"Gemmell, David - Drenai 06 - Druss 01 - The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend" - читать интересную книгу автора (Gemmel David)David Gemmell's first novel, Legend, was published in 1984. He has written
many bestsellers, including the Drenai saga, the Jon Shannow novels and the
Stones of Power sequence. He is now widely acclaimed as Britain's king of
heroic fantasy. David Gemmell lives in East Sussex. By David Gemmell LEGEND THE KING BEYOND THE GATE WAYLANDER QUEST FOR LOST HEROES WAYLANDER II THE FIRST CHRONICLES OF DRUSS THE LEGEND WOLF IN SHADOW THE LAST GUARDIAN BLOODSTONE GHOST KING LAST SWORD OF POWER LION OF MACEDON DARK PRINCE IRONHAND'S DAUGHTER THE HAWK ETERNAL KNIGHTS OF DARK RENOWN MORNINGSTAR The First
Chronicles of druss the legend David A.
Gemmell An Orbit Book First published in Great Britain by Legend Books 1993 Reprinted by Orbit 1998, 1999, 2000 Copyright © David A. Gemmell 1994 The moral right of
the author has been asserted. All characters in this publication are fictitious and
any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored
in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any
means, without the prior permission in writing of the
publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover
other than that in which it is published and without a
similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. A CJP catalogue record for this book is available from
the British Library. ISBN I 85723 680 1 Printed and bound in Great Britain by Mackays of
Chatham plc, Chatham, Kent Orbit A Division of Little, Brown and Company (UK) Brettenham House Lancaster Place London WC2E 7EN Contents BOOK TWO: The Demon
in the Axe DedicationDruss the Legend is dedicated with great love and affection to memory of Mick
Jeffrey, a quiet Christian of infinite patience and kindness. Those privileged
to know him were blessed indeed. Goodnight and God bless, Mick! AcknowledgmentsMy thanks to my editor John Jarrold, copy
editor Jean Maund, and test readers Val Gemmell, Stella Graham, Edith Graham,
Tom Taylor, and Vikki Lee France. Thanks also to Stan Nicholls and Chris Baker
for bringing Druss to life in a new way. BOOK ONE: Birth of a Legend
PrologueScreened by the undergrowth he knelt by the
trail, dark eyes scanning the boulders ahead of him and the trees beyond.
Dressed as he was in a shirt of fringed buckskin, and brown leather leggings
and boots, the tall man was virtually invisible, kneeling in the shadows of the
trees. The sun was high in a cloudless summer sky,
and the spoor was more than three hours old. Insects had criss-crossed the
hoof-marks, but the edges of the prints were still firm. Forty horsemen, laden with plunder . . . Shadak faded back through the undergrowth
to where his horse was tethered. He stroked the beast's long neck and lifted
his swordbelt from the back of the saddle. Strapping it to his waist he drew
the two short swords; they were of the finest Vagrian steel, and double edged.
He thought for a moment, then sheathed the blades and reached for the bow and
quiver strapped to the saddle pommel. The bow was of Vagrian horn, a hunting
weapon capable of launching a two-foot-long arrow across a killing space of
sixty paces. The doeskin quiver held twenty shafts that Shadak had crafted
himself: the flights of goose feather, stained red and yellow, the heads of
pointed iron, not barbed, and easily withdrawn from the bodies of the slain.
Swiftly he strung the bow and notched an arrow to the string. Then looping the
quiver over his shoulder, he made his way carefully back to the trail. Would they have left a rearguard? It was
unlikely, for there were no Drenai soldiers within fifty miles. But Shadak was a cautious man. And he knew
Collan. Tension rose in him as he pictured the smiling face and the cruel,
mocking eyes. 'No anger,' he told himself. But it was hard, bitterly hard.
Angry men make mistakes, he reminded himself. The hunter must be cold as iron. Silently he edged his way forward. A
towering boulder jutted from the earth some twenty paces ahead and to his left;
to the right was a cluster of smaller rocks, no more than four feet high.
Shadak took a deep breath and rose from his hiding-place. From behind the large boulder a man stepped
into sight, bowstring bent. Shadak dropped to his knee, the attacker's arrow
slashing through the air above his head. The bowman tried to leap back behind
the shelter of the boulder, but even as he was dropping Shadak loosed a shaft
which plunged into the bowman's throat, punching through the skin at the back
of his neck. Another attacker ran forward, this time
from Shadak's right. With no time to notch a second arrow Shadak swung the bow,
lashing it across the man's face. As the attacker stumbled, Shadak dropped the
bow and drew his two short swords; with one sweeping blow he cut through the
neck of the fallen man. Two more attackers ran into view and he leapt to meet
them. Both men wore iron breastplates, their necks and heads protected by chain
mail, and they carried sabres. 'You'll not die easily, you bastard!'
shouted the first, a tall, wide-shouldered warrior. Then his eyes narrowed as
he recognised the swordsman facing him. Fear replaced battle lust - but he was
too close to Shadak to withdraw and made a clumsy lunge with his sabre. Shadak
parried the blade with ease, his second sword lancing forward into the man's
mouth and through the bones of his neck. As the swordsman died, the second
warrior backed away. 'We didn't know it was you, I swear!' he
said, hands trembling. 'Now you do,' said Shadak softly. Without a word the man turned and ran back
towards the trees as Shadak sheathed his swords and moved to his bow. Notching
an arrow, he drew back on the string. The shaft flashed through the air to
punch home into the running man's thigh. He screamed and fell. As Shadak loped
to where he lay, the man rolled to his back, dropping his sword. 'For pity's sake don't kill me!' he
pleaded. 'You had no pity back in Corialis,' said
Shadak. 'But tell me where Collan is heading and I'll let you live.' A wolf
howled in the distance, a lonely sound. It was answered by another, then
another. 'There's a village . . . twenty miles
south-east,' said the man, his eyes fixed on the short sword in Shadak's hand.
'We scouted it. Plenty of young women. Collan and Harib Ka plan to raid it for
slaves, then take them to Mashrapur.' Shadak nodded. 'I believe you,' he said, at
last. 'You're going to let me live, yes? You
promised,' the wounded man whimpered. 'I always keep my promises,' said Shadak,
disgusted at the man's weakness. Reaching down, he wrenched his shaft clear of
the man's leg. Blood gushed from the wound, and the injured warrior groaned.
Shadak wiped the arrow clean on the man's cloak, then stood and walked to the
body of the first man he had killed. Kneeling beside the corpse, he recovered
his arrow and then strode to where the raiders had tethered their horses.
Mounting the first, he led the others back down the trail to where his gelding
waited. Gathering the reins, he led the four mounts back out on to the trail. 'What about me?' shouted the wounded man. Shadak turned in the saddle. 'Do your best
to keep the wolves away,' he advised. 'By dark they will have picked up the
scent of blood.' 'Leave me a horse! In the name of Mercy!' 'I am not a merciful man,' said Shadak. And he rode on towards the south-east, and
the distant mountains. Chapter OneThe axe was four feet long, with a
ten-pound head, the blade flared, and sharp as any sword. The haft was of elm,
beautifully curved, and more than forty years old. For most men it was a heavy
tool, unwieldy and imprecise. But in the hands of the dark-haired young man who
stood before the towering beech it sang through the air, seemingly as light as
a sabre. Every long swing saw the head bite exactly where the woodsman
intended, deeper and deeper into the meat of the trunk. Druss stepped back, then glanced up. There
were several heavy branches jutting towards the north. He moved around the
tree, gauging the line where it would fall, then returned to his work. This was
the third tree he had tackled today and his muscles ached, sweat gleaming on
his naked back. His short-cropped black hair was soaked with perspiration that
trickled over his brow, stinging his ice-blue eyes. His mouth was dry, but he
was determined to finish the task before allowing himself the reward of a
cooling drink. Some way to his left the brothers Pilan and
Yorath were sitting on a fallen tree, laughing and talking, their hatchets
beside them. Theirs was the task of stripping the trunks, hacking away smaller
branches and limbs that could be used for winter firewood. But they stopped
often and Druss could hear them discussing the merits and alleged vices of the
village girls. They were handsome youths, blond and tall, sons of the
blacksmith, Tetrin. Both were witty and intelligent, and popular among the
girls. Druss disliked them. To his right several
of the older boys were sawing through the larger branches of the first tree
Druss had felled, while elsewhere young girls were gathering deadwood, kindling
for winter fires, and loading them to wheelbarrows to be pushed downhill to the
village. At the edge of the new clearing stood the
four workhorses, hobbled now and grazing, waiting for the trees to be cleaned
so that chain traces could be attached to the trunks for the long haul into the
valley. Autumn was fading fast, and the village elders were determined that the
new perimeter wall would be finished before winter. The frontier mountains of
Skoda boasted only one troop of Drenai cavalry, patrolling an area of a
thousand square miles. Raiders, cattle thieves, slavers, robbers and outlaws
roamed the mountains, and the ruling council in Drenai made it clear they would
accept no responsibility for the new settlements on the Vagrian borders. But thoughts of the perils of frontier life
did not discourage the men and women who journeyed to Skoda. They sought a new
life, far removed from the more civilised south and east, and built their homes
where land was still free and wild, and where strong men did not need to tug
the forelock nor bow when the nobles rode by. Freedom was the key word, and no talk of
raiders could deter them. Druss hefted his axe, then thundered the
blade into the widening notch. Ten times more he struck, deep into the base of
the trunk. Then another ten smooth, powerful strokes. Three more axe-blows and
the tree would groan and give, wrenching and tearing as she fell. Stepping back he scanned the ground along
the line of the fall. A movement caught his eye, and he saw a small child with
golden hair sitting beneath a bush, a rag doll in her hand. 'Kiris!' bellowed
Druss.'If you are not out of there by the time I count to three I'll tear off
your leg and beat you to death with the wet end! One! Two!' The child's mouth dropped open, her eyes
widening. Dropping her rag doll she scrambled clear of the bush and ran crying
from the forest. Druss shook his head and walked forward to retrieve the doll,
tucking it into his wide belt. He felt the eyes of the others on him, and
guessed what they were thinking: Druss the Brute, Druss the Cruel - that's how
they saw him. And maybe they were right. Ignoring them, he walked back to the tree
and hefted his axe. Only two weeks before he had been felling a
tall beech, and had been called away with the work almost completed. When he
returned it was to find Kiris sitting in the topmost branches with her doll, as
always, beside her. 'Come down,' he had coaxed. The tree is
about to fall.' 'Won't,' said Kiris. 'We like it here. We
can see for ever.' Druss had looked around, for once hoping
that some of the village girls were close by. But there was no one. He examined
the huge cleft in the trunk, a sudden wind could cause the trunk to topple.
'Come down, there's a good girl. You'll be hurt if the tree falls.' 'Why should it fall?' 'Because I've been hitting it with my axe.
Now come down.' 'All right,' she said, then started to
climb down. The tree suddenly tilted and Kiris screamed and clung to a branch.
Druss's mouth was dry. 'Quickly now,' he said. Kiris said nothing,
nor did she move. Druss swore and, setting his foot to a low knot, levered
himself up to the first branch. Slowly and with great care he climbed the
half-felled tree, higher and higher towards the child. At last he reached her. 'Put your arms
around my neck,' he commanded. She did so, and he began the climb down. Half-way to the ground Druss felt the tree
shudder - and snap. Leaping clear he hugged the child to him, then hit the
ground, landing awkwardly with his left shoulder slamming into the soft earth.
Shielded by his bulk, Kiris was unhurt, but Druss groaned as he rose. 'Are you hurt?' asked Kiris. Druss's pale eyes swung on the child. 'If I
catch you near my trees again, I shall feed you to the wolves!' he roared. 'Now
begone!' She had sprinted away as if her dress was on fire. Chuckling at the
memory now, he hefted his axe and thundered the blade into the beech. A great
groan came from the tree, a wrenching, tearing sound that drowned out the
nearby thudding of hatchets and the sawing of boughs. The beech toppled, twisting as it fell.
Druss turned towards the water-sack hanging from a branch nearby; the felling
of the tree signalled the break for the midday meal, and the village youngsters
gathered in groups in the sunshine, laughing and joking. But no one approached
Druss. His recent fight with the former soldier Alarm had unsettled them, and they
viewed him even more warily than before. He sat alone, eating bread and cheese
and taking long, cool swallows of water. Pilan and Yorath were now sitting with
Berys and Tailia, the daughters of the miller. The girls were smiling prettily,
tilting their heads and enjoying the attention. Yorath leaned in close to
Tailia, kissing her ear. Tailia feigned outrage. Their games ceased when a black-bearded man
entered the clearing. He was tall, with massive shoulders and eyes the colour
of winter clouds. Druss saw his father approach, and stood. 'Clothe yourself and walk with me,' said
Bress, striding away into the woods. Druss donned his shirt and followed his
father. Out of earshot of the others, the tall man sat down beside a
fast-moving stream and Druss joined him. 'You must learn to control that temper, my
son,' said Bress. 'You almost killed the man.' 'I just hit him . . . once.' 'The once broke his jaw and
dislodged three teeth.' 'Have the Elders decided on a penalty?' 'Aye. I must support Alarin and his family
through the winter. Now I can ill afford that, boy.' 'He spoke slightingly of Rowena and I'll
not tolerate that. Ever.' Bress took a deep breath, but before
speaking he lifted a pebble and hurled it into the stream. Then he sighed. 'We
are not known here, Druss - save as good workers and fellow villagers. We came
a long way to be rid of the stigma my father bequeathed our family. But
remember the lessons of his life. He could not control his temper - and he
became an outcast and a renegade, a bloodthirsty butcher. Now they say blood
runs true. In our case I hope they are wrong.' Tm not a killer,' argued Druss. 'Had I
wanted him dead, I could have broken his neck with a single blow.' 'I know. You are strong - you take after me
in that regard. And proud; that I think came from your mother, may her soul
know peace. The gods alone know how often I have been forced to swallow my
pride.' Bress tugged at his beard and turned to face his son. 'We are a small
settlement now, and we cannot have violence among ourselves - we would not
survive as a community. Can you understand that?' 'What did they ask you to tell me?' Bress sighed. 'You must make your peace
with Alarin. And know this - if you attack any other man of the village you
will be cast out.' Druss's face darkened. 'I work harder than
any man. I trouble no one. I do not get drunk like Pilan and Yorath, nor try to
make whores of the village maids like their father. I do not steal. I do not
lie. Yet they will cast me out?' 'You frighten them, Druss. You frighten me
too.' 'I am not my grandfather. I am not a
murderer.' Bress sighed. 'I had hoped that Rowena,
with all her gentleness, would have helped to calm that temper of yours. But on
the morning after your wedding you half-kill a fellow settler. And for what?
Don't tell me he spoke slightingly. All he said was that you were a lucky man
and he'd like to have bedded her himself. By all the gods, son! If you feel you
have to break a man's jaw for every compliment he pays your wife, there won't
be any men left in this village to work at all.' 'It wasn't said as a compliment. And I can
control my temper, but Alarin is a loud-mouthed braggart - and he received
exactly what he deserved.' 'I hope you'll take note of what I've said,
son.' Bress stood and stretched his back. 'I know you have little respect for
me. But I hope you'll think of how Rowena would fare if you were both declared
outcast.' Druss gazed up at him and swallowed back
his disappointment. Bress was a physical giant, stronger than any man Druss had
ever known, but he wore defeat like a cloak. The younger man rose alongside his
father. 'I'll take heed,' he said. Bress smiled wearily. 'I have to get back
to the wall. It should be finished in another three days; we'll all sleep
sounder then.' 'You'll have the timber,' Druss promised. 'You're a good man with an axe, I'll say
that.' Bress walked away for several paces, then turned. 'If they did cast you
out, son, you wouldn't be alone. I'd walk with you.' Druss nodded. 'It won't come to that. I've
already promised Rowena I'll mend my ways.' 'I'll wager she was angry,' said Bress,
with a grin. 'Worse. She was disappointed in me.' Druss
chuckled. 'Sharper than a serpent's tooth is the disappointment of a new
wife.' 'You should laugh more often, my boy. It
suits you.' But as Bress walked away the smile faded
from the young man's face as he gazed down at his bruised knuckles and
remembered the emotions that had surged within him as he struck Alarin. There
had been anger, and a savage need for combat. But when his fist landed and
Alarin toppled there had been only one sensation, brief and indescribably
powerful. Joy. Pure pleasure, of a kind and a power
he had not experienced before. He closed his eyes, forcing the scene from his mind. 'I am not my grandfather,' he told himself.
'I am not insane.' That night he repeated the words to Rowena as they lay in
the broad bed Bress had fashioned for a wedding gift. Rolling to her stomach she leaned on his
chest, her long hair feeling like silk upon his massive shoulder. 'Of course
you are not insane, my love,' she assured him. 'You are one of the gentlest men
I've known.' That's not how they see me,' he told her,
reaching up and stroking her hair. 'I know. It was wrong of you to break
Alarin's jaw. They were just words - and it matters not a whit if he meant them
unpleasantly. They were just noises, blowing into the air.' Easing her from him, Druss sat up. 'It is
not that easy, Rowena. The man had been goading me for weeks. He wanted that
fight - because he wanted to humble me. But he did not. No man ever will.' She
shivered beside him. 'Are you cold?' he asked, drawing her into his embrace. 'Deathwalker,' she whispered. 'What? What did you say?' Her eyelids fluttered. She smiled and
kissed his cheek. 'It doesn't matter. Let us forget Alarin, and enjoy each
other's company.' 'I'll always enjoy your company,' he said.
'I love you.' * Rowena's dreams were dark and brooding and
the following day, at the riverside, she could not force the images from her
mind. Druss, dressed in black and silver and bearing a mighty axe, stood upon a
hillside. From the axe-blades came a great host of souls, flowing like smoke
around their grim killer. Death-walker! The vision had been powerful.
Squeezing the last of the water from the shirt she was washing, she laid it
over a flat rock alongside the drying blankets and the scrubbed woollen dress.
Stretching her back, she rose from the water's edge and walked to the tree line
where she sat, her right hand closing on the brooch Druss had fashioned for her
in his father's workshop - soft copper strands entwined around a moonstone,
misty and translucent. As her fingers touched the stone her eyes closed and her
mind cleared. She saw Druss sitting alone by the high stream. 'I am with you,' she whispered. But he
could not hear her and she sighed. No one in the village knew of her Talent,
for her father, Voren, had impressed upon her the need for secrecy. Only last
year four women in Drenan had been convicted of sorcery and burnt alive by the
priests of Missael. Voren was a careful man. He had brought Rowena to this
remote village, far from Drenan, because, as he told her, 'Secrets cannot live
quietly among a multitude. Cities are full of prying eyes and attentive ears,
vengeful minds and malevolent thoughts. You will be safer in the mountains.' And he had made her promise to tell no one
of her skills. Not even Druss. Rowena regretted that promise as she gazed with
the eyes of Spirit upon her husband. She could see no harshness in his blunt,
flat features, no swirling storm-clouds in those grey-blue eyes, no hint of
sullenness in the flat lines of his mouth. He was Druss- and she loved him.
With a certainty born of her Talent she knew she would love no other man as she
loved Druss. And she knew why . . . he needed her. She had gazed through the
window of his soul and had found there a warmth and a purity, an island of
tranquillity set in a sea of roaring violent emotions. While she was with him
Druss was tender, his turbulent spirit at peace. In her company he smiled.
Perhaps, she thought, with my help I can keep him at peace. Perhaps the grim
killer will never know life. 'Dreaming again, Ro,' said Mari, moving to
sit alongside Rowena. The young woman opened her eyes and smiled at her friend.
Mari was short and plump, with honey-coloured hair and a bright, open smile. 'I was thinking of Druss,' said Rowena. Mari nodded and looked away and Rowena
could feel her concern. For weeks her friend had tried to dissuade her from
marrying Druss, adding her arguments to those of Voren and others. 'Will Pilan be your partner at the Solstice
Dance?' asked Rowena, changing the subject. Mari's mood changed abruptly, and she giggled.
'Yes. But he doesn't know yet.' 'When will he find out?' 'Tonight.' Mari lowered her voice, though
there was no one else within earshot. 'We're meeting in the lower meadow.' 'Be careful,' warned Rowena. 'Is that the advice of the old married
woman? Didn't you and Druss make love before you were wed?' 'Yes, we did,' Rowena admitted, 'but Druss
had already made his pledge before the Oak. Pilan hasn't.' 'Just words, Ro. I don't need them. Oh, I
know Pilan's been flirting with Tailia, but she's not for him. No passion, you
see. All she thinks about is wealth. She doesn't want to stay in the
wilderness, she yearns for Drenan. She'll not want to keep a mountain man warm
at night, nor make the beast with two backs in a wet meadow, with the grass
tickling her . . .' 'Mari! You really are too frank,'
admonished Rowena. Mari giggled and leaned in close. 'Is Druss
a good lover?' Rowena sighed, all tension and sadness
disappearing. 'Oh, Mari! Why is it that you can talk about forbidden subjects
and make them seem so. . .so wonderfully ordinary? You are like the sunshine
that follows rain.' 'They're not forbidden here, Ro. That's the
trouble with girls born in cities and surrounded by stone walls and marble, and
granite. You don't feel the earth any more. Why did you come here?' 'You know why,' said Rowena uneasily.
'Father wanted a life in the mountains.' 'I know that's what you've always said -
but I never believed it. You're a terrible liar - your face goes red and you
always look away!' 'I . . . can't tell you. I made a promise.' 'Wonderful!' exclaimed Mari. 'I love
mysteries. Is he a criminal? He was a book-keeper, wasn't he? Did he steal some
rich man's money?' 'No! It was nothing to do with him. It was
me! Don't ask me any more. Please?' 'I thought we were friends,' said Mari. 'I
thought we could trust one another.' 'We can. Honestly!' 'I wouldn't tell anyone.' 'I know,' said Rowena sadly. 'But it would
spoil our friendship.' 'Nothing could do that. How long have you
been here - two seasons? Have we ever fought? Oh, come on, Ro. Where's the
harm? You tell me your secret and I'll tell you mine.' 'I know yours already,' whispered Rowena.
'You gave yourself to the Drenai captain when he and his men passed through
here on patrol in the summer. You took him to the low meadow.' 'How did you find out?' 'I didn't. It was in your mind when you
told me you would share a secret with me.' 'I don't understand.' 'I can see what people are thinking. And I
can sometimes tell what is going to happen. That's my secret.' 'You have the Gift? I don't believe it!
What am I thinking now?' 'A white horse with a garland of red
flowers.' 'Oh, Ro! That's wonderful. Tell my
fortune,' she pleaded, holding out her hand. 'You won't tell anyone else?' 'I promised, didn't I?' 'Sometimes it doesn't work.' Try anyway,' urged Mari, thrusting out her
plump hand. Rowena reached out, her slender fingers closing on Mari's palm, but
suddenly she shuddered and the colour faded from her face. 'What is it?' Rowena began to tremble. 'I. . . I must
find Druss. Can't. . . talk . . .' Rising, she stumbled away, the washed
clothes forgotten. 'Ro! Rowena, come back!' On the hillside above, a rider stared down
at the women by the river. Then he turned his horse and rode swiftly towards
the north. * Bress closed the door of the cabin and
moved through to his work room, where from a small box he took a lace glove. It
was old and yellowed, and several of the pearls which had once graced the wrist
were now missing. It was a small glove and Bress sat at his bench staring down
at it, his huge fingers stroking the remaining pearls. 'I am a lost man,' he said softly, closing
his eyes and picturing Arithae's sweet face. 'He despises me. Gods, I despise
myself.' Leaning back in his chair he gazed idly at the walls, and the many
shelves bearing strands of copper and brass, work tools, jars of dye, boxes of
beads. It was rare now for Bress to find the time to make jewellery; there was
little call for such luxuries here in the mountains. Now it was his skills as a
carpenter which were valued; he had become merely a maker of doors and tables,
chairs and beds. Still nursing the glove, he moved back into
the hearth room. 'I think we were born under unlucky stars,'
he told the dead Arithae. 'Or perhaps Bardan's evil stained our lives. Druss is
like him, you know. I see it in the eyes, in the sudden rages. I don't know
what to do. I could never convince father. And I cannot reach Druss.' His thoughts drifted back - memories, dark
and painful, flooding his mind. He saw Bardan on that last day, blood-covered,
his enemies all around him. Six men were dead, and that terrible axe was still
slashing left and right . . . Then a lance had been thrust into Bardan's throat.
Blood bubbled from the wound but Bardan slew the lance wielder before falling
to his knees. A man ran in behind him and delivered a terrible blow to Bardan's
neck. From his hiding-place high in the oak the
fourteen-year-old Bress had watched his father die, and heard one of the
killers say: The old wolf is dead - now where is the pup?' He had stayed in the tree all night, high
above the headless body of Bardan. Then, in the cold of the dawn he had climbed
down and stood by the corpse. There was no sadness, only a terrible sense of
relief combined with guilt. Bardan was dead: Bardan the Butcher. Bardan the
Slayer. Bardan the Demon. He had walked sixty miles to a settlement,
and there had found employment, apprenticed to a carpenter. But just as he was
settling down, the past came back to torment him when a travelling tinker
recognised him: he was the son of the Devil! A crowd gathered outside the
carpenter's shop, an angry mob armed with clubs and stones. Bress had climbed from the rear window and
fled from the settlement. Three times during the next five years he had been
forced to run - and then he had met Alithae. Fortune smiled on him then and he
remembered Alithae's father, on the day of the wedding, approaching him and
offering him a goblet of wine. 'I know you have suffered, boy,' said the old
man. 'But I am not one who believes that a father's evil is visited upon the
souls of his children. I know you, Bress. You are a good man.' Aye, thought Bress, as he sat by the
hearth, a good man. Lifting the glove he kissed it softly.
Alithae had been wearing it when the three men from the south had arrived at
the settlement where Bress and his wife and new son had made their homes. Bress
had a small but thriving business making brooches and rings and necklets for
the wealthy. He was out walking one morning, Alithae beside him carrying the
babe. 'It's Bardan's son!' he heard someone shout
and he glanced round. The three riders had stopped their horses, and one of the
men was pointing at him; they spurred their mounts and rode at him. Alithae,
struck by a charging horse, fell heavily, and Bress had leapt at the rider,
dragging him from the saddle. The other men hurled themselves from their
saddles. Bress struck left and right, his huge fists clubbing them to the ground. As the dust settled he turned back to
Alithae. . . . Only to find her dead, the babe crying
beside her. From that moment he lived like a man with
no hope. He rarely smiled and he never laughed. The ghost of Bardan was upon him, and he
took to travelling, moving through the lands of the Drenai with his son beside
him. Bress took what jobs he could find: a labourer in Drenan, acarpenter in
Delnoch, a bridge-builder in Mashrapur, a horse-handler in Corteswain. Five
years ago he had wed a farmer's daughter named Patica - a simple lass, plain of
face and none too bright. Bress cared for her, but there was no room left for
love in his heart for Alithae had taken it with her when she died. He had
married Patica to give Druss a mother, but the boy had never taken to her. Two years ago, with Druss now fifteen, they
had come to Skoda. But even here the ghost remained -born again, it seemed,
into the boy. 'What can I do, Alithae?' he asked. Patica entered the cabin, holding three
fresh loaves in her arms. She was a large woman with a round pleasant face
framed by auburn hair. She saw the glove and tried to mask the hurt she felt.
'Did you see Druss?' she asked. 'Aye, I did. He says he'll try to curb his
temper.' 'Give him time. Rowena will calm him.' Hearing the thunder of hooves outside,
Bress placed the glove on the table and moved to the door. Armed men were
riding into the village, swords in their hands. Bress saw Rowena running into the
settlement, her dress hitched up around her thighs. She saw the raiders and tried
to turn away but a horseman bore down on her. Bress ran into the open and leapt
at the man, pulling him from the saddle. The rider hit the ground hard, losing
his grip on his sword. Bress snatched it up, but a lance pierced his shoulder
and with a roar of anger he twisted round and the lance snapped. Bress lashed
out with the sword. The rider fell back, and the horse reared. Riders surrounded him, with lances
levelled. In that instant Bress knew he was about to
die. Time froze for him. He saw the sky, filled with lowering clouds, and
smelled the new-mown grass of the meadows. Other raiders were galloping through
the settlement, and he heard the screams of the dying villagers. Everything
they had built was for nothing. A terrible anger raged inside him. Gripping the
sword, he let out the battle-cry of Bardan. 'Blood and death!' he bellowed. And charged. * Deep within the woods Druss leaned on his
axe, a rare smile on his normally grim face. Above him the sun shone through a
break in the clouds, and he saw an eagle soaring, golden wings seemingly
aflame. Druss removed his sweat-drenched linen headband, laying it on a stone
to dry. Lifting a waterskin, he took a long drink. Nearby Pilan and Yorath laid
aside their hatchets. Soon Tailia and Berys would arrive with the
haul-horses and the work would begin again, attaching the chains and dragging
the timbers down to the village. But for now there was little to do but sit and
wait. Druss opened the linen-wrapped package Rowena had given him that morning;
within was a wedge of meat pie, and a large slice of honey cake. 'Ah, the joys of married life!' said Pilan. Druss laughed. 'You should have tried
harder to woo her. Too late to be jealous now.' 'She wouldn't have me, Druss. She said she
was waiting for a man whose face would curdle milk and that if she married me
she would spend the rest of her life wondering which of her pretty friends
would steal me from her. It seems her dream was to find the world's ugliest
man.' His smile faded as he saw the expression on
the woodsman's face, and the cold gleam that appeared in his pale eyes. 'Only
jesting,' said Pilan swiftly, the colour ebbing from his face. Druss took a deep breath and, remembering
his father's warning, fought down his anger. 'I am not. . . good with jests,'
he said, the words tasting like bile in his mouth. 'No harm done,' said Pilan's brother,
moving to sit alongside the giant. 'But if you don't mind my saying so, Druss,
you need to develop a sense of humour. We all make jests at the expense of our
. . . friends. It means nothing.' Druss merely nodded and turned his
attention to the pie. Yorath was right. Rowena had said exactly the same words,
but from her it was easy to take criticism. With her he felt calm and the world
had colour and joy. He finished the food and stood. 'The girls should have been
here by now,' he said. 'I can hear horses,' said Pilan, rising. 'They're coming fast,' Yorath added. Tailia and Berys came running into the
clearing, their faces showing fear, their heads turning towards the unseen
horsemen. Druss snatched his axe from the stump and ran towards them as Tailia,
looking back, stumbled and fell. Six horsemen rode into sight, armour
gleaming in the sunlight. Druss saw raven-winged helms, lances and swords. The
horses were lathered and, on seeing the three youths, the warriors shouted
battle cries and spurred their mounts towards them. Pilan and Yorath sprinted away towards the
right. Three riders swung their horses to give chase, but the remaining three
came on towards Druss. The young man stood calmly, the axe held
loosely across his naked chest. Directly in front of him was a felled tree. The
first of the riders, a lancer, leaned forward in the saddle as his gelding
jumped over the fallen beech. At that moment Druss moved, sprinting forward and
swinging his axe in a murderous arc. As the horse landed the axe-blade hissed
over its head, plunging into the chest of the lancer to splinter his
breastplate and smash his ribs to shards. The blow hammered the man from the
saddle. Druss tried to wrench the axe clear, but the blade was caught by the
fractured armour. A sword slashed down at the youth's head and Druss dived and
rolled. As a horseman moved in close he hurled himself from the ground,
grabbing the stallion's right foreleg. With one awesome heave he toppled horse
and rider. Hurdling the fallen tree, he ran to where the other two youths had
left their hatchets. Scooping up the first he turned as a raider galloped
towards him. Druss' arm came back, then snapped forward. The hatchet sliced
through the air, the iron head crunching into the man's teeth. He swayed in the
saddle. Druss ran forward to drag him from the horse. The raider, having
dropped his lance, tried to draw a dagger. Druss slapped it from his hand,
delivered a bone-breaking punch to the warrior's chin and then, snatching up
the dagger, rammed it into the man's unprotected throat. 'Look out, Druss!' yelled Tailia. Druss
spun, just as a sword flashed for his belly. Parrying the blade with his
forearm, he thundered a right cross which took the attacker full on the jaw,
spinning him from his feet. Druss leapt on the man, one huge hand grabbing his
chin, the other his brow. With one savage twist Druss heard the swordsman's
neck snap like a dry stick. Moving swiftly to the first man he had
killed, Druss tore the felling axe clear of the breastplate as Tailia ran from
her hiding-place in the bushes. 'They are attacking the village,' she said,
tears in her eyes. Pilan came running into the clearing, a
lancer behind him. 'Swerve!' bellowed Druss. But Pilan was too terrified to
obey and he ran straight on - until the lance pierced his back, exiting in a
bloody spray from his chest. The youth cried out, then slumped to the ground.
Druss roared in anger and raced forward. The lancer desperately tried to wrench
his weapon clear of the dying boy. Druss swung wildly with the axe, which
glanced from the rider's shoulder and plunged into the horse's back. The animal
whinnied in pain and reared before falling to the earth, its legs flailing. The
rider scrambled clear, blood gushing from his shoulder and tried to run, but
Druss's next blow almost decapitated him. Hearing a scream, Druss began to run
towards the sound and found Yorath struggling with one raider; the second was
kneeling on the ground, blood streaming from a wound in his head. The body of
Berys was beside him, a blood-smeared stone in her hand. The swordsman
grappling with Yorath suddenly head-butted the youth, sending Yorath back
several paces. The sword came up. Druss shouted, trying to distract the
warrior. But to no avail. The weapon lanced into Yorath's side. The swordsman
dragged the blade clear and turned towards Druss. 'Now your time to die, farm
boy!' he said. 'In your dreams!' snarled the woodsman. Swinging the axe over
his head, Druss charged. The swordsman side-stepped to his right - but Druss
had been waiting for the move, and with all the power of his mighty shoulders
he wrenched the axe, changing its course. It clove through the man's
collarbone, smashing the shoulder-blade and ripping into his lungs. Tearing the
axe loose, Druss turned from the body to see the first wounded warrior
struggling to rise; jumping forward, he struck him a murderous blow to the
neck. 'Help me!' called Yorath. 'I'll send Tailia,' Druss told him, and
began to run back through the trees. Reaching the crest of the hill he gazed
down on the village. He could see scattered bodies, but no sign of raiders. For
a moment he thought the villagers had beaten them back . . . but there was no
movement at all. 'Rowena!' he yelled. 'Rowena!' * Druss ran down the slope. He fell and
rolled, losing his grip on the felling-axe, but scrambling to his feet he
pounded on - down into the meadow, across the flat, through the half-finished
gates. Bodies lay everywhere. Rowena's father, the former book-keeper Voren,
had been stabbed through the throat, and blood was staining the earth beneath
him. Breathing hard, Druss stopped, and stared around the settlement square. Old women, young children and all the men
were dead. As he stumbled on he saw the golden-haired child, Kins, beloved of
all the villagers, lying sprawled in death alongside her rag doll. The body of
an infant lay against one building, a bloodstain on the wall above showing how
it had been slain. He found his father lying in the open with
four dead raiders around him. Patica was beside him, a hammer in her hand, her
plain brown woollen dress drenched in blood. Druss fell to his knees by his
father's body. There were terrible wounds to the chest and belly, and his left
arm was almost severed at the wrist. Bress groaned and opened his eyes. 'Druss.
. . .' 'I am here, Father.' 'They took the young women. . . . Rowena .
. . was among them.' 'I'll find her.' The dying man glanced to his right at the
dead woman beside him. 'She was a brave lass; she tried to help me. I should
have . . . loved her better.' Bress sighed, then choked as blood flowed into
his throat. He spat it clear. 'There is . . . a weapon. In the house . . . far
wall, beneath the boards. It has a terrible history. But. . . but you will need
it.' Druss stared down at the dying man and
their eyes met. Bress lifted his right hand. Druss took it. 'I did my best,
boy,' said his father. 'I know.' Bress was fading fast, and Druss
was not a man of words. Instead he lifted his father into his arms and kissed
his brow, hugging him close until the last breath of life rasped from the
broken body. Then he pushed himself to his feet and
entered his father's home. It had been ransacked - cupboards hauled open,
drawers pulled from the dressers, rugs ripped from the walls. But by the far
wall the hidden compartment was undiscovered and Druss prised open the boards
and hauled out the chest that lay in the dust below the floor. It was locked.
Moving through into his father's workshop, he returned with a large hammer and
a chisel which he used to pry off the hinges. Then he took hold of the lid and
wrenched it clear, the brass lock twisting and tearing free. Inside, wrapped in
oilskin, was an axe. And such an axe! Druss unwrapped it reverently. The black
metal haft was as long as a man's arm, the double heads shaped like the wings
of a butterfly. He tested the edges with his thumb; the weapon was as sharp as
his father's shaving-knife. Silver runes were inscribed on the haft, and though
Druss could not read them he knew the words etched there. For this was the
awful axe of Bardan, the weapon that had slain men, women, and even children
during the reign of terror. The words were part of the dark folklore of the
Drenai. Snaga, the Sender, the blades of no
return He lifted the axe clear, surprised by its
lightness and its perfect balance in his hand. Beneath it in the chest was a black leather
jerkin, the shoulders reinforced by strips of silver steel; two black leather
gauntlets, also protected by shaped metal knuckle-guards; and a pair of black,
knee-length boots. Beneath the clothes was a small pouch, and within it Druss
found eighteen silver pieces. Kicking off his soft leather shoes, Druss
pulled on the boots and donned the jerkin. At the bottom of the chest was a
helm of black metal, edged with silver; upon the brow was a small silver axe
flanked by silver skulls. Druss settled the helm into place, then lifted the
axe once more. Gazing down at his reflection in the shining blades, he saw a
pair of cold, cold blue eyes, empty, devoid of feeling. Snaga, forged in the Elder days, crafted by
a master. The blade had never been sharpened, for it had never dulled despite
the many battles and skirmishes that filled the life of Bardan. And even before
that the blade had been in use. Bardan had acquired the battle-axe during the
Second Vagrian War, looting it from an old barrow in which lay the bones of an
ancient battle king, a monster of Legend, Caras the Axeman. 'It was an evil weapon,' Bress had once
told his son. 'All the men who ever bore it were killers with no souls.' 'Why do you keep it then?' asked his
thirteen-year-old son. 'It cannot kill where I keep it,' was all
Bress had answered. Druss stared at the blade. 'Now you can
kill,' he whispered. Then he heard the sound of a walking horse.
Slowly he rose. Chapter TwoShadak's horses were skittish, the smell of
death unnerving the beasts. He had bought his own three-year-old from a farmer
south of Corialis and the gelding had not been trained for war. The four mounts
he had taken from the raiders were less nervous, but still their ears were back
and their nostrils flaring. He spoke soothingly to them and rode on. Shadak had been a soldier for most of his
adult life. He had seen death - and he thanked the gods that it still had the
power to stir his emotions. Sorrow and anger vied in his heart as he gazed upon
the still corpses, the children and the old women. None of the houses had been put to the
torch - the smoke would be seen for miles, and could have brought a troop of
lancers. He gently tugged on the reins. A golden-haired child lay against the
wall of a building, a doll beside it. Slavers had no time for children, for
they had no market in Mashrapur. Young Drenai women between the ages of
fourteen and twenty-five were still popular in the eastern kingdoms of Ventria,
Sherak, Dospilis and Naashan. Shadak touched heels to the gelding. There was no
point in remaining in this place; the trail led south. A young warrior stepped from one of the
buildings, startling his horse which reared and whinnied. Shadak calmed it and
gazed upon the man. Although of average height he was powerfully built, his
huge shoulders and mighty arms giving the impression of a giant. He wore a
black leather jerkin and helm and carried a fearful axe. Shadak glanced swiftly
around the corpse-strewn settlement. But there was no sign of a horse. Lifting his leg, Shadak slid from the
saddle. 'Your friends leave you behind, laddie?' he asked the axeman. The young
man did not speak but stepped out into the open. Shadak looked into the man's
pale eyes and felt the unaccustomed thrill of fear. The face beneath the helm was flat and
expressionless, but power emanated from the young warrior. Shadak moved warily
to his right, hands resting on the hilts of his short swords. 'Proud of your
handiwork, are you?' he asked, trying to force the man into conversation.
'Killed many babes today, did you?' The young man's brow furrowed. 'This was my
. . . my home,' he said, his voice deep. 'You are not one of the raiders?' 'I am hunting them,' said Shadak, surprised
at the relief he felt. 'They attacked Corialis looking for slaves,
but the young women escaped them. The villagers fought hard. Seventeen of them
died, but the attack was beaten off. My name is Shadak. Who are you?' 'I am Druss. They took my wife. I'll find
them.' Shadak glanced at the sky. 'It's getting dark. Best to start in the
morning, we could lose their trail in the night.' 'I'll not wait,' said the young man. 'I
need one of your horses.' Shadak smiled grimly. 'It is difficult to refuse when
you ask so politely. But I think we should talk before you ride out.' 'Why?' 'Because there are many of them, laddie,
and they do have a tendency to leave rearguards behind them, watching the
road.' Shadak pointed to the horses. 'Four lay in wait for me.' 'I'll kill any I find.' 'I take it they took all the young women,
since I see no corpses here?' 'Yes.' Shadak hitched his horses to a rail and
stepped past the young man into the home of Bress. 'You'll lose nothing by
listening for a few minutes,' he said. Inside the building he righted the chairs
and stopped. On the table was an old glove, made of lace and edged with pearls.
'What's this?' he asked the cold-eyed young man. 'It belonged to my mother. My father used
to take it out now and again, and sit by the fire holding it. What did you want
to talk about?' Shadak sat down at the table. 'The raiders are led by two men
-Collan, a renegade Drenai officer, and Harib Ka, a Ventrian. They will be
making for Mashrapur and the slave markets there. With all the captives they
will not be able to move at speed and we will have little difficult catching
them. But if we follow now, we will come upon them in the open. Two against
forty - these are not odds to inspire confidence. They will push on through
most of tonight, crossing the plain and reaching the long valley trails to
Mashrapur late tomorrow. Then they will relax.' 'They have my wife,' said the young man.
'I'll not let them keep her for a heartbeat longer than necessary.' Shadak shook his head and sighed. 'Nor
would I, laddie. But you know the country to the south. What chance would we
have of rescuing her on the plains? They would see us coming from a mile away.' For the first time the young man looked
uncertain. Then he shrugged and sat, laying the great axe on the table-top,
where it covered the tiny glove. 'You are a soldier?' he asked. 'I was. Now I am a hunter - a hunter of
men. Trust me. Now, how many women did they take?' The young man thought for a moment.
'Perhaps around thirty. They killed Berys in the woods. Tailia escaped. But I
have not seen all the bodies. Maybe others were killed.' 'Then let us think of thirty. It won't be
easy freeing them.' A sound from outside made both men turn as
a young woman entered the room. Shadak rose. The woman was fair-haired and
pretty, and there was blood upon her blue woollen skirt and her shirt of white
linen. 'Yorath died,' she told the young man.
'They're all dead, Druss.' Her eyes filled with tears and she stood in the
doorway looking lost and forlorn. Druss did not move, but Shadak stepped
swiftly towards her, taking her in his arms and stroking her back. He led her into the room and sat her at the
table. 'Is there any food here?' he asked Druss. The young man nodded and moved
through to the back room, returning with a pitcher of water and some bread.
Shadak filled a clay cup with water and told the girl to drink. 'Are you hurt?'
he asked. She shook her head. 'The blood is
Yorath's,' she whispered. Shadak sat beside her and Tailia sagged against him;
she was exhausted. 'You need to rest,' he told her gently,
helping her to rise and leading her through the building to a small bedroom.
Obediently she lay down, and he covered her with a thick blanket.
'Sleep, child. I will be here.' 'Don't leave me,' she pleaded. He took her hand. 'You are safe . . .
Tailia. Sleep.' She closed her eyes, but clung to his hand, and Shadak sat with
her until the grip eased and her breathing deepened. At last he stood and
returned to the outer room. 'You were planning to leave her behind?' he
asked the young man. 'She is nothing to me,' he said coldly.
'Rowena is everything.' 'I see. Then think on this, my friend:
suppose it was you who had died and it was Rowena who survived hiding in the
woods. How would your spirit feel if you saw me ride in and leave her alone in
this wilderness?' 'I did not die,' said Druss. 'No,' said Shadak, 'you didn't. We'll take
the girl with us.' 'No!' 'Either that or you walk on alone, laddie.
And I do mean walk.' The young man looked up at the hunter, and
his eyes gleamed. 'I have killed men today,' he said, 'and I will not be
threatened by you, or anyone. Not ever again. If I choose to leave here on one
of your stolen horses, I shall do so. You would be wise not to try to stop me.' 'I wouldn't try, boy, I'd do it.'
The words were spoken softly, and with a quiet confidence. But deep inside
Shadak was surprised, for it was a confidence he did not feel. He saw the young
man's hand snake around the haft of the axe. 'I know you are angry, lad, and
concerned for the safety of. . . Rowena. But you can do nothing alone - unless
of course you are a tracker, and an expert horseman. You could ride off into
the dark and lose them. Or you could stumble upon them, and try to kill forty
warriors. Then there'll be no one to rescue her, or the others.' Slowly the giant's fingers relaxed, the
hand moving away from the axe haft, the gleam fading from his eyes. 'It hurts
me to sit here while they carry her further away.' 'I understand that. But we will catch them.
And they will not harm the women; they are valuable to them.' 'You have a plan?' 'I do. I know the country, and I can guess
where they will be camped tomorrow. We will go in at night, deal with the
sentries and free the captives.' Druss nodded. 'What then? They'll be
hunting us. How do we escape with thirty women?' 'Their leaders will be dead,' said Shadak
softly. 'I'll see to that.' 'Others will take the lead. They will come
after us.' Shadak shrugged, then smiled. 'Then we kill
as many as we can.' 'I like that part of the plan,' said the
young man grimly. * The stars were bright and Shadak sat on the
porch of the timber dwelling, watching Druss sitting beside the bodies of his
parents. 'You're getting old,' Shadak told himself,
his gaze fixed on Druss. 'You make me feel old,' he whispered. Not in twenty
years had a man inspired such fear in Shadak. He remembered the moment well -
he was a Sathuli tribesman named Jonacin, a man with eyes of ice and fire, a
legend among his own people. The Lord's champion, he had killed
seventeen men in single combat, among them the Vagrian champion, Vearl. Shadak had known the Vagrian - a tall, lean
man, lightning-fast and tactically sound. The Sathuli, it was said, had treated
him like a novice, first slicing off his right ear before despatching him with
a heart thrust. Shadak smiled as he remembered hoping with
all his heart that he would never have to fight the man. But such hopes are
akin to magic, he knew now, and all men are ultimately faced with their darkest
fears. It had been a golden morning in the Delnoch
mountains. The Drenai were negotiating treaties with a Sathuli Lord and Shadak
was present merely as one of the envoy's guards. Jonacin had been mildly
insulting at the dinner the night before, speaking sneeringly of Drenai sword
skills. Shadak had been ordered to ignore the man. But on the following morning
the white-robed Sathuli stepped in front of him as he walked along the path to
the Long Hall. 'It is said you are a fighter,' said
Jonacin, the sneer in his voice showing disbelief. Shadak had remained cool under the other's
baleful stare. 'Stand aside, if you please. I am expected at the meeting.' 'I shall stand aside - as soon as you have
kissed my feet.' Shadak had been twenty-two then, in his
prime. He looked into Jonacin's eyes and knew there was no avoiding
confrontation. Other Sathuli warriors had gathered close by and Shadak forced a
smile. 'Kiss your feet? I don't think so. Kiss this instead!' His right fist
lashed into the Sathuli's chin, spinning him to the ground. Then Shadak walked
on and took his place at the table. As he sat he glanced at the Sathuli Lord, a
tall man with dark, cruel eyes. The man saw him, and Shadak thought he glimpsed
a look of faint amusement, even triumph, in the Lord's face. A messenger
whispered something in the Lord's ear and the chieftain stood. "The hospitality
of my house has been abused,' he told the envoy. 'One of your men struck my
champion, Jonacin. The attack was unwarranted. Jonacin demands satisfaction.' The envoy was speechless. Shadak stood. 'He
shall have it, my Lord. But let us fight in the cemetery. At least then you
will not have far to carry his body!' Now the hoot of an owl brought Shadak back
to the present, and he saw Druss striding towards him. The young man made as if
to walk by, then stopped. 'I had no words,' he said. 'I could think of nothing
to say.' 'Sit down for a moment and we will speak of
them,' said Shadak. 'It is said that our praises follow the dead to their place
of rest. Perhaps it is true.' Druss sat alongside the swordsman. 'There
is not much to tell. He was a carpenter, and a fashioner of brooches. She was a
bought wife.' 'They raised you, helped you to be strong.' 'I needed no help in that.' 'You are wrong, Druss. If your father had
been a weak, or a vengeful man, he would have beaten you as a child, robbed you
of your spirit. In my experience it takes a strong man to raise strong men. Was
the axe his?' 'No. It belonged to my grandfather.' 'Bardan the Axeman,' said Shadak softly. 'How could you know?' 'It is an infamous weapon. Snaga. That was
the name. Your father had a hard life, trying to live down such a beast as
Bardan. What happened to your real mother?' Druss shrugged. 'She died in an accident
when I was a babe.' 'Ah yes, I remember the story,' said
Shadak. Three men attacked your father; he killed two of them with his bare
hands and near crippled the third. Your mother was struck down by a charging
horse.' 'He killed two men?' Druss was astonished.
'Are you sure?' 'So the story goes.' 'I cannot believe it. He always backed away
from any argument. He never stood up for himself at all. He was weak . . .
spineless.' 'I don't think so.' 'You didn't know him.' 'I saw where his body lay, and I saw the
dead men around it. And I know many stories concerning the son of Bardan. None
of them speaks of his cowardice. After his own father was killed he tried to
settle in many towns, under many names. Always he was discovered and forced to
flee. But on at least three occasions he was followed and attacked. Just
outside Drenan he was cornered by five soldiers. One of them shot an arrow into
your father's shoulder. Bress was carrying an infant at the time and according
to the soldiers he laid the babe behind a boulder, and then charged at them. He
had no weapon, and they were all armed with swords. But he tore a limb from a tree
and laid into them. Two went down swiftly, the others turned and fled. I know that
story is true, Druss, because my brother was one of the soldiers. It was
the year before he was killed in the Sathuli campaign. He said that Bardan's
son was a black-bearded giant with the strength of six men.' 'I knew none of this,' said Druss. 'Why did
he never speak of it?' 'Why should he? Perhaps he took no pleasure
for being the son of a monster. Perhaps he did not relish speaking of killing
men with his hands, or beating them unconscious with a tree branch.' 'I didn't know him at all,' whispered
Druss. 'Not at all.' 'I expect he didn't know you either,' said
Shadak, with a sigh. 'It is the curse of parents and children.' 'You have sons?' 'One. He died a week ago at Corialis. He
thought he was immortal.' 'What happened?' 'He went up against Collan; he was cut to
pieces.' Shadak cleared his throat and stood. 'Time for some sleep. It'll be
dawn soon, and I'm not as young as I was.' 'Sleep well,' said Druss. 'I will, laddie. I always do. Go back to
your parents and find something to say.' 'Wait!' called Druss. 'Yes,' answered the swordsman, pausing in
the doorway. 'You were correct in what you said. I
wouldn't have wanted Rowena left in the mountains alone. I spoke in. . .
anger.' Shadak nodded. 'A man is only as strong as
that which makes him angry. Remember that, laddie.' * Shadak could not sleep. He sat in the wide
leather chair beside the hearth, his long legs stretched out before him, his
head resting on a cushion,.his body relaxed. But his mind was in turmoil -
images, memories flashing into thoughts. He saw again the Sathuli cemetery, Jonacin
stripped to the waist, a broad-bladed tulwar in his hands and a small iron
buckler strapped to his left forearm. 'Do you feel fear, Drenai?' asked Jonacin.
Shadak did not answer. Slowly he unstrapped his baldric, then lifted clear his
heavy woollen shirt. The sun was warm on his back, the mountain air fresh in
his lungs. You are going to die today, said the voice of his soul. And then the duel began. Jonacin drew first
blood, a narrow cut appearing on Shadak's chest. More than a thousand Sathuli
onlookers, standing around the perimeter of the cemetery, cheered as the blood
began to flow. Shadak leapt back. 'Not going to try for the ear?' he asked
conversationally. Jonacin gave an angry growl, and launched a new attack.
Shadak blocked a thrust, then thundered a punch to the Sathuli's face. It
glanced from his cheekbone, but the man staggered. Shadak followed up with a
disembowelling thrust and the Sathuli swayed to his right, the blade slashing
the skin of his waist. Now it was Jonacin's turn to jump backwards. Blood
gushed from the shallow wound in his side; he touched the cut with his fingers,
staring down amazed. 'Yes,' said Shadak, 'you bleed too. Come to me. Bleed some
more.' Jonacin screamed and rushed forward but
Shadak side-stepped and clove his sabre through the Sathuli's neck. As the
dying man fell to the ground Shadak felt a tremendous sense of relief, and a
surging realisation. He was alive! But his career was ruined. The treaty talks
came to nothing, and his commission was revoked upon his return to Drenan. Then Shadak had found his true vocation:
Shadak the Hunter. Shadak the Tracker. Outlaws, killers, renegades - he hunted
them all, following like a wolf on the trail. In all the years since the fight with
Jonacin he had never again known such fear. Until today, when the young axeman
had stepped into the sunlight. He is young and untrained. I would have
killed him, he told himself. But then he pictured again the ice-blue
eyes and the shining axe. * Druss sat under the stars. He was tired,
but he could not sleep. A fox moved out into the open, edging towards a corpse.
Druss threw a stone at it and the creature slunk away . . . but not far. By tomorrow the crows would be feasting
here, and the other carrion beasts would tear at the dead flesh. Only hours ago
this had been a living community, full of people enjoying their own hopes and
dreams. Druss stood and walked along the main street of the settlement, past
the home of the baker, whose body was stretched out in the doorway with his
wife beside him. The smithy was open, the fires still glowing faintly. There
were three bodies here. Tetrin the Smith had managed to kill two of the
raiders, clubbing them down with his forge hammer. Tetrin himself lay beside
the long anvil, his throat cut. Druss swung away from the scene. What was it for? Slaves and gold. The
raiders cared nothing for the dreams of other men. 'I will make you pay,' said
Druss. He glanced at the body of the smith. 'I will avenge you. And your sons.
I will avenge you all,' he promised. And he thought of Rowena and his throat
went dry, his heartbeat increasing. Forcing back his fears, he gazed around at
the settlement. In the moonlight the village still seemed
strangely alive, its buildings untouched. Druss wondered at this. Why did the
raiders not put the settlement to the torch? In all the stories he had heard of
such attacks, the plunderers usually fired the buildings. Then he remembered
the troop of Drenai cavalry patrolling the wilderness. A column of smoke would
alert them, were they close. Druss knew then what he had to do. Moving
to the body of Tetrin he hauled it across the street to the meeting hall,
kicking open the door and dragging the corpse inside, laying it at the centre
of the hall. Then he returned to the street and began to gather one by one, all
the dead of the community. He was tired when he began, and bone-weary by the
finish. Forty-four bodies he placed in the long hall, making sure that husbands
were beside wives and their children close. He did not know why he did this,
but it seemed right. Lastly he carried the body of Bress into
the building, and laid it beside Patica. Then he knelt by the woman and, taking
the dead hand in his own, he bowed his head. 'I thank you,' he said quietly,
'for your years of care, and for the love you gave my father. You deserved
better than this, Patica.' With all the bodies accounted for, he began to fetch
wood from the winter store, piling it against the walls and across the bodies.
At last he carried a large barrel of lantern oil from the main storehouse and
poured it over the wood, splashing it to the dry walls. As dawn streaked the eastern sky, he struck
a flame to the pyre and blew it into life. The morning breeze licked at the
flames in the doorway, caught at the tinder beyond, then hungrily roared up the
first wall. Druss stepped back into the street. At
first the blaze made little smoke, but as the fire grew into an inferno a black
column of oily smoke billowed into the morning sky, hanging in the light wind,
flattening and spreading like an earth-born storm cloud. 'You have been working
hard,' said Shadak, moving silently alongside the young axeman. Druss nodded. 'There was no time to bury
them,' he said. 'Now maybe the smoke will be seen.' 'Perhaps,' agreed the hunter, 'but you
should have rested. Tonight you will need your strength.' As Shadak moved away,
Druss watched him; the man's movements were sure and smooth, confident and
strong. Druss admired that - as he admired the way
that Shadak had comforted Tailia in the doorway. Like a father or a brother
might. Druss had known that she needed such consolation, but had been unable to
provide it. He had never possessed the easy touch of a Pilan or a Yorath, and
had always been uncomfortable in the company of women or girls. But not Rowena. He remembered the day when
she and her father had come to the village, a spring day three seasons ago.
They had arrived with several other families, and he had seen Rowena standing
beside a wagon helping to unload furniture. She seemed so frail. Druss had
approached the wagon. 'I'll help if you want,' offered the
fifteen-year-old Druss, more gruffly than he had intended. She turned and
smiled. Such a smile, radiant and friendly. Reaching up, he took hold of the
chair her father was lowering and carried it into the half-built dwelling. He
helped them unload and arrange the furniture, then made to leave. But Rowena
brought him a goblet of water. 'It was kind of you to help us,' she said.
'You are very strong.' He had mumbled some inanity, listened as
she told him her name, and left without telling her his own. That evening she
had seen him sitting by the southern stream and had sat beside him. So close
that he had felt remarkably uncomfortable. 'The land is beautiful, isn't it?' she
said. It was. The mountains were huge, like
snow-haired giants, the sky the colour of molten copper, the setting sun a dish
of gold, the hills bedecked with flowers. But Druss had not seen the beauty
until the moment she observed it. He felt a sense of peace, a calm that settled
over his turbulent spirit in a blanket of warmth. 'I am Druss.' 'I know. I asked your mother where you
were.' 'Why?' 'You are my first friend here.' 'How can we be friends? You do not know
me.' 'Of course I do. You are Druss, the son of
Bress.' 'That is not knowing. I . . . I am not
popular here,' he said, though he did not know why he should admit it so
readily. 'I am disliked.' 'Why do they dislike you?' The question was
innocently asked, and he turned to look at her. Her face was so close that he
blushed. Twisting, he put space between them. 'My ways are rough, I suppose. I don't. . .
talk easily. And I . . . sometimes . . . become angry. I don't understand their
jests and their humour. I like to be . . . alone.' 'Would you like me to go?' 'No! I just . . . I don't know what I am
saying.' He shrugged, and blushed a deeper crimson. 'Shall we be friends then?' she asked him,
holding out her hand. 'I have never had a friend,' he admitted. 'Then take my hand, and we will start now.'
Reaching out, he felt the warmth of her fingers against his calloused palm.
'Friends?' she asked with a smile. 'Friends,' he agreed. She made as if to
withdraw her hand, but he held it for a moment longer. 'Thank you,' he said
softly, as he released his hold. She laughed then. 'Why would you thank me?' He shrugged. 'I don't know. It is just
that. . . you have given me a gift that no one else ever offered. And I do not
take it lightly. I will be your friend, Rowena. Until the stars burn out and
die.' 'Be careful with such promises, Druss. You
do not know where they might lead you.' One of the roof timbers cracked and crashed
into the blaze. Shadak called out to him. 'Better choose yourself a mount,
axeman. It's time to go.' Gathering his axe, Druss turned his gaze
towards the south. Somewhere out there was Rowena. 'I'm on my way,' he whispered. And she heard him. Chapter ThreeThe wagons rolled on through the first
afternoon, and on into the night. At first the captured women were silent,
stunned, disbelieving. Then grief replaced shock, and there were tears. These
were harshly dealt with by the men riding alongside the wagons, who ordered
silence and, when it was not forthcoming, dismounted and leapt aboard the
wagons dealing blows and brutal slaps, and issuing threats of whip and lash. Rowena, her hands tied before her, sat
beside the equally bound Mari. Her friend had swollen eyes, both from weeping
and from a blow that had caught her on the bridge of the nose. 'How are you
feeling now?' Rowena whispered. 'All dead,' came the response. 'They're all
dead.' Mari's eyes gazed unseeing across the wagon, where other young women
were sitting. 'We are alive,' continued Rowena, her voice
low and gentle. 'Do not give up hope, Mari. Druss is alive also. And there is a
man with him - a great hunter. They are following us.' 'All dead,' said Mari. They're all dead.' 'Oh, Mari!' Rowena reached out with her
bound hands but Mari screamed and pulled away. 'Don't touch me!' She swung round to face
Rowena, her eyes fierce and gleaming. 'This was a punishment. For you. You are
a witch! It is all your fault!' 'No, I did nothing!' 'She's a witch,' shouted Mari. The other
women stared. 'She has powers of Second Sight. She knew the raid was coming,
but she didn't warn us.' 'Why did you not tell us?' shouted another
woman. Rowena swung and saw the daughter of Jarin the Baker. 'My father is
dead. My brothers are dead. Why did you not warn us?' 'I didn't know. Not until the last moment!' 'Witch!' screamed Mari. 'Stinking witch!'
She lashed out with her tied hands, catching Rowena on the side of the head.
Rowena fell to her left, into another woman. Fists struck as all around her in
the wagon women surged upright, lashing out with hands and feet. Riders
galloped alongside the wagon and Rowena felt herself lifted clear and flung to
the ground. She hit hard, the breath knocked out of her. 'What is going on here?' she heard someone
yell. 'Witch! Witch! Witch!' chanted the women. Rowena was hauled to her feet, then a
filthy hand caught her by the hair. She opened her eyes and looked up into a
gaunt, scarred face. 'Witch, are you?' grunted the man..'We'll see about that!'
He drew a knife and held it before her, the point resting against the woollen
shirt she wore. 'Witches have three nipples, so it's said,' he told her. 'Leave her be!' came another voice, and a
horseman rode close alongside. The man sheathed his knife. 'I wasn't going to cut her, Harib. Witch or
no, she'll still bring a pretty price.' 'More if she is a witch,' said the
horseman. 'Let her ride behind you.' Rowena gazed up at the rider. His face was
swarthy, his eyes dark, his mouth part hidden by the bronze ear-flaps of his
battle helm. Touching spurs to his mount the rider galloped on. The man holding
her stepped into the saddle, pulling her up behind him. He smelt of stale sweat
and old dirt, but Rowena scarcely noticed it. Glancing at the wagon where her
former friends now sat silently, she felt afresh the terrible sense of loss. Yesterday the world was full of hope. Their
home was almost complete, her husband coming to terms with his restless spirit,
her father relaxed and free from care, Mari preparing for a night of passion
with Pilan. In the space of a few hours it had all
changed. Reaching up, she touched the brooch at her breast . . . And saw the Axeman her husband was
becoming. Deathwalker! Tears flowed then, silently coursing down
her cheeks. * Shadak rode ahead, following the trail,
while Druss and Tailia travelled side by side, the girt on a bay mare, the
young man on a chestnut gelding. Tailia said little for the first hour, which
suited Druss, but as they topped a rise before a long valley she leaned in
close and touched his arm. 'What are you planning?' she asked. 'Why
are we following them?' 'What do you mean?' responded Druss,
nonplussed. 'Well, you obviously can't fight them all;
you'll be killed. Why don't we just ride for the garrison at Padia? Send
troops?' He swung to look at her. Her blue eyes were red-rimmed from crying. 'That's a four-day walk. I don't know how
long it would take to ride - two days at the least, I would think. Then, if the
troop was there - and they may not be - it would take them at least three days
to find the raiders. By then they will be in Vagrian territory, and close to
the borders of Mashrapur. Drenai soldiers have no jurisdiction there.' 'But you can't do anything. There is no
point to this pursuit.' Druss took a deep breath. 'They have
Rowena,' he said. 'And Shadak has a plan.' 'Ah, a plan,' she said derisively, her
full-lipped mouth twisting in a sneer. 'Two men with a plan. Then I suppose I
am safe?' 'You are alive - and free,' Druss told her.
'If you want to ride to Padia, then do so.' Her expression softened and she reached
out, laying her hand on Druss's forearm. 'I know you are brave, Druss; I saw
you kill those raiders and you were magnificent. I don't want to see you die in
some meaningless battle. Rowena wouldn't want it either. There are many of
them, and they're all killers.' 'So am I,' he said. 'And there are fewer
than there were.' 'Well, what happens to me when they cut you
down?' she snapped. 'What chance will I have?' He looked at her for a moment, his eyes
cold. 'None,' he told her. Tailia's eyes widened. 'You never liked me,
did you?' she whispered. 'You never liked any of us.' 'I have no time for this nonsense,' he
said, touching heels to the gelding and moving ahead. He did not look back, and
was not surprised when he heard the sound of her horse galloping off towards
the north. A few minutes later Shadak rode up from the
south. 'Where is she?' asked the hunter, letting go of the reins of the two
horses he was leading and allowing them to wander close by, cropping the long
grass. 'Riding for Padia,' answered Druss. The
hunter said nothing for a moment, but he gazed towards the north where Tailia
could be seen as a tiny figure in the distance. 'You'll not talk her out of
it,' Druss said. 'Did you send her away?' 'No. She thinks we are both dead men, and
she doesn't want to risk being taken by the slavers.' 'That's a hard point to argue with,' agreed
Shadak. Then he shrugged. 'Ah well, she chose her own road. Let us hope it was
a wise one.' 'What of the raiders?' asked Druss, all
thoughts of Tailia gone from his mind. 'They rode through the night, and are
heading due south. I think they will make camp by the Tigren, some thirty miles
from here. There is a narrow valley opening on to a bowl-shaped canyon. It's
been used by slavers for years - and horse thieves, cattle stealers and
renegades. It is easily defendable.' 'How long until we reach them?' 'Some time after midnight. We'll move on
for two more hours, then we'll rest and eat before switching horses.' 'I don't need a rest.' 'The horses do,' said Shadak, 'and so do I.
Be patient. It will be a long night, and fraught with peril. And I have to tell
you that our chances are not good. Tailia was right to be concerned for her
safety; we will need more luck than any two men have a right to ask for.' 'Why are you doing this?' asked Druss. 'The
women are nothing to you.' Shadak did not reply and they rode in silence until
the sun was almost at noon. The hunter spotted a small grove of trees to the
east and turned his horse; the two men dismounted in the shade of several
spreading elms beside a rock pool. 'How many did you kill back there?' he
asked Druss as they sat in the shade. 'Six,' answered the axeman, taking a strip
of dried beef from the pouch at his side and tearing off a chunk. 'You ever kill men before?' 'No.' 'Six is . . . impressive. What did you
use?' Druss chewed for a moment, then swallowed. 'Felling-axe and a hatchet.
Oh. . . and one of their daggers,' he said at last. 'And my hands.' 'And you have had no training in combat?' 'No.' Shadak shook his head. Talk me through the
fights - everything you can remember.' Druss did so, Shadak listened in
silence, and when the axeman had finished his tale the hunter smiled. 'You are
a rare young man. You positioned yourself well, in front of the fallen tree.
That was a good move - the first of many, it seems. But the most impressive is
the last. How did you know the swordsman would jump to your left?' 'He saw I had an axe and that I was
right-handed. In normal circumstances the axe would have been raised over my
left shoulder and pulled down towards the right. Therefore he moved to his
right - my left.' 'That is cool thinking for a man in combat.
I think there is a great deal of your grandfather in you.' 'Don't say that!' growled Druss. 'He was
insane.' 'He was also a brilliant fighting man. Yes,
he was evil. But that does not lessen his courage and his skills.' 'I am my own man,' said Druss. 'What I have
is mine.' 'I do not doubt it. But you have great
strength, good timing and a warrior's mind. These are gifts that pass from
father to son, and on through the line. But know this, laddie, there are
responsibilities that you must accept.' 'Like what?' 'Burdens that separate the hero from the
rogue.' 'I don't know what you mean.' 'It comes back to the question you asked
me, about the women. The true warrior lives by a code. He has to. For each man
there are different perspectives, but at the core they are the same: Never
violate a woman, nor harm a child. Do not lie, cheat or steal. These things are
for lesser men. Protect the weak against the evil strong. And never allow
thoughts of gain to lead you into the pursuit of evil.' 'This is your code?' asked Druss. 'It is. And there is more, but I shall not
bore you with it.' 'I am not bored. Why do you need such a
code to live by?' Shadak laughed. 'You will understand,
Druss, as the years go by.' 'I want to understand now,' said the
younger man. 'Of course you do. That is the curse of the
young, they want it all now. No. Rest a while. Even your prodigious strength
will fail after a time. Sleep a little. And wake refreshed. It will be a long
-and bloody - night.' * The moon was high, and a quarter full in a
cloudless sky. Silver light bathed the mountains, rippling on the river below,
making it seem of molten metal. Three camp-fires burned and Druss could just
make out the movement of men in the flickering light. The women were huddled
between two wagons; there was no fire near them, but guards patrolled close by.
To the north of the wagons, around thirty paces from the women, was a large
tent. It gleamed yellow-gold, like a great lantern, shimmering shadows being
cast on the inside walls; there was obviously a brazier within, and several
lamps. Shadak moved silently alongside the axeman,
beckoning him back. Druss edged from the slope, returning to the glade where
the horses were tethered. 'How many did you count?' asked Shadak,
keeping his voice low. 'Thirty-four, not including those inside
the tent.' There are two men there, Harib Ka and
Collan. But I make it thirty-six outside. They have placed two men by the
river-bank to prevent any of the women trying to swim to safety.' 'When do we go in?' asked Druss. 'You are very anxious to fight, laddie. But
I need you to have a cool head down there. No baresark warfare.' 'Do not concern yourself about me, hunter.
I merely want my wife back.' Shadak nodded. 'I understand that, but now
I want you to consider something. What if she has been raped?' Druss's eyes gleamed, his fingers
tightening on the axe haft. 'Why do you ask this now?' 'It is certain that some of the women will
have been violated. It is the way of men such as these to take their pleasures
where they want them. How cool do you feel now?' Druss swallowed back his rising anger.
'Cool enough. I am not a baresark, Shadak. I know this. And I will follow your
plan to the last detail, live or die, win or lose.' 'Good. We will move two hours before dawn.
Most of them will be deeply asleep by then. Do you believe in the gods?' 'I never saw one - so no.' .Shadak grinned. 'Neither do I. It puts
praying for divine help out of the question, I suppose.' Druss was silent for a moment. 'Tell me
now,' he said at last, 'why you need a code to live by.' Shadak's face was ghostly in the moonlight,
the expression suddenly stern and forbidding. Then he relaxed and turned to
gaze down at the camp of the raiders. 'Those men down there have only one code.
It is simple: Do what you will is the whole of the law. Do you
understand?' 'No,' admitted Druss. 'It means that whatever their strength can
obtain is rightfully theirs. If another man holds something they desire they
kill the other man. This is right in their minds; this is the law the world
offers - the law of the wolf. But you and I are no different from them, Druss.
We have the same desires, the same perceived needs. If we are attracted to a
woman, why should we not have her, regardless of her opinions? If another man
has wealth, why should we not take it, if we are stronger, deadlier than he? It
is an easy trap to fall into. Collan was once an officer in the Drenai lancers.
He comes from a good family; he took the Oath as we all did, and when he said
the words he probably believed them. But in Drenan he met a woman he wanted
desperately, and she wanted him. But she was married. Collan murdered her
husband. That was his first step on the road to Perdition; after that the other
steps were easy. Short of money, he became a mercenary - fighting for gold in
any cause, right or wrong, good or evil. He began to see only what was good for
Collan. Villages were there merely for him to raid. Harib Ka is a Ventrian
nobleman, distantly related to the Royal House. His story is similar. Both
lacked the Iron Code. I am not a good man, Druss, but the Code holds me to the
Way of the Warrior.' 'I can understand,' said Druss, 'that a man
will seek to protect what is his, and not steal or kill for gain. But it does
not explain why you risk your life tonight for women you do not know.' 'Never back away from an enemy, Druss.
Either fight or surrender. It is not enough to say I will not be evil.
It must be fought wherever it is found. I am hunting Collan, not just for
killing my son but for being what he is. But if necessary I will put off that
hunt tonight in order for the girls to be freed; they are more important.' 'Perhaps,' Druss said, unconvinced. 'For
me, all I want is Rowena and a home in the mountains. I care nothing about
fighting evil.' 'I hope you learn to care,' said Shadak. * Harib Ka could not sleep. The ground was
hard beneath the tent floor and despite the heat from the brazier he felt cold
through to his bones. The girl's face haunted him. He sat up and reached for
the wine-jug. You are drinking too much, he told himself. Stretching, he poured
a full goblet of red wine, draining it in two swallows. Then he pushed back his
blankets and rose. His head ached. He sat down on a canvas stool and refilled
his goblet. What have you become? whispered a voice in his mind. He rubbed at his eyes, his thoughts
returning to the academy and his days with Bodasen and the young Prince. 'We will change the world,' said the
Prince. 'We will feed the poor and ensure employment for all. And we will drive
the raiders from Ventria, and establish a kingdom of peace and prosperity.' Harib Ka gave a dry laugh and sipped his
wine. Heady days, a time of youth and optimism with its talk of knights and brave
deeds, great victories and the triumph of the Light over the Dark. 'There is no Light and Dark,' he said
aloud. 'There is only Power.' He thought then of the first girl - what
was her name, Mari? Yes. Compliant, obedient to his desires, warm, soft. She had
cried out with pleasure at his touch. No. She had pretended to enjoy his coarse
love-making. 'I'll do anything for you - but don't hurt me.' Don't hurt me. The chill winds of autumn rippled the tent
walls. Within two hours of enjoying Mari he had felt in need of a second woman,
and had chosen the hazel-eyed witch. That was a mistake. She had entered his
tent, rubbing at her chafed wrists, her eyes large and sorrowful. 'You intend to rape me?' she had asked him
quietly. He had smiled. 'Not necessarily. That is
your choice. What is your name?' 'Rowena,' she told him. 'And how can it be
my choice?' 'You can give yourself to me, or you can
fight me. Either way the result will be the same. So why not enjoy the
love-making?' 'Why do you speak of love?' 'What?' 'There is no love in this. You have
murdered those I have loved. And now you seek to pleasure yourself at the
expense of what dignity I have left.' He strode towards her, gripping her upper
arms. 'You are not here to debate with me, whore! You are here to do as you are
told.' 'Why do you call me a whore? Does it make
your actions more simple for you? Oh, Harib Ka, how would Rajica view your
actions?' He reeled back as if struck. 'What do you
know of Rajica?' 'Only that you loved her - and that she
died in your arms.' 'You are a witch!' 'And you are a lost man, Harib Ka.
Everything you once held dear has been sold - your pride, your honour, your
love of life.' 'I will not be judged by you,' he said, but
he made no move to silence her. 'I do not judge you,' she told him. 'I pity
you. And I tell you this: unless you release me and the other women, you will
die.' 'You are a seer also?' he said, trying to
mock. 'Are the Drenai cavalry close, witch? Is there an army waiting to fall
upon me and my men? No. Do not seek to threaten me, girl. Whatever else I may
have lost I am still a warrior and, with the possible exception of Collan, the
finest swordsman you will ever see. I do not fear death. No. Sometimes I long
for it.' He felt his passion ebbing away. 'So tell me, witch, what is this
peril I face?' 'His name is Druss. He is my husband.' 'We killed all the men in the village.' 'No. He was in the woods, felling timbers
for the palisade.' 'I sent six men there.' 'But they have not returned,' Rowena
pointed out. 'You are saying he killed them all?' 'He did,' she told him softly, 'and now he
is coming for you.' 'You make him sound like a warrior of
legend,' said Harib uneasily. 'I could send men back to kill him.' 'I hope you do not.' 'You fear for his life?' 'No, I would mourn for theirs.' She sighed. 'Tell me of him. Is he a swordsman? A
soldier?' 'No, he is the son of a carpenter. But once
I dreamt I saw him on a mountainside. He was black-bearded and his axe was
smeared with blood. And before him were hundreds of souls. They stood mourning
their lives. More flowed from his axe, and they wailed. Men of many nations,
billowing like smoke until broken by the breeze. All slain by Druss. Mighty
Druss. The Captain of the Axe. The Deathwalker.' 'And this is your husband?' 'No, not yet. This is the man he will
become if you do not free me. This is the man you created when you slew his
father and took me prisoner. You will not stop him, Harib Ka.' He sent her away then, and ordered the
guards to let her remain unmolested. Collan had come to him and had laughed at
his misery. 'By Missael, Harib, she is just a village wench and now a slave.
She is property. Our property. And her gift makes her worth ten times
the price we will receive for any of the others. She is attractive and young -
I'd say around a thousand gold pieces' worth. There is that Ventrian merchant,
Kabuchek; he's always looking for seers and fortune-tellers. I'll wager he'd
pay a thousand.' Harib sighed. 'Aye, you are right, my
friend. Take her. We'll need coin upon our arrival. But don't touch her,
Collan,' he warned the handsome swordsman. 'She really does have the Gift, and
she will see into your soul.' 'There is nothing to see,' answered Collah,
with a harsh, forced smile. * Druss edged his way along the river-bank,
keeping close to the undergrowth and pausing to listen. There were no sounds
save the rustling of autumn leaves in the branches above, no movement apart
from the occasional swooping flight of bat or owl. His mouth was dry, but he
felt no fear. Across the narrow river he saw a white
jutting boulder, cracked down the centre. According to Shadak, the first of the
sentries was positioned almost opposite. Moving carefully Druss crept back into
the woods, then angled towards the river-bank, timing his approach by the wind
which stirred the leaves above him, the rustling in the trees masking the sound
of his movements. The sentry was sitting on a rock no more
than ten feet to Druss's right, and he had stretched out his right leg. Taking
Snaga in his left hand, Druss wiped his sweating palm on his trews, his eyes
scanning the undergrowth for the second sentry. He could see no one. Druss waited, his back against a broad
tree. From a little distance to the left came a harsh, gurgling sound. The
sentry heard it too, and rose. 'Bushin! What are you doing there, you
fool?' Druss stepped out behind the man. 'He is
dying,' he said. The man spun, hand snaking down for the
sword at his hip. Snaga flashed up and across, the silver blade entering the
neck just below the ear and shearing through sinew and bone. The head toppled
to the right, the body to the left. Shadak stepped from the undergrowth. 'Well
done,' he whispered. 'Now, when I send the women down to you, get them to wade
across by the boulder, then head north up into the canyon to the cave.' 'We've been over this many times,' Druss
pointed out. Ignoring the comment, Shadak laid a hand on
the younger man's shoulder. 'Now, whatever happens, do not come back into the
camp. Stay with the women. There is only one path up to the cave, but several
leading from it to the north. Get the women moving on the north-west route. You
hold the path.' Shadak faded back into the undergrowth and
Druss settled down to wait. * Shadak moved carefully to the edge of the
camp. Most of the women were asleep, and a guard was sitting by them; his head
was resting against a wagon wheel, and Shadak guessed he was dozing. Unbuckling
his sword-belt, he moved forward on his belly, drawing himself on his elbows
until he reached the wagon. Slipping his hunting-knife from the sheath at his
hip, Shadak came up behind the man - his left hand reached through the wheel,
fingers closing on the sentry's throat. The knife rammed home into the man's
back; his leg jerked once, then he was still. Moving back from beneath the wagon, Shadak
came to the first girl. She was sleeping close to several other women, huddled
together for warmth. He clamped a hand over her mouth and shook her. She awoke
in a panic and started to struggle. 'I am here to rescue you!' hissed Shadak.
'One of your villagers is by the river-bank and he will lead you to safety. You
understand? When I release you, slowly wake the others. Head south to the
river. Druss, the son of Bress, is waiting there. Nod if you understand me.' He felt her head move against his hand.
'Good. Make sure none of the others make a noise. You must move slowly. Which
one is Rowena?' 'She is not with us,' whispered the girl.
They took her away.' 'Where?' 'One of the leaders, a man with a scarred
cheek, he rode out with her just after dusk.' Shadak swore softly. There was no time for
a second plan. 'What is your name?' 'Mari.' 'Well, Mari, get the others moving - and
tell Druss to follow the original plan,' Shadak moved away from the girl, gathered
his swords and belted them to his waist. Then he stepped out into the open and
strolled casually towards the tent. Only a few men were awake, and they paid
little heed to the figure moving through the shadows so confidently. Lifting the tent-flap he swiftly entered,
drawing his right-hand sword as he did so. Harib Ka was sitting on a canvas
chair with a goblet of wine in his left hand, a sabre in his right. 'Welcome to
my hearth, Wolf-man,' he said, with a smile. He drained the goblet and stood.
Wine had run into his dark, forked beard, making it shine in the lantern light
as if oiled. 'May I offer you a drink?' 'Why not?' answered Shadak, aware that if
they began to fight too soon the noise of clashing steel would wake the other
raiders and they would see the women fleeing. 'You are far from home,' remarked Harib Ka. 'These days I have no home,' Shadak told
him. Harib Ka filled a second goblet and passed
it to the hunter. 'You are here to kill me?' 'I came for Collan. I understand he has
gone?' 'Why Collan?' asked Harib Ka, his dark eyes
glittering in the golden light. 'He killed my son in Corialis.' 'Ah, the blond boy. Fine swordsman, but too
reckless.' 'A vice of the young.' Shadak sipped his
wine, his anger controlled like an armourer's fire, hot but contained. 'That vice killed him,' observed Shadak.
'Collan is very skilled. Where did you leave the young villager, the one with
the axe?' 'You are well informed.' 'Only a few hours ago his wife stood where
you now stand; she told me he was coming. She's a witch - did you know that?' 'No. Where is she?' 'On her way to Mashrapur with Collan. When
do you want the fight to begin?' 'As soon as . . .' began Shadak, but even
as he was speaking Harib attacked, his sabre slashing for Shadak's throat. The
hunter ducked, leaned to the left and kicked out at Harib's knee. The Ventrian
crashed to the floor and Shadak's sword touched the skin of Harib's throat.
'Never fight drunk,' he said softly. 'I'll remember that. What now?' 'Now tell me where Collan stays in
Mashrapur.' 'The White Bear Inn. It's in the western
quarter.' 'I know that. Now, what is your life worth,
Harib Ka?' To the Drenai authorities? Around a thousand
gold pieces. To me? I have nothing to offer - until I sell my slaves.' 'You have no slaves.' 'I can find them again. Thirty women on
foot in the mountains will pose me no problem.' 'Hunting is not easy with a slit throat,'
pointed out Shadak, adding an extra ounce of pressure to the sword-blade, which
pricked the skin of Harib's neck. 'True,' agreed the Ventrian, glancing up.
'What do you suggest?' Just as Shadak was about to answer he caught the gleam
of triumph in Harib's eyes and he swung round. But too late. Something cold, hard and metallic crashed
against his skull. And the world spun into darkness. * Pain brought Shadak back to consciousness,
harsh slaps to his face that jarred his teeth. His eyes opened. His arms were
being held by two men who had hauled him to his knees, and Harib Ka was
squatting before him. 'Did you think me so stupid that I would
allow an assassin to enter my tent unobserved? I knew someone was following us.
And when the four men I left in the pass did not return I guessed it had to be
you. Now I have questions for you, Shadak. Firstly, where is the young farmer
with the axe; and secondly, where are my women?' Shadak said nothing. One of the men holding
him crashed a fist against the hunter's ear; lights blazed before Shadak's eyes
and he sagged to his right. He watched Harib Ka rise and move to the brazier
where the coals had burned low. 'Get him outside to a fire,' ordered the
leader. Shadak was hauled to his feet and half carried out into the camp. Most
of the men were still asleep. His captors pushed him to his knees beside a
camp-fire and Harib Ka drew his dagger, pushing the blade into the flames. 'You
will tell me what I wish to know,' he said, 'or I will burn out your eyes and
then set you free in the mountains.' Shadak tasted blood on his tongue, and fear
in his belly. But still he said nothing. An unearthly scream tore through the
silence of the night, followed by the thunder of hooves. Harib swung to see
forty terrified horses galloping towards the camp. One of the men holding the
hunter turned also, his grip slackening. Shadak surged upright, head butting
the raider who staggered back. The second man, seeing the stampeding horses
closing fast, released his hold and ran for the safety of the wagons. Harib Ka
drew his sabre and leapt at Shadak, but the first of the horses cannoned into
him, spinning him from his feet. Shadak spun on his heel to face the terrified
beasts and began to wave his arms. The maddened horses swerved around him and
galloped on through the camp. Some men, still wrapped in their blankets, were
trampled underfoot. Others tried to halt the charging beasts. Shadak ran back
to Harib's tent and found his swords. Then he stepped out into the night. All
was chaos. The fires had been scattered by pounding
hooves and several corpses were lying on the open ground. Some twenty of the
horses had been halted and calmed; the others were running on through the
woods, pursued by many of the warriors. A second scream sounded and despite his
years of experience in warfare and battle, Shadak was astonished by what
followed. Alone, the young woodsman had attacked the
camp. The awesome axe shone silver in the moonlight, slashing and cleaving into
the surprised warriors. Several took up swords and ran at him; they died in
moments. But he could not survive. Shadak saw the
raiders group together, a dozen men spread out in a semi-circle around the
black-garbed giant, Harib Ka among them. The hunter, his two short swords
drawn, ran towards them yelling the battle-cry of the Lancers. 'Ayiaa! Ayiaa!'
At that moment arrows flashed from the woods. One took a raider in the throat,
a second glanced from a helm to plunge home into an unprotected shoulder.
Combined with the sudden battle-cry, the attack made the raiders pause, many of
them backing away and scanning the tree line. At that moment Druss charged the
enemy centre, cutting to left and right. The raiders fell back before him,
several tumbling to the ground, tripping over their fellows. The mighty
blood-smeared axe clove into them, rising and falling with a merciless rhythm. Just as Shadak reached them, the raiders
broke and fled. More arrows sailed after them. Harib Ka ran for one of the horses,
grabbing its mane and vaulting to its bare back. The animal reared, but he held
on. Shadak hurled his right-hand sword, which lanced into Harib's shoulder. The
Ventrian sagged, then fell to the ground as the horse galloped away 'Druss!' shouted Shadak. 'Druss!' The
axeman was pursuing the fleeing raiders, but he stopped at the edge of the
trees and swung back. Harib Ka was on his knees, trying to pull the
brass-hilted sword from his body. The axeman stalked back to where Shadak was
waiting. He was blood-drenched and his eyes glittered. 'Where is she?' he asked
the hunter. 'Collan took her to Mashrapur; they left at
dusk.' Two women emerged from the trees, carrying
bows and quivers of arrows. 'Who are they?' asked Shadak. 'The Tanner's daughters. They did a lot of
hunting for the village. I gave them the bows the sentries had with them.' The tallest of the women approached Druss.
'They are fleeing into the night. I don't think they'll come back now. You want
us to follow them?' 'No, bring the others down and gather the
horses.' The axeman turned towards the kneeling figure of Harib Ka. 'Who is
this?' Druss asked Shadak. 'One of the leaders.' Without a word Druss clove the axe through
Harib's neck. 'Not any more,' he observed. 'Indeed not,' agreed Shadak, stepping to
the still quivering corpse and pulling free his sword. He gazed around the
clearing and counted the bodies. 'Nineteen. By all the gods, Druss, I can't
believe you did that!' 'Some were trampled by the horses I
stampeded, others were killed by the girls.' Druss turned and stared out over
the campsite. Somewhere to his left a man groaned and the tallest of the girls
ran to him, plunging a dagger into his throat. Druss turned back to Shadak.
'Will you see the women get safely to Padia?' 'You're going on to Mashrapur?' 'I'm going to find her.' Shadak laid his hand on the young man's
shoulder. 'I hope that you do, Druss. Seek out the White Bear Inn - that's
where Collan will stay. But be warned, my friend. In Mashrapur, Rowena is his
property. That is their law.' 'This is mine,' answered Druss, raising the
double-headed axe. Shadak took the young man's arm and led him
back to Harib's tent where he poured himself a goblet of wine and drained it.
One of Harib's linen tunics was draped over a small chest and Shadak threw it
to Druss. 'Wipe off the blood. You look like a demon.' Druss smiled grimly and
wiped his face and arms, then cleaned the double blades. 'What do you know of Mashrapur?' asked
Shadak. The axeman shrugged. 'It is an independent
state, ruled by an exiled Ventrian Prince. That's all.' 'It is a haven for thieves and slavers,'
said Shadak. The laws are simple: those with gold to offer bribes are
considered fine citizens. It matters not where the gold comes from. Collan is
respected there; he owns property and dines with the Emir.' 'So?' 'So if you march in and kill him, you will
be taken and executed. It is that simple.' 'What do you suggest?' 'There is a small town around twenty miles
from here, due south. There is a man there, a friend of mine. Go to him, tell
him I sent you. He is young and talented. You won't like him, Druss; he is a
fop and a pleasure-seeker. He has no morals. But it will make him invaluable in
Mashrapur.' 'Who is this man?' 'His name is Sieben. He's a poet, a
saga-teller, and he performs at palaces; he's very good as a matter of fact. He
could have been rich. But he spends most of his time trying to bed every pretty
young woman who comes into his line of vision. He never concerns himself
whether they are married or single - that has brought him many enemies.' 'Already I don't like the sound of him.' Shadak chuckled. 'He has good qualities. He
is a loyal friend, and he is ridiculously fearless. A good man with a knife.
And he knows Mashrapur. Trust him.' 'Why should he help me?' 'He owes me a favour.' Shadak poured a
second goblet of wine and passed it to the young man. Druss sipped it, then drained the goblet.
'This is good. What is it?' 'Lentrian Red. Around five years old, I'd
say. Not the best, but good enough on a night like this.' 'I can see that a man could get a taste for
it,' Druss agreed. Chapter FourSieben was enjoying himself. A small crowd
had gathered around the barrel, and three men had already lost heavily. The
green crystal was small and fitted easily under one of the three walnut shells.
'I'll move a little more slowly,' the young poet told the tall, bearded warrior
who had just lost four silver pieces. His slender hands slid the shells around
the smooth barrel top, halting them in a line across the centre. 'Which one?
And take your time, my friend, for that emerald is worth twenty golden raq.' The man sniffed loudly and scratched at his
beard with a dirty finger. 'That one,' he said at last, pointing to the centre
shell. Sieben flipped the shell. There was nothing beneath it. Moving his hand
to the right he covered a second shell, expertly palmed the stone under it and
showed it to the audience. 'So close,' he said, with a bright smile.
The warrior swore, then turned and thrust his way through the crowd. A short
swarthy man was next; he had body odour that could have felled an ox. Sieben
was tempted to let him win. The fake emerald was only worth a tenth of what he
had already cheated from the crowd. But he was enjoying himself too much. The swarthy
man lost three silver pieces. The crowd parted and a young warrior eased
his way to the front as Sieben glanced up. The newcomer was dressed in black,
with shoulder guards of shining silver steel. He wore a helm on which was
blazoned a motif of two skulls on either side of a silver axe. And he was
carrying a double-headed axe. 'Try your luck?' asked Sieben, gazing up into the
eyes of winter blue. 'Why not?' answered the warrior, his voice
deep and cold. He placed a silver piece on the barrel head. The poet's hands
moved with bewildering speed, gliding the shells in elaborate figure eights. At
last he stopped. 'I hope you have a keen eye, my friend,'
said Sieben. 'Keen enough,' said the axeman, and leaning
forward he placed a huge finger on the central shell. 'It is here,' he said. 'Let us see,' said the poet, reaching out,
but the axeman pushed his hand away. 'Indeed we shall,' he said. Slowly he
flipped the shells to the left and right of the centre. Both were empty. 'I
must be right,' he said, his pale eyes locked to Sieben's face. You may show
us.' Lifting his finger, he gestured to the poet. Sieben forced a smile and palmed the crystal under the shell as he
flipped it. 'Well done, my friend. You are indeed hawk-eyed.' The crowd
applauded and drifted away. 'Thank you for not exposing me,' said
Sieben, rising and gathering his silver. 'Fools and money are like ice and heat,'
quoted the young man. 'They cannot live together. You are Sieben?' 'I might be,' answered the other
cautiously. 'Who is asking?' 'Shadak sent me.' 'For what purpose?' 'A favour you owe him.' 'That is between the two of us. What has it
to do with you?' The warrior's face darkened. 'Nothing at
all,' he said, then turned away and strode towards the tavern on the other side
of the street. As Sieben watched him go, a young woman approached from the
shadows. 'Did you earn enough to buy me a fine
necklace?' she asked. He swung and smiled. The woman was tall and shapely,
raven-haired and full-lipped; her eyes were tawny brown, her smile an enchantment.
She stepped into his embrace and winced. 'Why do you have to wear so many
knives?' she asked, moving back from him and tapping the brown leather baldric
from which hung four diamond-shaped throwing-blades. 'Affectation, my love. I'll not wear them
tonight. And as for your necklace - I'll have it with me.' Taking her hand he
kissed it. 'However, at the moment, duty calls.' 'Duty, my poet? What would you know of
duty?' He chuckled. 'Very little - but I always
pay my debts; it is my last finger-hold on the cliff of respectability. I will
see you later.' He bowed, then walked across the street. The tavern was an old, three-storeyed
building with a high gallery on the second floor overlooking a long room with
open fires at both ends. There was a score of bench tables and seats and a
sixty-foot brass-inlaid bar behind which six tavern maids were serving ale,
mead and mulled wine. The tavern was crowded, unusually so, but this was market
day and fanners and cattle-breeders from all over the region had gathered for
the auctions. Sieben stepped to the long bar, where a young tavern maid with
honey-blonde hair smiled and approached him. 'At last you visit me,' she said. 'Who could stay away from you for long,
dear heart?' he said with a smile, straining to remember her name. 'I will be finished here by second watch,'
she told him. 'Where's my ale?' shouted a burly farmer,
some way to the left. 'I was before you, goat-face!' came another
voice. The girl gave a shy smile to Sieben, then moved down the bar to quell
the threatened row. 'Here I am now, sirs, and I've only one
pair of hands. Give me a moment, won't you?' Sieben strolled through the crowds, seeking
out the axeman, and found him sitting alone by a narrow, open window. Sieben
eased on to the bench alongside him. 'Might be a good idea to start again,'
said the poet. 'Let me buy you a jug of ale.' 'I buy my own ale,' grunted the axeman.
'And don't sit so close.' Sieben stood and moved to the far side of
the table, seating himself opposite the young man. 'Is that more to your
liking?' he asked, with heavy sarcasm. 'Aye, it is. Are you wearing perfume?' 'Scented oil on the hair. You like it?' The axeman shook his head, but refrained
from comment. He cleared his throat. 'My wife has been taken by slavers. She is
in Mashrapur.' Sieben sat back and gazed at the young man.
'I take it you weren't home at the time,' he said. 'No. They took all the women. I freed them.
But Rowena wasn't with them; she was with someone called Collan. He left before
I got to the other raiders.' 'Before you got to the other raiders?'
repeated Sieben. 'Isn't there a little more to it?' 'To what?' 'How did you free the other women?' 'What in Hell's name does that matter? I
killed a few of them and the rest ran away. But that's not the point. Rowena
wasn't there - she's in Mashrapur.' Sieben raised a slender hand. 'Slow down,
there's a good fellow. Firstly, how does Shadak come into this? And secondly,
are you saying that you single-handedly attacked Harib Ka and his killers?' 'Not single-handedly. Shadak was there;
they were going to torture him. Also I had two girls with me; good archers.
Anyway, all that is past. Shadak said you could help me to find Rowena and come
up with a plan to rescue her.' 'From Collan?' 'Yes, from Collan,' stormed the axeman.
'Are you deaf or stupid?' Sieben's dark eyes narrowed and he leaned
forward. 'You have an appealing way of asking for help, my large and ugly
friend. Good luck with your quest!' He rose and moved back through the throng,
emerging into the late afternoon sunlight. Two men were lounging close to the
entrance, a third was whittling a length of wood with a razor-sharp
hunting-knife. The first of the men moved in front of the
poet; it was the warrior who had first lost money at the barrel head. 'Get your
emerald back, did you?' 'No,' answered Sieben, still angry. 'What a
bumptious, ill-bred boor!' 'Not a friend, then?' 'Hardly. I don't even know his name. More
to the point, I don't want to.' 'It's said you're crafty with those
knives,' said the warrior, pointing to the throwing-blades. 'Is it true?' 'Why do you ask?' 'Could be you'll get the emerald back if
you are.' 'You plan to attack him? Why? As far as I
could see he carries no wealth.' 'It's not his wealth!' snapped the second
warrior. Sieben stepped back as the man's body odour reached him. 'He's a
madman. He attacked our camp two days ago, stampeded our horses. Never did find
my grey. And he killed Harib. Asia's tits! He must have downed a dozen men with
that cursed axe.' 'If he killed a dozen, what makes you think
that three of you can deal with him?' The noxious warrior tapped his nose.
'Surprise. When he steps out, Rafin will ask him a question. As he turns, Zhak
and I will move in and gut him. But you could help. A knife through the eye
would slow him up some, eh?' 'Probably,' agreed Sieben, and he moved
away several paces to seat himself on a hitching rail. He drew a knife from its
sheath and began to clean his nails. 'You with us?' hissed the first man. 'We'll see,' said Sieben. * Druss sat at the table and gazed down at
the shining blades of the axe. He could see his reflection there, cold-eyed and
grim. The features were flat and sullen, the mouth a tight, angry line. He
removed the black helm and laid it on the blades, covering the face in the axe. 'Whenever you speak someone gets angry.'
The words of his father drifted up from the halls
of memory. And it was true. Some men had a knack for friendship, for easy
chatter and simple jests. Druss envied them. Until Rowena had walked into his
life he had believed such qualities were entirely lacking in him. But with her
he felt at ease, he could laugh and joke - and see himself for a moment as
others saw him, huge and bear-like, short-tempered and frightening. 'It was
your childhood, Druss,' Rowena told him one morning, as they sat on the
hillside overlooking the village. 'Your father moved from place to place,
always frightened he would be recognised, never allowing himself to become
close to people. It was easier for him, for he was a man. But it must have been
hard for a boy who never learned how to make friends.' 'I don't need friends,' he said. 'I need you.' The memory of those three softly spoken
words made his heart lurch. A tavern maid passed the table and Druss reached
out and caught her arm. 'Do you have Lentrian Red?' he asked. 'I'll bring you a goblet, sir.' 'Make it a jug.' He drank until his senses swam and his
thoughts became jumbled and confused. He remembered Alarm, and the punch which
broke the man's jaw, and then, after the raid, hauling Alarm's body into the
meeting hall. He had been stabbed through the back by a lance which had snapped
in half in his body. The dead man's eyes had been open. So many of the dead had
open eyes . . . all accusing. 'Why are you alive and we dead?' they asked
him. 'We had families, lives, dreams, hopes. Why should you outlive us?' 'More wine!' he bellowed and a young girl
with honey-blonde hair leaned over the table. 'I think you've had enough, sir. You've
drunk a quart already.' 'All the eyes were open,' he said. 'Old
women, children. The children were the worst. What kind of a man kills a
child?' 'I think you should go home, sir. Have a
little sleep.' 'Home?' He laughed, the sound harsh and
bitter. 'Home to the dead? And what would I tell them? The forge is cold. There
is no smell of fresh-baked bread; no laughter among the children. Just eyes.
No, not even eyes. Just ashes.' 'We heard there was a raid to the north,'
she said. 'Was that your home?' 'Bring me more wine, girl. It helps me.' 'It is a false friend, sir,' she whispered. 'It is the only one I have.' A burly, bearded man in a leather apron
moved in close. 'What does he want?' he asked the girl. 'More wine, sir.' 'Then fetch it for him - if he can pay.' Druss reached into the pouch at his side,
drawing out one of the six silver pieces Shadak had given him. He flipped it to
the innkeeper. 'Well, serve him!' the man ordered the maid. The second jug went the way of the first
and, when it was finished, Druss pushed himself ponderously to his feet. He
tried to don the helm, but it slipped from his fingers and rolled to the floor.
As he bent down, he rammed his brow against the edge of the table. The serving
maid appeared alongside him. 'Let me help you, sir,' she said, scooping up the
helm and gently placing it on his head. 'Thank you,' he said, slowly. He fumbled in
his pouch and gave her a silver piece. 'For . . . your . . . kindness,' he told
her, enunciating the words with care. 'I have a small room at the back, sir. Two
doors down from the stable. It is unlocked; you may sleep there if you wish.' He picked up the axe, but it too fell to
the floor, the prongs of the blades embedding in a wooden plank. 'Go back and
sleep, sir. I'll bring your . . . weapon with me later.' 'He nodded and weaved his way towards the
door. * Pulling open the door, he stepped out into
the fading sunlight, his stomach lurching. Someone spoke from his left, asking
him a question. Druss tried to turn, but stumbled into the man and they both
fell against the wall. He tried to right himself, grabbing the man's shoulder
and heaving himself upright. Through the fog in his mind he heard other men
running in. One of them screamed. Druss lurched back and saw a long-bladed
dagger clatter to the ground. The former wielder was standing alongside him,
his right arm raised unnaturally. Druss blinked. The man's wrist was pinned to
the inn door by a throwing knife. He heard the rasp of swords being drawn.
'Defend yourself, you fool!' came a voice. A swordsman ran at him and Druss stepped in
to meet him, parrying the lunging blade with his forearm and slamming a right
cross to the warrior's chin. The swordsman went down as if poleaxed. Swinging
to meet the second attacker, Druss lost his balance and fell heavily. But in
mid-swing the swordsman also stumbled and Druss lashed out with his foot,
catching his assailant on the heel and catapulting him to the ground. Rolling
to his knees, Druss grabbed the fallen man by the hair and hauled him close,
delivering a bone-crunching head butt to the warrior's nose. The man slumped
forward, unconscious. Druss released him. Another man moved alongside him and Druss
recognised the handsome young poet. 'Gods, you reek of cheap wine,' said
Sieben. 'Who. . . are you?' mumbled Druss, trying
to focus on the man with his arm pinned to the door. 'Miscreants,' Sieben told him, moving
alongside the stricken warrior and levering his knife clear. The man screamed
in pain but Sieben ignored him and returned to the street. 'I think you'd
better come with me, old horse.' Druss remembered little of the walk through
the town, only that he stopped twice to vomit, and his head began to ache
abominably. He awoke at midnight and found himself lying on a porch under the
stars. Beside him was a bucket. He sat up . . . and groaned as the terrible
pounding began in his head. It felt as if an iron band had been riveted to his
brow. Hearing sounds from within the house, he stood and moved to the door.
Then he halted. The sounds were unmistakable. 'Oh, Sieben . . . Oh . . . Oh . . . !' Druss swore and returned to the edge of the
porch. A breath of wind touched his face, bringing with it an unpleasant smell,
and he gazed down at himself. His jerkin was soiled with vomit, and he stank of
stale sweat and travel. To his left was a well. Forcing himself upright, he
walked to it, and slowly raised the bucket. Somewhere deep within his head a
demon began to strike at his skull with a red-hot hammer. Ignoring the pain,
Druss stripped to the waist and washed himself with the cold water. He heard the door open and turned to see a
dark-haired young woman emerge from the house. She looked at him, smiled, then
ran off through the narrow streets. Lifting the bucket, Druss tipped the last
of the contents over his head. 'At the risk of being offensive,' said
Sieben from the doorway, 'I think you need a little soap. Come inside. There's
a fire burning in the hearth and I've heated some water. Gods, it's freezing
out here.' Gathering his clothes, Druss followed the
poet inside. The house was small, only three rooms, all on the ground floor - a
cook-room with an iron stove, a bedroom and a square dining-room with a
stone-built hearth in which a fire was blazing. There was a table with four
wooden chairs and on either side of the hearth were comfort seats of padded
leather stuffed with horsehair. Sieben led him to the cloakroom where he
filled a bowl with hot water. Handing Druss a slab of white soap and a towel,
he opened a cupboard door and removed a plate of sliced beef and a loaf of
bread. 'Come in and eat when you're ready,' said the poet, as he walked back to
the dining-room. Druss scrubbed himself with the soap, which
smelled of lavender, then cleaned his jerkin and dressed. He found the poet
sitting by the fire with his long legs stretched out, a goblet of wine in one
hand. The other slender hand swept through the shoulder-length blond hair,
sweeping it back over his head. Holding it in place, he settled a black leather
headband over his brow; at the centre of the band was a glittering opal. The
poet lifted a small oval mirror and studied himself. 'Ah, what a curse it is to
be so good-looking,' he said, laying aside the mirror. 'Care for a drink?'
Druss felt his stomach heave and shook his head. 'Eat, my large friend. You may
feel as if your stomach will revolt, but it is the best thing for you. Trust
me.' Druss tore off a hunk of bread and sat
down, slowly chewing it. It tasted of ashes and bile, but he finished it
manfully. The poet was right. His stomach settled. The salted beef was harder
to take but, washed down with cool water, he soon began to feel his strength
returning. 'I drank too much,' he said. 'No, really? Two quarts, I understand.' 'I don't remember how much. Was there a
fight?' 'Not much of one, by your standards.' 'Who were they?' 'Some of the raiders you attacked.' 'I should have killed them.' 'Perhaps - but in the state you were in you
should consider yourself lucky to be alive.' Druss filled a clay cup with water and
drained it. 'You helped me, I remember that. Why?' 'A passing whim. Don't let it concern you.
Now, tell me again about your wife and the raid.' To what purpose? It's done. All I care
about is finding Rowena.' 'But you will need my help - otherwise
Shadak wouldn't have sent you to me. And I like to know the kind of man I'm
expected to travel with. You understand? So tell me.' 'There isn't a great deal to tell. The
raiders . . .' 'How many?' 'Forty or so. They attacked our village,
killed all the men, the old women, the children. They took the younger women
prisoner. I was in the woods, felling timber. Some killers came to the woods
and I dealt with them. Then I met Shadak, who was also following them; they
raided a town and killed his son. We freed the women. Shadak was captured. I
stampeded their horses and attacked the camp. That's it.' Sieben shook his head and smiled. 'I think
you could tell the entire history of the Drenai in less time than it takes to
boil an egg. A story-teller you are not, my friend - which is just as well,
since that is my main source of income and I loathe competition.' Druss rubbed his eyes and leaned back in
the chair, resting his head on the high padded leather cushion. The heat from
the fire was soothing and his body was weary beyond anything he had known
before. The days of the chase had taken their toll. He felt himself drifting on
a warm sea. The poet was speaking to him, but his words failed to penetrate. He awoke with the dawn to find the fire was
burned down to a few glowing coals and the house empty. Druss yawned and
stretched, then walked to the kitchen, helping himself to stale bread and a
hunk of cheese. He drank some more water, then heard the main door creak open.
Wandering out, he saw Sieben and a young, blonde woman. The poet was carrying
his axe and his gauntlets. 'Someone to see you, old horse,' said
Sieben, laying the axe in the doorway and tossing the gauntlets to a chair. The
poet smiled and walked back out into the sunlight. The blonde woman approached Druss, smiling
shyly. 'I didn't know where you were. I kept your axe for you.' 'Thank you. You are from the inn.' She was
dressed now in a woollen dress of poor quality, that once had been blue but was
now a pale grey. Her figure was shapely, her face gentle and pretty, her eyes
warm and brown. 'Yes. We spoke yesterday,' she said, moving
to a chair and sitting down with her hands on her knees. 'You seemed . . . very
sad.' 'I am . . . myself now,' he told her
gently. 'Sieben told me your wife was taken by
slavers.' 'I will find her.' 'When I was sixteen raiders attacked our
village. They killed my father and wounded my husband. I was taken, with seven
other girls, and we were sold in Mashrapur. I was there two years. I escaped
one night, with another girl, and we fled into the wilderness. She died there,
killed by a bear, but I was found by a company of pilgrims on their way to
Lentria. I was almost dead from starvation. They helped me, and I made my way
home.''Why are you telling me all this?' asked Druss softly, seeing the sadness
in her eyes. 'My husband had married someone else. And
my brother, Loric, who had lost an arm in the raid, told me I was no longer
welcome. He said I was a fallen woman, and if I had any pride I would
have taken my own life. So I left.' Druss reached out and took her hand. 'Your
husband was a worthless piece of dung, and your brother likewise. But I ask
again, why are you telling me this?' 'When Sieben told me you were hunting for
your wife . . . it made me remember. I used to dream Karsk was coming for me.
But a slave has no rights, you know, in Mashrapur. Anything the Lord wishes, he
can have. You cannot refuse. When you find your . . .lady. . .she may well have
been roughly used.' She fell silent and sat staring at her hands. 'I don't know
how to say what I mean . . .When I was a slave I was beaten, I was humiliated.
I was raped and abused. But nothing was as bad as the look on my husband's face
when he saw me, or the disgust in my brother's voice when he cast me out.' Still holding to her hand, Druss leaned in
towards her. 'What is your name?' 'Sashan.' 'If I had been your husband, Sashan, I
would have followed you. I would have found you. And when I did I would have
taken you in my arms and brought you home. As I will bring Rowena home.' 'You will not judge her?' He smiled. 'No more than I judge you, save
to say that you are a brave woman and any man - any true man - would be proud
to have you walk beside him.' She reddened and rose. 'If wishes were
horses, then beggars would ride,' she said, then turned away and walked to the
doorway. She looked back once, but said nothing; then she stepped from the
house. Sieben entered. 'That was well said, old
horse. Very well said. You know, despite your awful manners and your lack of
conversation, I think I like you. Let's go to Mashrapur and find your lady.' Druss looked hard at the slim young man. He
was perhaps an inch taller than the axeman and his clothes were of fine cloth,
his long hair barber-trimmed, not hacked by a knife nor cut with shears using a
basin for a guide. Druss glanced down at the man's hands; the skin was soft,
like that of a child. Only the baldric and the knives gave any evidence Sieben
was a fighter. 'Well? Do I pass inspection, old horse?' 'My father once said that fortune makes for
strange bedfellows,' said Druss. 'You should see the problem from where I'm
standing,' answered Sieben. 'You will travel with a man versed in literature
and poetry, a story-teller without equal. While I, on the other hand, get to
ride beside a peasant in a vomit-flecked jerkin.' Amazingly Druss found no rising anger, no
surging desire to strike out. Instead he laughed, tension flowing from him. 'I like you, little man,' he said. * Within the first day they had left the
mountains behind them, and rode now through valleys and vales, and sweeping
grassland dotted with hills and ribbon streams. There were many hamlets and
villages beside the road, the buildings of whitewashed stone with roofs of
timber or slate. Sieben rode gracefully, straight of back
and easy in the saddle, sunlight gleaming from his riding tunic of pale blue
silk and the silver edging on his knee-length riding boots. His long blond hair
was tied back in a pony-tail, and he also sported a silver headband. 'How many
headbands do you have?' asked Druss as they set off. 'Pitifully few. Pretty though, isn't it? I
picked it up in Drenan last year. I've always like silver.' 'You look like a fop.' 'Just what I needed this morning,' said
Sieben, smiling, 'hints on sartorial elegance from a man whose hair has
apparently been cut with a rusty saw, and whose only shirt carries wine stains,
and . . . no, don't tell me what the other marks are.' Druss glanced down. 'Dried blood. But it's
not mine.' 'Well, what a relief. I shall sleep more
soundly tonight for knowing that.' For the first hour of the journey the poet
tried to give helpful advice to the young axeman. 'Don't grip the horse with
your calves, just your thighs. And straighten your back.' Finally he gave up.
'You know, Druss, my dear, some men are born to ride. You on the other hand
have no feel for it. I've seen sacks of carrots with more grace than you.' The axeman's reply was short and brutally
obscene. Sieben chuckled and gazed up at the sky which was cloudless and
gloriously blue. 'What a day to set off in search of a kidnapped princess,' he
said. 'She's not a princess.' 'All kidnapped women are princesses,'
Sieben told him. 'Have you never listened to the stories? Heroes are tall,
golden-haired and wondrously handsome. Princesses are demure and beautiful,
spending their lives waiting for the handsome prince who will free them. By the
gods, Druss, no one would want to hear tales of the truth. Can you imagine? The
young hero unable to ride in search of his sweetheart because the large boil on
his buttocks prevents him from sitting on a horse?' Sieben's laughter rippled
out. Even normally grim Druss smiled and Sieben
continued. 'It's the romance, you see. A woman in stories is either a goddess
or a whore. The princess, being a beautiful virgin, falls into the former
category. The hero must also be pure, waiting for the moment of his destiny in
the arms of the virginal princess. It's wonderfully quaint - and quite ridiculous
of course. Love-making, like playing the lyre, requires enormous practice.
Thankfully the stories always end before we see the young couple fumbling their
way through their first coupling.' 'You talk like a man who has never been in
love,' said Druss. 'Nonsense. I have been in love scores of
times,' snapped the poet. Druss shook his head. 'If that were true,
then you would know just how . . . how fine the fumbling can be. How far
is it to Mashrapur?' 'Two days. But the slave markets are always
held on Missael or Manien, so we've time. Tell me about her.' 'No.' 'No? You don't like talking about your
wife?' 'Not to strangers. Have you ever been wed?' 'No - nor ever desired to be. Look around
you, Druss. See all those flowers on the hillsides? Why would a man want to
restrict himself to just one bloom? Just one scent? I had a horse once,
Shadira, a beautiful beast, faster than the north wind. She could clear a
four-bar fence with room to spare. I was ten when my father gave her to me, and
Shadira was fifteen. But by the time I was twenty Shadira could no longer run
as fast, and she jumped not at all. So I got a new horse. You understand what I
am saying?' 'Not a word of it,' grunted Druss. 'Women
aren't horses.' 'That's true,' agreed Sieben. 'Most horses
you want to ride more than once.' Druss shook his head. 'I don't know what it
is that you call love. And I don't want to know.' The trail wound to the south, the hills
growing more gentle as the mountain range receded behind them. Ahead on the
road they saw an old man shuffling towards them. He wore robes of faded blue
and he leaned heavily on a long staff. As they neared, Sieben saw that the man
was blind. The old man halted as they rode closer.
'Can we help you, old one?' asked Sieben. 'I need no help,' answered the man, his
voice surprisingly strong and resonant. 'I am on my way to Drenan.' 'It is a long walk,' said Sieben. 'I am in no hurry. But if you have food,
and are willing to entertain a guest at your midday meal, I would be glad to
join you.' 'Why not?' said Sieben. 'There is a stream
some little way to your right; we will see you there.' Swinging his mount
Sieben cantered the beast across the grass, leaping lightly from the saddle and
looping the reins over the horse's head as Druss rode up and dismounted. 'Why did you invite him to join us?' Sieben glanced back. The old man was out of
earshot and moving slowly towards them. 'He is a seeker, Druss. A mystic. Have
you not heard of them?' 'No.' 'Source Priests who blind themselves in
order to increase their powers of prophecy. Some of them are quite
extraordinary. It's worth a few oats.' Swiftly the poet prepared a fire over which
he placed a copper pot half filled with water. He added oats and a little salt.
The old man sat cross-legged nearby. Druss removed his helm and jerkin and
stretched out in the sunshine. After the porridge had cooked, Sieben filled a
bowl and passed it to the priest. 'Do you have sugar?' asked the Seeker. 'No. We have a little honey. I will fetch
it.' After the meal was concluded the old man
shuffled to the stream and cleaned his bowl, returning it to Sieben. 'And now
you wish to know the future?' asked the priest, with a crooked smile. 'That would be pleasant,' said Sieben. 'Not necessarily. Would you like to know
the day of your death?' 'I take your point, old man. Tell me of the
next beautiful woman who will share my bed.' The old man chuckled. 'A talent so large,
yet men only require such infinitesimal examples of it. I could tell you of
your sons, and of moments of peril. But no, you wish to hear of matters
inconsequential. Very well. Give me your hand.' Sieben sat opposite him and extended his
right hand. The old man took it, and sat silently for several minutes. Finally
he sighed. 'I have walked the paths of your future, Sieben the Poet, Sieben the
Saga-master. The road is long. The next woman? A whore in Mashrapur, who will
ask for seven silver pennies. You will pay it.' He released Sieben's hand and turned his
blind eyes towards Druss. 'Do you wish your future told?' 'I will make my own future,' answered
Druss. 'Ah, a man of strength and independent
will. Come. Let me at least see, for my own interest, what tomorrow holds for
you.' 'Come on, lad,' pleaded Sieben. 'Give him
your hand.' Druss rose and walked to where the old man
sat. He squatted down before him and thrust out his hand. The priest's fingers
closed around his own. 'A large hand,' he said. 'Strong . . . very strong.'
Suddenly he winced, his body stiffening. 'Are you yet young, Druss the Legend?
Have you stood at the pass?' 'What pass?' 'How old are you?' 'Seventeen.' 'Of course. Seventeen. And searching for
Rowena. Yes . . . Mashrapur. I see it now. Not yet the Deathwalker, the
Silver Slayer, the Captain of the Axe. But still mighty.' He released his hold
and sighed. 'You are quite right, Druss, you will make your own future; you
will need no words from me.' The old man rose and took up his staff. 'I thank
you for your hospitality.' Sieben stood also. 'At least tell us what
awaits in Mashrapur,' he said. 'A whore and seven silver pennies,'
answered the priest with a dry smile. He turned his blind eyes towards Druss.
'Be strong, axeman. The road is long and there are legends to be made. But
Death awaits, and he is patient. You will see him as you stand beneath the
gates in the fourth Year of the Leopard.' He walked slowly away. 'Incredible,'
whispered Sieben. 'Why?' responded Druss. 'I could have
foretold that the next woman you meet would be a whore.' 'He knew our names, Druss; he knew
everything. Now, when is the fourth Year of the Leopard?' 'He told us nothing. Let's move on.' 'How can you say that it was nothing? He
called you Druss the Legend. What legend? How will you build it?' Ignoring him, Druss walked to his horse and
climbed into the saddle. 'I don't like horses,' he said. 'Once we reach
Mashrapur I'll sell it. Rowena and I will walk back.' Sieben looked up at the pale-eyed young
man. 'It meant nothing to you, did it? His prophecy, I mean.' 'They were just words, poet. Noises on the
air. Let's ride.' After a while Sieben spoke. 'The Year of
the Leopard is forty-three years away. Gods, Druss, you'll live to be an old
man. I wonder where the gates are.' Druss ignored him and rode on. Chapter FiveBodasen threaded his way through the crowds
milling on the dock, past the gaudily dressed women with their painted faces
and insincere smiles, past the stallholders bellowing their bargains, past the
beggars with their deformed limbs and their pleading eyes. Bodasen hated
Mashrapur, loathed the smell of the teeming multitudes who gathered here
seeking instant wealth. The streets were narrow and choked with the detritus of
humanity, the houses built high - three-, four- and five-storey - all linked by
alleyways and tunnels and shadowed pathways where robbers could plunge their
blades into unsuspecting victims and flee through the labyrinthine back streets
before the undermanned city guards could apprehend them. What a city, thought Bodasen. A place of
filth and painted women, a haven for thieves, smugglers, slavers and renegades. A woman approached him. 'You look lonely,
my love,' she said, flashing a gold-toothed smile. He gazed down at her and her
smile faded. She backed away swiftly and Bodasen rode on. He came to a narrow alleyway and paused to
push his black cloak above his left shoulder. The hilt of his sabre shone in
the fading sunlight. As Bodasen walked on, three men stood in the shadows. He
felt their eyes upon him and turned his face towards them, his stare
challenging; they looked away, and he continued along the alley until it
broadened out to a small square with a fountain at the centre, constructed
around a bronze statue of a boy riding a dolphin. Several whores were sitting
beside the fountain, chatting to one another. They saw him, and instantly their
postures changed. Leaning back to thrust out their breasts, they assumed their
customary smiles. As he passed he heard their chatter begin again. The inn was almost empty. An old man sat at
the bar, nursing a jug of ale, and two maids were cleaning tables, while a
third prepared the night's fire in the stone hearth. Bodasen moved to a window
table and sat, facing the door. A maid approached him. 'Good evening, my lord. Are you ready for
your usual supper?' 'No. Bring me a goblet of good red wine and
a flagon of fresh water.' 'Yes, my lord.' She curtsied prettily and
walked away. Her greeting eased his irritation. Some, even in this disgusting
city, could recognise nobility. The wine was of an average quality, no more
than four years old and harsh on the tongue, and Bodasen drank sparingly. The inn door opened and two men entered.
Bodasen leaned back in his chair and watched them approach. The first was a
handsome man, tall and wide-shouldered; he wore a crimson cloak over a red
tunic, and a sabre was scabbarded at his hip. The second was a huge, bald
warrior, heavily muscled and grim of feature. The first man sat opposite Bodasen, the
second standing alongside the table. 'Where is Harib Ka?' Bodasen asked. 'Your countryman will not be joining us,'
replied Collan. 'He said he would be here; that is the
reason I agreed to this meeting.' Collan shrugged. 'He had an urgent
appointment elsewhere.' 'He said nothing of it to me.' 'I think it was unexpected. You wish to do
business, or not?' 'I do not do business, Collan. I
seek to negotiate a treaty with the. . . free traders of the Ventrian Sea. My
understanding is that you have . . . shall we say, contacts, among them?' Collan chuckled. 'Interesting. You can't
bring yourself to say pirates, can you? No, that would be too much for a
Ventrian nobleman. Well, let us think the situation through. The Ventrian fleet
has been scattered or sunk. On land your armies are crushed, and the Emperor
slain. Now you pin your hopes on the pirate fleet; only they can ensure that
the armies of Naashan do not march all the way to the capital. Am I in error on
any of these points?' Bodasen cleared his throat. "The
Empire is seeking friends. The Free Traders are in a position to aid us in our
struggle against the forces of evil. We always treat our friends with great
generosity.' 'I see,' said Collan, his eyes mocking. 'We
are fighting the forces of evil now? And there I was believing that
Naashan and Ventria were merely two warring empires. How naive of me. However,
you speak of generosity. How generous is the Prince?' 'The Emperor is noted for his
largess.' CoHan smiled. 'Emperor at nineteen - a
rapid rise to power. But he has lost eleven cities to the invader, and his
treasury is severely depleted. Can he find two hundred thousand gold raq?' 'Two . . . surely you are not serious?' 'The Free Traders have fifty warships. With
them we could protect the coastline and prevent invasion from the sea; we could
also shepherd the convoys that carry Ventrian silk to the Drenai and the
Lentrians and countless others. Without us you are doomed, Bodasen. Two hundred
thousand is a small price to pay.' 'I am authorised to offer fifty. No more.' 'The Naashanites have offered one hundred.' Bodasen fell silent, his mouth dry.
'Perhaps we could pay the difference in silks and trade goods?' he offered at
last. 'Gold,' said Collan. That is all that
interests us. We are not merchants.' No, thought Bodasen bitterly, you are thieves
and killers, and it burns my soul to sit in the same room with such as you. 'I
will need to seek counsel of the ambassador,' he said. 'He can communicate your
request to the Emperor. I will need five days.' 'That is agreeable,' said Collan, rising.
'You know where to find me?' Under a flat rock, thought Bodasen, with
the other slugs and lice. 'Yes,' he said, softly, 'I know where to find you.
Tell me, when will Harib be back in Mashrapur?' 'He won't.' 'Where is this appointment then?' 'In Hell,' answered Collan. * 'You must have patience,' said Sieben, as
Druss stalked around the small room on the upper floor of the Tree of Bone Inn.
The poet had stretched out his long, lean frame on the first of the two narrow
beds, while Druss strode to the window and stood staring out over the dock and
the sea beyond the harbour. 'Patience?' stormed the axeman. 'She's here
somewhere, maybe close.' 'And we'll find her,' promised Sieben, 'but
it will take a little time. First there are the established slave traders. This
evening I will ask around, and find out where Collan has placed her. Then we
can plan her rescue.' Druss swung round. 'Why not go to the White
Bear Inn and find Collan? He knows.' 'I expect he does, old horse.' Sieben swung
his legs from the bed and stood. 'And he'll have any number of rascals ready to
plunge knives in our backs. Foremost among them will be Borcha. I want you to
picture a man who looks as if he was carved from granite, with muscles that
dwarf even yours. Borcha is a killer. He has beaten men to death in fist
fights, snapped necks in wrestling bouts; he doesn't need a weapon. I have seen
him crush a pewter goblet in one hand, and watched him lift a barrel of ale
above his head. And he is just one of Collan's men.' 'Frightened, are you, poet?' 'Of course I'm frightened, you young fool!
Fear is sensible. Never make the mistake of equating it with cowardice. But it
is senseless to go after Collan; he is known here and has friends in very high
places. Attack him and you will be arrested, tried and sentenced. Then there
will be no one to rescue Rowena.' Druss slumped down, his elbows resting on
the warped table. 'I hate sitting here doing nothing,' he said. 'Then let's walk around the city for a
while,' offered Sieben. 'We can gather some information. How much did you get
for your horse?' Twenty in silver.' 'Almost fair. You did well. Come on, I'll
show you the sights.' Druss stood and gathered his axe. 'I don't think you'll
need that,' Sieben told him. 'It's one thing to wear a sword or carry a knife,
but the City Watch will not take kindly to that monstrosity. In a crowded
street you're likely to cut off someone's arm by mistake. Here, I'll loan you
one of my knives.' 'I won't need it,' said Druss, leaving the
axe on the table and striding out of the room. Together they walked down into the main
room of the inn, then out into the narrow street beyond. Druss sniffed loudly. 'This city stinks,'
he said. 'Most cities do - at least in the poorest
areas. No sewers. Refuse is thrown from windows. So walk warily.' They moved towards the docks where several
ships were being unloaded, bales of silk from Ventria and Naashan and other
eastern nations, herbs and spices, dried fruit and barrels of wine. The dock
was alive with activity. 'I've never seen so many people in one
place,' said Druss. 'It's not even busy yet,' Sieben pointed
out. They strolled around the harbour wall, past temples and large municipal
buildings, through a small park with a statue-lined walkway and a central
fountain. Young couples were walking hand in hand and to the left an orator was
addressing a small crowd. He was speaking of the essential selfishness of the
pursuit of altruism. Sieben stopped to listen for a few minutes, then walked
on. 'Interesting, don't you think?' he asked
his companion. 'He was suggesting that good works are ultimately selfish
because they make the man who undertakes them feel good. Therefore he has not
been unselfish at all, but has merely acted for his own pleasure.' Druss shook his head and glowered at the
poet. 'His mother should have told him the mouth is not for breaking wind
with.' 'I take it this is your subtle way of
saying you disagree with his comments?' snapped Sieben. 'The man's a fool.' 'How would you set about proving that?' 'I don't need to prove it. If a man serves
up a plate of cow dung, I don't need to taste it to know it's not steak.' 'Explain it,' Sieben urged him. 'Share some
of that vaunted frontier philosophy.' 'No,' said Druss, walking on. 'Why not?' asked Sieben, moving alongside
him. 'I am a woodsman. I know about trees. Once
I worked in an orchard. Did you know you can take cuttings from any variety and
graft them to another apple tree? One tree can have twenty varieties. It's the
same with pears. My father always said men were like that with knowledge. So
much can be grafted on, but it must match what the heart feels. You can't graft
apple to pear. It's a waste of time - and I don't like wasting my time.' 'You think I could not understand your
arguments?' asked Sieben with a sneering smile. 'Some things you either know or you don't.
And I can't graft that knowledge on to you. Back in the mountains I watched
fanners plant tree lines across the fields; they did it because the winds can
blow away the top-soil. But the trees would take a hundred years to form a real
windbreak, so those farmers were building for the future, for others they will
never know. They did it because it was right to do it - and not one of them
would be able to debate with that pompous windbag back there. Or with you. Nor
is it necessary that they should.' 'That pompous windbag is the first
minister of Mashrapur, a brilliant politician and a poet of some repute. I'm
sure he would be mortally humiliated to know that a young uneducated peasant
from the frontier disagrees with his philosophy.' 'Then we won't tell him,' said Druss.
'We'll just leave him here serving up his cow-pats to people who will believe
they're steaks. Now I'm thirsty, poet. Do you know of a decent tavern?' 'It depends what you're looking for. The
taverns on the docks are rough, and usually filled with thieves and whores. If
we walk on for another half-mile we'll come to a more civilised area. There we
can have a quiet drink.' 'What about those places over there?' asked
Druss, pointing to a row of buildings alongside the wharf. 'Your judgement is unerring, Druss. That is
East Wharf, better known to the residents here as Thieves Row. Every night
there are a score of fights - and murders. Almost no one of quality would go
there - which makes it perfect for you. You go on. I'll visit some old friends
who might have news of recent slave movements.' 'I'll come with you,' said Druss. 'No, you won't. You'd be out of place. Most
of my friends, you see, are pompous windbags. I'll meet you back at the Tree of
Bone by midnight.' Druss chuckled, which only increased Sieben's annoyance as
the poet swung away and strode through the park. * The room was furnished with a large bed
with satin sheets, two comfort chairs padded with horsehair and covered with
velvet, and a table upon which sat a jug of wine and two silver goblets. There
were rugs upon the floor, woven with great skill and soft beneath her bare
feet. Rowena sat upon the edge of the bed, her right hand clasping the brooch
Druss had fashioned for her. She could see him walking beside Sieben. Sadness
overwhelmed her and her hand dropped to her lap. Harib Ka was dead - as she had
known he would be - and Druss was now closer to his dread destiny. She felt powerless and alone in Collan's
house. There were no locks upon the door, but there were guards in the corridor
beyond. Yet there was no escape. On the first night, when Collan had taken her
from the camp, he had raped her twice. On the second occasion she had tried to
empty her mind, losing herself in dreams of the past. In doing so she had
unlocked the doors to her Talent. Rowena had floated free of her abused body
and hurtled through darkness and Time. She saw great cities, huge armies,
mountains that breached the clouds. Lost, she sought for Druss and could not
find him. Then a voice came to her, a gentle voice,
warm and reassuring. 'Be calm, sister. I will help you.' She paused in her flight, floating above a
night-dark ocean. A man appeared alongside her; he was slim of build and young,
perhaps twenty. His eyes were dark, his smile friendly. 'Who are you?' she
asked him. 'I am Vintar of the Thirty.' 'I am lost,' she said. 'Give me your hand.' Reaching out she felt his spirit fingers,
then his thoughts washed over hers. On the verge of panic Rowena felt herself
swamped by his memories, seeing a temple of grey stone, a dwelling-place of
white-clad monks. He withdrew from her as swiftly as he had entered her
thoughts. 'Your ordeal is over,' he said. 'He has left you and now sleeps
beside you. I shall take you home.' 'I cannot bear it. He is a vile man.' 'You will survive, Rowena.' 'Why should I wish to?' she asked him. 'My
husband is changing, becoming day by day as vicious as the men who took me.
What kind of life will I face?' 'I will not answer that, though probably I
could,' he told her. 'You are very young, and you have experienced great pain.
But you are alive, and while living can achieve great good. You have the
Talent, not only to Soar but also to Heal, to Know. Few are blessed with this
gift. Do not concern yourself with Collan; he raped you only because Harib Ka
said that he should not and he will not touch you again.' 'He has defiled me.' 'No,' said Vintar sternly, 'he has defiled
himself. It is important to understand that.' 'Druss would be ashamed of me, for I did
not fight.' 'You fought, Rowena, in your own way. You
gave him no pleasure. To have tried to resist would have increased his lust,
and his satisfaction. As it was - and you know this to be true - he felt
deflated and full of melancholy. And you know his fate.' 'I don't want any more deaths!' 'We all die. You . . . me . . . Druss. The
measure of us all is established by how we live.' He had returned her to her body, taking
care to instruct her in the ways of Spirit travel, and the routes by which she
could return by herself in the future. 'Will I see you again?' she asked him. 'It is possible,' he answered. Now, as she sat on the satin-covered bed,
she wished she could speak with him again. The door opened and a huge warrior entered.
He was bald and heavily muscled. There were scars around his eyes and his nose
was flattened against his face. He moved towards the bed but there was no
threat, she knew. Silently he laid a gown of white silk upon the bed. 'Collan
has asked that you wear this for Kabuchek.' 'Who is Kabuchek?' she enquired. 'A Ventrian merchant. If you do well he
will buy you. It won't be a bad life, girl. He has many palaces and treats his
slaves with care.' 'Why do you serve Collan?' she asked. His eyes narrowed. 'I serve no one. Collan
is a friend. I help him sometimes.' 'You are a better man than he.' 'That is as may be. But several years ago,
when I was first champion, I was waylaid in an alley by supporters of the
vanquished champion. They had swords and knives. Collan ran to my aid. We
survived. I always pay my debts. Now put on the gown, and prepare your skill.
You need to impress the Ventrian.' 'And if I refuse?' 'Collan will not be pleased and I don't
think you would like that. Trust me on this, lady. Do your best and you will be
clear of this house.' 'My husband is coming for me,' she said
softly. 'When he does, he will kill any who have harmed me.' 'Why tell me?' 'Do not be here when he comes, Borcha.' The giant shrugged. 'The Fates will
decide,' he said. * Druss strolled across to the wharf
buildings. They were old, a series of taverns created from derelict warehouses
and there were recesses and alley entrances everywhere. Garishly dressed women
lounged against the walls and ragged men sat close by, playing knucklebones or
talking in small groups. A woman approached him. 'All the delights
your mind can conjure for just a silver penny,' she said wearily. 'Thank you, but no,' he told her. 'I can get you opiates, if you desire
them?' 'No,' he said, more sternly, and moved on.
Three bearded men pushed themselves to their feet and walked in front of him.
'A gift for the poor, my lord?' asked the first. Druss was about to reply when he glimpsed
the man to his left edge his hand into the folds of a filthy shirt. He
chuckled. 'If that hand comes out with a knife in it - I'll make you eat it,
little man.' The beggar froze. 'You shouldn't be coming here with
threats,' said the first man. 'Not unarmed as you are. It's not wise, my
lord.' Reaching behind his back, he drew a long-bladed dagger. As the blade appeared Druss stepped forward
and casually backhanded the man across the mouth. The robber cartwheeled to
'the left, scattering a group of watching whores and colliding with a wall of
brick. He moaned once, then lay still. Ignoring the other two beggars, Druss
strode to the nearest tavern and stepped inside. The interior was windowless and
high-ceilinged, lit by lanterns which hung from the beams. The tavern smelt of
burning oil and stale sweat. It was crowded, and Druss eased his way to a long
trestle table on which several barrels of ale were set. And old man in a greasy
apron approached him. 'You don't want to be drinking before the bouts begin;
it'll fill you with wind,' he warned. 'What bouts?' The man looked at him appraisingly, and his
glittering eyes held no hint of warmth. 'You wouldn't be trying to fool Old
Thorn, would you?' 'I'm a stranger here,' said Druss. 'Now,
what bouts?' 'Follow me, lad,' said Thorn, and he pushed
his way through the crowd towards the back of the tavern and on through a
narrow doorway. Druss followed him and found himself standing in a rectangular
warehouse where a wide circle of sand had been roped off at the centre. By the
far walls were a group of athletes, moving through a series of exercises to
loosen the muscles of shoulders and back. 'You ever fought?' 'Not for money.' Thorn nodded, then reached out and lifted
Druss's hand. 'A good size, and flat knuckles. But are you fast, boy?' 'What is the prize?' countered the young
man. 'It won't work that way - not for you. This
is a standard contest and all the entrants are nominated well in advance so
that sporting gentlemen can have opportunities to judge the quality of the
fighter. But just before the start of the competition there'll be offers to men
in the crowd to earn a few pennies by taking on various champions. A golden raq,
for example, to the man who can stay on his feet for one turn of the sandglass.
They do it to allow the fighters to warm up against low-quality opposition.' 'How long is one turn?' asked Druss. 'About as long as it's been since you first
walked into the Blind Corsair.' 'And what if a man won?' 'It doesn't happen, lad. But if it did,
then he'd take the loser's place in the main event. No, the main money is made
on wagers among the crowd. How much coin are you carrying?' 'You ask a lot of questions, old man.' 'Pah! I'm not a robber, lad. Used to be,
but then I got old and slow. Now I live on my wits. You look like a man who
could stand up for himself. At first I mistook you for Grassin the Lentrian -that's
him over there, by the far door.' Druss followed the old man's pointing finger
and saw a powerfully built young man with short-cropped black hair. He was
talking to another heavily-muscled man, a blond warrior with a dangling
moustache. 'The other one is Skatha, he is a Naashanite sailor. And the big
fellow at the back is Borcha. He'll win tonight. No question. Deadly, he is.
Most likely someone will be crippled by him before the evening is out.' Druss gazed at the man and felt the hackles
on his neck rise. Borcha was enormous, standing some seven inches above six
feet tall. He was bald, his head vaguely pointed as if his skin was stretched
over a Vagrian helm. His shoulders were massively muscled, his neck huge with
muscles swollen and bulging. 'No good looking at him like that, boy.
He's too good for you. Trust me on that. He's skilled and very fast. He won't
even step up for the warming bouts. No one would face him - not even for twenty
golden raq. But that Grassin now, I think you could stand against him for a
turn of the glass. And if you've some coin to wager, I'll find takers.' 'What do you get, old man?' 'Half of what we make.' 'What odds could you bargain for?' 'Two to one. Maybe three.' 'And if I went against Borcha?' 'Put it from your mind, boy. We want to
make money - not coffin fuel.' 'How much?' persisted Druss. 'Ten to one - twenty to one. The gods alone
know!' Druss opened the pouch at his side,
removing ten silver pieces. Casually he dropped them into the old man's
outstretched hand. 'Let it be known that I wish to stand against Borcha for a
turn of the glass.' 'Asia's tits, he'll kill you.' 'If he doesn't, you could make a hundred
pieces of silver. Maybe more.' 'There is that, of course,' said Old Thorn,
with a crooked grin. * Crowds slowly began to fill the warehouse
arena. Rich nobles clad in silks and fine leathers, their ladies beside them in
lace and satin, were seated on high tiers overlooking the sand circle. On the
lower levels were the merchants and traders in their conical caps arid long
capes. Druss felt uncomfortable, hemmed in by the mass. The air was growing
foul, the temperature rising as more and more people filed in. Rowena would hate this place, with its
noise and its pressing throng. His mood darkened as he thought of her - a
prisoner somewhere, a slave to the whims and desires of Collan. He forced such
thoughts from his mind, and concentrated instead on his conversation with the
poet. He had enjoyed irritating the man; it had eased his own anger, an anger
generated by the unwilling acceptance that much of what the speaker in the park
had said was true. He loved Rowena, heart and soul. But he needed her also, and
he often wondered which was the stronger, love or need. And was he trying to
rescue her because he loved her, or because he was lost without her? The
question tormented him. Rowena calmed his turbulent spirit in a way
no other living soul ever could. She helped him to see the world through gentle
eyes. It was a rare and beautiful experience. If she had been with him now, he
thought, he too would have been filled with distaste at the sweating multitude
waiting for blood and pain. Instead the young man stood amidst the crowd and
felt his heartbeat quicken, his excitement rise at the prospect of combat. His pale eyes scanned the crowd, picking
out the fat figure of Old Thorn talking to a tall man in a red velvet cloak.
The man was smiling. He turned from Thorn and approached the colossal figure of
Borcha. Druss saw the fighter's eyes widen, then the man laughed. Druss could
not hear the sound above the chatter and noise about him, but he felt his anger
grow. This was Borcha, one of Collan's men - perhaps one of those who had taken
Rowena. Old Thorn returned through the crowd and
led Druss to a fairly quiet corner. 'I've set events in motion,' he said. 'Now
listen to me - don't try for the head. Men have broken their hands on that
skull. He has a habit of dipping into punches so that the other man's knuckles
strike bone. Go for the lower body. And watch his feet - he's a skilled kicker,
lad. . . what's your name, by the way?' 'Druss.' 'Well, Druss, you've grabbed a bear by the
balls this time. If he hurts you, don't try to hold on; he'll use that head on
you, and cave in the bones of your face. Try backing away and covering up.' 'Let him try backing away,' snarled Druss. 'Ah, you're a cocky lad, for sure. But
you've never faced a man like Borcha. He's like a living hammer.' Druss chuckled. 'You really know how to
lift a man's spirits. What odds did you find?' 'Fifteen to one. If you hold to your feet,
you'll have seventy-five pieces of silver - plus your original ten.' 'Is that enough to buy a slave?' 'What would you want with a slave?' 'Is it enough?' 'Depends on the slave. Some girls fetch
upwards of a hundred. You have someone in mind?' Druss dipped into his pouch, removing the
last four silver pieces. 'Wager these also.' The old man took the money. 'I take it this
is your entire wealth?' 'It is.' 'She must be a very special slave?' 'She's my wife. Collan's men took her.' 'Collan takes lots of women. Your wife's
not a witch, is she?' 'What?' snarled Druss. 'No offence, lad. But Collan sold a witch
woman to Kabuchek the Ventrian today. Five thousand silver pieces she brought.' 'No, she is not a witch. Just a mountain
girl, sweet and gentle.' 'Ah well, a hundred should be enough,' said
Thorn. 'But first you have to win it. Have you ever been hit?' 'No. But a tree fell on me once.' 'Knock you out?' 'No. I was dazed for a while.' 'Well, Borcha will feel like a mountain
fell on you. I hope you've the strength to withstand it.' 'We'll see, old man.' 'If you go down, roll under the ropes.
Otherwise he'll stomp you.' Druss smiled. 'I like you, old man. You
don't honey the medicine, do you?' 'Does you no good unless it tastes bad,'
replied Thorn, with a crooked grin. * Borcha enjoyed the admiring glances from
the crowd - fear and respect from the men and healthy lust from the women. He
felt he had earned such silent accolades during the past five years. His blue
eyes scanned the tiers and he picked out Mapek, the First Minister of
Mashrapur, Bodasen the Ventrian envoy, and a dozen more notables from the
Emir's government. He kept his face impassive as he gazed around the converted
warehouse. It was well known that he never smiled, save in the sand circle when
his opponent began to weaken under his iron fists. He glanced at Grassin, watching the man
move through a series of loosening exercises. He had to hold back his smile
then. Others might believe Grassin was merely stretching tight muscles, but
Borcha could read fear in the man's movements. He focused on the other
fighters, staring at them. Few looked his way, and those who did cast fleeting
glances, avoiding his eyes. Losers, all of them, he thought. He took a deep breath, filling his massive
lungs. The air was hot and damp. Signalling to one of his aides, Borcha told
the man to open the wide windows at either end of the warehouse. A second aide
approached him, 'There is a yokel who wants to try a turn of the glass with
you, Borcha.' The fighter was irritated and he surreptitiously studied the
crowd. All eyes were on him. So the word was already out! He threw back his
head and forced a laugh, 'Who is this man?' 'A stranger from the mountains. Youngster -
around twenty, I'd say.' 'That explains his stupidity,' hissed
Borcha. No man who had ever seen him fight would relish the prospect of four
minutes in the sand circle with the champion of Mashrapur. But still he was
annoyed. Winning involved far more skills than with
fists and feet, he knew. It was a complex mix of courage and heart, allied to
the planting of the seeds of doubt in the minds of opponents. A man who
believed his enemy was invincible had already lost, and Borcha had spent years
building such a reputation. No one in two years had dared to risk a
turn of the glass with the champion. Until now. Which threw up a second problem.
Arena fights were without rules: a fighter could legitimately gouge out an
opponent's eyes or, after downing him, stamp upon his neck. Deaths were rare,
but not unknown, and many fighters were crippled for life. But Borcha would not
be able to use his more deadly array of skills against an unknown youngster. It
would suggest he feared the boy. They're offering fifteen to one against him
surviving,' whispered the aide. 'Who is negotiating for him?' 'Old Thorn.' 'How much has he wagered?' 'I'll find out.' The man moved away into
the crowd. The tournament organiser, a huge, obese
merchant named Bilse, stepped into the sand circle. 'My friends,' he bellowed,
his fat chins wobbling, 'welcome to the Blind Corsair. Tonight you will be
privileged to witness the finest fist fighters in Mashrapur.' Borcha closed his mind to the man's droning
voice. He had heard it all before. Five years ago his mood had been different.
His wife and son sick from dysentery, the young Borcha had finished his work on
the docks and had run all the way to the Corsair to win ten silver pieces in a
warm-up contest. To his surprise he had beaten his opponent, and had taken his
place in the tournament. That night, after hammering six fighters to defeat, he
had taken home sixty golden raq. He had arrived at their rooms triumphant, only
to find his son dead and his wife comatose. The best doctor in Mashrapur was
summoned. He had insisted Caria be removed to a hospital in the rich northern
district - but only after Borcha had parted with all his hard-won gold. There
Caria rallied for a while, only to be struck down with consumption. The treatment over the next two years cost
three hundred raq. And still she died, her body ravaged by
sickness. Borcha's bitterness was colossal, and he
unleashed it in every fight, focusing his hatred and his fury on the men who
faced him. He heard his name called and raised his
right arm. The crowd cheered and clapped. Now he had a house in the northern quarter,
built of marble and the finest timber, with terracotta tiles on the roof.
Twenty slaves were on hand to do his bidding, and his investments in slaves and
silks brought him an income to rival any of the senior merchants. Yet still he
fought, the demons of the past driving him on. Bilse announced that the warm-up contest
would begin and Borcha watched as Grassin stepped into the circle to take on a
burly dock-worker. The bout lasted barely a few seconds, Grassin lifting the
man from his feet with an uppercut. Borcha's aide approached him. 'They have
wagered around nine silver pieces. Is it important?' Borcha shook his head. Had there been large
sums involved it would have indicated trickery of some kind, perhaps a foreign
fighter drafted in, a tough man from another city, a bruiser unknown in
Mashrapur. But no. This was merely stupidity and arrogance combined. Bilse called his name and Borcha stepped
into the circle. He tested the sand beneath his feet. Too thick and it made for
clumsy movement, too thin and a fighter could slide and lose balance. It was
well raked. Satisfied, Borcha turned his gaze on the young man who had entered
the circle from the other side. He was young and some inches shorter than
Borcha, though his shoulders were enormous. His chest was thick, the pectoral
muscles well developed, and his biceps were huge. Watching him move, Borcha saw
that he was well balanced and lithe. His waist was thick, but carried little
fat, and his neck was large and well protected by the powerful, swollen muscles
of the trapezius. Borcha transferred his gaze to his opponent's face. Strong
cheekbones and a good chin. The nose was wide and flat, the brows heavy. The
champion looked into the challenger's eyes; they were pale, and they showed no
fear. Indeed, thought Borcha, he looks as if he hates me. Bilse introduced the young man as 'Druss
from the lands of the Drenai'. The two fighters approached one another. Borcha
towered over Druss. The champion held out his hands but Druss merely smiled and
walked back to the ropes, turning to wait for the signal to begin. The casual insult did not concern the
champion. Lifting his hands into the orthodox fighting position, left arm
extended and right fist held close to the cheek, he advanced on the young man.
Druss surged forward, almost taking Borcha by surprise. But the champion was
fast and sent a thudding left jab into the young man's face, following it with
a stinging right cross that thundered against Druss's jaw. Borcha stepped back,
allowing room for Druss to fall, but something exploded against the side of the
champion. For a moment he thought a large rock had been hurled from the crowd,
then he realised it was the fist of his opponent. Far from falling, the young
man had taken the two punches and hit back with one of his own. Borcha reeled
from the blow, then counter-attacked with a series of combination strikes that
snapped Druss's head back. Yet still he came on. Borcha feinted a jab to the
head, then swept an uppercut into the young man's belly, whereupon Druss
snarled and threw a wild right. Borcha ducked under it, dipping just in time to
meet a rising left uppercut. He managed to roll his head, the blow striking his
cheek. Surging upright, he crashed an overhand right into Druss's face,
splitting the skin above the man's left eye; then he hit him with a left. Druss staggered back, thrown off balance,
and Borcha moved in for the kill, but a hammer-blow hit him just under the
heart and he felt a rib snap. Anger roared through him and he began to smash
punches into the youngster's face and body - brutal, powerful blows that forced
his opponent back towards the ropes. Another cut appeared, this time over
Druss's right eye. The young man ducked and weaved, but more and more blows
hammered home. Sensing victory, Borcha increased the ferocity of his attack and
the pace of his punches. But Druss refused to go down and, ducking his head, he
charged at Borcha. The champion sidestepped and threw a left that glanced from
Druss's shoulder. The young man recovered his balance and Borcha stepped in.
Druss wiped the blood from his eyes and advanced to meet him. The champion
feinted with a left, but Druss ignored it and sent a right that swept under
Borcha's guard and smashed into his injured ribs. The champion winced as pain
lanced his side. A huge fist crashed against his chin and he felt a tooth snap;
he responded with a left uppercut that lifted Druss to his toes and a right
hook that almost felled the youngster. Druss hit him with another right to the
ribs and Borcha was forced back. The two men began to circle one another, and
only now did Borcha hear the baying of the crowd. They were cheering for Druss,
just as five years before they had cheered for Borcha. Druss attacked. Borcha threw a left that
missed and a right that didn't. Druss rocked back on his heels, but advanced
again. Borcha hit him three times, further opening the cuts that saw blood
streaming into the young man's face. Almost blinded, Druss lashed out, one
punch catching Borcha on the right bicep, numbing his arm, a second cracking
against his brow. Blood seeped from the champion's face now, and a tremendous
roar went up from the crowd. Oblivious to the noise Borcha
counter-attacked, driving Druss back across the circle, hitting him time and
again with brutal hooks and jabs. Then the horn sounded. The sandglass had
run out. Borcha stepped back, but Druss attacked. Borcha grabbed him around the
waist, pinning his arms and hauling him in close. 'It is over, boy,' he hissed.
'You won your wager.' Druss jerked himself loose and shook his
head, spraying blood to the sand. Then he lifted his hand and pointed at
Borcha. 'You go to Collan,' he snarled, 'and you tell him that if anyone has
harmed my wife I'll tear his head from his neck.' Then the young man swung away and stalked
from the circle. Borcha turned and saw the other fighters
watching him. They were all willing to meet his eyes now.
. . and Grassin was smiling. * Sieben entered the Tree of Bone just after
midnight. There were still some hardened drinkers present, and the serving
maids moved wearily among them. Sieben mounted the stairs to the gallery above
and made his way to the room he shared with Druss. Just as he was about to open
the door, he heard voices from within. Drawing his dagger, he threw open the
door and leapt inside. Druss was sitting on one of the beds, his face bruised
and swollen, the marks of rough stitches over both eyes. A dirt-streaked fat
man was sitting on Sieben's bed and a slim, black-cloaked nobleman with a
trident beard was standing by the window. As the poet entered the nobleman
swung, a shining sabre hissing from its scabbard. The fat man screamed and
dived from the bed, landing with a dull thud behind the seated Druss. 'You took your time, poet,' said the
axeman. Sieben gazed down at the point of the sabre
which was motionless in the air some two inches from his throat. 'It didn't
take you long to make new friends,' he said, with a forced smile. With great care he slipped the knife back
into its sheath, and was relieved to see the nobleman return his sabre to its
scabbard. 'This is Bodasen; he's a Ventrian,' said
Druss. 'And the man on his knees behind me is Thorn.' The fat man rose, grinning sheepishly.
'Good to meet you, my lord,' he said, bowing. 'Who the Devil gave you those black eyes?'
asked Sieben, moving forward to examine Dross's wounds. 'Nobody gave them to me. I had to fight for
them.' 'He fought Borcha,' said Bodasen, with the
faintest trace of an eastern accent. 'And a fine bout it was. Lasted a full
turn of the glass.' 'Aye, it was something to see,' added
Thorn. 'Borcha didn't look none too pleased - especially when Dross cracked his
rib! We all heard it. Wonderful, it was.' 'You fought Borcha?' whispered Sieben. 'To a standstill,' said the Ventrian.
'There were no surgeons present, so I assisted with the stitching. You are the
poet Sieben, are you not?' 'Yes. Do I know you, my friend?' 'I saw you perform once in Drenan, and in
Ventria I read your saga of Waylander. Wonderfully inventive.' 'Thank you. Much needed to be invention
since little is known of him. I did not know that the book had travelled so
far. Only fifty copies were made.' 'My Emperor acquired one on his travels,
bound in leather and embossed with gold leaf. The script is very fine.' 'There were five of those,' said Sieben.
'Twenty raq each. Beautiful works.' Bodasen chuckled. 'My Emperor paid six
hundred for it.' Sieben sighed and sat down on the bed. 'Ah
well, better the fame than gold, eh? So tell me, Dross, what made you fight
Borcha?' 'I earned a hundred silver pieces. Now I
shall buy Rowena. Did you find out where she is held?' 'No, my friend. Collan has sold only one
woman recently. A Seer. He must be keeping Rowena for himself.' 'Then I shall kill him and take her - and
to Hell with the law of Mashrapur.' 'If I may,' said Bodasen, 'I think I can
help. I am acquainted with this Collan. It may be that I can secure the release
of your lady - without bloodshed.' Sieben said nothing, but he noted the
concern in the Ventrian's dark eyes. 'I'll not wait much longer,' said Druss.
'Can you see him tomorrow?' 'Of course. You will be here?' 'I'll wait for your word,' promised Dross. 'Very well. I bid you all good night,' said
Bodasen, with a short bow. After he had left Old Thorn also made for
the door. 'Well, lad, it were quite a night. If you decide to fight again I'd
be honoured to make the arrangements.' 'No more for me,' said Druss. 'I'd sooner
have trees fall on me than that man again.' Thorn shook his head. 'I wish that I'd had
more faith,' he said. 'I only bet one silver piece of my share.' He chuckled
and spread his hands. 'Ah well, that is life, I suppose.' His smile faded. 'A
word of warning, Druss. Collan has many friends here. And there are those who
will slit a man's throat for the price of a jug of ale. Walk with care.' He
turned and left the room. There was a jug of wine on the small table
and Sieben filled a clay goblet and sat. 'You are a curious fellow, to be
sure,' he said, grinning. 'But at least Borcha has improved your looks. I think
your nose is broken.' 'I think you are right,' said Druss. 'So
tell me of your day.' 'I visited four well-known slave traders.
Collan brought no women with him to the slave markets. The story of your attack
on Harib Ka is known everywhere. Some of the men who survived have now joined
Collan, and they speak of you as a demon. But it is a mystery, Druss. I don't
know where she could be - unless at his home.' The wound above Druss's right eye began to
seep blood. Sieben found a cloth and offered it to the axeman. Dross waved it
away. 'It will seal. Forget about it.' 'By the gods, Dross, you must be in agony.
Your face is swollen, your eyes black.' 'Pain lets you know you're alive,' said
Dross. 'Did you spend your silver pennies on the whore?' Sieben chuckled. 'Yes. She was very good -
told me I was the best love-maker she had ever known.' 'There's a surprise,' said Druss and Sieben
laughed. 'Yes - but it's nice to hear.' He sipped
his wine, then stood and gathered his belongings. 'Where are you going?' asked Druss. 'Not I . . .we. We'll move rooms.' 'I like it here.' 'Yes, it is quaint. But we need to sleep
and - convivial as they both were - I see no reason to trust men I do not know.
Collan will send killers after you, Druss. Bodasen may be in his employ, and as
for the walking lice-sack who just left I think he'd sell his mother for a
copper farthing. So trust me, and let's move.' 'I liked them both - but you are right. I
do need sleep.' Sieben stepped outside and called to a
tavern maid, slipping her a silver piece and asking for their move to be kept
secret - even from the landlord. She slipped the coin into the pocket of her
leather apron and took the two men to the far end of the gallery. The new room
was larger than the first, boasting three beds and two lanterns. A fire had
been laid in the hearth, but it was unlit and the room was cold. When the maid had departed Sieben lit the
fire and sat beside it, watching the flames lick at the tinder. Druss pulled
off his boots and jerkin and stretched out on the widest of the beds. Within
moments he was asleep, his axe on the floor beside the bed. Sieben lifted the baldric of knives from
his shoulder and hooked it over the back of the chair. The fire blazed more
brightly and he added several thick chunks of wood from the log basket beside
the hearth. As the hours passed, all sounds from the inn below faded, and only
the crackling of burning wood disturbed the silence. Sieben was tired, but he
did not sleep. Then he heard the sounds of men upon the
stairs, stealthy footfalls. Drawing one of his knives he moved to the door,
opening it a fraction and peering out. At the other end of the gallery some
seven men were crowding around the door of their previous quarters; the
landlord was with them. The door was wrenched open and the men surged inside,
but moments later they returned. One of the newcomers took hold of the landlord
by his shirt and pushed him against the wall. The frightened man's voice rose,
and Sieben could just make out some of his words: "They were . . .
honestly . . . lives of my children . . . they . . . without paying . . .'
Sieben watched as the man was hurled to the floor. The would-be assassins then
trooped down the gallery stairs and out into the night. Pushing shut the door, Sieben returned to
the fire. And slept. Chapter SixBorcha sat quietly while Collan berated the
men he had sent in search of Druss. They stood shamefaced before him, heads
down. 'How long have you been with me, Kotis?' he asked one of them, his voice
low and thick with menace. 'Six years,' answered the man at the centre
of the group, a tall, wide-shouldered bearded fist-fighter. Borcha remembered
his destruction of this man; it had taken no more than a minute. 'Six years,' echoed Collan. 'And in that
time have you seen other men fall foul of me?' 'Aye, I have. But we got the information
from Old Thorn. He swore they were staying in the Tree of Bone - and so they
were. But they went into hiding after the fight with Borcha. We've men still
looking; they won't be hard to find tomorrow.' 'You're right,' said Collan. 'They won't be
hard to find; they'll be coming here!' 'You could give his wife back,' offered
Bodasen, who was lounging on a couch on the far side of the room. 'I don't give women back. I take
them! Anyway, I don't know which farm wench he's talking about. Most of those
we took were freed when the madman attacked the camp. I expect his wife took a
welcome opportunity to escape from his clutches.' 'He's not a man I'd want hunting me,' said
Borcha. 'I've never hit anyone so hard - and seen them stay on their feet.' 'Get back out on the streets, all of you.
Scour the inns and taverns near the docks. They won't be far. And understand
this, Kotis, if he does walk into my home tomorrow I'll kill you!' The men shuffled out and Borcha leaned back
on the couch, suppressing a groan as his injured rib lanced pain into his side.
He had been forced to withdraw from the tournament, and that hurt his pride.
Yet he felt a grudging admiration for the young fighter; he, too, would have taken
on an army for Caria. 'You know what I think?' he offered. 'What?' snapped Collan. 'I think she's the witch you sold to
Kabuchek. What was her name?' 'Rowena.' 'Did you rape her?' 'I didn't touch her,' lied Collan. 'And
anyway, I've sold her to Kabuchek. He gave me five thousand in silver - just
like that. I should have asked for ten.' 'I think you should see the Old Woman,'
advised Borcha. 'I don't need a prophet to tell me how to
deal with one country bumpkin and an axe. Now to business.' He turned to Bodasen.
'It is too early to have received word on our demands, so why are you here
tonight?' The Ventrian smiled, his teeth startlingly
white against the black trident beard. 'I came because I told the young fighter
that we were acquainted. I said I might be able to secure the release of his
wife. But if you have already sold her, then I have wasted my time.' 'What concern is it of yours?' Bodasen rose and flung his black cloak
around his shoulders. 'I am a soldier, Collan - as you once were. And I know men.
You should have seen his fight with Borcha. It wasn't pretty, it was brutal and
almost terrifying. You are not dealing with a country bumpkin, you are facing a
terrible killer. I don't believe you have the men to stop him.' 'Why should you care?' 'Ventria needs the Free Traders and you are
my link to them. I don't want to see you dead just yet.' 'I am a fighter too, Bodasen,' said Collan. 'Indeed you are, Drenai. But let us review
what we know. Harib Ka, according to those of his men who survived the raid,
sent six men into the woods. They did not return. I spoke to Druss tonight and
he told me he killed them. I believe him. Then he attacked a camp where forty
armed men were based. The men ran away. Now he has fought Borcha, whom most
men, including myself, believed to be invincible. The rabble you just sent out
will have no chance against him.' True,' admitted Collan, 'but as soon as he
kills them the City Watch will take him. And I have only four more days to
spend here; then I sail for the Free Trading ports. However, I take it you have
some advice to offer?' 'Indeed I do. Get the woman back from
Kabuchek and deliver her to Druss. Buy her or steal her - but do it, Collan.'
With a short, perfunctory bow the Ventrian officer left the room. 'I'd listen to him if I were you,' advised
Borcha. 'Not you as well!' stormed Collan. 'By the
gods, did he scramble your brains tonight? You and I both know what keeps us at
the top of this filthy pile. Fear. Awe. Sometimes sheer terror. Where would my
reputation be if I gave back a stolen woman?' 'You are quite right,' said Borcha, rising,
'but a reputation can be rebuilt. A life is something else. He said he'd tear
off your head and he's a man who could do just that.' 'I never thought to see you running scared,
my friend. I thought you were impervious to fear.' Borcha smiled. 'I am strong, Collan. I use
my reputation because it makes it easier to win but I don't live it. If
I were to be in the path of a charging bull, then I would step aside, or turn
and run, or climb a tree. A strong man should always know his limitations.' 'Well, he's helped you know yours, my
friend,' said Collan, with a sneer. Borcha smiled and shook his head. He left
Collan's house and wandered through the northern streets. They were wider here,
and lined with trees. Officers of the Watch marched by him, the captain
saluting as he recognised the champion. Former champion, thought Borcha. Now it was
Grassin who would win the accolades. Until next year. 'I'll be back,' whispered
Borcha. 'I have to. It is all I have.' * Sieben floated to consciousness through
layers of dreams. He was drifting on a blue lake, yet his body was dry; he was
standing on an island of flowers, but could not feel the earth beneath his
feet; he was lying on a satin bed, beside a statue of marble. At his touch she
became flesh, but remained cold. He opened his eyes and the dreams whispered
away from his memory. Druss was still asleep. Sieben rose from the chair and
stretched his back, then he gazed down on the sleeping warrior. The stitches on Druss's brows were tight
and puckered, dried blood had stained both eyelids and his nose was swollen and
discoloured. Yet despite the wounds his face radiated strength and Sieben felt
chilled by the almost inhuman power of the youth. Druss groaned and opened his eyes. 'How are you feeling this morning?' asked
the poet. 'Like a horse galloped over my face,'
answered Druss, rolling from the bed and pouring himself a goblet of water.
Someone tapped at the door. Sieben rose from his chair and drew a knife
from its sheath. 'Who is it?' 'It is me, sir,' came the voice of the
tavern-maid. "There is a man to see you; he is downstairs.' Sieben opened the door and the maid
curtsied. 'Do you know him?' asked Sieben. 'He is the Ventrian gentleman who was here
last night, sir.' 'Is he alone?' 'Yes, sir.' 'Send him up,' ordered Sieben. While they
were waiting he told Druss about the men who had come searching for them the
night before. 'You should have woken me,' said Druss. 'I thought we could do without a scene of
carnage,' Sieben replied. Bodasen entered and immediately crossed to
where Druss stood by the window. He leaned in and examined the stitches on the
axeman's eyebrows. "They've held well,' said Bodasen, with a smile. 'What news?' asked Druss. The Ventrian removed his black cloak and
draped it over a chair. 'Last night Collan had men scouring the city for you.
Assassins. But today he has come to his senses. This morning he sent a man to
me with a message for you. He has decided to return your wife to you.' 'Good. When and where.' "There is a quay about a half-mile
west of here. He will meet you there tonight, one hour after dusk, and he will
have Rowena with him. But he is a worried man, Druss; he doesn't want to die.' 'I'll not kill him,' promised Druss. 'He wants you to come alone - and unarmed.' 'Madness!' stormed Sieben. 'Does he think
he is dealing with fools?' 'Whatever else he may be,' said Bodasen,
'he is still a Drenai noble. His word must be accepted.' 'Not by me,' hissed Sieben. 'He is a
murdering renegade who has become rich by dealing in the misery of others.
Drenai noble indeed!' 'I'll go,' said Druss. 'What other choices
are there?' 'It is a trap, Druss. There is no honour in
men like Collan. He'll be there, right enough - with a dozen or so killers.' 'They won't stop me,' insisted the axeman,
his pale eyes gleaming. 'A knife through the throat can stop
anyone.' Bodasen stepped forward and laid his hand
on Druss's shoulder. 'Collan assured me this was an honest trade. I would not
have brought this message had I believed it to be false.' Druss nodded and smiled. 'I believe you,'
he said. 'How did you find us?' enquired Sieben. 'This is where you said you would be,'
answered Bodasen. 'Exactly where will this meeting take
place?' asked Druss. Bodasen gave directions and then bade them farewell. When he had left Sieben turned on the young
axeman. 'You truly believe him?' 'Of course. He is a Ventrian gentleman. My
father told me they are the world's worst traders because they have a hatred of
lies and deceit. They are reared that way.' 'Collan isn't a Ventrian,' Sieben pointed
out. 'No,' agreed Druss, his expression grim.
'No, he is not. He is everything you described. And you are quite right, poet.
It will be a trap.' 'And yet you will still go?' 'As I have already said, there are no other
choices. But you don't have to be there. You owe Shadak - not me.' Sieben smiled. 'You are quite right, old
horse. So how shall we play this little game?' * An hour before dusk Collan sat in an upper
room overlooking the quay. The bearded Kotis stood beside him. 'Is everyone in
place?' asked the Drenai swordsman. 'Aye. Two crossbowmen, and six
knife-fighters. Is Borcha coming?' Collan's handsome face darkened. 'No.' 'He would make a difference,' observed
Kotis. 'Why?' snapped Collan. 'He's already taken
one beating from the peasant!' 'You really think he will come alone and
unarmed?' 'Bodasen believes he will.' 'Gods, what a fool!' Collan laughed. 'The world is full of
fools, Kotis. That is how we grow rich.' He leaned out of the window and gazed
down on the quayside. Several whores were lounging in doorways, and two beggars
were accosting passers-by. A drunken dock-worker staggered from a tavern,
collided with a wall and slid to the ground by a mooring post. He tried to
rise, but as he lifted his work-sack he fell back, and then curled up on the
stone and went to sleep. What a city, thought Collan! What a wonderful city. A
whore moved to the sleeping man and dipped her fingers expertly into his
money-pouch. Collan stepped back from the window and
drew his sabre. Taking a whetstone, he sharpened the edge. He had no intention
of facing the peasant, but a man could never be too careful. Kotis poured a goblet of cheap wine. 'Don't
drink too much of that,' warned Collan. 'Even unarmed, the man can fight.' 'He won't fight so well with a crossbow
bolt through the heart.' Collan sat down in a padded leather chair
and stretched out his long legs. 'In a few days we'll be rich, Kotis. Ventrian
gold -enough to fill this squalid room. Then we'll sail to Naashan and buy a
palace. Maybe more than one.' 'You think the pirates will aid Ventria?'
asked Kotis. 'No, they've already taken Naashanite gold.
Ventria is finished.' 'Then we keep Bodasen's money?' 'Of course. As I said, the world is full of
fools. You know, I used to be one of them. I had dreams, I wasted half my life
on them. Chivalry, gallantry. My father fed me the concepts until my mind was
awash with dreams of knighthood and I truly believed it all.' Collan chuckled.
'Incredible! But I learnt the error of my ways. I become wise to the way of the
world.' 'You are in good humour today,' observed
Kotis. 'You'll have to kill Bodasen too. He won't
be pleased when he learns he's been tricked.' 'Him I'll fight,' said Collan. 'Ventrians!
A pox on them! They think they're better than everyone else. Bodasen more than
most; he thinks he's a swordsman. We'll see. I'll cut him a piece at a time, a
nick here and a slash there. He'll suffer well enough. I'll break his pride
before I kill him.' 'He may be better than you,' ventured
Kotis. 'No one is better than me, with sabre or
short blade.' 'They say Shadak is one of the best who
ever lived.' 'Shadak is an old man!' stormed Collan,
surging to his feet, 'and even at his best he could not have faced me.' Kotis paled and began to stammer out an
apology. 'Be silent!' snapped Collan. 'Get outside and check that the men are
in position.' As Kotis backed from the room, Collan
poured himself a goblet of wine and sat down by the window. Shadak! Always
Shadak. What was it about the man that inspired men to revere him? What had he
ever done? Shema's balls, I've killed twice as many swordsmen as the old man!
But do they sing songs about Collan? No. . One day I'll hunt him out, he promised
himself. Somewhere in public view, where men can see the great Shadak humbled.
He glanced out of the window. The sun was setting, turning the sea to fire. Soon the peasant would arrive. Soon the
enjoyment would begin. * Druss approached the quayside. There was a
ship moored at the far end; dock-workers were untying the mooring ropes and
hurling them to the decks, while aloft sailors were unfurling the great square
of the main-mast. Gulls swooped above the vessel, their wings silver in the
moonlight. The young warrior glanced along the quayside,
which was almost deserted save for two whores and a sleeping man. He scanned
the buildings, but all the windows were closed. He could taste fear in his
mouth, not for his own safety but for Rowena's should Collan kill him. A life
of slavery beckoned for her, and Druss could not bear that. The wounds above his eyes were stinging,
and a dull, thudding headache reminded him of the bout with Borcha. He hawked
and spat, then made for the quay. From the shadows to his right a man moved. 'Druss!' came a low voice. He stopped and
turned his head to see Old Thorn standing just inside the mouth of a dark
alleyway. 'What do you want?' asked Druss. 'They're waiting for you, lad. There's nine
of them. Go back!' 'I cannot. They have my wife.' 'Damn you, boy, you're going to die.' 'We'll see.' 'Listen to me. Two have crossbows. Keep
close to the wall on the right. The bowmen are in upper rooms; they'll not be
able to sight their weapons if you keep to the wall.' 'I'll do that,' said Druss. 'Thank you, old
man.' Thorn faded back into the shadows and was
gone. Drawing in a deep breath, Druss moved on to the quay. Above and ahead of
him he saw a window open. Altering his line, he moved in towards the walls of
the moonlit buildings. 'Where are you, Collan?' he shouted. Armed men moved out of the shadows and he
saw the tall, handsome figure of Collan among them. Druss walked forward.
'Where is my wife?' he called. 'That's the beauty of it,' answered Collan,
pointing at the ship. 'She's on board - sold to the merchant Kapuchek, who is
even now sailing for his home in Ventria. Maybe she will even see you die!' 'In your dreams!' snarled Druss as he
charged the waiting men. Behind them the drunken dock-worker suddenly rose, two
knives in his hands. One blade flashed by Collan's head, burying itself to the
hilt in Kotis's neck. A dagger swept towards Druss's belly, but
he brushed the attacker's arm aside and delivered a bone-crunching blow to the
man's chin, spinning him into the path of the warriors behind him. A knife
plunged into Druss's back. Twisting, he grabbed the wielder by the throat and
groin and hurled him into the remaining men. Sieben pulled Snaga from the work-sack and
threw it through the air. Druss caught the weapon smoothly. Moonlight glittered
from the terrible blades and the attackers scattered and ran. Druss ran towards the ship, which was
gliding slowly away from the quayside. 'Rowena!' he yelled. Something struck him
in the back and he staggered, then fell to his knees. He saw Sieben run forward.
The poet's arm went back, then swept down. Druss half turned to see a
crossbowman outlined against a window-frame; the man dropped his bow, then
tumbled from the window with a knife embedded in his eye. Sieben knelt alongside Druss. 'Lie still,'
he said. 'You've a bolt in your back!' 'Get away from me!' shouted Druss, levering
himself to his feet. 'Rowena!' He stumbled forward but the ship was moving
away from the quay more swiftly now, the wind catching the sail. Druss could
feel blood from his wounds streaming down his back and pooling above his belt.
A terrible lethargy swept over him and he fell again. Sieben came alongside. 'We must get you to
a surgeon,' he heard Sieben say. Then the poet's voice receded away from him,
and a great roaring filled his ears. Straining his eyes, he saw the ship angle
towards the east, the great sail filling. 'Rowena!' he shouted. 'Rowena!' The stone
of the quay was cold against his face, and the distant cries of the gulls
mocked his anguish. Pain flowed through him as he struggled to rise. . ... And fell from the edge of the world. * Collan raced along the quay, then glanced
back. He saw the giant warrior down, his companion kneeling beside him. Halting
his flight, he sat down on a mooring-post to recover his breath. It was
unbelievable! Unarmed, the giant had attacked armed men, scattering them.
Borcha was right. The charging bull analogy had been very perceptive. Tomorrow
Collan would move to a hiding place in the south of the city and then, as
Borcha had advised, seek out the old woman. That was the answer. Pay her to
cast a spell, or send a demon, or supply poison. Anything. Collan rose - and saw a dark figure
standing in the moon shadows by the wall. The man was watching him. 'What are
you staring at?' he said. The shadowy figure moved towards him,
moonlight bathing his face. He wore a tunic shirt of soft black leather, and
two short swords were scabbarded at his hips. His hair was black and long, and
tied in a pony-tail. 'Do I know you?' asked Collan. 'You will, renegade,' said the man, drawing
his right-hand sword. 'You've chosen the wrong man to rob,'
Collan told him. His sabre came up and he slashed the air to left and right,
loosening his wrist. 'I'm not here to rob you, Collan,' said the
man, advancing. 'I'm here to kill you.' Collan waited until his opponent was within
a few paces and then he leapt forward, lunging his sabre towards the man's
chest. There was a clash of steel as their blades met. Collan's sabre was
parried and a lightning riposte swept at the swordsman's throat. Collan jumped
back, the point of the sword missing his eye by less than an inch. 'You are
swift, my friend. I underestimated you.' 'It happens,' said the man. Collan attacked again, this time with a
series of sweeps and thrusts aiming for neck and belly. Their blades glittered
in the moonlight and all around them windows were opened as the discordant
clashing of steel echoed along the quay. Whores leaned out over the window-sills,
yelling encouragement; beggars appeared from alleyways; a nearby tavern emptied
and a crowd gathered in a large circle around the duelling men. Collan was
enjoying himself. His attacks were forcing his opponent back, and he had now
taken the measure of the man. The stranger was fast and lithe, cool under
pressure; but he was no longer young and Collan could sense he was tiring. At
first he had made several counter-attacks, but these were fewer now as he
desperately fended off the younger man's blade. Collan feinted a cut, then
rolled, his wrist lunging forward on to his right foot. The stranger blocked
too late, the point of the sabre piercing the man's left shoulder. Collan leapt
back, his blade sliding clear. 'Almost time to die, old man,' said Collan. 'Yes. How does it feel?' countered his
opponent. Collan laughed. 'You have nerve, I'll say that for you. Before I kill
you, will you tell me why you are hunting me? A wronged wife, perhaps? A
despoiled daughter? Or are you a hired assassin?' 'I am Shadak,' said the man. Collan grinned. 'So the night is not a
total waste.' He glanced at the crowd. 'The great Shadak!' he said, his voice
rising. 'This is the famed hunter, the mighty swordsman. See him bleed? Well,
my friends, you can tell your children how you saw him die! How Collan slew the
man of legend.' He advanced on the waiting Shadak, then
raised his sabre in a mock salute. 'I have enjoyed this duel, old man,' he
said, 'but now it is time to end it.' Even as he spoke he leapt, sending a fast
reverse cut towards Shadak's right side. As his opponent parried Collan rolled
his wrist, the sabre rolling over the blocking blade and sweeping up towards
Shadak's unprotected neck. It was the classic killing stroke, and one Collan
had employed many times, but Shadak swayed to his left, the sabre cutting into
his right shoulder. Collan felt a searing pain in his belly and glanced down.
Horrified, he saw Shadak's sword jutting there. 'Burn in Hell!' hissed Shadak, wrenching
the blade clear. Collan screamed and fell to his knees, his sabre clattering
against the stones of the quay. He could feel his heart hammering and agony,
red-hot acid pain, scorched through him. He cried out: 'Help me!' The crowd was silent now. Collan fell face
down on the stones. 'I can't be dying,' he thought. 'Not me. Not Collan.' The pain receded, replaced by a soothing
warmth that stole across his tortured mind. He opened his eyes and could see
his sabre glinting on the stones just ahead. He reached out for it, his fingers
touching the hilt. 'I can still win!' he told himself. 'I can.
. . .' Shadak sheathed his sword and stared down
at the dead man. Already the beggars were around him, pulling at his boots and
ripping at his belt. Shadak turned away and pushed through the crowd. He saw Sieben kneeling beside the still
figure of Druss, and his heart sank. Moving more swiftly, he came alongside the
body and knelt down. 'He's dead,' said Sieben. 'In your . . . dreams,' hissed Druss. 'Gel
me to my feet.' Shadak chuckled. 'Some men take a sight of
killing,' he told the poet. The two men hauled Druss upright. 'She's out there,' said Druss, staring at
the ship that was slowly shrinking against the distant horizon. 'I know, my friend,' said Shadak softly.
'But we'll find her. Now let's get you to a surgeon.' BOOK TWO: The Demon in the AxePrologueThe ship glided from the harbour, the early
evening swell rippling against the hull. Rowena stood on the aft deck, the tiny
figure of Pudri beside her. Above them, unnoticed on the raised tiller deck,
stood the Ventrian merchant Kabuchek. Tall and cadaverously thin, he stared at
the dock. He had seen Collan cut down by an unknown swordsman, and had watched
the giant Drenai warrior battle his way through Collan's men. Interesting, he
thought, what men will do for love. His thoughts flew back to his youth in
Varsipis and his desire for the young maiden Harenini. Did I love her then, he
wondered? Or has time added colours to the otherwise grey days of youth? The ship lifted on the swell as the vessel
approached the harbour mouth and the surging tides beyond. Kabuchek glanced
down at the girl; Collan had sold her cheaply. Five thousand pieces of silver
for a talent such as hers? Ludicrous. He had been prepared for a charlatan, or
a clever trickster. But she had taken his hand, looked into his eyes and said a
single word: 'Harenini'. Kabuchek had kept the shock from his face. He
had not heard her name in twenty-five years, and certainly there was no way
that the pirate Collan could have known of his juvenile infatuation. Though
already convinced of her talents, Kabuchek asked many questions until finally
he turned to Collan. 'It appears she has a modicum of talent,' he said. 'What
price are you asking?' 'Five thousand.' Kabuchek swung to his servant, the eunuch
Pudri. 'Pay him,' he said, concealing the smile of triumph and contenting
himself with the tormented look which appeared on Collan's face. 'I will take
her to the ship myself.' Now, judging by how close the axeman had
come, he congratulated himself upon his shrewdness. He heard Pudri's gentle
voice speaking to the girl. 'I pray your husband is not dead,' said
Pudri. Kabuchek glanced back at the dock and saw two Drenai warriors were
kneeling beside the still figure of the axeman. 'He will live,' said Rowena, tears filling
her eyes. 'And he will follow me.' If he does, thought Kabuchek, I will have
him slain. 'He has a great love for you, Pahtai,' said
Pudri soothingly. 'So it should be between husband and wife. It rarely happens
that way, however. I myself have had three wives - and none of them loved me.
But then a eunuch is not the ideal mate.' The girl watched the tiny figures on the
dock until the ship had slipped out of the harbour and the lights of Mashrapur
became distant twinkling candles. She sighed and sank down on the rail seat,
her head bowed, tears spilling from her eyes. Pudri sat beside her, his slender arm on
her shoulders. 'Yes,' he whispered, 'tears are good. Very good.' Patting her
back as if she were a small child, he sat beside her and whispered meaningless
platitudes. Kabuchek climbed down the deck steps and
approached them. 'Bring her to my cabin,' he ordered Pudri. Rowena glanced up at the harsh face of her
new master. His nose was long and hooked, like the beak of an eagle, and his
skin was darker than any she had seen, almost black. His eyes, however, were a
bright blue beneath thick brows. Beside her Pudri stood, helping her to her
feet, and together they followed the Ventrian merchant down the steps to the
aft cabin. Lanterns were lit here, hanging on bronze hooks from low oak beams. Kabuchek sat down behind a desk of polished
mahogany. 'Cast the runes for the voyage,' he ordered Rowena. 'I do not cast runes,' she said. 'I would
not know how.' He waved his hand dismissively. 'Do
whatever it is you do, woman. The sea is a treacherous mistress and I need to
know how the voyage will be.' Rowena sat opposite him. 'Give me your hand,'
she said. Leaning forward, he struck her face with his open palm. It was not a
heavy blow, but it stung the skin. 'You will address me always as master,' he
said, without any display of anger. His bright blue eyes scrutinised her face
for any sign of anger or defiance, but found himself gazing into calm hazel
eyes which appeared to be appraising him. Curiously he felt like apologising
for the blow, which was a ridiculous thought. It was not intended to hurt,
being merely a swift method of establishing authority-ownership. He cleared his
throat. 'I expect you to learn swiftly the ways of Ventrian households. You
will be well cared for and well fed; your quarters will be comfortable and warm
in winter, cool in summer. But you are a slave: understand that. I own you. You
are property. Do you understand this?' 'I understand . . . master,' said
the girl. The title was said with just a touch of emphasis, but without
insolence. 'Very well. Then let us move on to more
important matters.' He extended his hand. Rowena reached out and touched his open
palm. At first she could see only the details of his recent past, his agreement
with the traitors who had slain the Ventrian Emperor, one of them a hawk-faced
man. Kabuchek was kneeling before him and there was blood on the man's sleeve.
A name whispered into her mind - Shabag. 'What's that you say?' hissed Kabuchek. Rowena blinked, then realised she must have
spoken the name. 'I see a tall man with blood on his sleeve. You are kneeling
before him . . .' 'The future, girl! Not the past.' From the
decks above came a great flapping as if some giant flying beast was descending
from the sky. Rowena was startled. 'It is just the mainsail,' said Kabuchek.
'Concentrate, girl!' Closing her eyes, Rowena allowed her mind
to drift. She could see the ship now from above, floating on a clear sea
beneath a sky of brilliant blue. Then another ship hove into sight, a trireme,
its three banks of oars sending up a white spray as it sheared through the
waves towards them. Rowena floated closer . . . closer. Armed men filled the
trireme's deck. Silver-grey forms swam around the trireme -
great fish, twenty feet long, with fins like spear points cutting through the
water. Rowena watched as the two ships crashed together, saw men falling into the
water and the sleek grey fish rising up towards them. Blood billowed into the
sea, and she saw the jagged teeth in the mouths of the fish, saw them rend and
tear and dismember the helpless sailors thrashing in the water. The battle on the ship's deck was short and
brutal. She saw herself and.Pudri, and the tall form of Kabuchek clambering
over the aft rail and leaping out into the waves. The killer fish circled them - then moved
in. Rowena could watch no more and, jerking her
mind to the present, she opened her eyes. 'Well, what did you see?' asked Kabuchek. 'A black-sailed trireme, master.' 'Earin Shad,' whispered Pudri, his face
pale, his eyes fearful. 'Do we escape him?' asked Kabuchek. 'Yes,' said Rowena, her voice dull, her
thoughts full of despair, 'we escape Earin Shad.' 'Good. I am well satisfied,' announced
Kabuchek. He glanced at Pudri. 'Take her to her cabin and give her some food.
She is looking pale.' Pudri led Rowena back along the narrow
corridor to a small door. Pushing it open, he stepped inside. 'The bed is very
small, but you are not large. I think it will suffice, Pahtai.' Rowena
nodded dumbly and sat. 'You saw more than you told the master,' he
said. 'Yes. There were fish, huge fish, dark with
terrible teeth.' 'Sharks,' said Pudri, sitting beside her. 'This ship will be sunk,' she told him.
'And you and I, and Kabuchek, will leap into the sea, where the sharks will be
waiting.' Chapter OneSieben sat in an outer room, sunlight
slanting through the shuttered window at his back. He could hear low voices
from the room beyond - a man's deep, pleading tones, and the harsh responses
from the Old Woman. Muffled by the thick walls of stone and the oak door, the
words were lost - which was just as well, since Sieben had no wish to hear the
conversation. The Old Woman had many clients; most seeking the murder of rivals
- at least, according to the whispered gossip he had heard. He closed his ears to the voices and
concentrated instead on the shafts of light and the gleaming dust motes dancing
within them. The room was bare of ornament save for the three seats of plain,
unfinished wood. They were not even well made and Sieben guessed they had been
bought in the southern quarter, where the poor spent what little money they
had. Idly he swept his hand through a shaft of
light. The dust scattered and swirled. The oak door opened and a middle-aged man
emerged. Seeing Sieben, he swiftly turned his face away and hurried from the
house. The poet rose and moved towards the open door. The room beyond was
scarcely better furnished than the waiting area. There was a broad table with
ill-fitting joints, two hard wood chairs and a single shutter window. No light
shone through the slats and Sieben saw that old cloths had been wedged between
them. 'A curtain would have been sufficient to
block the light,' he said, forcing a lightness of tone he did not feel. The Old Woman did not smile, her face
impassive in the light of the red-glassed lantern on the table before her. 'Sit,' she said. He did so, and tried to stop himself from
considering her awesome ugliness. Her teeth were multi-coloured - green, grey
and the brown of rotting vegetation. Her eyes were rheumy, and a cataract had
formed in the left. She was wearing a loose-fitting gown of faded red, and a
gold talisman was partially hidden in the wrinkled folds of her neck. 'Put the gold upon the table,' she said. He
lifted a single gold raq from the pouch at his side and slid it towards her.
Making no move to pick up the coin, she looked into his face. 'What do you
require of me?' she asked him. 'I have a friend who is dying.' 'The young axeman.' 'Yes. The surgeons have done all they can,
but there is poison within his lungs, and the knife wound in his lower back
will not heal.' 'You have something of his with you?' Sieben nodded and pulled the
silver-knuckled gauntlet from his belt. She took it from his hand and sat in
silence, running the calloused skin of her thumb across the leather and metal.
'The surgeon is Calvar Syn,' she said. 'What does he say?' 'Only that Druss should already be dead.
The poison in his system is spreading; they are forcing liquids into him, but
his weight is falling away and he has not opened his eyes in four days.' 'What would you have me do?' Sieben shrugged. 'It is said you are very
skilled in herbs. I thought you might save him.' She laughed suddenly, the sound dry and
harsh. 'My herbs do not usually prolong life, Sieben.' Laying the gauntlet upon
the table, she leaned back in her chair. 'He suffers,' she said. 'He has lost
his lady, and his will to live is fading. Without the will, there is no hope.' 'There is nothing you can do?' 'About his will? No. But his lady is on
board a ship bound for Ventria and she is safe - for the moment. But the war
sweeps on and who can say what will become of a slave-girl if she reaches that
battle-torn continent? Go back to the hospital. Take your friend to the house
Shadak is preparing for you.' 'He will die, then?' She smiled, and Sieben tore his eyes from
the sudden show of rotting teeth. 'Perhaps . . . Place him in a room where the
sunlight enters in the morning, and lay his axe upon his bed, his fingers upon
the hilt.' Her hand snaked across the table, and the gold raq vanished into her
palm. 'That is all you can tell me for an ounce
of gold?" 'It is all you need to know. Place his hand
upon the hilt.' Sieben rose. 'I had expected more.' 'Life is full of disappointments, Sieben.' He moved to the door, but her voice stopped
him. 'Do not touch the blades,' she warned. 'What?' 'Carry the weapon with care.' Shaking his head, he left the house. The
sun was hidden now behind dark clouds, and rain began to fall. * Druss was sitting alone and exhausted
upon a grim mountainside, the sky above him grey and forlorn, the earth around
him arid and dry. He gazed up at the towering peaks so far above him and
levered himself to his feet. His legs were unsteady, and he had been climbing
for so long that all sense of time had vanished. All he knew was that Rowena
waited on the topmost peak, and he must find her. Some twenty paces ahead was a
jutting finger of rock and Druss set off towards it, forcing his aching limbs
to push 'his weary body on and up. Blood was gushing from the wounds in his
back, making the ground treacherous around his feet. He fell. Then he crawled. It seemed that hours had passed. He looked up. The jutting finger of rock
was now forty paces from him. Despair came fleetingly, but was washed
away on a tidal wave of rage. He crawled on. Ever on. 'I won't give up,' he hissed. 'Ever.' Something cold touched his hand, his
fingers closing around an object of steel. And he heard a voice. 7 am back, my brother.' Something in the words chilled him. He
gazed down at the silver axe - and felt his wounds heal, his strength flooding
back into his frame. Rising smoothly, he looked up at the
mountain. It was merely a hill. Swiftly he strode to the top. And woke. * Calvar Syn patted Druss's back. 'Put on your shirt, young man,' he
said. 'The wounds have finally healed. There is a little pus, but the blood is
fresh and the scab contains no corruption. I congratulate you on your
strength.' Druss nodded, but did not reply. Slowly and
with care he pulled on his shirt of grey wool, then leaned back exhausted on
the bed. Calvar Syn reached out, gently pressing his index finger to the pulse
point on the young man's throat. The beat was erratic and fast, but this was to
be expected after such a long infection. 'Take a deep breath,' ordered the
surgeon and Druss obeyed. 'The right lung is still not operating at full
efficiency; but it will. I want you to move out into the garden. Enjoy the
sunshine and the sea air.' The surgeon rose and left the room, walking
down the long hallways and out into the gardens beyond. He saw the poet,
Sieben, sitting beneath a spreading elm and tossing pebbles into a man-made
pond. Calvar Syn wandered to the poolside. 'Your friend is improving, but not as
swiftly as I had hoped,' he said. 'Did you bleed him?' 'No. There is no longer a fever. He is very
silent . . . withdrawn.' Sieben nodded. 'His wife was taken from
him.' 'Very sad, I'm sure. But there are other
women in the world,' observed the surgeon. 'Not for him. He loves her, he's going
after her.' 'He'll waste his life,' said Calvar. 'Has
he any idea of the size of the Ventrian continent? There are thousands upon
thousands of small towns and villages, and more than three hundred major
cities. Then there is the war. All shipping has ceased. How will he get there?' 'Of course he understands. But he's Druss -
he's not like you or me, surgeon.' The poet chuckled and threw another pebble.
'He's an old-fashioned hero. You don't see many these days. He'll find a way.' Calvar cleared his throat. 'Hmmm. Well,
your old-fashioned hero is currently as strong as a three-day lamb. He is deep
in a melancholic state, and until he recovers from it I cannot see him
improving. Feed him red meat and dark green vegetables. He needs food for the
blood.' He cleared his throat again, and stood silently. 'Was there something else?' asked the poet. Calvar cursed inwardly. People were always
the same. As soon as they were sick, they sent at speed for the doctor. But
when it came to the time for settling accounts . . . No one expected a baker to
part with bread without coin. Not so a surgeon. There is the question of my
fee,' he said coldly. 'Ah, yes. How much is it?' 'Thirty raq.' 'Shema's balls! No wonder you surgeons live
in palaces.' Calvar sighed, but kept his temper. 'I do
not live in a palace; I have a small house to the north. And the reason why
surgeons must charge such fees is that a great number of patients renege. Your
friend has been ill now for two months. During this time I have made more than
thirty visits to this house, and I have had to purchase many expensive herbs.
Three times now you have promised to settle the account. On each occasion you
ask me how much is it. So you have the money?' 'No,' admitted Sieben. 'How much do you have?' 'Five raq.' Calvar held out his hand and Sieben handed
him the coins. 'You have until this time next week to find the rest of the
money. After that I shall I inform the Watch. In Mashrapur the law is simple:
if you do not honour your debts your property will be sequestered. Since this
house does not belong to you and, as far as I know, you have no source of
income, you are likely to be imprisoned until sold as a slave. Until next week
then.' Calvar turned away and strode through the
garden, his anger mounting. Another bad debt. One day I really will go to the Watch, he
promised himself. He strolled on through the narrow streets, his medicine bag
swinging from his narrow shoulders. 'Doctor! Doctor!' came a woman's voice and
he swung to see a young woman running towards him. Sighing he waited. 'Could
you come with me? It's my son, he has a fever.' Calvar looked down at the
woman. Her dress was of poor quality, and old. She wore no shoes. 'And how will you pay me?' he asked, the
question springing from the residue of his anger. She stood silent for a moment. 'You can
take everything I have,' she said simply. He shook his head, his anger finally
disappearing. 'That will not be necessary,' he told her, with a professional
smile. He arrived home a little after midnight.
His servant had left him a cold meal of meat and cheese. Calvar stretched out
on a leather-covered couch and sipped a goblet of wine. Untying his money-pouch, he tipped the
contents to the table. Three raq tumbled to the wooden surface. 'You will never
be rich, Calvar,' he said, with a wry smile. He had sat with the boy while the mother
was out buying food. She had returned with eggs, and meat, and milk, and bread,
her face glowing. It was worth two raq just to see her expression, he thought. * Druss made his way slowly out into the
garden. The moon was high, the stars bright. He remembered a poem of Sieben's: Glitter
dust in the lair of night. Yes, that's how the stars looked. He was
breathing heavily by the time he reached the circular seat constructed around
the bole of the elm. Take a deep breath, the surgeon had ordered. Deep? If felt
as if a huge lump of stone had been wedged into his lungs, blocking all air. The crossbow bolt had pierced cleanly, but
it had also driven a tiny portion of his shirt into the wound, and this had
caused the poison that drained his strength. The wind was cool, and bats circled above
the trees. Strength. Druss realised now just how much he had undervalued
the awesome power of his body. One small bolt and a hastily thrust knife had
reduced him to this shambling, weak shell. How, in this state, could he rescue
Rowena? Despair struck him like a fist under the
heart. Rescue her? He did not even know where she was, save that thousands of
miles now separated them. No Ventrian ships sailed, and even if they did he had
no gold with which to purchase passage. He gazed back at the house where golden
light gleamed from Sieben's window. It was a fine house, better than any Druss
had ever visited. Shadak had arranged for them to rent the property, the owner
being trapped in Ventria. But the rent was due. The surgeon had told him it
would be two months before his strength began to return. We'll starve before then, thought Druss.
Levering himself to his feet, he walked on to the high wall at the rear of the
garden. By the time he reached it his legs felt boneless, his breath was coming
in ragged gasps. The house seemed an infinite distance away. Druss struck out
for it, but had to stop by the pond and sit at the water's edge. Splashing his
face, he waited until his feeble strength returned, then rose and stumbled to the
rear doors. The iron gate at the far end of the garden was lost in shadow now.
He wanted to walk there once more, but his will was gone. As he was about to enter the building he
saw movement from the corner of his eye. He swung, ponderously, and a man moved
from the shadows. 'Good to see you alive, lad,' said Old
Thorn. Druss smiled. There is an ornate
door-knocker at the front of the house,' he said. 'Didn't know as I'd be welcome,' the old
man replied. Druss led the way into the house, turning
left into the large meeting room with its four couches and six padded chairs.
Thorn moved to the hearth, lighting a taper from the dying flames of the fire,
then touching it to the wick of a lantern set on the wall. 'Help yourself to a
drink,' offered Druss. Old Thorn poured a goblet of red wine, then a second
which he passed to the young man. 'You've lost a lot of weight, lad, and you
look like an old man,' said Thorn cheerfully. 'I've felt better.' 'I see Shadak spoke up for you with the
magistrates. No action to be taken over the fight at the quay. Good to have
friends, eh? And don't worry about Calvar Syn.' 'Why should I worry about him?' 'Unpaid debt. He could have you sold into
slavery - but he won't. Soft, he is.' 'I thought Sieben had paid him. I'll not be
beholden to any man.' 'Good words, lad. For good words and a
copper farthing you can buy a loaf of bread.' 'I'll get the money to pay him,' promised
Druss. 'Of course you will, lad. The best way - in
the sand circle. But we've got to get your strength up first. You need to work
- though my tongue should turn black for saying it.' 'I need time,' said Druss. 'You've little time, lad. Borcha is looking
for you. You took away his reputation and he says he'll beat you to death when
he finds you.' 'Does he indeed?' hissed Druss, his pale
eyes gleaming. 'That's more like it, my bonny lad! Anger,
that's what you need! Right, well I'll leave you now. By the way, they're
felling trees to the west of the city, clearing the ground for some new
buildings. They're looking for workers. Two silver pennies a day. It ain't
much, but it's work.' 'I'll think on it.' 'I'll leave you to your rest, lad. You look
like you need it.' Druss watched the old man leave, then
walked out into the garden once more. His muscles ached, and his heart was
beating to a ragged drum. But Borcha's face was fixed before his mind's eye and
he forced himself to walk to the gate and back. Three times. . . . * Vintar rose from his bed, moving quietly so
as not to wake the four priests who shared the small room in the southern wing.
Dressing himself in a long white habit of rough wool, he padded barefoot along
the cold stone of the corridor and up the winding steps to the ancient
battlements. From here he could see the mountain range
that separated Lentria from the lands of the Drenai. The moon was high, half
full, the sky cloudless. Beyond the temple the trees of the forest shimmered in
the spectral light. 'The night is a good time for meditation,
my son,' said the Abbot, stepping from the shadows. 'But you will need your
strength for the day. You are falling behind in your sword work.' The Abbot was
a broad-shouldered, powerful man who had once been a mercenary. His face bore a
jagged scar from his right cheekbone down to his rugged jaw. 'I am not meditating, Father. I cannot stop
thinking about the woman.' 'The one taken by slavers?' 'Yes. She haunts me.' 'You are here because your parents gave you
into my custody, but you remain of your own free will. Should you desire to
leave and find this girl you may do so. The Thirty will survive, Vintar.' The young man sighed. 'I do not wish to
leave, Father. And it is not that I desire her.' He smiled wistfully. 'I have
never desired a woman. But there was something about her that I cannot shake from
my thoughts.' 'Come with me, my boy. It is cold here, and
I have a fire. We will talk.' Vintar followed the burly Abbot into the
western wing and the two men sat in the Abbot's study as the sky paled towards
dawn. 'Sometimes,' said the Abbot, as he hung a copper kettle over the flames,
'it is hard to define the will of the Source. I have known men who wished to
travel to far lands. They prayed for guidance. Amazingly they found that the
Source was guiding them to do just what they wished for. I say amazingly because,
in my experience, the Source rarely sends a man where he wants to go. That is
part of the sacrifice we make when we serve Him. I do not say it never happens,
you understand, for that would be arrogance. No, but when one prays for
guidance it should be with an open mind, all thoughts of one's own desires put
aside.' The kettle began to hiss, clouds of vapour
puffing from the curved spout. Shielding his hands with a cloth, the Abbot
poured the water into a second pot, in which he had spooned dried herbs.
Placing the kettle in the hearth, he sat back in an old leather chair. 'Now the Source very rarely speaks to us
directly, and the question is: How do we know what is required? These matters
are very complex. You chose to absent yourself from study, and soar across the
Heavens. In doing so you rescued the spirit of a young girl and led her home to
her abused body. Coincidence? I distrust coincidence. Therefore it is my
belief, though I may be wrong, that the Source led you to her. And that is why
she now haunts your mind. Your dealings with her are not yet concluded.' 'You think I should seek her out?' 'I do. Take yourself to the south wing
library. There is a small cell beyond it. I will excuse you from all studies
tomorrow.' 'But how shall I find her again, Lord
Abbot? She was a slave. She could be anywhere.' 'Start with the man who was abusing her.
You know his name - Collan. You know where he was planning to take her -
Mashrapur. Let your spirit search begin there.' The Abbot poured tea into two clay cups.
The aroma was sweet and heady. 'I am the least talented of all the priests,'
said Vintar sorrowfully. 'Surely it would be better to pray for the Source to
send someone stronger?' The Abbot chuckled. 'It is so strange, my
boy. Many people say they wish to serve the Lord of All Peace. But in an
advisory capacity: "Ah, my God, you are most wondrous, having created all
the planets and the stars. However, you are quite wrong to choose me. I know
this, for I am Vintar, and I am weak." ' 'You mock me, father.' 'Of course I mock you. But I do so with at
least a modicum of love in my heart. I was a soldier, a killer, a drunkard, a
womaniser. How do you think I felt when He chose me to become a member of the
Thirty? And when my brother priests stood facing death, can you imagine my
despair at being told I was the one who must survive? I was to be the new
Abbot. I was to gather the new Thirty. Oh Vintar, you have much to learn. Find
this girl. I rather believe that in doing so you will find something for yourself.' The young priest finished his tea and
stood. 'Thank you, Father, for your kindness.' 'You told me she has a husband who was
searching for her,' said the Abbot. 'Yes. A man named Druss.' 'Perhaps he will still be in Mashrapur.' An hour later, in the bright sky above the
city, the spirit of the young priest hovered. From here, despite the distance
that made the buildings and palaces seem tiny, like the building bricks of an
infant, he could feel the pulsing heart of Mashrapur, like a beast upon wakening;
ravenous, filled with greed and lust. Dark emotions radiated from the city,
filling his thoughts and swamping the purity he fought so hard to maintain. He
dropped closer, closer still. Now he could see the dock-workers strolling
to work, and the whores plying the early-morning trade and the merchants
opening their shops and stalls. Where to begin? He had no idea. For hours he flew aimlessly, touching a
mind here, a thought there, seeking knowledge of Collan, Rowena or Druss. He
found nothing save greed, or want, hunger or dissipation, lust or, so rarely,
love. Tired and defeated, he was ready to return
to the Temple when he felt a sudden pull on his spirit, as if a rope had
attached itself to him. In panic he tried to pull away, but though he used all
his strength he was drawn inexorably down into a room where all the windows had
been barred. An elderly woman was sitting before a red lantern. She gazed up at
him as he floated just below the ceiling. 'Ah, but you are a treat to these old eyes,
my pretty,' she said. Suddenly shocked, Vintar realised that his form was naked
and he clothed himself in an instant in robes of white. She gave a dry laugh.
'And modest too.' The smile faded, and with it her good humour. 'What are you
doing here? Hmmm? This is my city, child.' 'I am a priest, lady,' he said. 'I am
seeking knowledge of a woman called Rowena, the wife of Druss, the slave of
Collan.' 'Why?' 'My Abbot instructed me to find her. He
believes the Source may want her protected.' 'By you?' Her good humour returned. 'Boy,
you can't even protect yourself from an old witch. Were I to desire it, I could
send your soul flaming into Hell.' 'Why would you desire such a terrible
thing?' She paused for a moment. 'It might be a
whim, or a fancy. What will you give me for your life?' 'I don't have anything to give.' 'Of course you do,' she said. Her old eyes
closed and he watched her spirit rise from her body. She took the form of a
beautiful woman, young and shapely, with golden hair and large blue eyes. 'Does
this form please you?' 'Of course. It is flawless. Is that how you
looked when younger?' 'No, I was always ugly. But this is how I
choose for you to see me.' She glided in close to him and stroked his face. Her
touch was warm, and he felt a ripple of arousal. 'Please do not continue,' he said. 'Why? Is it not pleasurable?' Her hand
touched his robes and they disappeared. 'Yes, it is. Very. But my vows. . . do not
allow for the pleasures of the flesh.' 'Silly boy,' she whispered into his ear.
'We are not flesh. We are spirit.' 'No,' he said sternly. Instantly he
transformed himself into the image of the old woman sitting at the table. 'Clever boy,' said the beautiful vision.
'Yes, very clever. And virtuous too. I don't know if I like that, but it does
have the charm of being novel. Very well. I will help you.' He felt the invisible chains holding him
disappear, as did the vision. The old woman opened her eyes. 'She was at sea, heading for Ventria when
the ship came under attack. She leapt into the water, and the sharks took her.' Vintar reeled back and cried out, 'It's my
fault! I should have sought her sooner.' 'Go back to your Temple, boy. My time is
precious, and I have clients waiting.' Her laughter rang out and she waved her
hand dismissively. Once more he felt the pull on his spirit. It dragged him
out, hurling him high into the sky over Mashrapur. * Vintar returned to the tiny cell at the
Temple, merging once more with his body. As always he felt nauseous and dizzy
and lay still for a few moments, experiencing the weight of his flesh, feeling
the rough blanket beneath his skin. A great sadness fell upon him. His talents
were far beyond those of normal men, yet they had brought him no pleasure. His
parents had treated him with cold reverence, frightened by his uncanny skills.
They had been both delighted and relieved when the Abbot came to them one
autumn evening, offering to take the boy into his custody. It mattered nothing
to them that the Abbot represented a Temple of the Thirty, where men with
awesome talents trained and studied with one purpose only - to die in some
battle, some distant war, and thus become one with the Source. The prospect of
his death could not grieve his parents, for they had never treated him as a
human being, flesh of their flesh, blood of their blood. They saw him as a
changeling, a demonic presence. He had no friends. Who wants to be around a boy
who can read minds, who can peek into the darkest corners of your soul and know
all your secrets? Even in the Temple he was alone, unable to share in the
simple camaraderie of others with talents the equal of his. And now he had missed an opportunity to
help a young woman, indeed to save her life. He sat up and sighed. The old woman had
been a witch, and he had felt the malevolence of her personality. Even so the
vision she created had aroused him. He could not even withstand such a petty
evil. And then the thought struck him, like a
blow between the eyes. Evil! Malice and deceit walked hand in hand beneath the
darkness of evil. Perhaps she lied! He lay back and forced his mind to relax,
loosening the spirit once more. Soaring from the Temple, he sped across the
ocean, seeking the ship and praying that he was not too late. Clouds were gathering in the east,
promising a storm. Vintar swooped low over the water, spirit eyes scanning the
horizon. Forty miles from the coast of Ventria he
saw the ships, a trireme with a huge black sail and a slender merchant vessel
seeking to avoid capture. The merchant ship swung away, but the trireme
ploughed on, its bronze-covered ram striking the prey amidships, smashing the
timbers and ripping into the heart of the vessel. Armed men swarmed over the
trireme's prow. On the rear deck Vintar saw a young woman dressed in white,
with two men - one tall and dark-skinned, the other small and slightly built.
The trio leapt into the waves. Sharks glided through the water towards them. Vintar flew to Rowena, his spirit hand
touching her shoulder as she bobbed in the water, clinging to a length of
timber, the two men on either side of her. 'Stay calm, Rowena,' he pulsed. A shark lunged up at the struggling trio
and Vintar entered its mind, tasting the bleakness of its non-thoughts, the
coldness of its emotions, the hunger that consumed it. He felt himself becoming
the shark, seeing the world through black, unblinking eyes, tasting the
environment through a sense of smell a hundred, perhaps a thousand times more
powerful than Man's. Another shark glided below the three people, its jaws
opening as it swept up towards them. With a flick of his tail Vintar rammed the
beast, which turned and snapped at his side, barely missing his dorsal fin. Then came a scent in the water, sweet and
beguiling, promising infinite pleasure and a cessation of hunger. Almost
without thinking Vintar swam for it, sensing and seeing the other sharks racing
towards it. And then he knew, and his soaring lust was
quelled as swiftly as it had risen. Blood. The victims of the pirates were
being thrown to the sharks. Releasing control of the sea beast, he flew
back to where Rowena and the others were clinging to the beam. 'Get your
friends to kick out. You must swim away from here,', he told her. He heard her
tell the others, and slowly the three of them began to move away from the
carnage. Vintar soared high into the sky and scanned
the horizon. Another ship was just in sight, a merchant vessel, and the young
priest sped towards it. Dropping to where the captain stood by the tiller
Vintar entered the man's mind, screening out his thoughts of wife, family,
pirates and bad winds. The ship was manned by two hundred rowers and thirty
seamen; it was carrying wine from Lentria to the Naashanite port of Virinis. Vintar flowed through the captain's body,
seeking control. In the lungs he found a small, malignant cancer. Swiftly
Vintar neutralised it, accelerating the body's healing mechanism to carry away
the corrupt cell. Moving up once more into the brain, he made the captain swing
the ship towards the north-west. The captain was a kindly man, his thoughts
mellow. He had seven children, and one of them - the youngest daughter - had
been sick with yellow fever when he set sail. He was praying for her recovery. Vintar imprinted the new course on the
man's unsuspecting mind and flew back to Rowena, telling her of the ship that
would soon arrive. Then he moved to the pirate trireme. Already they had sacked
the merchant vessel and were backing oars, pulling clear the ram and allowing
the looted ship to sink. Vintar entered the captain's mind - and
reeled with the horror of his thoughts. Swiftly he made the man see the distant
merchant ship and filled his mind with nameless fears. The approaching ship, he
made the captain believe, was filled with soldiers. It was an ill omen, it
would be the death of him. Then Vintar left him, and listened with satisfaction
as Earin Shad bellowed orders to his men to turn about and make for the
north-west. Vintar floated above Rowena and the two men
until the merchant ship arrived and hauled them aboard. Then he departed for
the Lentrian port of Chupianin, where he healed the captain's daughter. Only then did he return to the Temple,
where he found the Abbot sitting beside his bed. 'How are you feeling, my boy?' he asked. 'Better than I have in years, Father. The
girl is safe now. And I have enhanced two lives.' 'Three,' said the Abbot. 'You have enhanced
your own.' 'That is true,' admitted Vintar, 'and it is
good to be home.' * Druss could hardly believe the chaos at the
clearing site. Hundreds of men scurried here and there without apparent
direction, felling trees, digging out roots, hacking at the dense, overgrown
vegetation. There was no order to the destruction. Trees were hacked down,
falling across paths used by men with wheelbarrows who were trying to clear the
debris. Even while he waited to see the Overseer he watched a tall pine topple
on to a group of men digging out tree roots. No one was killed, but one worker
suffered a broken arm and several others showed bloody gashes to face or arm. The Overseer, a slender yet pot-bellied
man, called him over. 'Well, what are your skills?' he asked. 'Woodsman,' answered Druss. 'Everyone here claims to be a woodsman,'
said the man wearily. 'I'm looking for men with skill.' 'You certainly need them,' observed Druss. 'I have twenty days to clear this area,
then another twenty to prepare footings for the new buildings. The pay is two
silver pennies a day.' The man pointed to a burly, bearded man sitting on a
tree-stump. 'That's Togrin, the charge-hand. He organises the work-force and
hires the men.' 'He's a fool,' said Druss, 'and he'll get
someone killed.' 'Fool he may be,' admitted the Overseer,
'but he's also a very tough man. No one shirks when he's around.' Druss gazed at the site. 'That may be true;
but you'll never finish on time. And I'll not work for any man who doesn't know
what he's doing.' 'You're a little young to making such
sweeping comments,' observed the Overseer. 'So tell me, how would you
re-organise the work?' Td move the axemen further west and allow
the rest of the men to clear behind them. If it carries on like this, all
movement will cease. Look there,' said Druss, pointing to the right. Trees had
been felled in a rough circle, at the centre of which were men digging out huge
roots. 'Where will they take the roots?' asked the axeman. 'There is no longer
a path. They will have to wait while the trees are hauled away. Yet how will
you move horses and trace chains through to them?' The Overseer smiled. 'You have a point,
young man. Very well. The charge-hand earns four pennies a day. Take his place
and show me what you can do.' Druss took a deep breath. His muscles were
already tired from the long walk to the site, and the wounds in his back were
aching. He was in no condition to fight, and had been hoping to ease himself in
to the work. 'How do you signal a break in the work?' he asked. 'We ring the bell for the noon break. But
that's three hours away.' 'Have it rung now,' said Druss. The Overseer chuckled. "This should
break the monotony,' he said. 'Do you want me to tell Togrin he has lost his
job?' Druss looked into the man's brown eyes.
'No. I'll tell him myself,' he said. 'Good. Then I'll see to the bell.' The Overseer strolled away and Druss picked
his way through the chaos until he was standing close to the seated Togrin. The
man glanced up. He was large and round-shouldered, heavy of arm and sturdy of
chin. His eyes were dark, almost black under heavy brows. 'Looking for work?'
he asked. 'No.' 'Then get off my site. I don't like
idlers.' The clanging of a bell sounded through the
wood. Togrin swore and rose as everywhere men stopped working. 'What the. . .
?' He swung around. 'Who rang that bell?' he bellowed. Men began to gather around the charge-hand
and Druss approached the man. 'I ordered the bell rung,' he said. Togrin's eyes narrowed. 'And who might you
be?' he asked. 'The new charge-hand,' replied Druss. 'Well, well,' said Togrin, with a wide
grin. 'Now there are two charge-hands. I think that's one too many.' 'I agree,' Druss told him. Stepping in
swiftly, he delivered a thundering blow to the man's belly. The air left Togrin's
lungs with a great whoosh and he doubled up, his head dropping. Druss's left
fist chopped down the man's jaw and Togrin hit the ground face first. The
charge-hand twitched, then lay still. Druss sucked in a great gulp of air. He
felt unsteady and white lights danced before his eyes as he looked around at
the waiting men. 'Now we are going to make some changes,' he said. * Day by day Druss's strength grew, the
muscles of his arms and shoulders swelling with each sweeping blow of the axe,
each shovelful of hard clay, each wrenching lift that tore a stubborn tree root
clear of the earth. For the first five days Druss slept at the site in a small
canvas tent supplied by the Overseer. He had not the energy to walk the three
miles back to the rented house. And each lonely night two faces hovered in his
mind as he drifted to sleep: Rowena, whom he loved more than life, and Borcha,
the fist-fighter he knew he had to face. In the quiet of the tent his thoughts were
many. He saw his father differently now and wished he had known him better. It
took courage to live down a father like Bardan the Slayer, and to raise a child
and build a life on the frontier. He remembered the day when the wandering
mercenary had stopped at the village. Druss had been impressed by the man's
weapons, knife, short sword and hand-axe, and by his, battered breastplate and
helm. 'He lives a life of real courage,' he had observed to his father, putting
emphasis on the word real. Bress had merely nodded. Several days later,
as they were walking across the high meadow, Bress had pointed towards the
house of Egan the farmer. 'You want to see courage, boy,' he said. 'Look at him
working in that field. Ten years ago he had a farm on the Sentran Plain, but
Sathuli raiders came in the night, burning him out. Then he moved to the
Ventrian border, where locusts destroyed his crops for three years. He had
borrowed money to finance his farm and he lost everything. Now he is back on
the land, working from first light to last. That's real courage. It
doesn't take much for a man to abandon a life of toil for a sword. The real
heroes are those who battle on.' The boy had known better. You couldn't be a
hero and a farmer. 'If he was so brave, why didn't he fight
off the Sathuli?' 'He had a wife and three children to
protect.' 'So he ran away?' 'He ran away,' agreed Bress. 'I'll never run from a fight,' said Druss. 'Then you'll die young,' Bress told him. Druss sat up and thought back to the raid.
What would he have done if the choice had been to fight the slavers - or run
with Rowena? His sleep that night was troubled. On the sixth night as he walked from the
site a tall, burly figure stepped into his path. It was Togrin, the former
charge-hand. Druss had not seen him since the fight. The young axeman scanned
the darkness, seeking other assailants, but there were none. 'Can we talk?' asked Togrin. 'Why not?' countered Druss. The man took a deep breath. 'I need work,'
he said. 'My wife's sick. The children have not eaten in two days.' Druss looked hard into the man's face,
seeing the hurt pride and instantly sensing what it had cost him to ask for
help. 'Be on site at dawn,' he said, and strolled on. He felt uncomfortable as
he made his way home, telling himself he would never have allowed his own
dignity to be lost in such a way. But even as he thought the words, a seed of
doubt came to him. Mashrapur was a harsh, unforgiving city. A man was valued
only so long as he contributed to the general well-being of the community. And
how dreadful it must be, he thought, to watch your children starve. It was dusk when he arrived at the house.
He was tired, but the bone-weariness he had experienced for so long had faded.
Sieben was not home. Druss lit a lantern and opened the rear door to the garden
allowing the cool sea breeze to penetrate the house. Removing his money-pouch; he counted out
the twenty-four silver pennies he had earned thus far. Twenty was the
equivalent of a single raq, and that was one month's rent on the property. At
this rate he would never earn enough to settle his debts. Old Thorn was right:
he could make far more in the sand circle. He recalled the bout with Borcha, the
terrible pounding he had received. The memory of the punches he had taken was
strong within him - but so too was the memory of those he had thundered into
his opponent. He heard the iron gate creak at the far end
of the garden and saw a shadowly figure making his way towards the house.
Moonlight glinted from the man's bald pate, and he seemed colossal as he strode
through the shadowed trees. Druss rose from his seat, his pale eyes narrowing. Borcha halted just before the door. 'Well,'
he asked, 'are you going to invite me in?' Druss stepped into the garden. 'You can
take your beating out here,' he hissed. 'I've not the money to pay for broken
furniture.' 'You're a cocky lad,' said Borcha amiably,
stepping into the house and draping his green cloak across the back of a couch.
Nonplussed, Druss followed him inside. The big man stretched out in a padded
chair, crossing his legs and leaning his head back against the high back. 'A
good chair,' he said. 'Now how about a drink?' 'What do you want here?' demanded Druss,
fighting to control his rising temper. 'A little hospitality, farm boy. I don't
know about you, but where I come from we normally offer a guest a goblet of
wine when he takes the trouble to call.' 'Where I'm from,' responded Druss,
'uninvited guests are rarely welcome.' 'Why such hostility? You won your wager and
you fought well. Collan did not take my advice - which was to return your wife
-and now he is dead. I had no part in the raid.' 'And I suppose you haven't been looking for
me, seeking your revenge?' Borcha laughed. 'Revenge? For what? You
stole nothing from me. You certainly did not beat me - nor could you. You have
the strength but not the skill. If that had been a genuine bout I would have
broken you, boy - eventually. However, you are quite right - I have been
looking for you.' Druss sat opposite the giant. 'So Old Thorn
told me. He said you were seeking to destroy me.' Borcha shook his head and grinned. 'The
drunken fool misunderstood, boy. Now tell me, how old do you think I am?' 'What? How in the name of Hell should I
know?' stormed Druss. 'I'm thirty-eight, thirty-nine in two
months. And yes, I could still beat Grassin, and probably all the others. But
you showed me the mirror of time, Druss. No one lasts for ever - not in the
sand circle. My day is over; my few minutes with you taught me that. Your day
is beginning. But it won't last long unless you learn how to fight.' 'I need no instruction in that,' said
Druss. 'You think not? Every time you throw a
right-hand blow, you drop your left shoulder. All of your punches travel in a
curve. And your strongest defence is your chin which, though it may appear to
be made of granite, is in fact merely bone. Your footwork is adequate, though
it could be improved, but your weaknesses are many. Grassin will exploit them;
he will wear you down.' 'That's one opinion,' argued Druss. 'Don't misunderstand me, lad. You are good.
You have heart and great strength. But you also know how you felt after four
minutes with me. Most bouts last ten times that long.' 'Mine won't.' Borcha chuckled. 'It will with Grassin. Do
not let arrogance blind you to the obvious, Druss. They say you were a
woodsman. When you first picked up an axe, did it strike with every blow?' 'No,' admitted the younger man. 'It is the same with combat. I can teach
you many styles of punch, and even more defences. I can show you how to feint,
and lure an opponent in to your blows.' 'Perhaps you can - but why would you?' 'Pride,' said Borcha. 'I don't understand.' 'I'll explain it - after you beat Grassin.' 'I won't be here long enough,' said Druss.
'As soon as a ship bound for Ventria docks in Mashrapur, I shall sail on her.' 'Before the war such a journey would cost
ten raq. Now. . . ? Who knows? But in one month there is a small tournament at
Visha, with a first prize of one hundred raq. The rich have palaces in Visha,
and a great deal of money can be made on side wagers. Grassin will be taking
part, and several of the other notable figures. Agree to let me train you and I
will enter your name in my place.' Druss stood and poured a goblet of wine,
which he passed to the bald fighter. 'I have taken employment, and I promised
the Overseer I would see the work done. It will take a full month.' 'Then I will train you in the evenings.' 'On one condition,' said Druss. 'Name it!' 'The same one I gave the Overseer. If a
ship bound for Ventria docks and I can get passage, then I will up and go.' 'Agreed.' Borcha thrust out his hand. Druss
clasped it and Borcha stood. 'I'll leave you to your rest. By the way, warn
your poet friend that he is taking fruit from the wrong tree.' 'He is his own man,' said Druss. Borcha shrugged. 'Warn him anyway. I'll see
you tomorrow.' Chapter TwoSieben lay awake, staring at the ornate
ceiling. Beside him the woman slept, and he could feel the warmth of her skin
against his side and legs. There was a painting on the ceiling, a hunting scene
showing men armed with spears and bows pursuing a red-maned lion. What kind of
man would have such a composition above the marital bed, he thought? Sieben
smiled. The First Minister of Mashrapur must have an enormous ego since,
whenever he and his wife made love, she would be gazing up at a group of men
more handsome than her husband. Rolling to his side, he looked down at the
sleeping woman. Her back was turned towards him, her arm thrust under the
pillow, her legs drawn up. Her hair was dark, almost black against the
creamy-white of the pillow. He could not see her face, but he pictured again
the full lips and the long, beautiful neck. When first he had seen her she was
standing beside Mapek in the marketplace. The minister was surrounded by
underlings and sycophants, Evejorda looking bored and out of place. Sieben had stood very still, waiting for
her eyes to glance in his direction. When they did, he sent her a smile. One of
his best - a swift, flashing grin that said, 'I am bored too. I understand you.
I am a linked soul.' She raised an eyebrow at him, signifying her distaste for
his impertinence, and then turned away. He waited, knowing she would look
again. She moved to a nearby stall and began to examine a set of ceramic bowls.
He angled himself through the crowd and she looked up, startled to see him so
close. 'Good morning, my lady,' he said. She
ignored him. 'You are very beautiful.' 'And you are presumptuous, sir.' Her voice
had a northern burr, which he normally found irritating. Not so now. 'Beauty demands presumption. Just as it
demands adoration." 'You are very sure of yourself,' she said,
moving in close to disconcert him. She was wearing a simple gown of radiant
blue and a Lentrian shawl of white silk. But it was her perfume that filled his
senses - a rich, scented musk he recognised as Moserche, a Ventrian
import costing five gold raq an ounce. 'Are you happy?' he asked her. 'What a ridiculous question! Who could
answer it?' 'Someone who is happy,' he told her. She smiled. 'And you, sir, are you happy?' 'I am now.' 'I think you are an accomplished womaniser,
and there is no truth to your words.' 'Then judge me by my deeds, my lady. My
name is Sieben.' He whispered the address of the house he shared with Druss and
then, taking her hand, he kissed it. Her messenger arrived at the house two days
later. She moved in her sleep. Sieben's hand slid
under the satin sheet, cupping her breast. At first she did not stir, but he
gently continued to caress her skin, squeezing her nipple until it swelled
erect. She moaned and stretched. 'Do you never sleep?' she asked him. He did not reply. Later, as Evejorda slept again, he lay
silently beside her, his passion gone, his thoughts sorrowful. She was without
doubt the most beautiful woman he had ever enjoyed. She was bright,
intelligent, dynamic and full of passion. And he was bored. . . . As a poet he had sung of love, but never
known it, and he envied the lovers of legend who looked into each other's eyes
and saw eternity beckoning. He sighed and slipped from the bed, dressing
swiftly and leaving the room, padding softly down the back stairs to the garden
before pulling on his boots. The servants were not yet awake, and dawn was only
just breaking in the eastern sky. A cockerel crowed in the distance. Sieben walked through the garden and out on
to the avenue beyond. As he walked he could smell the fresh bread baking, and
he stopped at a bakery to buy some cheese bread which he ate as he strolled
home. Druss was not there, and he remembered the
labouring work the young man had undertaken. God, how could a man spend his
days digging in the dirt, he wondered? Moving through to the kitchen, he stoked
up the iron stove and set a copper pan filled with water atop it. Making a tisane of mint and herbs, he
stirred the brew and carried it to the main sitting room where he found Shadak
asleep on a couch. The hunter's black jerkin and trews were travel-stained, his
boots encrusted with mud. He awoke as Sieben entered, and swung his long legs
from the couch. 'I was wondering where you were,' said
Shadak, yawning. 'I arrived last night.' 'I stayed with a friend,' said Sieben, sitting
opposite the hunter and sipping his tisane. Shadak nodded. 'Mapek is due in Mashrapur
later today. He cut short his visit to Vagria.' 'Why would that concern me?' Tm sure that it does not. But now you know
it anyway.' 'Did you come to give me a sermon, Shadak?' 'Do I look like a priest? I came to see
Druss. But when I got here he was in the garden, sparring with a bald giant.
From the way he moved I concluded his wounds are healed.' 'Only the physical wounds,' said Sieben. 'I know,' responded the hunter. 'I spoke to
him. He still intends to sail for Ventria. Will you go with him?' Sieben laughed. 'Why should I? I dori't
know his wife. Gods, I hardly know him.' 'It might be good for you, poet.' 'The sea air, you mean?' 'You know what I mean,' said Shadak gravely.
'You have chosen to make an enemy of one of the most powerful men in Mashrapur.
His enemies die, Sieben. Poison, or the blade, or a knotted rope around your
throat as you sleep.' 'Is my business known all over the city?? 'Of course. There are thirty servants in
that house. You think to keep secrets from them when her ecstatic cries
reverberate around the building in the middle of the afternoon, or the morning,
or in the dead of night?' 'Or indeed all three,' said Sieben,
smiling. 'I see no humour in this,' snapped Shadak.
'You are no more than a rutting dog and you will undoubtedly ruin her life as
you have ruined others. Yet I would sooner you lived than died - only the gods
know why!' 'I gave her a little pleasure, that's all.
Which is more than that dry stick of a husband could do. But I will think on
your advice.' 'Do not think too long. When Mapek returns
he will soon find out about his wife's . . . little pleasure. Do not be
surprised if he has her killed also.' Sieben paled. 'He wouldn't . . .' 'He is a proud man, poet. And you have made
a profound error.' 'If he touches her I'll kill him.' 'Ah, how noble. The dog bares its fangs.
You should never have wooed her. You do not even have the defence of being in
love; you merely wanted to rut.' 'Is that not what love is?' countered
Sieben. 'For you, yes.' Shadak shook his head. 'I
don't believe you'll ever understand it, Sieben. To love means giving, not
receiving. Sharing your soul. But this argument is wasted on you, like teaching
algebra to a chicken.' 'Oh, please, don't try to spare my feelings
with pretty words. Just come right out with it!' Shadak rose. 'Bodasen is hiring warriors,
mercenaries to fight in the Ventrian war. He has chartered a ship which will
sail in twelve days. Lie low until then, and do not seek to see Evejorda again
- not if you want her to live.' The hunter moved towards the door, but
Sieben called out, 'You don't think very highly of me, do you?' Shadak half turned. 'I think more of you
than you think of yourself.' 'I am too tired for riddles.' 'You can't forget Gulgothir.' Sieben jerked as if struck, then lunged to
his feet. 'That is all past. It means nothing to me. You understand? Nothing!' 'If you say so. I'll see you in twelve
days. The ship is called The Thunderchild. She will sail from Quay 12.' 'I may be on it. I may not.' 'A man always has two choices, my friend.' * 'No! No! No!' roared Borcha. 'You are still
thrusting out that chin, and leading with your head.' Stepping back from his
opponent, Borcha swept up a towel and wiped the sweat from his face and head.
'Try to understand, Druss, that if Grassin gets the opportunity he will take
out one - or both - of your eyes. He will step in close, and as you charge he
will strike with a sudden thrust, his thumb like a dagger.' 'Let's go again,' said Druss. 'No. You are too angry and it swamps your
thoughts. Come and sit for a while.' 'The light is fading,' Druss pointed out. 'Then let it fade. You are four days from
the competition. Four days, Druss. In that time you must learn to
control your temper. Winning is everything. It means nothing if an opponent
sneers at you, or mocks you, or claims your mother sold herself to sailors. You
understand? These insults are merely weapons in a fighter's armoury. You will
be goaded - because every fighter knows that his enemy's rage is his greatest
weakness.' 'I can control it,' snapped Druss. 'A few moments ago you were fighting well -
your balance was good, the punches crisp. Then I slapped you with a straight
left . . . then another. The blows were too fast for your defences and they
began to irritate you. Then the curve came back to your punches and you exposed
your chin, your face.' Druss sat beside the fighter and nodded.
'You are right. But I do not like this sparring, this holding back. It does not
feel real.' 'It isn't real, my friend, but it prepares
the body for genuine combat.' He slapped the younger man on the shoulder. 'Do
not despair; you are almost ready. I think your digging in the dirt has brought
back your strength. How goes it at the clearing site?' 'We finished today,' said Druss. 'Tomorrow
the stonemasons and builders move in.' 'On time. The Overseer must have been
pleased - I know I am.' 'Why should it please you?' 'I own a third of the land. The value will
rise sharply when the houses are completed.' The bald fighter chuckled. 'Were
you happy with your bonus?' 'Was that your doing?' asked Druss
suspiciously. 'It is standard practice, Druss. The
Overseer received fifty raq for completing within the time allocated. The
charge-hand is usually offered one tenth of this sum.' 'He gave me ten raq - in gold.' 'Well, well, you must have impressed him.' 'He asked me to stay on and supervise the
digging of the footings.' 'But you declined?' 'Yes. There is a ship bound for Ventria. I
told him my assistant, Togrin, could take my place. He agreed.' Borcha was silent for a moment. He knew of
Druss's fight with Togrin on the first day, and how he had welcomed the defeated
charge-hand back on the site, training him and giving him responsibility. And
the Overseer had told him at their progress meetings how well the men responded
to Druss. 'He is a natural leader who inspires by
example. No work is too menial, nor too hard. He's a real find, Borcha; I
intend to promote him. There is a new site planned to the north, with difficult
terrain. I shall make him Overseer.' 'He won't take it.' 'Of course he will. He could become rich.' Borcha pulled his thoughts back to the
present. 'You know you may never find her,' he said softly. Druss shook his head. 'I'll find her,
Borcha - if I have to walk across Ventria and search every house.' 'You are a woodman, Druss, so answer me
this: If I marked a single fallen leaf in a forest, how would you begin to
search for it?' 'I hear you - but it is not that difficult.
I know who bought her: Kabuchek. He is a rich man, an important man; I will
find him.' Reaching behind the bench seat, Druss drew forth Snaga. 'This was my
grandfather's axe,' he said. 'He was an evil man, they say. But when he was
young a great army came out of the north, led by a Gothir King named Pasia.
Everywhere there was panic. How could the Drenai stand against such an army?
Towns emptied, people piled their possessions on to carts, wagons, coaches, the
backs of horses, ponies. Bardan - my grandfather - led a small raiding party
deep into the mountains, to where the enemy was camped. He and twenty men
walked into the camp, found the King's tent and slew him in the night. In the
morning they found Pasia's head stuck atop a lance. The army went home.' 'An interesting story, and one I have heard
before,' said Borcha. 'What do you think we learn from it?' 'There is nothing a man cannot achieve if
he has the will, the strength and the courage to attempt it,' answered Druss. Borcha rose and stretched the massive
muscles of his shoulders and back. 'Then let's see if it is true,' he said,
with a smile. 'Let's see if you have the will, the strength and the courage to
keep your chin tucked in.' Druss chuckled and placed the axe beside
the seat as he stood. 'I like you, Borcha. How in the name of Chaos did you
ever come to serve a man like Collan?' 'He had a good side, Druss.' 'He did?' 'Aye, he paid well.' As he spoke his hand
snaked out, the open palm lashing across Druss's cheek. The younger man snarled
and leapt at him but Borcha swayed left, his fist glancing from Druss's cheek.
'The chin, you ox! Keep it in!' he bellowed. * 'I was hoping for men with more quality,'
said Bodasen, as he scanned the crowds milling in the Celebration Field. Borcha chuckled. 'Do not be misled by
appearances. Some of these men are quality. It really depends on what
you are seeking.' Bodasen stared moodily at the rabble - some
in rags, most filthy. More than two hundred had assembled so far, and a quick
glance to the gate showed others moving along the access road. 'I think we have
different views on what constitutes quality,' he said gloomily. 'Look over there,' said Borcha, pointing to
a man sitting on a fence rail. 'That is Eskodas the Bowman. He can hit a mark
no larger than your thumbnail from fifty paces. A man to walk the mountains
with, as they say in my home country. And there, the swordsman Kelva - fearless
and highly skilled. A natural killer.' 'But do they understand the concept of
honour?' Borcha's laughter rang out. 'You have
listened to too many tales of glory and wonder, my friend. These men are
fighters; they fight for pay.' Bodasen sighed. 'I am trapped in this . . .
this blemish of a city. My emperor is beset on all sides by a terrible enemy,
and I cannot join him. No ship will sail unless it is manned by seasoned
troops, and I must choose them from among the gutter scum of Mashrapur. I had
hoped for more.' 'Choose wisely, and they may yet surprise
you,' advised Borcha. 'Let us see the archers first,' Bodasen
ordered. For more than an hour Bodasen watched the
bowmen sending their shafts at targets stuffed with straw. When they had finished
he selected five men, the youthful Eskodas among them. Each man was given a
single gold raq, and told to report to The Thunderchild at dawn on the
day of departure. The swordsmen were more difficult to judge.
At first he ordered them to fence with one another, but the warriors set about
their task with mindless ferocity and soon several men were down with cuts,
gashes, and one with a smashed collar-bone. Bodasen called a halt to the
proceedings and, with Borcha's help, chose ten. The injured men were each given
five silver pieces. The day wore on, and by noon Bodasen had
chosen thirty of the fifty men he required to man The Thunderchild. Dismissing
the remainder of the would-be mercenaries, he strode from the field with Borcha
beside him. 'Will you leave a place for Druss?' asked
the fighter. 'No. I will have room only for men who will
fight for Ventria. His quest is a personal one.' 'According to Shadak he is the best
fighting man in the city.' 'I am not best disposed towards Shadak.
Were it not for him the pirates would not be fighting Ventria's cause.' 'Sweet Heaven!' snorted Borcha. 'How can
you believe that? Collan would merely have taken your money and given nothing
in return.' 'He gave me his word,' said Bodasen. 'How on earth did you Ventrians ever build
an empire?' enquired Borcha. 'Collan was a liar, a thief, a raider. Why would
you believe him? Did he not tell you he was going to give back Druss's wife?
Did he not lie to you in order for you to lure Druss into a trap? What kind of
man did you believe you were dealing with?' 'A nobleman,' snapped Bodasen. 'Obviously I
was wrong.' 'Indeed you were. You have just paid a gold
raq to Eskodas, the son of a goat-breeder and a Lentrian whore. His father was
hanged for stealing two horses and his mother abandoned him. He was raised in
an orphanage run by two Source priests.' 'Is there some point to this sordid tale?'
asked the Ventrian. 'Aye, there is. Eskodas will fight to the
death for you; he'll not run. Ask him his opinion, and he'll give an honest answer.
Hand him a bag of diamonds and tell him to deliver it to a man a thousand
leagues distant, and he will do so - and never once will he consider stealing a
single gem.' 'So I should hope,' observed Bodasen. 'I
would expect no less from any Ventrian servant I employed. Why do you make
honesty sound like a grand virtue?' 'I have known rocks with more common sense
than you,' said Borcha, struggling to hold his temper. Bodasen chuckled. 'Ah, the ways of you
barbarians are mystifying. But you are quite right about Druss - I was
instrumental in causing him grievous wounds. Therefore I shall leave a place
for him on The Thunderchild. Now let us find somewhere that serves good
food and passable wine.' * Shadak, Sieben and Borcha stood with Druss
on the quayside as dock-workers moved by them, climbing the gangplank, carrying
the last of the ship's stores to the single deck. The Thunderchild was
riding low in the water, her deck crammed with mercenaries who leaned on the
rail, waving goodbyes to the women who thronged the quay. Most were whores, but
there were a few wives with small children, and many were the tears. Shadak gripped Druss's hand. 'I wish you
fair sailing, laddie,' the hunter told him. 'And I hope the Source leads you to
Rowena.' 'He will,' said Druss. The axeman's eyes
were swollen, the lids discoloured - a mixture of dull yellow and faded purple
- and there was a lump under his left eye, where the skin was split and badly
stitched. Shadak grinned at him. 'It was a good
fight. Grassin will long remember it.' 'And me,' grunted Druss. Shadak nodded, and his smile faded. 'You
are a rare man, Druss. Try not to change. Remember the code.' 'I will,' promised Druss. The two men shook
hands again, and Shadak strolled away. 'What code?' Sieben asked. Druss watched as the black-garbed hunter
vanished into the crowd. 'He once told me that all true warriors live by a
code: Never violate a woman, nor harm a child. Do not lie, cheat or steal.
These things are for lesser men. Protect the weak against the evil strong. And
never allow thoughts of gain to lead you into the pursuit of evil.' 'Very true, I'm sure,' said Sieben, with a
dry, mocking laugh. 'Ah well, Druss, I can hear the call of the fleshpots and
the taverns. And with the money I won on you, I can live like a lord for
several months.' He thrust out his slender hand and Druss clasped it. 'Spend your money wisely,' he advised. 'I shall . . . on women and wine and
gambling.' Laughing, he swung away. Druss turned to Borcha. 'I thank you for your
training, and your kindness.' 'The time was well spent, and it was
gratifying to see Grassin humbled. But he still almost took out your eye. I
don't think you'll ever learn to keep that chin protected.' 'Hey, Druss! Are you coming aboard?' yelled
Bodasen from the deck and Druss waved. 'I'm on my way,' he shouted. The two men
clasped hands in the warrior's grip, wrist to wrist. 'I hope we meet again,'
said Druss. 'Who can say what the fates will decree?' Druss hefted his axe and turned for the
gangplank. 'Tell me now why you helped me?' he asked suddenly. Borcha shrugged. 'You frightened me, Druss.
I wanted to see just how good you could be. Now I know. You could be the best.
It makes what you did to me more palatable. Tell me, how does it feel to leave
as champion?' Druss chuckled. 'It hurts,' he said,
rubbing his swollen jaw. 'Move yourself, dog-face!' yelled a
warrior, leaning over the rail. The axeman glanced up at the speaker, then
turned back to Borcha. 'Be lucky, my friend,' he said, then strode up the
gangplank. With the ropes loosed, The Thunderchild eased away from the
quayside. Warriors were lounging on the deck, or
leaning over the rail waving goodbye to friends and loved ones. Druss found a
space by the port rail and sat, laying his axe on the deck beside him. Bodasen
was standing beside the mate at the tiller; he waved and smiled at the axeman. Druss leaned back, feeling curiously at
peace. The months trapped in Mashrapur had been hard on the young man. He
pictured Rowena. 'I'm coming for you,' he whispered. * Sieben strolled away from the quay, and off
into the maze of alleys leading to the park. Ignoring the whores who pressed
close around him, his thoughts were many. There was sadness at the departure of
Druss. He had come to like the young axeman; there were no hidden sides to him,
no cunning, no guile. And much as he laughed at the axeman's rigid morality, he
secretly admired the strength that gave birth to it. Druss had even sought out
the surgeon Calvar Syn, and settled his debt. Sieben had gone with him and
would long remember the surprise that registered on the young doctor's face. But Ventria? Sieben had no wish to visit a
land torn by war. He thought of Evejorda and regret washed
over him. He'd like to have seen her just one more time, - to have felt those
slim thighs sliding up over his hips. But Shadak was right; it was too
dangerous for both of them. Sieben turned left and started to climb the
Hundred Steps to the park gateway. Shadak was wrong about Gulgothir. He
remembered the filth-strewn streets, the limbless beggars and the cries of the
dispossessed. But he remembered them without bitterness. And was it his fault
that his father had made such a fool of himself with the Duchess? Anger flared
briefly. Stupid fool, he thought. Stupid, stupid man! She had stripped him
first of his wealth, then his dignity, and finally his manhood. They called her
the Vampire Queen and it was a good description, save that she didn't drink
blood. No, she drank the very life force from a man, sucked him dry and left
him thanking her for doing it, begging her to do it again. Sieben's father had been thrown aside - a
useless husk, an empty, discarded shell of a man. While Sieben and his mother
had almost starved, his father was sitting like a beggar outside the home of
the Duchess. He sat there for a month, and finally cut his own throat with a
rusty blade. Stupid, stupid man! But I am not stupid, thought Sieben as he
climbed the steps. I am not like my father. He glanced up to see two men walking down
the steps towards him. They wore long cloaks that were drawn tightly across
their bodies. Sieben paused in his climb. It was a hot morning, so why would
they be dressed in such a manner? Hearing a sound, he turned to see another man
climbing behind him. He also wore a long cloak. Fear flared suddenly in the poet's heart
and, spinning on his heel, he descended towards the single man. As he neared
the climber the cloak flashed back, a long knife appearing in the man's hand.
Sieben leapt feet first, his right boot cracking into the man's chin and
sending him tumbling down the steps. Sieben landed heavily but rose swiftly and
began to run, taking the steps three at a time. He could hear the men behind
him also running. Reaching the bottom, he set off through the
alleyways. A hunting horn sounded and a tall warrior leapt into his path with a
sword in hand. Sieben, at full run, turned his shoulder into the man, barging
him aside. He swerved right, then left. A knife sliced past his head to clatter
against a wall. Increasing his speed, he raced across a
small square and into a side street. He could see the docks ahead. It was more
crowded here and he pushed his way through. Several men shouted abuse, and a
young woman fell behind him. He glanced back - there were at least half a dozen
pursuers'. Close to panic now, he emerged on to the
quay. To his left he saw a group of men emerge from a side street; they were
all carrying weapons and Sieben swore. The Thunderchild was slipping away from the quayside as Sieben ran across the cobbles
and launched himself through the air, reaching out to grab at a trailing rope.
His fingers curled around it, and his body cracked against the ship's timbers.
Almost losing his grip, he clung to the rope as a knife thudded into the wood
beside his head. Fear gave him strength and he began to climb. A familiar face loomed above him and Druss
leaned over, grabbing him by the shirt and hauling him on to the deck. 'Changed your mind, I see,' said the
axeman. Sieben gave a weak smile and glanced back at the quay. There were at
least a dozen armed men there now. 'I thought the sea air would be good for
me,' said Sieben. The captain, a bearded man in his fifties,
pushed his way through to them. 'What's going on?' he said. 'I can only carry
fifty men. That's the limit.' 'He doesn't weigh much,' said Druss
goodnaturedly. Another man stepped forward. He was tall
and broad-shouldered, and wore a dented breastplate, two short swords and a
baldric boasting four knives. 'First you keep us waiting, dogface, and now you
bring your boyfriend aboard. Well, Kelva the Swordsman won't sail with the
likes of you.' 'Then don't!' Druss's left hand snaked out,
his fingers locking to the man's throat, his right slamming home into the
warrior's groin. With one surging heave Druss lifted the struggling man into
the air and tossed him over the side. He hit with a great splash and came up
struggling under the weight of his armour. The Thunderchild pulled away and Druss turned to the captain. 'Now we are fifty
again,' he said, with a smile. 'Can't argue with that,' the captain
agreed. He swung to the sailors standing by the mast. 'Let loose the mainsail!'
he bellowed. Sieben walked to the rail and saw that
people on the quayside had thrown a rope to the struggling warrior in the
water. 'He might have friends aboard the ship,' observed the poet. 'They're welcome to join him,' answered
Druss. Chapter ThreeEach morning Eskodas paced the deck, moving
along the port rail all the way to the prow and then back along the starboard
rail, rising the six steps to the tiller deck at the stern, where either the
captain or the first mate would be standing alongside the curved oak tiller. The bowman feared the sea, gazing with
undisguised dread at the rolling waves and feeling the awesome power that
lifted the ship like a piece of driftwood. On the first morning of the voyage
Eskodas had climbed to the tiller deck and approached the captain, Milus Bar. 'No passengers up here,' said the captain
sternly. 'I have questions, sir,' Eskodas told him
politely. Milus Bar looped a hemp rope over the
tiller arm, securing it. 'About what?' he asked. 'The boat.' 'Ship,' snapped Milus. 'Yes, the ship. Forgive me, I am not versed
in nautical terms.' 'She's seaworthy,' said Milus. Three
hundred and fifty feet of seasoned timber. She leaks no more than a man can
sweat, and she'll ride any storm the gods can throw our way. She's sleek. She's
fast. What else do you need to know?' 'You talk of the . . . ship . . . as a
woman.' 'Better than any woman I ever knew,' said
Milus, grinning. 'She's never let me down.' 'She seems so small against the immensity
of the ocean,' observed Eskodas. 'We are all small against the ocean, lad.
But there are few storms at this time of year. Our danger is pirates, and
that's why you are here.' He stared at the young bowman, his grey eyes
narrowing under heavy brows. 'If you don't mind me saying so, lad, you seem a
little out of place among these killers and villains.' 'I don't object to you saying it, sir,'
Eskodas told him. 'They might object to hearing it, however. Thank you for your
time and your courtesy.' The bowman climbed down to the main deck.
Men were lounging everywhere, some dicing, others talking. By the port rail
several others were engaged in an arm-wrestling tourney. Eskodas moved through
them towards the prow. The sun was bright in a blue sky, and there
was a good following breeze. Gulls circled high above the ship, and to the
north he could just make out the coast of Lentria. At this distance the land
seemed misty and unreal, a place of ghosts and legends. There were two men sitting by the prow. One
was the slim young man who had boarded the ship so spectacularly. Blond and
handsome, long hair held in place by a silver headband, his clothes were
expensive - a pale blue shirt of fine silk, dark blue leggings of lambswool
seamed with soft leather. The other man was huge; he had lifted Kelva as if the
warrior weighed no more than a few ounces, and hurled him into the sea like a
spear. Eskodas approached them. The giant was younger than he had first thought,
but the beginnings of a dark beard gave him the look of someone older. Eskodas
met his gaze. Cold blue eyes, flint-hard and unwelcoming. The bowman smiled.
'Good morning,' he said. The giant grunted something, but the blond dandy rose
and extended his hand. 'Hello, there. My name is Sieben. This is
Druss.' 'Ay, yes. He defeated Grassin at the
tournament - broke his jaw, I believe.' 'In several places,' said Sieben. 'I am Eskodas.' The bowman sat down on a
coiled rope and leaned his back against a cloth-bound bale. Closing his eyes,
he felt the sun warm on his face. The silence lasted for several moments, then
the two men resumed their conversation. Eskodas didn't listen too intently . . .
something about a woman and assassins. He thought of the journey ahead. He had
never seen Ventria, which according to the story books was a land of fabled
wealth, dragons, centaurs and many wild beasts. He tended to disbelieve the
part about the dragons; he was widely travelled, and in every country there
were stories of them, but never had Eskodas seen one. In Chiatze there was a
museum where the bones of a dragon had been re-assembled. The skeleton was
colossal, but it had no wings, and a neck that was at least eight feet long. No
fire could have issued from such a throat, he thought. But dragons or not, Eskodas looked forward
with real pleasure to seeing Ventria. 'You don't say much, do you?' observed
Sieben. Eskodas opened his eyes and smiled. 'When I
have something to say, I will speak,' he said. 'You'll never get the chance,' grunted
Druss. 'Sieben talks enough for ten men.' Eskodas smiled politely. 'You are the
saga-master,' he said. 'Yes. How gratifying to be recognised.' 'I saw you in Corteswain. You gave a
performance of The Song of Karnak. It was very good; I particularly
enjoyed the tale of Dros Purdol and the siege, though I was less impressed by
the arrival of the gods of war, and the mysterious princess with the power to
hurl lightning.' 'Dramatic licence,' said Sieben, with a
tight smile. 'The courage of men needs no such licence,'
said Eskodas. 'It lessens the heroism of the defenders to suggest that they had
divine help.' 'It was not a history lesson,' Sieben
pointed out, his smile fading. 'It was a poem - a song. The arrival of the gods
was merely an artistic device to highlight that courage will sometimes bring
about good fortune.' 'Hmmm,' said Eskodas, leaning back and
closing his eyes. 'What does that mean?' demanded Sieben.
'Are you disagreeing?' Eskodas sighed. 'It is not my wish to
provoke an argument, sir poet, but I think the device was a poor one. You
maintain it was inserted to supply dramatic effect. There is no point in
further discussion; I have no desire to increase your anger.' 'I am not angry, damn you!' stormed Sieben. 'He doesn't take well to criticism,' said
Druss. 'That's very droll,' snapped Sieben,
'coming as it does from the man who tosses shipmates over the side at the first
angry word. Now why was it a poor device?' Eskodas leaned forward. 'I have been in
many sieges. The point of greatest courage comes at the end, when all seems
lost; that is when weak men break and run, or beg for their lives. You had the
gods arrive just before that moment, and offer divine assistance to thwart the
Vagrians. Therefore the truly climactic moment was lost, for as soon as the
gods appeared we knew victory was assured.' 'I would have lost some of my best lines.
Especially the end, where the warriors wonder if they will ever see the gods
again.' 'Yes, I remember. . . the eldritch rhymes,
the wizard spells, the ringing of sweet Elven bells. That one.' 'Precisely.' 'I prefer the grit and the reality of your
earlier pieces: But came the day, when youth was worn away, and locks once
thought of steel and fire, proved both ephemeral and unreal against the
onslaught of the years. How wrong are the young to believe in secrets or
enchanted woods.' He lapsed into silence. 'Do you know all my work?' asked Sieben,
clearly astonished. Eskodas smiled. 'After you performed at Corteswain I sought
out your books of poetry. There were five, I think. I have two still - the
earliest works.' 'I am at a loss for words.' 'That'll be the day,' grunted Druss. 'Oh, be quiet. At last we meet a man of
discernment on a ship full of rascals. Perhaps this voyage will not be so
dreadful. So, tell me, Eskodas, what made you sign on for Ventria?' 'I like killing people,' answered Eskodas.
Druss's laughter bellowed out. * For the first few days the novelty of being
at sea kept most of the mercenaries amused. They sat up on the deck during
daylight hours, playing dice or telling stories. At night they slept under a
tarpaulin that was looped and tied to the port and starboard rails. Druss was
fascinated by the sea and the seemingly endless horizons. Berthed at Mashrapur The
Thunderchild had looked colossal, unsinkable. But here on the open sea she
seemed fragile as a flower stem in a river torrent. Sieben had grown bored with
the voyage very swiftly. Not so Druss. The sighing of the wind, the plunging
and the rising of the ship, the call of the gulls high above - all these fired
the young axeman's blood. One morning he climbed the rigging to the
giant cross-beam that held the mainsail. Sitting astride it he could see no
sign of land, only the endless blue of the sea. A sailor walked along the beam
towards him, barefooted, and using no hand-holds. He stood in delicate balance
with hands on hips and looked down at Druss. 'No passengers should be up here,' he said. Druss grinned at the young man. 'How can
you just stand there, as if you were on a wide road? A puff of breeze could
blow you away.' 'Like this?' asked the sailor, stepping
from the beam. He twisted in mid-air, his hands fastening to a sail rope. For a
moment he hung there, then lithely pulled himself up alongside the axeman. 'Very good,' said Druss. His eye was caught
by a silver-blue flash in the water below and the sailor chuckled. 'The gods of the sea,'he told the
passenger. 'Dolphins. If they are in the mood, you should see some wonderful
sights.' A gleaming shape rose out of the water, spinning into the air before
entering the sea again with scarcely a splash. Druss clambered down the
rigging, determined to get a closer look at the sleek and beautiful animals
performing in the water. High-pitched cries echoed around the ship as the
creatures bobbed their heads above the surface. Suddenly an arrow sped from the ship,
plunging into one of the dolphins as it soared out of the water. Within an instant the creatures had
disappeared. Druss glared at the archer while other men
shouted at him, their anger sudden, their mood ugly. 'It was just a fish!' said the archer. Milus Bar pushed his way through the crowd.
'You fool!' he said, his face almost grey beneath his tan. 'They are the gods
of the sea; they come for us to pay homage. Sometimes they will even lead us
through treacherous waters. Why did you have to shoot?' 'It was a good target,' said the man. 'And
why not? It was my choice.' 'Aye, it was, lad,' Milus told him, 'but if
our luck turns bad now it will be my choice to cut out your innards and feed
them to the sharks.' The burly skipper stalked back to the tiller deck. The
earlier good mood had evaporated now and the men drifted back to their pursuits
with little pleasure. Sieben approached Druss. 'By the gods, they
were wondrous,' said the poet. 'According to legend, Asia's chariot is drawn by
six white dolphins.' Druss sighed. 'Who would have thought that
anyone would consider killing one of them? Do they make good food, do you
know?' 'No,' said Sieben. 'In the north they
sometimes become entangled in the nets and drown. I have known men who cooked
the meat; they say it tastes foul, and is impossible to digest.' 'Even worse then,' Druss grunted. 'It is no different from any other kind of
hunting for sport, Druss. Is not a doe as beautiful as a dolphin?' 'You can eat a doe. Venison is fine meat.' 'But most of them don't hunt for food, do
they? Not the nobles. They hunt for pleasure. They enjoy the chase, the
terror of the prey, the final moment of the kill. Do not blame this man alone
for his stupidity. He comes, as do we all, from a cruel world.' Eskodas joined them. 'Not very inspiring,
was he?' said the bowman. 'Who?' 'The man who shot the fish.' 'We were just talking about it.' 'I didn't know you understood the skills of
archery,' said Eskodas, surprised. 'Archery? What are you talking about?' 'The bowman. He drew and loosed in a single
movement. No hesitation. It is vital to pause and sight your target; he was
overanxious for the kill.' 'Be that as it may,' said Sieben, his
irritation rising, 'we were talking about the morality of hunting.' 'Man is a killer by nature,' said Eskodas
amiably. 'A natural hunter. Like him there!' Sieben and Druss both turned to
see a silver-white fin cutting through the water. 'That's a shark. He scented
the blood from the wounded dolphin. Now he'll hunt him down, following the
trail as well as a Sathuli scout.' Druss leaned over the side and watched the
shimmering form slide by. 'Big fellow,' he said. 'They come bigger than that,' said Eskodas.
'I was on a ship once that sank in a storm off the Lentrian coast. Forty of us
survived the wreck, and struck out for shore. Then the sharks arrived. Only
three of us made it - and one of those had his right leg ripped away. He died
three days later.' 'A storm, you say?' ventured Druss. 'Aye.' 'Like that one?' asked Druss, pointing to
the east, where massive dark clouds were bunching. A flash of lightning speared
across the sky, followed by a tremendous roll of thunder. 'Yes, like that. Let's hope it is not
blowing our way.' Within minutes the sky darkened, the sea
surging and rising. The Thunderchild rolled and rose on the crests of
giant waves, sliding into ever larger valleys of water. Then the rain began,
faster and faster, icy needles that came from the sky like arrows. Crouching by the port rail Sieben glanced
to where the unfortunate archer was huddled. The man who had shot the dophin
was alone, and holding fast to a rope. Lightning flashed above the ship. 'I would say our luck has changed,'
observed Sieben. But neither Druss nor Eskodas could hear
him above the screaming of the wind. Eskodas hooked his arms around the port
rail and clung on as the storm raged. A huge wave crashed over the side of the ship,
dislodging several men from their precarious holds on ropes and bales, sweeping
them across the deck to crash into the dipping starboard rail. A post cracked,
but no one heard it above the ominous roll of thunder booming from the
night-dark sky. The Thunderchild rode high on the crest of an enormous
wave, then slid down into a valley of raging water. A sailor carrying a coiled
rope ran along the deck trying to reach the warriors at the starboard rail. A
second wave crashed over him, hurling him into the struggling men. The port
rail gave way, and within the space of a heartbeat some twenty men were swept
from the deck. The ship reared like a frightened horse. Eskodas felt his grip
on the rail post weaken. He tried to readjust his hold, but the ship lurched
again. Torn from his position of relative safety,
he slid headlong towards the yawning gap in the starboard rail. A huge hand clamped down around his ankle,
then he was hauled back. The axeman grinned at him, then handed him a length of
rope. Swiftly Eskodas slipped it around his waist, fastening the other end to
the mast. He glanced at Druss. The big man was enjoying the storm.
Secure now, Eskodas scanned the deck. The poet was clinging to a section of the
starboard rail that seemed none too secure, and high on the tiller deck the
bowman could see Milus Bar wrestling with the tiller, trying to keep The
Thunderchild ahead of the storm. Another massive wave swept over the deck.
The starboard rail cracked and Sieben slid over the edge of the deck. Druss
untied his rope and rose. Eskodas shouted at him, but the axeman either did not
hear, or ignored him. Druss ran across the heaving deck, fell once, then
righted himself until he came alongside the shattered rail. Dropping to his
knees Druss leaned over, dragging Sieben back to the deck. Just behind them the man who had shot the
dolphin was reaching for a rope with which to tie himself to a hauling ring set
in the deck. The ship reared once more. The man tumbled to the deck, then slid
on his back, cannoning into Druss who fell heavily. Still holding Seiben with
one hand, the axeman tried to reach the doomed archer, but the man vanished
into the raging sea. Almost at that instant the sun appeared
through broken clouds and the rain lessened, the sea settling. Druss rose and
gazed into the water. Eskodas untied the rope that held him to the mast and
stood, his legs unsteady. He walked to where Druss stood with Sieben. The poet's face was white with shock. 'I'll
never sail again,' he said. 'Never!' Eskodas thrust out his hand. 'Thank you,
Druss. You saved my life.' The axeman chuckled. 'Had to, laddie.
You're the only one on this boat who can leave our saga-master speechless.' Bodasen appeared from the tiller deck.
'That was a reckless move, my friend,' he told Druss, 'but it was well done. I
like to see bravery in the men who fight alongside me.' As the Ventrian moved on, counting the men
who were left, Eskodas shivered. 'I think we lost nearly thirty men,' he said. 'Twenty-seven,' said Druss. Sieben crawled back to the edge of the deck
and vomited into the sea. 'Make that twenty-seven and a half,' Eskodas added. Chapter FourThe young Emperor climbed down from the
battlement walls and strode along the quayside, his staff officers following;
his aide, Nebuchad, beside him. 'We can hold for months, Lord,' said Nebuchad,
squinting his eyes against the glare from the Emperor's gilded breastplate.
'The walls are thick and high, and the catapults will prevent any attempt to
storm the harbour mouth from the sea.' Gorben shook his head. 'The walls will not
protect us,' he told the young man. 'We have fewer than three thousand men
here. The Naashanites have twenty times that number. Have you ever seen tiger
ants attack a scorpion?' 'Yes, Lord.' 'They swarm all over it - that is how the
enemy will storm Capalis.' 'We will fight to the death,' promised an
officer. Gorben halted and turned. 'I know that,' he
said, his dark eyes angry now. 'But dying will not bring us victory, will it,
Jasua?' 'No, Lord.' Gorben strode on, along near-empty streets,
past boarded, deserted shops and empty taverns. At last he reached the entrance
to the Magisters' Hall. The City Elders had long since departed and the ancient
building had become the headquarters of the Capalis militia. Gorben entered the
hallway and stalked to his chambers, waving away his officers and the two
servants who ran towards him - one bearing wine in a golden goblet, the second
carrying a towel soaked with warm, scented water. Once inside, the young Emperor kicked off
his boots and hurled his white cloak across a nearby chair. There was one large
window facing east, and before it was a desk of oak upon which were laid many
maps, and reports from scouts and spies. Gorben sat down and stared at the
largest map; it was of the Ventrian Empire and. had been commissioned by his
father six years ago. He smoothed out the hide and gazed with
undisguised fury at the map. Two-thirds of the Empire had been overrun. Leaning
back in his chair, he remembered the palace at Nusa where he had been born and
raised. Built on a hill overlooking a verdant valley, and a glistening city of
white marble, the palace had taken twelve years to construct, and at one time
more than eight thousand workers had laboured on the task, bringing in blocks
of granite and marble and towering trunks of cedar, oak and elm to be fashioned
by the Royal masons and carpenters. Nusa - the first of the cities to fall. 'By
all the gods of Hell, Father, I curse thee!' hissed Gorben. His father had
reduced the size of the national army, relying on the wealth and power of his
Satraps to protect the borders. But four of the nine Satraps had betrayed him,
opening a path for the Naashanites to invade. His father had gathered an army
to confront them, but his military skills were non-existent. He had fought
bravely, so Gorben had been informed - but then they would say that to the new
Emperor. The new Emperor! Gorben rose now and walked
to the silvered mirror on the far wall. What he saw was a young, handsome man,
with black hair that gleamed with scented oils, and deep-set dark eyes. It was
a strong face - but was it the face of an Emperor? Can you overcome the enemy,
he asked himself silently, aware that any spoken word could be heard by
servants and repeated. The gilded breastplate had been worn by warrior Emperors
for two hundred years, and the cloak of purple was the mark of ultimate
royalty. But these were merely adornments. What mattered was the man who wore
them. Are you man enough? He gazed hard at his reflection, taking in the broad
shoulders and the narrow waist, the muscular legs and powerful arms. But these
too were merely adornments, he knew. The cloak of the soul. Are you man enough? The thought haunted him and he returned to
his studies. Leaning forward with his elbows on the table, Gorben stared down
at the map once more. Scrawled across it in charcoal was the new line of
defence: Capalis to the west, Larian and Ectanis to the east. Gorben hurled the
map aside. Beneath it lay a second map of the port city of Capalis. Four gates,
sixteen towers and a single wall which stretched from the sea in the south in a
curving half-circle to the cliffs of the north. Two miles of wall, forty feet
high, guarded by three thousand men, many of them raw recruits with no shields
nor breastplates. Rising, Gorben moved to the window and the
balcony beyond. The harbour and the open sea met his gaze. 'Ah, Bodasen, my
brother, where are you?' he whispered. The sea seemed so peaceful under the
clear blue sky and the young Emperor sank into a padded seat and lifted his
feet to rest on the balcony rail. On this warm, tranquil day it seemed
inconceivable that so much death and destruction had been visited upon the
Empire in so short a time. He closed his eyes and recalled the Summer Banquet
at Nusa last year. His father had been celebrating his forty-fourth birthday,
and the seventeenth anniversary of his accession to the throne. The banquet had
lasted eight days and there had been circuses, plays, knightly combat, displays
of archery, running, wrestling and riding. The nine Satraps were all present,
smiling and offering toasts to the Emperor. Shabag, tall and slim, hawk-eyed,
and cruel of mouth. Gorben pictured him. He always wore black gloves, even in
the hottest weather, and tunics of silk buttoned to the neck. Berish, fat and
greedy, but a wonderful raconteur with his tales of orgies and humorous
calamities. Darishan, the Fox of the North, the cavalryman, the Lancer, with
his long silver hair braided like a woman. And Ashac, the Peacock, the
lizard-eyed lover of boys. They had been given pride of place on either side of
the Emperor, while his eldest son was forced to sit on the lower table, gazing
up at these men of power! Shabag, Berish, Darishan, and Ashac! Names
and faces that burned Gorben's heart and soul. Traitors! Men who swore
allegiance to his father, then saw him done to death, his lands overrun and his
people slaughtered. Gorben opened his eyes and took a deep
breath. 'I will seek you out - each one of you,' he promised, 'and I will pay
you back for your treachery.' The threat was as empty as the treasury
coffers, and Gorben knew it. A soft tapping came at the outer door.
'Enter!' he called. Nebuchad stepped inside and bowed low. 'The
scouts are in, Lord. The enemy is less than two days' march from the walls.' 'What news from the east?' 'None, Lord. Perhaps our riders did not get
through.' 'What of the supplies?' Nebuchad reached inside his tunic and
produced a parchment scroll which he unrolled. 'We have sixteen thousand loaves
of unleavened bread, a thousand barrels of flour, eight hundred beef cattle,
one hundred and forty goats. The sheep have not been counted yet. There is
little cheese left, but a great quantity of oats and dried fruit.' 'What about salt?' 'Salt, Lord?' 'When we kill the cattle, how will we keep
the meat fresh?' 'We could kill them only when we need
them,' offered Nebuchad, reddening. 'To keep the cattle we must feed them, but
there is no food to spare. Therefore they must be slaughtered, and the meat
salted. Scour the city. And, Nebuchad?' 'Lord?' 'You did not mention water?' 'But, Lord, the river flows through the
city.' 'Indeed it does. But what will we drink
when the enemy dam it, or fill it with poisons?' 'There are artesian wells, I believe.' 'Locate them.' The young man's head dropped. 'I fear,
Lord, that I am not serving you well. I should have anticipated these
requirements.' Gorben smiled. 'You have much to think of
and I am well pleased with you. But you do need help. Take Jasua.' 'As you wish, Lord,' said Nebuchad
doubtfully. 'You do not like him?' Nebuchad swallowed hard. 'It is not a
question of "like", Lord. But he treats me with . . . contempt.' Gorben's eyes narrowed, but he held the
anger from his voice. 'Tell him it is my wish that he assist you. Now go.' As the door closed, Gorben slumped down on
to a satin-covered couch. 'Sweet Lords of Heaven,' he whispered, 'does my
future depend on men of such little substance?' He sighed, then gazed once more
out to sea. 'I need you, Bodasen,' he said. 'By all that is sacred, I need
you!' * Bodasen stood on the tiller deck, his right
hand shading his eyes, his vision focusing on the far horizon. On the main deck
sailors were busy repairing the rail, while others were aloft in the rigging,
or refastening bales that had slipped during the storm. 'You'll see pirates soon enough if they are
near,' said Milus Bar. Bodasen nodded and swung back to the
skipper. 'With a mere twenty-four warriors, I am hoping not to see them at
all,' he said softly. The captain chuckled. 'In life we do not
always get what we want, my Ventrian friend. I did not want a storm. I did not
want my first wife to leave me - nor my second wife to stay.' He shrugged.
'Such is life, eh?' 'You do not seem unduly concerned.' 'I am a fatalist, Bodasen. What will be
will be.' 'Could we outrun them?' Milus Bar shrugged once more. 'It depends
on which direction they are coming from.' He waved his hand in the air. 'The
wind. Behind us? Yes. There is not a swifter ship on the ocean than my Thunderchild.
Ahead and to the west - probably. Ahead and to the east - no. They would
ram us. They have a great advantage, for many of their vessels are triremes
with three banks of oars. You would be amazed, my friend, at the speed with
which they can turn and ram.' 'How long now to Capalis?' 'Two days - maybe three if the wind drops.' Bodasen moved across the tiller deck,
climbing down the six steps to the main deck. He saw Druss, Sieben and Eskodas
by the prow and walked towards them. Druss saw him and glanced up. 'Just the man we need,' said the axeman.
'We are talking about Ventria. Sieben maintains there are mountains there which
brush the moon. Is it so?' 'I have not seen all of the Empire,'
Bodasen told him, 'but according to our astronomers the moon is more than a
quarter of a million miles from the surface of the earth. Therefore I would
doubt it.' 'Such eastern nonsense,' mocked Sieben.
'There was a Drenai archer once, who fired a shaft into the moon. He had a
great bow called Akansin, twelve feet long and woven with spells. He fired a
black arrow, which he named Paka. Attached to the arrow was a thread of silver,
which he used to climb to the moon. He sat upon it as it sailed around the
great plate of the earth.' 'Mere fable,' insisted Bodasen. 'It is recorded in the library at Drenan -
in the Historic section.' 'All that tells me is how limited is your
understanding of the universe,' said Bodasen. 'Do you still believe the sun is
a golden chariot drawn by six white, winged horses?' He sat down upon a coiled
rope. 'Or perhaps that the earth sits upon the shoulders of an elephant, or
some such beast?' Sieben smiled. 'No, we do not. But would it
not be better if we did? Is there not a certain beauty in the tale? One day I
shall craft a bow and shoot at the moon.' 'Never mind the moon,' said Druss. 'I want
to know about Ventria.' 'According to the census ordered by the
Emperor fifteen years ago, and concluded only last year, the Greater Ventrian
empire is 214,969 square miles. It has an estimated population of fifteen and a
half million people. On a succession of fast horses, a rider galloping along
the borders would return to where he started in just under four years.' Druss looked crestfallen. He swallowed
hard. 'So large?' 'So large,' agreed Bodasen. Druss's eyes narrowed. 'I will find her,'
he said at last. 'Of course you will,' said Bodasen. 'She
left with Kabuchek and he will have headed for his home in Ectanis, which means
he will have docked at Capalis. Kabuchek is a famous man, senior advisor to the
Satrap, Shabag. He will not be hard to find. Unless . . .' 'Unless what?' queried Druss. 'Unless Ectanis has already fallen.' 'Sail! Sail!' came a cry from the rigging.
Bodasen leapt up, eyes scanning the glittering water. Then he saw the ship in
the east with sails furled, three banks of oars glistening like wings. Swinging
back towards the main deck, he drew his sabre. 'Gather your weapons,' he shouted. Druss donned his jerkin and helm and stood
at the prow, watching the trireme glide towards them. Even at this distance he
could see the fighting men thronging the decks. 'A magnificent ship,' he said. Beside him Sieben nodded. 'The very best.
Two hundred and forty oars. See there! At the prow!' Druss focused on the oncoming ship, and saw
a glint of gold at the waterline. 'I see it.' 'That is the ram. It is an extension of the
keel, and it is covered with reinforced bronze. With three banks of oars at
full stretch, that ram could punch through the hull of the strongest vessel!' 'Will that be their plan?' Druss asked. Sieben shook his head. 'I doubt it. This is
a merchant vessel, ripe for plunder. They will come in close, the oars will be
withdrawn, and they'll try to drag us in with grappling-hooks.' Druss hefted Snaga and glanced back along
the deck. The remaining Drenai warriors were armoured now, their faces grim.
Bowmen, Eskodas among them, were climbing the rigging to hook themselves into
place high above the deck, ready to shoot down into the enemy. Bodasen was
standing on the tiller deck with a black breastplate buckled to his torso. The Thunderchild swung away towards the west, then veered back. In the distance two
more sails could be seen and Sieben swore. 'We can't fight them all,' he said.
Druss glanced at the billowing sail, and then back at the newly sighted vessel. 'They don't look the same,' he observed.
'They're bulkier. No oars. And they're tacking against the wind. If we can deal
with the trireme, they'll not catch us.' Sieben chuckled. 'Aye, aye, captain. I bow
to your superior knowledge of the sea.' 'I'm a swift learner. That's because I
listen.' 'You never listen to me. I've lost count of
the number of times you've fallen asleep during our conversations on this
voyage.' The Thunderchild swung again, veering away from the trireme. Druss swore and ran back
along the deck, climbing swiftly to where Bodasen stood with Milus Bar at the
tiller. 'What are you doing?' he yelled at the
skipper. 'Get off my deck!' roared Milus. 'If you keep this course, we'll have three
ships to fight,' Druss snarled. 'What other choices are there?' queried
Bodasen. 'We cannot defeat a trireme.' 'Why?' asked Druss. 'They are only men.' 'They have close to one hundred fighting
men - plus the oarsmen. We have twenty-four, and a few sailors. The odds speak
for themselves.' Druss glanced back at the sailing-ships to
the west. 'How many men do they have?' Bodasen spread his hands and looked to
Milus Bar. The captain thought for a moment. 'More than two hundred on each
ship,' he admitted. 'Can we outrun them?' 'If we get a mist, or if we can keep them
off until dusk.' 'What chance of either?' enquired the
axeman. 'Precious little,' said Milus. 'Then let's at least take the fight to
them.' 'How do you suggest we do that, young man?'
the captain asked. Druss smiled. 'I'm no sailor, but it seems
to me their biggest advantage lies in the oars. Can we not try to smash them?' 'We could,' admitted Milus, 'but that would
bring us in close enough for their grappling-hooks. We'd be finished then;
they'd board us.' 'Or we board them!' snapped Druss. Milus laughed aloud. 'You are insane!' 'Insane and quite correct,' said Bodasen.
'They are hunting us down like wolves around a stag. Let's do it, Milus!' For a moment the captain stood and stared
at the two warriors, then he swore and leaned in to the tiller. The
Thunderchild swung towards the oncoming trireme. * His name was Earin Shad, though none of his
crew used it. They addressed him to his face as Sea Lord, or Great One, while
behind his back they used the Naashanite slang - Bojeeba, The Shark. Earin Shad was a tall man, slim and
round-shouldered, long of neck, with protruding eyes that glimmered pearl-grey
and a lipless mouth that never smiled. No one aboard the Darkwind knew
from whence he came, only that he had been a pirate leader for more than two
decades. One of the Lords of the Corsairs, mighty men who ruled the seas, he
was said to own palaces on several of the Thousand Islands, and to be as rich
as one of the eastern kings. This did not show in his appearance. He
wore a simple breastplate of shaped bronze, and a winged helm looted from a
merchant ship twelve years before. At his hip hung a sabre with a simple hilt
of polished wood and a fist-guard of plain brass. Earin Shad was not a man who
liked extravagance. He stood at the stern as the steady, rhythmic
pound of the drums urged the rowers to greater efforts, and the occasional
crack of the whip sounded against the bare skin of a slacker's back. His pale
eyes narrowed as the merchant vessel swung towards the Darkwind. 'What is he doing?' asked the giant Patek. Earin Shad glanced up at the man. 'He has
seen Reda's ship and he is trying to cut by us. He won't succeed.' Swinging to
the steersman, a short toothless old man named Luba, Earin Shad saw that the
man was already altering course. 'Steady now,' he said. 'We don't want her
rammed.' 'Aye, Sea Lord!' 'Make ready with the hooks!' bellowed
Patek. The giant watched as the men gathered coiled ropes, attaching them to
the three-clawed grappling-hooks. Then he transferred his gaze to the oncoming
ship. 'Look at that, Sea Lord!' he said, pointing at The Thunderchild's prow.
There was a man there, dressed in black; he had raised a double-headed axe
above his head in a gesture of defiance. They'll never cut all the ropes,' said
Patek. Earin Shad did not reply - he was scanning the decks of the enemy ship,
seeking any sign of female passengers. He saw none, and his mood darkened. To
compensate for his disappointment he found himself remembering the last ship
they had taken three weeks ago, and the Satrap's daughter she had carried. He
licked his lips at the memory. Proud, defiant, and comely - the whip alone had
not tamed her, nor the stinging slaps. And even after he had raped her
repeatedly, still her eyes shone with murderous intent. Ah, she was lively, no doubt
about that. But he had found her weakness; he always did. And when he had he
experienced, as always, both triumph and disappointment. The moment of
conquest, when she had begged him to take her - had promised to serve him
always, in any way that he chose - had been exquisite. But then sadness had
flowed within him, followed by anger. He had killed her quickly, which
disappointed the men. But then she had earned that, he thought. She had held
her nerve for five days in the darkness of the hold, in the company of the
black rats. Earin Shad sniffed, then cleared his
throat. This was no time to be considering pleasures. A cabin door opened behind him and he heard
the soft footfalls of the young sorcerer. 'Good day, Sea Lord,' said Gamara. Patek
moved away, avoiding the sorcerer's gaze. Earin Shad nodded to the slender Chiatze.
"The omens are good, I take it?' he asked. Gamara spread his hands in an elegant
gesture. 'It would be a waste of power to cast the stones, Sea Lord. During the
storm they lost half their men.' 'And you are sure they are carrying gold?' The Chiatze grinned, showing a perfect line
of small, white teeth. Like a child's, thought Earin Shad. He looked into the
man's dark, slanted eyes. 'How much are they carrying?' 'Two hundred and sixty thousand gold
pieces. Bodasen gathered it from Ventrian merchants in Mashrapur.' 'You should have cast the stones,' said
Earin Shad. 'We will see much blood,' answered Gamara.
'Aha! See, my good Lord, the sharks, as ever, follow in your wake. They are
like pets, are they not?' Earin Shad did not glance at the grey forms
slipping effortlessly through the water, fins like raised sword-blades. 'They
are the vultures of the sea,' he said, 'and I like them not at all.' The wind shifted and The Thunderchild swung
like a dancer on the white-flecked waves. On the decks of the Darkwind scores
of warriors crouched by the starboard rail as the two ships moved ever closer.
It will be close, thought Earin Shad; they will veer again and try to pull
away. Anticipating the move he bellowed an order to Patek, who now stood on the
main deck among the men. The giant leaned over the side and repeated the
instruction to the oars chief. Immediately the starboard oars lifted from the
water, the 120 rowers on the port side continuing to row. Darkwind spun
to starboard. The Thunderchild sped on, then veered towards the oncoming vessel. On the prow the
dark-bearded warrior was still waving the gleaming axe - and in that instant
Earin Shad knew he had miscalculated. 'Bring in the oars!' he shouted. Patek glanced up, astonished. 'What, Lord?' 'The oars, man! They're attacking us!' It was too late. Even as Patek leaned over
the side to shout the order The Thunderchild leapt to the attack,
swinging violently towards Darkwind, the prow striking the first ranks
of oars. Wood snapped violently with explosive cracks, mingled with the screams
of the slave rowers as the heavy oars smashed into arms and skulls, shoulders
and ribs. Grappling-lines were hurled out, iron claws
biting into wood or hooking into The Thunderchild's rigging. An arrow
slashed into the chest of a corsair; the man pitched back, struggled to rise,
then fell again. The corsairs hauled on the grappling-lines and the two ships
edged together. Earin Shad was furious. Half the oars on
the starboard side had been smashed, and the gods alone knew how many slaves
were crippled. Now he would be forced to limp to port. 'Ready to board!' he
yelled. The two ships crashed together. The
corsairs rose and clambered to the rails. In that moment the black-bearded warrior on
the enemy ship stepped up to the prow and leaped into the massed ranks of
waiting corsairs. Earin Shad could hardly believe what he was seeing. The
black-garbed axeman sent several men spinning to the deck, almost fell himself,
then swung his axe. A man screamed as blood sprayed from a terrible wound in
his chest. The axe rose and fell - and the corsairs scattered back from the
apparently deranged warrior. He charged them, the axe cleaving into
their ranks. Further along the deck other corsairs were still trying to board
the merchant ship and meeting ferocious resistance from the Drenai warriors,
but at the centre of the main deck all was chaos. A man ran in behind the
axeman, a curved knife raised to stab him in the back. But an arrow slashed
into the assailant's throat and he stumbled and fell. Several Drenai warriors leapt to join the
axeman. Earin Shad swore and drew his sabre, vaulting the rail and landing
smoothly on the deck below. When a swordsman ran at him he parried the lunge
and sent a riposte that missed the neck but opened the man's face from
cheekbone to chin. As the warrior fell back Earin Shad plunged his blade into
the man's mouth and up into the brain. A lithe warrior in black breastplate and
helm despatched a corsair and moved in on Earin Shad. The Corsair captain
blocked a fierce thrust and attempted a riposte, only to leap back as his
opponent's blade slashed by his face. The man was dark-skinned and dark-eyed,
and a master swordsman. Earin Shad stepped back and drew a dagger.
'Ventrian?' he enquired. The man smiled. 'Indeed I am.' A corsair
leapt from behind the swordsman. He spun and disembowelled the man, then swung
back in time to block a thrust from Earin Shad. 'I am Bodasen.' * The corsairs were tough, hardy men, long
used to battles and the risk of death. But they had never had to face a
phenomenon like the man with the axe. Watching from the tiller deck of The
Thunderchild, Sieben saw them fall back, again and again, from Druss's
frenzied, tireless assaults. Though the day was warm Sieben felt a chill in his
blood as he watched the axe cleaving into the hapless pirates. Druss was
unstoppable - and Sieben knew why. When swordsmen fought the outcome rested on
skill, but armed with the terrible double-headed axe there was no skill needed,
just power and an eagerness for combat - a battle lust that seemed
unquenchable. No one could stand against him, for the only way to win was to
run within the reach of those deadly blades. Death was not a risk; it was a
certainty. And Druss himself seemed to possess a sixth sense. Corsairs circled
behind him, but even as they rushed in he swung to face them, the axe-blades
slashing through skin, flesh and bone. Several of the corsairs threw down their
weapons, backing away from the huge, blood-smeared warrior. These Druss
ignored. Sieben flicked his gaze to where Bodasen
fought with the enemy captain. Their swords, shimmering in the sunlight, seemed
fragile and insubstantial against the raw power of Druss and his axe. A giant figure bearing an iron war hammer
leapt at Druss - just as Snaga became embedded in the ribs of a charging
corsair. Druss ducked under the swinging weapon and sent a left hook that
exploded against the man's jaw. Even as the giant fell, Druss snatched up his
axe and near beheaded a daring attacker. Other Drenai warriors ran to join him
and the corsairs backed away, dismayed and demoralised. 'Throw your weapons down!' bellowed Druss,
'and live!' There was little hesitation and swords,
sabres, cutlasses and knives clattered to the deck. Druss turned to see Bodasen
block a thrust and send a lightning counter that ripped across the enemy
captain's throat. Blood sprayed from the wound. The captain half fell, and
tried for one last stab. But his strength fled from him and he pitched face
first to the deck. A man in flowing green robes appeared at
the tiller deck rail. Slender and tall, his hair waxed to his skull, he lifted
his hands. Sieben blinked. He seemed to be holding two spheres of glowing brass
- no, the poet realised, not brass - but fire! 'Look out, Druss!' he shouted. The sorcerer threw out his hands and a
sheet of flame seared towards the axeman. Snaga flashed up; the flames struck
the silver heads. Time stopped for the poet. In a fraction of
a heartbeat he saw a scene he would never forget. At the moment when the flames
struck the axe, a demonic figure appeared above Druss, its skin iron-grey and
scaled, its long, powerful arms ending in taloned fingers. The flames rebounded
from the creature arid slashed back into the sorcerer. His robes blazed and his
chest imploded - a gaping hole appearing in his torso, through which Sieben
could see the sky. The sorcerer toppled from the deck and the demon
disappeared. 'Sweet mother of Cires!' whispered Sieben.
He turned to Milus Bar. 'Did you see it?' 'Aye! The axe saved him right enough.' 'Axe? Did you not see the creature?' 'What are you talking about, man?' Sieben felt his heart hammering. He saw
Eskodas climbing down from the rigging and ran to him. 'What did you see when
the flames came at Druss?' he asked, grabbing the bowman's arm. 'I saw him deflect them with his axe. What
is wrong with you?' 'Nothing. Nothing at all.' 'We'd better cut free these ropes,' said
Eskodas. 'The other ships are closing in.' The Drenai warriors on the Darkwind also
saw the two battle vessels approaching. With the defeated corsair standing by,
they hacked at the ropes and then leapt back to The Thunderchild. Druss
and Bodasen came last. None tried to stop them. The giant Druss had felled rose unsteadily,
then ran to the rail and leapt after the axeman, landing amidst a group of
Drenai warriors and scattering them. 'It's not over!' he yelled. 'Face me!' The Thunderchild eased away from the corsair ship, the wind gathering once more in
her sails as Druss dropped Snaga to the deck and advanced on the giant. The
corsair - almost a foot taller than the blood-drenched Drenai - landed the
first blow, a juddering right that split the skin above Druss's left eye. Druss
pushed through the blow and sent an uppercut that thundered against the man's
rib-cage. The corsair grunted and smashed a left hook into Druss's jaw, making
him stumble, then hit him again with lefts and rights. Dfuss rode them and
hammered an overhand right that spun his opponent in a half-circle. Following
up he hit him again, clubbing the man to his knees. Stepping back, Druss sent a
vicious kick that almost lifted the giant from the deck. He slumped down, tried
to rise, then lay still. 'Druss! Druss! Druss!' yelled the surviving
Drenai warriors as The Thunderchild slipped away from the pursuing
vessels. Sieben sat down and stared at his friend. No wonder you are so deadly, he thought.
Sweet Heaven, Druss, you are possessed! * Druss moved wearily to the starboard rail,
not even looking at the pursuing ships which were even now falling further
behind The Thunderchild. Blood was clotting on his face, and he rubbed
his left eye where the lashes were matted and sticky. Dropping Snaga to the
deck Druss peeled off his jerkin, allowing the breeze to cool his skin. Eskodas appeared alongside him, carrying a
bucket of water. 'Is any of that blood yours?' the bowman asked. Druss shrugged, uncaring. Removing his
gauntlets, he dipped his hands into the bucket, splashing water to his face and
beard. Then he lifted the bucket and tipped the contents over his head. Eskodas scanned his body. 'You have minor
wounds,' he said, probing at a narrow cut on Druss's shoulder and a gash in the
side. 'Neither are deep. I'll get needle and thread.' Druss said nothing. He felt a great
weariness settle on him, a dullness of the spirit that left him leached of
energy. He thought of Rowena, her gentleness and tranquillity, and of the peace
he had known when beside her. Lifting his head, he leaned his huge hands on the
rail. Behind him he heard laughter, and turned to see some of the warriors
baiting the giant corsair. They had tied his hands behind his back and were
jabbing at him with knives, forcing him to leap and dance. Bodasen climbed down from the tiller deck.
'Enough of that!' he shouted. 'It's just a little sport before we throw
him to the sharks,' replied a wiry warrior with a black and silver beard. 'No one will be thrown to the sharks,'
snapped Bodasen. 'Now untie him.' The men grumbled, but obeyed the order, and
the giant stood rubbing his chafed wrists. His eyes met Druss's gaze, but the
corsair's expression was unreadable. Bodasen led the man to the small cabin
door below the tiller deck and they disappeared from view. Eskodas returned and stitched the wounds in
the axeman's shoulder and side. He worked swiftly and expertly. 'You must have
had the gods with you,' he said. 'They granted you good luck.' 'A man makes his own luck,' said Druss. Eskodas chuckled. 'Aye. Trust in the Source
- but keep a spare bowstring handy. That's what my old teacher used to tell
me.' Druss thought back to the action on the
trireme. 'You helped me,' he said, remembering the arrow that had killed the
man coming in behind him. 'It was a good shot,' agreed Eskodas. 'How
are you feeling?' Druss shrugged. 'Like I could sleep for a
week.' 'It is very natural, my friend. Battle lust
roars through the blood, but the aftermath is unbearably depressing. Not many
poets sing songs about that.' Eskodas took up a cloth and sponged the blood
from Druss's jerkin, handing it back to the axeman. 'You are a great fighter,
Druss - perhaps the best I've seen.' Druss slipped on his jerkin, gathered Snaga
and walked to the prow where he stretched out between two bales. He slept for
just under an hour, but was woken by Bodasen; he opened his eyes and saw the
Ventrian bending over him as the sun was setting. 'We need to talk, my friend,' said Bodasen
and Druss sat up. The stitches in his side pulled tight as he stretched. He
swore softly. 'I'm tired,' said the axeman. 'So let's make this brief.' 'I have spoken with the corsair. His name
is Patek . . .' 'I don't care what his name is.' Bodasen sighed. 'In return for information
about the numbers of corsair vessels, I have promised him his liberty when we
reach Capalis. I have given him my word.' 'What has this to do with me?' 'I would like your word also that you will
not kill him.' 'I don't want to kill him. He means nothing
to me.' 'Then say the words, my friend.' Druss looked into the Ventrian's dark eyes.
'There is something else,' he said, 'something you are not telling me.' 'Indeed there is,' agreed Bodasen. 'Tell me
that you will allow my promise to Patek to be honoured, and I shall explain
all.' 'Very well. I will not kill him. Now say
what you have to say - and then let me get some sleep.' Bodasen drew in a long, deep breath. 'The
trireme was the Darkwind. The captain was Earin Shad, one of the leading
Corsair . . . kings, if you like. They have been patrolling these waters for
some months. One of the ships they . . . plundered . . .' Bodasen fell silent.
He licked his lips. 'Druss, I'm sorry. Kabuchek's ship was taken and sunk, the
passengers and crew thrown to the sharks. No one survived.' Druss sat very still. All anger vanished
from him. 'I wish there was something I could say or
do to lessen your pain,' said Bodasen. 'I know that you loved her.' 'Leave me be,' whispered Druss. 'Just leave
me be.' Chapter FiveWord soon spread among the warriors and
crew of the tragedy that had befallen the huge axeman. Many of the men could
not understand the depth of his grief, knowing nothing of love, but all could
see the change in him. He sat at the prow, staring out over the sea, the
massive axe in his hands. Sieben alone could approach him, but even the poet
did not remain with him for long. There was little laughter for the remaining
three days of the voyage, for Dross's brooding presence seemed to fill the
deck. The corsair giant, Patek, remained as far from the axeman as space would
allow, spending his time on the tiller deck. On the morning of the fourth day the
distant towers of Capalis could be seen, white marble glinting in the sun. Sieben approached Dross. 'Milus Bar intends
to pick up a cargo of spices and attempt the return journey. Shall we stay on
board?' 'I'm not going back,' said Dross. 'There is nothing here for us now,' pointed
out the poet. 'There is the enemy,' the axeman grunted.
'What enemy?' 'The Naashanites.' Sieben shook his head. 'I don't understand
you. We don't even know a Naashanite!' 'They killed my Rowena. I'll make them
pay.' Sieben was about to debate the point, but he stopped himself. The
Naashanites had bought the services of the corsairs and in Dross's mind this made
them guilty. Sieben wanted to argue, to hammer home to Dross that the real
villain was Earin Shad, and that he was now dead. But what was the use? In the
midst of his grief Dross would not listen. His eyes were cold, almost lifeless,
and he clung to the axe as if it were his only friend. 'She must have been a very special woman,'
observed Eskodas when he and Sieben stood by the port rail as The
Thunderchild eased her way into the harbour. 'I never met her. But he
speaks of her with reverence.' Eskodas nodded, then pointed to the
quayside. 'There are no dock-workers,' he said, 'only soldiers. The city must
be under siege.' Sieben saw movement at the far end of the
quay, a column of soldiers wearing black breastplates adorned with silver
marching behind a tall, wide-shouldered nobleman. 'That must be Gorben,' he
said. 'He walks as if he owns the world.' Eskodas chuckled. 'Not any more - but I'll
agree he is a remarkably handsome fellow.' The Emperor wore a simple black cloak above
an unadorned breastplate, yet he still - like a hero of legend - commanded
attention. Men ceased in their work as he approached, and Bodasen leapt from
the ship even before the mooring ropes were fastened, landing lightly and
stepping into the other man's embrace. The Emperor clapped him on the back, and
kissed Bodasen on both cheeks. Td say they were friends,' observed Eskodas
dryly. 'Strange customs they have in foreign
lands,' said Sieben, with a grin. The gangplank was lowered and a squad of
soldiers moved on board, vanishing below decks and reappearing bearing heavy
chests of brass-bound oak. 'Gold, I'd say,' whispered Eskodas and
Sieben nodded. Twenty chests in all were removed before the Drenai warriors
were allowed to disembark. Sieben clambered down the gangplank just behind the
bowman. As he stepped ashore he felt the ground move beneath him and he almost
stumbled, then righted himself. 'Is it an earthquake?' he asked Eskodas. 'No, my friend, it is merely that you are
so used to the pitching and rolling of the ship that your legs are unaccustomed
to solid stone. It will pass very swiftly.' Druss strode down to join them as Bodasen
stepped forward, the Emperor beside him. 'And this, my Lord, is the warrior I spoke
of - Druss the Axeman. Almost single-handedly he destroyed the corsairs.' 'I would like to have seen it,' said
Gorben. 'But there is time yet to admire your prowess. The enemy are camped
around our city and the attacks have begun.' Druss said nothing, but the Emperor seemed
unconcerned. 'May I see your axe?' he asked. Druss nodded and passed the weapon
to the monarch. Gorben accepted it and lifted the blades to his face.
'Remarkable workmanship. Not a nick or a rust mark - the surface is entirely
unblemished. A rare kind of steel.' He examined the black haft and the silver
runes. 'This is an ancient weapon, and has seen much death.' 'It will see more,' said Druss, his voice
low and rumbling. At the sound Sieben shivered. Gorben smiled and handed back the axe, then
turned to Bodasen. 'When you have settled your men into their quarters you will
find me at the Magisters' Hall.' He strode away without another word. Bodasen's face was white with anger. 'When
you are in the presence of the Emperor you should bow deeply. He is a man to
respect.' 'We Drenai are not well versed in
subservient behaviour,' Sieben pointed out. 'In Ventria such disrespect is punishable
by disembowelling,' said Bodasen. 'But I think we can learn,' Sieben told him
cheerfully. Bodasen smiled. 'See that you do, my
friends. These are not Drenai lands, and there are other customs here. The
Emperor is a good man, a fine man. Even so he must maintain discipline, and he
will not tolerate such bad manners again.' * The Drenai warriors were billeted in the
town centre, all save Druss and Sieben who had not signed on to fight for the
Ventrians. Bodasen took the two of them to a deserted inn and told them to
choose their own rooms. Food, he said, could be found at either of the two main
barracks, although there were still some shops and stalls in the town centre. 'Do you want to look at the city?' asked
Sieben, after the Ventrian general had left. Druss sat on a narrow bed staring
at his hands; he did not seem to hear the question. The poet sat alongside him.
'How are you feeling?' he asked softly. 'Empty.' 'Everyone dies, Druss. Even you and I. It
is not your fault.' 'I don't care about fault. I just
keep thinking about our time in the mountains together. I can still feel . . .
the touch of her hand. I can still hear . . .' He stumbled to silence, his face
reddened and his jaw set in a tight line. 'What was that about the city?' he
growled. 'I thought we could take a look around.' 'Good. Let's go.' Druss rose, gathere- his
axe and strode through the door. The inn was situated on Vine Street. Bodasen
had given them directions through the city and these were easy to follow, the
roads being wide, the signs in several languages including the western tongue.
The buildings were of white and grey stone, some more than four levels high.
There were gleaming towers, domed palaces, gardens and tree-lined avenues. The
scent of flowers, jasmine and rose, was everywhere. 'It is very beautiful,' observed Sieben.
They passed a near-deserted barracks and headed on towards the eastern wall.
From the distance they could hear the clash of blades and the thin cries of
wounded men. 'I think I've seen enough,' announced Sieben, halting. Druss gave a cold smile. 'As you wish,' he
said. 'There's a temple back there I'd like to
see more of. You know, the one with the white horses?' 'I saw it,' said Druss. The two men
retraced their steps until they came to a large square. The temple was domed,
and around it were twelve exquisitely sculpted statues of rearing horses, three
times larger than life. A huge arched gateway, with open gates of polished
brass and silver between beckoned the two men into the temple. The domed roof
had seven windows, all of coloured glass, and beams of light criss-crossed the
high altar. There were benches that could seat almost a thousand people, Sieben
calculated, and upon the altar was a table on which was set a hunting horn of
gold encrusted with gems. The poet walked down the aisle and climbed to the
altar. 'It's worth a fortune,' he said. 'On the contrary,' came a low voice, 'it is
priceless.' Sieben turned to see a priest in robes of grey wool, embroidered
with silver thread. The man was tall, his shaven head and long nose giving him
a birdlike appearance. 'Welcome to the shrine of PashtarSen.' 'The citizens here must be worthy of great
trust,' said Sieben. 'Such a prize as this would gain a man enormous wealth.' The priest gave a thin smile. 'Not really.
Lift it!' Sieben reached out his hand, but his
fingers closed on air. The golden horn, so substantial to the eye, was merely
an image. 'Incredible!' whispered the poet. 'How is it done?' The priest shrugged and spread his thin
arms. 'Pashtar Sen worked the miracle a thousand years ago. He was a poet and a
scholar, but also a man of war. According to myth he met the goddess, Ciris,
and she gave him the hunting horn as a reward for his valour. He placed it
here. And the moment it left his grasp it became as you see it.' 'What is its purpose?' Sieben asked. 'It has healing properties. Barren women are
said to become fertile if they lie upon the altar and cover the horn. There is
some evidence that this is true. And once every ten years the horn is said to
become solid once more and then, so we are told, it can bring a man back from
the halls of death, or carry his spirit to the stars.' 'Have you ever seen it become solid?' 'No. And I have been a servant here for
thirty-seven years.' 'Fascinating. What happened to Pashtar
Sen?' 'He refused to fight for the Emperor and
was impaled on a spike of iron.' 'Not a good ending.' 'Indeed not, but he was a man of principle
and believed the Emperor to be in the wrong. Are you here to fight for
Ventria?' 'No. We are visitors.' The priest nodded and turned to Druss.
'Your mind is far away, my son,' he said. 'Are you troubled?' 'He has suffered a great loss,' said Sieben
swiftly. 'A loved one? Ah, I see. Would you wish to
commune with her, my son?' 'What do you mean?' growled Druss. 'I could summon her spirit. It might bring
you peace.' , Druss stepped forward. 'You could do that?' 'I could try. Follow me.' The priest led
them into the shadowed recesses at the rear of the temple, then along a narrow
corridor to a small, windowless room. 'You must leave your weapons outside,'
said the priest. Druss leaned Snaga against the wall, and Sieben hung his
baldric of knives to the haft. Inside the room there were two chairs facing one
another; the priest sat in the first, beckoning Druss to take the second. 'This
room,' said the priest, 'is a place of harmony. No profane language has ever
been heard here. It is a room of prayer and kind thoughts. It has been so for a
thousand years. Whatever happens, please remember that. Now give me your hand.' Druss stretched out his arm and the priest
took hold of his hand, asking who it was that he wished to call. Druss told
him. 'And your name, my son?' 'Druss.' The man licked his lips and sat, eyes
closed, for several minutes. Then he spoke. 'I call to thee, Rowena, child of
the mountains. I call to thee on behalf of Druss. I call to thee across the
plains of Heaven, I speak to thee across the vales of Earth. I reach out to
thee, even unto the dark places below the oceans of the world, and the arid
deserts of Hell.' For a moment nothing happened. Then the priest stiffened and
cried out. He slumped down in the chair, head dropping to his chest. His mouth opened and a single word issued
forth: 'Druss!' It was a woman's voice. Sieben was startled. He glanced at the
axeman; all colour faded from Druss's face. 'Rowena!' 'I love you, Druss. Where are you?' 'In Ventria. I came for you.' 'I am here waiting. Druss! Oh no,
everything is fading. Druss, can you hear. . . ?' 'Rowena!' shouted Druss, storming to his
feet. The priest jerked and awoke. 'I am sorry,' he said. 'I did not find her.' 'I spoke to her,' said Druss, hauling the
man to his feet. 'Get her again!' 'I cannot. There was no one. Nothing
happened!' 'Druss! Let him go!' shouted Sieben,
grabbing Druss's arm. The axeman released his hold on the priest's robes and
walked from the room. 'I don't understand,' whispered the man.
There was nothing!' 'You spoke with the voice of a woman,'
Sieben told him. 'Druss recognised it.' 'It is most peculiar, my son. Whenever I
commune with the dead I know their words. But it was as if I slept.' 'Do not concern yourself,' said Sieben,
fishing in his money-pouch for a silver coin. 'I take no money,' said the man, with a shy
smile. 'But I am perplexed and I will think on what just happened.' 'I'm sure he will too,' said Sieben. * He found Druss standing by the altar,
reaching out to the shimmering golden horn, his huge fingers trying to close
around it. The axeman's face was set in concentration, the muscles of his jaw
showing through the dark beard. 'What are you doing?' asked Sieben, his
voice gentle. 'He said it could bring back the dead.' 'No, my friend. He said that was the legend.
There is a difference. Come away. We'll find a tavern somewhere in this
city, and we'll drink.' Druss slammed his hand down on to the
altar, the golden horn apparently growing through the skin of his fist. 'I
don't need to drink! Gods, I need to fight!' Snatching up the axe, the big man
strode from the temple. The priest appeared alongside Sieben. 'I
fear that, despite my good intentions, the result of my labour was not as I had
hoped,' he said. 'He'll survive, Father.' Sieben turned to
the priest. 'Tell me, what do you know of demon possession?' 'Too much - and too little. You think you
are possessed?' 'No, not I. Druss.' The priest shook his head. 'Had he been so
. . . afflicted . . . I would have sensed it when I touched his hand. No, your
friend is his own man.' Sieben sat down on a bench seat and told
the priest what he had seen on the deck of the corsair trireme. The priest
listened in silence. 'How did he come by the axe?' he asked. 'Family heirloom, I understand.' 'If there is a demonic presence, my son, I
believe you will find it hidden within the weapon. Many of the ancient blades
were crafted with spells, in order to give the wielder greater strength or
cunning. Some even had the power to heal wounds, so it is said. Look to the
axe.' 'What if it is just the axe? Surely that
will only help him in times of combat?' 'Would that were true,' said the priest,
shaking his head. 'But evil does not exist in order to serve, but to rule. If
the axe is possessed it will have a history - a dark history. Ask him of its
past. And when you hear it, and of the men who wielded it, you will understand
my words.' Sieben thanked the man and left the temple.
There was no sign of Druss, and the poet had no wish to venture near the walls.
He strolled through the near deserted city until he heard the sound of music
coming from a courtyard nearby. He approached a wrought-iron gate and saw three
women sitting in a garden. One of them was playing a lyre, the others were
singing a gentle love song as Sieben stepped into the gateway. 'Good afternoon, ladies,' he said, offering
them his most dazzling smile. The music ceased and the three all gazed at him.
They were young and pretty - the oldest, he calculated, around seventeen. She
was dark-haired and dark-eyed, full-lipped and slender. The other two were
smaller, their hair blonde, their eyes blue. They were dressed in shimmering
gowns of satin, the dark-haired beauty in blue and the others in white. 'Have you come to see our brother, sir?'
asked the dark-haired girl, rising from her seat and placing the lyre upon it. 'No, I was drawn here by the beauty of your
playing and the sweet voices which accompanied it. I am a stranger here, and a
lover of all things beautiful, and I can only thank the fates for the vision I
find here.' The younger girls laughed, but the older sister merely smiled. 'Pretty words, sir, well phrased, and I
don't doubt well rehearsed. They have the smooth edges of weapons that have seen
great use.' Sieben bowed. 'Indeed, my lady, it has been
my pleasure and my privilege to observe beauty wherever I can find it; to pay
homage to it; to bend the knee before it. But it makes my words no less
sincere.' She gave a full smile, then laughed aloud.
'I think you are a rascal, sir, and a libertine, and in more interesting times
I would summon a servant to see you from the premises. However, since we are at
war and that makes for the dullest entertainment, I shall welcome you - but
only for so long as you are entertaining.' 'Sweet lady, I think I can promise you
entertainment enough, both in word and deed.' He was delighted that she did not
blush at his words, though the younger sisters reddened. 'Such fine promises, sir. But then perhaps
you would feel less secure in your boasting were you aware of the quality of
entertainment I have enjoyed in the past.' Now it was Sieben's turn to laugh. 'Should
you tell me that Azhral, the Prince of Heaven, came to your chambers and
transported you to the Palace of Infinite Variety, then truly I might be mildly
concerned.' 'Such a book should not be mentioned in
polite company,' she chided. He stepped closer and took her hand,
raising it to his lips and turning it to kiss her palm. 'Not so,' he said
softly, 'the book has great merit, for it shines like a lantern in the hidden
places. It parts the veils and leads us to the paths of pleasure. I recommend
the sixteenth chapter for all new lovers.' 'My name is Asha,' she said, 'and your
deeds will need to be as fine as your words, for I react badly to
disappointment.' * 'You were dreaming, Pahtai,' said
Pudri as Rowena opened her eyes and found herself sitting in the sunshine
beside the lake. 'I don't know what happened,' she told the
little eunuch. 'It was as if my soul was dragged from my body. There was a
room, and Druss was sitting opposite me.' 'Sadness gives birth to many visions of
hope,' quoted Pudri. 'No, it was real, but the hold loosened and
I came back before I could tell him where I was.' He patted her hand. 'Perhaps it will happen
again,' he said reassuringly, 'but for now you must compose yourself. The
master is entertaining the great Satrap, Shabag. He is being sent to command
the forces around Capalis and it is very important that you give him good
omens.' 'I can offer only the truth.' 'There are many truths, Pahtai. A
man may have only days to live, yet in that time will find great love. The
seeress who tells him he is about to die will cause him great sorrow - but it
will be the truth. The prophet who says that love is only a few hours away will
also be telling the truth, but will create great joy in the doomed man.' Rowena smiled. 'You are very wise, Pudri.' He shrugged and smiled. 'I am old, Rowena.' 'That is the first time you have used my
name.' He chuckled. 'It is a good name, but so is Pahtai;
it means gentle dove. Now we must go to the shrine. Shall I tell you
something of Shabag? Would it help your talent?' She sighed. 'No. Tell me nothing. I will
see what there is to see - and I will remember your advice.' Arm in arm they strolled into the palace,
along the richly carpeted corridors, past the beautifully carved staircase that
led to the upper apartments. Statues and busts of marble were set into recesses
every ten feet on both sides of the corridor, and the ceiling above them was
embellished with scenes from Ventrian literature, the architraves covered with
gold leaf. As they approached the shrine room a tall
warrior stepped out from a side door. Rowena gasped, for at first she took the
man to be Druss. He had the same breadth of shoulder and jutting jaw, and his
eyes beneath thick brows were startlingly blue. Seeing her, he smiled and
bowed. 'This is Michanek, Pahtai. He is the
champion of the Naashanite Emperor - a great swordsman and a respected
officer.' Pudri bowed to the warrior. 'This is the Lady Rowena, a guest of the
Lord Kabuchek.' 'I have heard of you, lady,' said Michanek,
taking her hand and drawing it to his lips. His voice was low and vibrant. 'You
saved the merchant from the sharks, no mean feat. But now I have seen you I can
understand how even a shark would wish to do nothing to mar your beauty.'
Keeping hold of her hand he smiled and moved in close. 'Can you tell me my
fortune, lady?' Her throat was dry, but she met his gaze.
'You will . . . you will achieve your greatest ambition, and realise your
greatest hope.' His eyes showed his cynicism. 'Is that it,
lady? Surely any street charlatan could say the same. How will I die?' 'Not fifty feet from where we stand,' she
said. 'Out in the courtyard. I see soldiers with black cloaks and helms,
storming the walls. You will gather your men for a last stand outside these
walls. Beside you will be . . . your strongest brother and a second cousin.' 'And when will this be?' 'One year after you are wed. To the day.' 'And what is the name of the lady I shall
marry?' 'I will not say,' she told him. 'We must go, Lord,' said Pudri swiftly.
"The Lords Kabuchek and Shabag await.' 'Of course. It was a pleasure meeting you,
Rowena. I hope we will meet again.' Rowena did not reply, but followed Pudri
into the shrine room. * At dusk the enemy drew back, and Druss was
surprised to see the Ventrian warriors leaving the walls and strolling back
through the city streets. 'Where is everyone going?' he asked the warrior
beside him. The man had removed his helm and was wiping his sweat-streaked face
with a cloth. 'To eat and rest,' the warrior answered. Druss scanned the walls. Only a handful of
men remained, and these were sitting with their backs to the ramparts. 'What if
there is another attack?' asked the axeman. 'There won't be. That was the fourth.' 'Fourth?' queried Druss, surprised. The warrior, a middle-aged man with a round
face and keen blue eyes, grinned at the Drenai. 'I take it that you are no
student of strategy. Your first siege, is it?' Druss nodded. 'Well, the rules
of engagement are precise. There will be a maximum of four attacks during any
twenty-four-hour period.' 'Why only four?' The man shrugged. 'It's a long time since I
studied the manual, but, as I recall, it is a question of morale. When Zhan Tsu
wrote The Art of War he explained that after four attacks the spirit of
the attackers can give way to despair.' 'There won't be very much despair among them
if they attack now - or after night falls,' Druss pointed out. 'They won't attack,' said his comrade
slowly, as if speaking to a child. 'If a night attack was planned there would
have only been three assaults during the day.' Druss was nonplussed. 'And these rules were
written in a book?' 'Yes, a fine work by a Chiatze general.' 'And you will leave these walls virtually
unmanned during the night because of a book?' The man laughed. 'Not the book, the
rules of engagement. Come with me to the barracks and I'll explain a little
more.' As they strolled the warrior, Oliquar, told
Druss that he had served in the Ventrian army for more than twenty years. 'I
was even an officer once, during the Opal Campaign. Damn near wiped out we
were, so I got to command a troop of forty men. It didn't last. The General
offered me a commission, but I couldn't afford the armour, so that was it. Back
to the rankers. But it's not a bad life. Comradeship, two good meals a day.' 'Why couldn't you afford the armour? Don't
they pay officers?' 'Of course, but only a disha a day.
That's half of what I earn now.' 'The officers receive less than the
rankers? That's stupid.' Oliquar shook his head. 'Of course it
isn't. That way only the rich can afford to be officers, which means that only
noblemen - or the sons of merchants, who desire to be noblemen - can command.
In this way the noble families retain power. Where are you from, young man?' 'I am Drenai.' 'Ah, yes. I have never been there of
course, but I understand the mountains of Skeln are exceptionally beautiful.
Green and lush, like the Saurab. I miss the mountains.' Druss sat with Oliquar in the Western
Barracks and ate a meal of beef and wild onions before setting off back to the
empty tavern. It was a calm night, with no clouds, and the moon turned the
white, ghostly buildings to a muted silver. Sieben was not in their room and Druss sat
by the window, staring out over the harbour, watching the moonlit waves and the
water which looked like molten iron. He had fought in three of the four attacks
- the enemy, red-cloaked, with helms boasting white horsehair plumes, running
forward carrying ladders which they leaned against the walls. Rocks had been hurled
down upon them, arrows peppered them. Yet on they came. The first to reach the
walls were speared, or struck with swords, but a few doughty fighters made
their way to the battlements, where they were cut down by the defenders.
Half-way through the second attack a dull, booming sound, like controlled
thunder, was heard on the walls. 'Battering-ram,' said the soldier beside
him. "They won't have much luck, those gates are reinforced with iron and
brass.' Druss leaned back in his chair and stared
down at Snaga. In the main, he had used the axe to push back ladders, sliding
them along the wall, sending attackers tumbling to the rocky ground below. Only
twice had the weapon drawn blood. Reaching out Druss stroked the black haft,
remembering the victims - a tall, beardless warrior and a swarthy, pot-bellied
man in an iron helm. The first had died when Snaga crunched through his wooden
breastplate, the second when the silver blades had sheared his iron helm in
two. Druss ran his thumb along the blades. Not a mark, or a nick. Sieben arrived at the room just before
midnight. His eyes were red-rimmed and he yawned constantly. 'What happened to
you?' asked Druss. The poet smiled. 'I made new friends.'
Pulling off his boots he settled back on one of the narrow beds. Druss sniffed the air. 'Smells like you
were rolling in a flowerbed.' 'A bed of flowers,' said Sieben, with a
smile. 'Yes, almost exactly how I would describe it.' Druss frowned. 'Well, never mind that, do
you know anything about rules of engagement?' 'I know everything about my rules of
engagement, but I take it you are talking about Ventrian warfare?' Swinging his
legs from the bed, he sat up. 'I'm tired, Druss, so let's make this
conversation brief. I have a meeting in the morning and I need to build up my
strength.' Druss ignored the exaggerated yawn with
which Sieben accompanied his words. 'I saw hundreds of men wounded today, and
scores killed. Yet now, with only a few men on the walls, the enemy sits back
and waits for sunrise. Why? Does no one want to win?' 'Someone will win,' answered Sieben. 'But
this is a civilised land. They have practised warfare for thousands of
years. The siege will go on for a few weeks, or a few months, and every day the
combatants will count their losses. At some point, if there is no breakthrough,
either one or the other will offer terms to the enemy.' 'What do you mean, terms?' 'If the besiegers decide they cannot win,
they will withdraw. If the men here decide all is lost, they will desert to the
enemy.' 'What about Gorben?' Sieben shrugged. 'His own troops might kill
him, or hand him over to the Naashanites.' 'Gods, is there no honour among these
Ventrians?' 'Of course there is, but most of the men
here are mercenaries from many eastern tribes. They are loyal to whoever pays
them the most.' 'If the rules of war here are so
civilised,' said Druss, 'why have the inhabitants of the city fled? Why not
just wait until the fighting is over, and serve whoever wins?' 'They would, at best, be enslaved; at
worst, slaughtered. It may be a civilised land, Druss, but it is also a harsh
one.' 'Can Gorben win?' 'Not as matters stand, but he may be lucky.
Often Ventrian sieges are settled by single combat between champions, though
such an event would take place only if both factions were of equal strength,
and both had champions they believed were invincible. That won't happen here,
because Gorben is heavily outnumbered. However, now that he has the gold
Bodasen brought he will send spies in to the enemy camp to bribe the soldiers
to desert to his cause. It's unlikely to work, but it might. Who knows?' 'Where did you learn all this?' asked
Druss. 'I have just spent an informative afternoon
with the Princess Asha - Gorben's sister.' 'What?' stormed Druss. 'What is it with
you? Did you learn nothing from what happened in Mashrapur? One day! And
already you are rutting!' 'I do not rut,' snapped Sieben. 'I
make love. And what I do is none of your concern.' 'That's true,' admitted Druss, 'and when
they take you for disembowelling, or impaling, I shall remind you of that.' 'Ah, Druss!' said Sieben, settling back on
the bed. 'There are some things worth dying for. And she is very beautiful. By
the gods, a man could do worse than marry her.' Druss stood and turned away to the window.
Sieben was instantly contrite. 'I am sorry, my friend. I wasn't thinking.' He
approached Druss and laid his hand on his shoulder. 'I am sorry about what
happened with the priest.' 'It was her voice,' said Druss, swallowing
hard and fighting to keep his emotions in check. 'She said she was waiting for
me. I thought that if I went to the wall I might be killed, and then I'd be
with her again. But no one came with the skill or the heart. No one ever will.
. . and I don't have the courage to do the deed myself.' 'That would not be courage, Druss. And
Rowena would not want it. She'd want you to be happy, to marry again.' 'Never!' 'You are not yet twenty, my friend. There
are other women.' 'None like her. But she's gone, and I'll
speak no more of her. I'll carry her here,' he said, touching his chest, 'and
I'll not forget her. Now go back to what you were saying about Eastern
warfare.' Sieben lifted a clay goblet from a shelf by
the window, blew the dust from it, and filled it with water which he drained at
a single swallow. 'Gods, that tastes foul! All right . . . Eastern warfare.
What is it you wish to know now?' 'Well,' said Druss, slowly, 'I know that
the enemy can attack four times in a day. But why did they only attack one
wall? They have the numbers to surround the city and attack in many places at
once.' 'They will, Druss, but not in the first
month. This is the testing time. Untried new soldiers are judged on their
courage during the first few weeks; then they will bring up the siege-engines.
That should be the second month. After that perhaps ballistae, hurling huge
rocks over the walls. If at the end of the month there has been no success,
they will call in the engineers and they will burrow under the walls, seeking
to bring them down.' 'And what rules over the besieged?' asked
the axeman. 'I don't understand you?' 'Well, suppose we were to attack them.
Could we only do it four times? Can we attack at night? What are the rules?' 'It is not a question of rules, Druss, it's
more a matter for common sense. Gorben is outnumbered by around twenty to one;
if he attacked, he'd be wiped out.' Druss nodded, and lapsed into silence.
Finally he spoke. 'I'll ask Oliquar for his book. You can read it to me, then
I'll understand.' 'Can we sleep now?' asked Sieben. Druss nodded and took up his axe. He did
not remove his boots or jerkin and stretched out on the second bed with Snaga
beside him. 'You don't need an axe in bed in order to
sleep.' 'It comforts me,' answered Druss, closing
his eyes. 'Where did you get it?' 'It belonged to my grandfather.' 'Was he a great hero?' asked Sieben,
hopefully. 'No, he was a madman, and a terrible
killer.' 'That's nice,' said Sieben, settling down
on his own bed. 'It's good to know you have a family trade to fall back on if
times get hard.' Chapter SixGorben leaned back in his chair as his
servant, Mushran, carefully shaved the stubble from his chin. He glanced up at
the old man. 'Why do you stare so?' he asked. 'You are tired, my boy. Your eyes are
red-rimmed and there are purple patches beneath them.' Gorben smiled. 'One day you will call me,
"great Lord" or "my Emperor". I live for that day,
Mushran.' The old man chuckled. 'Other men can bestow
upon you these titles. They can fall to the ground before you and bounce their
brows from the stone. But when I look upon you, my boy, I see the child
that was before the man, and the babe who was before the child. I prepared your
food and I wiped your arse. And I am too old to crash my poor head to the
stones every time you walk into a room. Besides, you are changing the subject.
You need more rest.' 'Has it escaped your notice that we have
been under siege for a month? I must show myself to the men; they must see me
fight, or they will lose heart. And there are supplies to be organised, rations
set - a hundred different duties. Find me some more hours in a day and I will
rest, I promise you.' 'You don't need more hours,' snapped the
old man, lifting the razor and wiping oil and stubble from the blade. 'You need
better men. Nebuchad is a good boy - but he's slow-witted. And Jasua. . .'
Mushran raised his eyes to the ceiling. 'A wonderful killer, but his brain is
lodged just above his . . .' 'Enough of that!' said Gorben amiably. 'If
my officers knew how you spoke of them, they'd have you waylaid in an alley and
beaten to death. Anyway, what about Bodasen?' 'The best of them - but let's be fair, that
isn't saying much.' Gorben's reply was cut off as the razor
descended to his throat and he felt the keen blade gliding up over his jawline
and across to the edge of his mouth. 'There!' said Mushran proudly. 'At least
you look like an Emperor now.' Gorben stood and wandered to the window.
The fourth attack was under way; it would be repulsed, he knew, but even from
here he could see the huge siege-towers being dragged into place for tomorrow.
He pictured the hundreds of men pulling them into position, saw in his mind's
eye the massive attack ramps crashing down on to the battlements, and heard the
war-cries of the Naashanite warriors as they clambered up the steps, along the
ramp, and hurled themselves on to the defenders. Naashanites? He laughed
bitterly. Two-thirds of the enemy soldiers were Ventrians, followers of
Shabag, one of the renegade Satraps. Ventrians killing Ventrians! It was
obscene. And for what? How much richer could Shabag become? How many palaces
could a man occupy at one time? Gorben's father had been a weak man, and a poor
judge of character, but for all that he had been an Emperor who cared for his
people. Every city boasted a university, built from funds supplied by the Royal
treasury. There were colleges where the brightest students could learn the arts
of medicine, listen to lectures from Ventria's finest herbalists. There were
schools, hospitals, and a road system second to none on the continent. But his
greatest achievement had been the forming of the Royal Riders, who could carry
a message from one end of the Empire to another in less than twelve weeks. Such
swift communication meant that if any satrapy suffered a natural disaster -
plague, famine, flood - then help could be sent almost immediately. Now the cities were either conquered or
besieged, the death toll was climbing towards a mountainous total, the
universities were closed, and the chaos of war was destroying everything his
father had built. With great effort he forced down the heat of anger, and
concentrated coolly on the problem facing him at Capalis. Tomorrow would be a pivotal day in the
siege. If his warriors held, then dismay would spread among the enemy. If not.
. . He smiled grimly. If not we are finished, he thought. Shabag would have him
dragged before the Naashanite Emperor. Gorben sighed. 'Never let despair enter your mind,' said
Mushran. 'There is no profit in it.' 'You read minds better than any seer.' 'Not minds, faces. So wipe that expression
clear and I'll fetch Bodasen.' 'When did he arrive?' 'An hour ago. I told him to wait. You
needed the shave - and the rest.' 'In a past life you must have been a
wonderful mother,' said Gorben. Mushran laughed, and left the room. Returning,
he ushered Bodasen inside and bowed. 'The general Bodasen, great Lord, my
Emperor,' he said, then backed out, pulling shut the door behind him. 'I don't know why you tolerate that man,
Lord!' snapped Bodasen. 'He is always insolent.' 'You wished to see me, general?' Bodasen snapped to attention. 'Yes, sir.
Druss the Axeman came to see me last night, he has a plan concerning the
siege-towers.' 'Go on.' Bodasen cleared his throat. 'He wants to
attack them.' Gorben stared hard at the general,
observing the deep blush that was appearing on the warrior's cheeks. 'Attack
them?' 'Yes, Lord. Tonight, under cover of
darkness - attack the enemy camp and set fire to the towers.' 'You feel this is feasible?' 'No, Lord . . . well . . . perhaps. I
watched this man attack a corsair trireme and force fifty men to throw down
their weapons. I don't know whether he can succeed this time, but . . .' 'I'm still listening.' 'We have no choice. They have thirty
siege-towers, Lord. They'll take the wall and we'll not hold them.' Gorben moved to a couch and sat. 'How does
he intend to set these fires? And what does he think the enemy will be doing
while he does so? The timbers are huge, old, weathered. It will take a great
flame to bring one of them down.' 'I appreciate that, Lord. But Druss says
the Naashanites will be too busy to think of towers.' He cleared his throat.
'He intends to attack the centre of the camp, kill Shabag and the other
generals, and generally cause enough mayhem to allow a group of men to sneak
out from Capalis and set fires beneath the towers.' 'How many men has he asked for?' 'Two hundred. He says he's already chosen
them.' 'He has
chosen them?' Bodasen glanced down at the floor. 'He is a
very . . . popular man, Lord. He has fought every day and he knows many of the
men well. They respect him.' 'Has he chosen any officers?' 'Only one . . . Lord.' 'Let me guess. You?' 'Yes, Lord.' 'And you are willing to lead this . . .
insane venture?' 'I am, Lord.' 'I forbid it. But you can tell Druss that I
agree, and that I will choose an officer to accompany him.' Bodasen seemed about to protest, but he
held his tongue, and bowed deeply. He backed to the door. 'General,' called Gorben. 'Yes, Lord?' 'I am well pleased with you,' said Gorben,
not looking at the man. He walked out to the balcony and breathed the evening
air. It was cool and flowing from the sea. * Shabag watched the setting sun turn the
mountains to fire, the sky burning like the vaults of Hades, deep crimson,
flaring orange. He shuddered. He had never liked sunsets. They spoke of
endings, inconstancy - the death of a day. The siege-towers stood in a grim line
facing Capalis, monstrous giants promising victory. He gazed up at the first.
Tomorrow they would be dragged to the walls, then the mouths of the giants
would open, the attack ramps would drop to the ramparts like stiff tongues. He
paused. How would one continue the analogy? He pictured the warriors climbing
from the belly of the beast and hurling themselves on to the enemy. Then he
chuckled. Like the breath of death, like a dragon's fire? No, more like a demon
disgorging acid. Yes, I like that, he thought. The towers had been assembled from sections
brought on huge wagons from Resha in the north. They had cost twenty thousand
gold pieces, and Shabag was still angry that he alone had been expected to
finance them. The Naashanite Emperor was a parsimonious man. 'We will have him tomorrow, sir?' said one
of his aides. Shabag jerked his mind to the present and turned to his staff
officers. The him was Gorben. Shabag licked his thin lips. 'I want him alive,' he said, keeping the
hatred from his voice. How he loathed Gorben! How he despised both the man and
his appalling conceit. A trick of fate had left him with a throne that was
rightly Shabag's. They shared the same ancestors, the kings of glory who had
built an empire unrivalled in history. And Shabag's grandfather had sat upon
the throne. But he died in battle leaving only daughters surviving him. Thus
had Gorben's father ascended the golden steps and raised the ruby crown to his
head. And what happened then to the Empire?
Stagnation. Instead of armies, conquest and glory, there were schools, fine roads
and hospitals. And to what purpose? The weak were kept alive in order to breed
more weaklings, peasants learned their letters and became obsessed with
thoughts of betterment. Questions that should never have been voiced were
debated openly in city squares: By what right do the noble families rule our
lives? Are we not free men? By what right? By the right of blood, thought
Shabag. By the right of steel and fire! He thought back with relish to the day when
he had surrounded the university at Resha with armed troops, after the students
there had voiced their protests at the war. He had called out their leader, who
came armed not with a sword, but with a scroll. It was an ancient work, written
by Pashtar Sen, and the boy had read it aloud. What a fine voice he had. It was
a well-written piece, full of thoughts of honour, and patriotism, and
brotherhood. But then when Pashtar Sen had written it the serfs knew their
places, the peasants lived in awe of their betters. The sentiments were outworn
now. He had allowed the boy to finish the work,
for anything less would have been ill-mannered, and ill befitting a nobleman.
Then he had gutted him like a fish. Oh, how the brave students ran then! Save
that there was nowhere to run, and they had died in their hundreds, like
maggots washed from a pus-filled sore. The Ventrian Empire was decaying under
the old emperor, and the only chance to resurrect her greatness was by war.
Yes, thought Shabag, the Naashanites will think they have won, and I will
indeed be a vassal king. But not for long. Not for long . . . 'Excuse me, sir,' said an officer and
Shabag turned to the man. 'Yes?' 'A ship has left Capalis. It is heading
north along the coast. There are quite a number of men aboard.' Shabag swore. 'Gorben has fled,' he announced.
'He saw our giants and realised he could not win.' He felt a sick sense
of disappointment, for he had been anticipating tomorrow with great
expectation. He turned his eyes towards the distant walls, half expecting to
see the Herald of Surrender. 'I shall be in my tent. When they send for terms
wake me.' 'Yes, sir.' He strode through the camp, his anger
mounting. Now some whore-born corsair would capture Gorben, maybe even kill
him. Shabag glanced up at the darkening sky. Td give my soul to have Gorben
before me!' he said. * But sleep would not come and Shabag wished
he had brought the Datian slave girl with him. Young innocent, and exquisitely
compliant, she would have brought him sleep and sweet dreams. He rose from his bed and lit two lanterns.
Gorben's escape - if he managed to avoid the corsairs - would prolong the war.
But only by a few months, reasoned Shabag. Capalis would be his by tomorrow,
and after that Ectanis would fall. Gorben would be forced to fall back into the
mountains, throwing himself upon the mercy of the wild tribes who inhabited
them. It would take time to hunt him down, but not too much. And the hunt might
afford amusement during the bleak winter months. He thought of his palace in Resha, deciding
that after organising the surrender of Capalis he would return home for a rest.
Shabag pictured the comforts of Resha, the theatres, the arena and the gardens.
By now the flowering cherry trees would be in bloom by the lake, dropping their
petals to the crystal waters, the sweet scent filling the air. Was it only a month since he had sat by the
lake with Darishan beside him, sunlight gleaming upon his braided silver hair? 'Why do you wear those gloves, cousin?'
Darishan had asked, tossing a pebble into the water. A large golden fish
flicked its tail at the sudden disturbance, then vanished into the depths. 'I like the feel of them,' answered Shabag
irritated. 'But I did not come here to discuss matters sartorial.' Darishan chuckled. 'Always so serious? We
are on the verge of victory.' 'You said that half a year ago,' Shabag
pointed out. 'And I was correct then. It is like a lion
hunt, cousin. While he is in the dense undergrowth he has a chance, but once
you have him on open ground, heading into the mountains, it is only a matter of
time before he runs out of strength. Gorben is running out of strength and gold.' 'He still has three armies.' 'He began with seven. Two of them are now
under my command. One is under yours, and one has been destroyed. Come, cousin,
why the gloom?' Shabag shrugged. 'I want to see an end to
the war, so I can begin to rebuild.' 'I? Surely you mean we? 'A slip of the tongue, cousin,' said Shabag
swiftly, forcing a smile. Darishan leaned back on the marble seat and idly twisted
one of his braids. Though not yet forty his hair was startlingly pale, silver
and white, and braided with wires of gold and copper. 'Do not betray me, Shabag,' he warned. 'You
will not be able to defeat the Naashanites alone.' 'A ridiculous thought, Darishan. We are of
the same blood - and we are friends.' Darishan's cold eyes held to Shabag's gaze,
then he too smiled. 'Yes,' he whispered, 'friends and cousins. I wonder where
our cousin - and former friend - Gorben is hiding today.' Shabag reddened. 'He was never my friend. I
do not betray my friends. Such thoughts are unworthy of you.' 'Indeed, you are right,' agreed Darishan,
rising. 'I must leave for Ectanis. Shall we have a small wager as to which of
us conquers first?' 'Why not? A thousand in gold that Capalis
falls before Ectanis.' 'A thousand - plus the Datian slave girl?' 'Agreed,' said Shabag, masking his
irritation. 'Take care, cousin.' The men shook hands. 'I shall.' The silver-haired Darishan swung
away, then glanced back over his shoulder. 'By the way, did you see the wench?' 'Yes, but she told me little of use. I
think Kabuchek was swindled.' 'That may be true, but she saved him from
the sharks and predicted a ship would come. She also told me where to find the
opal brooch I lost three years ago. What did she tell you?' Shabag shrugged. 'She talked of my past,
which was interesting, but then she could easily have been schooled by
Kabuchek. When I asked her about the coming campaign she closed her eyes and
took hold of my hand. She held it for maybe three heartbeats, then pulled away
and said she could tell me nothing.' 'Nothing at all?' 'Nothing that made any sense. She said . .
. "He is coming!" She seemed both elated and yet, moments
later, terrified. Then she told me not to go to Capalis. That was it.' Darishan nodded and seemed about to speak.
Instead he merely smiled and walked away. Putting thoughts of Darishan from his mind,
Shabag moved to the tent entrance. The camp was quiet. Slowly he removed the
glove from his left hand. The skin itched, red open sores covering the surface
as they had done since adolescence. There were herbal ointments and emollients
that could ease them, but nothing had ever healed the diseased skin, nor fully
removed the other sores that stretched across his back and chest, thighs and
calves. Slowly he peeled back the right-hand glove.
The skin here was clean and smooth. This was the hand she had held. He had offered Kabuchek sixty thousand gold
pieces for her, but the merchant had politely refused. When the battle is over,
thought Shabag, I shall have her taken from him. Just as he was about to turn into the tent
Shabag saw a line of soldiers marching slowly down towards the camp, their
armour gleaming in the moonlight. They were moving in columns of twos, with an
officer at the head; the man looked familiar, but he was wearing a plumed helm
with a thick nasal guard that bisected his face. Shabag rubbed at his tired eyes
to focus more clearly on the man; it was not the face but the walk that aroused
his interest. One of Darishan's officers, he wondered? Where have I seen him
before? Pah, what difference does it make, he
thought suddenly, pulling shut the tent-flap. He had just blown out the first
of the two lanterns when a scream rent the air. Then another. Shabag ran to the
entrance, tearing aside the flap. Warriors were running through his camp,
cutting and killing. Someone had picked up a burning brand and had thrown it
against a line of tents. Flames rippled across the bone-dry cloth, the wind
carrying the fire to other tents. At the centre of the fighting Shabag saw a
huge warrior dressed in black, brandishing a double-headed axe. Three men ran
at him, and he killed them in moments. Then Shabag saw the officer - and
remembrance rose like a lightning blast from the halls of his memory. * Gorben's soldiers surrounded Shabag's tent.
It had been set at the centre of the camp, with thirty paces of clear ground
around it to allow the Satrap a degree of privacy. Now it was ringed by armed
men. Shabag was bewildered by the speed at which
the enemy had struck, but surely, he reasoned, it would avail them nothing.
Twenty-five thousand men were camped around the besieged harbour city. How many
of the enemy were here? Two hundred? Three hundred? What could they possibly
hope to achieve, save to slay Shabag himself? And how would that serve them,
for they would die in the act? Nonplussed, he stood - a still, silent
spectator as the battle raged and the fires spread. He could not tear his eyes
from the grim, blood-smeared axeman, who killed with such deadly efficiency,
such a minimum of effort. When a horn sounded, a high shrill series of notes
that flowed above the sounds of combat, Shabag was startled. The trumpeter was
sounding the truce signal and the soldiers fell back, momentarily bewildered.
Shabag wanted to shout at his men: 'Fight on! Fight on!' But he could not
speak. Fear paralysed him. The silent circle of soldiers around him stood
ready, their blades shining in the moonlight. He felt that were he to even move
they would fall upon him like hounds upon a stag. His mouth was dry, his hands
trembling. Two men rolled a barrel into view,
up-ending it and testing the top. Then the enemy officer stepped forward and
climbed on to the barrel, facing out towards the massed ranks of Shabag's men.
The Satrap felt bile rise in his throat. The officer threw back his cloak. Armour of
gold shone upon his breast and he removed his helm. 'You know me,' he bellowed, his voice rich
and resonant, compelling. 'I am Gorben, the son of the God King, the heir of
the God King. In my veins runs the blood of Pashtar Sen, and Cyrios the Lord of
Battles, and Meshan Sen, who walked the Bridge of Death. I am Gorben!' The name
boomed out, and the men stood silently, spellbound. Even Shabag felt the
goose-flesh rising on his diseased skin. Druss eased back into the circle and stared
out at the massed ranks of the enemy. There was a kind of divine madness about
the scene which he found himself enjoying immensely. He had been angry when
Gorben himself had appeared at the harbour to take command of the troops, and
doubly so when the Emperor casually informed him there would be a change of
plan. 'What's wrong with the plan we have?' asked
Druss. Gorben chuckled, and, taking Druss's arm,
led him out of earshot of the waiting men. 'Nothing is wrong with it, axeman -
save for the objective. You seek to destroy the towers. Admirable. But it is
not the towers that will determine success or failure in this siege; it is the
men. So tonight we do not seek to hamper them, we seek to defeat them.' Druss chuckled. Two hundred against
twenty-five thousand?' 'No. One against one.' He had outlined his
strategy and Druss had listened in awed silence. The plan was audacious and
fraught with peril. Druss loved it. The first phase had been completed. Shabag
was surrounded and the enemy were listening to Gorben speak. But now came the
testing time. Success and glory or failure and death? Druss did not know, but
he sensed that the strategy was now teetering on a razor's edge. One wrong word
from Gorben and the horde would descend upon them. 'I am Gorben!' roared the Emperor again.
'And every man of you has been
led into treachery by this . . . this miserable wretch here behind me.' He
waved his hand contemptuously in the direction of Shabag. 'Look at him!
Standing like a frightened rabbit. Is this the man you would set upon the
throne? It will not be easy for him, you know.
He will have to ascend the Royal steps. How will he accomplish this with
his lips fastened to a Naashanite arse?' Nervous laughter rose from the massed
ranks. 'Aye, it is an amusing thought,' agreed Gorben, 'or it would be were it
not so tragic. Look at him! How can warriors follow such a creature? He was
lifted to high position by my father; he was trusted; and he betrayed the man
who had helped him, who loved him like a son. Not content with causing the
death of my father, he has also done everything within his power to wreak havoc
upon Ventria. Our cities burn. Our people are enslaved. And for why? So that
this quivering rodent can pretend to be a king. So that he can creep on all
fours to lie at the feet of a Naashanite goat-breeder.' Gorben gazed out over the ranks. 'Where are
the Naashanites?' he called. A roar went up from the rear. 'Ah yes,' he said,
'ever at the back!' The Naashanties began to shout, but their calls were
submerged beneath the laughter of Shabag's Ventrians. Gorben raised his hands
for silence. 'No!' he bellowed. 'Let them have their say. It is rude to laugh,
to mock others because they do not have your skills, your understanding of
honour, your sense of history. I had a Naashanite slave once - ran off with one
of my father's goats. I'll say this for him, though - he picked a pretty one!'
Laughter rose in a wall of sound and Gorben waited until it subsided. 'Ah, my
lads,' he said at last. 'What are we doing with this land we love? How did we
allow the Naashanites to rape our sisters and daughters?' An eerie silence
settled over the camp. 'I'll tell you how. Men like Shabag opened the doors to
them. "Come in," he shouted, "and do as you will. I will be your
dog. But please, please, let me have the crumbs that fall from your table. Let
me lick the scrapings from your plates!" ' Gorben drew his sword and
raised it high as his voice thundered out. 'Well, I'll have none of it! I am
the Emperor, anointed by the gods. And I'll fight to the death to save my
people!' 'And we'll stand by you!' came a voice from
the right. Druss recognised the caller. It was Bodasen; and with him were the
five thousand defenders of Capalis. They had marched silently past the
siege-towers while the skirmish raged and had crept up to the enemy lines while
the soldiers listened to the voice of Gorben. As Shabag's Ventrians began to shift
nervously, Gorben spoke again. 'Every man here - save the Naashanites - is
forgiven for following Shabag. More than this, I will allow you to serve me, to
purge your crimes by freeing Ventria. And more than this, I shall give you each
the pay that is owed you - and ten gold pieces for every man who pledges to
fight for his land, his people and his Emperor.' At the rear the nervous
Naashanites eased away from the packed ranks, forming a fighting square a little
way distant. 'See them cower!' shouted Gorben. 'Now is
the time to earn your gold! Bring me the heads of the enemy!' Bodasen forced his way through the throng.
'Follow me!' he shouted. 'Death to the Naashanites!' The cry was taken up, and
almost thirty thousand men hurled themselves upon the few hundred Naashanite
troops. Gorben leapt down from the barrel and
strode to where Shabag waited. 'Well, cousin,' he said, his voice soft yet
tinged with acid, 'how did you enjoy my speech?' 'You always could talk well,' replied
Shabag, with a bitter laugh. 'Aye, and I can sing and play the harp, and
read the works of our finest scholars. These things are dear to me - as I am
sure they are to you, cousin. Ah, what an awful fate it must be to be
born blind, or to lose the use of speech, the sense of touch.' 'I am noble born,' said Shabag, sweat
gleaming on his face. 'You cannot maim me.' 'I am the Emperor,' hissed Gorben. 'My will
is the law!' Shabag fell to his knees. 'Kill me cleanly, I beg of you . . .
cousin!' Gorben drew a dagger from the jewel-encrusted scabbard at his hip,
tossing the weapon to the ground before Shabag. The Satrap swallowed hard
as he lifted the dagger and stared with grim malevolence at his tormentor. 'You
may choose the manner of your passing,' said Gorben. Shabag licked his lips, then held the point
of the blade to his chest. 'I curse you, Gorben,' he screamed. Then taking the
hilt with both hands, he rammed the blade home. He groaned and fell back. His
body twitched, and his bowels opened. 'Remove . . . it,' Gorben ordered the
soldiers close by. 'Find a ditch and bury it.' He swung to Druss and laughed
merrily. 'Well, axeman, the deed is done.' 'Indeed it is, my Lord,' answered Druss. 'My Lord? Truly
this is a night of wonders!' At the edge of the camp the last of the
Naashanites died begging for mercy, and a grim quiet descended. Bodasen
approached the Emperor and bowed deeply. 'Your orders have been obeyed,
Majesty.' Gorben nodded. 'Aye, you have done well,
Bodasen. Now take Jasua and Nebuchad and gather Shabag's officers. Promise them
anything, but take them into the city, away from their men. Interrogate them.
Kill those who do not inspire your confidence.' 'As you order it, so shall it be,' said
Bodasen. * Michanek lifted Rowena from the carriage.
Her head lolled against his shoulder, and he smelt the sweetness of her breath.
Tying the reins to the brake bar, Pudri scrambled down and gazed apprehensively
at the sleeping woman. 'She is all right,' said Michanek. 'I will
take her to her room. You fetch the servants to unload the chests.' The tall
warrior carried Rowena towards the house. A slave girl held open the door and
he moved inside, climbing the stairs to a sunlit room in the eastern wing.
Gently he laid her down, covering her frail body with a satin sheet and a thin
blanket of lamb's wool. Sitting beside her, he lifted her hand. The skin was
hot and feverish; she moaned, but did not stir. Another slave girl appeared and curtsied to
the warrior. He rose. 'Stay by her,' he ordered. He found Pudri standing in the main doorway
of the house. The little man looked disconsolate and lost, his dark eyes
fearful. Michanek summoned him to the huge oval library, and bade him sit on a
couch. Pudri slumped down, wringing his hands. 'Now, from the beginning,' said Michanek.
'Everything.' The eunuch looked up at the powerful
soldier. 'I don't know, Lord. At first she seemed merely withdrawn, but the
more the Lord Kabuchek made her tell fortunes the more strange she became. I
sat with her and she told me the Talent was growing within her. At first she
needed to concentrate her mind upon the subject, and then visions would follow
- short, disjointed images. Though after a while no concentration was needed.
But the visions did not stop when she released the hands of Lord Kabuchek's. .
. guests. Then the dreams began. She would talk as if she was old, and then in
different voices. She stopped eating, and moved as if in a trance. Then, three
days ago, she collapsed. Surgeons were called and she was bled, but to no
avail.' His lip trembled and tears flowed to his thin cheeks. 'Is she dying,
Lord?' Michanek sighed. 'I don't know, Pudri.
There is a doctor here whose opinions I value. He is said to be a mystic
healer; he will be here within the hour.' He sat down opposite the little man.
He thought he could read the fear in the eunuch's eyes. 'No matter what
happens, Pudri, you will have a place here in my household. I did not purchase
you from Kabuchek merely because you are close to Rowena. If she . . . does not
recover I will not discard you.' Pudri nodded, but his expression did not
change. Michanek was surprised. 'Ah,' he said softly, 'you love her, even as I
do.' 'Not as you, Lord. She is like a daughter
to me. She is sweet, without a feather's weight of malice in her whole body.
But such Talent as she has should not have been used so carelessly. She was not
ready, not prepared.' He stood. 'May I sit with her, Lord?' 'Of course.' The eunuch hurried from the room and
Michanek rose and opened the doors to the gardens, stepping through into the
sunlight. Flowering trees lined the paths and the air was full of the scent of
jasmine, lavender and rose. Three gardeners were working, watering the earth
and clearing the flower-beds of weeds. As he appeared they stopped their work
and fell to their knees, their foreheads pressed into the earth. 'Carry on,' he
said, walking past them and entering the maze, moving swiftly through it to the
marble bench at the centre where the statue of the Goddess was set in the
circular pool. Of white marble, it showed a beautiful young woman, naked, her
arms held aloft, her head tilted back to stare at the sky. In her hands was an
eagle with wings spread, about to fly. Michanek sat and stretched out his long
legs. Soon the story would spread all over the city. The Emperor's champion had
paid two thousand silver pieces for a dying seeress. Such folly! Yet, since the
day he had first seen her, he had not been able to push her from his
mind. Even on the campaign, while fighting against Gorben's troops, she had
been with him. He had known more beautiful women, but at twenty-five had found
none with whom he wished to share his life. Until now. At the thought that she might be
dying, he found himself trembling. Recalling the first meeting, he remembered
her prophecy that he would die in this city, in a last stand against
black-cloaked troops. Gorben's Immortals. The Ventrian Emperor
had re-formed the famous regiment, manning it with the finest of his fighters.
Seven cities had been retaken by them, two of them after single combat between
Gorben's new champion, a Drenai axeman they called Deathwalker, and two
Naashanite warriors, both known to Michanek. Good men, strong and brave,
skilful beyond the dreams of most soldiers. Yet they had died. Michanek had asked for the right to join
the army and challenge this axeman. But his Emperor had refused. 'I value you
too highly,' said the Emperor. 'But, Lord, is this not my role? Am I not
your champion?' 'My seers tell me that the man cannot be
slain by you, Michanek. They say his axe is demon-blessed. There will be no
more single-combat settlements; we will crush Gorben by the might of our
armies.' But the man was not being crushed. The last
battle had been no more than a bloody draw, with thousands slain on both sides.
Michanek had led the charge which almost turned the tide, but Gorben had
withdrawn into the mountains, two of his general officers having been slain by
Michanek. Nebuchad and Jasua. The first had little
skill; he had charged his white horse at the Naashanite champion, and had died
with Michanek's lance in his throat. The second was a canny fighter, fast and
fearless - but not fast enough, and too fearless to accept that he had met a
better swordsman. He had died with a curse on his lips. 'The war is not being won,' Michanek told
the marble goddess. 'It is being lost - slowly, day by day.' Three of the
renegade Ventrian Satraps had been slain by Gorben; Shabag at Capalis; Berish,
the fat and greedy sycophant, hanged at Ectanis; and Ashac, Satrap of the
south-west, impaled after the defeat at Gurunur. Only Darishan, the
silver-haired fox of the north, survived. Michanek liked the man. The others he
had treated with barely concealed contempt, but Darishan was a warrior born.
Unprincipled, amoral, but gifted with courage. His thoughts were interrupted by the sound
of a man moving through the maze. 'Where in Hades are you, lad?' came a deep
voice. 'I thought you were a mystic, Shalatar,' he
called. The response was both an obscenity and an instruction. 'If I could do
that,' replied Michanek, chuckling, 'I could make a fortune with public
performances.' A bald, portly man in a long white tunic
appeared and sat beside Michanek. His face was round and red and his ears
protruded like those of a bat. 'I hate mazes,' he said. 'What on earth is the
point of them? A man walks three times as far to reach a destination, and when
he arrives there's nothing there. Futile!' 'Have you seen her?' asked Michanek.
Shalatar's expression changed, and he turned his eyes from the warrior's gaze.
'Yes. Interesting. Why ever did you buy her?' 'That is beside the point. What is your
prognosis?' 'She is the most talented seer I have ever
known - but that Talent overwhelmed her. Can you imagine what it must be like
to know everything about everyone you meet? Their pasts and their
futures. Every hand you touch flashes an entire life and death into your mind.
The influx of such knowledge - at such speed - has had a catastrophic effect on
her. She doesn't just see the lives, she experiences them, lives them. She
became not Rowena but a hundred different people - including you, I might add.' 'Me?' 'Yes. I only touched her mind fleetingly, but your image was
there.' 'Will she live?' Shalatar shook his head. 'I am a mystic, my friend, but not a
prophet. I would say she has only one chance: we must close the doors of her
talent.' 'Can you do this?' 'Not alone, but I will gather those of my colleagues with
experience of such matters. It is not unlike the casting-out of demons. We must
close off the corridors of her mind that lead to the source of her power. It
will be expensive, Michanek.' 'I
am a rich man.' 'You will need to be. One of the men I need is a former Source
priest and he will ask for at least ten thousand in silver for his services.' 'He will have it.' Shalatar laid his hand on his friend's
shoulder. 'You love her so dearly?' 'More than life.' 'Did she share your feelings?' 'No.' 'Then you will have a chance to start anew.
For after we have finished she will have no memory. What will you tell her?' 'I don't know. But I will give her love.' 'You intend to marry her?' Michanek thought back to her prophecy. 'No,
my friend. I have decided never to marry.' * Druss wandered along the dark streets.of
the newly captured city, his head aching, his mood restless. The battle had
been bloody and all too brief, and he was filled with a curious sense of
anti-climax. He sensed a change in himself, unwelcome and yet demanding; a need
for combat, to feel the axe crushing bone and flesh, to watch the light of life
disappear from an enemy's eyes. The mountains of his homeland seemed an
eternity from him, lost in some other time. How many men had he slain since setting off
in search of Rowena? He no longer knew, nor cared. The axe felt light in his
hand, warm and companionable. His mouth was dry and he longed for a cool drink
of water. Glancing up, he saw a sign proclaiming 'Spice Street'. Here in more
peaceful times traders had delivered their herbs and spices to be packed into
bales for export to the west. Even now there was a scent of pepper in the air.
At the far end of the street, where it intersected with the market square, was
a fountain and beside it a brass pump with a long curved handle and a copper
cup attached by a slender chain to an iron ring. Druss filled the cup, then
resting the axe against the side of the fountain wall he sat quietly drinking.
Every so often, though, his hand would drop to touch Snaga's black haft. When Gorben had ordered the last attack on
the doomed Naashanites, Druss had longed to hurl himself into the fray, had
felt the call of blood and the need to kill. It had taken all of his strength
to resist the demands of his turbulent spirit. For the enemy in the keep had
begged to surrender and Druss had known with certainty that such a slaughter
was wrong. The words of Shadak came back to him: 'The true warrior lives by a code. He
has to. For each man there are different perspectives, but at the core they are
the same. Never violate a woman, nor harm a child. Do not lie, cheat or steal.
These things are for lesser men. Protect the weak against the evil strong. And
never allow thoughts of gain to lead you into pursuit of evil.' Numbering only a few hundred, the
Naashanites had had no chance. But Druss still felt somehow cheated, especially
when, as now, he recalled the warm, satisfying, triumphant surging of
spirit during the fight in the camp of Harib Ka, or the blood-letting following
his leap to the deck of the corsair trireme. Pulling clear his helm, he dipped
his head into the water of the fountain pool and then stood, removed his jerkin
and washed his upper body. Movement from his left caught his eye as a tall,
bald man in robes of grey wool came into sight. 'Good evening, my son,' said
the priest from the temple back in Capalis. Druss nodded curtly, then donned
his jerkin and sat down. The priest made no move to walk on but stood gazing
down at the axeman. 'I have been looking for you these past months.' 'You have found me,' said Druss, his voice even. 'May I join you for a few moments?' 'Why not?' responded Druss, making room on the seat where the priest
sat alongside the black-garbed warrior. 'Our last meeting troubled me, my son. I have spent many an
evening in prayer and meditation since then; finally I walked the Paths of Mist
to seek out the soul of your loved one, Rowena. This proved fruitless. I
journeyed through the Void on roads too dark to speak of. But she was not
there, nor did I find any souls who knew of her death. Then I met a spirit, a
grossly evil creature, who in this life bore the name Earin Shad. A corsair
captain also called Bojeeba, the Shark, he knew of your wife, for this
was the ship that plundered the vessel on which she was sailing. He told me
that when his corsairs boarded the ship a merchant named Kabuchek, another man
and a young woman leapt over the side. There were sharks everywhere, and much
blood in the water once the slaughter started on the deck.' 'I don't need to know how she died!'
snapped Druss. 'Ah, but that is my point,' said the
priest. 'Earin Shad believes that she and Kabuchek were slain. But they were
not.' 'What?' 'Kabuchek is in Resha, building more
fortunes. He has a seeress with him whom they call Pahtai, the little
dove. I have seen her, in spirit. I read her thoughts; she is Rowena, your
Rowena.' 'She is alive?' 'Yes,' said the priest softly. 'Sweet Heaven!' Druss laughed and threw his
arms around the priest's scrawny shoulders. 'By the gods, you have done me a
great service. I'll not forget it. If ever there is anything you need from me,
you have only to ask.' 'Thank you, my son. I wish you well in your
quest. But there is one more matter to discuss: the axe.' 'What about it?' asked Druss, suddenly
wary, his hands reaching down to curl around the haft. 'It is an ancient weapon, and I believe
that spells were cast upon the blades. Someone of great power, in the distant
past, used sorcery to enhance the weapon.' 'So?' 'There were many methods. Sometimes the
spell would merely involve the armourer's blood being splashed upon the blades.
At other times a binding spell would be used. This served to keep the edge
keen, giving it greater cutting power. Small spells, Druss. Occasionally a
master of the arcane arts would bring his skills to bear on a weapon, usually
one borne by a king or lord. Some blades could heal wounds, others could cut
through the finest armour.' 'As indeed can Snaga,' said Druss, hefting
the axe. The blades glittered in the moonlight and the priest drew back. 'Do
not be frightened,' said Druss. 'I'll not harm you, man.' 'I do not fear you, my son,' the priest
told him. 'I fear what lives within those blades.' Druss laughed. 'So someone cast a spell a
thousand years ago? It is still an axe.' 'Yes, an axe. But the greatest of spells
was woven around these blades, Druss. An enchantment of colossal skill was
used. Your friend Sieben told me that when you were attacking the corsairs a
sorcerer cast a spell at you, a spell of fire. When you lifted your axe Sieben
saw a demon appear, scaled and horned; he it was who turned back the fire.' 'Nonsense,' said Druss, 'it bounced from
the blades. You know, Father, you shouldn't take a great deal of notice when
Sieben speaks. The man is a poet. He builds his tales well, but he embroiders
them, adds little touches. A demon indeed!' 'He needed to add no touches, Druss. I know
of Snaga the Sender. For in finding your wife I also learned something of you,
and the weapon you bear: Bardan's weapon. Bardan the Slayer, the butcher of
babes, the rapist, the slaughterer. Once he was a hero, yes? But he was
corrupted. Evil wormed into his soul, and the evil came from that!' he said,
pointing to the axe. 'I don't believe it. I am not evil, and I
have carried this axe for almost a year now.' 'And you have noticed no change in
yourself? No lusting after blood and death? You do not feel a need to hold the
axe, even when battle is not near? Do you sleep with it beside you?' 'It is not possessed!' roared Druss. 'It is
a fine weapon. It is my. . . .' he stumbled to silence. 'My friend"? Is that what you were going to say?' 'What if I was? I am a warrior, and in war
only this axe will keep me alive. Better than any friend, eh?' As he spoke he
lifted the axe . . . and it slipped from his grip. The priest threw up his
hands as Snaga plunged down towards his throat, but in that instant Druss's
left hand slammed into the haft, just as the priest pushed at the shining
blades. The axe crashed to the stones, sending up a shower of sparks from the
flints embedded in the paving slabs. 'God, I'm sorry. It just slipped!' said
Druss. 'Are you hurt?' The priest rose. 'No, it did not cut me.
And you are wrong, young man. It did not slip; it wanted me dead, and had it
not been for your swift response, so would I have been.' 'It was an accident, Father, I assure you.' The priest gave a sad smile. 'You saw me
push away the blades with my hand?' 'Aye?' responded Druss, mystified. 'Then look,' said the priest, lifting his
hand with the palm outward. The flesh was seared and blackened, the skin burned
black, blood and water streaming from the wound. 'Beware, Druss, the beast
within will seek to kill any who threaten it.' Druss gathered the axe and backed from the
priest. 'Look after that wound,' he said. Then he turned and strode away. He was shocked by what he had seen. He knew
little of demons and spells, save what the storytellers sang of when they had
visited the village. But he did know the value of a weapon like Snaga -
especially in an alien, war-torn land. Druss came to a halt and, lifting the
axe, he gazed into his own reflection in the blades. 'I need you,' he said softly, 'If I am to
find Rowena and get her home.' The haft was warm, the weapon light in his hand.
He sighed. 'I'll not give you up. I can't. And anyway, damn it all, you are
mine!' You are mine! came an echo deep inside his mind. You are mine! BOOK THREE: The Chaos WarriorChapter OneVarsava was enjoying the first sip of his
second goblet of wine when the body hit the table. It arrived head-first,
splintering the central board of the trestle table, striking a platter of meat
and sliding towards Varsava. With great presence of mind the bladesman lifted
his goblet high and leaned back as the body hurtled past to slam head-first
into the wall. Such was the impact that a jagged crack appeared in the white
plaster, but there was no sound from the man who caused it as he toppled from
the table and hit the floor with a dull thud. Glancing to his right, Varsava saw that the
inn was crowded, but the revellers had moved back to form a circle around a
small group struggling to overcome a black-bearded giant. One fighter - a petty
thief and pickpocket Varsava recognised - hung from the giant's shoulders, his
arms encircling the man's throat. Another was slamming punches into the giant's
midriff, while a third pulled a dagger and ran in. Varsava sipped his wine. It
was a good vintage - at least ten years old, dry and yet full-bodied. The giant hooked one hand over his
shoulder, grabbing the jerkin of the fighter hanging there. Spinning, he threw
the man into the path of the oncoming knifeman, who stumbled and fell into the
giant's rising boot. There followed a sickening crack and the knifeman slumped
to the floor, either his neck or his jaw broken. The giant's last opponent threw a
despairing punch at the black-bearded chin and the fist landed - to no effect.
The giant reached forward and pulled the fighter into a head butt. The sound
made even Varsava wince. The fighter took two faltering steps backwards, then
keeled over in perfect imitation of a felled tree. 'Anyone else?' asked the giant, his voice
.deep and cold. The crowd melted away and the warrior strode through the inn,
coming to Varsava's table. 'Is this seat taken?' he asked, slumping down to sit
opposite the bladesman. 'It is now,' said Varsava. Lifting his hand
he waved to a tavern maid and, once he had her attention, pointed to his
goblet. She smiled and brought a fresh flagon of wine. The bench table was
split down the centre, and the flagon sat drunkenly between the two men. 'May I
offer you some wine?' Varsava asked. 'Why not?' countered the giant, filling a
clay goblet. A low moan came from behind the table. 'He must have a hard head,' said Varsava.
'I thought he was dead.' 'If he comes near me again, he will be,'
promised the man. 'What is this place?' 'It's called the All but One,' Varsava told
him. 'An odd name for an inn?' Varsava looked into the man's pale eyes.
'Not really. It comes from a Ventrian toast: may all your dreams - save one
- come true.'' 'What does it mean?' 'Quite simply that a man must always have a
dream unfulfilled. What could be worse than to achieve everything one has ever
dreamed of? What would one do then?' 'Find another dream,' said the giant. 'Spoken like a man who understands nothing
about dreams.' The giant's eyes narrowed. 'Is that an
insult?' 'No, it is an observation. What brings you
to Lania?' 'I am passing through,' said the man.
Behind him two of the injured men had regained their feet; both drew daggers
and advanced towards them, but Varsava's hand came up from beneath the table
with a huge hunting-knife glittering in his fist. He rammed the point into the
table and left the weapon quivering there. 'Enough,' he told the would-be attackers,
the words softly spoken, a smile upon his face. 'Pick up your friend here and
find another place to drink.' 'We can't let him get away with this!' said
one of the men, whose eye was blackened and swollen almost shut. 'He did get away with it, my friends. And
if you persist in this foolishness, I think he will kill you. Now go away, I am
trying to hold a conversation.' Grumbling, the men sheathed their blades and
moved back into the crowd. 'Passing through to where?' he asked the giant. The
fellow seemed amused. 'You handled that well. Friends of yours?' 'They know me,' answered the bladesman,
offering his hand across the table. 'I am Varsava.' 'Druss.' 'I've heard that name. There was an axeman
at the siege of Capalis. There's a song about him, I believe.' 'Song!' snorted Druss. 'Aye, there is, but
I had no part in the making of it. Damn fool of a poet I was travelling with -
he made it up. Nonsense, all of it.' Varsava smiled. 'They speak in hushed
whispers of Druss and his axe, even demons will scatter when this man attacks.' Druss reddened. 'Asta's tits! You know
there's a hundred more lines of it?' He shook his head. 'Unbelievable!' 'There are worse fates in life than to be
immortalised in song. Isn't there some part of it about a lost wife? Is that
also an invention?' 'No, that's true enough,' admitted Druss,
his expression changing as he drained his wine and poured a second goblet. In
the silence that followed, Varsava leaned back and studied his drinking
companion. The man's shoulders were truly immense and he had a neck like a
bull. But it was not the size that gave him the appearance of a giant, Varsava
realised, it was more a power that emanated from him. During the fight he had
seemed seven feet tall, the other warriors puny by comparison. Yet here,
sitting quietly drinking, Druss seemed no more than a large, heavily muscled
young man. Intriguing, thought Varsava. 'If I remember aright, you were also at the
relief of Ectanis, and four other southern cities?' he probed. The man nodded,
but said nothing. Varsava called for a third flagon of wine and tried to recall
all he had heard of the young axeman. At Ectanis, it was said, he had fought
the Naashanite champion, Cuerl, and been one of the first to scale the walls.
And two years later he had held, with fifty other men, the pass of Kishtay,
denying the road to a full legion of Naashanite troops until Gorben could
arrive with reinforcements. 'What happened to the poet?' asked Varsava,
searching for a safe route to satisfy his curiosity. Druss chuckled.'He met a woman . . .
several women, in fact. Last I heard he was living in Pusha with the widow of a
young officer.' He laughed again and shook his head. 'I miss him; he was merry
company.' The smile faded from Druss's face. 'You ask a lot of questions?' Varsava shrugged. 'You are an interesting
man, and there is not much of interest these days in Lania. The war has made it
dull. Did you ever find your wife?' 'No. But I will. What of you? Why are you
here?' 'I am paid to be here,' said Varsava.
'Another flagon?' 'Aye, and I'll pay for it,' promised Druss.
Reaching out, he took hold of the huge knife embedded in the table and pulled
it clear. 'Nice weapon, heavy but well balanced. Good steel.' 'Lentrian. I had it made ten years ago.
Best money I ever spent. You have an axe, do you not?' Druss shook his head. 'I had one once. It
was lost.' 'How does one lose an axe?' Druss smiled. 'One falls from a
cliff into a raging torrent.' 'Yes, I would imagine that would do it,'
responded Varsava. 'What do you carry now?' 'Nothing.' 'Nothing at all? How did you cross the
mountains to Lania without a weapon?' 'I walked.' 'And suffered no attacks from robbers? Did
you travel with a large group?' 'I have answered enough questions. Now it
is your turn. Who pays you to sit and drink in Lania?' 'A nobleman from Resha who has estates near
here. While he was away fighting alongside Gorben, raiders came down from the
mountains and plundered his palace. His wife and son were taken, his servants
murdered - or fled. He has hired me to locate the whereabouts - if still alive
- of his son.' 'Just the son?' 'Well, he wouldn't want the wife back,
would he?' Druss's face darkened. 'He would - if he
loved her.' Varsava nodded. 'Of course, you are a
Drenai,' he said. "The rich here do not marry for love, Druss; they wed
for alliances or wealth, or to continue family lines. It is not rare for a man
to find that he does love the woman he has been told to marry, but neither is
it common. And a Ventrian nobleman would find himself a laughing-stock if he
took back a wife who had been - shall we say - abused. No, he has already
divorced her; it is the son who matters to him. If I can locate him, I receive
one hundred gold pieces. If I can rescue him, the price goes up to one
thousand.' Another flagon of wine arrived. Druss
filled his goblet and offered the wine to Varsava, who declined. 'My head is
already beginning to spin, my friend. You must have hollow legs.' 'How many men do you have?' asked Druss. 'None. I work alone.' 'And you know where the boy is?' 'Yes. Deep in the mountains there is a
fortress called Valia, a place for thieves, murderers, outlaws and renegades.
It is ruled by Cajivak - you have heard of him?' Druss shook his head. 'The man
is a monster in every respect. Bigger than you, and terrifying in battle. He is
also an axeman. And he is insane.' Druss drank the wine, belched and leaned
forward. 'Many fine warriors are considered mad.' 'I know that - but Cajivak is different.
During the last year he has led raids which have seen mindless slaughter that
you would not believe. He has his victims impaled on spikes, or skinned alive.
I met a man who served him for almost five years; that's how I found out where
the boy was. He said Cajivak sometimes speaks with a different voice, low and
chilling, and that when he does so his eyes gleam with a strange light. And
always - when such madness is upon him - he kills. It could be a servant or a
tavern wench, or a man who looks up just as Cajivak's eyes meet his. No, Druss,
we are dealing with madness . . . or possession.' 'How do you intend to rescue the boy?' Varsava spread his hands. 'I was
contemplating that when you arrived. As yet, I have no answers.' 'I will help you,' said Druss. Varsava's eyes narrowed. 'For how much?' 'You can keep the money.' Then why?' asked the bladesman, mystified. But Druss merely smiled and refilled his
goblet. * Druss found Varsava an agreeable companion.
The tall bladesman said little as they journeyed through the mountains and up
into the high valleys far above the plain on which Lania sat. Both men carried
packs, and Varsava wore a wide-brimmed brown leather hat with an eagle feather
tucked into the brim. The hat was old and battered, the feather ragged and
without sheen. Druss had laughed when first he saw it, for Varsava was a
handsome man - his clothes immaculately styled from fine green wool, his boots
of soft lambskin. 'Did you lose a wager?' asked Druss. 'A wager?' queried Varsava. 'Aye. Why else would a man wear such a
hat?' 'Ah!' said the bladesman. 'I imagine that
is what passes as humour among you barbarians. I'll have you know that this hat
belonged to my father.' He grinned. 'It is a magic hat and it has saved my life
more than once.' 'I thought Ventrians never lied,' said
Druss. 'Only noblemen,' Varsava pointed out.
'However, on this occasion I am telling the truth. The hat helped me escape
from a dungeon.' He removed it and tossed it to Druss. 'Take a look under the
inside band.' Druss did so and saw that a thin-saw blade
nestled on the right side, while on the left was a curved steel pin. At the
front he felt three coins and slipped one clear; it was gold. 'I take it all
back,' said Druss. 'It is a fine hat!' The air was fresh and cool here and Druss
felt free. It had been almost four years since he had left Sieben in Ectanis
and journeyed alone to the occupied city of Resha, searching for the merchant
Kabuchek and, through him, Rowena. He had found the house, only to discover
that Kabuchek had left a month before to visit friends in the lands of Naashan.
He had followed to the Naashanite city of Pieropolis, and there lost all traces
of the merchant. Back once more in Resha, he discovered that
Kabuchek had sold his palace and his whereabouts were unknown. Out of money and
supplies, Druss took employment with a builder in the capital who had been
commissioned to rebuild the shattered walls of the city. For four months he
laboured every day until he had enough gold to head back to the south. In the five years since the victories at
Capalis and Ectanis the Ventrian Emperor, Gorben, had fought eight major
battles against the Naashanites and their Ventrian allies. The first two had
been won decisively, the last also. But the others had been fought to
stalemate, with both sides suffering huge losses. Five years of bloody warfare
and neither side, as yet, could claim they were close to victory. 'Come this way,' said Varsava. 'There is
something I want you to see.' The bladesman left the path and climbed a
short slope to where a rusted iron cage had been set into the earth. Within the
domed cage was a pile of mouldering bones, and a skull that still had vestiges
of skin and hair clinging to it. Varsava knelt down by the cage. 'This was
Vashad - the peacemaker,' he said. 'He was blinded and his tongue cut out. Then
he was chained here to starve to death.' 'What was his crime?' asked Druss. 'I have already told you: he was a
peacemaker. This world of war and savagery has no place for men like Vashad.'
Varsava sat down and removed his wide-brimmed leather hat. Druss eased his pack from his shoulders and
sat beside the bladesman. 'But why would they kill him in such a fashion?' he
asked. Varsava smiled, but there was no humour in
his eyes. 'Do you see so much and know so little, Druss? The warrior lives for
glory and battle, testing himself against his fellows, dealing death. He likes
to see himself as noble, and we allow him such vanities because we admire him.
We make songs about him; we tell stories of his greatness. Think of all the
Drenai legends. How many concern peacemakers or poets? They are stories of heroes
- men of blood and carnage. Vashad was a philosopher, a believer in something
he called the nobility of man. He was a mirror, and when warmakers
looked into his eyes they saw themselves - their true selves - reflected there.
They saw the darkness, the savagery, the lust and the enormous stupidity of
their lives. They could not resist killing him, they had to smash the mirror:
so, they put out his eyes and they ripped out his tongue. Then they left him
here . . . and here he lies.' 'You want to bury him? I'll help with the
grave.' 'No,' said Varsava sadly, 'I don't want to
bury him. Let others see him, and know the folly of trying to change the
world.' 'Did the Naashanites kill him?' asked
Druss. 'No, he was killed long before the war.' 'Was he your father?' Varsava shook his head, his expression
hardening. 'I only knew him long enough to put out his eyes.' He stared hard at
Druss's face, trying to read his reaction, then he spoke again. 'I was a
soldier then. Such eyes, Druss - large and shining, blue as a summer sky. And
the last sight they had was of my face, and the burning iron that melted them.' 'And now he haunts you?' Varsava stood. 'Aye, he haunts me. It was
an evil deed, Druss. But those were my orders and I carried them out as a
Ventrian should. Immediately afterwards, I resigned my commission and left the
army.' He glanced at Druss. 'What would you have done in my place?' 'I would not be in your place,' said Druss,
hoisting his pack to his shoulder. 'Imagine that you were. Tell me!' 'I would have refused.' 'I wish I had,' Varsava admitted, and the
two men returned to the trail. They walked on in silence for a mile, then
Varsava sat down beside the path. The mountains loomed around them, huge and
towering, and a shrill wind was whistling through the peaks. High overhead two
eagles were circling. 'Do you despise me, Druss?' asked Varsava. 'Yes,' admitted Druss, 'but I also like
you.' Varsava shrugged. 'I do so admire a plain
speaker. I despise myself sometimes. Have you ever done anything which shamed
you?' 'Not yet, but I came close in Ectanis.' 'What happened?' asked Varsava. 'The city had fallen several weeks
beforehand when the army arrived the walls were already breached. I went in
with the first assault and I killed many. And then, with the bloodlust on me, I
forced my way into the main barracks. A child ran at me. He was carrying a
spear and before I could think about what I was doing I cut at him with my axe.
He slipped, and only the flat of the blade caught him; he was knocked out. But
I had tried to kill him. Had I succeeded it would not have sat well with me.' 'And that is all?' 'It is enough,' said Druss. 'You have never raped a woman? Or killed an
unarmed man? Or stolen?' 'No. And I never shall.' Varsava rose. 'You are an unusual man,
Druss. I think this world will either come to hate you or revere you.' 'I don't much care which,' said Druss. 'How
far to this mountain city?' 'Another two days. We'll camp in the high
pines, where it will be cold but the air is wonderfully fresh. By the way, you
haven't told me yet why you offered to help me.' 'That's true,' said Druss, with a grin.
'Now let us find a campsite.' They walked on, through a long pass which
opened out on to a stand of pine trees and a wide pear-shaped valley beyond.
Houses dotted the valley, clustered in the main along both banks of a narrow
river. Druss scanned the valley. 'There must be fifty homes here,' he said. 'Yes,' agreed Varsava. 'Farmers mostly.
Cajivak leaves them alone, for they supply him with meat and grain during the
winter months. But it will be best if we make a cold camp in the trees, for
Cajivak will have spies in the village, and I don't want our presence
announced.' The two men moved out from the pass and
into the shelter of the trees. The wind was less powerful here and they walked
on, seeking a camp-site. The landscape was similar to the mountains of home and
Druss found himself once more thinking of days of happiness with Rowena. When
he had set out with Shadak to find her, he had been convinced that only a
matter of days separated them. Even on board ship he had believed his quest was
almost over. But the months, and years, of pursuit had gnawed at his
confidence. He knew he would never give up the hunt, but to what purpose? What
if she were wed, or had children? What if she had found happiness without him?
What then, as he walked back into her life? His thoughts were broken by the sounds of
laughter echoing through the trees. Varsava stopped and moved silently from the
trail and Druss followed him. Ahead and to the left was a hollow through which
ran a ribbon stream, and at the centre of the hollow a group of men were
throwing knives at a tree-trunk. An old man was tied to the trunk, his arms
spread. A blade had nicked the skin of his face, there were wounds to both arms
and a knife jutted from his thigh. It was obvious to Druss that the men were
playing a game wjth the old man, seeing how close they could come with their
knives. To the left of the scene three other men were struggling with a young
girl, who screamed as they tore her dress and pushed her to the earth. As Druss
loosed his pack and started down the slope, Varsava grabbed him. 'What are you
doing? There are ten of them!' But Druss shrugged him off and strode
through the trees to come up behind the seven knife-throwers. Intent as they
were on their victim, they did not notice his approach. Reaching out, he
grabbed the heads of the two nearest knifemen and rammed them together; there
followed a sickening crack and both men dropped without a murmur. A third man swung
at the sound, but had no time to register surprise as a silver-skinned gauntlet
slammed into his mouth, splintering teeth. Unconscious, the knifeman flew
backwards to cannon into a comrade. A warrior leapt at Druss, thrusting his
blade towards his belly, but Druss slapped the blade aside and hammered a
straight left into the man's chin. The remaining warriors ran at him, and a
knife-blade slashed through his jerkin, ripping a narrow gash across his hip.
Druss grabbed the nearest warrior, dragging him into a ferocious head butt,
then swung and backhanded another attacker. The man cartwheeled across the
hollow, struggled to rise, then sat back against a tree having lost all
interest in the fight. Grappling with two men, Druss heard a
bloodcurdling scream. His attackers froze. Druss dragged an arm free and struck
the first of the men a terrible blow to the neck. The second released his hold
on the axeman and sprinted from the hollow. Druss's pale eyes scanned the area,
seeking new opponents. But only Varsava was standing there, his huge
hunting-knife dripping blood. Two corpses lay beside him. Three other men Druss
had struck lay where they had fallen, and the warrior he had backhanded was
still sitting by the tree. Druss walked to where he sat, then hauled him to his
feet. 'Time to go, laddie!' said Druss. 'Don't kill me!' pleaded the man. 'Who said anything about killing? Be off
with you!' The man tottered away on boneless legs as
Druss moved to the old man tied to the tree. Only one of his wounds was deep. Druss
untied him and eased him to the ground. Swiftly he dragged the knife clear of
the man's thigh as Varsava came alongside. That will need stitching,' he said.
'I'll get my pack.' The old man forced a smile. 'I thank you,
my friends. I fear they would have killed me. Where is Dulina?' Druss glanced round, but the girl was
nowhere in sight. 'She was not harmed,' he said. 'I think she ran when the
fight started.' Druss applied a tourniquet to the thigh wound, then stood and
moved back to check the bodies. The two men who had attacked Varsava were dead,
as was one other, his neck broken. The remaining two were unconscious. Rolling
them to their backs, Druss shook them awake and then pulled them upright. One
of the men immediately sagged back to the ground. 'Who are you?' asked the warrior still
standing. 'I am Druss.' 'Cajivak will kill you for this. Were I
you, I would leave the mountains.' 'You are not me, laddie. I go where I
please. Now pick up your comrade and take him home.' Druss dragged the fallen warrior to his
feet and watched as the two men left the hollow. When Varsava returned with his
pack, a young girl was walking beside him. She was holding her ruined dress in
place. 'Look what I found,' said Varsava. 'She was hiding under a bush.'
Ignoring the girl, Druss grunted and moved to the stream where he knelt and
drank. Had Snaga been with him, the hollow would
now be awash in blood and bodies. He sat back and stared at the rippling water. When the axe was lost Druss had felt as if
a burden had been lifted from his heart. The priest back in Capalis had been
right: it was a demon blade. He had felt its power growing as the battles
raged, had enjoyed the soaring, surging blood-lust that swept over him like a
tidal wave. But after the battles came the sense of emptiness and
disenchantment. Even the spiciest food was tasteless; summer days seemed grey
and colourless. Then came the day in the mountains when the
Naashanites had come upon him alone. He had killed five, but more than fifty
men had pursued him through the trees. He had tried to traverse the cliff, but
holding to the axe made his movements slow and clumsy. Then the ledge had given
way and he had fallen, twisting and turning through the air. Even as he fell he
hurled the axe from him, and tried to turn the fall into a dive; but his timing
was faulty and he had landed on his back, sending up a huge splash, the air
exploding from his lungs. The river was in flood and the currents swept him on
for more than two miles before he managed to grab a root jutting from the
river-bank. Hauling himself clear he had sat, as now, staring at the water. Snaga was gone. And Druss felt free. "Thank you for
helping my grandfather,' said a sweet voice and he turned and smiled. 'Did they hurt you?' 'Only a little,' said Dulina. 'They hit me
in the face.' 'How old are you?' 'Twelve - almost thirteen.' She was a
pretty child with large hazel eyes and light brown hair. 'Well, they've gone now. Are you from the
village?' 'No. Grandfather is a tinker. We go from
town to town; he sharpens knives and mends things. He's very clever.' 'Where are your parents?' The girl shrugged. 'I never had any; only
grandfather. You are very strong - but you are bleeding!' Druss chuckled. 'I heal fast, little one.'
Removing his jerkin, he examined the wound on his hip. The surface skin had
been sliced, but the cut was not deep. Varsava joined them. 'That should also be
stitched, great hero,' he said, irritation in his voice. Blood was still flowing freely from the
wound. Druss stretched out and lay still while Varsava, with little gentleness,
drew the flaps of skin together and pierced them with a curved needle. When he
had finished the bladesman stood. 'I suggest we leave this place and head back
for Lania. I think our friends will return before too long.' Druss donned his jerkin. 'What about the
city and your thousand gold pieces?' Varsava shook his head in disbelief.
"This . . . escapade . . . of yours has put paid to any plan of mine. I
shall return to Lania and claim my hundred gold pieces for locating the boy. As
to you, well, you can go where you like.' 'You give up very easily, bladesman. So we
cracked a few heads! What difference does that make? Cajivak has hundreds of
men; he won't interest himself in every brawl.' 'It is not Cajivak who concerns me, Druss.
It is you. I am not here to rescue maidens or kill dragons, or whatever else it
is that makes heroes of myth. What happens when we walk into the city and you
see some. . . some hapless victim? Can you walk by? Can you hold fast to a plan
of action that will see us succeed in our mission?' Druss thought for a moment. 'No,' he said
at last. 'No, I will never walk by.' 'I thought not, damn you! What are you
trying to prove, Druss? You want more songs about you? Or do you just want to
die young?' 'No, I have nothing to prove, Varsava. And
I may die young, but I'll never look in a mirror and be ashamed because I let
an old man suffer or a child be raped. Nor will I ever be haunted by a
peacemaker who died unjustly. Go where you will, Varsava. Take these people
back to Lania. I shall go to the city.' 'They'll kill you there.' Druss shrugged. 'All men die. I am not
immortal.' 'No, just stupid,' snapped Varsava and
spinning on his heel, the bladesman strode away. * Michanek laid his bloody sword on the
battlements and untied the chin-straps of his bronze helm, lifting it clear and
enjoying the sudden rush of cool air to his sweat-drenched head. The Ventrian
army was falling back in some disarray, having discarded the huge battering-ram
which lay outside the gate, surrounded by corpses. Michanek walked to the rear
of the ramparts and yelled orders to a squad of men below. 'Open the gate and drag that damned ram
inside,' he shouted. Pulling a rag from his belt, he wiped his sword clean of
blood and sheathed it. The fourth attack of the day had been
repulsed; there would be no further righting today. However, few of the men
seemed anxious to leave the wall. Back in the city the plague was decimating
the civilian population. No, he thought, it is worse than decimation. Far more
than one in ten were now suffering the effects. Gorben had not dammed the river. Instead he
had filled it with every kind of corruption - dead animals, bloated and
maggot-ridden, rotting food, and the human waste from an army of eleven
thousand men. Small wonder that sickness had ripped into the population. Water was now being supplied by artesian
wells, but no one knew how deep they were or how long the fresh water would
last. Michanek gazed up at the clear blue sky: not a cloud in sight, and rain
had not fallen for almost a month. A young officer approached him. 'Two
hundred with superficial wounds, sixty dead, and another thirty-three who will
not fight again,' he said. Michanek nodded, his mind elsewhere. 'What
news from the inner city, brother?' he asked. 'The plague is abating. Only seventy dead
yesterday, most of them either children or old people.' Michanek stood and smiled at the young man.
'Your section fought well today,' he said, clapping his hand on his brother's
shoulder. 'I shall see that a report is placed before the Emperor when we
return to Naashan.' The man said nothing and their eyes met, the unspoken
thought passing between them: if we return to Naashan. 'Get some rest,
Narin. You look exhausted.' 'So do you, Michi. And I was only here for
the last two attacks - you've been here since before dawn.' 'Yes, I am tired. Pahtai will revive
me; she always does.' Narin chuckled. 'I never expected love to
last so long for you. Why don't you marry the girl? You'll never find a better
wife. She's revered in the city. Yesterday she toured the poorest quarter,
healing the sick. It's amazing; she has more skill than any of the doctors. It
seems that all she needs to do is lay her hands upon the dying and their sores
disappear.' 'You sound as if you're in love with her
yourself,' said Michanek. 'I think I am - a little,' admitted Narin,
reddening. 'Is she still having those dreams?' 'No,' lied Michanek. 'I'll see you this
evening.' He moved down the battlement steps and strode through the streets
towards his home. Every other house, it seemed, boasted the white chalked cross
denoting plague. The market was deserted, the stalls standing empty. Everything
was rationed now, the food - four ounces of flour, and a pound of dried fruit -
doled out daily from storehouses in the west and east. Why don't you marry her! For two reasons he could never share. One:
she was already wed to another, though she did not know it. And secondly, it
would be like signing his death warrant. Rowena had predicted that he would die
here, with Narin beside him, one year to the day after he was wed. She no longer remembered this prediction
either, for the sorcerers had done their work well. Her Talent was lost to her,
and all the memories of her youth in the lands of the Drenai. Michanek felt no
guilt over this. Her Talent had been tearing her apart and now, at least, she
smiled and was happy. Only Pudri knew the whole truth, and he was wise enough
to stay silent. Michanek turned up the Avenue of Laurels
and pushed open the gates of his house. There were no gardeners now, and the
flower-beds were choked with weeds. The fountain was no longer in operation,
the fish-pool dry and cracked. As he strode to the house, Pudri came running out
to him. 'Master, come quickly, it is the Pahtair' 'What has happened?' cried Michanek,
grabbing the little man by his tunic. 'The plague, master,' he whispered, tears
in his dark eyes. 'It is the plague.' * Varsava found a cave nestling against the
rock-face to the north; it was deep and narrow, and curled like a figure six.
He built a small fire near the back wall, below a split in the rock that
created a natural chimney. The old man, whom Druss had carried to the cave, had
fallen into a deep, healing sleep with the child, Dulina, alongside him. Having
walked from the cave to check whether the glare of the fire could be seen from
outside, Varsava was now sitting in the cave-mouth staring out over the
night-dark woods. Druss joined him. 'Why so angry, bladesman?'
he asked. 'Do you not feel some satisfaction at having rescued them?' 'None at all,' replied Varsava. 'But then
no one ever made a song about me. I look after myself.' 'That does not explain your anger.' 'Nor could I explain it in any way that would
be understood by your simple mind. Borza's Blood!' He rounded on Druss. 'The
world is such a mind-numbingly uncomplicated place for you, Druss. There is
good, and there is evil. Does it ever occur to you that there may be a vast
area in between that is neither pure nor malevolent? Of course it doesn't! Take
today as an example. The old man could have been a vicious sorcerer who drank
the blood of innocent babes; the men punishing him could have been the fathers
of those babes. You didn't know, you just roared in and downed them.' Varsava
shook his head and took a deep breath. 'You are wrong,' said Druss softly. 'I have
heard the arguments before, from Sieben and Bodasen - and others. I will agree
that I am a simple man. I can scarcely read more than my name, and I do not
understand complicated arguments. But I am not blind. The man tied to the tree
wore homespun clothes, old clothes; the child was dressed in like manner. These
were not rich, as a sorcerer would be. And did you listen to the laughter of
the knife-throwers? It was harsh, cruel. These were not farmers; their clothes
were bought, their boots and shoes of good leather. They were scoundrels.' 'Maybe they were,' agreed Varsava, 'but
what business was it of yours? Will you criss-cross the world seeking to right
wrongs and protect the innocent? Is this your ambition in life?' 'No,' said Druss, 'though it would not be a
bad ambition.' He fell silent for several minutes, lost in thought. Shadak had
given him a code, and impressed upon him that without such an iron discipline
he would soon become as evil as any other reaver. Added to this there was
Bress, his father, who had lived his whole life bearing the terrible burden of
being the son of Bardan. And lastly there was Bardan himself, driven by a demon
to become one of the most hated and vilified villains in history. The lives,
the words and deeds of these three men had created the warrior who now sat
beside Varsava. But Druss had no words to explain, and it surprised him that he
desired them; he had never felt the need to explain to Sieben or Bodasen. 'I
had no choice,' he said at last. 'No choice?' echoed Varsava. 'Why?' 'Because I was there. There wasn't anyone
else.' Feeling Varsava's eyes upon him, and seeing
the look of blank incomprehension, Druss turned away and stared at the night
sky. It made no sense, he knew that, but he also knew that he felt good for
having rescued the girl and the old man. It might make no sense, but it was right. Varsava rose and moved back to the rear of
the cave, leaving Druss alone. A cold wind whispered across the mountainside,
and Druss could smell the coming of rain. He remembered another cold night,
many years before, when he and Bress had been camped in the mountains of Lentria.
Druss was very young, seven or eight, and he was unhappy. Some men had shouted
at his father, and gathered outside the workshop that Bress had set up in a
small village. He had expected his father to rush out and thrash them but
instead, as night fell, he had gathered a few belongings and led the boy out
into the mountains. 'Why are we running away?' he had asked
Bress. 'Because they will talk a lot, and then
come back to burn us out.' 'You should have killed them,' said the
boy. 'That would have been no answer,' snapped
Bress. 'Mostly they are good men, but they are frightened. We will find
somewhere where no one knows of Bardan.' 'I won't run away, not ever,' declared the
boy and Bress had sighed. Just then a man approached the camp-fire. He was old and
bald, his clothes ragged, but his eyes were bright and shrewd. 'May I share your fire?' he asked and mess
had welcomed him, offering some dried meat and a herb tisane' which the man
accepted gratefully. Druss had fallen asleep as the two men talked, but had
woken several hours later. Bress was asleep, but the old man was sitting by the
fire feeding the flames with twigs. Druss rose from his blankets and walked to
sit alongside him. 'Frightened of the dark, boy?' 'I am frightened of nothing,' Druss told him. 'That's good,' said the old man, 'but I am.
Frightened of the dark, frightened of starvation, frightened of dying. All my
life I've been frightened of something or other.' 'Why?' asked the boy, intrigued. The old man laughed. 'Now there's a
question! Wish I could answer it.' As he picked up a handful of twigs and
reached out, dropping them to the dying flames, Druss saw his right arm was
criss-crossed with scars. 'How did you get them?' asked the boy. 'Been a soldier most of my life, son.
Fought against the Nadir, the Vagrians, the Sathuli, corsairs, brigands. You
name the enemy, and I've crossed swords with them.' 'But you said you were a coward.' 'I said no such thing, lad. I said I was frightened.
There's a difference. A coward is a man who knows what's right, but is
afraid to do it; there're plenty of them around. But the worst of them are easy
to spot: they talk loud, they brag big, and given a chance they're as cruel as
sin.' 'My father is a coward,' said the boy
sadly. The old man shrugged. 'If he is, boy, then
he's the first in a long, long while to fool me. And if you are talking about
him running away from the village, there's times when to run away is the
bravest thing a man can do. I knew a soldier once. He drank like a fish, rutted
like an alley-cat and would fight anything that walked, crawled or swam. But he
got religion; he became a Source priest. When a man he once knew, and had
beaten in a fist-fight, saw him walking down the street in Drenan, he walked up
and punched the priest full in the face, knocking him flat. I was there. The
priest surged to his feet and stopped. He wanted to fight - everything in him
wanted to fight. But then he remembered what he was, and he held back. Such was
the turmoil within him that he burst into tears. And he walked away. By the
gods, boy, that took some courage.' 'I don't think that was courage,' said
Druss. 'Neither did anyone else who was watching.
But then that's something you'll learn, I hope. If a million people believe a
foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing.' Druss's mind jerked back to the present. He
didn't know why he had remembered that meeting, but the recollection left him
feeling sad and low in spirit. Chapter TwoA storm broke over the mountains, great
rolls of thunder that made the walls of the cave vibrate, and Druss moved back
as the rain lashed into the cave-mouth. The land below was lit by jagged spears
of lightning which seemed to change the very nature of the valley - the gentle
woods of pine and elm becoming shadow-haunted lairs, the friendly homes looking
like tombstones across the vault of Hell. Fierce winds buffeted the trees and Druss
saw a herd of deer running from the woods, their movements seeming disjointed
and ungainly against the flaring lightning bolts. A tree was struck and seemed
to explode from within, splitting into two halves. Fire blazed briefly from the
ruined trunk, but died within seconds in the sheeting rain. Dulina crept alongside him, pushing herself
against him. He felt the stitches in his side pull as she snuggled in, but he
lifted his arm around her shoulders. 'Is is only a storm, child,' he said. 'It
cannot harm us.' She said nothing and he drew her to his lap, holding her
close. She was warm, almost feverish, he thought. Sighing, Druss felt again the weight of
loss, and wondered where Rowena was on this dark and ferocious night. Was there
a storm where she lay? Or was the night calm? Did she feel the loss, or was
Druss just a dim memory of another life in the mountains? He glanced down to
see that the child was asleep, her head in the crook of his arm. Holding her firmly but gently, Druss rose
and carried her back to the fireside, laying her down on her blanket and adding
the last of the fuel to the fire. 'You are a good man,' came a soft voice.
Druss looked up and saw that the old tinker was awake. 'How is the leg?' 'It hurts, but it will heal. You are sad,
my friend.' Druss shrugged. 'These are sad times.' 'I heard your talk with your friend. I am
sorry that in helping me you have lost the chance to help others.' He smiled.
'Not that I would change anything, you understand?' Druss chuckled. 'Nor I.' 'I am Ruwaq the Tinker,' said the old man,
extending a bony hand. Druss shook it and sat beside him. 'Where
are you from?' 'Originally? The lands of Matapesh, far to
the east of Naashan and north of the Opal Jungles. But I have always been a man
who needed to see new mountains. People think they are all the same, but it is
not so. Some are lush and green, others crowned with shining ice and snow. Some
are sharp, like sword-blades, others old and rounded, comfortable within eternity.
I love mountains.' 'What happened to your children?' 'Children? Oh, I never had children. Never
married.' 'I thought the child was your
grand-daughter?' 'No, I found her outside Resha. She had
been abandoned and was starving to death. She is a good girl. I love her
dearly. I can never repay the debt to you for saving her.' 'There is no debt,' said Druss. The old man lifted his hand and wagged his
finger. 'I don't accept that, my friend. You gave her - and me - the gift of
life. I do not like storms, but I was viewing this one with the greatest
pleasure. Because until you entered the hollow I was a dead man, and Dulina
would have been raped and probably murdered. Now the storm is a vision of
beauty. No one ever gave me a greater gift.' The old man had tears in his eyes
and Druss's discomfort grew. Instead of feeling elated by his gratitude he
experienced a sense of shame. A true hero, he believed, would have gone to the
man's aid from a sense of justice, of compassion. Druss knew that was not why
he had helped them. Not even close. The right deed . . . for
the wrong reason. He patted the old man's shoulder and returned to the
cave-mouth where he saw that the storm was moving on towards the east, the rain
lessening. Druss's spirits sank. He wished Sieben were with him. Irritating as
the poet could be, he still had a talent for lifting the axeman's mood. But Sieben had refused to accompany him,
preferring the pleasures of city life to an arduous journey across the
mountains to Resha. No, thought Druss, not the journey; that was just an
excuse. 'I'll make a bargain with you though, old
horse,' said Sieben on that last day. 'Leave the axe and I'll change my mind.
Bury it. Throw it in the sea. I don't care which.' 'Don't tell me you believe that nonsense?' 'I saw it, Druss. Truly. It will be the
death of you - or at least the death of the man I know.' Now he had no axe, no friend, and no
Rowena. Unused to despair Druss felt lost, his strength useless. Dawn brightened the sky, the land
glistening and fresh from the rain as Dulina came alongside him. 'I had a
wonderful dream,' she said brightly. 'There was a great knight on a white
horse. And he rode up to where grandfather and I were waiting, and he leaned
from his saddle and lifted me to sit beside him. Then he took off his golden
helmet and he said, "I am your father." And he took me to live in a
castle. I never had a dream like it. Do you think it will come true?' Druss did not answer. He was staring down
at the woods at the armed men making their way towards the cave. * The world had shrunk now to a place of
agony and darkness. All Druss could feel was pain as he lay in the windowless
dungeon, listening to the skittering of unseen rats which clambered over him.
There was no light, save when at the end of the day the jailer strode down the
dungeon corridor and a tiny, flickering beam momentarily lit the narrow grille
of the door-stone. Only in those seconds could Druss see his surroundings. The
ceiling was a mere four feet from the floor, the airless room six feet square.
Water dripped from the walls, and it was cold. Druss brushed a rat from his leg, the
movement causing him a fresh wave of pain from his wounds. He could hardly move
his neck, and his right shoulder was swollen and hot to the touch. Wondering if
the bones were broken, he began to shiver. How many days? He had counted to
sixty-three, but then lost track for a while. Guessing at seventy, he had begun
to count again. But his mind wandered. Sometimes he dreamt of the mountains of
home, under a blue sky, with a fresh northerly wind cooling his brow. At other
times he tried to remember events in his life. 'I will break you, and then I will watch
you beg for death,' said Cajivak on the day they had hauled Druss into the
castle Hall. 'In your dreams, you ugly whoreson.' Cajivak had beaten him then, pounding his
face and body with brutal blows. His hands tied behind him, a tight rope around
his neck, Druss could do nothing but accept the hammering. For the first two weeks he was kept in a
larger cell. Every time he slept men would appear alongside his narrow bed to
beat him with clubs and sticks. At first he had fought them, grabbing one man
by the throat and cracking his skull against the cell wall. But deprived of
food and water for days on end, his strength had given out and he could only
curl himself into a tight ball against the merciless beatings. Then they had thrown him into this tiny
dungeon, and he had watched with horror as they slid the door-stone into place.
Once every two days a guard would push stale bread and a cup of water through
the narrow grille. Twice he caught rats and ate them raw, cutting his lips on
the tiny bones. Now he lived for those few seconds of light
as the guard walked back to the outside world. 'We caught the others,' the jailer said one
day, as he pushed the bread through the grille. But Druss did not believe him.
Such was Cajivak's cruelty that he would have dragged Druss out to see them
slain. He pictured Varsava pushing the child up
into the chimney crack in the cave, urging her to climb, and remembered lifting
Ruwaq up to where Varsava could haul the old man out of sight. Druss himself
was about to climb when he heard the warriors approaching the cave. He had turned. And charged them. . . . But there were too many, and most bore
clubs which finally smashed him from his feet. Boots and fists thundered into
him and he awoke to find a rope around his neck, his hands bound. Forced to
walk behind a horseman, he was many times dragged from his feet, the rope
tearing the flesh of his neck. Varsava had described Cajivak as a monster,
which could not be more true. The man was close to seven feet tall, with an
enormous breadth of shoulder and biceps as thick as most men's thighs. His eyes
were dark, almost black, and no hair grew on the right side of his head where
the skin was white and scaly, covered in scar tissue that only a severe burn
could create. Madness shone in his eyes, and Druss had glanced to the man's
left and the weapon that was placed there, resting against the high-backed
throne. Snaga! Druss shook himself free of the memory now
and stretched. His joints creaked and his hands trembled in the cold that
seeped from the wet walls. Don't think of it, he urged himself. Concentrate on
something else. He tried to picture Rowena, but instead found himself
remembering the day when the priest of Pashtar Sen had found him in a small
village, four days east of Lania. Druss had been sitting in the garden of an
inn, enjoying a meal of roast meat and onions and a jug of ale. The priest
bowed and sat opposite the axeman. His bald head was pink and peeling, burned
by the sun. 'I am glad to find you in good health,
Druss. I have searched for you for the last six months.' 'You found me,' said Druss. 'It is about the axe.' 'Do not concern yourself, Father. It is
gone. You were right, it was an evil weapon. I am glad to be rid of it.' The priest shook his head. 'It is back,' he
said. 'It is now in the possession of a robber named Cajivak. Always a killer,
he succumbed far more swiftly than a strong man like yourself and now he is
terrorising the lands around Lania, torturing, killing and maiming. With the
war keeping our troops from the area, there is little that can be done to stop
him.' 'Why tell me?' The priest said nothing for a moment,
averting his eyes from Druss's direct gaze. 'I have watched you,' he said at
last. 'Not just in the present, but through the past, from your birth through
your childhood, to your marriage to Rowena and your quest to find her. You are
a rare man, Druss. You have iron control over those areas of your soul
which have a capacity for evil. And you have a dread of becoming like Bardan.
Well, Cajivak is Bardan reborn. Who else can stop him?' 'I don't have time to waste, priest. My
wife is somewhere in these lands.' The priest reddened and hung his head. His
voice was a whisper, and there was shame in the words. 'Recover the axe and I
will tell you where she is,' he said. Druss leaned back and stared long and hard
at the slender man before him. 'This is unworthy of you,' he observed. The priest looked up. 'I know.' He spread
his hands. 'I have no other . . . payment. . . to offer.' 'I could take hold of your scrawny neck and
wring the truth from you,' Druss pointed out. 'But you will not. I know you, Druss.' The warrior stood. 'I'll find the axe,' he
promised. 'Where shall we meet?' 'You find the axe - and I'll find you,' the
priest told him. Alone in the dark, Druss remembered with
bitterness the confidence he had felt. Find Cajivak, recover the axe, then find
Rowena. So simple! What a fool you are, he thought. His face
itched and he scratched at the skin of his cheek, his grimy finger breaking a
scab upon his cheek. A rat ran across his leg and Druss lunged for it, but
missed. Struggling to his knees, he felt his head touch the cold stone of the
ceiling. Torchlight flickered as the guard moved
down the corridor. Druss scrambled to the grille, the light burning his eyes.
The jailer, whose face Druss could not see, bent and thrust a clay cup into the
door-stone cavity. There was no bread. Druss lifted the cup and drained the
water. 'Still alive, I see,' said the jailer, his voice deep and cold. 'I think
the Lord Cajivak has forgotten about you. By the gods, that makes you a lucky
man - you'll be able to live down here with the rats for the rest of your
life.' Druss said nothing and the voice went on, 'The last man who lived in
that cell was there for five years. When we dragged him out his hair was white
and all his teeth were rotten. He was blind, and bent like a crippled old man.
You'll be the same.' Druss focused on the light, watching the
shadows on the dark wall. The jailer stood, and the light receded. Druss sank
back. No bread . . . You'll be able to live down here with
the rats for the rest of your life. Despair struck
him like a hammer blow. Pahtai felt
the pain recede as she floated clear of her plague-racked body. I am dying, she
thought, but there was no fear, no surging panic, merely a peaceful sense of
harmony as she rose into the air. It was night, and the lanterns were lit.
Hovering just below the ceiling, she gazed down on Michanek as he sat beside
the frail woman in the bed, holding to her hand, stroking the fever-dry skin
and whispering words of love. That is me, thought Pahtai, staring down
at the woman. 'I love you, I love you,' whispered
Michanek. 'Please don't die!' He looked so tired, and Pahtai wanted
to reach out to him. He was all the security and love she had ever known, and
she recalled the first morning when she had woken in his home in Resha. She
remembered the bright sunshine and the smell of jasmine from the gardens, and
she knew that the bearded man sitting beside her should have been known to her.
But when she reached into her mind she could find no trace of him. It was so
embarrassing. 'How are you feeling?' he had asked, the voice familiar but doing
nothing to unlock her memory. She tried to think of where she might have met
him. That was when the second shock struck, with infinitely more power than the
first. She had no memory! Nothing! Her face must
have reacted to the shock, for he leaned in close and took her hand. 'Do not
concern yourself, Pahtai. You have been ill, very ill. But you are
getting better now. I know that you do not remember me, but as time passes you
will.' He turned his head and called to another man, tiny, slender and
dark-skinned. 'Look, here is Pudri,' said Michanek. 'He has been worried about you.' She had sat up then, and seen the tears in
the little man's eyes. 'Are you my father?' she asked. He shook his head. 'I am your servant and
your friend, Pahtai.' 'And you, sir,' she said, turning her gaze
on Michanek. 'Are you my . . . brother?' He had smiled. 'If that is what you wish,
that is what I will be. But no, I am not your brother. Nor am I your master.
You are a free woman, Pahtai.' Taking her hand, he kissed the palm, his
beard soft as fur against her skin. 'You are my husband, then?' 'No, I am merely a man who loves you. Take
my hand and tell me what you feel.' She did so. 'It is a good hand, strong. And
it is warm.' 'You see nothing? No . . . visions?' 'No. Should I?' He shook his head. 'Of course not. It is
only . . . that you were hallucinating when the fever was high. It just shows
how much better you are.' He kissed her hand again. Just as he was doing now. 'I love you,' she
thought, suddenly sad that she was about to die. She rose through the ceiling
and out into the night, gazing up at the stars. Through spirit eyes they no
longer twinkled, but sat perfect and round in the vast bowl of the night. The
city was peaceful, and even the camp-fires of the enemy seemed merely a glowing
necklace around Resha. She had never fully discovered the secrets
of her past. It seemed she was a prophet of some kind, and had belonged to a
merchant named Kabuchek, but he had fled the city long before the siege began. Pahtai
remembered walking to his house, hoping that the sight of it would stir her
lost memories. Instead she had seen a powerful man, dressed in black and
carrying a double-headed axe. He was talking to a servant. Instinctively she
had ducked back into an alley, her heart hammering. He looked like Michanek but
harder, more deadly. Unable to take her eyes from him, she found the oddest
sensations stirring within her. Swiftly she turned and ran back the way she
had come. And had never since sought to find out her
background. But sometimes as she and Michanek were
making love, usually in the garden beneath the flowering trees, she would find
herself suddenly thinking of the man with the axe, and then fear would come and
with it a sense of betrayal. Michanek loved her, and it seemed disloyal that
another man - a man she didn't even know -could intrude into her thoughts at
such a time. Pahtai soared
higher, her spirit drawn across the war-torn land, above gutted houses, ruined
villages and ghostly, deserted towns. She wondered if this was the route to
Paradise? Coming to a range of mountains, she saw an ugly fortress of grey
stone. She was thinking of the man with the axe, and found herself drawn into
the citadel. There was a hall and within it sat a huge man, his face scarred, his
eyes malevolent. Beside him was the axe she had seen carried by the man in
black. Down she journeyed, to a dungeon deep and
dark, cold and filthy, the haunt of rats and lice. The axeman lay there, his
skin covered in sores. He was asleep and his spirit was gone from the body.
Reaching out she tried to touch his face, but her spectral hand flowed beneath
the skin. In that moment she saw a slender line of pulsing light radiating
around the body. Her hand stroked the light and instantly she found him. He was alone and in terrible despair. She
spoke with him, trying to give him strength, but he reached for her and his
words were shocking and filled her with fear. He disappeared then, and she
guessed that he had been woken from sleep. Back in the citadel she floated through the
corridors and rooms, the antechambers and halls. An old man was sitting in a
deserted kitchen. He too was dreaming, and it was the dream that drew her to
him. He was in the same dungeon; he had lived there for years. Pahtai entered
his mind and spoke with his dream spirit. Then she returned to the night sky.
'I am not dying,' she thought. 'I am merely free.' In an instant she returned to Resha and her
body. Pain flooded through her, and the weight of flesh sank down like a prison
around her spirit. She felt the touch of Michanek's hand, and all thoughts of
the axeman dispersed like mist under the sun. She was suddenly happy, despite
the pain. He had been so good to her, and yet . . . 'Are you awake?' he asked, his voice low.
She opened her eyes. 'Yes. I love you.' 'And I you. More than life.' 'Why did we never wed?' she said, her
throat dry, the words rasping clear. She saw him pale. 'Is that what you wish for? Would it make
you well?' 'It would . . . make me . . . happy,' she
told him. 'I will send for a priest,' he promised. * She found him on a grim mountainside
where winter winds were howling through the peaks. He was frozen and weak, his
limbs trembling, his eyes dull. 'What are you doing?' she asked. 'Waiting to die,' he told her. 'That is no way for you to behave. You
are a warrior, and a warrior never gives up.' 'I have no strength left.' Rowena sat beside him and he felt the
warmth of her arms around his shoulders, smelt the sweetness of her breath. 'Be
strong,' she said, stroking his hair. 'In despair there is only defeat.' 'I cannot overcome cold stone. I cannot
shine a light through the darkness. My limbs are rotting, my teeth shake in
their sockets.' 'Is there nothing you would live for?' 'Yes,' he said, reaching for her. I live
for you! I always have. But I can't find you.' * He awoke in the darkness amidst the stench
of the dungeon and crawled to the door-stone grille, finding it by touch. Cool
air drifted down the corridor and he breathed deeply. Torchlight flickered,
burning his eyes. He squinted against it and watched as the jailer tramped down
the corridor. Then the darkness returned. Druss's stomach cramped and he
groaned. Dizziness swamped him, and nausea rose in his throat. A faint light showed and, rolling painfully
to his knees, he pushed his face against the narrow opening. An old man with a
wispy white beard knelt outside the dungeon stone. The light from the tiny clay
oil lamp was torturously bright, and Druss's eyes stung. 'Ah, you are alive! Good,' whispered the
old man. 'I have brought you this lamp and an old tinder-box. Use it carefully.
It will help accustom your eyes to light. Also I have some food.' He thrust a
linen package through the door-stone and Druss took it, his mouth too dry for
speech. 'I'll come back when I can,' said the old man. 'Remember, only use the
light once the jailer has gone.' Druss listened to the man slowly make his
way down the corridor. He thought he heard a door shut, but could not be sure.
With unsteady hands he drew the lamp into the dungeon, placing it on the floor
beside him. Then he hauled in the package and the small iron tinder-box. Eyes streaming from the light, he opened
the package to find there were two apples, a hunk of cheese and some dried
meat. When he bit into one of the apples it was unbearably delicious, the
juices stinging his bleeding gums. Swallowing was almost painful, but the minor
irritation was swamped by the coolness. He almost vomited, but held it down,
and slowly finished the fruit. His shrunken stomach rebelled after the second
apple, and he sat holding the cheese and the meat as if they were treasures of
gems and gold. While waiting for his stomach to settle he stared around at his
tiny cell, seeing the filth and decay for the first time. Looking at his hands,
he saw the skin was split and ugly sores showed on his wrists and arms. His
leather jerkin had been taken from him and the woollen shirt was alive with
lice. He saw the small hole in the corner of the wall from which the rats
emerged. And despair was replaced by anger. Unaccustomed to the light, his eyes continued to stream. Removing
his shirt, he gazed down at his wasted body. The arms were no longer huge, the
wrists and elbows jutting. But I am alive, he told himself. And I will survive. He
finished the cheese and half of the meat. Desperate as he was to consume it
all, he did not know if the old man would come back, and he rewrapped the meat
and pushed it into his belt. Examining the workings of the tinder-box he saw
that it was an old design, a sharp piece of flint that could be struck against
the serrated interior, igniting the powdered tinder in the well of the box.
Satisfied he could use it in the dark, he reluctantly blew out the lamp. The old man did return - but not for two days. This time he
brought some dried peaches, a hunk of ham and a small sack of tinder. 'It is
important that you keep supple,' he told Druss. 'Stretch out on the floor and
exercise.' 'Why are you doing this for me?' 'I sat in that cell for years, I know what
it is like. You must build your strength. There are two ways to do this, or so
I found. Lie on your stomach with your hands beneath your shoulders and then,
keeping the legs straight, push yourself up using only your arms. Repeat this
as many times as you can manage. Keep count. Each day try for one more. Also
you can lie on your back and raise your legs, keeping them straight. This will
strengthen the belly.' 'How long have I been here?' asked Druss. 'It is best not to think of that,' the old
man advised. 'Concentrate on building your body. I will bring some ointments
next time for those sores, and some lice powder.' 'What is your name?' 'Best you don't know - in case they find
the lamp.' 'I owe you a debt, my friend. And I always
pay my debts.' 'You'll have no chance of that - unless you
become strong again.' 'I shall,' promised Druss. When the old man had gone Druss lit the
lamp and lay down on his belly. With his hands beneath his shoulders he forced
his body up. He managed eight before collapsing to the filthy floor. A week later it was thirty. And by the end
of a month he could manage one hundred. Chapter ThreeThe guard at the main gate narrowed his
eyes and stared at the three-riders. None was known to him, but they rode with
casual confidence, chatting to one another and laughing. The guard stepped out
to meet them. 'Who are you?' he asked. The first of the men, a slim blond-haired
warrior wearing a baldric from which hung four knives, dismounted from his bay
mare. 'We are travellers seeking lodging for the night,' he said. 'Is there a
problem? Is there plague in the city?' 'Plague? Of course there's no plague,'
answered the guard, hastily making the sign of the Protective Horn. 'Where are
you from?' 'We've ridden from Lania, and we're heading
for Capalis and the coast. All we seek is an inn.' 'There are no inns here. This is the
fortress of Lord Cajivak.' The other two horsemen remained mounted.
The guard looked up at them. One was slim and dark-haired, a bow slung across
his shoulder and a quiver hanging from the pommel of his saddle. The third man
wore a wide leather hat and sported no weapons save an enormous hunting-knife
almost as long as a short sword. 'We can pay for our lodgings,' said the
blond man with an easy smile. The guard licked his lips. The man dipped his
hand into the pouch by his side and produced a thick silver coin which he
dropped into the guard's hand. 'Well. . . it would be churlish to turn you
away,' said the guard, pocketing the coin. 'All right. Ride through the main
square, bearing left. You'll see a domed building, with a narrow lane running
down its eastern side. There is a tavern there. It's a rough place, mind, with
much fighting. But the keeper - Ackae - keeps rooms at the back. Tell him that
Ratsin sent you.' 'You are most kind,' said the blond man,
stepping back into the saddle. As they rode in to the city the guard shook
his head. Be unlikely to see them again, he thought, not with that much silver
on them and not a sword between them. * The old man came almost every day, and
Druss grew to treasure the moments. He never stayed long, but his conversation
was brief, wise and to the point. 'The biggest danger when you get out is to
the eyes, boy. They get too used to the dark, and the sun can blind them -
permanently. I lost my sight for almost a month after they dragged me out.
Stare into the lamp flame, close as you can, force the pupils to contract.' Druss was now as strong as he would ever be
in such a place, and last night he had told the man, 'Do not come tomorrow, or
the next day.' 'Why?' Tm thinking of leaving,' answered the
Drenai. The old man had laughed. Tm serious, my friend. Don't come for two
days.' 'There's no way out. The door-stone alone
requires two men to move it, and there are two bolts holding it in place.' 'If you are correct,' Druss told him, 'then
I will see you here in three days.' Now he sat quietly in the dark. The
ointments his friend had supplied had healed most of his sores, and the lice
powder - while itching like the devil's touch - had convinced all but the most
hardy of the parasites to seek alternative accommodation. The food over the
last months had rebuilt Druss's strength, and his teeth no longer rattled in
their sockets. Now was the time, he thought. There'll never be a better. Silently he waited through the long day. At last he heard the jailer outside. A clay
cup was pushed into the opening, with a hunk of stale bread by it. Druss sat in
the dark, unmoving. 'Here is it, my black-bearded rat,' the
jailer called. Silence. 'Ah well, suit yourself. You'll
change your mind before long.' The hours drifted by. Torchlight flickered
in the corridor and he heard the jailer halt. Then the man walked on. Druss
waited for an hour, then he lit his lamp and chewed on the last of the meat the
old man had left the night before. Lifting the lamp to his face he stared hard
into the tiny flame, passing it back and forth before his eyes. The light
didn't sting as once it had. Blowing out the light he turned over on to his
stomach, pushing himself through one hundred and fifty press raises. He slept.
. . And awoke to the arrival of the jailer. The
man knelt down at the narrow opening, but Druss knew he could not see more than
a few inches into the dark. The food and water was untouched. The only question
now was whether the jailer cared if his prisoner lived or died. Cajivak had
threatened to have Druss dragged before him in order to plead for death. Would
the Lord be pleased that his jailer had robbed him of such delights? He heard the jailer curse, then move off
back the way he had come. Druss's mouth was dry, and his heart pounded. Minutes
passed - long, anxious minutes. Then the jailer returned; he was speaking to
someone. 'It's not my fault,' he was saying. 'His
rations were set by the Lord himself.' 'So it's his fault? Is that what
you're saying?' 'No! No! It's nobody's fault. Maybe
he had a weak heart or something. Maybe he's just sick. That's it, he's
probably sick. We'll move him to a bigger cell for a while.' 'I hope you're right,' said a soft voice,
'otherwise you'll be wearing your own entrails for a necklace.' A grating sound followed, then another, and
Druss guessed the bolts were being drawn back. 'All right, together now,' came
a voice. 'Heave!' The stone groaned as the men hauled it clear. 'Gods, but it stinks in there!' complained
one of the guards as a torch was thrust inside. Druss grabbed the wielder by
the throat, hauling him in, then he dived through the opening and rolled. He
rose, but dizziness caused him to stagger and a guard laughed. 'There's your dead man,' he said, and Druss
heard the rasp of a sword being drawn. It was so hard to see - there were at
least three torches, and the light was blinding. A shape moved towards him. 'Back in your hole, rat!' said the guard.
Druss leapt forward to smash a punch to the man's face. The guard's iron helm
flew from his head as his body shot backwards, his head cannoning into the
dungeon wall. A second guard ran in. Druss's vision was clearing now and he saw
the man aim a blow at his head. He ducked and stepped inside the blow,
thundering his fist in the man's belly. Instantly the guard folded, a great
whoosh of air rushing from his lungs. Druss brought his clenched fist down on
the man's neck, there was a sickening crack and the guard fell to his face. The jailer was trying to wriggle clear of
the dungeon opening as Druss turned on him. The man squealed in fright and
elbowed his way back into the dungeon. Druss hauled the first guard to the
entrance, thrusting the unconscious body through into the cell. The second
guard was dead; his body followed the first. Breathing heavily Druss looked at
the door-stone. Anger rose in him like a sudden fire. Squatting down, he took
the stone in both hands and heaved it into place. Then he sat before it and
pushed it home with his legs. For several minutes he sat exhausted, then he
crawled to the door-stone and pushed the bolts home. Lights danced before Druss's eyes, and his
heart was hammering so fast he could not count the beats. Yet he forced himself
upright and moved carefully to the door, which was partly open, and glanced
into the corridor beyond. Sunlight was shining through a window, the beam
highlighting dust motes in the air. It was indescribably beautiful. The corridor was deserted. He could see two
chairs and a table with two cups upon it. Moving into the corridor, he halted
at the table and, seeing the cups contained watered wine, he drained them both.
More dungeons lined the walls, but these all had doors of iron bars. He moved
on to a second wooden door, beyond which was a stairwell, dark and unlit. His strength was fading as he slowly
climbed the stairs, but anger drove him on. * Sieben gazed down with undisguised horror
at the small black insect upon the back of his hand. This,' he said, 'is
insufferable.' 'What?' asked Varsava from his position at
the narrow window. 'The room has fleas,' answered Sieben,
taking the insect between thumb and forefinger and crushing it. 'They seem to prefer you, poet,' put in
Eskodas with a boyish grin. 'The risk of death is one thing,' said
Sieben icily. 'Fleas are quite another. I have not even inspected the bed, but
I would imagine it is teeming with wild-life. I think we should make the rescue
attempt at once.' Varsava chuckled. 'After dark would
probably be best,' he said. 'I was here three months ago when I took a child
back out to his father. That's how I learned that Druss was here. The dungeons
are - as you would expect - on the lowest level. Above them are the kitchens,
and above them the main Hall. There is no exit from the dungeons save through
the Hall, which means we must be inside the Keep by dusk. There is no night
jailer; therefore, if we can hide within the Keep until around midnight, we
should be able to find Druss and get him out. As to leaving the fortress, that
is another matter. As you saw, the two gates are guarded by day and locked by
night. There are sentries on the walls, and lookouts in the towers.' 'How many?' asked Eskodas. 'When I was here before, there were five
near the main gate.' 'How did you get out with the child?' 'He was a small boy. I hid him in a sack
and carried him out just after dawn, draped behind my saddle.' 'I can't see Druss fitting in a sack,' said
Sieben. Varsava moved to sit alongside the poet.
'Do not think of him as you knew him, poet. He has been over a year in a tiny,
windowless cell. The food would be barely enough to keep him alive. He will not
be the giant we all knew. And he's likely to be blind - or insane. Or both.' Silence fell upon the room as each man
remembered the axeman they had fought alongside. 'I wish I'd known sooner,'
muttered Sieben. 'I did not know myself,' said Varsava. 'I
thought they'd killed him.' 'It's strange,' put in Eskodas, 'I could
never imagine Druss being beaten - even by an army. He was always so - so
indomitable.' Varsava chuckled. 'I know. I watched him
walk unarmed into a hollow where a dozen or so warriors were torturing an old
man. He went through them like a scythe through wheat. Impressive.' 'So, how shall we proceed?' Sieben asked. 'We will go to the main Hall to pay our
respects to the Lord Cajivak. Perhaps he won't kill us outright!' 'Oh, that's a good plan,' said Sieben, his
voice dripping with sarcasm. 'You have a better?' 'I believe that I have. One would imagine
that a sordid place like this would be short of entertainment. I shall go alone
and announce myself by name; I will offer to perform for my supper.' 'At the risk of being considered rude,' said
Eskodas, 'I don't think your epic poems will be as well received as you think.' 'My dear boy, I am an entertainer. I can
fashion a performance to suit any audience.' 'Well, this audience,' said Varsava, 'will
be made up of the dregs of Ventria and Naashan and all points east and west.
There will be Drenai renegades, Vagrian mercenaries and Ventrian criminals of
all kinds.' 'I shall dazzle them,' promised Sieben.
'Give me half an hour to make my introductions, then make your way into the
Hall. I promise you no one will notice your entrance.' 'Where did you acquire such humility?'
asked Eskodas. 'It's a gift,' replied Sieben, 'and I'm
very proud of it.' * Druss reached the second level and paused
at the top of the stairwell. He could hear the sounds of many people moving
around, the scrape of pans being cleaned and of cutlery being prepared. He
could smell fresh bread cooking, mixed with the savoury aroma of roasting beef.
Leaning against the wall, he tried to think. There was no way through without
being seen. His legs were tired, and he sank down to his haunches. What to do? ' He heard footsteps approaching and pushed
himself upright. An old man appeared, his back hideously bent, his legs bowed.
He was carrying a bucket of water. His head came up as he approached Druss, his
nostrils quivering. The eyes, Druss saw, were rheumy and covered with an opal
film. The old man put down the bucket and reached out. 'Is it you?' he
whispered. 'You are blind?' 'Almost. I told you I spent five years in
that cell. Come, follow me.' Leaving the bucket, the old man retraced his
steps, round a winding corridor and down a narrow stair. Pushing open a door,
he led Druss inside. The room was small, but there was a slit window that
allowed a shaft of sunshine. 'Wait here,' he said. 'I will bring you some food
and drink.' He returned within minutes with a half-loaf
of fresh baked bread, a slab of cheese and a jug of water. Druss devoured the
food and drank deeply, then leaned back on the cot-bed. 'I thank you for your kindness,' he said.
'Without it I would be worse than dead; I would have been lost.' 'I owed a debt,' said the cripple. 'Another
man fed me, just as I fed you. They killed him for it - Cajivak had him
impaled. But I would never have found the courage had the goddess not appeared
to me in a dream. Was it she who brought you from the dungeon?' 'Goddess?' 'She told me of you,.and your suffering,
and she filled me with shame at my cowardice. I swore to her that I would do
all in my power to help you. And she touched my hand, and when I awoke all pain
had gone from my back. Did she make the stone disappear?' 'No, I tricked the jailer.' He told the man
of the ruse, and his fight with the guards. 'They will not be discovered until later
tonight,' said the cripple. 'Ah, but I would love to hear their screams as the
rats come at them in the dark.' 'Why do you say the woman in your dream was
a goddess?' asked Druss. 'She told me her name, Pahtai, and
that is the daughter of the earth mother. And in my dream she walked with me upon
the green hillsides of my youth. I shall never forget her.' 'Pahtai,' said
Druss softly. 'She came to me also in that cell, and gave me strength.' He
stood and laid his hand on the old man's back. 'You risked much to help me, and
I've no time left in this world in which to repay you.' 'No time?' echoed the old man. 'You can
hide here and escape after dark. I can get a rope; you can lower yourself from
the wall.' 'No. I must find Cajivak - and kill him.' 'Good,' said the old man. 'The goddess will
give you powers, yes? She will pour strength into your body?' 'I fear not,' said Druss. 'In this I shall
be alone.' 'You will die! Do not attempt this,'
pleaded the old man, tears streaming from the opal eyes. 'I beg you. He will
destroy you; he is a monster with the strength of ten men. Look at yourself. I
cannot see you clearly, but I know how weak you must be. You have a chance at
life, freedom, sunshine on your face. You are young -what will you achieve if
you attempt this foolishness? He will crush you, and either kill you or throw
you back into that hole in the ground.' 'I was not born to run,' said Druss. 'And,
trust me, I am not as weak as you think. You saw to that. Now tell me of the
Keep, and where the stairwells lead.' * Eskodas had no fear of death, for he had no
love of life - a fact he had known for many years. Ever since his father was
dragged from their home and hanged, he had known no depth.of joy. He felt the
loss, but accepted it in a calm and tranquil manner. On board ship he had told
Sieben that he enjoyed killing people, but this was not true. He experienced no
sensation whatever when his arrow struck home, save for a momentary
satisfaction when his aim was particularly good. Now, as he strolled with Varsava towards
the grey, forbidding Hall, he wondered if he would die. He thought of Druss
imprisoned beneath the Keep in a dark, dank dungeon, and found himself
wondering what such incarceration would do to his own personality. He took no
especial pleasure from the sights of the world, the mountains and lakes, the
oceans and valleys. Would he miss them? He doubted it. Glancing at Varsava, he saw that the
bladesman was tense, expectant. Eskodas smiled. No need for fear, he thought. It is only death. The two men climbed the stone steps to the
Keep gates, which were open and unguarded. Moving inside, Eskodas heard a roar
of laughter from the Hall. They walked to the main doors and looked inside.
There were some two hundred men seated around three great tables and, at the
far end, on a dais raised some six feet from the floor, sat Cajivak. He was
seated in a huge, ornately carved chair of ebony, and he was smiling. Before
him, standing on the end table, was Sieben. The poet's voice sang out. He was telling
them a tale of such mind-bending raunchiness that Eskodas's jaw dropped. He had
heard Sieben tell epic stories, recite ancient poems and discuss philosophy,
but never had he heard the poet talk of whores and donkeys. Varsava laughed
aloud as Sieben finished the story with an obscene double entendre. Eskodas gazed around the hall. Above them
was a gallery, and he located the recessed stairway that led to it. This might
be a good place to hide. He nudged Varsava. 'I'll take a look upstairs,' he
whispered. The bladesman nodded and Eskodas strolled unnoticed through the
throng and climbed the stairs. The gallery was narrow and flowed round the
Hall. There were no doors leading from it, and a man seated here would be
invisible to those below. Sieben was now telling the story of a hero
captured by a vicious enemy. Eskodas paused to listen: 'He was taken before the leader, and told
that he had one opportunity for life: he must survive four trials by ordeal.
The first was to walk barefoot across a trench filled with hot coals. The
second to drink a full quart of the most powerful spirit. Thirdly he had to
enter a cave and, with a small set of tongs, remove a bad tooth from a
mankilling lioness. Lastly, he was told, he had to make love to the ugliest
crone in the village. 'Well, he pulled off his boots and told
them to bring on the hot coals. Manfully he strode through them to the other
side of the trench, where he lifted the quart of spirit and drained it, hurling
the pot aside. Then he stumbled into the cave. There followed the most terrible
sounds of spitting, growling, and banging and shrieking. The listening men
found their blood growing cold. At last the warrior staggered out into the
sunlight. "Right," he said. "Now where's the woman with the toothache?"
' Laughter echoed around the rafters and
Eskodas shook his head in amazement. He had watched Sieben back in Capalis
listening to warriors swapping jests and jokes. Not once had the poet laughed,
or appeared to find the stories amusing. Yet here he was, performing the same
tales with apparent relish. Transferring his gaze to Cajivak, the
archer saw that the leader was no longer smiling, but was sitting back in his
chair, his fingers drumming on the arm-rest. Eskodas had known many evil men,
and knew well that some could look as fine as angels - handsome, clear-eyed,
golden-haired. But Cajivak looked what he was, dark and malevolent. He was
wearing Druss's jerkin of black leather, with the silver shoulder guards, and
Eskodas saw him reach down and stroke the black haft of an axe that was resting
against the chair. It was Snaga. Suddenly the colossal warrior rose from his
chair. 'Enough!' he bellowed and Sieben stood silently before him. 'I don't
like your performance, bard, so I'm going to have you impaled on an iron
spike.' The Hall was utterly silent now. Eskodas drew a shaft from his quiver
and notched it to his bow. 'Well? Any more jests before you die?' Cajivak
asked. 'Just the one,' answered Sieben, holding to
the madman's gaze. 'Last night I had dream, a terrible dream. I dreamt I was
beyond the gates of Hell; it was a place of fire and torture, exquisitely
ghastly. I was very frightened and I said to one of the demon guards, "Is
there any way out of here?" And he said there was only one, and no one had
ever achieved the task set. He led me to a dungeon, and through a narrow grille
I saw the most loathsome woman. She was leprous, with weeping sores, toothless
and old beyond time. Maggots crawled in what was left of her hair. The guard
said, "If you can make love to her all night, you will be allowed to
leave." And, you know, I was prepared to have a try. But as I stepped
forward I saw a second door, and I glanced through. And you know what I saw,
Lord? I saw you. You were making love to one of the most beautiful women I have
ever seen. So I said to the guard, "Why is it that I have to bed a crone,
when Cajivak gets a beauty?" "Well," he said, " 'tis only
fair that the women also have a chance to get out." ' Even from the gallery Eskodas could see Cajivak's
face lose its colour. When he spoke, his voice was harsh and trembling. 'I will
make your death last an eternity,' he promised. Eskodas drew back on his bowstring . . .
and paused. A man had appeared at the back of the dais, his hair and beard matted
and filthy, his face blackened with ingrained dirt. He ran forward, throwing
his shoulder into the high back ofCajivak's chair, which hurtled forward to
catapult the warlord from the dais. He fell head-first on to the table upon
which Sieben stood. The filth-covered warrior swept up the
shining axe, and his voice boomed out through the Hall: 'Now do you want me to
beg, you miserable whoreson?' Eskodas chuckled. There were moments in
life worth cherishing, he realised. * As he swept up the axe, feeling the cool,
black haft in his hand, power surged through him. It felt like fire roaring
through his veins to every muscle and sinew. In that moment Druss felt renewed,
reborn. Nothing in his life had ever been so exquisite. He felt light-headed
and full of life, like a paralysed man who regains the use of his limbs. His laughter boomed out over the Hall, and
he gazed down on Cajivak who was scrambling to his feet amongst the dishes and
goblets. The warlord's face was bloody, his mouth contorted. 'It is mine!' shouted Cajivak. 'Give it
back!' The men around him looked surprised at his
reaction. Where they had expected fury and violence, they saw instead their
dread Lord reaching out, almost begging. 'Come and get it,' invited Druss. Cajivak hesitated and licked his thin lips.
'Kill him!' he screamed suddenly. The warriors surged to their feet, the
nearest man drawing his sword and running towards the dais. An arrow slashed
into his throat, pitching him from his feet. All movement ceased then as scores
of armed men scanned the Hall, seeking the hidden bowman. 'What a man you chose to follow!' said
Druss, his voice booming in the sudden silence. 'He stands with his feet in
your stew, too frightened to face a man who has been locked in his dungeon and
fed on scraps. You want the axe?' he asked Cajivak. 'I say again, Come and get
it.' Twisting the weapon, he slammed it down into the boards of the dais where
it stood quivering, the points of the butterfly blades punching deep into the
wood. Druss stepped away from the axe and the warriors waited. Suddenly Cajivak moved, taking two running
steps and leaping towards the dais. He was a huge man, with immense shoulders
and powerful arms; but he leapt into a straight left from the former champion
of Mashrapur which smashed his lips into his teeth, and a right cross that hit
his jaw like a thunderbolt. Cajivak fell to the dais and rolled back to the
floor, landing on his back. He was up fast, and this time he slowly mounted the
steps to the dais. 'I'll break you, little man! I'll rip out
your entrails and feed them to you!' 'In your dreams!' mocked Druss. As Cajivak
charged, Druss stepped in to meet him, slamming a second straight left into
Cajivak's heart. The larger man grunted, but then sent an overhand right that
cannoned against Dross's brow, forcing him back. Cajivak's left hand snapped
forward with fingers extended to rip out Dross's eyes. Dross dropped his head
so that the fingers stabbed into his brow, the long nails gashing the skin.
Cajivak grabbed for him, but as his hands closed around Dross's shirt the
rotted material gave way. As Cajivak staggered back, Druss stepped in to
thunder two blows to his belly. It felt as if he were beating his hands against
a wall. The giant warlord laughed and struck out with an uppercut that almost
lifted Dross from his feet. His nose was broken and streaming blood, but as
Cajivak leapt in for the kill Dross side-stepped, tripping the larger man.
Cajivak hit the floor hard, then rolled and came up swiftly. Dross was tiring now, the sudden surge of
power from the axe fading away from his muscles. Cajivak lunged forward, but
Dross feinted with a left and Cajivak swayed back from it - straight into the
path of a right hook that hammered into his mouth, impaling his lower lip on
his teeth. Dross followed this with a left, then another right. A cut opened
above Cajivak's right eye, blood spilling to the cheek, and he fell back. Then
he pulled the punctured lip from his teeth - and gave a bloody grin. For a
moment Dross was nonplussed, then Cajivak leaned over and dragged Snaga from
the boards. The axe shone red in the lantern light.
'Now you die, little man!' Cajivak snarled. He raised the axe as Druss took one running
step and leapt, his right foot coming down hard on Cajivak's knee. The joint gave
way with an explosive crack and the giant fell screaming to the ground, losing
his hold on the axe. The weapon twisted in the air-then plunged down, the twin
points striking the warlord just below the shoulder-blades, lancing through the
leather jerkin and the skin beyond. Cajivak twisted and the axe ripped clear of
his body. Dross knelt and retrieved the weapon. Cajivak, his face twisted in pain, pushed
himself into a sitting position and stared at the axeman with undisguised
hatred. 'Let the blow be a clean one,' he said softly. Still kneeling Druss nodded, then swept
Snaga in a horizontal arc. The blades bit into Cajivak's bull neck, slicing
through the muscle, sinew and bone. The body toppled to the right, the head
falling left where it bounced once on the dais before rolling to the hall floor
below. Dross stood and turned to face the stunned warriors. Suddenly weary, he
sat down on Cajivak's throne. 'Someone bring me a goblet of wine!' he ordered. Sieben grabbed a pitcher and a goblet and
moved slowly to where the axeman sat. 'You took your damned time getting here,'
said Druss. Chapter FourFrom the back of the Hall Varsava watched
the scene with fascination. Cajivak's body lay on the dais, blood staining the
floor around it. In the Hall itself the warriors stood with their eyes locked
to the man sitting slumped on Cajivak's throne. Varsava glanced up at the
gallery where Eskodas waited, an arrow still strung to his bow. What now, thought Varsava, scanning the
Hall. There must be over a hundred killers here. His mouth was dry. At any
moment the unnatural calm would vanish. What then? Would they rush the dais?
And what of Druss? Would he take up his axe and attack them all? I don't want to die here, he thought,
wondering what he would do if they did attack Druss. He was close to the rear
door - no one would notice if he just slipped away into the night. After all,
he owed the man nothing. Varsava had done more than his share, locating Sieben
and setting up the rescue attempt. To die now, in a meaningless skirmish, would
be nonsense. Yet he did not move but stood silently,
waiting, with all the other men, and watched Druss drain a third goblet of
wine. Then the axeman rose and wandered down into the hall, leaving his axe on
the dais. Druss moved to the first table and tore a chunk of bread from a
fresh-baked loaf. 'None of you hungry?' he asked the men. A tall, slim warrior wearing a crimson
shirt stepped forward. 'What are your plans?' he asked. 'I'm going to eat,' Druss told him.
"Then I'm going to bathe. After that I think I'll sleep for a week.' 'And then?' The Hall was silent, the
warriors milling closer to hear the axeman's answer. 'One thing at a time, laddie. When you sit
in a dungeon, in the dark, with only rats for company, you learn never to make
too many plans.' 'Are you seeking to take his place?'
persisted the warrior, pointing to the severed head. Druss laughed. 'By the gods, look at him!
Would you want to take his place?' Chewing on the bread, Druss returned
to the dais and sat. Then he leaned forward and addressed the men. 'I am
Druss,' he said. 'Some of you may remember me from the day I was brought here.
Others may know of my service with the Emperor. I have no ill-will towards any
of you . . . but if any man here wishes to die, then let him take up his
weapons and approach me. I'll oblige him.' He stood and hefted the axe.
'Anyone?' he challenged. No one moved and Druss nodded. 'You are all fighting
men,' he said, 'but you fight for pay. That is sensible. Your leader is dead -
best you finish your meal, and then choose another.' 'Are you putting yourself forward?' asked
the man in the crimson shirt. 'Laddie, I've had enough of this fortress.
And I have other plans.' Druss turned back to Sieben, and Varsava
could not hear their conversation. The warriors gathered together in small
groups, discussing the various merits and vices of Cajivak's under-leaders, and
Varsava strolled out of the Hall, confused by what he had seen. Beyond the Hall
was a wide antechamber where the bladesman sat on a long couch - his feelings
mixed, his heart heavy. Eskodas joined him. 'How did he do it?' asked Varsava. 'A
hundred killers, and they just accepted his murder of their leader.
Incredible!' Eskodas shrugged and smiled. 'That's
Druss.' Varsava swore softly. 'You call that an
answer?' 'It depends what you are looking for,'
responded the bowman. 'Perhaps you should be asking yourself why you are angry.
You came here to rescue a friend, and now he is free. What more did you want?' Varsava laughed, but the sound was dry and
harsh. 'You want the truth? I half desired to see Druss broken. I wanted
confirmation of his stupidity! The great herol He rescued an old man and
child - that's why he's spent a year or more in this cesspit. You understand?
It was meaningless. Meaningless!' 'Not for Druss.' 'What is so special about him?' stormed
Varsava. 'He's not blessed with a fine mind, he has no intellect to speak of.
Any other man who has just done what he did would be ripped to pieces by that
mangy crew. But no, not Druss! Why? He could have become their leader - just
like that! They would have accepted it.' 'I can give you no definitive answers,'
said Eskodas. 'I watched him storm a ship filled with blood-hungry corsairs -
they threw down their weapons. It is the nature of the man, I suppose. I had a
teacher once, a great bowman, who told me that when we see another man we
instinctively judge him as either threat or prey. Because we are hunting,
killing animals. Carnivores. We are a deadly breed, Varsava. When we look at
Druss we see the ultimate threat - a man who does not understand compromise. He
breaks the rules. No, more than that, I think. For him there are no
rules. Take what happened back there. An ordinary man might well have killed
Cajivak - though I doubt it. But he would not have hurled aside the axe and
fought the monster hand to hand. And when he'd slain the leader he would have
looked out at all those killers and, in his heart, he would have expected
death. They would have sensed it . . . and they would have killed him. But
Druss didn't sense it; he didn't care. One at a time, or all at once. He'd have
fought them all.' 'And died,' put in Varsava. 'Probably. But that's not the point. After
he killed Cajivak he sat down and called for a drink. A man doesn't do that if
he expects further battles. That left them confused, uncertain - no rules, you
see. And when he walked down among them he left the axe behind. He knew
he wouldn't need it - and they knew too. He played them like a harp. But he
didn't do it consciously, it is just the nature of the man.' 'I can't be like him,' said Varsava sadly,
remembering the peacemaker and the terrible death he suffered. 'Few can,' agreed Eskodas. 'That's why he
is becoming a legend.' Laughter echoed from the Hall. 'Sieben is
entertaining them again,' said Eskodas. 'Come on, let's go and listen. We can
get drunk.' 'I don't want to get drunk. I want to be
young again. I want to change the past, wipe a wet rag over the filthy slate.' 'It's a fresh day tomorrow,' said Eskodas
softly. 'What does that mean?' 'The past is dead, bladesman, the future
largely unwritten. I was on a ship once with a rich man when we hit a storm,
and the ship went down. The rich man gathered as much gold as he could carry.
He drowned. I left behind everything I owned. I survived.' 'You think my guilt weighs more than his
gold?' 'I think you should leave it behind,' said
Eskodas, rising. 'Now, come and see Druss - and let's get drunk.' 'No,' said Varsava sadly. 'I don't want to
see him.' He stood and placed his wide leather hat upon his head. 'Give him my
best wishes, and tell him . . . tell him . . .' His voice faded away. Tell him what?' Varsava shook his head, and smiled
ruefully. 'Tell him goodbye,' he said. * Michanek followed the young officer to the
base of the wall, then both men knelt with their ears to the stone. At first
Michanek could hear nothing, but then came the sound of scraping, like giant
rats beneath the earth, and he swore softly. 'You have done well, Cicarin. They are
digging beneath the walls. The question is, from where? Follow me.' The young
officer followed the powerfully built champion as Michanek scaled the rampart
steps and leaned out over the parapet. Ahead was the main camp of the Ventrian
army, their tents pitched on the plain before the city. To the left was a line
of low hills with the river beyond them. To the right was a higher section of
hills, heavily wooded. 'My guess,' said Michanek, 'would be that they began
their work on the far side of that hill, about half-way up. They would have
taken a bearing and know that if they hold to a level course they would come
under the walls by around two feet.' 'How serious is it, sir?' asked Cicarin
nervously. Michanek smiled at the young man. 'Serious
enough. Have you ever been down a mine?' 'No, sir.' Michanek chuckled. Of course he hadn't. The
boy was the youngest son of a Naashanite Satrap who until this siege had been
surrounded by servants, barbers, valets and huntsmen. His clothes would have
been laid out each morning, his breakfast brought to him on a silver tray as he
lay in bed with satin sheets. 'There are many aspects to soldiering,' he
said. 'They are mining beneath our walls, removing the foundations. As they
dig, they are shoring up the walls and ceiling with very dry timber. They will
dig along the line of the wall, then burrow on to the hills by the river,
emerging somewhere around . . . there.' He pointed to the tallest of the low
hills. 'I don't understand,' said Cicarin. 'If
they are shoring up the tunnel, what harm can it do?' 'That's an easy question to answer. Once
they have two openings there will be a through draught of air; then they will
soak the timbers with oil and, when the wind is right, set fire to the tunnel.
The wind will drive the flames through, the ceiling will collapse and, if they
have done their job well, the walls will come crashing down.' 'Can we do nothing to stop them?' 'Nothing of worth. We could send an armed
force to attack the workings, maybe kill a few miners, but they would just
bring in more. No. We cannot act, therefore we must react. I want you to assume
that this section of wall will fall.' He turned from the parapet and scanned
the line of houses behind the wall. There were several alleyways and two major
roads leading into the city. 'Take fifty men and block the alleys and roads.
Also fill in the ground-floor windows of the houses. We must have a secondary
line of defence.' 'Yes, sir,' said the young man, his eyes
downcast. 'Keep your spirits up, boy,' advised
Michanek. 'We're not dead yet.' 'No, sir. But people are starting to talk
openly about the relief army; they say it's not coming - that we've been left
behind.' 'Whatever the Emperor's decision, we will
abide by it,' said Michanek sternly. The young man reddened, then saluted and
strode away. Michanek watched him, then returned to the battlements. There was no relief force. The Naashanite
army had been crushed in two devastating battles and was fleeing now towards
the border. Resha was the last of the occupied cities. The intended conquest of
Ventria was now a disaster of the first rank. But Michanek had his orders. He, and the
renegade Ventrian Darishan, were to hold Resha as long as possible, tying down
Ventrian troops while the Emperor fled back to the safety of the mountains of
Naashan. Michanek dug into the pouch at his side and
pulled clear the small piece of parchment on which the message had been sent.
He gazed down at the hasty script. Hold at all costs, until otherwise
ordered. No surrender. The warrior slowly shredded the message.
There were no farewells, no tributes, no words of regret. Such is the gratitude
of princes, he thought. He had scribbled his own reply, folding it carefully
and inserting it into the tiny metal tube which he then tied to the leg of the
pigeon. The bird soared into the air and flew east, bearing Michanek's last
message to the Emperor he had served since a boy: As you order, so shall it be. The stitched wound on his side was itching
now, a sure sign of healing. Idly he scratched it. You were lucky, he thought.
Bodasen almost had you. By the western gate he saw the first of the food
convoys wending its way through the Ventrian ranks, and he strode down to meet
the wagons. The first driver waved as he saw him; it
was his cousin Shurpac. The man leapt down from the plank seat, throwing the
reins to the fat man beside him. 'Well met, cousin,' said Shurpac, throwing
his arms around Michanek and kissing both bearded cheeks. Michanek felt cold,
the thrill of fear coursing through him as he remembered Rowena's warning: 'I
see soldiers with black cloaks and helms, storming the walls. You will gather
your men for a last stand outside these walls. Beside you will be . . . your
youngest brother and a second cousin.' 'What's wrong, Michi? You look as if a
ghost has drifted across your grave.' Michanek forced a smile. 'I did not expect
to see you here. I heard you were with the Emperor.' 'I was. But these are sad times, cousin; he
is a broken man. I heard you were here and was trying to find a way through.
Then I heard about the duel. Wonderful. The stuff of legends! Why did you not
kill him?' Michanek shrugged. 'He fought well, and
bravely. But I pierced his lung and he fell. He was no threat after that, there
was no need to make the killing thrust.' 'I'd love to have seen Gorben's face. He is
said to have believed Bodasen unbeatable with the blade.' 'No one is unbeatable, cousin. No one.' 'Nonsense,' announced Shurpac. 'You are
unbeatable. That's why I wanted to be here, to fight beside you. I think we'll
show these Ventrians a thing or three. Where is Narin?' 'At the barracks, waiting for the food. We
will test it on Ventrian prisoners.' 'You think Gorben may have poisoned it?' Michanek shrugged. 'I don't know . . .
perhaps. Go on, take them through.' Shurpac clambered back to his seat, lifted
a whip and lightly cracked it over the heads of the four mules. They lurched
forward into the traces and the wagon rolled on. Michanek strolled out through
the gates and counted the wagons. There were fifty, all filled with flour and
dried fruit, oats, cereal, flour and maize. Gorben had promised two hundred.
Will you keep your word? wondered Michanek. As if in answer a lone horseman rode from
the enemy camp. The horse was a white stallion of some seventeen hands, a
handsome beast built for power and speed. It charged towards Michanek, who held
his ground with arms crossed against his chest. At the last moment the rider
dragged on the reins. The horse reared, and the rider leapt down. Michanek
bowed as he recognised the Ventrian Emperor. 'How is Bodasen?' asked Michanek. 'Alive. I thank you for sparing the last
thrust. He means much to me.' 'He's a good man.' 'So are you,' said Gorben. 'Too good to die
here for a monarch who has deserted you.' Michanek laughed. 'When I made my oath of
allegiance, I do not recall it having a clause that would allow me to break it.
You have such clauses in your own oath of fealty?' Gorben smiled. 'No. My people pledge to
support me to the death.' Michanek spread his arms. 'Well then, my
Lord, what else would you expect this poor Naashanite to do?' Gorben's smile faded and he stepped in
close. 'I had hoped you would surrender, Michanek. I do not seek your death - I
owe you a life. You must see now that even with these supplies, you cannot hold
out much longer. Why must I send in my Immortals to see you all cut to pieces?
Why not merely march out in good order and return home? You may pass
unmolested; you have my word.' 'That would be contrary to my orders, my
Lord.' 'Might I ask what they are?' 'To hold until ordered otherwise.' 'Your Lord is in full flight. I have
captured his baggage train, including his three wives and his daughters. Even
now one of his messengers is in my tent, negotiating for their safe return. But
he asks nothing for you, his most loyal soldier. Do you not find that galling?' 'Of course,' agreed Michanek, 'but it
alters nothing.' Gorben shook his head and turned to his
stallion. Taking hold of rein and pommel, he vaulted to the horse's back. 'You
are a fine man, Michanek. I wish you could have served me.' 'And you, sir, are a gifted general. It has
been a pleasure to thwart you for so long. Give my regards to Bodasen - and if
you wish to stake it all on another duel, I will meet whoever you send.' 'If my champion was here I would hold you
to that,' said Gorben, with a wide grin. 'I would like to see how you would
fare against Druss and his axe. Farewell, Michanek. May the gods grant you a
splendid afterlife.' The Ventrian Emperor heeled the stallion
into a run and galloped back to the camp. * Pahtai was
sitting in the garden when the first vision came to her. She was watching a bee
negotiate an entry into a purple bloom when suddenly she saw an image of the
man with the axe - only he had no axe, and no beard. He was sitting upon a
mountainside overlooking a small village with a half-built stockade wall. As
quickly as it had come, it disappeared. She was troubled, but with the constant
battles upon the walls of Resha, and her fears for Michanek's safety, she
brushed her worries away. But the second vision was more powerful
than the first. She saw a ship, and upon it a tall, thin man. A name filtered
through the veils of her mind: Kabuchek. He had owned her once, long ago in the days
when Pudri said she had a rare Talent, a gift for seeing the future and reading
the past. The gift was gone now, and she did not regret it. Amid a terrible
civil war it was, perhaps, a blessing not to know what perils the future had to
offer. She told Michanek of her visions and
watched as the look of sorrow touched his handsome face. He had taken her into
his arms, holding her tight, just as he had throughout her sickness. Michanek
had risked catching the plague, yet in her fever dreams she drew great strength
from his presence and his devotion. And she had survived, though all the
surgeons predicted her death. True her heart was now weak, so they said, and
any exertion tired her. But her strength was returning month by month. The sun was bright above the garden, and Pahtai
moved out to gather flowers with which to decorate the main rooms. In her
arms she held a flat wicker basket in which was placed a sharp cutting knife.
As the sun touched her face she tilted her head, enjoying the warmth upon her
skin. In the distance a high-pitched scream suddenly sounded and her eyes
turned towards the direction of the noise. Faintly she could hear the clash
of-steel on steel, the shouts and cries of warriors in desperate combat. Will it never end? she thought. A shadow fell across her and she turned and
saw that two men had entered the garden. They were thin, their clothes ragged
and filthy. 'Give us food,' demanded one, moving in
towards her. 'You must go to the ration centre,' she
said, fighting down her fear. 'You don't live on rations, do you, you
Naashanite whore!' said the second man, stepping in close. He stank of stale
sweat and cheap ale, and she saw his pale eyes glance towards her breasts. She
was wearing a thin tunic of blue silk, and her legs were bare. The first man
grabbed her arm, dragging her towards him. She thought of grabbing for the
cutting knife, but in that instant found herself staring down at a narrow bed
in a small room. Upon it lay a woman and a sickly child; their names flashed
into her mind. 'What of Katina?' she said suddenly. The
man groaned and fell back, releasing his hold, his eyes wide and stricken with
guilt. 'Your baby son is dying,' she said softly. 'Dying while you drink and
attack women. Go to the kitchen, both of you. Ask for Pudri, and tell him that
. . .' she hesitated . . . 'that Pahtai said you could have food. There
are some eggs and unleavened bread. Go now, both of you.' The men backed away from her, then turned
and ran for the house. Pahtai, trembling from the shock, sat down on a
marble seat. Pahtai? Rowena
. . . The name rose up from the deepest levels of her memory, and she greeted
it like a song of morning after a night of storms. Rowena. I am Rowena. A man came walking along the garden path,
bowing as he saw her. His hair was silver, and braided, yet his face was young
and almost unlined. He bowed again. 'Greetings, Pahtai, are you well?' 'I am well, Darishan. But you look tired.' 'Tired of sieges, that's for sure. May I
sit beside you?' 'Of course. Michanek is not here, but you
are welcome to wait for him.' He leaned back and sniffed the air. 'I do
love roses. Exquisite smell; they remind me of my childhood. You know I used to
play with Gorben? We were friends. We used to hide in bushes such as these, and
pretend we were being hunted by assassins. Now I am hiding again, but there is
not a rose bush large enough to conceal me.' Rowena said nothing, but she gazed into his
handsome face and saw the fear lurking below the surface. 'I saddled the wrong horse, my dear,' he
said, with a show of brightness. 'I thought the Naashanites would be preferable
to watching Gorben's father destroy the Empire. But all I have done is to train
a younger lion in the ways of war and conquest. Do you think I could convince
Gorben that I have, in fact, done him a service?' He looked into her face. 'No,
I suppose I couldn't. I shall just have to face my death like a Ventrian.' 'Don't talk of death,' she scolded. 'The
walls still hold and now we have food.' Darishan smiled. 'Yes. It was a fine duel,
but I don't mind admitting that my heart was in my mouth throughout. Michanek
might have slipped, and then where would I have been, with the gates open to
Gorben?' 'There is no man alive who could defeat
Michanek,' she said. 'So far. But Gorben had another champion
once . . . Druss, I think his name was. Axeman. He was rather deadly, as I
recall.' Rowena shivered. 'Are you cold?' he asked,
suddenly solicitous. 'You're not getting a fever, are you?' Lifting his hand,
he laid his palm on her brow. As he touched her she saw him die, fighting upon
the battlements, black-cloaked warriors all around him, swords and knives
piercing his flesh. Closing her eyes, she forced the images
back. 'You are unwell,' she heard him say, as if from a great distance. Rowena took a deep breath. 'I am a little
weak,' she admitted. 'Well, you must be strong for your
celebration. Michanek has found three singers and a lyre player - it should be
quite an entertainment. And I have a full barrel of the finest Lentrian Red,
which I shall have sent over.' At the thought of the anniversary Rowena
brightened. It was almost a year since she had recovered from the plague . . .
A year since Michanek had made her happiness complete. She smiled at Darishan.
'You will join us tomorrow? That is good. I know Michanek values your
friendship.' 'And I his.' Darishan rose. 'He's a good
man, you know, far better than the rest of us. I'm proud to have known him.' 'I'll see you tomorrow,' she said. 'Tomorrow,' he agreed. * 'I have to admit, old horse, that life
without you was dull,' said Sieben. Druss said nothing, but sat staring into
the flames of the small fire, watching them dance and flicker. Snaga was laid
beside him, the blades upwards resting against the trunk of a young oak, the
haft wedged against a jutting root. On the other side of the fire Eskodas was
preparing two rabbits for the spit. 'When we have dined,' continued Sieben, 'I
shall regale you with the further adventures of Druss the Legend.' 'No, you damned well won't,' grunted Druss. Eskodas laughed. 'You really should hear
it, Druss. He has you descending into Hell to rescue the soul of a princess.' Druss shook his head, but a brief smile
showed through the black beard and Sieben was heartened. In the month since
Druss had killed Cajivak the axeman had said little. For the first two weeks
they had rested at Lania, then they had journeyed across the mountains, heading
east. Now, two days from Resha, they were camped on a wooded hillside above a
small village. Druss had regained much of his lost weight, and his shoulders
almost filled the silver-embossed jerkin he had removed from Cajivak's body. Eskodas placed the spitted rabbits across
the fire and sat back, wiping grease and blood from his fingers. 'A man can
starve to death eating rabbit,' he observed. 'Not a lot of goodness there. We
should have gone down to the village.' 'I like being outside,' said Druss. 'Had I known, I would have come sooner,'
said Sieben softly and Druss nodded. 'I know that, poet. But it is in the past
now. All that matters is that I find Rowena. She came to me in a dream while I
was in that dungeon; she gave me strength. I'll find her.' He sighed. 'Some
day.' 'The war is almost over,' said Eskodas.
'Once it is won, I think you'll find her. Gorben will be able to send riders to
every city, village and town. Whoever owns her will know that the Emperor wants
her returned.' 'That's true,' said Druss, brightening,
'and he did promise to help. I feel better already. The stars are bright, the
night is cool. Ah, but it's good to be alive! All right, poet, tell me how I
rescued the princess from Hell. And put in a dragon or two!' 'No,' said Sieben, with a laugh, 'you are
now in altogether too good a mood. It is only amusing when your face is dark as
thunder and your knuckles are clenched white.' 'There is truth in that,' muttered Druss.
'I think you only invent these tales to annoy me.' Eskodas lifted the spit and turned the
roasting meat. 'I rather liked the tale, Druss. And it had the ring of truth.
If the Chaos Spirit did drag your soul into Hell, I'm sure you'd twist his tail
for him.' Conversation ceased as they heard movement
from the woods. Sieben drew one of his knives; Eskodas took up his bow and
notched a shaft to the string; Druss merely sat silently, waiting. A man
appeared. He was wearing long flowing robes of dusty grey, though they shone
like silver in the bright moonlight. 'I was waiting for you in the village,'
said the priest of Pashtar Sen, sitting down alongside the axeman. 'I prefer it here,' said Druss, his voice
cold and unwelcoming. 'I am sorry, my son, for your suffering,
and I feel a weight of shame for asking you to take up the burden of the axe.
But Cajivak was laying waste to the countryside, and his power would have
grown. What you did . . .' 'I did what I did,' snarled Druss. 'Now
live up to your side of the bargain.' 'Rowena is in Resha. She . . . lives . . .
with a soldier named Michanek. He is a Naashanite general, and the Emperor's
champion.' 'Lives with?' The priest hesitated. 'She is married to
him,' he said swiftly. Druss's eyes narrowed. 'That is a lie. They
might force her to do many things, but she would never marry another man.' 'Let me tell this in my own way,' pleaded
the priest. 'As you know I searched long and hard for her, but there was
nothing. It was as if she had ceased to exist. When I did find her it was by
chance - I saw her in Resha just before the siege and I touched her mind. She
had no memory of the lands of the Drenai, none whatever. I followed her home
and saw Michanek greet her. Then I entered his mind. He had a friend, a mystic,
and he employed him to take away Rowena's Talent as a seeress. In doing this
they also robbed her of her memories. Michanek is now all she has ever known.' 'They tricked her with sorcery. By the
gods, I'll make them pay for that! Resha, eh?' Reaching out Druss curled his
hand around the haft of the axe, drawing the weapon to him. 'No, you still don't understand,' said the
priest. 'Michanek is a fine man. What he . . .' 'Enough!' thundered Druss. 'Because of you
I have spent more than a year in a hole in the ground, with only rats for
company. Now get out of my sight - and never, ever cross my path again.' The priest slowly rose.and backed away from
the axeman. He seemed about to speak, but Druss turned his pale eyes upon the
man and the priest stumbled away into the darkness. Sieben and Eskodas said nothing. * High in the cliffs, far to the east, the
Naashanite Emperor sat, his woollen cloak wrapped tightly around him. He was
fifty-four years of age and looked seventy, his hair white and wispy, his eyes
sunken. Beside him sat his staff officer, Anindais; he was unshaven, and the
pain of defeat was etched into his face. Behind them, down the long pass, the
rearguard had halted the advancing Ventrians. They were safe . . . for the
moment. Nazhreen Connitopa, Lord of the Eyries,
Prince of the Highlands, Emperor of Naashan, tasted bile in his mouth and his
heart was sick with frustration. He had planned the invasion of Ventria for
almost eleven years, and the Empire had been his for the taking. Gorben was
beaten - everyone knew it, from the lowliest peasant to the highest Satraps in
the land. Everyone, that is, except Gorben. Nazhreen silently cursed the gods for
snatching away his prize. The only reason he was still alive was because
Michanek was holding Resha and tying down two Ventrian armies. Nazhreen rubbed
at his face and saw, in the firelight, that his hands were grubby, the paint on
his nails cracked and peeling. 'We must kill Gorben,' said Anindais
suddenly, his voice harsh and cold as the winds that hissed through the peaks. Nazhreen gazed sullenly at his cousin. 'And
how do we do that?' he countered. 'His armies have vanquished ours. His
Immortals are even now harrying our rearguard.' 'We should do now what I urged two years
ago, cousin. Use the Darklight. Send for the Old Woman.' 'No! I will not use sorcery.' 'Ah, you have so many other choices then,
cousin?' The tone was derisive, contempt dripping from every word. Nazhreen
swallowed hard. Anindais was a dangerous man, and Nazhreen's position as a
losing Emperor left him exposed. 'Sorcery has a way of rebounding on those
who use it,' he said softly. 'When you summon demons they require payment in
blood.' Anindais leaned forward, his pale eyes
glittering in the firelight. 'Once Resha falls, you can expect Gorben to march
into Naashan. Then there'll be blood aplenty. Who will defend you, Nazhreen?
Our troops have been cut to pieces, and the best of our men are trapped in
Resha and will be butchered. Our only hope is for Gorben to die; then the
Ventrians can fight amongst themselves to choose a successor and that will give
us time to rebuild, to negotiate. Who else can guarantee his death? The Old
Woman has never failed, they say.' 'They say,' mocked
the Emperor. 'Have you used her yourself then? Is that why your brother died in
so timely a fashion?' As soon as the words were spoken he regretted them, for
Anindais was not a man to offend, not even in the best of times. And these were
certainly not the best of times. Nazhreen was relieved to see his cousin
smile broadly, as Anindais leaned in and placed his arm around the Emperor's
shoulder. 'Ah, cousin, you came so close to victory. It was a brave gamble and
I honour you for it. But times change, needs change.' Nazhreen was about to answer when he saw
the firelight glint from the dagger blade. There was no time to struggle or to
scream, and the blade plunged in between his ribs, cutting through his heart. There was no pain, only release as he
slumped sideways, his head resting on Anindais' shoulder. The last feeling he
experienced was of Anindais stroking his hair. It was soothing . . . Anindais pushed the body from him and
stood. A figure shuffled from the shadows, an old woman in a wolfskin cloak.
Kneeling by the body, she dipped her skeletal fingers into the blood and licked
them. 'Ah, the blood of kings,' she said. 'Sweeter than wine.' 'Is that enough of a sacrifice?' Anindais
asked. 'No - but it will suffice as a beginning,'
she said. She shivered. 'It is cold here. Not like Mashrapur. I think I shall
return there when this is over. I miss my house.' 'How will you kill him?' asked Anindais. She glanced up at the general. 'We shall
make it poetic. He is a Ventrian nobleman, and the sign of his house is the
Bear. I shall send Kalith.' Anindais licked his dry lips. 'Kalith is
just a dark legend, surely?' 'If you want to see him for yourself I can
arrange it,' hissed the Old Woman. Anindais fell back. 'No, I believe you.' 'I like you, Anindais,' she said softly.
'You do not have a single redeeming virtue - that is rare. So I will give you a
gift, and charge nothing for it. Stay by me and you will see the Kalith kill
the Ventrian.' She stood and walked to the cliff-face. 'Come,' she called and
Anindais followed. The Old Woman gestured at the grey rock and the wall became
smoke. Taking the general's hand, she led him through. A long dark tunnel beckoned and Anindais
shrank back. 'Not a single redeeming feature,' she repeated, 'not even courage.
Stay by me, general, and no harm will befall you.' The walk was not long, but to Anindais it
stretched on for an eternity. He knew they were passing through a world that
was not his own, and in the distance he could hear screams and cries that were
not human. Great bats flew in a sky of dark ash, and not a living plant could
be seen. The Old Woman followed a slender path, and took him across a narrow
bridge that spanned an awesome chasm. At last she came to a fork in the path,
and moved to the left towards a small cave. A three-headed dog guarded the
entrance, but it backed away from her and they passed through. Within was a
circular room stacked with tomes and scrolls. Two skeletons were hanging from
hooks in the ceiling, their joints bound with golden wire. A cadaver lay across
a long table, its chest and belly cut open, the heart lying beside the body
like a grey stone about the size of a human fist. The Old Woman lifted the heart and showed
it to Anindais. 'Here it is,' she said, 'the secret of life. Four chambers and
a number of valves, arteries and veins. Just a pump. No emotions, no secret
storehouse for the soul.' She seemed disappointed. Anindais said nothing.
'Blood,' she went on, 'is pumped into the lungs to pick up oxygen, then
distributed through the atria and the ventricles. Just a pump. Now, where were
we? Ah yes, the Kalith.' She sniffed loudly and threw the heart back
towards the table; it hit the cadaver, then fell to the dusty floor. Swiftly
she rummaged through the books on a high shelf, pulling one clear and flicking
through the yellowed pages. Then she sat at a second desk and laid the book on
the table. The left-hand page bore a neat script, the letters tiny. Anindais
could not read, but he could see the picture painted on the right-hand page. It
showed a huge bear, with claws of steel, its eyes of fire, its fangs dripping
venom. 'It is a creature of earth and fire,' said
the Old Woman, 'and it will take great energy to summon it. That is why I need
your assistance.' 'I know no sorcery,' said Anindais. 'You need to know none,' she snapped. 'I
will say the words, you will repeat them. Follow me.' She led him further back into the cave, to
an altar stone surrounded by gold wire fastened to a series of stalagmites. The
stone sat at the centre of a circle of gold, and she bade Anindais step over
the wires and approach the altar, upon which was a silver bowl full of water. 'Look into the water,' she said, 'and
repeat the words I speak.' 'Why do you stay outside the wire?' he
asked. 'There is a seat here and my old legs are
tired,' she told him. 'Now let us begin.' Chapter FiveOliquar was the first of the Immortals to
see Druss striding down the hill. The soldier was sitting on an upturned barrel
darning the heel of a sock when the axeman appeared. Laying the worn garment
aside, Oliquar stood and called out Druss's name. Several of the soldiers
sitting nearby looked up as Oliquar ran to meet him, throwing his brawny arms
around Druss's neck. Hundreds of other warriors gathered round,
craning to see the Emperor's champion, the famed axeman who fought like ten
tigers. Druss grinned at his old comrade. 'There are more grey hairs in that
beard than I remember,' he said. Oliquar laughed. 'I earned every one. By
the Holy Hands, it is good to see you, friend!' 'Life has been dull without me?' 'Not exactly,' answered Oliquar, gesturing
towards the walls of Resha. 'They fight well, these Naashanites. And they have
a champion too: Michanek, a great warrior.' The smile left Druss's face. 'We'll see how
great he is,' he promised. Oliquar turned to Sieben and Eskodas. 'We
hear that you did not need to rescue our friend. It is said he slew the great
killer Cajivak, and half the men of his fortress. Is it true?' 'Wait until you hear the song,' Sieben
advised. 'Aye, there are dragons in it,' put in
Eskodas. Oliquar led the trio through the silent
ranks of warriors to a tent set up near the river's edge. Producing a jug of
wine and several clay goblets, he sat down and looked at his friend. 'You are a
little thinner,' he said, 'and your eyes are tired.' 'Pour me a drink and you'll see them shine
again. Why the black cloaks and helms?' 'We are the new Immortals, Druss.' 'You don't look immortal, judging by that,'
said Druss, pointing to the bloodstained bandage on Oliquar's right bicep. 'It is a title - a great title. For two
centuries the Immortals were the Emperor's hand-picked honour guard. The finest
soldiers, Druss: the elite. But twenty or so years ago the Immortal general,
Vuspash, led a revolt, and the regiment was disbanded. Now the Emperor has
re-formed them - us! It is a wondrous honour to be an Immortal.' He leaned
forward and winked. 'And the pay is better - double, in fact!' Filling the goblets, he passed one to each
of the newcomers. Druss drained his in a single swallow and Oliquar refilled
it. 'And how goes the siege?' asked the axeman. Oliquar shrugged. 'This Michanek holds them
together. He is a lion, Druss, tireless and deadly. He fought Bodasen in single
combat. We thought the war would be over. The Emperor offered two hundred
wagons of food, for there is starvation in the city. The wager was that if
Bodasen lost, the food would be delivered, but if he won then the city gates
would be opened and the Naashanites allowed to march free.' 'He killed Bodasen?' put in Eskodas. 'He
was a great swordsman.' 'He didn't kill him; he put him down with a
chest wound, then stepped back. The first fifty wagons were delivered an hour
ago and the rest go in tonight. It will leave us on short rations for a while.' 'Why didn't he strike the killing blow?'
asked Sieben. 'Gorben could have refused to send the food. Duels are supposed
to be to the death, aren't they?' 'Aye, they are. But this Michanek, as I
said, is special.' 'You sound as if you like the man,' snapped
Druss, finishing the second goblet. 'Gods, Druss, it's hard not to like him. I
keep hoping they'll surrender; I don't relish the thought of slaughtering such
bonny fighters. I mean, the war's over - this is just the last skirmish. What
point is there in more killing and dying?' 'Michanek has my wife,' said Druss, his
voice low and cold. 'He tricked her into marrying him, stole her memory. She
does not know me at all.' 'I find that hard to believe,' said Oliquar. 'Are you calling me a liar?' hissed Druss,
his hand snaking round the haft of his axe. 'And I find this hard to believe,'
said Oliquar. 'What is the matter with you, my friend?' Druss's hand trembled on the haft, and he
snatched it clear and robbed at his eyes. Taking a deep breath, he forced a
smile. 'Ah, Oliquar! I am tired, and the wine has made me stupid. But what I
said was true; it was told to me by a priest of Pashtar Sen. And tomorrow I
will scale those walls, and I will find Michanek. Then we will see how special
he is.' Druss levered himself to his feet and
entered the tent. For a while the three men sat in silence, then Oliquar spoke,
keeping his voice low. 'Michanek's wife is called Pahtai. Some of the
refugees from the city spoke of her. She is a gentle soul, and when plague
struck the city she went to the homes of the sick and dying, comforting them,
bringing them medicines. Michanek adores her, and she him. This is well known.
And I say again, he is not the man to take a woman by trickery.' 'It doesn't matter,' said Eskodas. 'It is
like fate carved into stone. Two men and one woman; there must be blood. Isn't
that right, poet?' 'Sadly you are correct,' agreed Sieben.
'But I can't help wondering how she will feel when Druss marches in to her, drenched
in the blood of the man she loves. What then?' Lying on a blanket within the tent, Druss
heard every word. They cut his soul with knives of fire. * Michanek shielded his eyes against the
setting sun and watched the distant figure of the axeman walk down towards the
Ventrian camp, saw the soldiers gather round him, heard them cheer. 'Who is it, do you think?' asked his
cousin, Shurpac. Michanek took a deep breath. 'I'd say it
was the Emperor's champion, Druss.' 'Will you fight him?' 'I don't think Gorben will offer us the
chance,' answered Michanek. 'There's no need - we can't hold for long now.' 'Long enough for Narin to return with
reinforcements,' put in Shurpac, but Michanek did not reply. He had sent his
brother out of the city with a written request for aid, though he knew there
would be no help from Naashan; his one purpose had been to save his brother. And yourself. The thought leapt unbidden from deep within him. Tomorrow was the
first anniversary of his marriage, the day Rowena had predicted he would die
with Narin on one side of him, Shurpac on the other. With Narin gone, perhaps
the prophecy could be thwarted. Michanek squeezed shut his tired eyes. It felt
as if sand was lodged under the lids. The mining under the walls had stopped now
and soon, when the winds permitted, the Ventrians would fire the timbers in the
tunnel. He gazed out over the Ventrian camp. At least eleven thousand warriors
were now gathered before Resha, and the defenders numbered only eight hundred.
Glancing to left and right, Michanek saw the Naashanite soldiers sitting
slumped by the battlements. There was little conversation, and much of the food
that had just been carried up from the city was left untouched. Michanek moved to the nearest soldier, a
young man who was sitting with his head resting on his knees. His helm was
beside him; it was split across the crown, dislodging the white horsehair
plume. 'Not hungry, lad?' asked Michanek. The boy looked up. His eyes were dark
brown, his face beardless and feminine. 'Too tired to eat, general,' he said. 'The food will give you strength. Trust
me.' The boy lifted a hunk of salted beef and
stared down at it. 'I'm going to die,' he said, and Michanek saw a tear spill
to his dust-stained cheek. The general laid his hand on the boy's
shoulder. 'Death is merely another journey, lad. But you won't be walking that
road alone - I'll be with you. And who knows what adventures wait?' 'I used to believe that,' said the soldier
sadly, 'but I've seen so much death. I saw my brother die yesterday, his guts
spilling out. His screams were terrible. Are you frightened of dying, sir?' 'Of course. But we are soldiers of the
Emperor. We knew the risks when we first strapped on the breastplate and
greaves. And what is better, lad, to live until we are toothless and mewling,
our muscles like rotted string, or to face down our enemies in the fullness of
our strength? We are all destined to die one day.' 'I don't want to die; I want to get out of
here. I want to marry and father children. I want to watch them grow.' The boy
was openly weeping now and Michanek sat beside him, taking him in his arms and
stroking his hair. 'So do I,' he said, his voice barely above
a whisper. After a while the sobbing ceased and the
boy drew himself up. 'I'm sorry, general. I won't let you down, you know.' 'I knew that anyway. I've watched you, and
you're a brave lad: one of the best. Now eat your ration and get some sleep.' Michanek rose and walked back to Shurpac.
'Let's go home,' he said. 'I'd like to sit in the garden with Pahtai and
watch the stars.' * Druss lay still, his eyes closed, allowing
the buzz of conversation to drift over him. He could not remember feeling so
low - not even when Rowena was taken. On that dreadful day his anger had been
all-consuming, and since then his desire to find her had fuelled his spirit,
giving him a strength of purpose that bound his emotions in chains of steel.
Even in the dungeon he had found a way to fend off despair. But now his stomach
was knotted, his emotions unravelling. She was in love with another man. He formed the words in his mind, and they ground into his heart like
broken glass in a wound. He tried to hate Michanek, but even that
was denied him. Rowena would never love a worthless or an evil man. Druss sat
up and stared down at his hands. He had crossed the ocean to find his love, and
these hands had killed, and killed, and killed in order that Rowena could be
his once more. He closed his eyes. Where should I be? he
asked himself. In the front rank as they storm the walls? On the walls
defending Rowena's city? Or should I just walk away? Walk away. The tent entrance flapped as Sieben ducked
under it. 'How are you faring, old horse?' asked the poet. 'She loves him,' said Druss, his voice
thick, the words choking him. Sieben sat alongside the axeman. He took a
deep breath. 'If her memories were taken, then what she has done is no
betrayal. She does not know you.' 'I understand that. I bear her no ill-will
- how could I? She is the most . . . beautiful . . . I can't explain it, poet.
She doesn't understand hatred, or greed, or envy. Soft but not weak, caring but
not stupid.' He swore and shook his head. 'As I said, I can't explain it.' 'You're doing fine,' said Sieben softly. 'When I'm with her there is no . . . no
fire in my mind. No anger. When I was a child I hated to be laughed at. I was
big and clumsy - I'd knock over pots, trip over my own big feet. But when
people laughed at my clumsiness I wanted to. . . I don't know. . . crush them. But
I was with Rowena one day on the mountainside, and it had been raining. I lost
my footing and fell headlong into a muddy pool. Her laughter was bright and
fresh; I sat up, and I just laughed with her. And it was so good, poet, it was
so good.' 'She's still there, Druss. Just across the
wall.' The axeman nodded. 'I know. What do I do -
scale the wall, kill the man she loves and then march up to her and say,
"Remember me?" I cannot win here.' 'One step at a time, my friend. Resha will
fall. From what I gathered from Oliquar, Michanek will fight to the end, to the
death. You don't have to kill him, his fate is already sealed. And then Rowena
will need someone. I can't advise you, Druss, I have never truly been in love
and I envy you that. But let us see what tomorrow brings, eh?' Druss nodded and took a deep breath.
'Tomorrow,' he whispered. 'Gorben has asked to see you, Druss. Why
not come with me? Bodasen is with him - and there'll be wine and good food.' Druss stood and gathered Snaga to him. The
blades guttered in the light from the brazier burning at the centre of the
tent. 'A man's best friend is said to be a dog,' said Sieben, stepping back as
Druss lifted the axe. The axeman ignored him and stepped out into
the night. * Rowena stood by with a long robe as
Michanek stepped from the bath. Smiling, she brushed two rose petals from his
shoulder, then held the robe open. Michanek slid his arms into the sleeves,
then tied the satin belt and turned towards her. Taking her hand he led her
into the garden. Rowena leaned in towards him and he stopped and took her into
his arms, kissing the top of her head. His body was rich with the smell of rose
oil and she put her arms around him, snuggling in to the soft robe. Tilting
back her head, she looked up into his dark brown eyes. 'I love you,' she said. Cupping her chin he kissed her,
lingeringly. His mouth tasted of the peaches he had eaten while lazing in the
bath. But there was no passion in the kiss and he drew away from her. 'What is wrong?' she asked. He shrugged and
forced a smile. 'Nothing.' 'Why do you say that?' she chided. 'I hate
it when you lie to me.' 'The siege is almost over,' he said,
leading her to a small circular bench beneath a flowering tree. 'When will you surrender?' she asked. He shrugged. 'When I receive orders to do
so.' 'But the battle is unnecessary. The war is
over. If you negotiate with Gorben he will allow us to leave. You can show me
your home in Naashan. You always promised to take me to your estates near the
Lakes; you said the gardens there would dazzle me with their beauty.' 'So they would,' he told her. Slipping his
hands around her waist he stood and lifted her swiftly, lightly kissing her
lips. 'Put me down. You'll tear the stitches -
you know what the surgeon said.' He chuckled. 'Aye, I listened to him. But
the wound is almost healed.' Kissing her twice more, he lowered her to the
ground and they walked on. 'There are matters we must discuss,' he said, but
when she waited for him to continue he merely glanced up at the stars and the silence
grew. 'What matters?' 'You,' he said at last. 'Your life.' Rowena
looked at him, saw the lines of tension on his moonlit face, the tightening of
the muscle in his jaw. 'My life is with you,' she said. 'That's
all I want.' 'Sometimes we want more than we can have.' 'Don't say that!' 'You used to be a seer - a good one.
Kabuchek charged two hundred silver pieces for a single reading from you. You
were never wrong.' 'I know all this, you have told me before.
What difference does it make now?' 'All the difference in the world. You were
born in the lands of the Drenai, you were taken by slavers. But there was a man
. . .' 'I don't want to hear this,' she said,
pulling away from him and walking to the edge of the tiny lake. He did not
follow, but his words did. The man was your husband.' Rowena sat down
by the water's edge, trailing her fingers across the surface, sending ripples
through the moon's reflection. 'The man with the axe,' she said dully. 'You remember?' he asked, walking forward
and sitting beside her. 'No. But I saw him once-at the house of
Kabuchek. And also in a dream, when he lay in a dungeon.' 'Well, he is not in a dungeon now, Pahtai.
He is outside the city. He is Druss the Axeman, Gorben's champion.' 'Why are you telling me this?' she asked
him, turning to face him in the bright moonlight. His white robe shimmered, and he looked
ghostly, almost ethereal. 'Do you think I want to?' he countered. 'I'd sooner
fight a lion with my hands than have this conversation. But I love you, Pahtai.
I have loved you since our first meeting. You were standing with Pudri in
the main corridor of Kabuchek's home, and you told my future.' 'What did I tell you?' He smiled. 'You told me I would wed the
woman I loved. But that is not important now. I think soon you will meet your.
. . first . . . husband.' 'I don't want to.' Her heart was beating
fast and she felt faint. Michanek put his arms around her. 'I don't know much about him, but I do know
you,' he said. 'You are Drenai; your customs are different from ours. You were
not high-born, therefore it is likely you married for love. And think on this:
Druss has followed you across the world for seven years. He must love you
deeply.' 'I don't want to talk about this!' she
said, her voice rising as panic flooded her. She tried to rise, but he held her
close. 'Neither do I,' he whispered, his voice
hoarse. 'I wanted to sit here with you and watch the stars. I wanted to kiss
you, and to make love.' His head dropped, and she saw tears in his eyes. Her panic disappeared and the cold touch of
fear settled on her soul. She looked up-into his face. 'You talk as if you are
going to die.' 'Oh, I will some day,' he said, with a
smile. 'Now I must go. I am meeting Darishan and the other officers to discuss
tomorrow's strategy. They should be in the house now.' 'Don't go!' she pleaded. 'Stay with me a
little while . . . just a little while?' 'I'll always be with you,' he said softly. 'Darishan will die tomorrow. On the walls.
I saw it; it was a vision. He was here today and I saw him die. My Talent is
coming back. Give me your hand! Let me see our future.' 'No!' he said, rising and moving back from
her. 'A man's fate is his own. You read my future once. Once was enough, Pahtai.' 'I predicted your death, didn't I?' she
said, but it was not a question for she knew the answer even before he spoke. 'You told me about my dreams, and you
mentioned my brother, Narin. I don't remember much of it now. We'll talk
later.' 'Why did you mention Druss? You think that
if you die I will just go to him, and take up a life I know nothing of? If you
die, I will have nothing to live for.' Her eyes locked to his. 'And I will not
live,' she said. A figure moved out of the shadows. 'Michi,
why are you keeping us all waiting?' Rowena saw her husband flinch and glanced
up to see Narin striding towards them. 'I sent you away,' said Michanek.. 'What
are you doing here?' 'I made it as far as the hills, but the
Ventrians are everywhere. I came in through the sewers; the guards there
recognised me, thank the gods. What is the matter with you? Are you not pleased
to see me?' Michanek did not answer. Turning to Rowena
he smiled, but she saw the fear in his eyes. 'I'll not be long, my love. We'll
talk again later.' She remained on the seat as the two men
walked away. Closing her eyes she thought of the axeman, picturing the pale
grey eyes and the broad, flat face. But even as she pictured him, another image
came to her: The face of a terrible beast, with talons
of steel and eyes of fire. * Gorben leaned back on his couch and watched
with appreciation the sword jugglers before the huge fire, the five razor-sharp
blades spinning in the air between the two men. It was a display of rare skill
as the jugglers deftly caught the swords, before sending them soaring back
across the open ground. The men were clad in loincloths, their skin shone
red-gold in the firelight. Around them sat more than five hundred Immortals,
enjoying the martial display.' Beyond the dancing flames of the camp-fire
Gorben could see the walls of Resha, and the few defenders there. It was all
but over. Against all the odds he had won. Yet there was no sense of joy in his heart.
The years of battle, the stresses and the fears had taken their toll on the
young Emperor. For every victory he had seen childhood friends cut down:
Nebuchad at Ectanis, Jasua in the mountains above Porchia, Bodasen before the
gates of Resha. He glanced to his right where Bodasen was lying on a raised
bed, his face pale. The surgeons said he would live, and they had managed to
re-inflate his collapsed lung. You are like my Empire, thought Gorben, wounded
almost unto death. How long would it take to rebuild Ventria? Years? Decades? A great roar went up from the watching men
as the sword jugglers completed their performance. The men bowed to the
Emperor. Gorben rose and tossed them a pouch full of gold pieces. There was
great laughter when the first of the jugglers reached out and failed to catch
the pouch. 'You are better with blades than coins,'
said Gorben. 'Money has always slipped through his
fingers, Lord,' said the second man. Gorben returned to his seat and smiled down
at Bodasen. 'How are you feeling, my friend?' 'My strength is returning, Lord.' The voice
was weak, his breathing ragged as Gorben reached out and patted his shoulder.
The heat of the skin and the sharpness of the bone beneath his hand almost made
him recoil. Bodasen's eyes met his. 'Do not concern yourself about me, Lord.
I'll not die on you.' The swordsman's eyes flickered to the left, and he smiled
broadly. 'By the gods, there's a sight to gladden the eyes!' Gorben turned to see Druss and Sieben
walking towards them. The poet dropped to one knee, bowing his head. Druss gave
a perfunctory bow. 'Well met, axeman,' said Gorben, stepping
forward and embracing Druss. Turning, he took Sieben's arm and raised him to
his feet. 'And I have missed your talents, saga-master. Come, join us.' Servants brought two couches for the
Emperor's guests, and golden goblets filled with fine wine. Druss moved to
Bodasen. 'You look as weak as a three-day kitten,' he said. 'Are you going to
live?' 'I'll do my best, axeman.' 'He cost me two hundred wagons of food,'
said Gorben. 'I blame myself for believing him to be unbeatable.' 'How good is this Michanek?' asked Druss. 'Good enough to leave me lying here scarce
able to breathe,' answered Bodasen. 'He's fast, and he's fearless. The best I
ever met. I tell you truly, I wouldn't want to face him again.' Druss turned to Gorben. 'You want me to
take him?' 'No,' said Gorben. "The city will fall
in the next day or two - there is no need for single combat to decide the
issue. The walls are undermined. Tomorrow, if the wind is good, we will fire
them. Then the city will be ours and this ghastly war will be over. Now, tell
me about your adventures. I hear you were held captive?' 'I escaped,' Druss told him, then drained
his goblet. A servant ran forward to refill it. Sieben laughed. 'I will tell you, Lord,' he
said, and launched into a richly embroidered account of Druss's time in the
dungeons of Cajivak. The huge camp-fire was burning low and
several men moved forward to throw logs upon it. Suddenly the ground heaved
beneath one of them, pitching him to the earth. Gorben looked up, and watched
the man struggle to rise. All around the fire the seated men were scrambling
back. 'What is happening?' asked Gorben, rising and striding forward. The
ground lurched beneath him. 'Is it an earthquake?' he heard Sieben ask
Druss. Gorben stood still and gazed down. The
earth was writhing. The camp-fire suddenly flared, sending bright sparks into
the night sky. The heat was intense and Gorben moved back from it, staring into
the flames. Logs exploded out from the blaze and a huge shape appeared within
the fire, a beast with outspread arms. The flames died and Gorben found himself
staring at a colossal bear, more than twelve feet tall. Several soldiers carrying spears ran at the
creature, plunging their weapons into the great belly. The first of the spears
snapped on impact. The beast roared, a deafening sound like captured thunder.
One of the mighty arms swept down, steel talons ripping through the first
soldier, cutting him in half at the waist. Surging from the fading fire, the beast
leapt towards Gorben. * As the creature of fire appeared Sieben,
who was sitting alongside Bodasen, found all sensation of time and reality
slipping away from him. His eyes fastened on the beast, and an image flew from
the halls of his memory, linking what he could see in terrifying life to a
still, small moment three years ago in the main Library at Drenan. Researching
for an epic poem, he had been scanning the ancient leather-bound books in the
archives. The pages were dry and yellow, and much of the ink and paint had
faded from them, but on one page the colours were still vibrant, fierce hues
-glowing gold, savage crimsons, sun-bright yellows. The figure painted there
was colossal, and flames sprouted like blooms from its eyes. Sieben could still
picture the carefully painted letters above the painting . . . The Kalith of Numar Beneath the heading were the words: The Chaos Beast, the Stalker, the Hound
of the Invincible, whose skin no blade of man shall pierce. Where he walks,
death follows. As Sieben recalled the night of the monster
in later days, he would wonder anew at the lack of fear he experienced. He
watched men die horribly, saw a beast from the depths of Hell tear human limbs
asunder, disembowelling warriors, ripping their lives from them. He heard the
ghastly howling and smelt the stench of death on the night breeze. Yet there
was no fear. A dark legend had come to life and he, the
saga-master, was on hand to witness it. Gorben was standing stock-still, rooted to
the spot. A soldier Sieben recognised as Oliquar threw himself at the beast,
slashing at it with a sabre; but the blade clanged against the creature's side,
and the sound that followed was like the dim tolling of a distant bell. A
taloned paw swept down, and Oliquar's face and head disappeared in a bloody
spray of shattered bone. Several archers shot arrows, but these either
shattered on impact or ricocheted away. The creature advanced on Gorben. Sieben saw the Emperor flinch, then hurl
himself to his right, rolling to his feet smoothly. The enormous beast turned
ponderously, the glowing coals of its eyes seeking out Gorben. Loyal soldiers, showing incredible bravery,
threw themselves into the path of the beast, stabbing at it ineffectually. Each
time the talons slashed down, and blood sprayed across the camp-site. Within a
few heartbeats there were at least twenty dead or maimed soldiers. The Chaos
Beast's talons ripped into a soldier's chest, lifting him from his feet and
hurling him across the dying fire. Sieben heard the man's ribs snap, and saw
his entrails spill out like a tattered banner as the corpse sailed through the
air. Druss, axe in his hand, strode out towards
the creature. Soldiers were falling back before it, but still they formed a
wall between the beast and the Emperor. Looking tiny and insubstantial against
the colossal frame of the Kalith, Druss stepped into its path. The moon was
bright in the night sky, shining from his shoulder-guards and glinting on
Snaga's terrible blades. The Chaos Beast paused and seemed to stare
down at the tiny man before it. Sieben's mouth was dry, and he could feel the
hammering of his own heart. And the Kalith spoke, voice deep and
rumbling, words slurred by its foot-long tongue. 'Step aside, brother,' it said. 'I have not
come for you.' The axe began to glow as red as blood.
Druss stood his ground, with Snaga held in both hands. 'Step aside,' repeated the Kalith, 'or I
must kill you!' 'In your dreams,' said Druss. The creature lunged forward, one great paw
sweeping in towards the axeman. Druss dropped to one knee and swung the
blood-red axe, the blade striking the beast's wrist and cleaving through. As
the taloned paw fell to the ground beside the axeman, the Kalith reeled back.
No blood issued from the wound, but an oily smoke pumped out into the air,
billowing and growing. Fire blazed from the creature's mouth and it lunged
again at the mortal before it. But instead of jumping back Druss leapt in to
meet it, swinging Snaga high over his head and bringing the weapon down in a
lethal arc that clove into the Kalith's chest, smashing the sternum and ripping
a wound from throat to groin. Flames exploded from the beast, engulfing
the axeman. Druss staggered - and the Kalith fell back, and as the huge form
struck the ground even Sieben, some thirty feet away, felt the tremor of the earth.
A breeze blew up, the smoke disappearing. And there was no sign of the Kalith . . . Sieben ran to where Druss stood. The
axeman's eyebrows and beard were singed, but he bore no marks of burns. 'By the
gods, Druss,' Sieben shouted, slapping his friend's back. 'Now that'll make a
song to bring us both fame and riches!' 'It killed Oliquar,' said Druss, shrugging
off Sieben's embrace and letting fall the axe. Gorben moved alongside him. 'That was nobly
done, my friend. I'll not forget - I owe you my life.' Bending his body, he
lifted the axe. It was now black and silver once more. 'This is an enchanted
weapon,' whispered the Emperor. 'I will give you twenty thousand in gold for
it.' 'It is not for selling, my Lord,' said
Druss. 'Ah, Druss, and I thought you liked me.' 'I do, laddie. That's why I'll not sell it
to you.' * A cold wind swirled around the cave.
Anindais felt the chill and swung from the altar, looking back to see the Old
Woman rise from her seat outside the golden circle. 'What is happening?' he
asked. "The axeman has killed the beast. Can we send another?' 'No,' she told him. 'But he did not kill
it, he merely sent it back to the Pit.' 'Well, what now?' 'Now we pay for the services of the
Kalith.' 'You said the payment would be the blood of
Gorben.' 'Gorben did not die.' 'Then I do not understand you. And why is
it so cold?' A shadow fell across the Naashanite, who
swung round to see a huge shape rearing above him. Talons flashed down, slicing
into his chest. 'Not even intelligence,' repeated the Old
Woman, turning her back on his screams. Returning to her apartments, she sat
back in an old wicker chair. 'Ah, Druss,' she whispered, 'perhaps I should have
let you die back in Mashrapur.' Chapter SixRowena opened her eyes and saw Michanek
sitting at her bedside. He was wearing his ceremonial armour of bronze and
gold, the helm with the red crest, and the enamelled cheek-guards, the moulded
breastplate covered in sigils and motifs. 'You look very handsome,' she said
sleepily. 'And you are very beautiful.' Rubbing her eyes, she sat up. 'Why are you
wearing that today? It is not as strong as your old breastplate of iron.' 'It will lift morale among the men.' Taking
her hand he kissed her palm, then rose and moved towards the door. At the
doorway he paused and spoke without looking back. 'I have left something for
you - in my study. It is wrapped in velvet.' And then he was gone. Within minutes Pudri appeared, bearing a
tray which he laid down beside her. There were three honey-cakes and a goblet
of apple-juice. 'The Lord looks very magnificent today,' said the little man,
and Rowena saw that his expression was sorrowful. 'What is wrong, Pudri?' 'I don't like battles,' he told her. 'So much
blood and pain. But it is even worse when the reasons for battle have long been
overtaken by events. Men will die today for no reason. Their lives will be
snuffed out like midnight candles. And for why? And will it end here? No. When
Gorben is strong enough he will lead a vengeance invasion against the people of
Naashan. Futile and stupid!' He shrugged. 'Maybe it is because I am a eunuch
that I do not understand such matters.' 'You understand them very well,' she said.
'Tell me, was I a good seeress?' 'Ah, you must not ask me this, my lady.
That was yesterday, and it has flown away into the past.' 'Did the Lord Michanek ask you to withhold
my past from me?' He nodded glumly. 'It was for love that he
asked this of me. Your Talent almost killed you and he did not wish for you to
suffer again. Anyway, your bath is prepared. It is hot and steaming, and I
managed to find some rose oil for the water.' An hour later Rowena was walking through
the garden when she saw that the window to Michanek's study was open. This was
unusual, for there were many papers here and the summer breezes would often
scatter them around the room. Moving inside, she opened the door and pulled
shut the small window. Then she saw the package on the oak desk. It was small
and, as Michanek had said, was wrapped in purple velvet. Slowly she unwrapped the velvet to find a
small, unadorned wooden box with a hinged lid, which she opened. Within lay a
brooch which was simply, even crudely, made of soft copper strands surrounding
a moonstone. Her mouth was suddenly dry. A part of her mind told her the brooch
was new to her, but a tiny warning bell was ringing in the deep recesses of her
soul. This is mine! Her right hand dropped slowly towards the
brooch, then stopped, the fingers hovering just above the moonstone. Rowena
drew back, then sat down. She heard Pudri enter the room. 'You were wearing that when I first saw
you,' he said gently. She nodded, but did not answer. The little Ventrian
approached and handed her a letter, sealed with red wax. 'The Lord asked me to
give you this when you had seen his . . . gift.' Rowena broke the seal and opened the
letter. It was written in Michanek's bold, clear script. Greetings, Beloved. I am skilled with the sword, and yet, at
this moment, I would sell my soul to be as skilful with words. A long time ago,
as you lay dying, I paid three sorcerers to seal your Talents deep within you.
In doing so they closed also the doorways of memory. The brooch was, they told me, made for
you as a gift of love. It is the key to your past, and a gift for your future.
Of all the pain I have known, there is no suffering greater than the knowledge
that your future will be without me. Yet I have loved you, and would not change
a single day. And if, by some miracle, I was allowed to return to the past and
court you once more, I would do so in the same way, in ful knowledge of the
same outcome. You are the light in my life and the
love of my heart. Farewell, Pahtai. May your paths be made
easy, and your soul know many joys. The letter fell from her hands, floating to
the floor. Pudri stepped forward swiftly and placed his slender arm around her
shoulders. 'Take the brooch, my lady!' She shook her head. 'He's going to die.' 'Yes,' admitted the Ventrian. 'But he bade
me urge you to take the brooch. It was his great wish. Do not deny him!' 'I'll take the brooch,' she said solemnly,
'but when he dies, I shall die with him.' * Druss sat in the near deserted camp and watched
the attack on the walls. From this distance it seemed that the attackers were
insects, swarming up tiny ladders. He watched bodies topple and fall, heard the
sound of battle horns and the occasional high-pitched scream that drifted on
the shifting breeze. Sieben was beside him. 'The first time I've ever seen you miss a
fight, Druss. Are you mellowing in your old age?' Druss did not answer. His pale eyes watched
the fighting and saw the smoke seeping out from under the wall. The timber and
brushwood in the tunnels were burning now, and soon the foundations of the wall
would disappear. As the smoke grew thicker the attackers fell back and waited. Time passed slowly now in the great silence
that descended over the plain. The smoke thickened, then faded. Nothing
happened. Druss gathered his axe and stood. Sieben
rose with him. 'It didn't work,' said the poet. 'Give it time,' grunted Druss and he
marched forward, Sieben followed until they were within thirty yards of the
wall. Gorben was waiting here with his officers around him. No one spoke. A jagged line, black as a spider's leg,
appeared on the wall, followed by a high screeching sound. The crack widened
and a huge block of masonry dislodged itself from a nearby tower, thundering
down to crash on the rocks before the wall. Druss could see defenders
scrambling back. A second crack appeared . . . then a third. A huge section of
wall crumbled and a high tower pitched to the right, smashing down on the
ruined wall and sending up an immense cloud of dust. Gorben covered his mouth
with his cloak, and waited until the dust settled. Where moments before there had been a wall
of stone, there were now only jagged ruins like the broken teeth of a giant. The battle horns sounded. The black line of
the Immortals surged forward. Gorben turned to Druss. 'Will you join them
in the slaughter?' Druss shook his head. 'I have no stomach
for slaughter,' he said. * The courtyard was littered with corpses and
pools of blood. Michanek glanced to his right where his brother Narin was lying
on his back with a lance jutting from his chest, his sightless eyes staring up
at the crimson-stained sky. Almost sunset, thought Michanek. Blood ran
from a wound in his temple and he could feel it trickling down his neck. His
back hurt, and when he moved he could feel the arrow that was lodged above his
left shoulder-blade gouging into muscle and flesh. It made holding the heavy
shield impossible, and Michanek had long since abandoned it. The hilt of his
sword was slippery with blood. A man groaned to his left. It was his cousin
Shurpac; he had a terrible wound in his belly, and was attempting to stop his
entrails from gushing forth. Michanek transferred his gaze to the enemy
soldiers surrounding him. They had fallen back now, and were standing in a grim
circle. Michanek turned slowly. He was the last of the Naashanites still
standing. Glaring at the Immortals, he challenged them. 'What's the matter with
you? Frightened of Naashanite steel?' They did not move. Michanek staggered and
almost fell, but then righted himself. All pain was fading now. It had been quite a day. The undermined
wall had collapsed, killing a score of his men, but the rest had regrouped well
and Michanek was proud of them. Not one had suggested surrender. They had
fallen back to the second line of defence and met the Ventrians with arrows,
spears and even stones. But there were too many, and it had been impossible to
hold a line. Michanek had led the last fifty warriors
towards the inner Keep, but they were cut off and forced down a side road that
led to the courtyard of Kabuchek's old house. What were they waiting for? The answer came to him instantly: They
are waiting for you to die. He saw a movement at the edge of the
circle, the men moving aside as Gorben appeared - dressed now in a robe of
gold, a seven-spiked crown upon his head. He looked every inch the Emperor.
Beside him was the axeman, the husband of Pahtai. 'Ready for another duel . . . my Lord?'
called Michanek. A racking cough burst from his lungs, spraying blood into the
air. 'Put up your sword, man. It is over!' said
Gorben. 'Do I take it you are surrendering?'
Michanek asked. 'If not, then let me fight your champion!' Gorben turned to the axeman, who nodded and
moved forward. Michanek steadied himself, but his mind was wandering. He
remembered a day with Pahtai, by a waterfall. She had made a crown of
white water-lilies which she placed on his brow. The flowers were wet and cool;
he could feel them now . . . No. Fight! Win! He looked up. The axeman seemed colossal
now, towering above him, and Michanek realised he had fallen to his knees.
'No,' he said, the words slurring, 'I'll not die on my knees.' Leaning forward
he tried to push himself upright, but fell again. Two strong hands took hold of
his shoulders, drawing him upright, and he looked into the pale eyes of Druss
the Axeman. 'Knew. . .you would. . .come,' he said.
Druss half carried the dying warrior to a marble bench at the wall of the
courtyard, laying him gently to the cool stone. An Immortal removed his own
cloak and rolled it into a pillow for the Naashanite general. Michanek gazed up at the darkening sky,
then turned his head. Druss was kneeling alongside him, and beyond the axeman
the Immortals waited. At an order from Gorben they drew their swords and held
them high, saluting their enemy. 'Druss! Druss!' 'I am here.' Treat. . . her . . . gently.' Michanek did not hear his answer. He was sitting on the grass by a waterfall,
the cool petals of a water-lily crown against his skin. * There was no looting in Resha, nor any
organised slaughter amongst the population. The Immortals patrolled the city,
having first marched through to the centre past cheering crowds who were waving
banners and hurling flower petals beneath the feet of the soldiers. In the
first hours there were isolated outbursts of violence, as angry citizens
gathered in mobs to hunt down Ventrians accused of collaborating with the
Naashanite conquerors. Gorben ordered the mobs dispersed,
promising judicial inquiries at a later date to identify those who could be
accused of treason. The bodies of the slain were buried in two mass graves
beyond the city walls, and the Emperor ordered a monument built above the
Ventrian fallen, a huge stone Kon with the names of the dead carved into the
base. Above the Naashanite grave there was to be no stone. Michanek, however,
was laid to rest in the Hall of the Fallen, below the Great Palace on the Hill
that stood like a crown at the centre of Resha. Food was brought in to feed the populace,
and builders began work, removing the dams that had starved the city of water,
rebuilding the walls and repairing those houses and shops damaged by the huge
stones of the ballistae that had hurtled over the walls during the past three
months. Druss had no interest in the affairs of the
city. Day by day he sat at Rowena's bedside, holding to her cold, pale hand. After Michanek had died Druss had sought
out his house, the directions supplied by a Naashanite soldier who had survived
the last assault. With Sieben and Eskodas he had run through the city streets
until at last he had come to the house on the hill, entering it through a
beautiful garden. There he saw a small man, sitting weeping by an ornamental
lake. Druss seized him by his woollen tunic, hauling him to his feet. 'Where is
she?' he demanded. 'She is dead,' wailed the man, his tears
flowing freely. 'She took poison. There is a priest with the body.' He pointed
to the house, then fell to weeping again. Releasing him, Druss ran in to the
house and up the curved stairs. The first three rooms were empty, but in the
fourth he found the priest of Pashtar Sen sitting by the bedside. 'Gods, no!' said Druss as he saw the still
form of his Rowena, her face grey, her eyes closed. The priest looked up, his
eyes tired. 'Say nothing,' urged the priest, his voice
weak and seemingly far away. 'I have sent for a . . .a friend. And it is taking
all my power to hold her to life.' He closed his eyes. At a loss, Druss walked
to the far side of the bed and gazed down on the woman he had loved for so
long. It was seven years since last he had laid eyes on her, and her beauty
tore at his heart with talons of steel. Swallowing hard, he sat at the bedside.
The priest was holding to her hand; sweat was flowing down his face, making
grey streaks on his cheeks, and he seemed mortally weary. When Sieben and
Eskodas entered the room Druss waved them to silence, and they sat and waited. It was almost an hour before another man
entered: a bald, portly man with a round red face and comically protruding
ears, He was dressed in a long white tunic, and carried a large leather bag
slung from his shoulder by a long gold-embroidered strap. Without a word to the
three men he moved to the bedside, placing his fingers against Rowena's neck. The priest of Pashtar Sen opened his eyes.
'She has taken yasroot, Shalitar,' he said. The bald man nodded. 'How long ago?' 'Three hours, though I have prevented most
of it from spreading through the blood. But a minute part has reached the
lymphatic system.' Shalitar clicked his teeth, then delved
into the leather bag. 'One of you fetch water,' he ordered. Eskodas stood and
left the room, returning moments later with a silver jug. Shalitar told him to
stand close to the head of the bed, then from the bag he produced a small
packet of powder which he tipped into the jug. It foamed briefly, then settled.
Delving into the bag again, he pulled clear a long grey tube and a funnel.
Reaching down, he opened Rowena's mouth. 'What are you doing?' stormed Druss,
grabbing the man's hand. The surgeon was unperturbed. 'We must get
the potion into her stomach. As you can see, she is in no condition to drink,
therefore I intend to insert this tube in her throat and pour the potion in
through the funnel. It is a delicate business, for I would not want to flood
her lungs. It would be hard for me to do it correctly with a broken hand.' Druss released him, and watched in silent
anguish as the tube was eased into her throat. Shalitar held the funnel in
place and ordered Eskodas to pour. When half of the contents of the jug had
vanished, Shalitar nipped the tube between thumb and forefinger and withdrew
it. Kneeling by the bed, he pressed his ear to Rowena's breast. 'The heartbeat is very slow,' he said, 'and
weak. A year ago I treated her for plague; she almost died then, but the
illness left its mark. The heart is not strong.' He turned to the men. 'Leave
me now, for I must keep her circulation strong, and that will involve rubbing
oil into her legs, arms and back.' 'I'll not leave,' said Druss. 'Sir, this lady is the widow of the
Lord Michanek. She is well loved here - despite being wed to a Naashanite. It
is not fitting for men to observe her naked - and any man who causes her shame
will not survive the day.' 'I am her husband,' hissed Druss. The
others can go. I stay.' Shalitar rubbed his chin, but looked ready
to argue no further. The priest of Pashtar Sen touched the surgeon's arm. 'It
is a long story, my friend, but he speaks truly. Now do your best.' 'My best may not be good enough,' muttered
Shalitar. * Three days passed. Druss ate little and
slept by the bedside. There was no change in Rowena's condition, and Shalitar
grew ever more despondent. The priest of Pashtar Sen returned on the morning of
the fourth day. 'The poison is gone from her body,' said
Shalitar, 'yet she does not wake.' The priest nodded sagely. 'When first I
came, as she was sinking into the coma, I touched her spirit. It was fleeing
from life; she had no will to live.' 'Why?' asked Druss. 'Why would she want to
die?' The man shrugged. 'She is a gentle soul.
She first loved you, back in your own lands, and carried that love within as
something pure in a tarnished world. Knowing you were coming for her, she was
ready to wait. Her Talents grew astonishingly swiftly and they overwhelmed her.
Shalitar, and some others, saved her life by closing the pathways of that
Talent, but in doing so they also took her memory. So here she woke, in the
house of Michanek. He was a good man, Druss, and he loved her - as much as you
love her. He nursed her to health, and he won her heart. But he did not tell
her his greatest secret - that she had, as a seeress, predicted his death . . .
one year to the day after he was wed. For several years they lived together,
and she succumbed to the plague. During her illness and, as I have said, with
no knowledge of her life as a seeress, she asked Michanek why he had never
married her. In his fear at her condition, he believed that a marriage would
save her. Perhaps he was right. Now we come to the taking of Resha. Michanek
left her a gift - this gift,' he said, passing the brooch to Druss. Druss took the delicate brooch in his huge
hand and closed his fingers around it. 'I made this,' he said. 'It seems like a
lifetime ago.' 'This was the key which Michanek knew would
unlock her memory. He thought, as I fear men will, that a return of memory
would help her assuage her grief at his passing. He believed that if she
remembered you, and that if you still loved her, she would have a safe future.
His reasoning was flawed, for when she touched the brooch what struck her most
was a terrible guilt. She had asked Michanek to marry her, thus assuring
- as she saw it - his death. She had seen you, Druss, at the house of
Kabuchek, and had run away, frightened to find out her past, terrified it would
destroy her new-found happiness. In that one moment she saw herself as a betrayer,
and as a harlot and, I fear, as a killer.' 'None of it was her fault,' said Druss.
'How could she think it was?' The priest smiled, but it was Shalitar who
spoke. 'Any death produces guilt, Druss. A son dies of plague, and the mother
will berate herself for not taking the child away to somewhere safe before the
disease struck. A man falls to his death, and his wife will think, "If
only I had asked him to stay home today." It is the nature of good people
to draw burdens to themselves. All tragedy could be avoided, if only we knew
it; therefore when it strikes we blame ourselves. But for Rowena, the weight of
guilt was overpowering.' 'What can I do?' the axeman asked. 'Nothing. We must just hope she returns.' The priest of Pashtar Sen seemed about to
speak, but instead stood and walked to the window. Druss saw the change in the
man. 'Speak,' he said. 'What were you about to say?' 'It doesn't matter,' he said softly. 'Let me be the judge of that, if it
concerns Rowena.' The priest sat down and rubbed his tired
eyes. 'She hovers,' he said at last, 'between death and life, her spirit
wandering in the Valley of the Dead. Perhaps, if we could find a sorcerer, we
could send his spirit after her to bring her home.' He spread his hands. 'But I
do not know where to find such a man - or woman. And I don't think we have the
time to search.' 'What about your Talent?' asked Druss. 'You
seem to know of this place.' The man's eyes swung away from Druss's
gaze. 'I. . . I do have the Talent, but not the courage. It is a terrible
place.' He forced a smile. 'I am a coward, Druss. I would die there. It is no
place for men of little spirit.' 'Then send me. I'll find her.' 'You would have no chance. We are talking
of a . . .a realm of dark magic and demons. You would be defenceless against
them, Druss; they would overwhelm you.' 'But you could send me there?' 'There is no point. It would be madness.' Druss turned to Shalitar. 'What will happen
to her if we do nothing?' 'She has maybe a day . . . perhaps two.
Already she is fading.' 'Then there are no choices, priest,' said
Druss, rising and moving to stand before the man. 'Tell me how I reach this
Valley.' 'You must die,' the priest whispered. * A grey mist swirled, though there was no
discernible breeze, and strange sounds echoed eerily from all around him. The priest was gone now, and Druss was
alone. Alone? Around him shapes moved in the mist,
some huge, some low and slithering. 'Keep to the path,' the priest had said.
'Follow the road through the mist. Under no circumstances allow yourself to be
led from the road.' Druss glanced down. The road was
seamless and grey, as if it had been created from molten stone. It was smooth and
flat and the mist held to it, floating and swaying in cold tendrils that
swirled around his legs and lower body. A woman's voice called to him from the
side of the road. He paused and glanced to his right. A dark-haired woman,
scarce more than a girl, was sitting on a rock with legs apart, her right hand
stroking her thigh. She licked her lips and tossed her head. 'Come here,' she
called. 'Come here!' Druss shook his head. 7 have other business.' She laughed at him. 'Here? You have
other business here?' Her laughter rang out and
she moved closer to him, but he saw that she did not set foot upon the road.
Her eyes were large and golden but there were no pupils, merely black slits in
the gold. When her mouth opened a forked tongue darted between her lips, which
Druss now saw were grey-blue. Her teeth were small and sharp. Ignoring her he walked on. An old man
was sitting in the centre of the road with shoulders hunched. Druss paused.
'Which way, brother?' asked the old man. 'Which way do I go? There are so many
paths.' 'There is only one,' said Druss. 'So many paths,' repeated the other man.
Again Druss moved on, and behind him he heard the woman's voice speaking to the
old man. 'Come here! Come here!' Druss didn't look back, but only moments later
he heard a terrible scream. The road moved ever on through the mist,
level and straight as a spear. There were others on the road, some walking
tall, others shuffling. No one spoke. Druss moved through them silently,
scanning their faces, seeking Rowena. A young woman stumbled from the path,
falling to her knees. Instantly a scaled hand caught at her cloak, dragging her
back. Druss was too far back to help, and he cursed and moved on. Many pathways merged with the road and
Druss found himself travelling with a multitude of silent people, young and
old. Their faces were blank, their expressions preoccupied. Many left the path
and wandered through the mist. It seemed to the axeman that he had
walked for many days. There was no sense of time here, nor any fatigue, nor hunger.
Gazing ahead, he could see vast numbers of souls wending their way through the
mist-enveloped road. Despair touched him. How would he find
her among so many? Ruthlessly he pushed the fear from his mind, concentrating
only on scanning the faces as he moved ever on. Nothing would ever have been
achieved, he thought, if men had allowed themselves to be diverted by the scale
of the problems faced. After a while Druss noted that the road
was rising. He could see further ahead, and the mist was thinning. There were
no more merging pathways now; the road itself was more than a hundred feet
wide. On and on he moved, forcing his way
through the silent throng. Then he saw that the road was beginning to diverge
once more, into scores of pathways leading to arched tunnels, dark and
forbidding. A small man in a robe of coarse brown
wool was moving back through the river of souls. He saw Druss and smiled. 'Keep
moving, my son,' he said, patting Druss's shoulder. 'Wait!' called the axeman as the man
moved past him. Brown Robe swung back, surprised. Stepping to Druss, he
gestured him to the side of the road. 'Let me see your hand, brother,' he
said. 'What?' 'Your hand, your right hand. Show me the
palm!' The little man was insistent. Druss held out his hand and Brown Robe
grasped it, peering intently at the calloused palm. 'But you are not ready to
pass over, brother. Why are you here?' 'I am looking for someone.' 'Ah,' said the man, apparently relieved.
'You are the despairing heart. Many of you try to pass through. Did your loved
one die? Has the world treated you savagely? Whatever the answer, brother, you
must return whence you came. There is nothing for you here - unless you stray
from the path. And then there is only an eternity of suffering. Go back!' 'I cannot. My wife is here. And she is
alive - just like me.' 'If she is alive, brother, then she will
not have passed the portals before you. No living soul can enter. You do not
have the coin.' He held out his own hand. Nestling there was a black shadow,
circular and insubstantial. 'For the Ferryman,' he said, 'and the road to
Paradise.' 'If she could not pass the tunnels, then
where could she be?' asked Druss. 7 don't know, brother. I have never left
the path and I know not what lies beyond, save that it is inhabited by the
souls of the damned. Go to the Fourth Gateway. Ask for Brother Domitori. He is
the Keeper.' Brown Robe smiled, then moved away to be
swallowed up by the multitude. Druss joined the flow and eased his way through
to the Fourth Gateway where another man in a brown, hooded robe stood silently
by the entrance. He was tall and round-shouldered, with sad, solemn eyes. 'Are
you Brother Domitori?' asked Druss. The man nodded, but did not speak. 'I am looking for my wife.' 'Pass on, brother. If her soul lives you
will find her.' 'She had no coin,' said Druss. The man
nodded and pointed to a narrow, winding path that led up and around a low hill. 'There are many such,' said Domitori,
'beyond the hill. There they flicker and fade, and rejoin the road when they
are ready, when their bodies give up the fight, when the heart ceases.' Druss turned away, but Domitori called
out to him. 'Beyond the hill the road is no more. You will be in the Valley of
the Dead. Best you arm yourself.' 'I have no weapons here.' Domitori raised his hand and the flow of
souls ceased to move through the Gateway. He stepped alongside Druss. 'Bronze
and steel have no place here, though you will see what appear to be swords and
lances. This is a place of Spirit, and a man's spirit can be steel or water,
wood or fire. To cross the hill - and return - will require courage, and so
much more. Do you have faith?' 'In what?' The man sighed. 'In the Source? In
yourself? What do you hold most dear?' 'Rowena - my wife.' 'Then holdfast to your love, my friend.
No matter what assails you. What do you fear most?' 'Losing her.' 'What else?' 'I fear nothing.' 'All men fear something. And that is
your weakness. This place of the Damned and the Dead has an uncanny talent for
bringing a man face to face with what he fears. I pray that the Source will
guide you. Go in peace, brother.' Returning to the Gateway he lifted his
hand once more, and the entrance opened, the grim, silent flow of souls
continuing without pause. * 'You gutless whoreson!' stormed Sieben. 'I
should kill you!' The surgeon Shalitar stepped between Sieben
and the priest of Pashtar Sen. 'Be calm,' he urged. The man has admitted to
lacking courage and has no need to apologise for it. Some men are tall, some
short, some brave, others not so brave.' That may be true,' conceded Sieben, 'but
what chance does Druss have in a world of enchantment and sorcery? Tell me
that!' 'I don't know,' Shalitar admitted. 'No, but he does,' said Sieben. 'I have
read of the Void; a great many of my tales are centred there. I have spoken to
Seekers and mystics who have journeyed through the Mist. All agree on one point
- without access to the powers of sorcery a man is finished there. Is that not
true, priest?' The man nodded, but did not look up. He was
sitting beside the wide bed upon which lay the still figures of Druss and
Rowena. The axeman's face was pale, and he did not seem to be breathing. 'What will he face there?' insisted Sieben.
'Come on, man!' 'The horrors of his past,' answered the
priest, his voice barely audible. 'By the gods, priest, I tell you this: If
he dies, you will follow him.' * Druss had reached the brow of the hill
and gazed down into a parched valley. There were trees, black and dead,
silhouetted against the slate-grey earth, as if sketched there with charcoal.
There was no wind, no movement save for the few souls who wandered aimlessly
across the face of the valley. A little way down the hill he saw an old woman
sitting on the ground with head bowed and shoulders hunched. Druss approached
her. 'I am looking for my wife,' he said. 'You are looking for more than that,'
she told him. He squatted down opposite her. 'No, just
my wife. Can you help me?' Her head came up and he found himself
staring into deep-set eyes that glittered with malice. 'What can you give me,
Druss?' 'How is it you know me?' he countered. 'The Axeman, the Silver Slayer, the man
who fought the Chaos Beast. Why should I not know you? Now, what can you give
me?' 'What do you want?' 'Make me a promise.' 'What promise?' 'You will give me your axe.' 'I do not have it here.' 'I know that, boy,' she snapped. 'But in
the world above you will give me your axe.' 'Why do you need it?' 'That is no part of the bargain. But
look around you, Druss. How will you begin to find her in the time that is
left?' 'You can have it,' he said. 'Now, where
is she?' 'You must cross a bridge. You will find
her there. But the bridge is guarded, Druss, by an awesome warrior.' 'Just tell me where it is.' A staff lay beside the old woman and she
used it to lever herself to her feet. 'Come,' she said, and began to walk
towards a low line of hills. As they walked, Druss saw many new souls wandering
down into the valley. 'Why do they come here?' he asked. 'They are weak,' she told him. 'Victims
of despair, of guilt, of longing. Suicides, mostly. As they wander here their
bodies are dying - like Rowena.' 'She is not weak.' 'Of course she is. She is a victim of
love - just as you are. And love is the ultimate downfall of Man. There is no
abiding strength in love, Druss. It erodes the natural strength of man, it
taints the heart of the hunter.' 'I do not believe that.' She laughed, a dry sound like the
rattling of bones.'Yes, you do,'' she said. ''You are not a man of love, Druss.
Or was it love that led you to leap upon the decks of the corsair ship, cutting
and killing? Was it love that sent you over the battlements at Ectanis? Was it
love that carried you through the battles in the sand circles of Mashrapur?' She
halted in her stride and turned to face him.'Was it?' 'Yes. Everything was for Rowena - to
help me find her. I love her.' 'It is not love, Druss; it is perceived
need. You cannot bear what you are without her - a savage, a killer, a brute.
But with her it is a different story. You can leach from her purity, suck it in
like fine wine. And then you can see the beauty in a flower, smell the essence
of life upon the summer breeze. Without her you see yourself as a creature
without worth. And answer me this, axeman: If it was truly love, would you not
wish for her happiness above all else?' 'Aye, I would. And I do!' 'Really? Then when you found that she
was happy, living with a man who loved her, her life rich and secure, what did
you do? Did you try to persuade Gorben to spare Michanek?' 'Where is this bridge?' he asked. 'It is not easy to face, is it?' she
persisted. 'I am no debater, woman. I only know
that I would die for her.' 'Yes, yes. Typical of the male - always
look for the easy solutions, the simple answers.' She walked on, cresting the
hill, and paused, resting on her staff. Druss gazed down into the chasm beyond.
Far, far below a river of fire, at this distance a slender ribbon of flame,
flowed through a black gorge. Across the gorge stretched a narrow bridge of
black rope and grey timber. At the centre stood a warrior in black and silver
with a huge axe in his hands. 'She is on the far side,' said the old
woman. 'But to reach her you must pass the guardian. Do you recognise him?' 'No.' 'You will.' The bridge was secured by thick black
ropes tied to two blocks of stone. The wooden slats that made up the main body
of the structure were, Druss judged, around three feet long and an inch thick.
He stepped out on to the bridge, which immediately began to sway. There were no
guiding ropes attached by which a man could steady himself and, looking down,
Druss felt a sick sense of vertigo. Slowly he walked out over the chasm, his
eyes fixed to the boards.He was half-way to the man in black and silver before
he looked up. Then shock struck him like a blow. The man smiled, bright teeth shining
white against the black and silver beard. 'I am
not you, boy,' he said. 'I am everything you could have been.' Druss stared hard at the man. He
was the very image of Druss himself, except that he was older and his eyes,
cold and pale, seemed to hold many secrets. 'You are Bardan,' said Druss. 'And proud of it. I used my strength,
Druss. I made men shake with fear. I took my pleasures where I wanted them. I
am not like you, strong in body but weak in heart. You take after Bress.' 'I take that as a compliment,' said
Druss. 'For I would never have wanted to be like you - a slayer of babes, an
abuser of women. There is no strength in that.' 'I fought men. No man could accuse
Bardan of cowardice. Shemak's balls, boy, I fought armies!' 'I say you were a coward,' said Druss.
'The worst kind. What strength you had came from that,'
he said, pointing to the axe. 'Without it you were nothing. Without it you are
nothing.' Bardan's face reddened, then grew pale.
'1 don't need this to deal with you, you weak-kneed whoreson. I could take you
with my hands.' 'In your dreams,' mocked Druss. Bardan made as if to lay down the axe,
but then hesitated. 'You can't do it, can you?' taunted Druss. 'The mighty
Bardan! Gods, I spit on you!' Bardan straightened, the axe still in
his right hand. 'Why should I lay aside my only friend? No one else stood by me
all those lonely years. And here - even here he has been my constant aid.' 'Aid?' countered Druss. 'He destroyed
you, just as he destroyed Cajivak and all others who took him to their hearts.
But I don't need to convince you, Grandfather: You know it, but you are too
weak to acknowledge it.' 'I'll show you weakness!' roared Bardan,
leaping forward with axe raised. The bridge swayed perilously, but Druss leapt
in under the swinging axe, hammering a ferocious punch to Bardan's chin. As the
other man staggered, Druss took one running step and leapt feet first, his
boots thudding into Bardan's chest to hurl him back. Bardan lost his grip on
the axe and teetered on the edge. Druss rolled to his feet and dived at
the man. Bardan, recovering his footing, snarled and met him head-on. Druss
smashed a blow to the other man's chin, but Bardan rolled with the punch,
sending an uppercut which snapped the axeman's head back. The power in the blow
was immense and Druss reeled. A second blow caught him above the ear, smashing
him to the boards. Rolling as a booted foot slashed past his ear, he grabbed
Bardan's leg and heaved. The warrior fell heavily. As Druss pushed himself
upright, Bardan launched himself from the boards, his hands circling Druss's
throat. The bridge was swaying wildly now and both men fell and rolled towards
the edge. Druss hooked his foot into the space between two boards, but he and
Bardan were hanging now over the awesome drop. Druss tore himself free of Bardan's grip
and thundered a punch to the warrior's chin. Bardan grunted and toppled from
the bridge. His hand snaked out to grab Druss's arm - the wrenching grasp
almost pulled Druss over the edge. Bardan hung above the river of fire, his
pale eyes looking up into Druss's face. 'Ah, but you're a bonnie fighter,
laddie,' said Bardan softly. Druss got a grip on the other man's jerkin and
tried to pull him up on to the bridge. 'Time to die at last,' said Bardan. 'You
were right. It was the axe, always the axe.' Releasing his hold, he smiled.
'Let me go, boy. It's over.' 'No! Damn you, take my hand!' 'May the gods smile on you, Druss!'
Bardan twisted up and hit out at Druss's arm, dislodging his grip. The bridge
swayed again and the black and silver warrior fell. Druss watched him fall,
spinning down, down, until he was just a dark speck swallowed up by the river
of fire. Pushing himself to his knees he glanced
at the axe. Red smoke swirled from it to form a crimson figure - the skin scaled, the head horned at the temples. There was no
nose, merely two slits in the flesh above a shark-like mouth. 'You were correct, Druss,' said the
demon affably. 'He was weak. As was Cajivak, and all the others. Only you have
the strength to use me.' 'I want no part of you.' The demon's head lifted and his laughter
sounded. 'Easy to say, mortal. But look yonder.' At the far end of the bridge
stood the Chaos Beast, huge and towering, its taloned paws glinting, its eyes
glowing like coals of fire. Druss felt a swelling of despair and his
heart sank as the axe-demon stepped closer, his voice low and friendly. 'Why do
you hesitate, Man? When have I failed you? On the ship of Earin Shad, did I not
turn away the fire? Did I not slip in Cajivak's grasp? I am your friend,
Mortal. I have always been your friend. And in these long and lonely centuries
I have waited for a man with your strength and determination. With me you can
conquer the world. Without me you will never leave this place, never feel the
sun upon your face. Trust me, Druss! Slay the beast - and then we can go home.' The demon shimmered into smoke, flowing
back into the black haft of the axe. Druss glanced up to see the Chaos Beast
waiting at the far end of the bridge. It was even more monstrous now: massive
shoulders beneath the black fur, saliva dripping from its huge maw. Stepping
forward, Druss gripped the haft ofSnaga, swinging the blades into the air. Instantly his strength returned, and
with it a soaring sense of hatred and a lust to cleave and kill. His mouth was
dry with the need for battle, and he moved towards the flame-eyed bear. The
beast waited with arms at its sides. It seemed to Druss then that all the
evil of the world rested in the creature's colossal frame, all the frustrations
of life, the angers, the jealousies, the vileness - everything that he had ever
suffered could be laid upon the black soul of the Chaos Beast. Fury and madness
made his limbs tremble and he felt his lips draw back in a snarl as he lifted
high the axe and ran at the creature. The beast did not move. It stood still,
arms down and head drooping. Druss slowed in his charge. Kill it!
Kill it! Kill it! He reeled with the intensity of his need to destroy, then
looked down at the axe in his hand. 'No!' he shouted, and with one
tremendous heave hurled the axe high in the air and out over the chasm. It spun
glistening towards the ribbon of flame, and Druss saw the demon spew from it,
blackagainst the silver of the blades. Then the axe struck the river of fire.
Exhausted, Druss turned back to face the beast. Rowena stood alone and naked, her gentle
eyes watching him. He groaned and walked towards her.
'Where is the beast?' he said. 'There is no beast, Druss. Only me. Why
did you change your mind about killing me?' 'You? I would never hurt you! Sweet
heaven, how could you think it?' 'You looked at me with hate and then you
ran at me with your axe.' 'Oh, Rowena! I saw only a demon. I was
bewitched! Forgive me!' Stepping in close he tried to put his arms around her,
but she moved back from him. 'I loved Michanek,' she said. He sighed and nodded. 7 know. He was a good man - perhaps a great one. I was with him
at the end. He asked me. . . urged me to look after you. He didn't need
to ask that of me. You are everything to me, you always were. Without you there
was no light in my life. And I've waited so long for this moment. Come back
with me, Rowena. Live!' 'I was looking for him,' she said, tears
in her eyes, 'but I couldn't find him.' 'He's gone where you cannot follow,'
said Druss. 'Come home.' 'l am both a wife and widow. Where is my
home, Druss? Where?' Her head drooped and bright tears
fell to her cheeks. Druss took her in his arms, drawing her in to him.
'Wherever you choose to make your home,' he whispered,'I will build it for you.
But it should be where the sun shines, and where you can hear the birdsong,
smell the flowers. This place is not for you - nor would Michanek want you here.
I love you, Rowena. But if you want to live without me I will bear it. Just so
long as you live. Come back with me. We'll talk again in the light.' 'I don't want to stay here,' she said,
clinging to him. 'But I miss him so.' The words tore at Druss, but he held her
close and kissed her hair. 'Let's go home,' he said. 'Take my hand.' * Druss opened his eyes and drew in a great
gulp of air. Beside him Rowena slept. He felt a moment of panic, but then a
voice spoke. 'She is alive.' Druss sat up, and saw the Old Woman sitting in a
chair by the bedside. 'You want the axe? Take it!' She chuckled, the sound dry and cold. 'Your
gratitude is overwhelming, axeman. But no, I do not need Snaga. You exorcised
the demon from the weapon and he is gone. But I shall find him. You did well,
boy. All that hatred and lust for death - yet you overcame it. What a complex
creature is Man.' 'Where are the others?' asked Druss. Taking up her staff, she eased herself to
her feet. 'Your friends are sleeping. They were exhausted and it took little
effort to send them deep into dreams. Good luck to you, Druss. I wish you and
your lady well. Take her back to the Drenai mountains, enjoy her company while
you can. Her heart is weak, and she will never see the white hair of a human
winter. But you will, Druss.' She sniffed and stretched, her bones
creaking. 'What did you want with the demon?' asked Druss as she made her way
to the door. She turned in the doorway. 'Gorben is
having a sword made - a great sword. He will pay me to make it an enchanted
weapon. And I shall, Druss. I shall.' And then she was gone. Rowena stirred and woke. Sunlight broke through the clouds and
bathed the room. BOOK FOUR: Druss the LegendPrologueDruss took Rowena back to the lands-of the
Drenai, and, with the gold presented to him by a grateful Gorben, bought a farm
in the high mountains. For two years he lived quietly, struggling to be a
loving husband and a man of peace. Sieban travelled the land, performing his
songs and tales before princes and courtiers, and the legend of Druss spread
across the continent. At the invitation of the King of Gothir
Druss travelled north, and fought in the Second Campaign against the Nadir,
earning the title Deathwalker*. Sieban joined him and together they
travelled through many lands. *From
the Second Chronicles of Druss the Legend. And the legend grew. Between campaigns Druss would return to his
farm, but always he would listen for the siren call to battle and Rowena would
bid him farewell as he set off, time and again, to fight, what he assured her,
would be his last battle. Faithful Pudri remained at Rowena's side.
Sieban continued to scandalise Drenai society and his travels with Druss were
usually undertaken to escape the vengeance of outraged husbands. In the east the Ventrian Emperor, Gorben,
having conquered all his enemies, turned his attention to the fiercely
independent Drenai. Druss was forty five, and once more had
promised Rowena there would be no more journeying to distant wars. What he could not know was, this time, the
war was coming to him. The Battle of Skeln PassDruss sat in the sunshine, watching the
clouds glide slowly across the mountains, and thought of his life. Love and
friendship had been with him always, the first with Rowena, the latter with
Sieben, Eskodas and Bodasen. But the greater part of his forty-five years had
been filled with blood and death, the screams of the wounded and dying. He sighed. A man ought to leave more behind
him than corpses, he decided. The clouds thickened, the land falling into
shadow, the grass of the hillside no longer gleaming with life, the flowers
ceasing to blaze with colour. He shivered. It was going to rain. The soft,
dull, arthritic ache had begun in his shoulder. 'Getting old,' he said. 'Who are you talking to, my love?' He
turned and grinned. Rowena seated herself beside him on the wooden bench,
slipping her arm around his waist, resting her head on his shoulder. His huge
hand stroked her hair, noting the grey at the temples. 'I was talking to myself. It's something
that happens when you get old.' She stared up into his grizzled face and
smiled. 'You'll never get old. You're the strongest man in the world.' 'Once, princess. Once.' 'Nonsense. You hefted that barrel of sand
at the village fair right over your head. No one else could do that.' 'That only makes me the strongest man in
the village.' Pulling away from him, Rowena shook her
head, but her expression, as always, was gentle. 'You miss the wars and the
battles?' 'No. I. . . I am happy here. With you. You
give my soul peace.' 'Then what is troubling you?' 'The clouds. They move in front of the sun.
They cast shadows. Then they are gone. Am I like that, Rowena? Will I leave
nothing behind me?' 'What would you wish to leave?' 'I don't know,' he answered, looking away. 'You would have liked a son,' she said,
softly. 'As would I. But it was not to be. Do you blame me for it?' 'No! No! Never.' His arms swept around her,
drawing her to him. 'I love you. I always have. I always will. You are my
wife!' 'I would have liked to have given you a
son,' she whispered. 'I does not matter.'. They sat in silence until the clouds
darkened and the first drops of rain began to fall. Druss stood, lifting Rowena into his arms,
and began the long walk to the stone house. 'Put me down,' she commanded.
'You'll hurt your back.' 'Nonsense. You are as light as a sparrow
wing. And am I not the strongest man in the world?' A fire was blazing in the hearth, and their
Ventrian servant, Pudri, was preparing mulled wine for them. Druss lowered
Rowena into a broad-backed leather armchair. 'Your face is red with the effort,' she
chided him. He smiled and did not argue. His shoulder
was hurting, his lower back aching like the devil. The slender Pudri grinned at
them both. 'Such children you are,' he said, and
shuffled away into the kitchen. 'He's right,' said Druss. 'With you I am
still the boy from the farm, standing below the Great Oak with the most
beautiful woman in the Drenai lands.' 'I was never beautiful,' Rowena told him,
'but it pleased me to hear you say it.' 'You were - and are,' he assured her. The firelight sent dancing shadows on to
the walls of the room as the light outside began to fail. Rowena fell asleep
and Druss sat silently watching her. Four times in the last three years she had
collapsed, the surgeons warning Druss of a weakness in her heart. The old warrior
had listened to them without comment, his ice-blue eyes showing no expression.
But within him a terrible fear had begun to grow. He had forsaken his battles
and settled down to life in the mountains, believing that his presence nearby
would hold Rowena to life. But he watched her always, never allowing
her to become too tired, fussing over her meals, waking in the night to feel
her pulse, then being unable to sleep. 'Without her I am nothing,' he confided to
his friend Sieben the Poet, whose house had been built less than a mile from
the stone house. 'If she dies, part of me will die with her.' 'I know, old horse,' said Sieben. 'But I am
sure the princess will be fine.' Druss smiled. 'Why did you make her a
princess? Are you poets incapable of the truth?' Sieben spread his hands and chuckled. 'One
must cater to one's audience. The saga of Druss the Legend had need of a
princess. Who would want to listen to the tale of a man who fought his way
across continents to rescue a farm girl?' 'Druss the Legend? Pah! There are no real
heroes any more. The likes of Egel, Karnak and Waylander are long gone. Now
they were heroes, mighty men with eyes of fire.' Sieben laughed aloud. 'You say that only
because you have heard the songs. In years to come men will talk of you in the
same way. You and that cursed axe.' The cursed axe. Druss glanced up to where the weapon hung
on the wall, its twin silver steel blades glinting in the firelight. Snaga the
Sender, the blades of no return. He stood and moved silently across the room,
lifting the axe from the brackets supporting it. The black haft was warm to the
touch, and he felt, as always, the thrill of battle ripple through him as he
hefted the weapon. Reluctantly he returned the axe to its resting place. 'They are calling you,' said Rowena. He
swung and saw that she was awake and watching him. 'Who is calling me?' 'The hounds of war. I can hear them
baying.' Druss shivered and forced a smile. 'No one is calling me,' he told her, but
there was no conviction in his voice. Rowena had always been a mystic. 'Gorben is coming, Druss. His ships are
already at sea.' 'It is not my war. My loyalties would be
divided.' For a moment she said nothing. Then: 'You
liked him, didn't you?' 'He is a good Emperor - or he was. Young,
proud, and terribly brave.' 'You set too much store by bravery. There
was a madness in him you could never see. I hope you never do.' 'I told you, it is not my war. I'm
forty-five years old, my beard is going grey and my joints are stiff. The young
men of the Drenai will have to tackle him without me.' 'But the Immortals will be with him,' she
persisted. 'You said once there were no finer warriors in the world.' 'Do you remember all my words?' 'Yes,' she answered, simply. The sound of hoofbeats came from the yard
beyond, and Druss strode to the door, stepping out on to the porch. The rider wore the armour of a Drenai
officer, white plumed helm and silver breastplate, with a long scarlet cloak.
He dismounted, tied the reins of his horse to a hitching rail and walked towards
the house. 'Good evening. I am looking for Druss the
Axeman,' said the man, removing his helm and running his fingers through his
sweat-drenched fair hair. 'You found him.' 'I thought so. I am Dun Certak. I have a
message from Lord Abalayn. He wonders if you would agree to ride east to our
camp at Skeln.' 'Why?' 'Morale, sir. You are a legend. The Legend.
It would boost the men during the interminable waiting.' 'No,' said Druss. 'I am retired.' 'Where are your manners, Druss?' called
Rowena. 'Ask the young man to come in.' Druss stepped aside and the officer
entered, bowing deeply to Rowena. 'It is a pleasure to meet you, my lady. I
have heard so much about you.' 'How disappointing for you,' she replied,
her smile friendly. 'You hear of a princess and meet a plump matron.' 'He wants me to travel to Skeln,' said
Druss. 'I heard. I think you should go.' 'I am no speechmaker,' growled Druss. 'Then take Sieben with you. It will do you
good. You have no idea how irritating it is to have you fussing around me all
day. Be honest, you will enjoy yourself enormously.' 'Are you married?' Druss asked Certak, his
voice almost a growl. 'No, sir.' 'Very wise. Will you stay the night?' 'No, sir. Thank you. I have other
despatches to deliver. But I will see you at Skeln . . . and look forward to
it.' The officer bowed once more and backed away towards the door. 'You will stay for supper,' ordered Rowena.
'Your despatches can wait for at least one hour.' 'I'm sorry, my lady, but . . .' 'Give up, Certak,' advised Druss. 'You
cannot win.' The officer smiled and spread his hands.
'An hour then,' he agreed. * The following morning, on borrowed horses,
Druss and Sieben waved farewell and headed east. Rowena waved and smiled until
they were out of sight, then returned to the house, where Pudri was waiting. 'You should not have sent him away, lady,'
said the Ventrian sadly. Rowena swallowed hard, and the tears began to flow.
Pudri moved alongside her, his slender arms encircling her. 'I had to. He must not be here when the
time comes,' 'He would want to be here.' 'In so many ways he is the strongest man I
have ever known. But in this I am right. He must not see me die.' 'I will be with you, lady. I will hold your
hand.' 'You will tell him that it was sudden, and
there was no pain - even if it is a lie?' 'I will.' * Six days later, after a dozen changes of
mount, Certak galloped into the camp. There were four hundred white tents set
in unit squares in the shadow of the Skeln range, each housing twelve men. Four
thousand horse were picketed in the surrounding fields, and sixty cookfires
were blazing under iron pots. The odour of stew assailed him as he reined in
outside the large red-striped tent used by the general and his staff. The young officer handed over his
despatches, saluted and left to rejoin his company at the northern edge of the
camp. Leaving his lathered mount with a groom, he removed his helm and pushed
aside the tent flap of his quarters. Inside his companions were dicing and
drinking. The game broke up as he entered. 'Certak!' said Orases, grinning and rising
to meet him. 'Well, what was he like?' 'Who?' asked Certak innocently. 'Druss, you moron.' 'Big,' said Certak, moving past the burly
blond officer and throwing his helm to the narrow pallet bed. He unbuckled his
breastplate, letting it drop to the floor. Freed of its weight, he took a deep
breath and scratched his chest. 'Now don't be annoying, there's a good
fellow,' said Orases, his smile fading. 'Tell us about him.' 'Do tell him,' urged the dark-eyed
Diagoras. 'He's been talking about the axeman non-stop since you left.' 'That's not true,' muttered Orases,
blushing. 'We've all been talking about him.' Certak slapped Orases on the
shoulder, then ruffled his hair. 'You get me a drink, Orases, and then I'll
tell you all.' As Orases fetched a flagon of wine and four
goblets, Diagoras moved smoothly to his feet and pulled up a chair, reversing
it before sitting opposite Certak, who had streched out on the bed. The fourth
man, Archytas, joined them, accepting a goblet of light honey mead wine from
Orases and draining it swiftly. 'As I said, he is big,' said Certak. 'Not
as tall as the stories claim, but built like a small castle. The size of his
arms? Well, his biceps are as long as your thighs, Diagoras. He is bearded and
dark, though there is some grey in his hair. His eyes are blue, and they seem
to look right through you.' 'And Rowena?' asked Orases eagerly. 'Is she
as fabulously beautiful as the poem says?' 'No. She is nice enough, in a matronly sort
of way. I suppose she would have been lovely once. It's hard to tell with some
of these older women. Her eyes are gorgeous, though, and she has a pretty
smile.' 'Did you see the axe?' asked Archytas, a
wand-slender nobleman from the Lentrian border. 'No.' 'Did you ask Druss about his battles?'
asked Diagoras. 'Of course not, you fool. He may be only a
farmer now, but he's still Druss. You don't just march up and ask how many
dragons he's downed.' 'There are no dragons,' said Archytas
loftily. Certak shook his head, staring at the man
through narrowed eyes. 'It was a figure of speech,' he said.
'Anyway, they invited me to join them for supper and we chatted about horses
and the running of the farm. He asked my opinion about the war, and I told him
I thought Gorben would sail for Penrac Bay.' 'It's a safe bet,' said Diagoras. 'Not necessarily. If it's that safe, how
come we're stuck here with five regiments?' 'Abalayn is over-cautious,' answered
Diagoras, grinning. 'That's the trouble with you westerners,'
said Certak. 'You live so long with your horses that you start to think like
them. Skeln Pass is a gateway to the Sentran Plain. If Gorben took that we
would starve during the winter. So would half of Vagria, for that matter.' 'Gorben is no fool,' offered Archytas. 'He
knows Skeln can be defended forever with two thousand men. The pass is too
narrow for the numbers of his army to be of any real use. And there's no other
way through. Penrac makes more sense. It's only three hundred miles from Drenan
and the countryside around is as flat as a lake. There his army could spread
and cause real problems.' 'I don't particularly care where he lands,'
said Orases, 'as long as I'm close by to see it.' Certak and Diagoras exchanged glances. Both
had fought the Sathuli and had seen the true, bloody face of battle, and
watched the crows peck out the eyes of dead friends. Orases was a newcomer who
had urged his father to buy him a commission in Abalayn's lancers when news of
the invasion fleet reached Drenan. 'What about the Cuckold King?' asked
Archytas. 'Was he there?' 'Sieben? Yes, he arrived for supper. He
looks ancient. I can't see the ladies swooning over him any longer. Bald as a
rock and thin as a stick.' 'You think Druss will want to fight
alongside us?' asked Diagoras. 'That would be something to tell the children.' 'No. He's past it. Tired. You can see it in
him. But I liked him. He's no braggart, that's for sure. Down to earth. You'd
never believe he was the subject of so many songs and ballads. They say Gorben
has never forgotten him.' 'Maybe he sailed the fleet just for a
reunion with his friend Druss,' said Archytas, with a sneer. 'Perhaps you
should put that idea to the general. We could all go home.' 'It's an idea,' admitted Certak, biting
back his anger. 'But if the regiments separate, we'd be deprived of your
delightful company, Archytas. And nothing is worth that.' 'I could live with it,' said Diagoras. 'And I could do without being forced to
share a tent with a pack of ill-bred hounds,' said Archytas. 'But needs must.' 'Well, woof woof,' said Diagoras. 'Do you
think we've been insulted, Certak?' 'Not by anyone worth worrying about,' he
replied. 'Now that is an insult,' said Archytas,
rising. A sudden commotion from outside the tent cut through the gathering
drama. The flap was pulled aside. A young soldier pushed his head inside. 'The beacons are lit,' he said. The
Ventrians have landed at Penrac.' The four warriors leapt to their feet,
rushing to gather their armour. Archytas turned as he buckled his
breastplate. 'This changes nothing,' he said. 'It is a
question of honour.' 'No,' said Certak. 'It is a question of
dying. And you'll do that nicely, you pompous pig.' Archytas grinned mirthlessly back at him. 'We'll see,' he said. Diagoras pulled down the earflaps of his
bronze helmet and tied them under his chin. He leaned conspiratorially close to
Archytas. 'A thought to remember, goat-face. If you
kill him - which is extremely doubtful - I shall cut your throat while you're
sleeping.' He smiled pleasantly and patted Archytas' shoulder. 'You see, I'm no
gentleman.' The camp was in uproar. Along the coast the
warning beacons were blazing from the Skeln peaks. Gorben, as expected, had
landed in the south. Abalayn was there with twenty thousand men. But he would
be outnumbered at least two to one. It was a hard five days' ride to Penrac and
the orders were being issued at speed, the horses saddled, and the tents packed
away. Cooking fires were doused and wagons loaded as men scurried about the
camp in seeming chaos. By morning only six hundred warriors
remained in the mouth of Skeln Pass, the bulk of the army thundering south to
bolster Abalayn. Earl Delnar, Warden of the North, gathered
the men together just after dawn. Beside him stood Archytas. 'As you know, the Ventrians have landed,'
said the Earl. 'We are to stay here in case they send a small force to harry
the north. I know many of you would have preferred to head south, but, to state
the obvious, someone has to stay behind to protect the Sentran Plain. And we've
been chosen. The camp here is no longer suitable for our needs and we will be
moving up into the pass itself. Are there any questions?' There were none and Delnar dismissed the
men, turning to Archytas. 'Why you have been left here I do not
know,' he said. 'But I don't like you at all, lad. You are a troublemaker. I
would have thought your skills would have been welcome at Penrac. However, be
that as it may. You cause any trouble here and you will regret it.' 'I understand, Lord Delnar,' replied
Archytas. 'Understand this also: As my aide I will
require you to work, passing on my instructions exactly as I give them to you.
I am told you are a man of surpassing arrogance.' 'That is hardly fair.' 'Perhaps. I cannot see that it should be
true, since your grandfather was a tradesman and your nobility is scarce two
generations old. You will find as you grow older that it is what a man does
that counts, and not what his father did.' 'Thank you for your advice, ray lord. I
shall bear it in mind,' said Archytas stiffly. 'I doubt that you will. I do not know what
drives you, but then I don't care overmuch. We should be here about three weeks
and then I'll be rid of you.' 'As you say, my lord.' Delnar waved him away, then glanced beyond
him to the edge of the trees bordering the field to the west. Two men were
walking steadily towards them. Delnar's jaw tightened as he recognised the
poet. He called Archytas back. 'Sir?' 'The two men approaching yonder. Go out to
meet them and have them brought to my tent.' 'Yes, sir. Who are they, do you know?' 'The large one is Druss the Legend. The
other is the saga poet Sieben.' 'I understand you know him very well,' said
Archytas, barely disguising his malice. * 'It doesn't look much of an army,' said
Druss, shading his eyes against the sun rising over the Skeln peaks. 'Can't be
more than a few hundred of them.' Sieben didn't answer. He was exhausted.
Early the previous day Druss had finally tired of riding the tall gelding
borrowed in Skoda. He had left it with a stock breeder in a small town thirty
miles west, determined to walk to Skeln. In a moment - in which Sieben could
only consider he had been struck by transient and massive stupidity - he had
agreed to walk with him. He seemed to remember thinking that it would be good
for him. Now, even with Druss carrying both packs, the poet stumbled wearily
alongside, his legs boneless and numb, his ankles and wrists swollen, his
breathing ragged. 'You know what I think?' said Druss. Sieben
shook his head, concentrating on the tents. 'I think we're too late. Gorben has
landed at Penrac and the army's gone. Still, it's been a pleasant journey. Are
you all right, poet?' Sieben nodded, his face grey. 'You don't look it. If you weren't standing
here beside me I'd think you were dead. I've seen corpses that looked in better
health.' Sieben glared at him. It was the only response his fading strength
would allow. Druss chuckled. 'Lost for words, eh? This was worth coming for.' A tall young officer was making his way
towards them, fastidiously avoiding small patches of mud and the more obvious
reminders of the horses picketed in the field the night before. Halting before them, he bowed elaborately. 'Welcome to Skeln,' he said. 'Is your
friend ill?' 'No, he always looks like this,' said
Druss, running his eyes over the warrior. He moved well, and handled himself
confidently, but there was something about the narrow green eyes and the set of
his features that nettled the axeman. 'Earl Delnar asked me to conduct you to his
tent. I am Archytas. And you?' 'Druss. This is Sieben. Lead on.' The officer set a fast pace which Druss
made no effort to match on the last few hundred paces uphill. He walked slowly
beside Sieben. The truth of it was that Druss himself was tired. They had
walked most of the night, both trying to prove they still had a claim to youth. Delnar dismissed Archytas and remained
seated behind the small folding table on which were strewn papers and
despatches. Sieben, oblivious of the tension, slumped to Delnar's narrow bed.
Druss lifted a flagon of wine to his lips, taking three great swallows. 'He is not welcome here - and, therefore,
neither are you,' said Delnar, as Druss replaced the flagon. The axeman wiped his mouth with the back of
his hand. 'Had I been sure you were here, I would not have brought him,' he
said. 'I take it the army has moved on.' 'Yes. They travelled south. Gorben has
landed. You may borrow two horses, but I want you gone by sundown.' 'I came to give the men something to think
about besides waiting,' said Druss. They won't need me now. So I'll just rest
here for a couple of days then head back to Skoda.' 'I said you're not welcome here,' said
Delnar. The axeman's eyes grew cold as he stared at
the Earl. 'Listen to me,' said Druss, as softly as he could. 'I know why you
feel as you do. In your place I would feel the same. But I am not in your
place. I am Druss. And I walk where I will. If I say I will stay here then I
shall. Now I like you, laddie. But cross me and I'll kill you.' Delnar nodded and rubbed his chin. The
situation had gone as far as he could allow it. He had hoped Druss would leave,
but he could not force him. What could be more ludicrous than the Earl of the
North ordering Drenai warriors to attack Druss the Legend? Especially since the
man had been invited to the camp by the Lord of Hosts. Delnar did not fear
Druss, because he did not fear death. His life had been ended for him six years
before. Since then his wife, Vashti, had shamed him with many more affairs.
Three years ago she had delivered to him a daughter, a delightful child he
adored, even if he doubted his part in her conception. Vashti had run away to
the capital soon after, leaving the child at Delnoch. The Earl had heard his
wife was now living with a Ventrian merchant in the rich western quarter.
Taking a deep, calming breath, he met Druss' eyes. 'Stay then,' he said. 'But keep him from my
sight.' Druss nodded. He glanced down at Sieben.
The poet was asleep. 'This should never have come between us,'
said Delnar. 'These things happen,' said Druss. 'Sieben
always had a weakness for beautiful women.' 'I shouldn't hate him. But he was the first
I knew about. He was the man who destroyed my dreams. You understand?' 'We will leave tomorrow,' said Druss
wearily. 'But for now let's walk in the pass. I need some air in my lungs.' The Earl rose and donned his helm and red
cape, and together the two warriors walked through the camp and on up the steep
rocky slope to the mouth of the pass. It ran for almost a mile, narrowing at
the centre to less than fifty paces, where the ground dropped away gently in a
rolling slope down to a stream that flowed across the valley floor, angling
towards the sea some three miles distant. From the mouth of the pass, through
the jagged peaks, the sea glittered in the fragmented sunlight, glowing gold
and blue. A fresh easterly wind cooled Druss's face. 'Good place for a defensive battle,' said
the axeman, scanning the pass. 'At the centre any attacking force would be
funnelled in and numbers would be useless.' 'And they would have to charge uphill,'
said Delnar. 'I think Abalayn was hoping Gorben would land here. We could have
sealed him in the bay. Left his army to starve, and brought the fleet round to
harry his ships.' 'He's too canny for that,' said Druss. 'A
more wily warrior you will not find.' 'You liked him?' 'He was always fair with me,' said Druss,
keeping his tone neutral. Delnar nodded. 'They say he's become a
tyrant.' Druss shrugged. 'He once told me it was the
curse of kings.' 'He was right,' said Delnar. 'You know your
friend Bodasen is still one of his top generals?' 'I wouldn't doubt it. He's a loyal man,
with a good eye for strategy.' 'I should think you are relieved to miss
this battle, my friend,' commented the Earl. Druss nodded. 'The years I served with the
Immortals were happy ones, I'll grant that. And I have other friends among
them. But you are right, I would hate to come up against Bodasen. We were
brothers in battle, and I love the man dearly.' 'Let's go back. I'll arrange some food for
you.' The Earl saluted the sentry at the mouth of
the pass and the two men made their way up the slope to the camp. Delnar took
him to a square white tent, lifting the flap for Druss to enter first. Within
were four men. They leapt to their feet as the Earl followed Druss inside. 'Stand easy,' said Delnar. 'This is Druss,
an old friend of mine. He'll be staying with us for a while. I'd like you to
make him welcome.' He turned to Druss. 'I believe you know Certak and Archytas.
Well, this black-bearded reprobate is Diagoras.' Druss liked the look of the
man; his smile was quick and friendly, and the gleam in his dark eyes bespoke
humour. But more than this he had what soldiers call 'the look of eagles' and
Druss knew instantly he was a warrior born. 'Nice to meet you, sir. We've heard a lot
about you.' 'And this is Orases,' said Certak. 'He's
new with us. From Drenan.' Druss shook hands with the young man,
noting the fat around his middle and the softness of his grip. He seemed
pleasant enough, but beside Diagoras and Certak he seemed boyish and clumsy. 'Would you like some food?' asked Diagoras,
after the Earl had departed. 'I certainly would,' muttered Druss. 'My
stomach thinks my throat's been sliced.' 'I'll get it,' said Orases swiftly. 'I think he's a little in awe of you,
Druss,' said Diagoras as Orases raced from the tent. 'It happens,' said Druss. 'Why don't you ask
me to sit down?' Diagoras chuckled and pulled up a chair.
Druss reversed it and sat. The others followed suit and the atmosphere eased.
The world is getting younger, thought Druss, wishing he had never come. 'May I see your axe, sir?' asked Certak. 'Certainly,' said Druss, pulling Snaga
smoothly from the oiled sheath. In the older man's hands the weapon seemed
almost weightless, but as it passed to Certak the officer grunted. 'The blade that smote the Chaos Hound,'
whispered Certak, turning it over in his hands, then returning it to Druss. 'Do you believe everything you hear?' said
Archytas, sneering. 'Did it happen, Druss?' said Diagoras,
before Certak could answer. 'Yes. A long time ago. But it scarce
pierced its hide.' 'Was it true they were sacrificing a
princess?' asked Certak. 'No. Two small children. But tell me about
yourselves,' said Druss. 'Wherever I go people ask me the same questions and I
get very bored.' 'If you're that bored,' said Archytas, 'why
do you take the poet with you on all your adventures?' 'What does that mean?' 'Quite simply that it seems strange for a
man as modest as you seem to be to take a saga master with him. Although it
proved very convenient.' 'Convenient?' 'Well, he created you, didn't he? Druss the
Legend. Fame and fortune. Surely any wandering warrior with such a companion
could have been boosted into legend?' 'I suppose that's true,' said Druss. 'I've
known a lot of men in my time whose deeds are forgotten, but who were worthy of
remembrance in song or tale. I never really thought of it before.' 'How much of Sieben's great saga is
exaggerated?' asked Archytas. 'Oh do shut up,' snapped Diagoras. 'No,' said Druss, lifting his hand. 'You've
no idea how good this is. Always people ask me about the stories, and whenever
I tell them they are - shall we say - rounded, they disbelieve me. But it's
true. The stories are not about me. They are based on the truth, but they have
grown. I was the seed; they have become the tree. I never met a princess in my
life. But to answer your first question. I never took Sieben on my quest. He
just came. I think he was bored and wanted to see the world.' 'But did you slay the werebeast in the
mountains of Pelucid?' said Certak. 'No. I just killed a lot of men in a lot of
battles.' 'Then why do you allow the poems to be
sung?' asked Archytas. 'If I could have stopped them I would,'
Druss told him. 'The first few years of my return were a nightmare. But I've
got used to it since. People believe what they want to believe. The truth
rarely makes a difference. People need heroes, and if they don't have any, they
invent them.' Orases returned with a bowl of stew and a
loaf of black bread. 'Have I missed anything?' he asked. 'Not really,' said Druss. 'We were just
chatting.' 'Druss has been telling us that his legend
is all lies,' said Archytas. 'It's been most revealing.' Druss chuckled with genuine humour and
shook his head. 'You see,' he told Diagoras and Certak, 'people believe what
they want to believe, and hear only what they wish to hear.' He glanced across
at the tight-lipped Archytas. 'Boy, there was a time when your blood would now
be staining the walls of this tent. But I was younger then, and headstrong. Now
I get no delight from killing puppies. But I am still Druss, so I tell you
this, walk softly around me from now on.' Archytas forced a laugh. 'You cause me no
concern, old man,' he said. 'I don't think . . .' Druss rose swiftly and backhanded, him
across the face. Archytas hurtled backwards over his chair to lie groaning on
the tent floor, his nose smashed and leaking blood. 'No, you don't think,' said Druss. 'Now
give me that stew, Orases. It must be getting cold.' 'Welcome to Skeln, Druss,' said Diagoras,
grinning. * For three days Druss remained at the camp.
Sieben had woken in Delnar's trent, complaining of chest pains. The regimental
surgeon examined him and ordered him to rest, explaining to Druss and Delnar
that the poet had suffered a serious spasm of the heart. 'How bad is it?' asked Druss. The surgeon's eyes were bleak. 'If he rests
for a week or two he could be fine. The danger is that the heart might cramp
suddenly - and fail. He's not a young man, and the journey here was hard for
him.' 'I see,' said Druss. 'Thank you.' He turned
to Delnar. 'I am sorry, but we must stay.' 'Do not concern yourself, my friend,'
responded the Earl, waving his hand. 'Despite what I said when you arrived, you
are welcome. But, tell me, what happened between you and Archytas? It looks
like a mountain fell on his face.' 'His nose tapped my hand,' grunted Druss. Delnar smiled. 'He's a somewhat loathsome
character. But you had better watch out for him. He's stupid enough to
challenge you.' 'No, he won't,' said Druss. 'He may be
foolish, but he's not in love with death. Even a puppy knows to hide from a
wolf.' On the morning of the fourth day, as Druss
sat with Sieben, one of the lookout sentries came running headlong into the
camp. Within minutes chaos reigned as men raced for their armour. Hearing the
commotion, Druss walked from the tent. A young soldier ran by. Druss's arm
snaked out, catching the man's cloak and wrenching him to a stop. 'What's going on?' asked Druss. 'The Ventrians are here!' shouted the
soldier, tearing himself loose and running towards the pass. Druss swore and
strode after him. At the mouth of the pass he halted, staring out over the
stream. Standing in armoured line upon line, their
lances gleaming, were the warriors of Gorben, filling the valley from
mountainside to mountainside. At the centre of the mass was the tent of the
Emperor, and around it were massed the black and silver ranks of the Immortals. Drenai warriors scurried past him as Druss
made his slow way to Delnar's side. 'I told you he was cunning,' said Druss.
'He must have sent a token force to Penrac, knowing it would draw our army
south.' 'Yes. But what now?' 'You're not left with many choices,' said
Druss. True.' The Drenai warriors spread out across the
narrow centre of the pass in three ranks, their round shields glinting in the
morning sun, their white horsehair-crested helms flowing in the breeze. 'How many here are veterans?' asked Druss. 'About half. I've placed them at the
front.' 'How long will it take a rider to reach
Penrac?' 'I've sent a man. The army should be back
in about ten days.' 'You think we've got ten days?' asked
Druss. 'No. But, as you say, there aren't too many
choices. What do you think Gorben will do?' 'First he'll talk. He'll ask you to
surrender. You'd better request a few hours to make up your mind. Then he'll
send the Panthians in. They're an undisciplined bunch but they fight like
devils. We should see them off. Their wicker shields and stabbing spears are no
match for Drenai armour. After that he'll test all his troops on us . . .' 'The Immortals?' 'Not until the end, when we're weary and
finished.' 'It's a gloomy picture,' said Delnar. 'It's a bitch,' agreed Druss. 'Will you stand with us, axeman?' 'Did you expect me to leave?' Delnar chuckled suddenly. 'Why shouldn't
you? I wish I could.' * In the first Drenai line Diagoras sheathed
his sword, wiping his sweating palm on his red cloak. "There are enough of
them,' he said. Beside him Certak nodded. 'Masterly
understatement. They look like they could run right over us.' 'We'll have to surrender, won't we?'
whispered Orases from behind them, blinking sweat from his eyes. 'Somehow I don't think that's likely,' said
Certak. 'Though I admit it's a welcome thought.' A rider on a black stallion forded the
stream and galloped towards the Drenai line. Delnar walked through the ranks,
Druss beside him, and waited. The rider wore the black and silver armour
of a general of the Immortals. Reining in before the two men, he leaned forward
on the pommel of his saddle. 'Druss?' he said. 'Is that you?' Druss studied the gaunt features, the
silver-streaked dark hair hanging in two braids. 'Welcome to Skeln, Bodasen,' answered the
axeman. 'I'm sorry to find you here. I was meaning
to ride for Skoda as soon as we took Drenan. Is Rowena well?' 'Yes. And you?' 'As you see me. Fit and well. Yourself?' 'I'm not complaining.' 'And Sieben?' 'He's asleep in a tent.' 'He always knew when to avoid battles,'
said Bodasen, forcing a smile. 'And that's what this is looking like unless
commonsense prevails. Are you the leader?' he asked Delnar. 'I am. What message do you bring?' 'Merely this. Tomorrow morning my Emperor
will ride through this pass. He would consider it a courtesy if you could
remove your men from his path.' 'We will think on it,' said Delnar. 'I would advise you to think well,' said
Bodasen, turning his mount. 'I'll be seeing you, Druss. Take care!' 'You too.' Bodasen spurred the stallion back towards
the stream and on through the Panthian ranks. Druss beckoned Delnar aside, away from the
men. 'It's pointless standing here all day staring at them,' he said. 'Why
don't you order them to stand down and we'll send half of them back to bring up
some blankets and fuel?' 'You don't think they'll attack today?' 'No. Why should they? They know we'll not
be reinforced tonight. Tomorrow will come soon enough.' Druss tramped back to
the camp, stopping in to see the poet. Sieben was asleep. Druss pulled up a
chair and stared down at the poet's lined face. Uncharacteristically he stroked
the balding head. Sieben opened his eyes. 'Oh it's you,' he said. 'What's all the
fuss about?' 'The Ventrians tricked us. They're on the other
side of the mountain.' Sieben swore softly. Druss chuckled. 'You
just lie here, poet, and I'll tell you all about it once we've sent them
running.' 'The Immortals are here too?' asked Sieben. 'Of course.' 'Wonderful. A nice little outing you
promised me. A few speeches. And what do we get? Another War.' 'I saw Bodasen. He's looking well.' 'Marvellous. Maybe after he's killed us we
can have a drink together and chat about old times.' 'You take things too seriously, poet. Rest
now, and later I'll have some men carry you up to the pass. You'd hate to miss
the action, now, wouldn't you?' 'Couldn't you get them to carry me all the
way back to Skoda?' 'Later,' grinned Druss. 'Anyway, I must be
getting back.' The axeman walked swiftly up the mountain
slopes and sat on a boulder at the mouth of the pass, gazing intently at the
enemy camp. 'What are you thinking about?' asked
Delnar, moving up to join him. 'I was remembering something I told an old
friend a long time ago.' 'What was that?' 'If you want to win: Attack.' * Bodasen dismounted before the Emperor and
knelt, pressing his forehead to the earth. Then he rose. From a distance the
Ventrian looked as he always had, powerful, black-bearded and keen of eye. But
he could no longer stand close inspection. His hair and beard showed the
unhealthy sheen of heavy, dark dye, his painted face glowed with unnatural
colour and his eyes saw treachery in every shadow. His followers, even those
like Bodasen who had served him for decades, knew never to stare into his face,
addressing all their remarks to the gilded griffin on his breastplate. No one
was allowed to approach him bearing a weapon, and he had not granted a private
audience to anyone in years. Always he wore armour - even, it was said, when he
slept. His food was tasted by slaves, and he had taken to wearing gloves of
soft leather, in the belief that poison might be spread on the outside of his
golden goblets. Bodasen waited for permission to speak,
glancing up swiftly to read the expression on the Emperor's face. Gorben was
staring moodily. 'Was that Druss?' he asked. 'Aye, my lord.' 'So even he has turned against me.' 'He is a Drenai, my lord.' 'Do you dispute with me, Bodasen?' 'No, sire. Of course not.' 'Good. I want Druss brought before me for
judgement. Such treachery must be answered with swift justice. You understand?' 'Yes, sire.' 'Will the Drenai give us the way?' 'I think not, sire. But it will not take
long to clear the path. Even with Druss there. Shall I order the men to stand
down and prepare camp?' 'No. Let them stay in ranks for a while.
Let the Drenai see their power and their strength.' 'Yes, sire.' Bodasen backed away. 'Are you still loyal?' asked the Emperor,
suddenly. Bodasen's mouth was dry. 'As I have always
been, lord.' 'Yet Druss was your friend.' 'Even though that is true, sire, I will see
him dragged before you in chains. Or his head presented to you, should he be
slain in the defence.' The Emperor nodded, then turned his painted
face to stare up at the pass. 'I want them dead. All dead,' he whispered. * In the cool of the pre-dawn haze the Drenai
formed their lines, each warrior bearing a rounded shield and a short stabbing
sword. Their sabres had been put aside, for in close formation a swinging
longsword could be as deadly to a comrade standing close as to an enemy bearing
down. The men were nervous, constantly rechecking breastplate straps, or
discovering the bronze greaves protecting their lower legs were too tight, too
loose, too anything. Cloaks were removed and left in tight red rolls by the
mountain wall behind the ranks. Both Druss and Delnar knew this was the time a
man's courage was under the greatest strain. Gorben could do many things. The
dice were in his hands. All the Drenai could do was wait. 'Do you think he'll attack immediately the
sun comes up?' asked Delnar. Druss shook his head. 'I don't think so.
He'll let the fear work for about an hour. But then again - you can never tell
with him.' The two hundred men in the front rank
shared the same emotions now, with varying intensity. Pride, for they had been
singled out as the best; fear, for they would be the first to die. Some had
regrets. Many had not written home for weeks, others had left friends and
relatives with bitter words. Many were the thoughts. Druss made his way to the centre of the
first line, calling for Diagoras and Certak to stand on either side of him. 'Move away from me a little,' he said.
'Give me swinging room.' The line shuffled apart. Druss loosened his shoulders,
stretching the muscles of his arms and back. The sky lightened. Druss cursed.
The disadvantage for the defenders - apart from the numbers of the enemy - was
that the sun rose in their eyes. Across the stream the black-skinned
Pahthians sharpened their spears. There was little fear among them. The
ivory-skins facing them were few in number. They would be swept away like
antelope before a veldt blaze. Gorben waited until the sun cleared the peaks,
then gave the order to attack. The Panthians surged to their feet, a swelling
roar of hatred rising from their throats, a wall of sound that hurtled up into
the pass, washing over the defenders. 'Listen to that!' bellowed Druss. 'That's
not strength you hear. That's the sound of terror!' Five thousand warriors raced towards the
pass, their feet drumming a savage beat on the rocky slopes, echoing high into
the peaks. Druss hawked and spat. Then he began to
laugh, a rich, full sound that brought a few chuckles from the men around him. 'Gods, I've missed this,' he shouted. 'Come
on, you cowsons!' he yelled at the Panthians. 'Move yourselves!' Delnar, at the centre of the second line,
smiled and drew his sword. With the enemy a bare hundred paces
distant, the men of the third line looked to Archytas. He raised his arm. The
men dropped their shields and stooped, rising with barbed javelins. Each man
had five of them at his feet. The Panthians were almost upon them. 'Now!' yelled Archytas. Arms flew forward and two hundred shafts of
death hurtled into the black mass. 'Again!' bellowed Archytas. The front ranks of the advancing horde
disappeared screaming, to be trampled by the men behind them. The charge faltered
as the tribesmen tripped and fell over fallen comrades. The mountain walls,
narrowing like an hour-glass, slowed the attack still further. Then the lines clashed. A spear lunged for Druss. Blocking it with
his axe blades, he dragged a back-hand cut that sheared through the wicker
shield and the flesh beyond. The man grunted as Snaga clove through his
ribcage. Druss tore the weapon clear, parried another thrust and hammered his
axe into his opponent's face. Beside him Certak blocked a spear with his shield,
expertly sliding his gladius into a gleaming black chest. A spear sliced his
upper thigh, but there was no pain. He counter-thrust, and his attacker fell
across the growing pile of corpses in front of the line. The Panthians now found themselves leaping
upon the bodies of their comrades in their desperation to breach the line. The
floor of the pass became slippery with blood, but the Drenai held. A tall warrior threw aside his wicker
shield and hurdled the wall of dead, spear raised. He hurtled towards Druss.
Snaga buried itself in his chest, but the weight of the man bore Druss back,
tearing his axe from his hands. A second man leapt at him. Druss turned aside
the thrusting spear with his mail-covered gauntlets, and smashed a cruel punch
to the man's jaw. As the warrior crumpled Druss grabbed him by the throat and
groin and hoisted the body above his head, hurling him back over the corpse
wall into the faces of the advancing warriors. Twisting, he wrenched his axe
clear of the first man's body. 'Come on, my lads,' he bellowed. 'Time to
send them home!' Leaping up on the corpses, he cut left and
right, opening up a space in the Panthian ranks. Diagoras couldn't believe his
eyes. He swore. Then leapt to join him. The Drenai advanced, clambering over the
Panthian dead, their swords red, their eyes grim. At the centre the tribesmen struggled first
to overcome the madman with the axe, then to get back from him, as other Drenai
warriors joined him. Fear flashed through their ranks like a
plague. Within minutes they were streaming back
across the valley floor. Druss led the warriors back into position.
His jerkin was stained with blood, and his beard spotted with crimson. Opening
his shirt, he removed a towel and wiped his sweating face. Doffing his helm of
black and silver, he scratched his head. 'Well, lads,' he called out, his deep voice
echoing in the crags, 'how does it feel to have earned your pay?' 'They're coming again!' someone shouted. Druss' voice cut through the rising fear.
'Of course they are,' he bellowed. 'They don't know when they're beaten. Front
rank fall back, second rank stand to. Let's spread the glory!' Druss remained with the front line,
Diagoras and Certak alongside him. By dusk they had beaten off four charges
for the loss of only forty men - thirty dead, ten wounded. The Panthians had lost over eight hundred
men. It was a macabre scene that night as the
Drenai sat around small campfires, the dancing flames throwing weird shadows
across the wall of corpses in the pass making it seem as if the bodies writhed
in the darkness. Delnar ordered the men to gather all the wicker shields they
could find and recover as many javelins and spears as were still usable. Towards midnight many of the veterans were
asleep-, but others found the excitement of the day too fresh, and they sat in
small groups, talking in low tones. Delnar walked from group to group, sitting
with them, joking and lifting their spirits. Druss slept in the tent of Sieben,
high in the mouth of the pass. The poet had watched part of the day's action
from his bed, and fallen asleep during the long afternoon. Diagoras, Orases and Certak sat with half a
dozen other men as Delnar approached and joined them. 'How are you feeling?' asked the Earl. The men smiled. What answer could they
give? 'Can I ask a question, sir?' asked Orases. 'Certainly.' 'How is it that Druss has stayed alive so
long? I mean, he has no defence to speak of.' 'It's a good point,' said the Earl, doffing
his helm and running his fingers through his hair, enjoying the cool of the
night. "The reason is contained in your question. It is because he has no
defence. That terrible axe rarely leaves a man with a non-mortal wound. To kill
Druss you have to be prepared to die. No, not just prepared. You would have to
attack Druss in the sure knowledge that he will kill you. Now, most men want to
live. You understand?' 'Not really, sir,' admitted Orases. 'Do you know the one kind of warrior no one
wants to face?' asked Delnar. 'No, sir.' 'The baresark, sometimes called the
berserker, a man whose killing frenzy makes him oblivious to pain and uncaring
about life. He throws his armour away and attacks the enemy, cutting and
killing until he himself is cut to pieces. I saw a baresark once who had lost
an arm. As the blood spewed from the stump he aimed it in the faces of his
attackers and carried on fighting until he dropped. 'No one wants to fight such a man. Now,
Druss is even more formidable than the berserker. He has all the virtues, but
his killing frenzy is controlled. He can think clearly. And when you add the
man's awesome strength he becomes a veritable machine of destruction.' 'But surely a chance thrust amid the
melee,' said Diagoras. 'A sudden slip on a pool of blood. He could die as well
as any other man.' 'Yes,' admitted Delnar. 'I do not say that
he won't die in such a way; only that the odds are all with Druss. Most of you
saw him today. Those who fought alongside him had no time to study his
technique, but others of you caught a glimpse of the Legend. He's always
balanced, always moving. His eyes are never still. His peripheral vision is
incredible. He can sense danger even amid chaos. Today a very brave Panthian
warrior hurled himself on the axe, dragging it from Druss's hand. A second
warrior followed. Did anyone see it?' 'I did,' said Orases. 'But you didn't really learn from it. The
first Panthian died to remove Druss's weapon. The second was to engage him
while the others breached the line. Had they come through then, our force might
have been split and pushed back into the walls of the mountain. Druss saw that
instantly. That's why, although he could have just knocked his attacker
senseless and retrieved his axe, he hurled the man back into the breach. Now
think on this: In that instant Druss had seen the danger, formulated a plan of
action, and carried it out. More even than this. He retrieved the axe and took
the battle to the enemy. That's what broke them. Druss had judged exactly the
right moment to attack. It's the instinct of the born warrior.' 'But how did he know we would follow him?'
asked Diagoras. 'He could have been cut to pieces.' 'Even in this he was confident. That's why
he asked you and Certak to stand alongside him. Now that's a compliment. He
knew you would respond, and that others who might not follow him would follow
you.' 'He has told you this?' asked Certak. The Earl chuckled. 'No. In a way Druss
would be as surprised to hear it as you are. His actions are not reasoned. As I
said, they are instinctive. If we live through this you will leam much.' 'Do you think we will?' asked Orases. 'If we are strong,' lied Delnar smoothly,
surprised at himself. * The Panthians came again at dawn, creeping
up through the pass as the Drenai waited, swords drawn. But they did not
attack. Under the bewildered eyes of the defenders, they hauled away the bodies
of their comrades. It was a bizarre scene. Delnar ordered the
Drenai back twenty paces to make room for the work, and the warriors waited.
Delnar sheathed his sword and moved alongside Druss in the front line. 'What do you think?' 'I think they're preparing the ground for
chariots,' said Druss. 'Horses will never attack a solid line.
They'll pull up short,' the Earl pointed out. 'Take a look yonder,' muttered the axeman. On the far side of the stream, the Ventrian
army had parted, making way for the gleaming bronze chariots of the Tantrians.
With their huge wheels bearing sickle blades, serrated and deadly, each chariot
was drawn by two horses and manned by a driver and a spear carrier. For an hour the clearing of bodies
continued, while the chariots formed a line in the valley below. As the
Panthians withdrew, Delnar ordered forward thirty men carrying the wicker
shields retrieved from the battle the day before. The shields were spread in a
line across the pass and doused with lantern oil. Delnar placed his hand on Druss's shoulder.
'Take the line fifty paces forward, beyond the shields. When they attack, break
formation left and right and make for the cover of the rocks. Once they are
through we will fire the shields. Hopefully that will stop them. The second
rank will engage the chariots while your line holds the following infantry.' 'Sounds good,' said Druss. 'If it doesn't work we won't try it again,'
said Delnar. Druss grinned. Along the line of chariots the drivers were
pulling silken hoods over the eyes of the horses. Druss led his two hundred men
forward, hurdling the wall of wicker shields, Diagoras, Certak and Archytas
beside him. The thunder of hooves on the valley floor
echoed through the crags as two hundred charioteers whipped their horses into
the gallop. With the chariots almost upon them Druss
bellowed the order to break ranks. As men raced to the safety of the mountain
walls on either side, the enemy thundered on towards the second line. Flaming
torches were flung upon the wall of oil-soaked wicker shields. Black smoke
billowed instantly, followed by dancing flames. The breeze carried the smoke
towards the east, burning the flaring nostrils of the hooded horses. Whinnying
their terror, they tried to turn, ignoring the biting whips of the charioteers. Instantly all was confusion. The second
line of chariots tore into the first, horses falling, vehicles overturning,
hurling screaming men to the jagged rocks. And into the milling chaos leapt the
Drenai, hurdling the dying flames to fall upon the Ventrian spearmen, whose
lances were useless at such close quarters. Gorben, from his vantage point a half-mile
away, ordered a legion of infantry into the fray. Druss and the two hundred Drenai swordsmen
re-formed across the pass, locking shields against the new attack, presenting a
glittering wall of blades to the silver-armoured infantry. Crushing the skull of one man and gutting a
second, Druss stepped back, casting a lightning glance to left and right. The line held. More Drenai fell in this attack than on the
previous day, but their numbers were few compared with the losses suffered by
the Ventrians. Only a handful of chariots burst back
through the Drenai front line, there to crash and cut a path through their own
infantry in their desire to be free of the pass. Hour upon bloody hour the battle continued,
savagely fought by both sides, with no thought of quarter. The silver-clad Ventrian infantry continued
to press their attack, but by dusk their efforts lacked conviction and weight. Furious, Gorben ordered their general
forward into the pass. 'Lead them hard, or you'll beg to be
allowed to die,' he promised. The general's body fell within the
hour, and the infantry slunk back across the stream in the gathering gloom of
twilight. * Ignoring the dancing troupe performing
before him, Gorben lay back on the silk-covered couch, conversing in low tones
with Bodasen. The Emperor wore full battle-dress, and behind him stood the
massively muscled Panthian bodyguard who for the last five years had been
Gorben's executioner. He killed with his hands, sometimes by strangling his
victims slowly, at other times gouging his thumbs through the eye sockets of
the hapless prisoners. All executions were performed before the Emperor, and
scarcely a week passed without such a grisly scene. The Panthian had once killed a man by
crushing his skull between his hands, to the applause of Gorben and his courtiers. Bodasen was sickened by it all, but he was
caught within a web of his own making. Through the years, naked ambition had
driven him to the heights of power. He now commanded the Immortals and was,
under Gorben, the most powerful man in Ventria. But the position was perilous.
Gorben's paranoia was such that few of his generals survived for long, and Bodasen
had begun to feel the Emperor's eyes upon him. Tonight he had invited Gorben to his tent,
promising him an evening of entertainment, but the king was in a surly,
argumentative mood, and Bodasen trod warily. 'You thought the Panthians and the chariots
would fail, did you not?' asked Gorben. The question was loaded with menace. If
the answer was yes, the Emperor would ask why Bodasen had not stated his view.
Was he not the Emperor's military advisor? What was the use of an advisor who
gave no advice? If the answer was no, then his military judgement would prove
to be lacking. 'We have fought many wars over the years,
my lord,' he said. 'In most,of them we have suffered reverses. You have always
said "Unless we try we will never know how to succeed".' 'You think we should send in my Immortals?'
asked Gorben. Always before the Emperor had called them your Immortals.
Bodasen licked his lips and smiled. 'There is no doubt they could clear the
pass swiftly. The Drenai are fighting well. They are disciplined. But they know
they cannot withstand the Immortals. But that decision is yours alone, my lord.
Only you have the divine mastery of tactics. Men like myself are mere
reflections of your greatness.' 'Then where are the men who can think for
themselves?' snapped the Emperor. 'I must be honest with you, sire,' said
Bodasen quickly. 'You will not find such a man.' 'Why?' 'You seek men who can think as rapidly as
you yourself, with your own penetrating insight. Such men do not exist. You are
supremely gifted, sire. The gods would visit such wisdom on only one man in ten
generations.' 'You speak truly,' said Gorben. 'But there
is little joy in being a man apart, separated from his fellows by his god-given
gifts. I am hated, you know,' he whispered, eyes darting to the sentries beyond
the tent entrance. 'There will always be those that are
jealous, sire,' said Bodasen. 'Are you jealous of me, Bodasen?' 'Yes, sire.' Gorben rolled to his side, eyes gleaming.
'Speak on.' 'In all the years I have served and loved
you, lord, I have always wished I could be more like you. For then I could have
served you better. A man would be a fool not to be jealous of you. But he is
insane if he hates you because you are what he never can be.' 'Well said. You are an honest man. One of
the few I can trust. Not like Druss, who promised to serve me, and now thwarts
my destiny. I want him dead, my general. I want his head brought to me.' 'It shall be done, sire,' said Bodasen. Gorben leaned back, gazing around him at
the tent and its contents. 'Your quarters are almost as lavish as my own,' he
said. 'Only because they are filled with gifts
from you, sire,' answered Bodasen swiftly. * Faces and armour blackened by dirt mixed
with oil, Druss and fifty swordsmen silently waded the narrow stream under a
moonless sky. Praying the clouds would not part, Druss led the men single-file
towards the eastern bank, axe in hand, blackened shield held before him. Once
ashore Druss squatted at the centre of the small group, pointing towards two
dozing sentries by a dying fire. Diagoras and two others ghosted from the
group, approaching the sentries silently, daggers in hand. The men died without
a sound. Removing torches hastily constructed from the wicker shields of
Panthian warriors, Druss and the soldiers approached the sentries' fire. Stepping over the bodies, Druss lit his
torch and ran towards the nearest tent. His men followed suit, racing from tent
to tent, until flames leapt thirty feet into the night sky. Suddenly all was chaos, as screaming men
burst from blazing canopies to fall before the swords of the Drenai. Druss
raced ahead, cutting a crimson path through the confused Ventrians, his eyes
fixed on the tent ahead, its glowing griffin outlined in the towering flames.
Close behind came Certak and a score of warriors bearing torches. Wrenching
open the flaps, Druss leapt inside. 'Damn,' he grunted, 'Gorben's not here!
Curse it!' Setting torch to silk, Druss shouted for
his men to regroup, then led them back towards the stream. No concerted effort
was made to stop them, as Ventrians milled in confusion, many of them
half-clothed, others filling helmets with water, forming human chains to battle
the fierce inferno racing on the wings of the wind throughout the Ventrian
camp. A small group of Immortals, swords in hand,
collided with Druss as he raced towards the stream. Snaga leapt forward,
braining the first. The second died as Diagoras back-handed a slash across his
throat. The battle was brief and bloody, but the element of surprise was with
the Drenai. Bursting through the front line of swordsmen, Druss crashed his axe
through one man's side before reversing a slashing swipe across another's
shoulder. Bodasen ran from his tent, sword in hand.
Swiftly gathering a small group of Immortals, he raced past the flames towards
the battle. A Drenai warrior loomed before him. The man aimed a thrust at
Bodasen's unprotected body. The Ventrian parried and launched a devastating
riposte that tore open the man's throat. Bodasen stepped over the body and led
his men forward. Druss killed two men, then bellowed for the
Drenai to fall back. The pounding of feet from behind caused him
to swivel and face the new force. With the fire behind them Druss could not
make out faces. Nearby Archytas despatched a warrior, then
saw Druss standing alone. Without thinking, he raced towards the
Immortals. In that instant Druss charged. His axe rose and fell, shearing
through armour and bone. Diagoras and Certak joined him, with four other Drenai
warriors. The battle was brief. Only one Ventrian broke clear, hurling himself
to the right and rolling to his feet behind Archytas. The tall Drenai turned on
his heel and engaged the man. Archytas grinned as their swords met. The man was
old, though skilful, and no match for the young Drenai. Their swords glittered
in the firelight: parry, riposte, counter, thrust and block. Suddenly the
Ventrian seemed to trip. Archytas leapt forward. His opponent ducked and rolled
to his feet in one flowing movement, his sword ramming into Archytas' groin. 'You live and learn, boy,' hissed Bodasen,
dragging his blade clear. Bodasen turned as more Immortals ran forward. Gorben
wanted Druss's head. Tonight he would give it to him. Druss wrenched his axe from a man's body
and sprinted for the stream and the relative sanctuary of the pass. A warrior leapt into his path. Snaga sang
through the air, smashing the man's sword to shards. A back-hand cut shattered
his ribs. As Druss passed him, the man reached out, grabbing his shoulder. In
the gleam of the flames, the axeman saw it was Bodasen. The dying Immortal
general gripped Druss's jerkin, trying to slow him. Druss kicked him aside and
ran on. Bodasen fell heavily and rolled, watching
the burly figure of the axeman and his companions fording the stream. The Ventrian's vision swam. He closed his
eyes. Weariness settled on him like a cloak. Memories danced in his mind. He
heard a great noise like the crashing of the sea, and saw again the corsair
ship bearing down upon them, gliding out of the past. Once more he raced with
Druss to board her, carrying the fight to the aft deck. Damn! He should have realised Druss would
never change. Attack. Always attack. He opened his eyes, blinking to clear his
vision. Druss was safely on the other side of the stream now, leading the
warriors back to the Drenai line. Bodasen tried to move, but agony lanced
him. Carefully he probed the wound in his side, his sticky fingers feeling the
broken ribs and the rush of arterial blood from the gaping gash. It was over. No more fear. No more insanity. No more
bowing and scraping to the painted madman. In a way he was relieved. His whole life had been an anticlimax after
that battle with Druss against the corsairs. In that one towering moment he had
been alive, standing with Druss against . . . They brought his body to the Emperor in the
pink light of dawn. And Gorben wept. Around them the camp was a shambles.
Gorben's generals stood beside the throne, uneasy and silent. Gorben covered
the body with his own cloak and dried his eyes on a white linen towel. Then he
turned his attention to the man kneeling before him, flanked by Immortal
guards. 'Bodasen dead. My tent destroyed. My camp
in flames. And you, you pathetic wretch, were the officer of the guard. A score
of men invade my camp, killing my beloved general, and you still live. Explain
yourself!' 'My lord, I sat with you in Bodasen's tent
- by your order.' 'So now it is my fault the camp was
attacked!' 'No, sire . . .' 'No, sire,' mimicked Gorben. 'I should
think not. Your sentries were sleeping. Now they are dead. Do you not think it
fitting for you to join them?' 'Sire?' 'Join them, I say. Take your blade and
slice your veins.' The officer drew his ornamental dagger,
reversed it, then plunged the blade into his belly. For a moment there was no
movement. Then the man began to scream and writhe. Gorben drew his sword,
slashing the blade through the man's neck. 'He couldn't even do that right,' said
Gorben. * Druss entered Sieben's tent and hurled his
axe to the floor. The poet was awake, but lying silently watching the stars
when Druss arrived. The axeman sat down on the floor, his great head slumped to
his chest, staring at his hands, clenching and unclenching his fists. The poet
sensed his despair. He struggled to sit up, the ache in his chest becoming a
stabbing pain. He grunted. Druss's head came up, his back straightened. 'How are you feeling?" asked Druss. 'Fine. I take it the raid failed?' 'Gorben was not in his tent.' 'What is wrong, Druss?' The axeman's head slumped forward and he
didn't answer. Sieben climbed from the bed and made his way to Druss, sitting
beside him. 'Come along, old horse, tell me.' 'I killed Bodasen. He came at me out of
shadows and I cut him down.' Sieben put his arm on Druss's shoulder.
'What can I say?' 'You could tell me why - why it had to be
me.' 'I can't tell you that. I wish I could. But
you did not travel across the ocean, seeking to kill him, Druss. He came here.
With an army.' 'I only ever had a few friends in my life,'
said Druss. 'Eskodas died in my home. I've killed Bodasen. And I've brought you
here to die for a pile of rock in a forgotten pass. I'm so tired, poet. I
should never have come here.' Druss rose and left the tent. Dipping his
hands in the water- barrel outside, he washed his face. His back was painful,
especially under the shoulder-blade where the spear had cut him so many years
before. A swollen vein in his right leg nagged at him. 'I don't know if you can hear me, Bodasen,'
he whispered, staring up at the stars, 'but I am sorry it had to be me. You
were a good friend in happier days, and a man to walk the mountains with.' Returning to the tent, he found Sieben had
fallen asleep in the chair. Druss lifted him gently and carried him to his
bed,.covering him with a thick blanket. 'You're worn out, poet,' he said. He
felt for Sieben's pulse. It was ragged but strong. 'Stay with me, Sieben,' he
told him. 'I'll get you home.' As the dawn's rays bathed the peaks Druss
walked slowly down the rocky slope to stand again with the Drenai line. For eight terrible days Skeln became a
charnel house, littered with swelling corpses and the foul stench of
putrefaction. Gorben threw legion after legion up into the pass, only to see
them stumble back defeated and dejected. The dwindling band of defenders was
held together by the indomitable courage of the black-garbed axeman, whose
terrifying skill dismayed the Ventrians. Some said he was a demon, others a god
of war. Old tales were recalled. The Chaos Warrior walked again in the
stories told around Ventrian camp-fires. Only the Immortals stayed aloof from the
fears. They knew it would fall to them to clear the pass, and they knew it
would not be easy. On the eighth night Gorben at last gave in
to the insistent demands of his generals. Time was running out. The way had to
be taken tomorrow lest the Drenai army trap them in this cursed bay. The order was given and the Immortals honed
their swords. At dawn they rose silently, forming their
black and silver line across the stream, staring stonily ahead at the three
hundred men who stood between them and the Sentran Plain. Tired were the Drenai, bone-weary and
hollow-eyed. Abadai, the new general of the Immortals,
walked forward and lifted his sword in silent salute to the Drenai, as was the
Immortal custom. The blade swept down and the line moved forward. To the rear
three drummers began the doleful marching beat, and the Immortals' swords
flashed into the air. Grim were the faces as the cream of
Ventria's army slowly marched towards the Drenai. Druss, bearing a shield now, watched the
advance, his cold blue eyes showing no expression, his jaw set, his mouth a
tight line. He stretched the muscles of his shoulders, arid took a deep breath. This was the test. This was the day of
days. The spear-point of Gorben's destiny against
the resolution of the Drenai. He knew the Immortals were damned fine
warriors, but they fought now for glory alone. The Drenai, on the other hand, were proud
men, and sons of proud men, descended from a race of warriors. They were
fighting for their homes, their wives, their sons, and sons yet unborn. For a
free land and the right to make their own way, run their own lives, fulfil the
destiny of a free race. Egel and Karnak had fought for this dream, and
countless more like them down through the centuries. Behind the axeman, Earl Delnar watched the
nearing enemy line. He was impressed by their discipline and, in a strangely
detached way, found himself admiring them. He transferred his gaze to the
axeman. Without him they could never have held this long. He was like the
anchor of a ship in a storm, holding the prow into the wind, allowing it to
ride clear and face the might of the elements without being broken upon the
rocks or overturned by the power of the sea. Strong men drew courage from his
presence. For he was a constant in a world of shifting change - a colossal
force that could be trusted to endure. As the Immortals loomed ever nearer, Delnar
could feel the fear spreading among the men. The line shifted as shields were
gripped more firmly. The Earl smiled. Time for you to speak, Druss, he thought. With the instinct of a lifetime of war,
Druss obliged. Raising his axe he bellowed at the advancing Immortals. 'Come in and die, you whoresons! I am Druss
and this is death!' * Rowena was picking flowers in the small
garden behind the house when the pain struck her, cutting beneath her ribs
through to her back. Her legs collapsed beneath her and she toppled into the
blooms. Pudri saw her from the meadow gate and ran to her side, shouting for
help. Sieben's wife, Niobe, came running from the meadow and between them they
lifted the unconscious woman and carried her into the house. Pudri forced a
little foxglove powder into her mouth, then poured water into a clay goblet.
Holding it to her lips, he pinched her nostrils, forcing her to swallow. But this time the pain did not pass, and
Rowena was carried upstairs to her bed while Niobe rode to the village for the
physician. Pudri sat by Rowena's bedside, his lined
leathery face sunken and filled with concern, his large dark eyes moist with
tears. 'Please do not die, lady,' he whispered.
'Please.' Rowena floated from her body and opened her
spirit eyes, gazing down with pity at the matronly form in her bed. She saw the
wrinkled face and greying hair, the dark rings below the eyes. Was this her?
Was this tired, worn-out shell the Rowena that had been taken to Ventria years
before? And poor Pudri, so shrunken and old. Poor
devoted Pudri. Rowena felt the pull of the Source. She
closed her eyes and thought of Druss. On the wings of the wind, the Rowena of
yesterday's dreams soared above the farm, tasting the sweetness of the air,
enjoying the freedom of those born to the sky. Lands swept below her, green and
fertile, dappled with the gold of cornfields. Rivers became satin ribbons, seas
rippling lakes, cities peopled with insects scurrying without purpose. The world shrank until it became a plate
studded with gems of blue and white, and then a stone, rounded as if by the
sea, and finally a tiny jewel. She thought of Druss once more. 'On, not yet!' she begged. 'Let me see him
once. Just once.' Colours swam before her eyes, and she fell,
twisting and spinning through the clouds. The land below her was gold and
green, the cornfields and meadows of the Sentran Plain, rich and verdant. To
the east it seemed as if a giant's cloak had been carelessly thrown on to the
land, grey and lifeless, the mountains of Skeln merely folds in the cloth.
Closer she flew until she hovered over the pass, gazing down on the embattled
armies. Druss was not hard to find. He stood, as always, at the centre of the
carnage, his murderous axe cutting and killing. Sadness touched her then, a sorrow so deep
it was like a pain in her soul. 'Goodbye, my love,' she said. And turned her face to the heavens. * The Immortals hurled themselves on the
Drenai line, and the clash of steel on steel sounded above the insistent drums.
Druss hammered Snaga into a bearded face, then sidestepped a murderous thrust,
disembowelling his assailant. A spear cut his face, a sword-blade ripped a
shallow wound in his shoulder. Forced back a pace, Druss dug his heel into
the ground, his bloody axe slashing into the black and silver ranks before him. Slowly the weight of the Immortals forced
back the Drenai line. A mighty blow to Druss's shield split it
down the middle. Hurling it from him, the axeman gripped Snaga with both hands,
slashing a red swathe through the enemy. Anger turned to fury within him. Druss's eyes blazed, power flooding his
tired, aching muscles. The Drenai had been pushed back nearly
twenty paces. Ten more and the pass widened. They would not be able to hold. Druss's mouth stretched in a death's-head
grin. The line was bending like a bow on either side of him, but the axeman
himself was immovable. The Immortals pushed towards him, but were cut down with
consummate ease. Strength flowed through him. He began to laugh. It was a terrible sound, and it filled the
veins of the enemy with ice. Druss lashed Snaga into the face of a bearded
Immortal. The man was catapulted into his fellows. The axeman leapt forward,
cleaving Snaga into the chest of the next warrior. Then he hammered left and
right. Men fell back from his path, opening a space in the ranks. Bellowing his
rage to the sky, Druss charged into the mass. Certak and Diagoras followed. It was suicidal, yet the Drenai formed a
wedge, Druss at the head, and sheared into the Ventrians. The giant axeman was unstoppable. Warriors
threw themselves at him from every side, but his axe flashed like quicksilver.
A young soldier called Eericetes, only accepted into the Immortals a month
before, saw Druss bearing down on him. Fear rose like bile in his throat.
Dropping his sword he turned, pushing at the man behind him. 'Back,' he shouted. 'Get back!' The men made way for him, and the cry was
taken up by others, thinking it was an order from the officers. 'Back! Back to the stream!' The cry swept
through the ranks and the Immortals turned, streaming towards the Ventrian
camp. From his throne Gorben watched in horror as
his men waded the shallow stream, disorganised and bewildered. His eyes flicked up to the pass, where the
axeman stood waving Snaga in the air. Druss's voice floated down to him, echoing
from the crags. 'Where is your legend now, you eastern sons
of bitches?' Abadai, blood streaming from a shallow cut
in his forehead, approached the Emperor, dropping to his knees, head bowed. 'How did it happen?' demanded Gorben. 'I don't know, sire. One moment we were
pushing them back, and then the axeman went mad, charging our line. We had
them. We really had them. But somehow the cry went up to fall back, and then
all was chaos.' In the pass Druss swiftly honed the dulled
blades of his axe. 'We beat the Immortals,' said Diagoras,
slapping Druss on the shoulder. 'By all the gods in Missael, we beat the damned
Immortals.' 'They'll be back, lad. And very soon. You'd
better pray the army is moving at speed.' With Snaga razor-edged once more, Druss
looked to his wounds. The cut on his face stung like the devil, but the flow of
blood had ceased. His shoulder was more of a problem, but he strapped it as
best he could. If they survived the day, he would stitch it that night. There
were several smaller cuts to his legs and arms but these had congealed and
sealed themselves. A shadow fell across him. He looked up.
Sieben stood there, wearing breastplate and helm. 'How do I look?' asked the poet. 'Ridiculous. What do you think you're
doing?' 'I'm getting into the thick of it, Druss
old horse. And don't think you can stop me.' 'I wouldn't dream of it.' 'You're not going to tell me I'm stupid?' Druss stood and grabbed his friend's
shoulders. 'These have been good years, poet. The best I could have wished for.
There are few treasures in a man's life. One of them comes with the knowledge
that a man has a friend to stand beside him when the hour grows dark. And let's
be honest, Sieben . . . It couldn't get much darker, could it?' 'Now you come to mention it, Druss my dear,
it does seem a tiny bit hopeless.' 'Well, everybody has to die sometime,' said
Druss. 'When death comes for you, spit in his eye, poet.' 'I'll do my best.' 'You always did.' The drums sounded again and the Immortals
massed. Fury was in their eyes now, and they glared balefully at the defenders.
They would not be turned back. Not by Druss. Not by the pitiful two hundred
facing them. From the first clash the Drenai line was
forced back. Even Druss, needing room to swing his axe, could find space only
by retreating a pace. Then another. Then another. He battled on, a tireless
machine, bloody and bloodied, Snaga rising in a crimson spray and falling with
pitiless efficiency. Time and again he rallied the Drenai. But
ever on came the Immortals, striding across the bodies of their dead, their
eyes grim, their mood resolute. Suddenly the Drenai line broke, and the
battle degenerated in moments to a series of skirmishes, small circles of
warriors forming shield rings amid the black and silver sea filling the pass. The Sentran Plain lay open to the
conqueror. The battle was lost. But the Immortals were desperate to erase
the memory of defeat. They blocked the pathway to the west, determined to kill
the last of the defenders. From his vantage point on the eastern hill
Gorben threw down his sceptre in fury, turning on Abadai. 'They have won. Why are they not pushing
on? Their bloodlust leaves them blocking the pass!' Abadai could not believe his eyes. With
time a desperate enemy waiting to betray them, the Immortals were unknowingly
continuing the work of the defenders. The narrow pass was now gorged with
warriors as the rest of Gorben's army jostled behind them, waiting to sweep
through to the plain beyond. Druss, Delnar, Diagoras and a score of
others had formed a ring of steel by a cluster of jutting boulders. Fifty paces
to the right Sieben, Certak and thirty men were surrounded and fighting
furiously. The poet's face was grey and terrible pain grew in his chest.
Dropping his sword he scrambled atop a grey boulder, pulling his throwing knife
from its wrist sheath. Certak parried one thrust, but a spear
punched through his breastplate, ripping into his lungs. Blood welled in his
throat and he fell. A tall Ventrian leapt to the boulder. Sieben hurled his
blade. It took the man through the right eye. A spear flashed through the air, lancing
Sieben's chest. Strangely, far from causing him pain, it released the agony
from his cramped heart. He toppled from the rock, to be swallowed by the black
and silver horde. Druss saw him fall - and went berserk. Breaking from the shield ring, he launched
his giant frame into the massed ranks of the warriors before him, cutting them
aside like wheat before a scythe. Delnar closed the ring behind him,
disembowelling a Ventrian lancer and locking shields with Diagoras. Surrounded now by Immortals, Druss hammered
his way forward. A spear took him high in the back. He swung round, braining
the lancer. A sword bounced from his helm, gashing his cheek. A second spear
pierced his side, and a clubbing blow from the flat of a sword thundered into
his temple. Grabbing one assailant, he hauled him forward, butting him
viciously. The man sagged in his grip. More enemies closed in around the
axeman. Using the unconscious Ventrian as a shield, Druss dropped to the
ground. Swords and spears slashed at him. Then came the sound of bugles. Druss struggled to rise, but a booted foot
lashed into his temple and he fell into darkness. * He awoke and cried out. His face was
swathed in bandages, his body racked with pain. He tried to sit, but a hand
pushed gently on his shoulder. 'Rest, axeman. You've lost a lot of blood.' 'Delnar?' 'Yes. We won, Druss. The army arrived just
in time. Now rest.' The last moments of battle surged back into
Druss's mind. 'Sieben!' 'He is alive. Barely.' 'Take me to him.' 'Don't be a fool. By rights you should be
dead. Your body was pierced a score of times. If you move, the stitches will
open and you'll bleed to death.' 'Take me to him, damn you!' Delnar cursed and helped the axeman to his
feet. Calling an orderly who took the weight on the left side, he half-carried
the wounded giant to the back of the tent and the still, sleeping form of
Sieben the Sagamaster. Lowering Druss into a seat by the bedside,
Delnar and the orderly withdrew. Druss leaned forward, gazing at the bandages
around Sieben's chest, and the slowly spreading red stain at the centre. . 'Poet!' he called softly. Sieben opened his eyes. 'Can nothing kill you, axeman?' he
whispered. 'It doesn't look like it.' 'We won,' said Sieben. 'And I want you to
note that I didn't hide.' 'I didn't expect you to.' 'I'm awfully tired, Druss old horse.' 'Don't die. Please don't die,' said the
axeman, tears causing him to blink furiously. 'There are some things even you cannot
have, old horse. My heart is almost useless. I don't know why I've lived this
long. But you were right. They have been good years. I wouldn't change
anything. Not even this. Look after Niobe and the children. And make sure some
sagamaster does me justice. You'll do that?' 'Of course I will.' 'I wish I could be around to add to this
saga. What a fitting climax.' 'Yes. Fitting. Listen, poet. I'm not good
with words. But I want to tell you . . . I want you to know you've been like a
brother to me. The best friend I ever had. The very best. Poet? Sieben?' Sieben's eyes stared unseeing at the tent
ceiling. His face was peaceful and looked almost young again. The lines seemed
to vanish before Druss's eyes. The axeman began to shake. Delnar approached and
closed Sieben's eyes, covering his face with a sheet. Then he helped Druss back
to his bed. 'Gorben is dead, Druss. His own men slew
him as they ran. Our fleet has the Ventrians bottled up in the bay. At the
moment one of their generals is meeting with Abalayn to discuss surrender. We
did it. We held the pass. Diagoras wants to see you. He made it through the
battle. Can you believe it, even fat Orases is still with us! Now, I'd have
laid ten to one odds he wouldn't survive.' 'Give me a drink, will you,' whispered
Druss. Delnar came back to his side, bearing a goblet
of cool water. Druss sipped it slowly. Diagoras entered the tent, carrying
Snaga. The axe had been cleaned of blood and polished to shine like silver. Druss gazed at it, but did not reach out.
The dark-eyed young warrior smiled. 'You did it,' he said. 'I have never seen
the like. I would not have believed it possible.' 'All things are possible,' said Druss.
'Never forget that, laddie.' Tears welled in the axeman's eyes, and he
turned his head away from them. After a moment he heard them back away. Only then
did he allow the tears to fall. David Gemmell's first novel, Legend, was published in 1984. He has written
many bestsellers, including the Drenai saga, the Jon Shannow novels and the
Stones of Power sequence. He is now widely acclaimed as Britain's king of
heroic fantasy. David Gemmell lives in East Sussex. By David Gemmell LEGEND THE KING BEYOND THE GATE WAYLANDER QUEST FOR LOST HEROES WAYLANDER II THE FIRST CHRONICLES OF DRUSS THE LEGEND WOLF IN SHADOW THE LAST GUARDIAN BLOODSTONE GHOST KING LAST SWORD OF POWER LION OF MACEDON DARK PRINCE IRONHAND'S DAUGHTER THE HAWK ETERNAL KNIGHTS OF DARK RENOWN MORNINGSTAR The First
Chronicles of druss the legend David A.
Gemmell An Orbit Book First published in Great Britain by Legend Books 1993 Reprinted by Orbit 1998, 1999, 2000 Copyright © David A. Gemmell 1994 The moral right of
the author has been asserted. All characters in this publication are fictitious and
any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored
in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any
means, without the prior permission in writing of the
publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover
other than that in which it is published and without a
similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. A CJP catalogue record for this book is available from
the British Library. ISBN I 85723 680 1 Printed and bound in Great Britain by Mackays of
Chatham plc, Chatham, Kent Orbit A Division of Little, Brown and Company (UK) Brettenham House Lancaster Place London WC2E 7EN Contents BOOK TWO: The Demon
in the Axe DedicationDruss the Legend is dedicated with great love and affection to memory of Mick
Jeffrey, a quiet Christian of infinite patience and kindness. Those privileged
to know him were blessed indeed. Goodnight and God bless, Mick! AcknowledgmentsMy thanks to my editor John Jarrold, copy
editor Jean Maund, and test readers Val Gemmell, Stella Graham, Edith Graham,
Tom Taylor, and Vikki Lee France. Thanks also to Stan Nicholls and Chris Baker
for bringing Druss to life in a new way. BOOK ONE: Birth of a Legend
PrologueScreened by the undergrowth he knelt by the
trail, dark eyes scanning the boulders ahead of him and the trees beyond.
Dressed as he was in a shirt of fringed buckskin, and brown leather leggings
and boots, the tall man was virtually invisible, kneeling in the shadows of the
trees. The sun was high in a cloudless summer sky,
and the spoor was more than three hours old. Insects had criss-crossed the
hoof-marks, but the edges of the prints were still firm. Forty horsemen, laden with plunder . . . Shadak faded back through the undergrowth
to where his horse was tethered. He stroked the beast's long neck and lifted
his swordbelt from the back of the saddle. Strapping it to his waist he drew
the two short swords; they were of the finest Vagrian steel, and double edged.
He thought for a moment, then sheathed the blades and reached for the bow and
quiver strapped to the saddle pommel. The bow was of Vagrian horn, a hunting
weapon capable of launching a two-foot-long arrow across a killing space of
sixty paces. The doeskin quiver held twenty shafts that Shadak had crafted
himself: the flights of goose feather, stained red and yellow, the heads of
pointed iron, not barbed, and easily withdrawn from the bodies of the slain.
Swiftly he strung the bow and notched an arrow to the string. Then looping the
quiver over his shoulder, he made his way carefully back to the trail. Would they have left a rearguard? It was
unlikely, for there were no Drenai soldiers within fifty miles. But Shadak was a cautious man. And he knew
Collan. Tension rose in him as he pictured the smiling face and the cruel,
mocking eyes. 'No anger,' he told himself. But it was hard, bitterly hard.
Angry men make mistakes, he reminded himself. The hunter must be cold as iron. Silently he edged his way forward. A
towering boulder jutted from the earth some twenty paces ahead and to his left;
to the right was a cluster of smaller rocks, no more than four feet high.
Shadak took a deep breath and rose from his hiding-place. From behind the large boulder a man stepped
into sight, bowstring bent. Shadak dropped to his knee, the attacker's arrow
slashing through the air above his head. The bowman tried to leap back behind
the shelter of the boulder, but even as he was dropping Shadak loosed a shaft
which plunged into the bowman's throat, punching through the skin at the back
of his neck. Another attacker ran forward, this time
from Shadak's right. With no time to notch a second arrow Shadak swung the bow,
lashing it across the man's face. As the attacker stumbled, Shadak dropped the
bow and drew his two short swords; with one sweeping blow he cut through the
neck of the fallen man. Two more attackers ran into view and he leapt to meet
them. Both men wore iron breastplates, their necks and heads protected by chain
mail, and they carried sabres. 'You'll not die easily, you bastard!'
shouted the first, a tall, wide-shouldered warrior. Then his eyes narrowed as
he recognised the swordsman facing him. Fear replaced battle lust - but he was
too close to Shadak to withdraw and made a clumsy lunge with his sabre. Shadak
parried the blade with ease, his second sword lancing forward into the man's
mouth and through the bones of his neck. As the swordsman died, the second
warrior backed away. 'We didn't know it was you, I swear!' he
said, hands trembling. 'Now you do,' said Shadak softly. Without a word the man turned and ran back
towards the trees as Shadak sheathed his swords and moved to his bow. Notching
an arrow, he drew back on the string. The shaft flashed through the air to
punch home into the running man's thigh. He screamed and fell. As Shadak loped
to where he lay, the man rolled to his back, dropping his sword. 'For pity's sake don't kill me!' he
pleaded. 'You had no pity back in Corialis,' said
Shadak. 'But tell me where Collan is heading and I'll let you live.' A wolf
howled in the distance, a lonely sound. It was answered by another, then
another. 'There's a village . . . twenty miles
south-east,' said the man, his eyes fixed on the short sword in Shadak's hand.
'We scouted it. Plenty of young women. Collan and Harib Ka plan to raid it for
slaves, then take them to Mashrapur.' Shadak nodded. 'I believe you,' he said, at
last. 'You're going to let me live, yes? You
promised,' the wounded man whimpered. 'I always keep my promises,' said Shadak,
disgusted at the man's weakness. Reaching down, he wrenched his shaft clear of
the man's leg. Blood gushed from the wound, and the injured warrior groaned.
Shadak wiped the arrow clean on the man's cloak, then stood and walked to the
body of the first man he had killed. Kneeling beside the corpse, he recovered
his arrow and then strode to where the raiders had tethered their horses.
Mounting the first, he led the others back down the trail to where his gelding
waited. Gathering the reins, he led the four mounts back out on to the trail. 'What about me?' shouted the wounded man. Shadak turned in the saddle. 'Do your best
to keep the wolves away,' he advised. 'By dark they will have picked up the
scent of blood.' 'Leave me a horse! In the name of Mercy!' 'I am not a merciful man,' said Shadak. And he rode on towards the south-east, and
the distant mountains. Chapter OneThe axe was four feet long, with a
ten-pound head, the blade flared, and sharp as any sword. The haft was of elm,
beautifully curved, and more than forty years old. For most men it was a heavy
tool, unwieldy and imprecise. But in the hands of the dark-haired young man who
stood before the towering beech it sang through the air, seemingly as light as
a sabre. Every long swing saw the head bite exactly where the woodsman
intended, deeper and deeper into the meat of the trunk. Druss stepped back, then glanced up. There
were several heavy branches jutting towards the north. He moved around the
tree, gauging the line where it would fall, then returned to his work. This was
the third tree he had tackled today and his muscles ached, sweat gleaming on
his naked back. His short-cropped black hair was soaked with perspiration that
trickled over his brow, stinging his ice-blue eyes. His mouth was dry, but he
was determined to finish the task before allowing himself the reward of a
cooling drink. Some way to his left the brothers Pilan and
Yorath were sitting on a fallen tree, laughing and talking, their hatchets
beside them. Theirs was the task of stripping the trunks, hacking away smaller
branches and limbs that could be used for winter firewood. But they stopped
often and Druss could hear them discussing the merits and alleged vices of the
village girls. They were handsome youths, blond and tall, sons of the
blacksmith, Tetrin. Both were witty and intelligent, and popular among the
girls. Druss disliked them. To his right several
of the older boys were sawing through the larger branches of the first tree
Druss had felled, while elsewhere young girls were gathering deadwood, kindling
for winter fires, and loading them to wheelbarrows to be pushed downhill to the
village. At the edge of the new clearing stood the
four workhorses, hobbled now and grazing, waiting for the trees to be cleaned
so that chain traces could be attached to the trunks for the long haul into the
valley. Autumn was fading fast, and the village elders were determined that the
new perimeter wall would be finished before winter. The frontier mountains of
Skoda boasted only one troop of Drenai cavalry, patrolling an area of a
thousand square miles. Raiders, cattle thieves, slavers, robbers and outlaws
roamed the mountains, and the ruling council in Drenai made it clear they would
accept no responsibility for the new settlements on the Vagrian borders. But thoughts of the perils of frontier life
did not discourage the men and women who journeyed to Skoda. They sought a new
life, far removed from the more civilised south and east, and built their homes
where land was still free and wild, and where strong men did not need to tug
the forelock nor bow when the nobles rode by. Freedom was the key word, and no talk of
raiders could deter them. Druss hefted his axe, then thundered the
blade into the widening notch. Ten times more he struck, deep into the base of
the trunk. Then another ten smooth, powerful strokes. Three more axe-blows and
the tree would groan and give, wrenching and tearing as she fell. Stepping back he scanned the ground along
the line of the fall. A movement caught his eye, and he saw a small child with
golden hair sitting beneath a bush, a rag doll in her hand. 'Kiris!' bellowed
Druss.'If you are not out of there by the time I count to three I'll tear off
your leg and beat you to death with the wet end! One! Two!' The child's mouth dropped open, her eyes
widening. Dropping her rag doll she scrambled clear of the bush and ran crying
from the forest. Druss shook his head and walked forward to retrieve the doll,
tucking it into his wide belt. He felt the eyes of the others on him, and
guessed what they were thinking: Druss the Brute, Druss the Cruel - that's how
they saw him. And maybe they were right. Ignoring them, he walked back to the tree
and hefted his axe. Only two weeks before he had been felling a
tall beech, and had been called away with the work almost completed. When he
returned it was to find Kiris sitting in the topmost branches with her doll, as
always, beside her. 'Come down,' he had coaxed. The tree is
about to fall.' 'Won't,' said Kiris. 'We like it here. We
can see for ever.' Druss had looked around, for once hoping
that some of the village girls were close by. But there was no one. He examined
the huge cleft in the trunk, a sudden wind could cause the trunk to topple.
'Come down, there's a good girl. You'll be hurt if the tree falls.' 'Why should it fall?' 'Because I've been hitting it with my axe.
Now come down.' 'All right,' she said, then started to
climb down. The tree suddenly tilted and Kiris screamed and clung to a branch.
Druss's mouth was dry. 'Quickly now,' he said. Kiris said nothing,
nor did she move. Druss swore and, setting his foot to a low knot, levered
himself up to the first branch. Slowly and with great care he climbed the
half-felled tree, higher and higher towards the child. At last he reached her. 'Put your arms
around my neck,' he commanded. She did so, and he began the climb down. Half-way to the ground Druss felt the tree
shudder - and snap. Leaping clear he hugged the child to him, then hit the
ground, landing awkwardly with his left shoulder slamming into the soft earth.
Shielded by his bulk, Kiris was unhurt, but Druss groaned as he rose. 'Are you hurt?' asked Kiris. Druss's pale eyes swung on the child. 'If I
catch you near my trees again, I shall feed you to the wolves!' he roared. 'Now
begone!' She had sprinted away as if her dress was on fire. Chuckling at the
memory now, he hefted his axe and thundered the blade into the beech. A great
groan came from the tree, a wrenching, tearing sound that drowned out the
nearby thudding of hatchets and the sawing of boughs. The beech toppled, twisting as it fell.
Druss turned towards the water-sack hanging from a branch nearby; the felling
of the tree signalled the break for the midday meal, and the village youngsters
gathered in groups in the sunshine, laughing and joking. But no one approached
Druss. His recent fight with the former soldier Alarm had unsettled them, and they
viewed him even more warily than before. He sat alone, eating bread and cheese
and taking long, cool swallows of water. Pilan and Yorath were now sitting with
Berys and Tailia, the daughters of the miller. The girls were smiling prettily,
tilting their heads and enjoying the attention. Yorath leaned in close to
Tailia, kissing her ear. Tailia feigned outrage. Their games ceased when a black-bearded man
entered the clearing. He was tall, with massive shoulders and eyes the colour
of winter clouds. Druss saw his father approach, and stood. 'Clothe yourself and walk with me,' said
Bress, striding away into the woods. Druss donned his shirt and followed his
father. Out of earshot of the others, the tall man sat down beside a
fast-moving stream and Druss joined him. 'You must learn to control that temper, my
son,' said Bress. 'You almost killed the man.' 'I just hit him . . . once.' 'The once broke his jaw and
dislodged three teeth.' 'Have the Elders decided on a penalty?' 'Aye. I must support Alarin and his family
through the winter. Now I can ill afford that, boy.' 'He spoke slightingly of Rowena and I'll
not tolerate that. Ever.' Bress took a deep breath, but before
speaking he lifted a pebble and hurled it into the stream. Then he sighed. 'We
are not known here, Druss - save as good workers and fellow villagers. We came
a long way to be rid of the stigma my father bequeathed our family. But
remember the lessons of his life. He could not control his temper - and he
became an outcast and a renegade, a bloodthirsty butcher. Now they say blood
runs true. In our case I hope they are wrong.' Tm not a killer,' argued Druss. 'Had I
wanted him dead, I could have broken his neck with a single blow.' 'I know. You are strong - you take after me
in that regard. And proud; that I think came from your mother, may her soul
know peace. The gods alone know how often I have been forced to swallow my
pride.' Bress tugged at his beard and turned to face his son. 'We are a small
settlement now, and we cannot have violence among ourselves - we would not
survive as a community. Can you understand that?' 'What did they ask you to tell me?' Bress sighed. 'You must make your peace
with Alarin. And know this - if you attack any other man of the village you
will be cast out.' Druss's face darkened. 'I work harder than
any man. I trouble no one. I do not get drunk like Pilan and Yorath, nor try to
make whores of the village maids like their father. I do not steal. I do not
lie. Yet they will cast me out?' 'You frighten them, Druss. You frighten me
too.' 'I am not my grandfather. I am not a
murderer.' Bress sighed. 'I had hoped that Rowena,
with all her gentleness, would have helped to calm that temper of yours. But on
the morning after your wedding you half-kill a fellow settler. And for what?
Don't tell me he spoke slightingly. All he said was that you were a lucky man
and he'd like to have bedded her himself. By all the gods, son! If you feel you
have to break a man's jaw for every compliment he pays your wife, there won't
be any men left in this village to work at all.' 'It wasn't said as a compliment. And I can
control my temper, but Alarin is a loud-mouthed braggart - and he received
exactly what he deserved.' 'I hope you'll take note of what I've said,
son.' Bress stood and stretched his back. 'I know you have little respect for
me. But I hope you'll think of how Rowena would fare if you were both declared
outcast.' Druss gazed up at him and swallowed back
his disappointment. Bress was a physical giant, stronger than any man Druss had
ever known, but he wore defeat like a cloak. The younger man rose alongside his
father. 'I'll take heed,' he said. Bress smiled wearily. 'I have to get back
to the wall. It should be finished in another three days; we'll all sleep
sounder then.' 'You'll have the timber,' Druss promised. 'You're a good man with an axe, I'll say
that.' Bress walked away for several paces, then turned. 'If they did cast you
out, son, you wouldn't be alone. I'd walk with you.' Druss nodded. 'It won't come to that. I've
already promised Rowena I'll mend my ways.' 'I'll wager she was angry,' said Bress,
with a grin. 'Worse. She was disappointed in me.' Druss
chuckled. 'Sharper than a serpent's tooth is the disappointment of a new
wife.' 'You should laugh more often, my boy. It
suits you.' But as Bress walked away the smile faded
from the young man's face as he gazed down at his bruised knuckles and
remembered the emotions that had surged within him as he struck Alarin. There
had been anger, and a savage need for combat. But when his fist landed and
Alarin toppled there had been only one sensation, brief and indescribably
powerful. Joy. Pure pleasure, of a kind and a power
he had not experienced before. He closed his eyes, forcing the scene from his mind. 'I am not my grandfather,' he told himself.
'I am not insane.' That night he repeated the words to Rowena as they lay in
the broad bed Bress had fashioned for a wedding gift. Rolling to her stomach she leaned on his
chest, her long hair feeling like silk upon his massive shoulder. 'Of course
you are not insane, my love,' she assured him. 'You are one of the gentlest men
I've known.' That's not how they see me,' he told her,
reaching up and stroking her hair. 'I know. It was wrong of you to break
Alarin's jaw. They were just words - and it matters not a whit if he meant them
unpleasantly. They were just noises, blowing into the air.' Easing her from him, Druss sat up. 'It is
not that easy, Rowena. The man had been goading me for weeks. He wanted that
fight - because he wanted to humble me. But he did not. No man ever will.' She
shivered beside him. 'Are you cold?' he asked, drawing her into his embrace. 'Deathwalker,' she whispered. 'What? What did you say?' Her eyelids fluttered. She smiled and
kissed his cheek. 'It doesn't matter. Let us forget Alarin, and enjoy each
other's company.' 'I'll always enjoy your company,' he said.
'I love you.' * Rowena's dreams were dark and brooding and
the following day, at the riverside, she could not force the images from her
mind. Druss, dressed in black and silver and bearing a mighty axe, stood upon a
hillside. From the axe-blades came a great host of souls, flowing like smoke
around their grim killer. Death-walker! The vision had been powerful.
Squeezing the last of the water from the shirt she was washing, she laid it
over a flat rock alongside the drying blankets and the scrubbed woollen dress.
Stretching her back, she rose from the water's edge and walked to the tree line
where she sat, her right hand closing on the brooch Druss had fashioned for her
in his father's workshop - soft copper strands entwined around a moonstone,
misty and translucent. As her fingers touched the stone her eyes closed and her
mind cleared. She saw Druss sitting alone by the high stream. 'I am with you,' she whispered. But he
could not hear her and she sighed. No one in the village knew of her Talent,
for her father, Voren, had impressed upon her the need for secrecy. Only last
year four women in Drenan had been convicted of sorcery and burnt alive by the
priests of Missael. Voren was a careful man. He had brought Rowena to this
remote village, far from Drenan, because, as he told her, 'Secrets cannot live
quietly among a multitude. Cities are full of prying eyes and attentive ears,
vengeful minds and malevolent thoughts. You will be safer in the mountains.' And he had made her promise to tell no one
of her skills. Not even Druss. Rowena regretted that promise as she gazed with
the eyes of Spirit upon her husband. She could see no harshness in his blunt,
flat features, no swirling storm-clouds in those grey-blue eyes, no hint of
sullenness in the flat lines of his mouth. He was Druss- and she loved him.
With a certainty born of her Talent she knew she would love no other man as she
loved Druss. And she knew why . . . he needed her. She had gazed through the
window of his soul and had found there a warmth and a purity, an island of
tranquillity set in a sea of roaring violent emotions. While she was with him
Druss was tender, his turbulent spirit at peace. In her company he smiled.
Perhaps, she thought, with my help I can keep him at peace. Perhaps the grim
killer will never know life. 'Dreaming again, Ro,' said Mari, moving to
sit alongside Rowena. The young woman opened her eyes and smiled at her friend.
Mari was short and plump, with honey-coloured hair and a bright, open smile. 'I was thinking of Druss,' said Rowena. Mari nodded and looked away and Rowena
could feel her concern. For weeks her friend had tried to dissuade her from
marrying Druss, adding her arguments to those of Voren and others. 'Will Pilan be your partner at the Solstice
Dance?' asked Rowena, changing the subject. Mari's mood changed abruptly, and she giggled.
'Yes. But he doesn't know yet.' 'When will he find out?' 'Tonight.' Mari lowered her voice, though
there was no one else within earshot. 'We're meeting in the lower meadow.' 'Be careful,' warned Rowena. 'Is that the advice of the old married
woman? Didn't you and Druss make love before you were wed?' 'Yes, we did,' Rowena admitted, 'but Druss
had already made his pledge before the Oak. Pilan hasn't.' 'Just words, Ro. I don't need them. Oh, I
know Pilan's been flirting with Tailia, but she's not for him. No passion, you
see. All she thinks about is wealth. She doesn't want to stay in the
wilderness, she yearns for Drenan. She'll not want to keep a mountain man warm
at night, nor make the beast with two backs in a wet meadow, with the grass
tickling her . . .' 'Mari! You really are too frank,'
admonished Rowena. Mari giggled and leaned in close. 'Is Druss
a good lover?' Rowena sighed, all tension and sadness
disappearing. 'Oh, Mari! Why is it that you can talk about forbidden subjects
and make them seem so. . .so wonderfully ordinary? You are like the sunshine
that follows rain.' 'They're not forbidden here, Ro. That's the
trouble with girls born in cities and surrounded by stone walls and marble, and
granite. You don't feel the earth any more. Why did you come here?' 'You know why,' said Rowena uneasily.
'Father wanted a life in the mountains.' 'I know that's what you've always said -
but I never believed it. You're a terrible liar - your face goes red and you
always look away!' 'I . . . can't tell you. I made a promise.' 'Wonderful!' exclaimed Mari. 'I love
mysteries. Is he a criminal? He was a book-keeper, wasn't he? Did he steal some
rich man's money?' 'No! It was nothing to do with him. It was
me! Don't ask me any more. Please?' 'I thought we were friends,' said Mari. 'I
thought we could trust one another.' 'We can. Honestly!' 'I wouldn't tell anyone.' 'I know,' said Rowena sadly. 'But it would
spoil our friendship.' 'Nothing could do that. How long have you
been here - two seasons? Have we ever fought? Oh, come on, Ro. Where's the
harm? You tell me your secret and I'll tell you mine.' 'I know yours already,' whispered Rowena.
'You gave yourself to the Drenai captain when he and his men passed through
here on patrol in the summer. You took him to the low meadow.' 'How did you find out?' 'I didn't. It was in your mind when you
told me you would share a secret with me.' 'I don't understand.' 'I can see what people are thinking. And I
can sometimes tell what is going to happen. That's my secret.' 'You have the Gift? I don't believe it!
What am I thinking now?' 'A white horse with a garland of red
flowers.' 'Oh, Ro! That's wonderful. Tell my
fortune,' she pleaded, holding out her hand. 'You won't tell anyone else?' 'I promised, didn't I?' 'Sometimes it doesn't work.' Try anyway,' urged Mari, thrusting out her
plump hand. Rowena reached out, her slender fingers closing on Mari's palm, but
suddenly she shuddered and the colour faded from her face. 'What is it?' Rowena began to tremble. 'I. . . I must
find Druss. Can't. . . talk . . .' Rising, she stumbled away, the washed
clothes forgotten. 'Ro! Rowena, come back!' On the hillside above, a rider stared down
at the women by the river. Then he turned his horse and rode swiftly towards
the north. * Bress closed the door of the cabin and
moved through to his work room, where from a small box he took a lace glove. It
was old and yellowed, and several of the pearls which had once graced the wrist
were now missing. It was a small glove and Bress sat at his bench staring down
at it, his huge fingers stroking the remaining pearls. 'I am a lost man,' he said softly, closing
his eyes and picturing Arithae's sweet face. 'He despises me. Gods, I despise
myself.' Leaning back in his chair he gazed idly at the walls, and the many
shelves bearing strands of copper and brass, work tools, jars of dye, boxes of
beads. It was rare now for Bress to find the time to make jewellery; there was
little call for such luxuries here in the mountains. Now it was his skills as a
carpenter which were valued; he had become merely a maker of doors and tables,
chairs and beds. Still nursing the glove, he moved back into
the hearth room. 'I think we were born under unlucky stars,'
he told the dead Arithae. 'Or perhaps Bardan's evil stained our lives. Druss is
like him, you know. I see it in the eyes, in the sudden rages. I don't know
what to do. I could never convince father. And I cannot reach Druss.' His thoughts drifted back - memories, dark
and painful, flooding his mind. He saw Bardan on that last day, blood-covered,
his enemies all around him. Six men were dead, and that terrible axe was still
slashing left and right . . . Then a lance had been thrust into Bardan's throat.
Blood bubbled from the wound but Bardan slew the lance wielder before falling
to his knees. A man ran in behind him and delivered a terrible blow to Bardan's
neck. From his hiding-place high in the oak the
fourteen-year-old Bress had watched his father die, and heard one of the
killers say: The old wolf is dead - now where is the pup?' He had stayed in the tree all night, high
above the headless body of Bardan. Then, in the cold of the dawn he had climbed
down and stood by the corpse. There was no sadness, only a terrible sense of
relief combined with guilt. Bardan was dead: Bardan the Butcher. Bardan the
Slayer. Bardan the Demon. He had walked sixty miles to a settlement,
and there had found employment, apprenticed to a carpenter. But just as he was
settling down, the past came back to torment him when a travelling tinker
recognised him: he was the son of the Devil! A crowd gathered outside the
carpenter's shop, an angry mob armed with clubs and stones. Bress had climbed from the rear window and
fled from the settlement. Three times during the next five years he had been
forced to run - and then he had met Alithae. Fortune smiled on him then and he
remembered Alithae's father, on the day of the wedding, approaching him and
offering him a goblet of wine. 'I know you have suffered, boy,' said the old
man. 'But I am not one who believes that a father's evil is visited upon the
souls of his children. I know you, Bress. You are a good man.' Aye, thought Bress, as he sat by the
hearth, a good man. Lifting the glove he kissed it softly.
Alithae had been wearing it when the three men from the south had arrived at
the settlement where Bress and his wife and new son had made their homes. Bress
had a small but thriving business making brooches and rings and necklets for
the wealthy. He was out walking one morning, Alithae beside him carrying the
babe. 'It's Bardan's son!' he heard someone shout
and he glanced round. The three riders had stopped their horses, and one of the
men was pointing at him; they spurred their mounts and rode at him. Alithae,
struck by a charging horse, fell heavily, and Bress had leapt at the rider,
dragging him from the saddle. The other men hurled themselves from their
saddles. Bress struck left and right, his huge fists clubbing them to the ground. As the dust settled he turned back to
Alithae. . . . Only to find her dead, the babe crying
beside her. From that moment he lived like a man with
no hope. He rarely smiled and he never laughed. The ghost of Bardan was upon him, and he
took to travelling, moving through the lands of the Drenai with his son beside
him. Bress took what jobs he could find: a labourer in Drenan, acarpenter in
Delnoch, a bridge-builder in Mashrapur, a horse-handler in Corteswain. Five
years ago he had wed a farmer's daughter named Patica - a simple lass, plain of
face and none too bright. Bress cared for her, but there was no room left for
love in his heart for Alithae had taken it with her when she died. He had
married Patica to give Druss a mother, but the boy had never taken to her. Two years ago, with Druss now fifteen, they
had come to Skoda. But even here the ghost remained -born again, it seemed,
into the boy. 'What can I do, Alithae?' he asked. Patica entered the cabin, holding three
fresh loaves in her arms. She was a large woman with a round pleasant face
framed by auburn hair. She saw the glove and tried to mask the hurt she felt.
'Did you see Druss?' she asked. 'Aye, I did. He says he'll try to curb his
temper.' 'Give him time. Rowena will calm him.' Hearing the thunder of hooves outside,
Bress placed the glove on the table and moved to the door. Armed men were
riding into the village, swords in their hands. Bress saw Rowena running into the
settlement, her dress hitched up around her thighs. She saw the raiders and tried
to turn away but a horseman bore down on her. Bress ran into the open and leapt
at the man, pulling him from the saddle. The rider hit the ground hard, losing
his grip on his sword. Bress snatched it up, but a lance pierced his shoulder
and with a roar of anger he twisted round and the lance snapped. Bress lashed
out with the sword. The rider fell back, and the horse reared. Riders surrounded him, with lances
levelled. In that instant Bress knew he was about to
die. Time froze for him. He saw the sky, filled with lowering clouds, and
smelled the new-mown grass of the meadows. Other raiders were galloping through
the settlement, and he heard the screams of the dying villagers. Everything
they had built was for nothing. A terrible anger raged inside him. Gripping the
sword, he let out the battle-cry of Bardan. 'Blood and death!' he bellowed. And charged. * Deep within the woods Druss leaned on his
axe, a rare smile on his normally grim face. Above him the sun shone through a
break in the clouds, and he saw an eagle soaring, golden wings seemingly
aflame. Druss removed his sweat-drenched linen headband, laying it on a stone
to dry. Lifting a waterskin, he took a long drink. Nearby Pilan and Yorath laid
aside their hatchets. Soon Tailia and Berys would arrive with the
haul-horses and the work would begin again, attaching the chains and dragging
the timbers down to the village. But for now there was little to do but sit and
wait. Druss opened the linen-wrapped package Rowena had given him that morning;
within was a wedge of meat pie, and a large slice of honey cake. 'Ah, the joys of married life!' said Pilan. Druss laughed. 'You should have tried
harder to woo her. Too late to be jealous now.' 'She wouldn't have me, Druss. She said she
was waiting for a man whose face would curdle milk and that if she married me
she would spend the rest of her life wondering which of her pretty friends
would steal me from her. It seems her dream was to find the world's ugliest
man.' His smile faded as he saw the expression on
the woodsman's face, and the cold gleam that appeared in his pale eyes. 'Only
jesting,' said Pilan swiftly, the colour ebbing from his face. Druss took a deep breath and, remembering
his father's warning, fought down his anger. 'I am not. . . good with jests,'
he said, the words tasting like bile in his mouth. 'No harm done,' said Pilan's brother,
moving to sit alongside the giant. 'But if you don't mind my saying so, Druss,
you need to develop a sense of humour. We all make jests at the expense of our
. . . friends. It means nothing.' Druss merely nodded and turned his
attention to the pie. Yorath was right. Rowena had said exactly the same words,
but from her it was easy to take criticism. With her he felt calm and the world
had colour and joy. He finished the food and stood. 'The girls should have been
here by now,' he said. 'I can hear horses,' said Pilan, rising. 'They're coming fast,' Yorath added. Tailia and Berys came running into the
clearing, their faces showing fear, their heads turning towards the unseen
horsemen. Druss snatched his axe from the stump and ran towards them as Tailia,
looking back, stumbled and fell. Six horsemen rode into sight, armour
gleaming in the sunlight. Druss saw raven-winged helms, lances and swords. The
horses were lathered and, on seeing the three youths, the warriors shouted
battle cries and spurred their mounts towards them. Pilan and Yorath sprinted away towards the
right. Three riders swung their horses to give chase, but the remaining three
came on towards Druss. The young man stood calmly, the axe held
loosely across his naked chest. Directly in front of him was a felled tree. The
first of the riders, a lancer, leaned forward in the saddle as his gelding
jumped over the fallen beech. At that moment Druss moved, sprinting forward and
swinging his axe in a murderous arc. As the horse landed the axe-blade hissed
over its head, plunging into the chest of the lancer to splinter his
breastplate and smash his ribs to shards. The blow hammered the man from the
saddle. Druss tried to wrench the axe clear, but the blade was caught by the
fractured armour. A sword slashed down at the youth's head and Druss dived and
rolled. As a horseman moved in close he hurled himself from the ground,
grabbing the stallion's right foreleg. With one awesome heave he toppled horse
and rider. Hurdling the fallen tree, he ran to where the other two youths had
left their hatchets. Scooping up the first he turned as a raider galloped
towards him. Druss' arm came back, then snapped forward. The hatchet sliced
through the air, the iron head crunching into the man's teeth. He swayed in the
saddle. Druss ran forward to drag him from the horse. The raider, having
dropped his lance, tried to draw a dagger. Druss slapped it from his hand,
delivered a bone-breaking punch to the warrior's chin and then, snatching up
the dagger, rammed it into the man's unprotected throat. 'Look out, Druss!' yelled Tailia. Druss
spun, just as a sword flashed for his belly. Parrying the blade with his
forearm, he thundered a right cross which took the attacker full on the jaw,
spinning him from his feet. Druss leapt on the man, one huge hand grabbing his
chin, the other his brow. With one savage twist Druss heard the swordsman's
neck snap like a dry stick. Moving swiftly to the first man he had
killed, Druss tore the felling axe clear of the breastplate as Tailia ran from
her hiding-place in the bushes. 'They are attacking the village,' she said,
tears in her eyes. Pilan came running into the clearing, a
lancer behind him. 'Swerve!' bellowed Druss. But Pilan was too terrified to
obey and he ran straight on - until the lance pierced his back, exiting in a
bloody spray from his chest. The youth cried out, then slumped to the ground.
Druss roared in anger and raced forward. The lancer desperately tried to wrench
his weapon clear of the dying boy. Druss swung wildly with the axe, which
glanced from the rider's shoulder and plunged into the horse's back. The animal
whinnied in pain and reared before falling to the earth, its legs flailing. The
rider scrambled clear, blood gushing from his shoulder and tried to run, but
Druss's next blow almost decapitated him. Hearing a scream, Druss began to run
towards the sound and found Yorath struggling with one raider; the second was
kneeling on the ground, blood streaming from a wound in his head. The body of
Berys was beside him, a blood-smeared stone in her hand. The swordsman
grappling with Yorath suddenly head-butted the youth, sending Yorath back
several paces. The sword came up. Druss shouted, trying to distract the
warrior. But to no avail. The weapon lanced into Yorath's side. The swordsman
dragged the blade clear and turned towards Druss. 'Now your time to die, farm
boy!' he said. 'In your dreams!' snarled the woodsman. Swinging the axe over
his head, Druss charged. The swordsman side-stepped to his right - but Druss
had been waiting for the move, and with all the power of his mighty shoulders
he wrenched the axe, changing its course. It clove through the man's
collarbone, smashing the shoulder-blade and ripping into his lungs. Tearing the
axe loose, Druss turned from the body to see the first wounded warrior
struggling to rise; jumping forward, he struck him a murderous blow to the
neck. 'Help me!' called Yorath. 'I'll send Tailia,' Druss told him, and
began to run back through the trees. Reaching the crest of the hill he gazed
down on the village. He could see scattered bodies, but no sign of raiders. For
a moment he thought the villagers had beaten them back . . . but there was no
movement at all. 'Rowena!' he yelled. 'Rowena!' * Druss ran down the slope. He fell and
rolled, losing his grip on the felling-axe, but scrambling to his feet he
pounded on - down into the meadow, across the flat, through the half-finished
gates. Bodies lay everywhere. Rowena's father, the former book-keeper Voren,
had been stabbed through the throat, and blood was staining the earth beneath
him. Breathing hard, Druss stopped, and stared around the settlement square. Old women, young children and all the men
were dead. As he stumbled on he saw the golden-haired child, Kins, beloved of
all the villagers, lying sprawled in death alongside her rag doll. The body of
an infant lay against one building, a bloodstain on the wall above showing how
it had been slain. He found his father lying in the open with
four dead raiders around him. Patica was beside him, a hammer in her hand, her
plain brown woollen dress drenched in blood. Druss fell to his knees by his
father's body. There were terrible wounds to the chest and belly, and his left
arm was almost severed at the wrist. Bress groaned and opened his eyes. 'Druss.
. . .' 'I am here, Father.' 'They took the young women. . . . Rowena .
. . was among them.' 'I'll find her.' The dying man glanced to his right at the
dead woman beside him. 'She was a brave lass; she tried to help me. I should
have . . . loved her better.' Bress sighed, then choked as blood flowed into
his throat. He spat it clear. 'There is . . . a weapon. In the house . . . far
wall, beneath the boards. It has a terrible history. But. . . but you will need
it.' Druss stared down at the dying man and
their eyes met. Bress lifted his right hand. Druss took it. 'I did my best,
boy,' said his father. 'I know.' Bress was fading fast, and Druss
was not a man of words. Instead he lifted his father into his arms and kissed
his brow, hugging him close until the last breath of life rasped from the
broken body. Then he pushed himself to his feet and
entered his father's home. It had been ransacked - cupboards hauled open,
drawers pulled from the dressers, rugs ripped from the walls. But by the far
wall the hidden compartment was undiscovered and Druss prised open the boards
and hauled out the chest that lay in the dust below the floor. It was locked.
Moving through into his father's workshop, he returned with a large hammer and
a chisel which he used to pry off the hinges. Then he took hold of the lid and
wrenched it clear, the brass lock twisting and tearing free. Inside, wrapped in
oilskin, was an axe. And such an axe! Druss unwrapped it reverently. The black
metal haft was as long as a man's arm, the double heads shaped like the wings
of a butterfly. He tested the edges with his thumb; the weapon was as sharp as
his father's shaving-knife. Silver runes were inscribed on the haft, and though
Druss could not read them he knew the words etched there. For this was the
awful axe of Bardan, the weapon that had slain men, women, and even children
during the reign of terror. The words were part of the dark folklore of the
Drenai. Snaga, the Sender, the blades of no
return He lifted the axe clear, surprised by its
lightness and its perfect balance in his hand. Beneath it in the chest was a black leather
jerkin, the shoulders reinforced by strips of silver steel; two black leather
gauntlets, also protected by shaped metal knuckle-guards; and a pair of black,
knee-length boots. Beneath the clothes was a small pouch, and within it Druss
found eighteen silver pieces. Kicking off his soft leather shoes, Druss
pulled on the boots and donned the jerkin. At the bottom of the chest was a
helm of black metal, edged with silver; upon the brow was a small silver axe
flanked by silver skulls. Druss settled the helm into place, then lifted the
axe once more. Gazing down at his reflection in the shining blades, he saw a
pair of cold, cold blue eyes, empty, devoid of feeling. Snaga, forged in the Elder days, crafted by
a master. The blade had never been sharpened, for it had never dulled despite
the many battles and skirmishes that filled the life of Bardan. And even before
that the blade had been in use. Bardan had acquired the battle-axe during the
Second Vagrian War, looting it from an old barrow in which lay the bones of an
ancient battle king, a monster of Legend, Caras the Axeman. 'It was an evil weapon,' Bress had once
told his son. 'All the men who ever bore it were killers with no souls.' 'Why do you keep it then?' asked his
thirteen-year-old son. 'It cannot kill where I keep it,' was all
Bress had answered. Druss stared at the blade. 'Now you can
kill,' he whispered. Then he heard the sound of a walking horse.
Slowly he rose. Chapter TwoShadak's horses were skittish, the smell of
death unnerving the beasts. He had bought his own three-year-old from a farmer
south of Corialis and the gelding had not been trained for war. The four mounts
he had taken from the raiders were less nervous, but still their ears were back
and their nostrils flaring. He spoke soothingly to them and rode on. Shadak had been a soldier for most of his
adult life. He had seen death - and he thanked the gods that it still had the
power to stir his emotions. Sorrow and anger vied in his heart as he gazed upon
the still corpses, the children and the old women. None of the houses had been put to the
torch - the smoke would be seen for miles, and could have brought a troop of
lancers. He gently tugged on the reins. A golden-haired child lay against the
wall of a building, a doll beside it. Slavers had no time for children, for
they had no market in Mashrapur. Young Drenai women between the ages of
fourteen and twenty-five were still popular in the eastern kingdoms of Ventria,
Sherak, Dospilis and Naashan. Shadak touched heels to the gelding. There was no
point in remaining in this place; the trail led south. A young warrior stepped from one of the
buildings, startling his horse which reared and whinnied. Shadak calmed it and
gazed upon the man. Although of average height he was powerfully built, his
huge shoulders and mighty arms giving the impression of a giant. He wore a
black leather jerkin and helm and carried a fearful axe. Shadak glanced swiftly
around the corpse-strewn settlement. But there was no sign of a horse. Lifting his leg, Shadak slid from the
saddle. 'Your friends leave you behind, laddie?' he asked the axeman. The young
man did not speak but stepped out into the open. Shadak looked into the man's
pale eyes and felt the unaccustomed thrill of fear. The face beneath the helm was flat and
expressionless, but power emanated from the young warrior. Shadak moved warily
to his right, hands resting on the hilts of his short swords. 'Proud of your
handiwork, are you?' he asked, trying to force the man into conversation.
'Killed many babes today, did you?' The young man's brow furrowed. 'This was my
. . . my home,' he said, his voice deep. 'You are not one of the raiders?' 'I am hunting them,' said Shadak, surprised
at the relief he felt. 'They attacked Corialis looking for slaves,
but the young women escaped them. The villagers fought hard. Seventeen of them
died, but the attack was beaten off. My name is Shadak. Who are you?' 'I am Druss. They took my wife. I'll find
them.' Shadak glanced at the sky. 'It's getting dark. Best to start in the
morning, we could lose their trail in the night.' 'I'll not wait,' said the young man. 'I
need one of your horses.' Shadak smiled grimly. 'It is difficult to refuse when
you ask so politely. But I think we should talk before you ride out.' 'Why?' 'Because there are many of them, laddie,
and they do have a tendency to leave rearguards behind them, watching the
road.' Shadak pointed to the horses. 'Four lay in wait for me.' 'I'll kill any I find.' 'I take it they took all the young women,
since I see no corpses here?' 'Yes.' Shadak hitched his horses to a rail and
stepped past the young man into the home of Bress. 'You'll lose nothing by
listening for a few minutes,' he said. Inside the building he righted the chairs
and stopped. On the table was an old glove, made of lace and edged with pearls.
'What's this?' he asked the cold-eyed young man. 'It belonged to my mother. My father used
to take it out now and again, and sit by the fire holding it. What did you want
to talk about?' Shadak sat down at the table. 'The raiders are led by two men
-Collan, a renegade Drenai officer, and Harib Ka, a Ventrian. They will be
making for Mashrapur and the slave markets there. With all the captives they
will not be able to move at speed and we will have little difficult catching
them. But if we follow now, we will come upon them in the open. Two against
forty - these are not odds to inspire confidence. They will push on through
most of tonight, crossing the plain and reaching the long valley trails to
Mashrapur late tomorrow. Then they will relax.' 'They have my wife,' said the young man.
'I'll not let them keep her for a heartbeat longer than necessary.' Shadak shook his head and sighed. 'Nor
would I, laddie. But you know the country to the south. What chance would we
have of rescuing her on the plains? They would see us coming from a mile away.' For the first time the young man looked
uncertain. Then he shrugged and sat, laying the great axe on the table-top,
where it covered the tiny glove. 'You are a soldier?' he asked. 'I was. Now I am a hunter - a hunter of
men. Trust me. Now, how many women did they take?' The young man thought for a moment.
'Perhaps around thirty. They killed Berys in the woods. Tailia escaped. But I
have not seen all the bodies. Maybe others were killed.' 'Then let us think of thirty. It won't be
easy freeing them.' A sound from outside made both men turn as
a young woman entered the room. Shadak rose. The woman was fair-haired and
pretty, and there was blood upon her blue woollen skirt and her shirt of white
linen. 'Yorath died,' she told the young man.
'They're all dead, Druss.' Her eyes filled with tears and she stood in the
doorway looking lost and forlorn. Druss did not move, but Shadak stepped
swiftly towards her, taking her in his arms and stroking her back. He led her into the room and sat her at the
table. 'Is there any food here?' he asked Druss. The young man nodded and moved
through to the back room, returning with a pitcher of water and some bread.
Shadak filled a clay cup with water and told the girl to drink. 'Are you hurt?'
he asked. She shook her head. 'The blood is
Yorath's,' she whispered. Shadak sat beside her and Tailia sagged against him;
she was exhausted. 'You need to rest,' he told her gently,
helping her to rise and leading her through the building to a small bedroom.
Obediently she lay down, and he covered her with a thick blanket.
'Sleep, child. I will be here.' 'Don't leave me,' she pleaded. He took her hand. 'You are safe . . .
Tailia. Sleep.' She closed her eyes, but clung to his hand, and Shadak sat with
her until the grip eased and her breathing deepened. At last he stood and
returned to the outer room. 'You were planning to leave her behind?' he
asked the young man. 'She is nothing to me,' he said coldly.
'Rowena is everything.' 'I see. Then think on this, my friend:
suppose it was you who had died and it was Rowena who survived hiding in the
woods. How would your spirit feel if you saw me ride in and leave her alone in
this wilderness?' 'I did not die,' said Druss. 'No,' said Shadak, 'you didn't. We'll take
the girl with us.' 'No!' 'Either that or you walk on alone, laddie.
And I do mean walk.' The young man looked up at the hunter, and
his eyes gleamed. 'I have killed men today,' he said, 'and I will not be
threatened by you, or anyone. Not ever again. If I choose to leave here on one
of your stolen horses, I shall do so. You would be wise not to try to stop me.' 'I wouldn't try, boy, I'd do it.'
The words were spoken softly, and with a quiet confidence. But deep inside
Shadak was surprised, for it was a confidence he did not feel. He saw the young
man's hand snake around the haft of the axe. 'I know you are angry, lad, and
concerned for the safety of. . . Rowena. But you can do nothing alone - unless
of course you are a tracker, and an expert horseman. You could ride off into
the dark and lose them. Or you could stumble upon them, and try to kill forty
warriors. Then there'll be no one to rescue her, or the others.' Slowly the giant's fingers relaxed, the
hand moving away from the axe haft, the gleam fading from his eyes. 'It hurts
me to sit here while they carry her further away.' 'I understand that. But we will catch them.
And they will not harm the women; they are valuable to them.' 'You have a plan?' 'I do. I know the country, and I can guess
where they will be camped tomorrow. We will go in at night, deal with the
sentries and free the captives.' Druss nodded. 'What then? They'll be
hunting us. How do we escape with thirty women?' 'Their leaders will be dead,' said Shadak
softly. 'I'll see to that.' 'Others will take the lead. They will come
after us.' Shadak shrugged, then smiled. 'Then we kill
as many as we can.' 'I like that part of the plan,' said the
young man grimly. * The stars were bright and Shadak sat on the
porch of the timber dwelling, watching Druss sitting beside the bodies of his
parents. 'You're getting old,' Shadak told himself,
his gaze fixed on Druss. 'You make me feel old,' he whispered. Not in twenty
years had a man inspired such fear in Shadak. He remembered the moment well -
he was a Sathuli tribesman named Jonacin, a man with eyes of ice and fire, a
legend among his own people. The Lord's champion, he had killed
seventeen men in single combat, among them the Vagrian champion, Vearl. Shadak had known the Vagrian - a tall, lean
man, lightning-fast and tactically sound. The Sathuli, it was said, had treated
him like a novice, first slicing off his right ear before despatching him with
a heart thrust. Shadak smiled as he remembered hoping with
all his heart that he would never have to fight the man. But such hopes are
akin to magic, he knew now, and all men are ultimately faced with their darkest
fears. It had been a golden morning in the Delnoch
mountains. The Drenai were negotiating treaties with a Sathuli Lord and Shadak
was present merely as one of the envoy's guards. Jonacin had been mildly
insulting at the dinner the night before, speaking sneeringly of Drenai sword
skills. Shadak had been ordered to ignore the man. But on the following morning
the white-robed Sathuli stepped in front of him as he walked along the path to
the Long Hall. 'It is said you are a fighter,' said
Jonacin, the sneer in his voice showing disbelief. Shadak had remained cool under the other's
baleful stare. 'Stand aside, if you please. I am expected at the meeting.' 'I shall stand aside - as soon as you have
kissed my feet.' Shadak had been twenty-two then, in his
prime. He looked into Jonacin's eyes and knew there was no avoiding
confrontation. Other Sathuli warriors had gathered close by and Shadak forced a
smile. 'Kiss your feet? I don't think so. Kiss this instead!' His right fist
lashed into the Sathuli's chin, spinning him to the ground. Then Shadak walked
on and took his place at the table. As he sat he glanced at the Sathuli Lord, a
tall man with dark, cruel eyes. The man saw him, and Shadak thought he glimpsed
a look of faint amusement, even triumph, in the Lord's face. A messenger
whispered something in the Lord's ear and the chieftain stood. "The hospitality
of my house has been abused,' he told the envoy. 'One of your men struck my
champion, Jonacin. The attack was unwarranted. Jonacin demands satisfaction.' The envoy was speechless. Shadak stood. 'He
shall have it, my Lord. But let us fight in the cemetery. At least then you
will not have far to carry his body!' Now the hoot of an owl brought Shadak back
to the present, and he saw Druss striding towards him. The young man made as if
to walk by, then stopped. 'I had no words,' he said. 'I could think of nothing
to say.' 'Sit down for a moment and we will speak of
them,' said Shadak. 'It is said that our praises follow the dead to their place
of rest. Perhaps it is true.' Druss sat alongside the swordsman. 'There
is not much to tell. He was a carpenter, and a fashioner of brooches. She was a
bought wife.' 'They raised you, helped you to be strong.' 'I needed no help in that.' 'You are wrong, Druss. If your father had
been a weak, or a vengeful man, he would have beaten you as a child, robbed you
of your spirit. In my experience it takes a strong man to raise strong men. Was
the axe his?' 'No. It belonged to my grandfather.' 'Bardan the Axeman,' said Shadak softly. 'How could you know?' 'It is an infamous weapon. Snaga. That was
the name. Your father had a hard life, trying to live down such a beast as
Bardan. What happened to your real mother?' Druss shrugged. 'She died in an accident
when I was a babe.' 'Ah yes, I remember the story,' said
Shadak. Three men attacked your father; he killed two of them with his bare
hands and near crippled the third. Your mother was struck down by a charging
horse.' 'He killed two men?' Druss was astonished.
'Are you sure?' 'So the story goes.' 'I cannot believe it. He always backed away
from any argument. He never stood up for himself at all. He was weak . . .
spineless.' 'I don't think so.' 'You didn't know him.' 'I saw where his body lay, and I saw the
dead men around it. And I know many stories concerning the son of Bardan. None
of them speaks of his cowardice. After his own father was killed he tried to
settle in many towns, under many names. Always he was discovered and forced to
flee. But on at least three occasions he was followed and attacked. Just
outside Drenan he was cornered by five soldiers. One of them shot an arrow into
your father's shoulder. Bress was carrying an infant at the time and according
to the soldiers he laid the babe behind a boulder, and then charged at them. He
had no weapon, and they were all armed with swords. But he tore a limb from a tree
and laid into them. Two went down swiftly, the others turned and fled. I know that
story is true, Druss, because my brother was one of the soldiers. It was
the year before he was killed in the Sathuli campaign. He said that Bardan's
son was a black-bearded giant with the strength of six men.' 'I knew none of this,' said Druss. 'Why did
he never speak of it?' 'Why should he? Perhaps he took no pleasure
for being the son of a monster. Perhaps he did not relish speaking of killing
men with his hands, or beating them unconscious with a tree branch.' 'I didn't know him at all,' whispered
Druss. 'Not at all.' 'I expect he didn't know you either,' said
Shadak, with a sigh. 'It is the curse of parents and children.' 'You have sons?' 'One. He died a week ago at Corialis. He
thought he was immortal.' 'What happened?' 'He went up against Collan; he was cut to
pieces.' Shadak cleared his throat and stood. 'Time for some sleep. It'll be
dawn soon, and I'm not as young as I was.' 'Sleep well,' said Druss. 'I will, laddie. I always do. Go back to
your parents and find something to say.' 'Wait!' called Druss. 'Yes,' answered the swordsman, pausing in
the doorway. 'You were correct in what you said. I
wouldn't have wanted Rowena left in the mountains alone. I spoke in. . .
anger.' Shadak nodded. 'A man is only as strong as
that which makes him angry. Remember that, laddie.' * Shadak could not sleep. He sat in the wide
leather chair beside the hearth, his long legs stretched out before him, his
head resting on a cushion,.his body relaxed. But his mind was in turmoil -
images, memories flashing into thoughts. He saw again the Sathuli cemetery, Jonacin
stripped to the waist, a broad-bladed tulwar in his hands and a small iron
buckler strapped to his left forearm. 'Do you feel fear, Drenai?' asked Jonacin.
Shadak did not answer. Slowly he unstrapped his baldric, then lifted clear his
heavy woollen shirt. The sun was warm on his back, the mountain air fresh in
his lungs. You are going to die today, said the voice of his soul. And then the duel began. Jonacin drew first
blood, a narrow cut appearing on Shadak's chest. More than a thousand Sathuli
onlookers, standing around the perimeter of the cemetery, cheered as the blood
began to flow. Shadak leapt back. 'Not going to try for the ear?' he asked
conversationally. Jonacin gave an angry growl, and launched a new attack.
Shadak blocked a thrust, then thundered a punch to the Sathuli's face. It
glanced from his cheekbone, but the man staggered. Shadak followed up with a
disembowelling thrust and the Sathuli swayed to his right, the blade slashing
the skin of his waist. Now it was Jonacin's turn to jump backwards. Blood
gushed from the shallow wound in his side; he touched the cut with his fingers,
staring down amazed. 'Yes,' said Shadak, 'you bleed too. Come to me. Bleed some
more.' Jonacin screamed and rushed forward but
Shadak side-stepped and clove his sabre through the Sathuli's neck. As the
dying man fell to the ground Shadak felt a tremendous sense of relief, and a
surging realisation. He was alive! But his career was ruined. The treaty talks
came to nothing, and his commission was revoked upon his return to Drenan. Then Shadak had found his true vocation:
Shadak the Hunter. Shadak the Tracker. Outlaws, killers, renegades - he hunted
them all, following like a wolf on the trail. In all the years since the fight with
Jonacin he had never again known such fear. Until today, when the young axeman
had stepped into the sunlight. He is young and untrained. I would have
killed him, he told himself. But then he pictured again the ice-blue
eyes and the shining axe. * Druss sat under the stars. He was tired,
but he could not sleep. A fox moved out into the open, edging towards a corpse.
Druss threw a stone at it and the creature slunk away . . . but not far. By tomorrow the crows would be feasting
here, and the other carrion beasts would tear at the dead flesh. Only hours ago
this had been a living community, full of people enjoying their own hopes and
dreams. Druss stood and walked along the main street of the settlement, past
the home of the baker, whose body was stretched out in the doorway with his
wife beside him. The smithy was open, the fires still glowing faintly. There
were three bodies here. Tetrin the Smith had managed to kill two of the
raiders, clubbing them down with his forge hammer. Tetrin himself lay beside
the long anvil, his throat cut. Druss swung away from the scene. What was it for? Slaves and gold. The
raiders cared nothing for the dreams of other men. 'I will make you pay,' said
Druss. He glanced at the body of the smith. 'I will avenge you. And your sons.
I will avenge you all,' he promised. And he thought of Rowena and his throat
went dry, his heartbeat increasing. Forcing back his fears, he gazed around at
the settlement. In the moonlight the village still seemed
strangely alive, its buildings untouched. Druss wondered at this. Why did the
raiders not put the settlement to the torch? In all the stories he had heard of
such attacks, the plunderers usually fired the buildings. Then he remembered
the troop of Drenai cavalry patrolling the wilderness. A column of smoke would
alert them, were they close. Druss knew then what he had to do. Moving
to the body of Tetrin he hauled it across the street to the meeting hall,
kicking open the door and dragging the corpse inside, laying it at the centre
of the hall. Then he returned to the street and began to gather one by one, all
the dead of the community. He was tired when he began, and bone-weary by the
finish. Forty-four bodies he placed in the long hall, making sure that husbands
were beside wives and their children close. He did not know why he did this,
but it seemed right. Lastly he carried the body of Bress into
the building, and laid it beside Patica. Then he knelt by the woman and, taking
the dead hand in his own, he bowed his head. 'I thank you,' he said quietly,
'for your years of care, and for the love you gave my father. You deserved
better than this, Patica.' With all the bodies accounted for, he began to fetch
wood from the winter store, piling it against the walls and across the bodies.
At last he carried a large barrel of lantern oil from the main storehouse and
poured it over the wood, splashing it to the dry walls. As dawn streaked the eastern sky, he struck
a flame to the pyre and blew it into life. The morning breeze licked at the
flames in the doorway, caught at the tinder beyond, then hungrily roared up the
first wall. Druss stepped back into the street. At
first the blaze made little smoke, but as the fire grew into an inferno a black
column of oily smoke billowed into the morning sky, hanging in the light wind,
flattening and spreading like an earth-born storm cloud. 'You have been working
hard,' said Shadak, moving silently alongside the young axeman. Druss nodded. 'There was no time to bury
them,' he said. 'Now maybe the smoke will be seen.' 'Perhaps,' agreed the hunter, 'but you
should have rested. Tonight you will need your strength.' As Shadak moved away,
Druss watched him; the man's movements were sure and smooth, confident and
strong. Druss admired that - as he admired the way
that Shadak had comforted Tailia in the doorway. Like a father or a brother
might. Druss had known that she needed such consolation, but had been unable to
provide it. He had never possessed the easy touch of a Pilan or a Yorath, and
had always been uncomfortable in the company of women or girls. But not Rowena. He remembered the day when
she and her father had come to the village, a spring day three seasons ago.
They had arrived with several other families, and he had seen Rowena standing
beside a wagon helping to unload furniture. She seemed so frail. Druss had
approached the wagon. 'I'll help if you want,' offered the
fifteen-year-old Druss, more gruffly than he had intended. She turned and
smiled. Such a smile, radiant and friendly. Reaching up, he took hold of the
chair her father was lowering and carried it into the half-built dwelling. He
helped them unload and arrange the furniture, then made to leave. But Rowena
brought him a goblet of water. 'It was kind of you to help us,' she said.
'You are very strong.' He had mumbled some inanity, listened as
she told him her name, and left without telling her his own. That evening she
had seen him sitting by the southern stream and had sat beside him. So close
that he had felt remarkably uncomfortable. 'The land is beautiful, isn't it?' she
said. It was. The mountains were huge, like
snow-haired giants, the sky the colour of molten copper, the setting sun a dish
of gold, the hills bedecked with flowers. But Druss had not seen the beauty
until the moment she observed it. He felt a sense of peace, a calm that settled
over his turbulent spirit in a blanket of warmth. 'I am Druss.' 'I know. I asked your mother where you
were.' 'Why?' 'You are my first friend here.' 'How can we be friends? You do not know
me.' 'Of course I do. You are Druss, the son of
Bress.' 'That is not knowing. I . . . I am not
popular here,' he said, though he did not know why he should admit it so
readily. 'I am disliked.' 'Why do they dislike you?' The question was
innocently asked, and he turned to look at her. Her face was so close that he
blushed. Twisting, he put space between them. 'My ways are rough, I suppose. I don't. . .
talk easily. And I . . . sometimes . . . become angry. I don't understand their
jests and their humour. I like to be . . . alone.' 'Would you like me to go?' 'No! I just . . . I don't know what I am
saying.' He shrugged, and blushed a deeper crimson. 'Shall we be friends then?' she asked him,
holding out her hand. 'I have never had a friend,' he admitted. 'Then take my hand, and we will start now.'
Reaching out, he felt the warmth of her fingers against his calloused palm.
'Friends?' she asked with a smile. 'Friends,' he agreed. She made as if to
withdraw her hand, but he held it for a moment longer. 'Thank you,' he said
softly, as he released his hold. She laughed then. 'Why would you thank me?' He shrugged. 'I don't know. It is just
that. . . you have given me a gift that no one else ever offered. And I do not
take it lightly. I will be your friend, Rowena. Until the stars burn out and
die.' 'Be careful with such promises, Druss. You
do not know where they might lead you.' One of the roof timbers cracked and crashed
into the blaze. Shadak called out to him. 'Better choose yourself a mount,
axeman. It's time to go.' Gathering his axe, Druss turned his gaze
towards the south. Somewhere out there was Rowena. 'I'm on my way,' he whispered. And she heard him. Chapter ThreeThe wagons rolled on through the first
afternoon, and on into the night. At first the captured women were silent,
stunned, disbelieving. Then grief replaced shock, and there were tears. These
were harshly dealt with by the men riding alongside the wagons, who ordered
silence and, when it was not forthcoming, dismounted and leapt aboard the
wagons dealing blows and brutal slaps, and issuing threats of whip and lash. Rowena, her hands tied before her, sat
beside the equally bound Mari. Her friend had swollen eyes, both from weeping
and from a blow that had caught her on the bridge of the nose. 'How are you
feeling now?' Rowena whispered. 'All dead,' came the response. 'They're all
dead.' Mari's eyes gazed unseeing across the wagon, where other young women
were sitting. 'We are alive,' continued Rowena, her voice
low and gentle. 'Do not give up hope, Mari. Druss is alive also. And there is a
man with him - a great hunter. They are following us.' 'All dead,' said Mari. They're all dead.' 'Oh, Mari!' Rowena reached out with her
bound hands but Mari screamed and pulled away. 'Don't touch me!' She swung round to face
Rowena, her eyes fierce and gleaming. 'This was a punishment. For you. You are
a witch! It is all your fault!' 'No, I did nothing!' 'She's a witch,' shouted Mari. The other
women stared. 'She has powers of Second Sight. She knew the raid was coming,
but she didn't warn us.' 'Why did you not tell us?' shouted another
woman. Rowena swung and saw the daughter of Jarin the Baker. 'My father is
dead. My brothers are dead. Why did you not warn us?' 'I didn't know. Not until the last moment!' 'Witch!' screamed Mari. 'Stinking witch!'
She lashed out with her tied hands, catching Rowena on the side of the head.
Rowena fell to her left, into another woman. Fists struck as all around her in
the wagon women surged upright, lashing out with hands and feet. Riders
galloped alongside the wagon and Rowena felt herself lifted clear and flung to
the ground. She hit hard, the breath knocked out of her. 'What is going on here?' she heard someone
yell. 'Witch! Witch! Witch!' chanted the women. Rowena was hauled to her feet, then a
filthy hand caught her by the hair. She opened her eyes and looked up into a
gaunt, scarred face. 'Witch, are you?' grunted the man..'We'll see about that!'
He drew a knife and held it before her, the point resting against the woollen
shirt she wore. 'Witches have three nipples, so it's said,' he told her. 'Leave her be!' came another voice, and a
horseman rode close alongside. The man sheathed his knife. 'I wasn't going to cut her, Harib. Witch or
no, she'll still bring a pretty price.' 'More if she is a witch,' said the
horseman. 'Let her ride behind you.' Rowena gazed up at the rider. His face was
swarthy, his eyes dark, his mouth part hidden by the bronze ear-flaps of his
battle helm. Touching spurs to his mount the rider galloped on. The man holding
her stepped into the saddle, pulling her up behind him. He smelt of stale sweat
and old dirt, but Rowena scarcely noticed it. Glancing at the wagon where her
former friends now sat silently, she felt afresh the terrible sense of loss. Yesterday the world was full of hope. Their
home was almost complete, her husband coming to terms with his restless spirit,
her father relaxed and free from care, Mari preparing for a night of passion
with Pilan. In the space of a few hours it had all
changed. Reaching up, she touched the brooch at her breast . . . And saw the Axeman her husband was
becoming. Deathwalker! Tears flowed then, silently coursing down
her cheeks. * Shadak rode ahead, following the trail,
while Druss and Tailia travelled side by side, the girt on a bay mare, the
young man on a chestnut gelding. Tailia said little for the first hour, which
suited Druss, but as they topped a rise before a long valley she leaned in
close and touched his arm. 'What are you planning?' she asked. 'Why
are we following them?' 'What do you mean?' responded Druss,
nonplussed. 'Well, you obviously can't fight them all;
you'll be killed. Why don't we just ride for the garrison at Padia? Send
troops?' He swung to look at her. Her blue eyes were red-rimmed from crying. 'That's a four-day walk. I don't know how
long it would take to ride - two days at the least, I would think. Then, if the
troop was there - and they may not be - it would take them at least three days
to find the raiders. By then they will be in Vagrian territory, and close to
the borders of Mashrapur. Drenai soldiers have no jurisdiction there.' 'But you can't do anything. There is no
point to this pursuit.' Druss took a deep breath. 'They have
Rowena,' he said. 'And Shadak has a plan.' 'Ah, a plan,' she said derisively, her
full-lipped mouth twisting in a sneer. 'Two men with a plan. Then I suppose I
am safe?' 'You are alive - and free,' Druss told her.
'If you want to ride to Padia, then do so.' Her expression softened and she reached
out, laying her hand on Druss's forearm. 'I know you are brave, Druss; I saw
you kill those raiders and you were magnificent. I don't want to see you die in
some meaningless battle. Rowena wouldn't want it either. There are many of
them, and they're all killers.' 'So am I,' he said. 'And there are fewer
than there were.' 'Well, what happens to me when they cut you
down?' she snapped. 'What chance will I have?' He looked at her for a moment, his eyes
cold. 'None,' he told her. Tailia's eyes widened. 'You never liked me,
did you?' she whispered. 'You never liked any of us.' 'I have no time for this nonsense,' he
said, touching heels to the gelding and moving ahead. He did not look back, and
was not surprised when he heard the sound of her horse galloping off towards
the north. A few minutes later Shadak rode up from the
south. 'Where is she?' asked the hunter, letting go of the reins of the two
horses he was leading and allowing them to wander close by, cropping the long
grass. 'Riding for Padia,' answered Druss. The
hunter said nothing for a moment, but he gazed towards the north where Tailia
could be seen as a tiny figure in the distance. 'You'll not talk her out of
it,' Druss said. 'Did you send her away?' 'No. She thinks we are both dead men, and
she doesn't want to risk being taken by the slavers.' 'That's a hard point to argue with,' agreed
Shadak. Then he shrugged. 'Ah well, she chose her own road. Let us hope it was
a wise one.' 'What of the raiders?' asked Druss, all
thoughts of Tailia gone from his mind. 'They rode through the night, and are
heading due south. I think they will make camp by the Tigren, some thirty miles
from here. There is a narrow valley opening on to a bowl-shaped canyon. It's
been used by slavers for years - and horse thieves, cattle stealers and
renegades. It is easily defendable.' 'How long until we reach them?' 'Some time after midnight. We'll move on
for two more hours, then we'll rest and eat before switching horses.' 'I don't need a rest.' 'The horses do,' said Shadak, 'and so do I.
Be patient. It will be a long night, and fraught with peril. And I have to tell
you that our chances are not good. Tailia was right to be concerned for her
safety; we will need more luck than any two men have a right to ask for.' 'Why are you doing this?' asked Druss. 'The
women are nothing to you.' Shadak did not reply and they rode in silence until
the sun was almost at noon. The hunter spotted a small grove of trees to the
east and turned his horse; the two men dismounted in the shade of several
spreading elms beside a rock pool. 'How many did you kill back there?' he
asked Druss as they sat in the shade. 'Six,' answered the axeman, taking a strip
of dried beef from the pouch at his side and tearing off a chunk. 'You ever kill men before?' 'No.' 'Six is . . . impressive. What did you
use?' Druss chewed for a moment, then swallowed. 'Felling-axe and a hatchet.
Oh. . . and one of their daggers,' he said at last. 'And my hands.' 'And you have had no training in combat?' 'No.' Shadak shook his head. Talk me through the
fights - everything you can remember.' Druss did so, Shadak listened in
silence, and when the axeman had finished his tale the hunter smiled. 'You are
a rare young man. You positioned yourself well, in front of the fallen tree.
That was a good move - the first of many, it seems. But the most impressive is
the last. How did you know the swordsman would jump to your left?' 'He saw I had an axe and that I was
right-handed. In normal circumstances the axe would have been raised over my
left shoulder and pulled down towards the right. Therefore he moved to his
right - my left.' 'That is cool thinking for a man in combat.
I think there is a great deal of your grandfather in you.' 'Don't say that!' growled Druss. 'He was
insane.' 'He was also a brilliant fighting man. Yes,
he was evil. But that does not lessen his courage and his skills.' 'I am my own man,' said Druss. 'What I have
is mine.' 'I do not doubt it. But you have great
strength, good timing and a warrior's mind. These are gifts that pass from
father to son, and on through the line. But know this, laddie, there are
responsibilities that you must accept.' 'Like what?' 'Burdens that separate the hero from the
rogue.' 'I don't know what you mean.' 'It comes back to the question you asked
me, about the women. The true warrior lives by a code. He has to. For each man
there are different perspectives, but at the core they are the same: Never
violate a woman, nor harm a child. Do not lie, cheat or steal. These things are
for lesser men. Protect the weak against the evil strong. And never allow
thoughts of gain to lead you into the pursuit of evil.' 'This is your code?' asked Druss. 'It is. And there is more, but I shall not
bore you with it.' 'I am not bored. Why do you need such a
code to live by?' Shadak laughed. 'You will understand,
Druss, as the years go by.' 'I want to understand now,' said the
younger man. 'Of course you do. That is the curse of the
young, they want it all now. No. Rest a while. Even your prodigious strength
will fail after a time. Sleep a little. And wake refreshed. It will be a long
-and bloody - night.' * The moon was high, and a quarter full in a
cloudless sky. Silver light bathed the mountains, rippling on the river below,
making it seem of molten metal. Three camp-fires burned and Druss could just
make out the movement of men in the flickering light. The women were huddled
between two wagons; there was no fire near them, but guards patrolled close by.
To the north of the wagons, around thirty paces from the women, was a large
tent. It gleamed yellow-gold, like a great lantern, shimmering shadows being
cast on the inside walls; there was obviously a brazier within, and several
lamps. Shadak moved silently alongside the axeman,
beckoning him back. Druss edged from the slope, returning to the glade where
the horses were tethered. 'How many did you count?' asked Shadak,
keeping his voice low. 'Thirty-four, not including those inside
the tent.' There are two men there, Harib Ka and
Collan. But I make it thirty-six outside. They have placed two men by the
river-bank to prevent any of the women trying to swim to safety.' 'When do we go in?' asked Druss. 'You are very anxious to fight, laddie. But
I need you to have a cool head down there. No baresark warfare.' 'Do not concern yourself about me, hunter.
I merely want my wife back.' Shadak nodded. 'I understand that, but now
I want you to consider something. What if she has been raped?' Druss's eyes gleamed, his fingers
tightening on the axe haft. 'Why do you ask this now?' 'It is certain that some of the women will
have been violated. It is the way of men such as these to take their pleasures
where they want them. How cool do you feel now?' Druss swallowed back his rising anger.
'Cool enough. I am not a baresark, Shadak. I know this. And I will follow your
plan to the last detail, live or die, win or lose.' 'Good. We will move two hours before dawn.
Most of them will be deeply asleep by then. Do you believe in the gods?' 'I never saw one - so no.' .Shadak grinned. 'Neither do I. It puts
praying for divine help out of the question, I suppose.' Druss was silent for a moment. 'Tell me
now,' he said at last, 'why you need a code to live by.' Shadak's face was ghostly in the moonlight,
the expression suddenly stern and forbidding. Then he relaxed and turned to
gaze down at the camp of the raiders. 'Those men down there have only one code.
It is simple: Do what you will is the whole of the law. Do you
understand?' 'No,' admitted Druss. 'It means that whatever their strength can
obtain is rightfully theirs. If another man holds something they desire they
kill the other man. This is right in their minds; this is the law the world
offers - the law of the wolf. But you and I are no different from them, Druss.
We have the same desires, the same perceived needs. If we are attracted to a
woman, why should we not have her, regardless of her opinions? If another man
has wealth, why should we not take it, if we are stronger, deadlier than he? It
is an easy trap to fall into. Collan was once an officer in the Drenai lancers.
He comes from a good family; he took the Oath as we all did, and when he said
the words he probably believed them. But in Drenan he met a woman he wanted
desperately, and she wanted him. But she was married. Collan murdered her
husband. That was his first step on the road to Perdition; after that the other
steps were easy. Short of money, he became a mercenary - fighting for gold in
any cause, right or wrong, good or evil. He began to see only what was good for
Collan. Villages were there merely for him to raid. Harib Ka is a Ventrian
nobleman, distantly related to the Royal House. His story is similar. Both
lacked the Iron Code. I am not a good man, Druss, but the Code holds me to the
Way of the Warrior.' 'I can understand,' said Druss, 'that a man
will seek to protect what is his, and not steal or kill for gain. But it does
not explain why you risk your life tonight for women you do not know.' 'Never back away from an enemy, Druss.
Either fight or surrender. It is not enough to say I will not be evil.
It must be fought wherever it is found. I am hunting Collan, not just for
killing my son but for being what he is. But if necessary I will put off that
hunt tonight in order for the girls to be freed; they are more important.' 'Perhaps,' Druss said, unconvinced. 'For
me, all I want is Rowena and a home in the mountains. I care nothing about
fighting evil.' 'I hope you learn to care,' said Shadak. * Harib Ka could not sleep. The ground was
hard beneath the tent floor and despite the heat from the brazier he felt cold
through to his bones. The girl's face haunted him. He sat up and reached for
the wine-jug. You are drinking too much, he told himself. Stretching, he poured
a full goblet of red wine, draining it in two swallows. Then he pushed back his
blankets and rose. His head ached. He sat down on a canvas stool and refilled
his goblet. What have you become? whispered a voice in his mind. He rubbed at his eyes, his thoughts
returning to the academy and his days with Bodasen and the young Prince. 'We will change the world,' said the
Prince. 'We will feed the poor and ensure employment for all. And we will drive
the raiders from Ventria, and establish a kingdom of peace and prosperity.' Harib Ka gave a dry laugh and sipped his
wine. Heady days, a time of youth and optimism with its talk of knights and brave
deeds, great victories and the triumph of the Light over the Dark. 'There is no Light and Dark,' he said
aloud. 'There is only Power.' He thought then of the first girl - what
was her name, Mari? Yes. Compliant, obedient to his desires, warm, soft. She had
cried out with pleasure at his touch. No. She had pretended to enjoy his coarse
love-making. 'I'll do anything for you - but don't hurt me.' Don't hurt me. The chill winds of autumn rippled the tent
walls. Within two hours of enjoying Mari he had felt in need of a second woman,
and had chosen the hazel-eyed witch. That was a mistake. She had entered his
tent, rubbing at her chafed wrists, her eyes large and sorrowful. 'You intend to rape me?' she had asked him
quietly. He had smiled. 'Not necessarily. That is
your choice. What is your name?' 'Rowena,' she told him. 'And how can it be
my choice?' 'You can give yourself to me, or you can
fight me. Either way the result will be the same. So why not enjoy the
love-making?' 'Why do you speak of love?' 'What?' 'There is no love in this. You have
murdered those I have loved. And now you seek to pleasure yourself at the
expense of what dignity I have left.' He strode towards her, gripping her upper
arms. 'You are not here to debate with me, whore! You are here to do as you are
told.' 'Why do you call me a whore? Does it make
your actions more simple for you? Oh, Harib Ka, how would Rajica view your
actions?' He reeled back as if struck. 'What do you
know of Rajica?' 'Only that you loved her - and that she
died in your arms.' 'You are a witch!' 'And you are a lost man, Harib Ka.
Everything you once held dear has been sold - your pride, your honour, your
love of life.' 'I will not be judged by you,' he said, but
he made no move to silence her. 'I do not judge you,' she told him. 'I pity
you. And I tell you this: unless you release me and the other women, you will
die.' 'You are a seer also?' he said, trying to
mock. 'Are the Drenai cavalry close, witch? Is there an army waiting to fall
upon me and my men? No. Do not seek to threaten me, girl. Whatever else I may
have lost I am still a warrior and, with the possible exception of Collan, the
finest swordsman you will ever see. I do not fear death. No. Sometimes I long
for it.' He felt his passion ebbing away. 'So tell me, witch, what is this
peril I face?' 'His name is Druss. He is my husband.' 'We killed all the men in the village.' 'No. He was in the woods, felling timbers
for the palisade.' 'I sent six men there.' 'But they have not returned,' Rowena
pointed out. 'You are saying he killed them all?' 'He did,' she told him softly, 'and now he
is coming for you.' 'You make him sound like a warrior of
legend,' said Harib uneasily. 'I could send men back to kill him.' 'I hope you do not.' 'You fear for his life?' 'No, I would mourn for theirs.' She sighed. 'Tell me of him. Is he a swordsman? A
soldier?' 'No, he is the son of a carpenter. But once
I dreamt I saw him on a mountainside. He was black-bearded and his axe was
smeared with blood. And before him were hundreds of souls. They stood mourning
their lives. More flowed from his axe, and they wailed. Men of many nations,
billowing like smoke until broken by the breeze. All slain by Druss. Mighty
Druss. The Captain of the Axe. The Deathwalker.' 'And this is your husband?' 'No, not yet. This is the man he will
become if you do not free me. This is the man you created when you slew his
father and took me prisoner. You will not stop him, Harib Ka.' He sent her away then, and ordered the
guards to let her remain unmolested. Collan had come to him and had laughed at
his misery. 'By Missael, Harib, she is just a village wench and now a slave.
She is property. Our property. And her gift makes her worth ten times
the price we will receive for any of the others. She is attractive and young -
I'd say around a thousand gold pieces' worth. There is that Ventrian merchant,
Kabuchek; he's always looking for seers and fortune-tellers. I'll wager he'd
pay a thousand.' Harib sighed. 'Aye, you are right, my
friend. Take her. We'll need coin upon our arrival. But don't touch her,
Collan,' he warned the handsome swordsman. 'She really does have the Gift, and
she will see into your soul.' 'There is nothing to see,' answered Collah,
with a harsh, forced smile. * Druss edged his way along the river-bank,
keeping close to the undergrowth and pausing to listen. There were no sounds
save the rustling of autumn leaves in the branches above, no movement apart
from the occasional swooping flight of bat or owl. His mouth was dry, but he
felt no fear. Across the narrow river he saw a white
jutting boulder, cracked down the centre. According to Shadak, the first of the
sentries was positioned almost opposite. Moving carefully Druss crept back into
the woods, then angled towards the river-bank, timing his approach by the wind
which stirred the leaves above him, the rustling in the trees masking the sound
of his movements. The sentry was sitting on a rock no more
than ten feet to Druss's right, and he had stretched out his right leg. Taking
Snaga in his left hand, Druss wiped his sweating palm on his trews, his eyes
scanning the undergrowth for the second sentry. He could see no one. Druss waited, his back against a broad
tree. From a little distance to the left came a harsh, gurgling sound. The
sentry heard it too, and rose. 'Bushin! What are you doing there, you
fool?' Druss stepped out behind the man. 'He is
dying,' he said. The man spun, hand snaking down for the
sword at his hip. Snaga flashed up and across, the silver blade entering the
neck just below the ear and shearing through sinew and bone. The head toppled
to the right, the body to the left. Shadak stepped from the undergrowth. 'Well
done,' he whispered. 'Now, when I send the women down to you, get them to wade
across by the boulder, then head north up into the canyon to the cave.' 'We've been over this many times,' Druss
pointed out. Ignoring the comment, Shadak laid a hand on
the younger man's shoulder. 'Now, whatever happens, do not come back into the
camp. Stay with the women. There is only one path up to the cave, but several
leading from it to the north. Get the women moving on the north-west route. You
hold the path.' Shadak faded back into the undergrowth and
Druss settled down to wait. * Shadak moved carefully to the edge of the
camp. Most of the women were asleep, and a guard was sitting by them; his head
was resting against a wagon wheel, and Shadak guessed he was dozing. Unbuckling
his sword-belt, he moved forward on his belly, drawing himself on his elbows
until he reached the wagon. Slipping his hunting-knife from the sheath at his
hip, Shadak came up behind the man - his left hand reached through the wheel,
fingers closing on the sentry's throat. The knife rammed home into the man's
back; his leg jerked once, then he was still. Moving back from beneath the wagon, Shadak
came to the first girl. She was sleeping close to several other women, huddled
together for warmth. He clamped a hand over her mouth and shook her. She awoke
in a panic and started to struggle. 'I am here to rescue you!' hissed Shadak.
'One of your villagers is by the river-bank and he will lead you to safety. You
understand? When I release you, slowly wake the others. Head south to the
river. Druss, the son of Bress, is waiting there. Nod if you understand me.' He felt her head move against his hand.
'Good. Make sure none of the others make a noise. You must move slowly. Which
one is Rowena?' 'She is not with us,' whispered the girl.
They took her away.' 'Where?' 'One of the leaders, a man with a scarred
cheek, he rode out with her just after dusk.' Shadak swore softly. There was no time for
a second plan. 'What is your name?' 'Mari.' 'Well, Mari, get the others moving - and
tell Druss to follow the original plan,' Shadak moved away from the girl, gathered
his swords and belted them to his waist. Then he stepped out into the open and
strolled casually towards the tent. Only a few men were awake, and they paid
little heed to the figure moving through the shadows so confidently. Lifting the tent-flap he swiftly entered,
drawing his right-hand sword as he did so. Harib Ka was sitting on a canvas
chair with a goblet of wine in his left hand, a sabre in his right. 'Welcome to
my hearth, Wolf-man,' he said, with a smile. He drained the goblet and stood.
Wine had run into his dark, forked beard, making it shine in the lantern light
as if oiled. 'May I offer you a drink?' 'Why not?' answered Shadak, aware that if
they began to fight too soon the noise of clashing steel would wake the other
raiders and they would see the women fleeing. 'You are far from home,' remarked Harib Ka. 'These days I have no home,' Shadak told
him. Harib Ka filled a second goblet and passed
it to the hunter. 'You are here to kill me?' 'I came for Collan. I understand he has
gone?' 'Why Collan?' asked Harib Ka, his dark eyes
glittering in the golden light. 'He killed my son in Corialis.' 'Ah, the blond boy. Fine swordsman, but too
reckless.' 'A vice of the young.' Shadak sipped his
wine, his anger controlled like an armourer's fire, hot but contained. 'That vice killed him,' observed Shadak.
'Collan is very skilled. Where did you leave the young villager, the one with
the axe?' 'You are well informed.' 'Only a few hours ago his wife stood where
you now stand; she told me he was coming. She's a witch - did you know that?' 'No. Where is she?' 'On her way to Mashrapur with Collan. When
do you want the fight to begin?' 'As soon as . . .' began Shadak, but even
as he was speaking Harib attacked, his sabre slashing for Shadak's throat. The
hunter ducked, leaned to the left and kicked out at Harib's knee. The Ventrian
crashed to the floor and Shadak's sword touched the skin of Harib's throat.
'Never fight drunk,' he said softly. 'I'll remember that. What now?' 'Now tell me where Collan stays in
Mashrapur.' 'The White Bear Inn. It's in the western
quarter.' 'I know that. Now, what is your life worth,
Harib Ka?' To the Drenai authorities? Around a thousand
gold pieces. To me? I have nothing to offer - until I sell my slaves.' 'You have no slaves.' 'I can find them again. Thirty women on
foot in the mountains will pose me no problem.' 'Hunting is not easy with a slit throat,'
pointed out Shadak, adding an extra ounce of pressure to the sword-blade, which
pricked the skin of Harib's neck. 'True,' agreed the Ventrian, glancing up.
'What do you suggest?' Just as Shadak was about to answer he caught the gleam
of triumph in Harib's eyes and he swung round. But too late. Something cold, hard and metallic crashed
against his skull. And the world spun into darkness. * Pain brought Shadak back to consciousness,
harsh slaps to his face that jarred his teeth. His eyes opened. His arms were
being held by two men who had hauled him to his knees, and Harib Ka was
squatting before him. 'Did you think me so stupid that I would
allow an assassin to enter my tent unobserved? I knew someone was following us.
And when the four men I left in the pass did not return I guessed it had to be
you. Now I have questions for you, Shadak. Firstly, where is the young farmer
with the axe; and secondly, where are my women?' Shadak said nothing. One of the men holding
him crashed a fist against the hunter's ear; lights blazed before Shadak's eyes
and he sagged to his right. He watched Harib Ka rise and move to the brazier
where the coals had burned low. 'Get him outside to a fire,' ordered the
leader. Shadak was hauled to his feet and half carried out into the camp. Most
of the men were still asleep. His captors pushed him to his knees beside a
camp-fire and Harib Ka drew his dagger, pushing the blade into the flames. 'You
will tell me what I wish to know,' he said, 'or I will burn out your eyes and
then set you free in the mountains.' Shadak tasted blood on his tongue, and fear
in his belly. But still he said nothing. An unearthly scream tore through the
silence of the night, followed by the thunder of hooves. Harib swung to see
forty terrified horses galloping towards the camp. One of the men holding the
hunter turned also, his grip slackening. Shadak surged upright, head butting
the raider who staggered back. The second man, seeing the stampeding horses
closing fast, released his hold and ran for the safety of the wagons. Harib Ka
drew his sabre and leapt at Shadak, but the first of the horses cannoned into
him, spinning him from his feet. Shadak spun on his heel to face the terrified
beasts and began to wave his arms. The maddened horses swerved around him and
galloped on through the camp. Some men, still wrapped in their blankets, were
trampled underfoot. Others tried to halt the charging beasts. Shadak ran back
to Harib's tent and found his swords. Then he stepped out into the night. All
was chaos. The fires had been scattered by pounding
hooves and several corpses were lying on the open ground. Some twenty of the
horses had been halted and calmed; the others were running on through the
woods, pursued by many of the warriors. A second scream sounded and despite his
years of experience in warfare and battle, Shadak was astonished by what
followed. Alone, the young woodsman had attacked the
camp. The awesome axe shone silver in the moonlight, slashing and cleaving into
the surprised warriors. Several took up swords and ran at him; they died in
moments. But he could not survive. Shadak saw the
raiders group together, a dozen men spread out in a semi-circle around the
black-garbed giant, Harib Ka among them. The hunter, his two short swords
drawn, ran towards them yelling the battle-cry of the Lancers. 'Ayiaa! Ayiaa!'
At that moment arrows flashed from the woods. One took a raider in the throat,
a second glanced from a helm to plunge home into an unprotected shoulder.
Combined with the sudden battle-cry, the attack made the raiders pause, many of
them backing away and scanning the tree line. At that moment Druss charged the
enemy centre, cutting to left and right. The raiders fell back before him,
several tumbling to the ground, tripping over their fellows. The mighty
blood-smeared axe clove into them, rising and falling with a merciless rhythm. Just as Shadak reached them, the raiders
broke and fled. More arrows sailed after them. Harib Ka ran for one of the horses,
grabbing its mane and vaulting to its bare back. The animal reared, but he held
on. Shadak hurled his right-hand sword, which lanced into Harib's shoulder. The
Ventrian sagged, then fell to the ground as the horse galloped away 'Druss!' shouted Shadak. 'Druss!' The
axeman was pursuing the fleeing raiders, but he stopped at the edge of the
trees and swung back. Harib Ka was on his knees, trying to pull the
brass-hilted sword from his body. The axeman stalked back to where Shadak was
waiting. He was blood-drenched and his eyes glittered. 'Where is she?' he asked
the hunter. 'Collan took her to Mashrapur; they left at
dusk.' Two women emerged from the trees, carrying
bows and quivers of arrows. 'Who are they?' asked Shadak. 'The Tanner's daughters. They did a lot of
hunting for the village. I gave them the bows the sentries had with them.' The tallest of the women approached Druss.
'They are fleeing into the night. I don't think they'll come back now. You want
us to follow them?' 'No, bring the others down and gather the
horses.' The axeman turned towards the kneeling figure of Harib Ka. 'Who is
this?' Druss asked Shadak. 'One of the leaders.' Without a word Druss clove the axe through
Harib's neck. 'Not any more,' he observed. 'Indeed not,' agreed Shadak, stepping to
the still quivering corpse and pulling free his sword. He gazed around the
clearing and counted the bodies. 'Nineteen. By all the gods, Druss, I can't
believe you did that!' 'Some were trampled by the horses I
stampeded, others were killed by the girls.' Druss turned and stared out over
the campsite. Somewhere to his left a man groaned and the tallest of the girls
ran to him, plunging a dagger into his throat. Druss turned back to Shadak.
'Will you see the women get safely to Padia?' 'You're going on to Mashrapur?' 'I'm going to find her.' Shadak laid his hand on the young man's
shoulder. 'I hope that you do, Druss. Seek out the White Bear Inn - that's
where Collan will stay. But be warned, my friend. In Mashrapur, Rowena is his
property. That is their law.' 'This is mine,' answered Druss, raising the
double-headed axe. Shadak took the young man's arm and led him
back to Harib's tent where he poured himself a goblet of wine and drained it.
One of Harib's linen tunics was draped over a small chest and Shadak threw it
to Druss. 'Wipe off the blood. You look like a demon.' Druss smiled grimly and
wiped his face and arms, then cleaned the double blades. 'What do you know of Mashrapur?' asked
Shadak. The axeman shrugged. 'It is an independent
state, ruled by an exiled Ventrian Prince. That's all.' 'It is a haven for thieves and slavers,'
said Shadak. The laws are simple: those with gold to offer bribes are
considered fine citizens. It matters not where the gold comes from. Collan is
respected there; he owns property and dines with the Emir.' 'So?' 'So if you march in and kill him, you will
be taken and executed. It is that simple.' 'What do you suggest?' 'There is a small town around twenty miles
from here, due south. There is a man there, a friend of mine. Go to him, tell
him I sent you. He is young and talented. You won't like him, Druss; he is a
fop and a pleasure-seeker. He has no morals. But it will make him invaluable in
Mashrapur.' 'Who is this man?' 'His name is Sieben. He's a poet, a
saga-teller, and he performs at palaces; he's very good as a matter of fact. He
could have been rich. But he spends most of his time trying to bed every pretty
young woman who comes into his line of vision. He never concerns himself
whether they are married or single - that has brought him many enemies.' 'Already I don't like the sound of him.' Shadak chuckled. 'He has good qualities. He
is a loyal friend, and he is ridiculously fearless. A good man with a knife.
And he knows Mashrapur. Trust him.' 'Why should he help me?' 'He owes me a favour.' Shadak poured a
second goblet of wine and passed it to the young man. Druss sipped it, then drained the goblet.
'This is good. What is it?' 'Lentrian Red. Around five years old, I'd
say. Not the best, but good enough on a night like this.' 'I can see that a man could get a taste for
it,' Druss agreed. Chapter FourSieben was enjoying himself. A small crowd
had gathered around the barrel, and three men had already lost heavily. The
green crystal was small and fitted easily under one of the three walnut shells.
'I'll move a little more slowly,' the young poet told the tall, bearded warrior
who had just lost four silver pieces. His slender hands slid the shells around
the smooth barrel top, halting them in a line across the centre. 'Which one?
And take your time, my friend, for that emerald is worth twenty golden raq.' The man sniffed loudly and scratched at his
beard with a dirty finger. 'That one,' he said at last, pointing to the centre
shell. Sieben flipped the shell. There was nothing beneath it. Moving his hand
to the right he covered a second shell, expertly palmed the stone under it and
showed it to the audience. 'So close,' he said, with a bright smile.
The warrior swore, then turned and thrust his way through the crowd. A short
swarthy man was next; he had body odour that could have felled an ox. Sieben
was tempted to let him win. The fake emerald was only worth a tenth of what he
had already cheated from the crowd. But he was enjoying himself too much. The swarthy
man lost three silver pieces. The crowd parted and a young warrior eased
his way to the front as Sieben glanced up. The newcomer was dressed in black,
with shoulder guards of shining silver steel. He wore a helm on which was
blazoned a motif of two skulls on either side of a silver axe. And he was
carrying a double-headed axe. 'Try your luck?' asked Sieben, gazing up into the
eyes of winter blue. 'Why not?' answered the warrior, his voice
deep and cold. He placed a silver piece on the barrel head. The poet's hands
moved with bewildering speed, gliding the shells in elaborate figure eights. At
last he stopped. 'I hope you have a keen eye, my friend,'
said Sieben. 'Keen enough,' said the axeman, and leaning
forward he placed a huge finger on the central shell. 'It is here,' he said. 'Let us see,' said the poet, reaching out,
but the axeman pushed his hand away. 'Indeed we shall,' he said. Slowly he
flipped the shells to the left and right of the centre. Both were empty. 'I
must be right,' he said, his pale eyes locked to Sieben's face. You may show
us.' Lifting his finger, he gestured to the poet. Sieben forced a smile and palmed the crystal under the shell as he
flipped it. 'Well done, my friend. You are indeed hawk-eyed.' The crowd
applauded and drifted away. 'Thank you for not exposing me,' said
Sieben, rising and gathering his silver. 'Fools and money are like ice and heat,'
quoted the young man. 'They cannot live together. You are Sieben?' 'I might be,' answered the other
cautiously. 'Who is asking?' 'Shadak sent me.' 'For what purpose?' 'A favour you owe him.' 'That is between the two of us. What has it
to do with you?' The warrior's face darkened. 'Nothing at
all,' he said, then turned away and strode towards the tavern on the other side
of the street. As Sieben watched him go, a young woman approached from the
shadows. 'Did you earn enough to buy me a fine
necklace?' she asked. He swung and smiled. The woman was tall and shapely,
raven-haired and full-lipped; her eyes were tawny brown, her smile an enchantment.
She stepped into his embrace and winced. 'Why do you have to wear so many
knives?' she asked, moving back from him and tapping the brown leather baldric
from which hung four diamond-shaped throwing-blades. 'Affectation, my love. I'll not wear them
tonight. And as for your necklace - I'll have it with me.' Taking her hand he
kissed it. 'However, at the moment, duty calls.' 'Duty, my poet? What would you know of
duty?' He chuckled. 'Very little - but I always
pay my debts; it is my last finger-hold on the cliff of respectability. I will
see you later.' He bowed, then walked across the street. The tavern was an old, three-storeyed
building with a high gallery on the second floor overlooking a long room with
open fires at both ends. There was a score of bench tables and seats and a
sixty-foot brass-inlaid bar behind which six tavern maids were serving ale,
mead and mulled wine. The tavern was crowded, unusually so, but this was market
day and fanners and cattle-breeders from all over the region had gathered for
the auctions. Sieben stepped to the long bar, where a young tavern maid with
honey-blonde hair smiled and approached him. 'At last you visit me,' she said. 'Who could stay away from you for long,
dear heart?' he said with a smile, straining to remember her name. 'I will be finished here by second watch,'
she told him. 'Where's my ale?' shouted a burly farmer,
some way to the left. 'I was before you, goat-face!' came another
voice. The girl gave a shy smile to Sieben, then moved down the bar to quell
the threatened row. 'Here I am now, sirs, and I've only one
pair of hands. Give me a moment, won't you?' Sieben strolled through the crowds, seeking
out the axeman, and found him sitting alone by a narrow, open window. Sieben
eased on to the bench alongside him. 'Might be a good idea to start again,'
said the poet. 'Let me buy you a jug of ale.' 'I buy my own ale,' grunted the axeman.
'And don't sit so close.' Sieben stood and moved to the far side of
the table, seating himself opposite the young man. 'Is that more to your
liking?' he asked, with heavy sarcasm. 'Aye, it is. Are you wearing perfume?' 'Scented oil on the hair. You like it?' The axeman shook his head, but refrained
from comment. He cleared his throat. 'My wife has been taken by slavers. She is
in Mashrapur.' Sieben sat back and gazed at the young man.
'I take it you weren't home at the time,' he said. 'No. They took all the women. I freed them.
But Rowena wasn't with them; she was with someone called Collan. He left before
I got to the other raiders.' 'Before you got to the other raiders?'
repeated Sieben. 'Isn't there a little more to it?' 'To what?' 'How did you free the other women?' 'What in Hell's name does that matter? I
killed a few of them and the rest ran away. But that's not the point. Rowena
wasn't there - she's in Mashrapur.' Sieben raised a slender hand. 'Slow down,
there's a good fellow. Firstly, how does Shadak come into this? And secondly,
are you saying that you single-handedly attacked Harib Ka and his killers?' 'Not single-handedly. Shadak was there;
they were going to torture him. Also I had two girls with me; good archers.
Anyway, all that is past. Shadak said you could help me to find Rowena and come
up with a plan to rescue her.' 'From Collan?' 'Yes, from Collan,' stormed the axeman.
'Are you deaf or stupid?' Sieben's dark eyes narrowed and he leaned
forward. 'You have an appealing way of asking for help, my large and ugly
friend. Good luck with your quest!' He rose and moved back through the throng,
emerging into the late afternoon sunlight. Two men were lounging close to the
entrance, a third was whittling a length of wood with a razor-sharp
hunting-knife. The first of the men moved in front of the
poet; it was the warrior who had first lost money at the barrel head. 'Get your
emerald back, did you?' 'No,' answered Sieben, still angry. 'What a
bumptious, ill-bred boor!' 'Not a friend, then?' 'Hardly. I don't even know his name. More
to the point, I don't want to.' 'It's said you're crafty with those
knives,' said the warrior, pointing to the throwing-blades. 'Is it true?' 'Why do you ask?' 'Could be you'll get the emerald back if
you are.' 'You plan to attack him? Why? As far as I
could see he carries no wealth.' 'It's not his wealth!' snapped the second
warrior. Sieben stepped back as the man's body odour reached him. 'He's a
madman. He attacked our camp two days ago, stampeded our horses. Never did find
my grey. And he killed Harib. Asia's tits! He must have downed a dozen men with
that cursed axe.' 'If he killed a dozen, what makes you think
that three of you can deal with him?' The noxious warrior tapped his nose.
'Surprise. When he steps out, Rafin will ask him a question. As he turns, Zhak
and I will move in and gut him. But you could help. A knife through the eye
would slow him up some, eh?' 'Probably,' agreed Sieben, and he moved
away several paces to seat himself on a hitching rail. He drew a knife from its
sheath and began to clean his nails. 'You with us?' hissed the first man. 'We'll see,' said Sieben. * Druss sat at the table and gazed down at
the shining blades of the axe. He could see his reflection there, cold-eyed and
grim. The features were flat and sullen, the mouth a tight, angry line. He
removed the black helm and laid it on the blades, covering the face in the axe. 'Whenever you speak someone gets angry.'
The words of his father drifted up from the halls
of memory. And it was true. Some men had a knack for friendship, for easy
chatter and simple jests. Druss envied them. Until Rowena had walked into his
life he had believed such qualities were entirely lacking in him. But with her
he felt at ease, he could laugh and joke - and see himself for a moment as
others saw him, huge and bear-like, short-tempered and frightening. 'It was
your childhood, Druss,' Rowena told him one morning, as they sat on the
hillside overlooking the village. 'Your father moved from place to place,
always frightened he would be recognised, never allowing himself to become
close to people. It was easier for him, for he was a man. But it must have been
hard for a boy who never learned how to make friends.' 'I don't need friends,' he said. 'I need you.' The memory of those three softly spoken
words made his heart lurch. A tavern maid passed the table and Druss reached
out and caught her arm. 'Do you have Lentrian Red?' he asked. 'I'll bring you a goblet, sir.' 'Make it a jug.' He drank until his senses swam and his
thoughts became jumbled and confused. He remembered Alarm, and the punch which
broke the man's jaw, and then, after the raid, hauling Alarm's body into the
meeting hall. He had been stabbed through the back by a lance which had snapped
in half in his body. The dead man's eyes had been open. So many of the dead had
open eyes . . . all accusing. 'Why are you alive and we dead?' they asked
him. 'We had families, lives, dreams, hopes. Why should you outlive us?' 'More wine!' he bellowed and a young girl
with honey-blonde hair leaned over the table. 'I think you've had enough, sir. You've
drunk a quart already.' 'All the eyes were open,' he said. 'Old
women, children. The children were the worst. What kind of a man kills a
child?' 'I think you should go home, sir. Have a
little sleep.' 'Home?' He laughed, the sound harsh and
bitter. 'Home to the dead? And what would I tell them? The forge is cold. There
is no smell of fresh-baked bread; no laughter among the children. Just eyes.
No, not even eyes. Just ashes.' 'We heard there was a raid to the north,'
she said. 'Was that your home?' 'Bring me more wine, girl. It helps me.' 'It is a false friend, sir,' she whispered. 'It is the only one I have.' A burly, bearded man in a leather apron
moved in close. 'What does he want?' he asked the girl. 'More wine, sir.' 'Then fetch it for him - if he can pay.' Druss reached into the pouch at his side,
drawing out one of the six silver pieces Shadak had given him. He flipped it to
the innkeeper. 'Well, serve him!' the man ordered the maid. The second jug went the way of the first
and, when it was finished, Druss pushed himself ponderously to his feet. He
tried to don the helm, but it slipped from his fingers and rolled to the floor.
As he bent down, he rammed his brow against the edge of the table. The serving
maid appeared alongside him. 'Let me help you, sir,' she said, scooping up the
helm and gently placing it on his head. 'Thank you,' he said, slowly. He fumbled in
his pouch and gave her a silver piece. 'For . . . your . . . kindness,' he told
her, enunciating the words with care. 'I have a small room at the back, sir. Two
doors down from the stable. It is unlocked; you may sleep there if you wish.' He picked up the axe, but it too fell to
the floor, the prongs of the blades embedding in a wooden plank. 'Go back and
sleep, sir. I'll bring your . . . weapon with me later.' 'He nodded and weaved his way towards the
door. * Pulling open the door, he stepped out into
the fading sunlight, his stomach lurching. Someone spoke from his left, asking
him a question. Druss tried to turn, but stumbled into the man and they both
fell against the wall. He tried to right himself, grabbing the man's shoulder
and heaving himself upright. Through the fog in his mind he heard other men
running in. One of them screamed. Druss lurched back and saw a long-bladed
dagger clatter to the ground. The former wielder was standing alongside him,
his right arm raised unnaturally. Druss blinked. The man's wrist was pinned to
the inn door by a throwing knife. He heard the rasp of swords being drawn.
'Defend yourself, you fool!' came a voice. A swordsman ran at him and Druss stepped in
to meet him, parrying the lunging blade with his forearm and slamming a right
cross to the warrior's chin. The swordsman went down as if poleaxed. Swinging
to meet the second attacker, Druss lost his balance and fell heavily. But in
mid-swing the swordsman also stumbled and Druss lashed out with his foot,
catching his assailant on the heel and catapulting him to the ground. Rolling
to his knees, Druss grabbed the fallen man by the hair and hauled him close,
delivering a bone-crunching head butt to the warrior's nose. The man slumped
forward, unconscious. Druss released him. Another man moved alongside him and Druss
recognised the handsome young poet. 'Gods, you reek of cheap wine,' said
Sieben. 'Who. . . are you?' mumbled Druss, trying
to focus on the man with his arm pinned to the door. 'Miscreants,' Sieben told him, moving
alongside the stricken warrior and levering his knife clear. The man screamed
in pain but Sieben ignored him and returned to the street. 'I think you'd
better come with me, old horse.' Druss remembered little of the walk through
the town, only that he stopped twice to vomit, and his head began to ache
abominably. He awoke at midnight and found himself lying on a porch under the
stars. Beside him was a bucket. He sat up . . . and groaned as the terrible
pounding began in his head. It felt as if an iron band had been riveted to his
brow. Hearing sounds from within the house, he stood and moved to the door.
Then he halted. The sounds were unmistakable. 'Oh, Sieben . . . Oh . . . Oh . . . !' Druss swore and returned to the edge of the
porch. A breath of wind touched his face, bringing with it an unpleasant smell,
and he gazed down at himself. His jerkin was soiled with vomit, and he stank of
stale sweat and travel. To his left was a well. Forcing himself upright, he
walked to it, and slowly raised the bucket. Somewhere deep within his head a
demon began to strike at his skull with a red-hot hammer. Ignoring the pain,
Druss stripped to the waist and washed himself with the cold water. He heard the door open and turned to see a
dark-haired young woman emerge from the house. She looked at him, smiled, then
ran off through the narrow streets. Lifting the bucket, Druss tipped the last
of the contents over his head. 'At the risk of being offensive,' said
Sieben from the doorway, 'I think you need a little soap. Come inside. There's
a fire burning in the hearth and I've heated some water. Gods, it's freezing
out here.' Gathering his clothes, Druss followed the
poet inside. The house was small, only three rooms, all on the ground floor - a
cook-room with an iron stove, a bedroom and a square dining-room with a
stone-built hearth in which a fire was blazing. There was a table with four
wooden chairs and on either side of the hearth were comfort seats of padded
leather stuffed with horsehair. Sieben led him to the cloakroom where he
filled a bowl with hot water. Handing Druss a slab of white soap and a towel,
he opened a cupboard door and removed a plate of sliced beef and a loaf of
bread. 'Come in and eat when you're ready,' said the poet, as he walked back to
the dining-room. Druss scrubbed himself with the soap, which
smelled of lavender, then cleaned his jerkin and dressed. He found the poet
sitting by the fire with his long legs stretched out, a goblet of wine in one
hand. The other slender hand swept through the shoulder-length blond hair,
sweeping it back over his head. Holding it in place, he settled a black leather
headband over his brow; at the centre of the band was a glittering opal. The
poet lifted a small oval mirror and studied himself. 'Ah, what a curse it is to
be so good-looking,' he said, laying aside the mirror. 'Care for a drink?'
Druss felt his stomach heave and shook his head. 'Eat, my large friend. You may
feel as if your stomach will revolt, but it is the best thing for you. Trust
me.' Druss tore off a hunk of bread and sat
down, slowly chewing it. It tasted of ashes and bile, but he finished it
manfully. The poet was right. His stomach settled. The salted beef was harder
to take but, washed down with cool water, he soon began to feel his strength
returning. 'I drank too much,' he said. 'No, really? Two quarts, I understand.' 'I don't remember how much. Was there a
fight?' 'Not much of one, by your standards.' 'Who were they?' 'Some of the raiders you attacked.' 'I should have killed them.' 'Perhaps - but in the state you were in you
should consider yourself lucky to be alive.' Druss filled a clay cup with water and
drained it. 'You helped me, I remember that. Why?' 'A passing whim. Don't let it concern you.
Now, tell me again about your wife and the raid.' To what purpose? It's done. All I care
about is finding Rowena.' 'But you will need my help - otherwise
Shadak wouldn't have sent you to me. And I like to know the kind of man I'm
expected to travel with. You understand? So tell me.' 'There isn't a great deal to tell. The
raiders . . .' 'How many?' 'Forty or so. They attacked our village,
killed all the men, the old women, the children. They took the younger women
prisoner. I was in the woods, felling timber. Some killers came to the woods
and I dealt with them. Then I met Shadak, who was also following them; they
raided a town and killed his son. We freed the women. Shadak was captured. I
stampeded their horses and attacked the camp. That's it.' Sieben shook his head and smiled. 'I think
you could tell the entire history of the Drenai in less time than it takes to
boil an egg. A story-teller you are not, my friend - which is just as well,
since that is my main source of income and I loathe competition.' Druss rubbed his eyes and leaned back in
the chair, resting his head on the high padded leather cushion. The heat from
the fire was soothing and his body was weary beyond anything he had known
before. The days of the chase had taken their toll. He felt himself drifting on
a warm sea. The poet was speaking to him, but his words failed to penetrate. He awoke with the dawn to find the fire was
burned down to a few glowing coals and the house empty. Druss yawned and
stretched, then walked to the kitchen, helping himself to stale bread and a
hunk of cheese. He drank some more water, then heard the main door creak open.
Wandering out, he saw Sieben and a young, blonde woman. The poet was carrying
his axe and his gauntlets. 'Someone to see you, old horse,' said
Sieben, laying the axe in the doorway and tossing the gauntlets to a chair. The
poet smiled and walked back out into the sunlight. The blonde woman approached Druss, smiling
shyly. 'I didn't know where you were. I kept your axe for you.' 'Thank you. You are from the inn.' She was
dressed now in a woollen dress of poor quality, that once had been blue but was
now a pale grey. Her figure was shapely, her face gentle and pretty, her eyes
warm and brown. 'Yes. We spoke yesterday,' she said, moving
to a chair and sitting down with her hands on her knees. 'You seemed . . . very
sad.' 'I am . . . myself now,' he told her
gently. 'Sieben told me your wife was taken by
slavers.' 'I will find her.' 'When I was sixteen raiders attacked our
village. They killed my father and wounded my husband. I was taken, with seven
other girls, and we were sold in Mashrapur. I was there two years. I escaped
one night, with another girl, and we fled into the wilderness. She died there,
killed by a bear, but I was found by a company of pilgrims on their way to
Lentria. I was almost dead from starvation. They helped me, and I made my way
home.''Why are you telling me all this?' asked Druss softly, seeing the sadness
in her eyes. 'My husband had married someone else. And
my brother, Loric, who had lost an arm in the raid, told me I was no longer
welcome. He said I was a fallen woman, and if I had any pride I would
have taken my own life. So I left.' Druss reached out and took her hand. 'Your
husband was a worthless piece of dung, and your brother likewise. But I ask
again, why are you telling me this?' 'When Sieben told me you were hunting for
your wife . . . it made me remember. I used to dream Karsk was coming for me.
But a slave has no rights, you know, in Mashrapur. Anything the Lord wishes, he
can have. You cannot refuse. When you find your . . .lady. . .she may well have
been roughly used.' She fell silent and sat staring at her hands. 'I don't know
how to say what I mean . . .When I was a slave I was beaten, I was humiliated.
I was raped and abused. But nothing was as bad as the look on my husband's face
when he saw me, or the disgust in my brother's voice when he cast me out.' Still holding to her hand, Druss leaned in
towards her. 'What is your name?' 'Sashan.' 'If I had been your husband, Sashan, I
would have followed you. I would have found you. And when I did I would have
taken you in my arms and brought you home. As I will bring Rowena home.' 'You will not judge her?' He smiled. 'No more than I judge you, save
to say that you are a brave woman and any man - any true man - would be proud
to have you walk beside him.' She reddened and rose. 'If wishes were
horses, then beggars would ride,' she said, then turned away and walked to the
doorway. She looked back once, but said nothing; then she stepped from the
house. Sieben entered. 'That was well said, old
horse. Very well said. You know, despite your awful manners and your lack of
conversation, I think I like you. Let's go to Mashrapur and find your lady.' Druss looked hard at the slim young man. He
was perhaps an inch taller than the axeman and his clothes were of fine cloth,
his long hair barber-trimmed, not hacked by a knife nor cut with shears using a
basin for a guide. Druss glanced down at the man's hands; the skin was soft,
like that of a child. Only the baldric and the knives gave any evidence Sieben
was a fighter. 'Well? Do I pass inspection, old horse?' 'My father once said that fortune makes for
strange bedfellows,' said Druss. 'You should see the problem from where I'm
standing,' answered Sieben. 'You will travel with a man versed in literature
and poetry, a story-teller without equal. While I, on the other hand, get to
ride beside a peasant in a vomit-flecked jerkin.' Amazingly Druss found no rising anger, no
surging desire to strike out. Instead he laughed, tension flowing from him. 'I like you, little man,' he said. * Within the first day they had left the
mountains behind them, and rode now through valleys and vales, and sweeping
grassland dotted with hills and ribbon streams. There were many hamlets and
villages beside the road, the buildings of whitewashed stone with roofs of
timber or slate. Sieben rode gracefully, straight of back
and easy in the saddle, sunlight gleaming from his riding tunic of pale blue
silk and the silver edging on his knee-length riding boots. His long blond hair
was tied back in a pony-tail, and he also sported a silver headband. 'How many
headbands do you have?' asked Druss as they set off. 'Pitifully few. Pretty though, isn't it? I
picked it up in Drenan last year. I've always like silver.' 'You look like a fop.' 'Just what I needed this morning,' said
Sieben, smiling, 'hints on sartorial elegance from a man whose hair has
apparently been cut with a rusty saw, and whose only shirt carries wine stains,
and . . . no, don't tell me what the other marks are.' Druss glanced down. 'Dried blood. But it's
not mine.' 'Well, what a relief. I shall sleep more
soundly tonight for knowing that.' For the first hour of the journey the poet
tried to give helpful advice to the young axeman. 'Don't grip the horse with
your calves, just your thighs. And straighten your back.' Finally he gave up.
'You know, Druss, my dear, some men are born to ride. You on the other hand
have no feel for it. I've seen sacks of carrots with more grace than you.' The axeman's reply was short and brutally
obscene. Sieben chuckled and gazed up at the sky which was cloudless and
gloriously blue. 'What a day to set off in search of a kidnapped princess,' he
said. 'She's not a princess.' 'All kidnapped women are princesses,'
Sieben told him. 'Have you never listened to the stories? Heroes are tall,
golden-haired and wondrously handsome. Princesses are demure and beautiful,
spending their lives waiting for the handsome prince who will free them. By the
gods, Druss, no one would want to hear tales of the truth. Can you imagine? The
young hero unable to ride in search of his sweetheart because the large boil on
his buttocks prevents him from sitting on a horse?' Sieben's laughter rippled
out. Even normally grim Druss smiled and Sieben
continued. 'It's the romance, you see. A woman in stories is either a goddess
or a whore. The princess, being a beautiful virgin, falls into the former
category. The hero must also be pure, waiting for the moment of his destiny in
the arms of the virginal princess. It's wonderfully quaint - and quite ridiculous
of course. Love-making, like playing the lyre, requires enormous practice.
Thankfully the stories always end before we see the young couple fumbling their
way through their first coupling.' 'You talk like a man who has never been in
love,' said Druss. 'Nonsense. I have been in love scores of
times,' snapped the poet. Druss shook his head. 'If that were true,
then you would know just how . . . how fine the fumbling can be. How far
is it to Mashrapur?' 'Two days. But the slave markets are always
held on Missael or Manien, so we've time. Tell me about her.' 'No.' 'No? You don't like talking about your
wife?' 'Not to strangers. Have you ever been wed?' 'No - nor ever desired to be. Look around
you, Druss. See all those flowers on the hillsides? Why would a man want to
restrict himself to just one bloom? Just one scent? I had a horse once,
Shadira, a beautiful beast, faster than the north wind. She could clear a
four-bar fence with room to spare. I was ten when my father gave her to me, and
Shadira was fifteen. But by the time I was twenty Shadira could no longer run
as fast, and she jumped not at all. So I got a new horse. You understand what I
am saying?' 'Not a word of it,' grunted Druss. 'Women
aren't horses.' 'That's true,' agreed Sieben. 'Most horses
you want to ride more than once.' Druss shook his head. 'I don't know what it
is that you call love. And I don't want to know.' The trail wound to the south, the hills
growing more gentle as the mountain range receded behind them. Ahead on the
road they saw an old man shuffling towards them. He wore robes of faded blue
and he leaned heavily on a long staff. As they neared, Sieben saw that the man
was blind. The old man halted as they rode closer.
'Can we help you, old one?' asked Sieben. 'I need no help,' answered the man, his
voice surprisingly strong and resonant. 'I am on my way to Drenan.' 'It is a long walk,' said Sieben. 'I am in no hurry. But if you have food,
and are willing to entertain a guest at your midday meal, I would be glad to
join you.' 'Why not?' said Sieben. 'There is a stream
some little way to your right; we will see you there.' Swinging his mount
Sieben cantered the beast across the grass, leaping lightly from the saddle and
looping the reins over the horse's head as Druss rode up and dismounted. 'Why did you invite him to join us?' Sieben glanced back. The old man was out of
earshot and moving slowly towards them. 'He is a seeker, Druss. A mystic. Have
you not heard of them?' 'No.' 'Source Priests who blind themselves in
order to increase their powers of prophecy. Some of them are quite
extraordinary. It's worth a few oats.' Swiftly the poet prepared a fire over which
he placed a copper pot half filled with water. He added oats and a little salt.
The old man sat cross-legged nearby. Druss removed his helm and jerkin and
stretched out in the sunshine. After the porridge had cooked, Sieben filled a
bowl and passed it to the priest. 'Do you have sugar?' asked the Seeker. 'No. We have a little honey. I will fetch
it.' After the meal was concluded the old man
shuffled to the stream and cleaned his bowl, returning it to Sieben. 'And now
you wish to know the future?' asked the priest, with a crooked smile. 'That would be pleasant,' said Sieben. 'Not necessarily. Would you like to know
the day of your death?' 'I take your point, old man. Tell me of the
next beautiful woman who will share my bed.' The old man chuckled. 'A talent so large,
yet men only require such infinitesimal examples of it. I could tell you of
your sons, and of moments of peril. But no, you wish to hear of matters
inconsequential. Very well. Give me your hand.' Sieben sat opposite him and extended his
right hand. The old man took it, and sat silently for several minutes. Finally
he sighed. 'I have walked the paths of your future, Sieben the Poet, Sieben the
Saga-master. The road is long. The next woman? A whore in Mashrapur, who will
ask for seven silver pennies. You will pay it.' He released Sieben's hand and turned his
blind eyes towards Druss. 'Do you wish your future told?' 'I will make my own future,' answered
Druss. 'Ah, a man of strength and independent
will. Come. Let me at least see, for my own interest, what tomorrow holds for
you.' 'Come on, lad,' pleaded Sieben. 'Give him
your hand.' Druss rose and walked to where the old man
sat. He squatted down before him and thrust out his hand. The priest's fingers
closed around his own. 'A large hand,' he said. 'Strong . . . very strong.'
Suddenly he winced, his body stiffening. 'Are you yet young, Druss the Legend?
Have you stood at the pass?' 'What pass?' 'How old are you?' 'Seventeen.' 'Of course. Seventeen. And searching for
Rowena. Yes . . . Mashrapur. I see it now. Not yet the Deathwalker, the
Silver Slayer, the Captain of the Axe. But still mighty.' He released his hold
and sighed. 'You are quite right, Druss, you will make your own future; you
will need no words from me.' The old man rose and took up his staff. 'I thank
you for your hospitality.' Sieben stood also. 'At least tell us what
awaits in Mashrapur,' he said. 'A whore and seven silver pennies,'
answered the priest with a dry smile. He turned his blind eyes towards Druss.
'Be strong, axeman. The road is long and there are legends to be made. But
Death awaits, and he is patient. You will see him as you stand beneath the
gates in the fourth Year of the Leopard.' He walked slowly away. 'Incredible,'
whispered Sieben. 'Why?' responded Druss. 'I could have
foretold that the next woman you meet would be a whore.' 'He knew our names, Druss; he knew
everything. Now, when is the fourth Year of the Leopard?' 'He told us nothing. Let's move on.' 'How can you say that it was nothing? He
called you Druss the Legend. What legend? How will you build it?' Ignoring him, Druss walked to his horse and
climbed into the saddle. 'I don't like horses,' he said. 'Once we reach
Mashrapur I'll sell it. Rowena and I will walk back.' Sieben looked up at the pale-eyed young
man. 'It meant nothing to you, did it? His prophecy, I mean.' 'They were just words, poet. Noises on the
air. Let's ride.' After a while Sieben spoke. 'The Year of
the Leopard is forty-three years away. Gods, Druss, you'll live to be an old
man. I wonder where the gates are.' Druss ignored him and rode on. Chapter FiveBodasen threaded his way through the crowds
milling on the dock, past the gaudily dressed women with their painted faces
and insincere smiles, past the stallholders bellowing their bargains, past the
beggars with their deformed limbs and their pleading eyes. Bodasen hated
Mashrapur, loathed the smell of the teeming multitudes who gathered here
seeking instant wealth. The streets were narrow and choked with the detritus of
humanity, the houses built high - three-, four- and five-storey - all linked by
alleyways and tunnels and shadowed pathways where robbers could plunge their
blades into unsuspecting victims and flee through the labyrinthine back streets
before the undermanned city guards could apprehend them. What a city, thought Bodasen. A place of
filth and painted women, a haven for thieves, smugglers, slavers and renegades. A woman approached him. 'You look lonely,
my love,' she said, flashing a gold-toothed smile. He gazed down at her and her
smile faded. She backed away swiftly and Bodasen rode on. He came to a narrow alleyway and paused to
push his black cloak above his left shoulder. The hilt of his sabre shone in
the fading sunlight. As Bodasen walked on, three men stood in the shadows. He
felt their eyes upon him and turned his face towards them, his stare
challenging; they looked away, and he continued along the alley until it
broadened out to a small square with a fountain at the centre, constructed
around a bronze statue of a boy riding a dolphin. Several whores were sitting
beside the fountain, chatting to one another. They saw him, and instantly their
postures changed. Leaning back to thrust out their breasts, they assumed their
customary smiles. As he passed he heard their chatter begin again. The inn was almost empty. An old man sat at
the bar, nursing a jug of ale, and two maids were cleaning tables, while a
third prepared the night's fire in the stone hearth. Bodasen moved to a window
table and sat, facing the door. A maid approached him. 'Good evening, my lord. Are you ready for
your usual supper?' 'No. Bring me a goblet of good red wine and
a flagon of fresh water.' 'Yes, my lord.' She curtsied prettily and
walked away. Her greeting eased his irritation. Some, even in this disgusting
city, could recognise nobility. The wine was of an average quality, no more
than four years old and harsh on the tongue, and Bodasen drank sparingly. The inn door opened and two men entered.
Bodasen leaned back in his chair and watched them approach. The first was a
handsome man, tall and wide-shouldered; he wore a crimson cloak over a red
tunic, and a sabre was scabbarded at his hip. The second was a huge, bald
warrior, heavily muscled and grim of feature. The first man sat opposite Bodasen, the
second standing alongside the table. 'Where is Harib Ka?' Bodasen asked. 'Your countryman will not be joining us,'
replied Collan. 'He said he would be here; that is the
reason I agreed to this meeting.' Collan shrugged. 'He had an urgent
appointment elsewhere.' 'He said nothing of it to me.' 'I think it was unexpected. You wish to do
business, or not?' 'I do not do business, Collan. I
seek to negotiate a treaty with the. . . free traders of the Ventrian Sea. My
understanding is that you have . . . shall we say, contacts, among them?' Collan chuckled. 'Interesting. You can't
bring yourself to say pirates, can you? No, that would be too much for a
Ventrian nobleman. Well, let us think the situation through. The Ventrian fleet
has been scattered or sunk. On land your armies are crushed, and the Emperor
slain. Now you pin your hopes on the pirate fleet; only they can ensure that
the armies of Naashan do not march all the way to the capital. Am I in error on
any of these points?' Bodasen cleared his throat. "The
Empire is seeking friends. The Free Traders are in a position to aid us in our
struggle against the forces of evil. We always treat our friends with great
generosity.' 'I see,' said Collan, his eyes mocking. 'We
are fighting the forces of evil now? And there I was believing that
Naashan and Ventria were merely two warring empires. How naive of me. However,
you speak of generosity. How generous is the Prince?' 'The Emperor is noted for his
largess.' CoHan smiled. 'Emperor at nineteen - a
rapid rise to power. But he has lost eleven cities to the invader, and his
treasury is severely depleted. Can he find two hundred thousand gold raq?' 'Two . . . surely you are not serious?' 'The Free Traders have fifty warships. With
them we could protect the coastline and prevent invasion from the sea; we could
also shepherd the convoys that carry Ventrian silk to the Drenai and the
Lentrians and countless others. Without us you are doomed, Bodasen. Two hundred
thousand is a small price to pay.' 'I am authorised to offer fifty. No more.' 'The Naashanites have offered one hundred.' Bodasen fell silent, his mouth dry.
'Perhaps we could pay the difference in silks and trade goods?' he offered at
last. 'Gold,' said Collan. That is all that
interests us. We are not merchants.' No, thought Bodasen bitterly, you are thieves
and killers, and it burns my soul to sit in the same room with such as you. 'I
will need to seek counsel of the ambassador,' he said. 'He can communicate your
request to the Emperor. I will need five days.' 'That is agreeable,' said Collan, rising.
'You know where to find me?' Under a flat rock, thought Bodasen, with
the other slugs and lice. 'Yes,' he said, softly, 'I know where to find you.
Tell me, when will Harib be back in Mashrapur?' 'He won't.' 'Where is this appointment then?' 'In Hell,' answered Collan. * 'You must have patience,' said Sieben, as
Druss stalked around the small room on the upper floor of the Tree of Bone Inn.
The poet had stretched out his long, lean frame on the first of the two narrow
beds, while Druss strode to the window and stood staring out over the dock and
the sea beyond the harbour. 'Patience?' stormed the axeman. 'She's here
somewhere, maybe close.' 'And we'll find her,' promised Sieben, 'but
it will take a little time. First there are the established slave traders. This
evening I will ask around, and find out where Collan has placed her. Then we
can plan her rescue.' Druss swung round. 'Why not go to the White
Bear Inn and find Collan? He knows.' 'I expect he does, old horse.' Sieben swung
his legs from the bed and stood. 'And he'll have any number of rascals ready to
plunge knives in our backs. Foremost among them will be Borcha. I want you to
picture a man who looks as if he was carved from granite, with muscles that
dwarf even yours. Borcha is a killer. He has beaten men to death in fist
fights, snapped necks in wrestling bouts; he doesn't need a weapon. I have seen
him crush a pewter goblet in one hand, and watched him lift a barrel of ale
above his head. And he is just one of Collan's men.' 'Frightened, are you, poet?' 'Of course I'm frightened, you young fool!
Fear is sensible. Never make the mistake of equating it with cowardice. But it
is senseless to go after Collan; he is known here and has friends in very high
places. Attack him and you will be arrested, tried and sentenced. Then there
will be no one to rescue Rowena.' Druss slumped down, his elbows resting on
the warped table. 'I hate sitting here doing nothing,' he said. 'Then let's walk around the city for a
while,' offered Sieben. 'We can gather some information. How much did you get
for your horse?' Twenty in silver.' 'Almost fair. You did well. Come on, I'll
show you the sights.' Druss stood and gathered his axe. 'I don't think you'll
need that,' Sieben told him. 'It's one thing to wear a sword or carry a knife,
but the City Watch will not take kindly to that monstrosity. In a crowded
street you're likely to cut off someone's arm by mistake. Here, I'll loan you
one of my knives.' 'I won't need it,' said Druss, leaving the
axe on the table and striding out of the room. Together they walked down into the main
room of the inn, then out into the narrow street beyond. Druss sniffed loudly. 'This city stinks,'
he said. 'Most cities do - at least in the poorest
areas. No sewers. Refuse is thrown from windows. So walk warily.' They moved towards the docks where several
ships were being unloaded, bales of silk from Ventria and Naashan and other
eastern nations, herbs and spices, dried fruit and barrels of wine. The dock
was alive with activity. 'I've never seen so many people in one
place,' said Druss. 'It's not even busy yet,' Sieben pointed
out. They strolled around the harbour wall, past temples and large municipal
buildings, through a small park with a statue-lined walkway and a central
fountain. Young couples were walking hand in hand and to the left an orator was
addressing a small crowd. He was speaking of the essential selfishness of the
pursuit of altruism. Sieben stopped to listen for a few minutes, then walked
on. 'Interesting, don't you think?' he asked
his companion. 'He was suggesting that good works are ultimately selfish
because they make the man who undertakes them feel good. Therefore he has not
been unselfish at all, but has merely acted for his own pleasure.' Druss shook his head and glowered at the
poet. 'His mother should have told him the mouth is not for breaking wind
with.' 'I take it this is your subtle way of
saying you disagree with his comments?' snapped Sieben. 'The man's a fool.' 'How would you set about proving that?' 'I don't need to prove it. If a man serves
up a plate of cow dung, I don't need to taste it to know it's not steak.' 'Explain it,' Sieben urged him. 'Share some
of that vaunted frontier philosophy.' 'No,' said Druss, walking on. 'Why not?' asked Sieben, moving alongside
him. 'I am a woodsman. I know about trees. Once
I worked in an orchard. Did you know you can take cuttings from any variety and
graft them to another apple tree? One tree can have twenty varieties. It's the
same with pears. My father always said men were like that with knowledge. So
much can be grafted on, but it must match what the heart feels. You can't graft
apple to pear. It's a waste of time - and I don't like wasting my time.' 'You think I could not understand your
arguments?' asked Sieben with a sneering smile. 'Some things you either know or you don't.
And I can't graft that knowledge on to you. Back in the mountains I watched
fanners plant tree lines across the fields; they did it because the winds can
blow away the top-soil. But the trees would take a hundred years to form a real
windbreak, so those farmers were building for the future, for others they will
never know. They did it because it was right to do it - and not one of them
would be able to debate with that pompous windbag back there. Or with you. Nor
is it necessary that they should.' 'That pompous windbag is the first
minister of Mashrapur, a brilliant politician and a poet of some repute. I'm
sure he would be mortally humiliated to know that a young uneducated peasant
from the frontier disagrees with his philosophy.' 'Then we won't tell him,' said Druss.
'We'll just leave him here serving up his cow-pats to people who will believe
they're steaks. Now I'm thirsty, poet. Do you know of a decent tavern?' 'It depends what you're looking for. The
taverns on the docks are rough, and usually filled with thieves and whores. If
we walk on for another half-mile we'll come to a more civilised area. There we
can have a quiet drink.' 'What about those places over there?' asked
Druss, pointing to a row of buildings alongside the wharf. 'Your judgement is unerring, Druss. That is
East Wharf, better known to the residents here as Thieves Row. Every night
there are a score of fights - and murders. Almost no one of quality would go
there - which makes it perfect for you. You go on. I'll visit some old friends
who might have news of recent slave movements.' 'I'll come with you,' said Druss. 'No, you won't. You'd be out of place. Most
of my friends, you see, are pompous windbags. I'll meet you back at the Tree of
Bone by midnight.' Druss chuckled, which only increased Sieben's annoyance as
the poet swung away and strode through the park. * The room was furnished with a large bed
with satin sheets, two comfort chairs padded with horsehair and covered with
velvet, and a table upon which sat a jug of wine and two silver goblets. There
were rugs upon the floor, woven with great skill and soft beneath her bare
feet. Rowena sat upon the edge of the bed, her right hand clasping the brooch
Druss had fashioned for her. She could see him walking beside Sieben. Sadness
overwhelmed her and her hand dropped to her lap. Harib Ka was dead - as she had
known he would be - and Druss was now closer to his dread destiny. She felt powerless and alone in Collan's
house. There were no locks upon the door, but there were guards in the corridor
beyond. Yet there was no escape. On the first night, when Collan had taken her
from the camp, he had raped her twice. On the second occasion she had tried to
empty her mind, losing herself in dreams of the past. In doing so she had
unlocked the doors to her Talent. Rowena had floated free of her abused body
and hurtled through darkness and Time. She saw great cities, huge armies,
mountains that breached the clouds. Lost, she sought for Druss and could not
find him. Then a voice came to her, a gentle voice,
warm and reassuring. 'Be calm, sister. I will help you.' She paused in her flight, floating above a
night-dark ocean. A man appeared alongside her; he was slim of build and young,
perhaps twenty. His eyes were dark, his smile friendly. 'Who are you?' she
asked him. 'I am Vintar of the Thirty.' 'I am lost,' she said. 'Give me your hand.' Reaching out she felt his spirit fingers,
then his thoughts washed over hers. On the verge of panic Rowena felt herself
swamped by his memories, seeing a temple of grey stone, a dwelling-place of
white-clad monks. He withdrew from her as swiftly as he had entered her
thoughts. 'Your ordeal is over,' he said. 'He has left you and now sleeps
beside you. I shall take you home.' 'I cannot bear it. He is a vile man.' 'You will survive, Rowena.' 'Why should I wish to?' she asked him. 'My
husband is changing, becoming day by day as vicious as the men who took me.
What kind of life will I face?' 'I will not answer that, though probably I
could,' he told her. 'You are very young, and you have experienced great pain.
But you are alive, and while living can achieve great good. You have the
Talent, not only to Soar but also to Heal, to Know. Few are blessed with this
gift. Do not concern yourself with Collan; he raped you only because Harib Ka
said that he should not and he will not touch you again.' 'He has defiled me.' 'No,' said Vintar sternly, 'he has defiled
himself. It is important to understand that.' 'Druss would be ashamed of me, for I did
not fight.' 'You fought, Rowena, in your own way. You
gave him no pleasure. To have tried to resist would have increased his lust,
and his satisfaction. As it was - and you know this to be true - he felt
deflated and full of melancholy. And you know his fate.' 'I don't want any more deaths!' 'We all die. You . . . me . . . Druss. The
measure of us all is established by how we live.' He had returned her to her body, taking
care to instruct her in the ways of Spirit travel, and the routes by which she
could return by herself in the future. 'Will I see you again?' she asked him. 'It is possible,' he answered. Now, as she sat on the satin-covered bed,
she wished she could speak with him again. The door opened and a huge warrior entered.
He was bald and heavily muscled. There were scars around his eyes and his nose
was flattened against his face. He moved towards the bed but there was no
threat, she knew. Silently he laid a gown of white silk upon the bed. 'Collan
has asked that you wear this for Kabuchek.' 'Who is Kabuchek?' she enquired. 'A Ventrian merchant. If you do well he
will buy you. It won't be a bad life, girl. He has many palaces and treats his
slaves with care.' 'Why do you serve Collan?' she asked. His eyes narrowed. 'I serve no one. Collan
is a friend. I help him sometimes.' 'You are a better man than he.' 'That is as may be. But several years ago,
when I was first champion, I was waylaid in an alley by supporters of the
vanquished champion. They had swords and knives. Collan ran to my aid. We
survived. I always pay my debts. Now put on the gown, and prepare your skill.
You need to impress the Ventrian.' 'And if I refuse?' 'Collan will not be pleased and I don't
think you would like that. Trust me on this, lady. Do your best and you will be
clear of this house.' 'My husband is coming for me,' she said
softly. 'When he does, he will kill any who have harmed me.' 'Why tell me?' 'Do not be here when he comes, Borcha.' The giant shrugged. 'The Fates will
decide,' he said. * Druss strolled across to the wharf
buildings. They were old, a series of taverns created from derelict warehouses
and there were recesses and alley entrances everywhere. Garishly dressed women
lounged against the walls and ragged men sat close by, playing knucklebones or
talking in small groups. A woman approached him. 'All the delights
your mind can conjure for just a silver penny,' she said wearily. 'Thank you, but no,' he told her. 'I can get you opiates, if you desire
them?' 'No,' he said, more sternly, and moved on.
Three bearded men pushed themselves to their feet and walked in front of him.
'A gift for the poor, my lord?' asked the first. Druss was about to reply when he glimpsed
the man to his left edge his hand into the folds of a filthy shirt. He
chuckled. 'If that hand comes out with a knife in it - I'll make you eat it,
little man.' The beggar froze. 'You shouldn't be coming here with
threats,' said the first man. 'Not unarmed as you are. It's not wise, my
lord.' Reaching behind his back, he drew a long-bladed dagger. As the blade appeared Druss stepped forward
and casually backhanded the man across the mouth. The robber cartwheeled to
'the left, scattering a group of watching whores and colliding with a wall of
brick. He moaned once, then lay still. Ignoring the other two beggars, Druss
strode to the nearest tavern and stepped inside. The interior was windowless and
high-ceilinged, lit by lanterns which hung from the beams. The tavern smelt of
burning oil and stale sweat. It was crowded, and Druss eased his way to a long
trestle table on which several barrels of ale were set. And old man in a greasy
apron approached him. 'You don't want to be drinking before the bouts begin;
it'll fill you with wind,' he warned. 'What bouts?' The man looked at him appraisingly, and his
glittering eyes held no hint of warmth. 'You wouldn't be trying to fool Old
Thorn, would you?' 'I'm a stranger here,' said Druss. 'Now,
what bouts?' 'Follow me, lad,' said Thorn, and he pushed
his way through the crowd towards the back of the tavern and on through a
narrow doorway. Druss followed him and found himself standing in a rectangular
warehouse where a wide circle of sand had been roped off at the centre. By the
far walls were a group of athletes, moving through a series of exercises to
loosen the muscles of shoulders and back. 'You ever fought?' 'Not for money.' Thorn nodded, then reached out and lifted
Druss's hand. 'A good size, and flat knuckles. But are you fast, boy?' 'What is the prize?' countered the young
man. 'It won't work that way - not for you. This
is a standard contest and all the entrants are nominated well in advance so
that sporting gentlemen can have opportunities to judge the quality of the
fighter. But just before the start of the competition there'll be offers to men
in the crowd to earn a few pennies by taking on various champions. A golden raq,
for example, to the man who can stay on his feet for one turn of the sandglass.
They do it to allow the fighters to warm up against low-quality opposition.' 'How long is one turn?' asked Druss. 'About as long as it's been since you first
walked into the Blind Corsair.' 'And what if a man won?' 'It doesn't happen, lad. But if it did,
then he'd take the loser's place in the main event. No, the main money is made
on wagers among the crowd. How much coin are you carrying?' 'You ask a lot of questions, old man.' 'Pah! I'm not a robber, lad. Used to be,
but then I got old and slow. Now I live on my wits. You look like a man who
could stand up for himself. At first I mistook you for Grassin the Lentrian -that's
him over there, by the far door.' Druss followed the old man's pointing finger
and saw a powerfully built young man with short-cropped black hair. He was
talking to another heavily-muscled man, a blond warrior with a dangling
moustache. 'The other one is Skatha, he is a Naashanite sailor. And the big
fellow at the back is Borcha. He'll win tonight. No question. Deadly, he is.
Most likely someone will be crippled by him before the evening is out.' Druss gazed at the man and felt the hackles
on his neck rise. Borcha was enormous, standing some seven inches above six
feet tall. He was bald, his head vaguely pointed as if his skin was stretched
over a Vagrian helm. His shoulders were massively muscled, his neck huge with
muscles swollen and bulging. 'No good looking at him like that, boy.
He's too good for you. Trust me on that. He's skilled and very fast. He won't
even step up for the warming bouts. No one would face him - not even for twenty
golden raq. But that Grassin now, I think you could stand against him for a
turn of the glass. And if you've some coin to wager, I'll find takers.' 'What do you get, old man?' 'Half of what we make.' 'What odds could you bargain for?' 'Two to one. Maybe three.' 'And if I went against Borcha?' 'Put it from your mind, boy. We want to
make money - not coffin fuel.' 'How much?' persisted Druss. 'Ten to one - twenty to one. The gods alone
know!' Druss opened the pouch at his side,
removing ten silver pieces. Casually he dropped them into the old man's
outstretched hand. 'Let it be known that I wish to stand against Borcha for a
turn of the glass.' 'Asia's tits, he'll kill you.' 'If he doesn't, you could make a hundred
pieces of silver. Maybe more.' 'There is that, of course,' said Old Thorn,
with a crooked grin. * Crowds slowly began to fill the warehouse
arena. Rich nobles clad in silks and fine leathers, their ladies beside them in
lace and satin, were seated on high tiers overlooking the sand circle. On the
lower levels were the merchants and traders in their conical caps arid long
capes. Druss felt uncomfortable, hemmed in by the mass. The air was growing
foul, the temperature rising as more and more people filed in. Rowena would hate this place, with its
noise and its pressing throng. His mood darkened as he thought of her - a
prisoner somewhere, a slave to the whims and desires of Collan. He forced such
thoughts from his mind, and concentrated instead on his conversation with the
poet. He had enjoyed irritating the man; it had eased his own anger, an anger
generated by the unwilling acceptance that much of what the speaker in the park
had said was true. He loved Rowena, heart and soul. But he needed her also, and
he often wondered which was the stronger, love or need. And was he trying to
rescue her because he loved her, or because he was lost without her? The
question tormented him. Rowena calmed his turbulent spirit in a way
no other living soul ever could. She helped him to see the world through gentle
eyes. It was a rare and beautiful experience. If she had been with him now, he
thought, he too would have been filled with distaste at the sweating multitude
waiting for blood and pain. Instead the young man stood amidst the crowd and
felt his heartbeat quicken, his excitement rise at the prospect of combat. His pale eyes scanned the crowd, picking
out the fat figure of Old Thorn talking to a tall man in a red velvet cloak.
The man was smiling. He turned from Thorn and approached the colossal figure of
Borcha. Druss saw the fighter's eyes widen, then the man laughed. Druss could
not hear the sound above the chatter and noise about him, but he felt his anger
grow. This was Borcha, one of Collan's men - perhaps one of those who had taken
Rowena. Old Thorn returned through the crowd and
led Druss to a fairly quiet corner. 'I've set events in motion,' he said. 'Now
listen to me - don't try for the head. Men have broken their hands on that
skull. He has a habit of dipping into punches so that the other man's knuckles
strike bone. Go for the lower body. And watch his feet - he's a skilled kicker,
lad. . . what's your name, by the way?' 'Druss.' 'Well, Druss, you've grabbed a bear by the
balls this time. If he hurts you, don't try to hold on; he'll use that head on
you, and cave in the bones of your face. Try backing away and covering up.' 'Let him try backing away,' snarled Druss. 'Ah, you're a cocky lad, for sure. But
you've never faced a man like Borcha. He's like a living hammer.' Druss chuckled. 'You really know how to
lift a man's spirits. What odds did you find?' 'Fifteen to one. If you hold to your feet,
you'll have seventy-five pieces of silver - plus your original ten.' 'Is that enough to buy a slave?' 'What would you want with a slave?' 'Is it enough?' 'Depends on the slave. Some girls fetch
upwards of a hundred. You have someone in mind?' Druss dipped into his pouch, removing the
last four silver pieces. 'Wager these also.' The old man took the money. 'I take it this
is your entire wealth?' 'It is.' 'She must be a very special slave?' 'She's my wife. Collan's men took her.' 'Collan takes lots of women. Your wife's
not a witch, is she?' 'What?' snarled Druss. 'No offence, lad. But Collan sold a witch
woman to Kabuchek the Ventrian today. Five thousand silver pieces she brought.' 'No, she is not a witch. Just a mountain
girl, sweet and gentle.' 'Ah well, a hundred should be enough,' said
Thorn. 'But first you have to win it. Have you ever been hit?' 'No. But a tree fell on me once.' 'Knock you out?' 'No. I was dazed for a while.' 'Well, Borcha will feel like a mountain
fell on you. I hope you've the strength to withstand it.' 'We'll see, old man.' 'If you go down, roll under the ropes.
Otherwise he'll stomp you.' Druss smiled. 'I like you, old man. You
don't honey the medicine, do you?' 'Does you no good unless it tastes bad,'
replied Thorn, with a crooked grin. * Borcha enjoyed the admiring glances from
the crowd - fear and respect from the men and healthy lust from the women. He
felt he had earned such silent accolades during the past five years. His blue
eyes scanned the tiers and he picked out Mapek, the First Minister of
Mashrapur, Bodasen the Ventrian envoy, and a dozen more notables from the
Emir's government. He kept his face impassive as he gazed around the converted
warehouse. It was well known that he never smiled, save in the sand circle when
his opponent began to weaken under his iron fists. He glanced at Grassin, watching the man
move through a series of loosening exercises. He had to hold back his smile
then. Others might believe Grassin was merely stretching tight muscles, but
Borcha could read fear in the man's movements. He focused on the other
fighters, staring at them. Few looked his way, and those who did cast fleeting
glances, avoiding his eyes. Losers, all of them, he thought. He took a deep breath, filling his massive
lungs. The air was hot and damp. Signalling to one of his aides, Borcha told
the man to open the wide windows at either end of the warehouse. A second aide
approached him, 'There is a yokel who wants to try a turn of the glass with
you, Borcha.' The fighter was irritated and he surreptitiously studied the
crowd. All eyes were on him. So the word was already out! He threw back his
head and forced a laugh, 'Who is this man?' 'A stranger from the mountains. Youngster -
around twenty, I'd say.' 'That explains his stupidity,' hissed
Borcha. No man who had ever seen him fight would relish the prospect of four
minutes in the sand circle with the champion of Mashrapur. But still he was
annoyed. Winning involved far more skills than with
fists and feet, he knew. It was a complex mix of courage and heart, allied to
the planting of the seeds of doubt in the minds of opponents. A man who
believed his enemy was invincible had already lost, and Borcha had spent years
building such a reputation. No one in two years had dared to risk a
turn of the glass with the champion. Until now. Which threw up a second problem.
Arena fights were without rules: a fighter could legitimately gouge out an
opponent's eyes or, after downing him, stamp upon his neck. Deaths were rare,
but not unknown, and many fighters were crippled for life. But Borcha would not
be able to use his more deadly array of skills against an unknown youngster. It
would suggest he feared the boy. They're offering fifteen to one against him
surviving,' whispered the aide. 'Who is negotiating for him?' 'Old Thorn.' 'How much has he wagered?' 'I'll find out.' The man moved away into
the crowd. The tournament organiser, a huge, obese
merchant named Bilse, stepped into the sand circle. 'My friends,' he bellowed,
his fat chins wobbling, 'welcome to the Blind Corsair. Tonight you will be
privileged to witness the finest fist fighters in Mashrapur.' Borcha closed his mind to the man's droning
voice. He had heard it all before. Five years ago his mood had been different.
His wife and son sick from dysentery, the young Borcha had finished his work on
the docks and had run all the way to the Corsair to win ten silver pieces in a
warm-up contest. To his surprise he had beaten his opponent, and had taken his
place in the tournament. That night, after hammering six fighters to defeat, he
had taken home sixty golden raq. He had arrived at their rooms triumphant, only
to find his son dead and his wife comatose. The best doctor in Mashrapur was
summoned. He had insisted Caria be removed to a hospital in the rich northern
district - but only after Borcha had parted with all his hard-won gold. There
Caria rallied for a while, only to be struck down with consumption. The treatment over the next two years cost
three hundred raq. And still she died, her body ravaged by
sickness. Borcha's bitterness was colossal, and he
unleashed it in every fight, focusing his hatred and his fury on the men who
faced him. He heard his name called and raised his
right arm. The crowd cheered and clapped. Now he had a house in the northern quarter,
built of marble and the finest timber, with terracotta tiles on the roof.
Twenty slaves were on hand to do his bidding, and his investments in slaves and
silks brought him an income to rival any of the senior merchants. Yet still he
fought, the demons of the past driving him on. Bilse announced that the warm-up contest
would begin and Borcha watched as Grassin stepped into the circle to take on a
burly dock-worker. The bout lasted barely a few seconds, Grassin lifting the
man from his feet with an uppercut. Borcha's aide approached him. 'They have
wagered around nine silver pieces. Is it important?' Borcha shook his head. Had there been large
sums involved it would have indicated trickery of some kind, perhaps a foreign
fighter drafted in, a tough man from another city, a bruiser unknown in
Mashrapur. But no. This was merely stupidity and arrogance combined. Bilse called his name and Borcha stepped
into the circle. He tested the sand beneath his feet. Too thick and it made for
clumsy movement, too thin and a fighter could slide and lose balance. It was
well raked. Satisfied, Borcha turned his gaze on the young man who had entered
the circle from the other side. He was young and some inches shorter than
Borcha, though his shoulders were enormous. His chest was thick, the pectoral
muscles well developed, and his biceps were huge. Watching him move, Borcha saw
that he was well balanced and lithe. His waist was thick, but carried little
fat, and his neck was large and well protected by the powerful, swollen muscles
of the trapezius. Borcha transferred his gaze to his opponent's face. Strong
cheekbones and a good chin. The nose was wide and flat, the brows heavy. The
champion looked into the challenger's eyes; they were pale, and they showed no
fear. Indeed, thought Borcha, he looks as if he hates me. Bilse introduced the young man as 'Druss
from the lands of the Drenai'. The two fighters approached one another. Borcha
towered over Druss. The champion held out his hands but Druss merely smiled and
walked back to the ropes, turning to wait for the signal to begin. The casual insult did not concern the
champion. Lifting his hands into the orthodox fighting position, left arm
extended and right fist held close to the cheek, he advanced on the young man.
Druss surged forward, almost taking Borcha by surprise. But the champion was
fast and sent a thudding left jab into the young man's face, following it with
a stinging right cross that thundered against Druss's jaw. Borcha stepped back,
allowing room for Druss to fall, but something exploded against the side of the
champion. For a moment he thought a large rock had been hurled from the crowd,
then he realised it was the fist of his opponent. Far from falling, the young
man had taken the two punches and hit back with one of his own. Borcha reeled
from the blow, then counter-attacked with a series of combination strikes that
snapped Druss's head back. Yet still he came on. Borcha feinted a jab to the
head, then swept an uppercut into the young man's belly, whereupon Druss
snarled and threw a wild right. Borcha ducked under it, dipping just in time to
meet a rising left uppercut. He managed to roll his head, the blow striking his
cheek. Surging upright, he crashed an overhand right into Druss's face,
splitting the skin above the man's left eye; then he hit him with a left. Druss staggered back, thrown off balance,
and Borcha moved in for the kill, but a hammer-blow hit him just under the
heart and he felt a rib snap. Anger roared through him and he began to smash
punches into the youngster's face and body - brutal, powerful blows that forced
his opponent back towards the ropes. Another cut appeared, this time over
Druss's right eye. The young man ducked and weaved, but more and more blows
hammered home. Sensing victory, Borcha increased the ferocity of his attack and
the pace of his punches. But Druss refused to go down and, ducking his head, he
charged at Borcha. The champion sidestepped and threw a left that glanced from
Druss's shoulder. The young man recovered his balance and Borcha stepped in.
Druss wiped the blood from his eyes and advanced to meet him. The champion
feinted with a left, but Druss ignored it and sent a right that swept under
Borcha's guard and smashed into his injured ribs. The champion winced as pain
lanced his side. A huge fist crashed against his chin and he felt a tooth snap;
he responded with a left uppercut that lifted Druss to his toes and a right
hook that almost felled the youngster. Druss hit him with another right to the
ribs and Borcha was forced back. The two men began to circle one another, and
only now did Borcha hear the baying of the crowd. They were cheering for Druss,
just as five years before they had cheered for Borcha. Druss attacked. Borcha threw a left that
missed and a right that didn't. Druss rocked back on his heels, but advanced
again. Borcha hit him three times, further opening the cuts that saw blood
streaming into the young man's face. Almost blinded, Druss lashed out, one
punch catching Borcha on the right bicep, numbing his arm, a second cracking
against his brow. Blood seeped from the champion's face now, and a tremendous
roar went up from the crowd. Oblivious to the noise Borcha
counter-attacked, driving Druss back across the circle, hitting him time and
again with brutal hooks and jabs. Then the horn sounded. The sandglass had
run out. Borcha stepped back, but Druss attacked. Borcha grabbed him around the
waist, pinning his arms and hauling him in close. 'It is over, boy,' he hissed.
'You won your wager.' Druss jerked himself loose and shook his
head, spraying blood to the sand. Then he lifted his hand and pointed at
Borcha. 'You go to Collan,' he snarled, 'and you tell him that if anyone has
harmed my wife I'll tear his head from his neck.' Then the young man swung away and stalked
from the circle. Borcha turned and saw the other fighters
watching him. They were all willing to meet his eyes now.
. . and Grassin was smiling. * Sieben entered the Tree of Bone just after
midnight. There were still some hardened drinkers present, and the serving
maids moved wearily among them. Sieben mounted the stairs to the gallery above
and made his way to the room he shared with Druss. Just as he was about to open
the door, he heard voices from within. Drawing his dagger, he threw open the
door and leapt inside. Druss was sitting on one of the beds, his face bruised
and swollen, the marks of rough stitches over both eyes. A dirt-streaked fat
man was sitting on Sieben's bed and a slim, black-cloaked nobleman with a
trident beard was standing by the window. As the poet entered the nobleman
swung, a shining sabre hissing from its scabbard. The fat man screamed and
dived from the bed, landing with a dull thud behind the seated Druss. 'You took your time, poet,' said the
axeman. Sieben gazed down at the point of the sabre
which was motionless in the air some two inches from his throat. 'It didn't
take you long to make new friends,' he said, with a forced smile. With great care he slipped the knife back
into its sheath, and was relieved to see the nobleman return his sabre to its
scabbard. 'This is Bodasen; he's a Ventrian,' said
Druss. 'And the man on his knees behind me is Thorn.' The fat man rose, grinning sheepishly.
'Good to meet you, my lord,' he said, bowing. 'Who the Devil gave you those black eyes?'
asked Sieben, moving forward to examine Dross's wounds. 'Nobody gave them to me. I had to fight for
them.' 'He fought Borcha,' said Bodasen, with the
faintest trace of an eastern accent. 'And a fine bout it was. Lasted a full
turn of the glass.' 'Aye, it was something to see,' added
Thorn. 'Borcha didn't look none too pleased - especially when Dross cracked his
rib! We all heard it. Wonderful, it was.' 'You fought Borcha?' whispered Sieben. 'To a standstill,' said the Ventrian.
'There were no surgeons present, so I assisted with the stitching. You are the
poet Sieben, are you not?' 'Yes. Do I know you, my friend?' 'I saw you perform once in Drenan, and in
Ventria I read your saga of Waylander. Wonderfully inventive.' 'Thank you. Much needed to be invention
since little is known of him. I did not know that the book had travelled so
far. Only fifty copies were made.' 'My Emperor acquired one on his travels,
bound in leather and embossed with gold leaf. The script is very fine.' 'There were five of those,' said Sieben.
'Twenty raq each. Beautiful works.' Bodasen chuckled. 'My Emperor paid six
hundred for it.' Sieben sighed and sat down on the bed. 'Ah
well, better the fame than gold, eh? So tell me, Dross, what made you fight
Borcha?' 'I earned a hundred silver pieces. Now I
shall buy Rowena. Did you find out where she is held?' 'No, my friend. Collan has sold only one
woman recently. A Seer. He must be keeping Rowena for himself.' 'Then I shall kill him and take her - and
to Hell with the law of Mashrapur.' 'If I may,' said Bodasen, 'I think I can
help. I am acquainted with this Collan. It may be that I can secure the release
of your lady - without bloodshed.' Sieben said nothing, but he noted the
concern in the Ventrian's dark eyes. 'I'll not wait much longer,' said Druss.
'Can you see him tomorrow?' 'Of course. You will be here?' 'I'll wait for your word,' promised Dross. 'Very well. I bid you all good night,' said
Bodasen, with a short bow. After he had left Old Thorn also made for
the door. 'Well, lad, it were quite a night. If you decide to fight again I'd
be honoured to make the arrangements.' 'No more for me,' said Druss. 'I'd sooner
have trees fall on me than that man again.' Thorn shook his head. 'I wish that I'd had
more faith,' he said. 'I only bet one silver piece of my share.' He chuckled
and spread his hands. 'Ah well, that is life, I suppose.' His smile faded. 'A
word of warning, Druss. Collan has many friends here. And there are those who
will slit a man's throat for the price of a jug of ale. Walk with care.' He
turned and left the room. There was a jug of wine on the small table
and Sieben filled a clay goblet and sat. 'You are a curious fellow, to be
sure,' he said, grinning. 'But at least Borcha has improved your looks. I think
your nose is broken.' 'I think you are right,' said Druss. 'So
tell me of your day.' 'I visited four well-known slave traders.
Collan brought no women with him to the slave markets. The story of your attack
on Harib Ka is known everywhere. Some of the men who survived have now joined
Collan, and they speak of you as a demon. But it is a mystery, Druss. I don't
know where she could be - unless at his home.' The wound above Druss's right eye began to
seep blood. Sieben found a cloth and offered it to the axeman. Dross waved it
away. 'It will seal. Forget about it.' 'By the gods, Dross, you must be in agony.
Your face is swollen, your eyes black.' 'Pain lets you know you're alive,' said
Dross. 'Did you spend your silver pennies on the whore?' Sieben chuckled. 'Yes. She was very good -
told me I was the best love-maker she had ever known.' 'There's a surprise,' said Druss and Sieben
laughed. 'Yes - but it's nice to hear.' He sipped
his wine, then stood and gathered his belongings. 'Where are you going?' asked Druss. 'Not I . . .we. We'll move rooms.' 'I like it here.' 'Yes, it is quaint. But we need to sleep
and - convivial as they both were - I see no reason to trust men I do not know.
Collan will send killers after you, Druss. Bodasen may be in his employ, and as
for the walking lice-sack who just left I think he'd sell his mother for a
copper farthing. So trust me, and let's move.' 'I liked them both - but you are right. I
do need sleep.' Sieben stepped outside and called to a
tavern maid, slipping her a silver piece and asking for their move to be kept
secret - even from the landlord. She slipped the coin into the pocket of her
leather apron and took the two men to the far end of the gallery. The new room
was larger than the first, boasting three beds and two lanterns. A fire had
been laid in the hearth, but it was unlit and the room was cold. When the maid had departed Sieben lit the
fire and sat beside it, watching the flames lick at the tinder. Druss pulled
off his boots and jerkin and stretched out on the widest of the beds. Within
moments he was asleep, his axe on the floor beside the bed. Sieben lifted the baldric of knives from
his shoulder and hooked it over the back of the chair. The fire blazed more
brightly and he added several thick chunks of wood from the log basket beside
the hearth. As the hours passed, all sounds from the inn below faded, and only
the crackling of burning wood disturbed the silence. Sieben was tired, but he
did not sleep. Then he heard the sounds of men upon the
stairs, stealthy footfalls. Drawing one of his knives he moved to the door,
opening it a fraction and peering out. At the other end of the gallery some
seven men were crowding around the door of their previous quarters; the
landlord was with them. The door was wrenched open and the men surged inside,
but moments later they returned. One of the newcomers took hold of the landlord
by his shirt and pushed him against the wall. The frightened man's voice rose,
and Sieben could just make out some of his words: "They were . . .
honestly . . . lives of my children . . . they . . . without paying . . .'
Sieben watched as the man was hurled to the floor. The would-be assassins then
trooped down the gallery stairs and out into the night. Pushing shut the door, Sieben returned to
the fire. And slept. Chapter SixBorcha sat quietly while Collan berated the
men he had sent in search of Druss. They stood shamefaced before him, heads
down. 'How long have you been with me, Kotis?' he asked one of them, his voice
low and thick with menace. 'Six years,' answered the man at the centre
of the group, a tall, wide-shouldered bearded fist-fighter. Borcha remembered
his destruction of this man; it had taken no more than a minute. 'Six years,' echoed Collan. 'And in that
time have you seen other men fall foul of me?' 'Aye, I have. But we got the information
from Old Thorn. He swore they were staying in the Tree of Bone - and so they
were. But they went into hiding after the fight with Borcha. We've men still
looking; they won't be hard to find tomorrow.' 'You're right,' said Collan. 'They won't be
hard to find; they'll be coming here!' 'You could give his wife back,' offered
Bodasen, who was lounging on a couch on the far side of the room. 'I don't give women back. I take
them! Anyway, I don't know which farm wench he's talking about. Most of those
we took were freed when the madman attacked the camp. I expect his wife took a
welcome opportunity to escape from his clutches.' 'He's not a man I'd want hunting me,' said
Borcha. 'I've never hit anyone so hard - and seen them stay on their feet.' 'Get back out on the streets, all of you.
Scour the inns and taverns near the docks. They won't be far. And understand
this, Kotis, if he does walk into my home tomorrow I'll kill you!' The men shuffled out and Borcha leaned back
on the couch, suppressing a groan as his injured rib lanced pain into his side.
He had been forced to withdraw from the tournament, and that hurt his pride.
Yet he felt a grudging admiration for the young fighter; he, too, would have taken
on an army for Caria. 'You know what I think?' he offered. 'What?' snapped Collan. 'I think she's the witch you sold to
Kabuchek. What was her name?' 'Rowena.' 'Did you rape her?' 'I didn't touch her,' lied Collan. 'And
anyway, I've sold her to Kabuchek. He gave me five thousand in silver - just
like that. I should have asked for ten.' 'I think you should see the Old Woman,'
advised Borcha. 'I don't need a prophet to tell me how to
deal with one country bumpkin and an axe. Now to business.' He turned to Bodasen.
'It is too early to have received word on our demands, so why are you here
tonight?' The Ventrian smiled, his teeth startlingly
white against the black trident beard. 'I came because I told the young fighter
that we were acquainted. I said I might be able to secure the release of his
wife. But if you have already sold her, then I have wasted my time.' 'What concern is it of yours?' Bodasen rose and flung his black cloak
around his shoulders. 'I am a soldier, Collan - as you once were. And I know men.
You should have seen his fight with Borcha. It wasn't pretty, it was brutal and
almost terrifying. You are not dealing with a country bumpkin, you are facing a
terrible killer. I don't believe you have the men to stop him.' 'Why should you care?' 'Ventria needs the Free Traders and you are
my link to them. I don't want to see you dead just yet.' 'I am a fighter too, Bodasen,' said Collan. 'Indeed you are, Drenai. But let us review
what we know. Harib Ka, according to those of his men who survived the raid,
sent six men into the woods. They did not return. I spoke to Druss tonight and
he told me he killed them. I believe him. Then he attacked a camp where forty
armed men were based. The men ran away. Now he has fought Borcha, whom most
men, including myself, believed to be invincible. The rabble you just sent out
will have no chance against him.' True,' admitted Collan, 'but as soon as he
kills them the City Watch will take him. And I have only four more days to
spend here; then I sail for the Free Trading ports. However, I take it you have
some advice to offer?' 'Indeed I do. Get the woman back from
Kabuchek and deliver her to Druss. Buy her or steal her - but do it, Collan.'
With a short, perfunctory bow the Ventrian officer left the room. 'I'd listen to him if I were you,' advised
Borcha. 'Not you as well!' stormed Collan. 'By the
gods, did he scramble your brains tonight? You and I both know what keeps us at
the top of this filthy pile. Fear. Awe. Sometimes sheer terror. Where would my
reputation be if I gave back a stolen woman?' 'You are quite right,' said Borcha, rising,
'but a reputation can be rebuilt. A life is something else. He said he'd tear
off your head and he's a man who could do just that.' 'I never thought to see you running scared,
my friend. I thought you were impervious to fear.' Borcha smiled. 'I am strong, Collan. I use
my reputation because it makes it easier to win but I don't live it. If
I were to be in the path of a charging bull, then I would step aside, or turn
and run, or climb a tree. A strong man should always know his limitations.' 'Well, he's helped you know yours, my
friend,' said Collan, with a sneer. Borcha smiled and shook his head. He left
Collan's house and wandered through the northern streets. They were wider here,
and lined with trees. Officers of the Watch marched by him, the captain
saluting as he recognised the champion. Former champion, thought Borcha. Now it was
Grassin who would win the accolades. Until next year. 'I'll be back,' whispered
Borcha. 'I have to. It is all I have.' * Sieben floated to consciousness through
layers of dreams. He was drifting on a blue lake, yet his body was dry; he was
standing on an island of flowers, but could not feel the earth beneath his
feet; he was lying on a satin bed, beside a statue of marble. At his touch she
became flesh, but remained cold. He opened his eyes and the dreams whispered
away from his memory. Druss was still asleep. Sieben rose from the chair and
stretched his back, then he gazed down on the sleeping warrior. The stitches on Druss's brows were tight
and puckered, dried blood had stained both eyelids and his nose was swollen and
discoloured. Yet despite the wounds his face radiated strength and Sieben felt
chilled by the almost inhuman power of the youth. Druss groaned and opened his eyes. 'How are you feeling this morning?' asked
the poet. 'Like a horse galloped over my face,'
answered Druss, rolling from the bed and pouring himself a goblet of water.
Someone tapped at the door. Sieben rose from his chair and drew a knife
from its sheath. 'Who is it?' 'It is me, sir,' came the voice of the
tavern-maid. "There is a man to see you; he is downstairs.' Sieben opened the door and the maid
curtsied. 'Do you know him?' asked Sieben. 'He is the Ventrian gentleman who was here
last night, sir.' 'Is he alone?' 'Yes, sir.' 'Send him up,' ordered Sieben. While they
were waiting he told Druss about the men who had come searching for them the
night before. 'You should have woken me,' said Druss. 'I thought we could do without a scene of
carnage,' Sieben replied. Bodasen entered and immediately crossed to
where Druss stood by the window. He leaned in and examined the stitches on the
axeman's eyebrows. "They've held well,' said Bodasen, with a smile. 'What news?' asked Druss. The Ventrian removed his black cloak and
draped it over a chair. 'Last night Collan had men scouring the city for you.
Assassins. But today he has come to his senses. This morning he sent a man to
me with a message for you. He has decided to return your wife to you.' 'Good. When and where.' "There is a quay about a half-mile
west of here. He will meet you there tonight, one hour after dusk, and he will
have Rowena with him. But he is a worried man, Druss; he doesn't want to die.' 'I'll not kill him,' promised Druss. 'He wants you to come alone - and unarmed.' 'Madness!' stormed Sieben. 'Does he think
he is dealing with fools?' 'Whatever else he may be,' said Bodasen,
'he is still a Drenai noble. His word must be accepted.' 'Not by me,' hissed Sieben. 'He is a
murdering renegade who has become rich by dealing in the misery of others.
Drenai noble indeed!' 'I'll go,' said Druss. 'What other choices
are there?' 'It is a trap, Druss. There is no honour in
men like Collan. He'll be there, right enough - with a dozen or so killers.' 'They won't stop me,' insisted the axeman,
his pale eyes gleaming. 'A knife through the throat can stop
anyone.' Bodasen stepped forward and laid his hand
on Druss's shoulder. 'Collan assured me this was an honest trade. I would not
have brought this message had I believed it to be false.' Druss nodded and smiled. 'I believe you,'
he said. 'How did you find us?' enquired Sieben. 'This is where you said you would be,'
answered Bodasen. 'Exactly where will this meeting take
place?' asked Druss. Bodasen gave directions and then bade them farewell. When he had left Sieben turned on the young
axeman. 'You truly believe him?' 'Of course. He is a Ventrian gentleman. My
father told me they are the world's worst traders because they have a hatred of
lies and deceit. They are reared that way.' 'Collan isn't a Ventrian,' Sieben pointed
out. 'No,' agreed Druss, his expression grim.
'No, he is not. He is everything you described. And you are quite right, poet.
It will be a trap.' 'And yet you will still go?' 'As I have already said, there are no other
choices. But you don't have to be there. You owe Shadak - not me.' Sieben smiled. 'You are quite right, old
horse. So how shall we play this little game?' * An hour before dusk Collan sat in an upper
room overlooking the quay. The bearded Kotis stood beside him. 'Is everyone in
place?' asked the Drenai swordsman. 'Aye. Two crossbowmen, and six
knife-fighters. Is Borcha coming?' Collan's handsome face darkened. 'No.' 'He would make a difference,' observed
Kotis. 'Why?' snapped Collan. 'He's already taken
one beating from the peasant!' 'You really think he will come alone and
unarmed?' 'Bodasen believes he will.' 'Gods, what a fool!' Collan laughed. 'The world is full of
fools, Kotis. That is how we grow rich.' He leaned out of the window and gazed
down on the quayside. Several whores were lounging in doorways, and two beggars
were accosting passers-by. A drunken dock-worker staggered from a tavern,
collided with a wall and slid to the ground by a mooring post. He tried to
rise, but as he lifted his work-sack he fell back, and then curled up on the
stone and went to sleep. What a city, thought Collan! What a wonderful city. A
whore moved to the sleeping man and dipped her fingers expertly into his
money-pouch. Collan stepped back from the window and
drew his sabre. Taking a whetstone, he sharpened the edge. He had no intention
of facing the peasant, but a man could never be too careful. Kotis poured a goblet of cheap wine. 'Don't
drink too much of that,' warned Collan. 'Even unarmed, the man can fight.' 'He won't fight so well with a crossbow
bolt through the heart.' Collan sat down in a padded leather chair
and stretched out his long legs. 'In a few days we'll be rich, Kotis. Ventrian
gold -enough to fill this squalid room. Then we'll sail to Naashan and buy a
palace. Maybe more than one.' 'You think the pirates will aid Ventria?'
asked Kotis. 'No, they've already taken Naashanite gold.
Ventria is finished.' 'Then we keep Bodasen's money?' 'Of course. As I said, the world is full of
fools. You know, I used to be one of them. I had dreams, I wasted half my life
on them. Chivalry, gallantry. My father fed me the concepts until my mind was
awash with dreams of knighthood and I truly believed it all.' Collan chuckled.
'Incredible! But I learnt the error of my ways. I become wise to the way of the
world.' 'You are in good humour today,' observed
Kotis. 'You'll have to kill Bodasen too. He won't
be pleased when he learns he's been tricked.' 'Him I'll fight,' said Collan. 'Ventrians!
A pox on them! They think they're better than everyone else. Bodasen more than
most; he thinks he's a swordsman. We'll see. I'll cut him a piece at a time, a
nick here and a slash there. He'll suffer well enough. I'll break his pride
before I kill him.' 'He may be better than you,' ventured
Kotis. 'No one is better than me, with sabre or
short blade.' 'They say Shadak is one of the best who
ever lived.' 'Shadak is an old man!' stormed Collan,
surging to his feet, 'and even at his best he could not have faced me.' Kotis paled and began to stammer out an
apology. 'Be silent!' snapped Collan. 'Get outside and check that the men are
in position.' As Kotis backed from the room, Collan
poured himself a goblet of wine and sat down by the window. Shadak! Always
Shadak. What was it about the man that inspired men to revere him? What had he
ever done? Shema's balls, I've killed twice as many swordsmen as the old man!
But do they sing songs about Collan? No. . One day I'll hunt him out, he promised
himself. Somewhere in public view, where men can see the great Shadak humbled.
He glanced out of the window. The sun was setting, turning the sea to fire. Soon the peasant would arrive. Soon the
enjoyment would begin. * Druss approached the quayside. There was a
ship moored at the far end; dock-workers were untying the mooring ropes and
hurling them to the decks, while aloft sailors were unfurling the great square
of the main-mast. Gulls swooped above the vessel, their wings silver in the
moonlight. The young warrior glanced along the quayside,
which was almost deserted save for two whores and a sleeping man. He scanned
the buildings, but all the windows were closed. He could taste fear in his
mouth, not for his own safety but for Rowena's should Collan kill him. A life
of slavery beckoned for her, and Druss could not bear that. The wounds above his eyes were stinging,
and a dull, thudding headache reminded him of the bout with Borcha. He hawked
and spat, then made for the quay. From the shadows to his right a man moved. 'Druss!' came a low voice. He stopped and
turned his head to see Old Thorn standing just inside the mouth of a dark
alleyway. 'What do you want?' asked Druss. 'They're waiting for you, lad. There's nine
of them. Go back!' 'I cannot. They have my wife.' 'Damn you, boy, you're going to die.' 'We'll see.' 'Listen to me. Two have crossbows. Keep
close to the wall on the right. The bowmen are in upper rooms; they'll not be
able to sight their weapons if you keep to the wall.' 'I'll do that,' said Druss. 'Thank you, old
man.' Thorn faded back into the shadows and was
gone. Drawing in a deep breath, Druss moved on to the quay. Above and ahead of
him he saw a window open. Altering his line, he moved in towards the walls of
the moonlit buildings. 'Where are you, Collan?' he shouted. Armed men moved out of the shadows and he
saw the tall, handsome figure of Collan among them. Druss walked forward.
'Where is my wife?' he called. 'That's the beauty of it,' answered Collan,
pointing at the ship. 'She's on board - sold to the merchant Kapuchek, who is
even now sailing for his home in Ventria. Maybe she will even see you die!' 'In your dreams!' snarled Druss as he
charged the waiting men. Behind them the drunken dock-worker suddenly rose, two
knives in his hands. One blade flashed by Collan's head, burying itself to the
hilt in Kotis's neck. A dagger swept towards Druss's belly, but
he brushed the attacker's arm aside and delivered a bone-crunching blow to the
man's chin, spinning him into the path of the warriors behind him. A knife
plunged into Druss's back. Twisting, he grabbed the wielder by the throat and
groin and hurled him into the remaining men. Sieben pulled Snaga from the work-sack and
threw it through the air. Druss caught the weapon smoothly. Moonlight glittered
from the terrible blades and the attackers scattered and ran. Druss ran towards the ship, which was
gliding slowly away from the quayside. 'Rowena!' he yelled. Something struck him
in the back and he staggered, then fell to his knees. He saw Sieben run forward.
The poet's arm went back, then swept down. Druss half turned to see a
crossbowman outlined against a window-frame; the man dropped his bow, then
tumbled from the window with a knife embedded in his eye. Sieben knelt alongside Druss. 'Lie still,'
he said. 'You've a bolt in your back!' 'Get away from me!' shouted Druss, levering
himself to his feet. 'Rowena!' He stumbled forward but the ship was moving
away from the quay more swiftly now, the wind catching the sail. Druss could
feel blood from his wounds streaming down his back and pooling above his belt.
A terrible lethargy swept over him and he fell again. Sieben came alongside. 'We must get you to
a surgeon,' he heard Sieben say. Then the poet's voice receded away from him,
and a great roaring filled his ears. Straining his eyes, he saw the ship angle
towards the east, the great sail filling. 'Rowena!' he shouted. 'Rowena!' The stone
of the quay was cold against his face, and the distant cries of the gulls
mocked his anguish. Pain flowed through him as he struggled to rise. . ... And fell from the edge of the world. * Collan raced along the quay, then glanced
back. He saw the giant warrior down, his companion kneeling beside him. Halting
his flight, he sat down on a mooring-post to recover his breath. It was
unbelievable! Unarmed, the giant had attacked armed men, scattering them.
Borcha was right. The charging bull analogy had been very perceptive. Tomorrow
Collan would move to a hiding place in the south of the city and then, as
Borcha had advised, seek out the old woman. That was the answer. Pay her to
cast a spell, or send a demon, or supply poison. Anything. Collan rose - and saw a dark figure
standing in the moon shadows by the wall. The man was watching him. 'What are
you staring at?' he said. The shadowy figure moved towards him,
moonlight bathing his face. He wore a tunic shirt of soft black leather, and
two short swords were scabbarded at his hips. His hair was black and long, and
tied in a pony-tail. 'Do I know you?' asked Collan. 'You will, renegade,' said the man, drawing
his right-hand sword. 'You've chosen the wrong man to rob,'
Collan told him. His sabre came up and he slashed the air to left and right,
loosening his wrist. 'I'm not here to rob you, Collan,' said the
man, advancing. 'I'm here to kill you.' Collan waited until his opponent was within
a few paces and then he leapt forward, lunging his sabre towards the man's
chest. There was a clash of steel as their blades met. Collan's sabre was
parried and a lightning riposte swept at the swordsman's throat. Collan jumped
back, the point of the sword missing his eye by less than an inch. 'You are
swift, my friend. I underestimated you.' 'It happens,' said the man. Collan attacked again, this time with a
series of sweeps and thrusts aiming for neck and belly. Their blades glittered
in the moonlight and all around them windows were opened as the discordant
clashing of steel echoed along the quay. Whores leaned out over the window-sills,
yelling encouragement; beggars appeared from alleyways; a nearby tavern emptied
and a crowd gathered in a large circle around the duelling men. Collan was
enjoying himself. His attacks were forcing his opponent back, and he had now
taken the measure of the man. The stranger was fast and lithe, cool under
pressure; but he was no longer young and Collan could sense he was tiring. At
first he had made several counter-attacks, but these were fewer now as he
desperately fended off the younger man's blade. Collan feinted a cut, then
rolled, his wrist lunging forward on to his right foot. The stranger blocked
too late, the point of the sabre piercing the man's left shoulder. Collan leapt
back, his blade sliding clear. 'Almost time to die, old man,' said Collan. 'Yes. How does it feel?' countered his
opponent. Collan laughed. 'You have nerve, I'll say that for you. Before I kill
you, will you tell me why you are hunting me? A wronged wife, perhaps? A
despoiled daughter? Or are you a hired assassin?' 'I am Shadak,' said the man. Collan grinned. 'So the night is not a
total waste.' He glanced at the crowd. 'The great Shadak!' he said, his voice
rising. 'This is the famed hunter, the mighty swordsman. See him bleed? Well,
my friends, you can tell your children how you saw him die! How Collan slew the
man of legend.' He advanced on the waiting Shadak, then
raised his sabre in a mock salute. 'I have enjoyed this duel, old man,' he
said, 'but now it is time to end it.' Even as he spoke he leapt, sending a fast
reverse cut towards Shadak's right side. As his opponent parried Collan rolled
his wrist, the sabre rolling over the blocking blade and sweeping up towards
Shadak's unprotected neck. It was the classic killing stroke, and one Collan
had employed many times, but Shadak swayed to his left, the sabre cutting into
his right shoulder. Collan felt a searing pain in his belly and glanced down.
Horrified, he saw Shadak's sword jutting there. 'Burn in Hell!' hissed Shadak, wrenching
the blade clear. Collan screamed and fell to his knees, his sabre clattering
against the stones of the quay. He could feel his heart hammering and agony,
red-hot acid pain, scorched through him. He cried out: 'Help me!' The crowd was silent now. Collan fell face
down on the stones. 'I can't be dying,' he thought. 'Not me. Not Collan.' The pain receded, replaced by a soothing
warmth that stole across his tortured mind. He opened his eyes and could see
his sabre glinting on the stones just ahead. He reached out for it, his fingers
touching the hilt. 'I can still win!' he told himself. 'I can.
. . .' Shadak sheathed his sword and stared down
at the dead man. Already the beggars were around him, pulling at his boots and
ripping at his belt. Shadak turned away and pushed through the crowd. He saw Sieben kneeling beside the still
figure of Druss, and his heart sank. Moving more swiftly, he came alongside the
body and knelt down. 'He's dead,' said Sieben. 'In your . . . dreams,' hissed Druss. 'Gel
me to my feet.' Shadak chuckled. 'Some men take a sight of
killing,' he told the poet. The two men hauled Druss upright. 'She's out there,' said Druss, staring at
the ship that was slowly shrinking against the distant horizon. 'I know, my friend,' said Shadak softly.
'But we'll find her. Now let's get you to a surgeon.' BOOK TWO: The Demon in the AxePrologueThe ship glided from the harbour, the early
evening swell rippling against the hull. Rowena stood on the aft deck, the tiny
figure of Pudri beside her. Above them, unnoticed on the raised tiller deck,
stood the Ventrian merchant Kabuchek. Tall and cadaverously thin, he stared at
the dock. He had seen Collan cut down by an unknown swordsman, and had watched
the giant Drenai warrior battle his way through Collan's men. Interesting, he
thought, what men will do for love. His thoughts flew back to his youth in
Varsipis and his desire for the young maiden Harenini. Did I love her then, he
wondered? Or has time added colours to the otherwise grey days of youth? The ship lifted on the swell as the vessel
approached the harbour mouth and the surging tides beyond. Kabuchek glanced
down at the girl; Collan had sold her cheaply. Five thousand pieces of silver
for a talent such as hers? Ludicrous. He had been prepared for a charlatan, or
a clever trickster. But she had taken his hand, looked into his eyes and said a
single word: 'Harenini'. Kabuchek had kept the shock from his face. He
had not heard her name in twenty-five years, and certainly there was no way
that the pirate Collan could have known of his juvenile infatuation. Though
already convinced of her talents, Kabuchek asked many questions until finally
he turned to Collan. 'It appears she has a modicum of talent,' he said. 'What
price are you asking?' 'Five thousand.' Kabuchek swung to his servant, the eunuch
Pudri. 'Pay him,' he said, concealing the smile of triumph and contenting
himself with the tormented look which appeared on Collan's face. 'I will take
her to the ship myself.' Now, judging by how close the axeman had
come, he congratulated himself upon his shrewdness. He heard Pudri's gentle
voice speaking to the girl. 'I pray your husband is not dead,' said
Pudri. Kabuchek glanced back at the dock and saw two Drenai warriors were
kneeling beside the still figure of the axeman. 'He will live,' said Rowena, tears filling
her eyes. 'And he will follow me.' If he does, thought Kabuchek, I will have
him slain. 'He has a great love for you, Pahtai,' said
Pudri soothingly. 'So it should be between husband and wife. It rarely happens
that way, however. I myself have had three wives - and none of them loved me.
But then a eunuch is not the ideal mate.' The girl watched the tiny figures on the
dock until the ship had slipped out of the harbour and the lights of Mashrapur
became distant twinkling candles. She sighed and sank down on the rail seat,
her head bowed, tears spilling from her eyes. Pudri sat beside her, his slender arm on
her shoulders. 'Yes,' he whispered, 'tears are good. Very good.' Patting her
back as if she were a small child, he sat beside her and whispered meaningless
platitudes. Kabuchek climbed down the deck steps and
approached them. 'Bring her to my cabin,' he ordered Pudri. Rowena glanced up at the harsh face of her
new master. His nose was long and hooked, like the beak of an eagle, and his
skin was darker than any she had seen, almost black. His eyes, however, were a
bright blue beneath thick brows. Beside her Pudri stood, helping her to her
feet, and together they followed the Ventrian merchant down the steps to the
aft cabin. Lanterns were lit here, hanging on bronze hooks from low oak beams. Kabuchek sat down behind a desk of polished
mahogany. 'Cast the runes for the voyage,' he ordered Rowena. 'I do not cast runes,' she said. 'I would
not know how.' He waved his hand dismissively. 'Do
whatever it is you do, woman. The sea is a treacherous mistress and I need to
know how the voyage will be.' Rowena sat opposite him. 'Give me your hand,'
she said. Leaning forward, he struck her face with his open palm. It was not a
heavy blow, but it stung the skin. 'You will address me always as master,' he
said, without any display of anger. His bright blue eyes scrutinised her face
for any sign of anger or defiance, but found himself gazing into calm hazel
eyes which appeared to be appraising him. Curiously he felt like apologising
for the blow, which was a ridiculous thought. It was not intended to hurt,
being merely a swift method of establishing authority-ownership. He cleared his
throat. 'I expect you to learn swiftly the ways of Ventrian households. You
will be well cared for and well fed; your quarters will be comfortable and warm
in winter, cool in summer. But you are a slave: understand that. I own you. You
are property. Do you understand this?' 'I understand . . . master,' said
the girl. The title was said with just a touch of emphasis, but without
insolence. 'Very well. Then let us move on to more
important matters.' He extended his hand. Rowena reached out and touched his open
palm. At first she could see only the details of his recent past, his agreement
with the traitors who had slain the Ventrian Emperor, one of them a hawk-faced
man. Kabuchek was kneeling before him and there was blood on the man's sleeve.
A name whispered into her mind - Shabag. 'What's that you say?' hissed Kabuchek. Rowena blinked, then realised she must have
spoken the name. 'I see a tall man with blood on his sleeve. You are kneeling
before him . . .' 'The future, girl! Not the past.' From the
decks above came a great flapping as if some giant flying beast was descending
from the sky. Rowena was startled. 'It is just the mainsail,' said Kabuchek.
'Concentrate, girl!' Closing her eyes, Rowena allowed her mind
to drift. She could see the ship now from above, floating on a clear sea
beneath a sky of brilliant blue. Then another ship hove into sight, a trireme,
its three banks of oars sending up a white spray as it sheared through the
waves towards them. Rowena floated closer . . . closer. Armed men filled the
trireme's deck. Silver-grey forms swam around the trireme -
great fish, twenty feet long, with fins like spear points cutting through the
water. Rowena watched as the two ships crashed together, saw men falling into the
water and the sleek grey fish rising up towards them. Blood billowed into the
sea, and she saw the jagged teeth in the mouths of the fish, saw them rend and
tear and dismember the helpless sailors thrashing in the water. The battle on the ship's deck was short and
brutal. She saw herself and.Pudri, and the tall form of Kabuchek clambering
over the aft rail and leaping out into the waves. The killer fish circled them - then moved
in. Rowena could watch no more and, jerking her
mind to the present, she opened her eyes. 'Well, what did you see?' asked Kabuchek. 'A black-sailed trireme, master.' 'Earin Shad,' whispered Pudri, his face
pale, his eyes fearful. 'Do we escape him?' asked Kabuchek. 'Yes,' said Rowena, her voice dull, her
thoughts full of despair, 'we escape Earin Shad.' 'Good. I am well satisfied,' announced
Kabuchek. He glanced at Pudri. 'Take her to her cabin and give her some food.
She is looking pale.' Pudri led Rowena back along the narrow
corridor to a small door. Pushing it open, he stepped inside. 'The bed is very
small, but you are not large. I think it will suffice, Pahtai.' Rowena
nodded dumbly and sat. 'You saw more than you told the master,' he
said. 'Yes. There were fish, huge fish, dark with
terrible teeth.' 'Sharks,' said Pudri, sitting beside her. 'This ship will be sunk,' she told him.
'And you and I, and Kabuchek, will leap into the sea, where the sharks will be
waiting.' Chapter OneSieben sat in an outer room, sunlight
slanting through the shuttered window at his back. He could hear low voices
from the room beyond - a man's deep, pleading tones, and the harsh responses
from the Old Woman. Muffled by the thick walls of stone and the oak door, the
words were lost - which was just as well, since Sieben had no wish to hear the
conversation. The Old Woman had many clients; most seeking the murder of rivals
- at least, according to the whispered gossip he had heard. He closed his ears to the voices and
concentrated instead on the shafts of light and the gleaming dust motes dancing
within them. The room was bare of ornament save for the three seats of plain,
unfinished wood. They were not even well made and Sieben guessed they had been
bought in the southern quarter, where the poor spent what little money they
had. Idly he swept his hand through a shaft of
light. The dust scattered and swirled. The oak door opened and a middle-aged man
emerged. Seeing Sieben, he swiftly turned his face away and hurried from the
house. The poet rose and moved towards the open door. The room beyond was
scarcely better furnished than the waiting area. There was a broad table with
ill-fitting joints, two hard wood chairs and a single shutter window. No light
shone through the slats and Sieben saw that old cloths had been wedged between
them. 'A curtain would have been sufficient to
block the light,' he said, forcing a lightness of tone he did not feel. The Old Woman did not smile, her face
impassive in the light of the red-glassed lantern on the table before her. 'Sit,' she said. He did so, and tried to stop himself from
considering her awesome ugliness. Her teeth were multi-coloured - green, grey
and the brown of rotting vegetation. Her eyes were rheumy, and a cataract had
formed in the left. She was wearing a loose-fitting gown of faded red, and a
gold talisman was partially hidden in the wrinkled folds of her neck. 'Put the gold upon the table,' she said. He
lifted a single gold raq from the pouch at his side and slid it towards her.
Making no move to pick up the coin, she looked into his face. 'What do you
require of me?' she asked him. 'I have a friend who is dying.' 'The young axeman.' 'Yes. The surgeons have done all they can,
but there is poison within his lungs, and the knife wound in his lower back
will not heal.' 'You have something of his with you?' Sieben nodded and pulled the
silver-knuckled gauntlet from his belt. She took it from his hand and sat in
silence, running the calloused skin of her thumb across the leather and metal.
'The surgeon is Calvar Syn,' she said. 'What does he say?' 'Only that Druss should already be dead.
The poison in his system is spreading; they are forcing liquids into him, but
his weight is falling away and he has not opened his eyes in four days.' 'What would you have me do?' Sieben shrugged. 'It is said you are very
skilled in herbs. I thought you might save him.' She laughed suddenly, the sound dry and
harsh. 'My herbs do not usually prolong life, Sieben.' Laying the gauntlet upon
the table, she leaned back in her chair. 'He suffers,' she said. 'He has lost
his lady, and his will to live is fading. Without the will, there is no hope.' 'There is nothing you can do?' 'About his will? No. But his lady is on
board a ship bound for Ventria and she is safe - for the moment. But the war
sweeps on and who can say what will become of a slave-girl if she reaches that
battle-torn continent? Go back to the hospital. Take your friend to the house
Shadak is preparing for you.' 'He will die, then?' She smiled, and Sieben tore his eyes from
the sudden show of rotting teeth. 'Perhaps . . . Place him in a room where the
sunlight enters in the morning, and lay his axe upon his bed, his fingers upon
the hilt.' Her hand snaked across the table, and the gold raq vanished into her
palm. 'That is all you can tell me for an ounce
of gold?" 'It is all you need to know. Place his hand
upon the hilt.' Sieben rose. 'I had expected more.' 'Life is full of disappointments, Sieben.' He moved to the door, but her voice stopped
him. 'Do not touch the blades,' she warned. 'What?' 'Carry the weapon with care.' Shaking his head, he left the house. The
sun was hidden now behind dark clouds, and rain began to fall. * Druss was sitting alone and exhausted
upon a grim mountainside, the sky above him grey and forlorn, the earth around
him arid and dry. He gazed up at the towering peaks so far above him and
levered himself to his feet. His legs were unsteady, and he had been climbing
for so long that all sense of time had vanished. All he knew was that Rowena
waited on the topmost peak, and he must find her. Some twenty paces ahead was a
jutting finger of rock and Druss set off towards it, forcing his aching limbs
to push 'his weary body on and up. Blood was gushing from the wounds in his
back, making the ground treacherous around his feet. He fell. Then he crawled. It seemed that hours had passed. He looked up. The jutting finger of rock
was now forty paces from him. Despair came fleetingly, but was washed
away on a tidal wave of rage. He crawled on. Ever on. 'I won't give up,' he hissed. 'Ever.' Something cold touched his hand, his
fingers closing around an object of steel. And he heard a voice. 7 am back, my brother.' Something in the words chilled him. He
gazed down at the silver axe - and felt his wounds heal, his strength flooding
back into his frame. Rising smoothly, he looked up at the
mountain. It was merely a hill. Swiftly he strode to the top. And woke. * Calvar Syn patted Druss's back. 'Put on your shirt, young man,' he
said. 'The wounds have finally healed. There is a little pus, but the blood is
fresh and the scab contains no corruption. I congratulate you on your
strength.' Druss nodded, but did not reply. Slowly and
with care he pulled on his shirt of grey wool, then leaned back exhausted on
the bed. Calvar Syn reached out, gently pressing his index finger to the pulse
point on the young man's throat. The beat was erratic and fast, but this was to
be expected after such a long infection. 'Take a deep breath,' ordered the
surgeon and Druss obeyed. 'The right lung is still not operating at full
efficiency; but it will. I want you to move out into the garden. Enjoy the
sunshine and the sea air.' The surgeon rose and left the room, walking
down the long hallways and out into the gardens beyond. He saw the poet,
Sieben, sitting beneath a spreading elm and tossing pebbles into a man-made
pond. Calvar Syn wandered to the poolside. 'Your friend is improving, but not as
swiftly as I had hoped,' he said. 'Did you bleed him?' 'No. There is no longer a fever. He is very
silent . . . withdrawn.' Sieben nodded. 'His wife was taken from
him.' 'Very sad, I'm sure. But there are other
women in the world,' observed the surgeon. 'Not for him. He loves her, he's going
after her.' 'He'll waste his life,' said Calvar. 'Has
he any idea of the size of the Ventrian continent? There are thousands upon
thousands of small towns and villages, and more than three hundred major
cities. Then there is the war. All shipping has ceased. How will he get there?' 'Of course he understands. But he's Druss -
he's not like you or me, surgeon.' The poet chuckled and threw another pebble.
'He's an old-fashioned hero. You don't see many these days. He'll find a way.' Calvar cleared his throat. 'Hmmm. Well,
your old-fashioned hero is currently as strong as a three-day lamb. He is deep
in a melancholic state, and until he recovers from it I cannot see him
improving. Feed him red meat and dark green vegetables. He needs food for the
blood.' He cleared his throat again, and stood silently. 'Was there something else?' asked the poet. Calvar cursed inwardly. People were always
the same. As soon as they were sick, they sent at speed for the doctor. But
when it came to the time for settling accounts . . . No one expected a baker to
part with bread without coin. Not so a surgeon. There is the question of my
fee,' he said coldly. 'Ah, yes. How much is it?' 'Thirty raq.' 'Shema's balls! No wonder you surgeons live
in palaces.' Calvar sighed, but kept his temper. 'I do
not live in a palace; I have a small house to the north. And the reason why
surgeons must charge such fees is that a great number of patients renege. Your
friend has been ill now for two months. During this time I have made more than
thirty visits to this house, and I have had to purchase many expensive herbs.
Three times now you have promised to settle the account. On each occasion you
ask me how much is it. So you have the money?' 'No,' admitted Sieben. 'How much do you have?' 'Five raq.' Calvar held out his hand and Sieben handed
him the coins. 'You have until this time next week to find the rest of the
money. After that I shall I inform the Watch. In Mashrapur the law is simple:
if you do not honour your debts your property will be sequestered. Since this
house does not belong to you and, as far as I know, you have no source of
income, you are likely to be imprisoned until sold as a slave. Until next week
then.' Calvar turned away and strode through the
garden, his anger mounting. Another bad debt. One day I really will go to the Watch, he
promised himself. He strolled on through the narrow streets, his medicine bag
swinging from his narrow shoulders. 'Doctor! Doctor!' came a woman's voice and
he swung to see a young woman running towards him. Sighing he waited. 'Could
you come with me? It's my son, he has a fever.' Calvar looked down at the
woman. Her dress was of poor quality, and old. She wore no shoes. 'And how will you pay me?' he asked, the
question springing from the residue of his anger. She stood silent for a moment. 'You can
take everything I have,' she said simply. He shook his head, his anger finally
disappearing. 'That will not be necessary,' he told her, with a professional
smile. He arrived home a little after midnight.
His servant had left him a cold meal of meat and cheese. Calvar stretched out
on a leather-covered couch and sipped a goblet of wine. Untying his money-pouch, he tipped the
contents to the table. Three raq tumbled to the wooden surface. 'You will never
be rich, Calvar,' he said, with a wry smile. He had sat with the boy while the mother
was out buying food. She had returned with eggs, and meat, and milk, and bread,
her face glowing. It was worth two raq just to see her expression, he thought. * Druss made his way slowly out into the
garden. The moon was high, the stars bright. He remembered a poem of Sieben's: Glitter
dust in the lair of night. Yes, that's how the stars looked. He was
breathing heavily by the time he reached the circular seat constructed around
the bole of the elm. Take a deep breath, the surgeon had ordered. Deep? If felt
as if a huge lump of stone had been wedged into his lungs, blocking all air. The crossbow bolt had pierced cleanly, but
it had also driven a tiny portion of his shirt into the wound, and this had
caused the poison that drained his strength. The wind was cool, and bats circled above
the trees. Strength. Druss realised now just how much he had undervalued
the awesome power of his body. One small bolt and a hastily thrust knife had
reduced him to this shambling, weak shell. How, in this state, could he rescue
Rowena? Despair struck him like a fist under the
heart. Rescue her? He did not even know where she was, save that thousands of
miles now separated them. No Ventrian ships sailed, and even if they did he had
no gold with which to purchase passage. He gazed back at the house where golden
light gleamed from Sieben's window. It was a fine house, better than any Druss
had ever visited. Shadak had arranged for them to rent the property, the owner
being trapped in Ventria. But the rent was due. The surgeon had told him it
would be two months before his strength began to return. We'll starve before then, thought Druss.
Levering himself to his feet, he walked on to the high wall at the rear of the
garden. By the time he reached it his legs felt boneless, his breath was coming
in ragged gasps. The house seemed an infinite distance away. Druss struck out
for it, but had to stop by the pond and sit at the water's edge. Splashing his
face, he waited until his feeble strength returned, then rose and stumbled to the
rear doors. The iron gate at the far end of the garden was lost in shadow now.
He wanted to walk there once more, but his will was gone. As he was about to enter the building he
saw movement from the corner of his eye. He swung, ponderously, and a man moved
from the shadows. 'Good to see you alive, lad,' said Old
Thorn. Druss smiled. There is an ornate
door-knocker at the front of the house,' he said. 'Didn't know as I'd be welcome,' the old
man replied. Druss led the way into the house, turning
left into the large meeting room with its four couches and six padded chairs.
Thorn moved to the hearth, lighting a taper from the dying flames of the fire,
then touching it to the wick of a lantern set on the wall. 'Help yourself to a
drink,' offered Druss. Old Thorn poured a goblet of red wine, then a second
which he passed to the young man. 'You've lost a lot of weight, lad, and you
look like an old man,' said Thorn cheerfully. 'I've felt better.' 'I see Shadak spoke up for you with the
magistrates. No action to be taken over the fight at the quay. Good to have
friends, eh? And don't worry about Calvar Syn.' 'Why should I worry about him?' 'Unpaid debt. He could have you sold into
slavery - but he won't. Soft, he is.' 'I thought Sieben had paid him. I'll not be
beholden to any man.' 'Good words, lad. For good words and a
copper farthing you can buy a loaf of bread.' 'I'll get the money to pay him,' promised
Druss. 'Of course you will, lad. The best way - in
the sand circle. But we've got to get your strength up first. You need to work
- though my tongue should turn black for saying it.' 'I need time,' said Druss. 'You've little time, lad. Borcha is looking
for you. You took away his reputation and he says he'll beat you to death when
he finds you.' 'Does he indeed?' hissed Druss, his pale
eyes gleaming. 'That's more like it, my bonny lad! Anger,
that's what you need! Right, well I'll leave you now. By the way, they're
felling trees to the west of the city, clearing the ground for some new
buildings. They're looking for workers. Two silver pennies a day. It ain't
much, but it's work.' 'I'll think on it.' 'I'll leave you to your rest, lad. You look
like you need it.' Druss watched the old man leave, then
walked out into the garden once more. His muscles ached, and his heart was
beating to a ragged drum. But Borcha's face was fixed before his mind's eye and
he forced himself to walk to the gate and back. Three times. . . . * Vintar rose from his bed, moving quietly so
as not to wake the four priests who shared the small room in the southern wing.
Dressing himself in a long white habit of rough wool, he padded barefoot along
the cold stone of the corridor and up the winding steps to the ancient
battlements. From here he could see the mountain range
that separated Lentria from the lands of the Drenai. The moon was high, half
full, the sky cloudless. Beyond the temple the trees of the forest shimmered in
the spectral light. 'The night is a good time for meditation,
my son,' said the Abbot, stepping from the shadows. 'But you will need your
strength for the day. You are falling behind in your sword work.' The Abbot was
a broad-shouldered, powerful man who had once been a mercenary. His face bore a
jagged scar from his right cheekbone down to his rugged jaw. 'I am not meditating, Father. I cannot stop
thinking about the woman.' 'The one taken by slavers?' 'Yes. She haunts me.' 'You are here because your parents gave you
into my custody, but you remain of your own free will. Should you desire to
leave and find this girl you may do so. The Thirty will survive, Vintar.' The young man sighed. 'I do not wish to
leave, Father. And it is not that I desire her.' He smiled wistfully. 'I have
never desired a woman. But there was something about her that I cannot shake from
my thoughts.' 'Come with me, my boy. It is cold here, and
I have a fire. We will talk.' Vintar followed the burly Abbot into the
western wing and the two men sat in the Abbot's study as the sky paled towards
dawn. 'Sometimes,' said the Abbot, as he hung a copper kettle over the flames,
'it is hard to define the will of the Source. I have known men who wished to
travel to far lands. They prayed for guidance. Amazingly they found that the
Source was guiding them to do just what they wished for. I say amazingly because,
in my experience, the Source rarely sends a man where he wants to go. That is
part of the sacrifice we make when we serve Him. I do not say it never happens,
you understand, for that would be arrogance. No, but when one prays for
guidance it should be with an open mind, all thoughts of one's own desires put
aside.' The kettle began to hiss, clouds of vapour
puffing from the curved spout. Shielding his hands with a cloth, the Abbot
poured the water into a second pot, in which he had spooned dried herbs.
Placing the kettle in the hearth, he sat back in an old leather chair. 'Now the Source very rarely speaks to us
directly, and the question is: How do we know what is required? These matters
are very complex. You chose to absent yourself from study, and soar across the
Heavens. In doing so you rescued the spirit of a young girl and led her home to
her abused body. Coincidence? I distrust coincidence. Therefore it is my
belief, though I may be wrong, that the Source led you to her. And that is why
she now haunts your mind. Your dealings with her are not yet concluded.' 'You think I should seek her out?' 'I do. Take yourself to the south wing
library. There is a small cell beyond it. I will excuse you from all studies
tomorrow.' 'But how shall I find her again, Lord
Abbot? She was a slave. She could be anywhere.' 'Start with the man who was abusing her.
You know his name - Collan. You know where he was planning to take her -
Mashrapur. Let your spirit search begin there.' The Abbot poured tea into two clay cups.
The aroma was sweet and heady. 'I am the least talented of all the priests,'
said Vintar sorrowfully. 'Surely it would be better to pray for the Source to
send someone stronger?' The Abbot chuckled. 'It is so strange, my
boy. Many people say they wish to serve the Lord of All Peace. But in an
advisory capacity: "Ah, my God, you are most wondrous, having created all
the planets and the stars. However, you are quite wrong to choose me. I know
this, for I am Vintar, and I am weak." ' 'You mock me, father.' 'Of course I mock you. But I do so with at
least a modicum of love in my heart. I was a soldier, a killer, a drunkard, a
womaniser. How do you think I felt when He chose me to become a member of the
Thirty? And when my brother priests stood facing death, can you imagine my
despair at being told I was the one who must survive? I was to be the new
Abbot. I was to gather the new Thirty. Oh Vintar, you have much to learn. Find
this girl. I rather believe that in doing so you will find something for yourself.' The young priest finished his tea and
stood. 'Thank you, Father, for your kindness.' 'You told me she has a husband who was
searching for her,' said the Abbot. 'Yes. A man named Druss.' 'Perhaps he will still be in Mashrapur.' An hour later, in the bright sky above the
city, the spirit of the young priest hovered. From here, despite the distance
that made the buildings and palaces seem tiny, like the building bricks of an
infant, he could feel the pulsing heart of Mashrapur, like a beast upon wakening;
ravenous, filled with greed and lust. Dark emotions radiated from the city,
filling his thoughts and swamping the purity he fought so hard to maintain. He
dropped closer, closer still. Now he could see the dock-workers strolling
to work, and the whores plying the early-morning trade and the merchants
opening their shops and stalls. Where to begin? He had no idea. For hours he flew aimlessly, touching a
mind here, a thought there, seeking knowledge of Collan, Rowena or Druss. He
found nothing save greed, or want, hunger or dissipation, lust or, so rarely,
love. Tired and defeated, he was ready to return
to the Temple when he felt a sudden pull on his spirit, as if a rope had
attached itself to him. In panic he tried to pull away, but though he used all
his strength he was drawn inexorably down into a room where all the windows had
been barred. An elderly woman was sitting before a red lantern. She gazed up at
him as he floated just below the ceiling. 'Ah, but you are a treat to these old eyes,
my pretty,' she said. Suddenly shocked, Vintar realised that his form was naked
and he clothed himself in an instant in robes of white. She gave a dry laugh.
'And modest too.' The smile faded, and with it her good humour. 'What are you
doing here? Hmmm? This is my city, child.' 'I am a priest, lady,' he said. 'I am
seeking knowledge of a woman called Rowena, the wife of Druss, the slave of
Collan.' 'Why?' 'My Abbot instructed me to find her. He
believes the Source may want her protected.' 'By you?' Her good humour returned. 'Boy,
you can't even protect yourself from an old witch. Were I to desire it, I could
send your soul flaming into Hell.' 'Why would you desire such a terrible
thing?' She paused for a moment. 'It might be a
whim, or a fancy. What will you give me for your life?' 'I don't have anything to give.' 'Of course you do,' she said. Her old eyes
closed and he watched her spirit rise from her body. She took the form of a
beautiful woman, young and shapely, with golden hair and large blue eyes. 'Does
this form please you?' 'Of course. It is flawless. Is that how you
looked when younger?' 'No, I was always ugly. But this is how I
choose for you to see me.' She glided in close to him and stroked his face. Her
touch was warm, and he felt a ripple of arousal. 'Please do not continue,' he said. 'Why? Is it not pleasurable?' Her hand
touched his robes and they disappeared. 'Yes, it is. Very. But my vows. . . do not
allow for the pleasures of the flesh.' 'Silly boy,' she whispered into his ear.
'We are not flesh. We are spirit.' 'No,' he said sternly. Instantly he
transformed himself into the image of the old woman sitting at the table. 'Clever boy,' said the beautiful vision.
'Yes, very clever. And virtuous too. I don't know if I like that, but it does
have the charm of being novel. Very well. I will help you.' He felt the invisible chains holding him
disappear, as did the vision. The old woman opened her eyes. 'She was at sea, heading for Ventria when
the ship came under attack. She leapt into the water, and the sharks took her.' Vintar reeled back and cried out, 'It's my
fault! I should have sought her sooner.' 'Go back to your Temple, boy. My time is
precious, and I have clients waiting.' Her laughter rang out and she waved her
hand dismissively. Once more he felt the pull on his spirit. It dragged him
out, hurling him high into the sky over Mashrapur. * Vintar returned to the tiny cell at the
Temple, merging once more with his body. As always he felt nauseous and dizzy
and lay still for a few moments, experiencing the weight of his flesh, feeling
the rough blanket beneath his skin. A great sadness fell upon him. His talents
were far beyond those of normal men, yet they had brought him no pleasure. His
parents had treated him with cold reverence, frightened by his uncanny skills.
They had been both delighted and relieved when the Abbot came to them one
autumn evening, offering to take the boy into his custody. It mattered nothing
to them that the Abbot represented a Temple of the Thirty, where men with
awesome talents trained and studied with one purpose only - to die in some
battle, some distant war, and thus become one with the Source. The prospect of
his death could not grieve his parents, for they had never treated him as a
human being, flesh of their flesh, blood of their blood. They saw him as a
changeling, a demonic presence. He had no friends. Who wants to be around a boy
who can read minds, who can peek into the darkest corners of your soul and know
all your secrets? Even in the Temple he was alone, unable to share in the
simple camaraderie of others with talents the equal of his. And now he had missed an opportunity to
help a young woman, indeed to save her life. He sat up and sighed. The old woman had
been a witch, and he had felt the malevolence of her personality. Even so the
vision she created had aroused him. He could not even withstand such a petty
evil. And then the thought struck him, like a
blow between the eyes. Evil! Malice and deceit walked hand in hand beneath the
darkness of evil. Perhaps she lied! He lay back and forced his mind to relax,
loosening the spirit once more. Soaring from the Temple, he sped across the
ocean, seeking the ship and praying that he was not too late. Clouds were gathering in the east,
promising a storm. Vintar swooped low over the water, spirit eyes scanning the
horizon. Forty miles from the coast of Ventria he
saw the ships, a trireme with a huge black sail and a slender merchant vessel
seeking to avoid capture. The merchant ship swung away, but the trireme
ploughed on, its bronze-covered ram striking the prey amidships, smashing the
timbers and ripping into the heart of the vessel. Armed men swarmed over the
trireme's prow. On the rear deck Vintar saw a young woman dressed in white,
with two men - one tall and dark-skinned, the other small and slightly built.
The trio leapt into the waves. Sharks glided through the water towards them. Vintar flew to Rowena, his spirit hand
touching her shoulder as she bobbed in the water, clinging to a length of
timber, the two men on either side of her. 'Stay calm, Rowena,' he pulsed. A shark lunged up at the struggling trio
and Vintar entered its mind, tasting the bleakness of its non-thoughts, the
coldness of its emotions, the hunger that consumed it. He felt himself becoming
the shark, seeing the world through black, unblinking eyes, tasting the
environment through a sense of smell a hundred, perhaps a thousand times more
powerful than Man's. Another shark glided below the three people, its jaws
opening as it swept up towards them. With a flick of his tail Vintar rammed the
beast, which turned and snapped at his side, barely missing his dorsal fin. Then came a scent in the water, sweet and
beguiling, promising infinite pleasure and a cessation of hunger. Almost
without thinking Vintar swam for it, sensing and seeing the other sharks racing
towards it. And then he knew, and his soaring lust was
quelled as swiftly as it had risen. Blood. The victims of the pirates were
being thrown to the sharks. Releasing control of the sea beast, he flew
back to where Rowena and the others were clinging to the beam. 'Get your
friends to kick out. You must swim away from here,', he told her. He heard her
tell the others, and slowly the three of them began to move away from the
carnage. Vintar soared high into the sky and scanned
the horizon. Another ship was just in sight, a merchant vessel, and the young
priest sped towards it. Dropping to where the captain stood by the tiller
Vintar entered the man's mind, screening out his thoughts of wife, family,
pirates and bad winds. The ship was manned by two hundred rowers and thirty
seamen; it was carrying wine from Lentria to the Naashanite port of Virinis. Vintar flowed through the captain's body,
seeking control. In the lungs he found a small, malignant cancer. Swiftly
Vintar neutralised it, accelerating the body's healing mechanism to carry away
the corrupt cell. Moving up once more into the brain, he made the captain swing
the ship towards the north-west. The captain was a kindly man, his thoughts
mellow. He had seven children, and one of them - the youngest daughter - had
been sick with yellow fever when he set sail. He was praying for her recovery. Vintar imprinted the new course on the
man's unsuspecting mind and flew back to Rowena, telling her of the ship that
would soon arrive. Then he moved to the pirate trireme. Already they had sacked
the merchant vessel and were backing oars, pulling clear the ram and allowing
the looted ship to sink. Vintar entered the captain's mind - and
reeled with the horror of his thoughts. Swiftly he made the man see the distant
merchant ship and filled his mind with nameless fears. The approaching ship, he
made the captain believe, was filled with soldiers. It was an ill omen, it
would be the death of him. Then Vintar left him, and listened with satisfaction
as Earin Shad bellowed orders to his men to turn about and make for the
north-west. Vintar floated above Rowena and the two men
until the merchant ship arrived and hauled them aboard. Then he departed for
the Lentrian port of Chupianin, where he healed the captain's daughter. Only then did he return to the Temple,
where he found the Abbot sitting beside his bed. 'How are you feeling, my boy?' he asked. 'Better than I have in years, Father. The
girl is safe now. And I have enhanced two lives.' 'Three,' said the Abbot. 'You have enhanced
your own.' 'That is true,' admitted Vintar, 'and it is
good to be home.' * Druss could hardly believe the chaos at the
clearing site. Hundreds of men scurried here and there without apparent
direction, felling trees, digging out roots, hacking at the dense, overgrown
vegetation. There was no order to the destruction. Trees were hacked down,
falling across paths used by men with wheelbarrows who were trying to clear the
debris. Even while he waited to see the Overseer he watched a tall pine topple
on to a group of men digging out tree roots. No one was killed, but one worker
suffered a broken arm and several others showed bloody gashes to face or arm. The Overseer, a slender yet pot-bellied
man, called him over. 'Well, what are your skills?' he asked. 'Woodsman,' answered Druss. 'Everyone here claims to be a woodsman,'
said the man wearily. 'I'm looking for men with skill.' 'You certainly need them,' observed Druss. 'I have twenty days to clear this area,
then another twenty to prepare footings for the new buildings. The pay is two
silver pennies a day.' The man pointed to a burly, bearded man sitting on a
tree-stump. 'That's Togrin, the charge-hand. He organises the work-force and
hires the men.' 'He's a fool,' said Druss, 'and he'll get
someone killed.' 'Fool he may be,' admitted the Overseer,
'but he's also a very tough man. No one shirks when he's around.' Druss gazed at the site. 'That may be true;
but you'll never finish on time. And I'll not work for any man who doesn't know
what he's doing.' 'You're a little young to making such
sweeping comments,' observed the Overseer. 'So tell me, how would you
re-organise the work?' Td move the axemen further west and allow
the rest of the men to clear behind them. If it carries on like this, all
movement will cease. Look there,' said Druss, pointing to the right. Trees had
been felled in a rough circle, at the centre of which were men digging out huge
roots. 'Where will they take the roots?' asked the axeman. 'There is no longer
a path. They will have to wait while the trees are hauled away. Yet how will
you move horses and trace chains through to them?' The Overseer smiled. 'You have a point,
young man. Very well. The charge-hand earns four pennies a day. Take his place
and show me what you can do.' Druss took a deep breath. His muscles were
already tired from the long walk to the site, and the wounds in his back were
aching. He was in no condition to fight, and had been hoping to ease himself in
to the work. 'How do you signal a break in the work?' he asked. 'We ring the bell for the noon break. But
that's three hours away.' 'Have it rung now,' said Druss. The Overseer chuckled. "This should
break the monotony,' he said. 'Do you want me to tell Togrin he has lost his
job?' Druss looked into the man's brown eyes.
'No. I'll tell him myself,' he said. 'Good. Then I'll see to the bell.' The Overseer strolled away and Druss picked
his way through the chaos until he was standing close to the seated Togrin. The
man glanced up. He was large and round-shouldered, heavy of arm and sturdy of
chin. His eyes were dark, almost black under heavy brows. 'Looking for work?'
he asked. 'No.' 'Then get off my site. I don't like
idlers.' The clanging of a bell sounded through the
wood. Togrin swore and rose as everywhere men stopped working. 'What the. . .
?' He swung around. 'Who rang that bell?' he bellowed. Men began to gather around the charge-hand
and Druss approached the man. 'I ordered the bell rung,' he said. Togrin's eyes narrowed. 'And who might you
be?' he asked. 'The new charge-hand,' replied Druss. 'Well, well,' said Togrin, with a wide
grin. 'Now there are two charge-hands. I think that's one too many.' 'I agree,' Druss told him. Stepping in
swiftly, he delivered a thundering blow to the man's belly. The air left Togrin's
lungs with a great whoosh and he doubled up, his head dropping. Druss's left
fist chopped down the man's jaw and Togrin hit the ground face first. The
charge-hand twitched, then lay still. Druss sucked in a great gulp of air. He
felt unsteady and white lights danced before his eyes as he looked around at
the waiting men. 'Now we are going to make some changes,' he said. * Day by day Druss's strength grew, the
muscles of his arms and shoulders swelling with each sweeping blow of the axe,
each shovelful of hard clay, each wrenching lift that tore a stubborn tree root
clear of the earth. For the first five days Druss slept at the site in a small
canvas tent supplied by the Overseer. He had not the energy to walk the three
miles back to the rented house. And each lonely night two faces hovered in his
mind as he drifted to sleep: Rowena, whom he loved more than life, and Borcha,
the fist-fighter he knew he had to face. In the quiet of the tent his thoughts were
many. He saw his father differently now and wished he had known him better. It
took courage to live down a father like Bardan the Slayer, and to raise a child
and build a life on the frontier. He remembered the day when the wandering
mercenary had stopped at the village. Druss had been impressed by the man's
weapons, knife, short sword and hand-axe, and by his, battered breastplate and
helm. 'He lives a life of real courage,' he had observed to his father, putting
emphasis on the word real. Bress had merely nodded. Several days later,
as they were walking across the high meadow, Bress had pointed towards the
house of Egan the farmer. 'You want to see courage, boy,' he said. 'Look at him
working in that field. Ten years ago he had a farm on the Sentran Plain, but
Sathuli raiders came in the night, burning him out. Then he moved to the
Ventrian border, where locusts destroyed his crops for three years. He had
borrowed money to finance his farm and he lost everything. Now he is back on
the land, working from first light to last. That's real courage. It
doesn't take much for a man to abandon a life of toil for a sword. The real
heroes are those who battle on.' The boy had known better. You couldn't be a
hero and a farmer. 'If he was so brave, why didn't he fight
off the Sathuli?' 'He had a wife and three children to
protect.' 'So he ran away?' 'He ran away,' agreed Bress. 'I'll never run from a fight,' said Druss. 'Then you'll die young,' Bress told him. Druss sat up and thought back to the raid.
What would he have done if the choice had been to fight the slavers - or run
with Rowena? His sleep that night was troubled. On the sixth night as he walked from the
site a tall, burly figure stepped into his path. It was Togrin, the former
charge-hand. Druss had not seen him since the fight. The young axeman scanned
the darkness, seeking other assailants, but there were none. 'Can we talk?' asked Togrin. 'Why not?' countered Druss. The man took a deep breath. 'I need work,'
he said. 'My wife's sick. The children have not eaten in two days.' Druss looked hard into the man's face,
seeing the hurt pride and instantly sensing what it had cost him to ask for
help. 'Be on site at dawn,' he said, and strolled on. He felt uncomfortable as
he made his way home, telling himself he would never have allowed his own
dignity to be lost in such a way. But even as he thought the words, a seed of
doubt came to him. Mashrapur was a harsh, unforgiving city. A man was valued
only so long as he contributed to the general well-being of the community. And
how dreadful it must be, he thought, to watch your children starve. It was dusk when he arrived at the house.
He was tired, but the bone-weariness he had experienced for so long had faded.
Sieben was not home. Druss lit a lantern and opened the rear door to the garden
allowing the cool sea breeze to penetrate the house. Removing his money-pouch; he counted out
the twenty-four silver pennies he had earned thus far. Twenty was the
equivalent of a single raq, and that was one month's rent on the property. At
this rate he would never earn enough to settle his debts. Old Thorn was right:
he could make far more in the sand circle. He recalled the bout with Borcha, the
terrible pounding he had received. The memory of the punches he had taken was
strong within him - but so too was the memory of those he had thundered into
his opponent. He heard the iron gate creak at the far end
of the garden and saw a shadowly figure making his way towards the house.
Moonlight glinted from the man's bald pate, and he seemed colossal as he strode
through the shadowed trees. Druss rose from his seat, his pale eyes narrowing. Borcha halted just before the door. 'Well,'
he asked, 'are you going to invite me in?' Druss stepped into the garden. 'You can
take your beating out here,' he hissed. 'I've not the money to pay for broken
furniture.' 'You're a cocky lad,' said Borcha amiably,
stepping into the house and draping his green cloak across the back of a couch.
Nonplussed, Druss followed him inside. The big man stretched out in a padded
chair, crossing his legs and leaning his head back against the high back. 'A
good chair,' he said. 'Now how about a drink?' 'What do you want here?' demanded Druss,
fighting to control his rising temper. 'A little hospitality, farm boy. I don't
know about you, but where I come from we normally offer a guest a goblet of
wine when he takes the trouble to call.' 'Where I'm from,' responded Druss,
'uninvited guests are rarely welcome.' 'Why such hostility? You won your wager and
you fought well. Collan did not take my advice - which was to return your wife
-and now he is dead. I had no part in the raid.' 'And I suppose you haven't been looking for
me, seeking your revenge?' Borcha laughed. 'Revenge? For what? You
stole nothing from me. You certainly did not beat me - nor could you. You have
the strength but not the skill. If that had been a genuine bout I would have
broken you, boy - eventually. However, you are quite right - I have been
looking for you.' Druss sat opposite the giant. 'So Old Thorn
told me. He said you were seeking to destroy me.' Borcha shook his head and grinned. 'The
drunken fool misunderstood, boy. Now tell me, how old do you think I am?' 'What? How in the name of Hell should I
know?' stormed Druss. 'I'm thirty-eight, thirty-nine in two
months. And yes, I could still beat Grassin, and probably all the others. But
you showed me the mirror of time, Druss. No one lasts for ever - not in the
sand circle. My day is over; my few minutes with you taught me that. Your day
is beginning. But it won't last long unless you learn how to fight.' 'I need no instruction in that,' said
Druss. 'You think not? Every time you throw a
right-hand blow, you drop your left shoulder. All of your punches travel in a
curve. And your strongest defence is your chin which, though it may appear to
be made of granite, is in fact merely bone. Your footwork is adequate, though
it could be improved, but your weaknesses are many. Grassin will exploit them;
he will wear you down.' 'That's one opinion,' argued Druss. 'Don't misunderstand me, lad. You are good.
You have heart and great strength. But you also know how you felt after four
minutes with me. Most bouts last ten times that long.' 'Mine won't.' Borcha chuckled. 'It will with Grassin. Do
not let arrogance blind you to the obvious, Druss. They say you were a
woodsman. When you first picked up an axe, did it strike with every blow?' 'No,' admitted the younger man. 'It is the same with combat. I can teach
you many styles of punch, and even more defences. I can show you how to feint,
and lure an opponent in to your blows.' 'Perhaps you can - but why would you?' 'Pride,' said Borcha. 'I don't understand.' 'I'll explain it - after you beat Grassin.' 'I won't be here long enough,' said Druss.
'As soon as a ship bound for Ventria docks in Mashrapur, I shall sail on her.' 'Before the war such a journey would cost
ten raq. Now. . . ? Who knows? But in one month there is a small tournament at
Visha, with a first prize of one hundred raq. The rich have palaces in Visha,
and a great deal of money can be made on side wagers. Grassin will be taking
part, and several of the other notable figures. Agree to let me train you and I
will enter your name in my place.' Druss stood and poured a goblet of wine,
which he passed to the bald fighter. 'I have taken employment, and I promised
the Overseer I would see the work done. It will take a full month.' 'Then I will train you in the evenings.' 'On one condition,' said Druss. 'Name it!' 'The same one I gave the Overseer. If a
ship bound for Ventria docks and I can get passage, then I will up and go.' 'Agreed.' Borcha thrust out his hand. Druss
clasped it and Borcha stood. 'I'll leave you to your rest. By the way, warn
your poet friend that he is taking fruit from the wrong tree.' 'He is his own man,' said Druss. Borcha shrugged. 'Warn him anyway. I'll see
you tomorrow.' Chapter TwoSieben lay awake, staring at the ornate
ceiling. Beside him the woman slept, and he could feel the warmth of her skin
against his side and legs. There was a painting on the ceiling, a hunting scene
showing men armed with spears and bows pursuing a red-maned lion. What kind of
man would have such a composition above the marital bed, he thought? Sieben
smiled. The First Minister of Mashrapur must have an enormous ego since,
whenever he and his wife made love, she would be gazing up at a group of men
more handsome than her husband. Rolling to his side, he looked down at the
sleeping woman. Her back was turned towards him, her arm thrust under the
pillow, her legs drawn up. Her hair was dark, almost black against the
creamy-white of the pillow. He could not see her face, but he pictured again
the full lips and the long, beautiful neck. When first he had seen her she was
standing beside Mapek in the marketplace. The minister was surrounded by
underlings and sycophants, Evejorda looking bored and out of place. Sieben had stood very still, waiting for
her eyes to glance in his direction. When they did, he sent her a smile. One of
his best - a swift, flashing grin that said, 'I am bored too. I understand you.
I am a linked soul.' She raised an eyebrow at him, signifying her distaste for
his impertinence, and then turned away. He waited, knowing she would look
again. She moved to a nearby stall and began to examine a set of ceramic bowls.
He angled himself through the crowd and she looked up, startled to see him so
close. 'Good morning, my lady,' he said. She
ignored him. 'You are very beautiful.' 'And you are presumptuous, sir.' Her voice
had a northern burr, which he normally found irritating. Not so now. 'Beauty demands presumption. Just as it
demands adoration." 'You are very sure of yourself,' she said,
moving in close to disconcert him. She was wearing a simple gown of radiant
blue and a Lentrian shawl of white silk. But it was her perfume that filled his
senses - a rich, scented musk he recognised as Moserche, a Ventrian
import costing five gold raq an ounce. 'Are you happy?' he asked her. 'What a ridiculous question! Who could
answer it?' 'Someone who is happy,' he told her. She smiled. 'And you, sir, are you happy?' 'I am now.' 'I think you are an accomplished womaniser,
and there is no truth to your words.' 'Then judge me by my deeds, my lady. My
name is Sieben.' He whispered the address of the house he shared with Druss and
then, taking her hand, he kissed it. Her messenger arrived at the house two days
later. She moved in her sleep. Sieben's hand slid
under the satin sheet, cupping her breast. At first she did not stir, but he
gently continued to caress her skin, squeezing her nipple until it swelled
erect. She moaned and stretched. 'Do you never sleep?' she asked him. He did not reply. Later, as Evejorda slept again, he lay
silently beside her, his passion gone, his thoughts sorrowful. She was without
doubt the most beautiful woman he had ever enjoyed. She was bright,
intelligent, dynamic and full of passion. And he was bored. . . . As a poet he had sung of love, but never
known it, and he envied the lovers of legend who looked into each other's eyes
and saw eternity beckoning. He sighed and slipped from the bed, dressing
swiftly and leaving the room, padding softly down the back stairs to the garden
before pulling on his boots. The servants were not yet awake, and dawn was only
just breaking in the eastern sky. A cockerel crowed in the distance. Sieben walked through the garden and out on
to the avenue beyond. As he walked he could smell the fresh bread baking, and
he stopped at a bakery to buy some cheese bread which he ate as he strolled
home. Druss was not there, and he remembered the
labouring work the young man had undertaken. God, how could a man spend his
days digging in the dirt, he wondered? Moving through to the kitchen, he stoked
up the iron stove and set a copper pan filled with water atop it. Making a tisane of mint and herbs, he
stirred the brew and carried it to the main sitting room where he found Shadak
asleep on a couch. The hunter's black jerkin and trews were travel-stained, his
boots encrusted with mud. He awoke as Sieben entered, and swung his long legs
from the couch. 'I was wondering where you were,' said
Shadak, yawning. 'I arrived last night.' 'I stayed with a friend,' said Sieben, sitting
opposite the hunter and sipping his tisane. Shadak nodded. 'Mapek is due in Mashrapur
later today. He cut short his visit to Vagria.' 'Why would that concern me?' Tm sure that it does not. But now you know
it anyway.' 'Did you come to give me a sermon, Shadak?' 'Do I look like a priest? I came to see
Druss. But when I got here he was in the garden, sparring with a bald giant.
From the way he moved I concluded his wounds are healed.' 'Only the physical wounds,' said Sieben. 'I know,' responded the hunter. 'I spoke to
him. He still intends to sail for Ventria. Will you go with him?' Sieben laughed. 'Why should I? I dori't
know his wife. Gods, I hardly know him.' 'It might be good for you, poet.' 'The sea air, you mean?' 'You know what I mean,' said Shadak gravely.
'You have chosen to make an enemy of one of the most powerful men in Mashrapur.
His enemies die, Sieben. Poison, or the blade, or a knotted rope around your
throat as you sleep.' 'Is my business known all over the city?? 'Of course. There are thirty servants in
that house. You think to keep secrets from them when her ecstatic cries
reverberate around the building in the middle of the afternoon, or the morning,
or in the dead of night?' 'Or indeed all three,' said Sieben,
smiling. 'I see no humour in this,' snapped Shadak.
'You are no more than a rutting dog and you will undoubtedly ruin her life as
you have ruined others. Yet I would sooner you lived than died - only the gods
know why!' 'I gave her a little pleasure, that's all.
Which is more than that dry stick of a husband could do. But I will think on
your advice.' 'Do not think too long. When Mapek returns
he will soon find out about his wife's . . . little pleasure. Do not be
surprised if he has her killed also.' Sieben paled. 'He wouldn't . . .' 'He is a proud man, poet. And you have made
a profound error.' 'If he touches her I'll kill him.' 'Ah, how noble. The dog bares its fangs.
You should never have wooed her. You do not even have the defence of being in
love; you merely wanted to rut.' 'Is that not what love is?' countered
Sieben. 'For you, yes.' Shadak shook his head. 'I
don't believe you'll ever understand it, Sieben. To love means giving, not
receiving. Sharing your soul. But this argument is wasted on you, like teaching
algebra to a chicken.' 'Oh, please, don't try to spare my feelings
with pretty words. Just come right out with it!' Shadak rose. 'Bodasen is hiring warriors,
mercenaries to fight in the Ventrian war. He has chartered a ship which will
sail in twelve days. Lie low until then, and do not seek to see Evejorda again
- not if you want her to live.' The hunter moved towards the door, but
Sieben called out, 'You don't think very highly of me, do you?' Shadak half turned. 'I think more of you
than you think of yourself.' 'I am too tired for riddles.' 'You can't forget Gulgothir.' Sieben jerked as if struck, then lunged to
his feet. 'That is all past. It means nothing to me. You understand? Nothing!' 'If you say so. I'll see you in twelve
days. The ship is called The Thunderchild. She will sail from Quay 12.' 'I may be on it. I may not.' 'A man always has two choices, my friend.' * 'No! No! No!' roared Borcha. 'You are still
thrusting out that chin, and leading with your head.' Stepping back from his
opponent, Borcha swept up a towel and wiped the sweat from his face and head.
'Try to understand, Druss, that if Grassin gets the opportunity he will take
out one - or both - of your eyes. He will step in close, and as you charge he
will strike with a sudden thrust, his thumb like a dagger.' 'Let's go again,' said Druss. 'No. You are too angry and it swamps your
thoughts. Come and sit for a while.' 'The light is fading,' Druss pointed out. 'Then let it fade. You are four days from
the competition. Four days, Druss. In that time you must learn to
control your temper. Winning is everything. It means nothing if an opponent
sneers at you, or mocks you, or claims your mother sold herself to sailors. You
understand? These insults are merely weapons in a fighter's armoury. You will
be goaded - because every fighter knows that his enemy's rage is his greatest
weakness.' 'I can control it,' snapped Druss. 'A few moments ago you were fighting well -
your balance was good, the punches crisp. Then I slapped you with a straight
left . . . then another. The blows were too fast for your defences and they
began to irritate you. Then the curve came back to your punches and you exposed
your chin, your face.' Druss sat beside the fighter and nodded.
'You are right. But I do not like this sparring, this holding back. It does not
feel real.' 'It isn't real, my friend, but it prepares
the body for genuine combat.' He slapped the younger man on the shoulder. 'Do
not despair; you are almost ready. I think your digging in the dirt has brought
back your strength. How goes it at the clearing site?' 'We finished today,' said Druss. 'Tomorrow
the stonemasons and builders move in.' 'On time. The Overseer must have been
pleased - I know I am.' 'Why should it please you?' 'I own a third of the land. The value will
rise sharply when the houses are completed.' The bald fighter chuckled. 'Were
you happy with your bonus?' 'Was that your doing?' asked Druss
suspiciously. 'It is standard practice, Druss. The
Overseer received fifty raq for completing within the time allocated. The
charge-hand is usually offered one tenth of this sum.' 'He gave me ten raq - in gold.' 'Well, well, you must have impressed him.' 'He asked me to stay on and supervise the
digging of the footings.' 'But you declined?' 'Yes. There is a ship bound for Ventria. I
told him my assistant, Togrin, could take my place. He agreed.' Borcha was silent for a moment. He knew of
Druss's fight with Togrin on the first day, and how he had welcomed the defeated
charge-hand back on the site, training him and giving him responsibility. And
the Overseer had told him at their progress meetings how well the men responded
to Druss. 'He is a natural leader who inspires by
example. No work is too menial, nor too hard. He's a real find, Borcha; I
intend to promote him. There is a new site planned to the north, with difficult
terrain. I shall make him Overseer.' 'He won't take it.' 'Of course he will. He could become rich.' Borcha pulled his thoughts back to the
present. 'You know you may never find her,' he said softly. Druss shook his head. 'I'll find her,
Borcha - if I have to walk across Ventria and search every house.' 'You are a woodman, Druss, so answer me
this: If I marked a single fallen leaf in a forest, how would you begin to
search for it?' 'I hear you - but it is not that difficult.
I know who bought her: Kabuchek. He is a rich man, an important man; I will
find him.' Reaching behind the bench seat, Druss drew forth Snaga. 'This was my
grandfather's axe,' he said. 'He was an evil man, they say. But when he was
young a great army came out of the north, led by a Gothir King named Pasia.
Everywhere there was panic. How could the Drenai stand against such an army?
Towns emptied, people piled their possessions on to carts, wagons, coaches, the
backs of horses, ponies. Bardan - my grandfather - led a small raiding party
deep into the mountains, to where the enemy was camped. He and twenty men
walked into the camp, found the King's tent and slew him in the night. In the
morning they found Pasia's head stuck atop a lance. The army went home.' 'An interesting story, and one I have heard
before,' said Borcha. 'What do you think we learn from it?' 'There is nothing a man cannot achieve if
he has the will, the strength and the courage to attempt it,' answered Druss. Borcha rose and stretched the massive
muscles of his shoulders and back. 'Then let's see if it is true,' he said,
with a smile. 'Let's see if you have the will, the strength and the courage to
keep your chin tucked in.' Druss chuckled and placed the axe beside
the seat as he stood. 'I like you, Borcha. How in the name of Chaos did you
ever come to serve a man like Collan?' 'He had a good side, Druss.' 'He did?' 'Aye, he paid well.' As he spoke his hand
snaked out, the open palm lashing across Druss's cheek. The younger man snarled
and leapt at him but Borcha swayed left, his fist glancing from Druss's cheek.
'The chin, you ox! Keep it in!' he bellowed. * 'I was hoping for men with more quality,'
said Bodasen, as he scanned the crowds milling in the Celebration Field. Borcha chuckled. 'Do not be misled by
appearances. Some of these men are quality. It really depends on what
you are seeking.' Bodasen stared moodily at the rabble - some
in rags, most filthy. More than two hundred had assembled so far, and a quick
glance to the gate showed others moving along the access road. 'I think we have
different views on what constitutes quality,' he said gloomily. 'Look over there,' said Borcha, pointing to
a man sitting on a fence rail. 'That is Eskodas the Bowman. He can hit a mark
no larger than your thumbnail from fifty paces. A man to walk the mountains
with, as they say in my home country. And there, the swordsman Kelva - fearless
and highly skilled. A natural killer.' 'But do they understand the concept of
honour?' Borcha's laughter rang out. 'You have
listened to too many tales of glory and wonder, my friend. These men are
fighters; they fight for pay.' Bodasen sighed. 'I am trapped in this . . .
this blemish of a city. My emperor is beset on all sides by a terrible enemy,
and I cannot join him. No ship will sail unless it is manned by seasoned
troops, and I must choose them from among the gutter scum of Mashrapur. I had
hoped for more.' 'Choose wisely, and they may yet surprise
you,' advised Borcha. 'Let us see the archers first,' Bodasen
ordered. For more than an hour Bodasen watched the
bowmen sending their shafts at targets stuffed with straw. When they had finished
he selected five men, the youthful Eskodas among them. Each man was given a
single gold raq, and told to report to The Thunderchild at dawn on the
day of departure. The swordsmen were more difficult to judge.
At first he ordered them to fence with one another, but the warriors set about
their task with mindless ferocity and soon several men were down with cuts,
gashes, and one with a smashed collar-bone. Bodasen called a halt to the
proceedings and, with Borcha's help, chose ten. The injured men were each given
five silver pieces. The day wore on, and by noon Bodasen had
chosen thirty of the fifty men he required to man The Thunderchild. Dismissing
the remainder of the would-be mercenaries, he strode from the field with Borcha
beside him. 'Will you leave a place for Druss?' asked
the fighter. 'No. I will have room only for men who will
fight for Ventria. His quest is a personal one.' 'According to Shadak he is the best
fighting man in the city.' 'I am not best disposed towards Shadak.
Were it not for him the pirates would not be fighting Ventria's cause.' 'Sweet Heaven!' snorted Borcha. 'How can
you believe that? Collan would merely have taken your money and given nothing
in return.' 'He gave me his word,' said Bodasen. 'How on earth did you Ventrians ever build
an empire?' enquired Borcha. 'Collan was a liar, a thief, a raider. Why would
you believe him? Did he not tell you he was going to give back Druss's wife?
Did he not lie to you in order for you to lure Druss into a trap? What kind of
man did you believe you were dealing with?' 'A nobleman,' snapped Bodasen. 'Obviously I
was wrong.' 'Indeed you were. You have just paid a gold
raq to Eskodas, the son of a goat-breeder and a Lentrian whore. His father was
hanged for stealing two horses and his mother abandoned him. He was raised in
an orphanage run by two Source priests.' 'Is there some point to this sordid tale?'
asked the Ventrian. 'Aye, there is. Eskodas will fight to the
death for you; he'll not run. Ask him his opinion, and he'll give an honest answer.
Hand him a bag of diamonds and tell him to deliver it to a man a thousand
leagues distant, and he will do so - and never once will he consider stealing a
single gem.' 'So I should hope,' observed Bodasen. 'I
would expect no less from any Ventrian servant I employed. Why do you make
honesty sound like a grand virtue?' 'I have known rocks with more common sense
than you,' said Borcha, struggling to hold his temper. Bodasen chuckled. 'Ah, the ways of you
barbarians are mystifying. But you are quite right about Druss - I was
instrumental in causing him grievous wounds. Therefore I shall leave a place
for him on The Thunderchild. Now let us find somewhere that serves good
food and passable wine.' * Shadak, Sieben and Borcha stood with Druss
on the quayside as dock-workers moved by them, climbing the gangplank, carrying
the last of the ship's stores to the single deck. The Thunderchild was
riding low in the water, her deck crammed with mercenaries who leaned on the
rail, waving goodbyes to the women who thronged the quay. Most were whores, but
there were a few wives with small children, and many were the tears. Shadak gripped Druss's hand. 'I wish you
fair sailing, laddie,' the hunter told him. 'And I hope the Source leads you to
Rowena.' 'He will,' said Druss. The axeman's eyes
were swollen, the lids discoloured - a mixture of dull yellow and faded purple
- and there was a lump under his left eye, where the skin was split and badly
stitched. Shadak grinned at him. 'It was a good
fight. Grassin will long remember it.' 'And me,' grunted Druss. Shadak nodded, and his smile faded. 'You
are a rare man, Druss. Try not to change. Remember the code.' 'I will,' promised Druss. The two men shook
hands again, and Shadak strolled away. 'What code?' Sieben asked. Druss watched as the black-garbed hunter
vanished into the crowd. 'He once told me that all true warriors live by a
code: Never violate a woman, nor harm a child. Do not lie, cheat or steal.
These things are for lesser men. Protect the weak against the evil strong. And
never allow thoughts of gain to lead you into the pursuit of evil.' 'Very true, I'm sure,' said Sieben, with a
dry, mocking laugh. 'Ah well, Druss, I can hear the call of the fleshpots and
the taverns. And with the money I won on you, I can live like a lord for
several months.' He thrust out his slender hand and Druss clasped it. 'Spend your money wisely,' he advised. 'I shall . . . on women and wine and
gambling.' Laughing, he swung away. Druss turned to Borcha. 'I thank you for your
training, and your kindness.' 'The time was well spent, and it was
gratifying to see Grassin humbled. But he still almost took out your eye. I
don't think you'll ever learn to keep that chin protected.' 'Hey, Druss! Are you coming aboard?' yelled
Bodasen from the deck and Druss waved. 'I'm on my way,' he shouted. The two men
clasped hands in the warrior's grip, wrist to wrist. 'I hope we meet again,'
said Druss. 'Who can say what the fates will decree?' Druss hefted his axe and turned for the
gangplank. 'Tell me now why you helped me?' he asked suddenly. Borcha shrugged. 'You frightened me, Druss.
I wanted to see just how good you could be. Now I know. You could be the best.
It makes what you did to me more palatable. Tell me, how does it feel to leave
as champion?' Druss chuckled. 'It hurts,' he said,
rubbing his swollen jaw. 'Move yourself, dog-face!' yelled a
warrior, leaning over the rail. The axeman glanced up at the speaker, then
turned back to Borcha. 'Be lucky, my friend,' he said, then strode up the
gangplank. With the ropes loosed, The Thunderchild eased away from the
quayside. Warriors were lounging on the deck, or
leaning over the rail waving goodbye to friends and loved ones. Druss found a
space by the port rail and sat, laying his axe on the deck beside him. Bodasen
was standing beside the mate at the tiller; he waved and smiled at the axeman. Druss leaned back, feeling curiously at
peace. The months trapped in Mashrapur had been hard on the young man. He
pictured Rowena. 'I'm coming for you,' he whispered. * Sieben strolled away from the quay, and off
into the maze of alleys leading to the park. Ignoring the whores who pressed
close around him, his thoughts were many. There was sadness at the departure of
Druss. He had come to like the young axeman; there were no hidden sides to him,
no cunning, no guile. And much as he laughed at the axeman's rigid morality, he
secretly admired the strength that gave birth to it. Druss had even sought out
the surgeon Calvar Syn, and settled his debt. Sieben had gone with him and
would long remember the surprise that registered on the young doctor's face. But Ventria? Sieben had no wish to visit a
land torn by war. He thought of Evejorda and regret washed
over him. He'd like to have seen her just one more time, - to have felt those
slim thighs sliding up over his hips. But Shadak was right; it was too
dangerous for both of them. Sieben turned left and started to climb the
Hundred Steps to the park gateway. Shadak was wrong about Gulgothir. He
remembered the filth-strewn streets, the limbless beggars and the cries of the
dispossessed. But he remembered them without bitterness. And was it his fault
that his father had made such a fool of himself with the Duchess? Anger flared
briefly. Stupid fool, he thought. Stupid, stupid man! She had stripped him
first of his wealth, then his dignity, and finally his manhood. They called her
the Vampire Queen and it was a good description, save that she didn't drink
blood. No, she drank the very life force from a man, sucked him dry and left
him thanking her for doing it, begging her to do it again. Sieben's father had been thrown aside - a
useless husk, an empty, discarded shell of a man. While Sieben and his mother
had almost starved, his father was sitting like a beggar outside the home of
the Duchess. He sat there for a month, and finally cut his own throat with a
rusty blade. Stupid, stupid man! But I am not stupid, thought Sieben as he
climbed the steps. I am not like my father. He glanced up to see two men walking down
the steps towards him. They wore long cloaks that were drawn tightly across
their bodies. Sieben paused in his climb. It was a hot morning, so why would
they be dressed in such a manner? Hearing a sound, he turned to see another man
climbing behind him. He also wore a long cloak. Fear flared suddenly in the poet's heart
and, spinning on his heel, he descended towards the single man. As he neared
the climber the cloak flashed back, a long knife appearing in the man's hand.
Sieben leapt feet first, his right boot cracking into the man's chin and
sending him tumbling down the steps. Sieben landed heavily but rose swiftly and
began to run, taking the steps three at a time. He could hear the men behind
him also running. Reaching the bottom, he set off through the
alleyways. A hunting horn sounded and a tall warrior leapt into his path with a
sword in hand. Sieben, at full run, turned his shoulder into the man, barging
him aside. He swerved right, then left. A knife sliced past his head to clatter
against a wall. Increasing his speed, he raced across a
small square and into a side street. He could see the docks ahead. It was more
crowded here and he pushed his way through. Several men shouted abuse, and a
young woman fell behind him. He glanced back - there were at least half a dozen
pursuers'. Close to panic now, he emerged on to the
quay. To his left he saw a group of men emerge from a side street; they were
all carrying weapons and Sieben swore. The Thunderchild was slipping away from the quayside as Sieben ran across the cobbles
and launched himself through the air, reaching out to grab at a trailing rope.
His fingers curled around it, and his body cracked against the ship's timbers.
Almost losing his grip, he clung to the rope as a knife thudded into the wood
beside his head. Fear gave him strength and he began to climb. A familiar face loomed above him and Druss
leaned over, grabbing him by the shirt and hauling him on to the deck. 'Changed your mind, I see,' said the
axeman. Sieben gave a weak smile and glanced back at the quay. There were at
least a dozen armed men there now. 'I thought the sea air would be good for
me,' said Sieben. The captain, a bearded man in his fifties,
pushed his way through to them. 'What's going on?' he said. 'I can only carry
fifty men. That's the limit.' 'He doesn't weigh much,' said Druss
goodnaturedly. Another man stepped forward. He was tall
and broad-shouldered, and wore a dented breastplate, two short swords and a
baldric boasting four knives. 'First you keep us waiting, dogface, and now you
bring your boyfriend aboard. Well, Kelva the Swordsman won't sail with the
likes of you.' 'Then don't!' Druss's left hand snaked out,
his fingers locking to the man's throat, his right slamming home into the
warrior's groin. With one surging heave Druss lifted the struggling man into
the air and tossed him over the side. He hit with a great splash and came up
struggling under the weight of his armour. The Thunderchild pulled away and Druss turned to the captain. 'Now we are fifty
again,' he said, with a smile. 'Can't argue with that,' the captain
agreed. He swung to the sailors standing by the mast. 'Let loose the mainsail!'
he bellowed. Sieben walked to the rail and saw that
people on the quayside had thrown a rope to the struggling warrior in the
water. 'He might have friends aboard the ship,' observed the poet. 'They're welcome to join him,' answered
Druss. Chapter ThreeEach morning Eskodas paced the deck, moving
along the port rail all the way to the prow and then back along the starboard
rail, rising the six steps to the tiller deck at the stern, where either the
captain or the first mate would be standing alongside the curved oak tiller. The bowman feared the sea, gazing with
undisguised dread at the rolling waves and feeling the awesome power that
lifted the ship like a piece of driftwood. On the first morning of the voyage
Eskodas had climbed to the tiller deck and approached the captain, Milus Bar. 'No passengers up here,' said the captain
sternly. 'I have questions, sir,' Eskodas told him
politely. Milus Bar looped a hemp rope over the
tiller arm, securing it. 'About what?' he asked. 'The boat.' 'Ship,' snapped Milus. 'Yes, the ship. Forgive me, I am not versed
in nautical terms.' 'She's seaworthy,' said Milus. Three
hundred and fifty feet of seasoned timber. She leaks no more than a man can
sweat, and she'll ride any storm the gods can throw our way. She's sleek. She's
fast. What else do you need to know?' 'You talk of the . . . ship . . . as a
woman.' 'Better than any woman I ever knew,' said
Milus, grinning. 'She's never let me down.' 'She seems so small against the immensity
of the ocean,' observed Eskodas. 'We are all small against the ocean, lad.
But there are few storms at this time of year. Our danger is pirates, and
that's why you are here.' He stared at the young bowman, his grey eyes
narrowing under heavy brows. 'If you don't mind me saying so, lad, you seem a
little out of place among these killers and villains.' 'I don't object to you saying it, sir,'
Eskodas told him. 'They might object to hearing it, however. Thank you for your
time and your courtesy.' The bowman climbed down to the main deck.
Men were lounging everywhere, some dicing, others talking. By the port rail
several others were engaged in an arm-wrestling tourney. Eskodas moved through
them towards the prow. The sun was bright in a blue sky, and there
was a good following breeze. Gulls circled high above the ship, and to the
north he could just make out the coast of Lentria. At this distance the land
seemed misty and unreal, a place of ghosts and legends. There were two men sitting by the prow. One
was the slim young man who had boarded the ship so spectacularly. Blond and
handsome, long hair held in place by a silver headband, his clothes were
expensive - a pale blue shirt of fine silk, dark blue leggings of lambswool
seamed with soft leather. The other man was huge; he had lifted Kelva as if the
warrior weighed no more than a few ounces, and hurled him into the sea like a
spear. Eskodas approached them. The giant was younger than he had first thought,
but the beginnings of a dark beard gave him the look of someone older. Eskodas
met his gaze. Cold blue eyes, flint-hard and unwelcoming. The bowman smiled.
'Good morning,' he said. The giant grunted something, but the blond dandy rose
and extended his hand. 'Hello, there. My name is Sieben. This is
Druss.' 'Ay, yes. He defeated Grassin at the
tournament - broke his jaw, I believe.' 'In several places,' said Sieben. 'I am Eskodas.' The bowman sat down on a
coiled rope and leaned his back against a cloth-bound bale. Closing his eyes,
he felt the sun warm on his face. The silence lasted for several moments, then
the two men resumed their conversation. Eskodas didn't listen too intently . . .
something about a woman and assassins. He thought of the journey ahead. He had
never seen Ventria, which according to the story books was a land of fabled
wealth, dragons, centaurs and many wild beasts. He tended to disbelieve the
part about the dragons; he was widely travelled, and in every country there
were stories of them, but never had Eskodas seen one. In Chiatze there was a
museum where the bones of a dragon had been re-assembled. The skeleton was
colossal, but it had no wings, and a neck that was at least eight feet long. No
fire could have issued from such a throat, he thought. But dragons or not, Eskodas looked forward
with real pleasure to seeing Ventria. 'You don't say much, do you?' observed
Sieben. Eskodas opened his eyes and smiled. 'When I
have something to say, I will speak,' he said. 'You'll never get the chance,' grunted
Druss. 'Sieben talks enough for ten men.' Eskodas smiled politely. 'You are the
saga-master,' he said. 'Yes. How gratifying to be recognised.' 'I saw you in Corteswain. You gave a
performance of The Song of Karnak. It was very good; I particularly
enjoyed the tale of Dros Purdol and the siege, though I was less impressed by
the arrival of the gods of war, and the mysterious princess with the power to
hurl lightning.' 'Dramatic licence,' said Sieben, with a
tight smile. 'The courage of men needs no such licence,'
said Eskodas. 'It lessens the heroism of the defenders to suggest that they had
divine help.' 'It was not a history lesson,' Sieben
pointed out, his smile fading. 'It was a poem - a song. The arrival of the gods
was merely an artistic device to highlight that courage will sometimes bring
about good fortune.' 'Hmmm,' said Eskodas, leaning back and
closing his eyes. 'What does that mean?' demanded Sieben.
'Are you disagreeing?' Eskodas sighed. 'It is not my wish to
provoke an argument, sir poet, but I think the device was a poor one. You
maintain it was inserted to supply dramatic effect. There is no point in
further discussion; I have no desire to increase your anger.' 'I am not angry, damn you!' stormed Sieben. 'He doesn't take well to criticism,' said
Druss. 'That's very droll,' snapped Sieben,
'coming as it does from the man who tosses shipmates over the side at the first
angry word. Now why was it a poor device?' Eskodas leaned forward. 'I have been in
many sieges. The point of greatest courage comes at the end, when all seems
lost; that is when weak men break and run, or beg for their lives. You had the
gods arrive just before that moment, and offer divine assistance to thwart the
Vagrians. Therefore the truly climactic moment was lost, for as soon as the
gods appeared we knew victory was assured.' 'I would have lost some of my best lines.
Especially the end, where the warriors wonder if they will ever see the gods
again.' 'Yes, I remember. . . the eldritch rhymes,
the wizard spells, the ringing of sweet Elven bells. That one.' 'Precisely.' 'I prefer the grit and the reality of your
earlier pieces: But came the day, when youth was worn away, and locks once
thought of steel and fire, proved both ephemeral and unreal against the
onslaught of the years. How wrong are the young to believe in secrets or
enchanted woods.' He lapsed into silence. 'Do you know all my work?' asked Sieben,
clearly astonished. Eskodas smiled. 'After you performed at Corteswain I sought
out your books of poetry. There were five, I think. I have two still - the
earliest works.' 'I am at a loss for words.' 'That'll be the day,' grunted Druss. 'Oh, be quiet. At last we meet a man of
discernment on a ship full of rascals. Perhaps this voyage will not be so
dreadful. So, tell me, Eskodas, what made you sign on for Ventria?' 'I like killing people,' answered Eskodas.
Druss's laughter bellowed out. * For the first few days the novelty of being
at sea kept most of the mercenaries amused. They sat up on the deck during
daylight hours, playing dice or telling stories. At night they slept under a
tarpaulin that was looped and tied to the port and starboard rails. Druss was
fascinated by the sea and the seemingly endless horizons. Berthed at Mashrapur The
Thunderchild had looked colossal, unsinkable. But here on the open sea she
seemed fragile as a flower stem in a river torrent. Sieben had grown bored with
the voyage very swiftly. Not so Druss. The sighing of the wind, the plunging
and the rising of the ship, the call of the gulls high above - all these fired
the young axeman's blood. One morning he climbed the rigging to the
giant cross-beam that held the mainsail. Sitting astride it he could see no
sign of land, only the endless blue of the sea. A sailor walked along the beam
towards him, barefooted, and using no hand-holds. He stood in delicate balance
with hands on hips and looked down at Druss. 'No passengers should be up here,' he said. Druss grinned at the young man. 'How can
you just stand there, as if you were on a wide road? A puff of breeze could
blow you away.' 'Like this?' asked the sailor, stepping
from the beam. He twisted in mid-air, his hands fastening to a sail rope. For a
moment he hung there, then lithely pulled himself up alongside the axeman. 'Very good,' said Druss. His eye was caught
by a silver-blue flash in the water below and the sailor chuckled. 'The gods of the sea,'he told the
passenger. 'Dolphins. If they are in the mood, you should see some wonderful
sights.' A gleaming shape rose out of the water, spinning into the air before
entering the sea again with scarcely a splash. Druss clambered down the
rigging, determined to get a closer look at the sleek and beautiful animals
performing in the water. High-pitched cries echoed around the ship as the
creatures bobbed their heads above the surface. Suddenly an arrow sped from the ship,
plunging into one of the dolphins as it soared out of the water. Within an instant the creatures had
disappeared. Druss glared at the archer while other men
shouted at him, their anger sudden, their mood ugly. 'It was just a fish!' said the archer. Milus Bar pushed his way through the crowd.
'You fool!' he said, his face almost grey beneath his tan. 'They are the gods
of the sea; they come for us to pay homage. Sometimes they will even lead us
through treacherous waters. Why did you have to shoot?' 'It was a good target,' said the man. 'And
why not? It was my choice.' 'Aye, it was, lad,' Milus told him, 'but if
our luck turns bad now it will be my choice to cut out your innards and feed
them to the sharks.' The burly skipper stalked back to the tiller deck. The
earlier good mood had evaporated now and the men drifted back to their pursuits
with little pleasure. Sieben approached Druss. 'By the gods, they
were wondrous,' said the poet. 'According to legend, Asia's chariot is drawn by
six white dolphins.' Druss sighed. 'Who would have thought that
anyone would consider killing one of them? Do they make good food, do you
know?' 'No,' said Sieben. 'In the north they
sometimes become entangled in the nets and drown. I have known men who cooked
the meat; they say it tastes foul, and is impossible to digest.' 'Even worse then,' Druss grunted. 'It is no different from any other kind of
hunting for sport, Druss. Is not a doe as beautiful as a dolphin?' 'You can eat a doe. Venison is fine meat.' 'But most of them don't hunt for food, do
they? Not the nobles. They hunt for pleasure. They enjoy the chase, the
terror of the prey, the final moment of the kill. Do not blame this man alone
for his stupidity. He comes, as do we all, from a cruel world.' Eskodas joined them. 'Not very inspiring,
was he?' said the bowman. 'Who?' 'The man who shot the fish.' 'We were just talking about it.' 'I didn't know you understood the skills of
archery,' said Eskodas, surprised. 'Archery? What are you talking about?' 'The bowman. He drew and loosed in a single
movement. No hesitation. It is vital to pause and sight your target; he was
overanxious for the kill.' 'Be that as it may,' said Sieben, his
irritation rising, 'we were talking about the morality of hunting.' 'Man is a killer by nature,' said Eskodas
amiably. 'A natural hunter. Like him there!' Sieben and Druss both turned to
see a silver-white fin cutting through the water. 'That's a shark. He scented
the blood from the wounded dolphin. Now he'll hunt him down, following the
trail as well as a Sathuli scout.' Druss leaned over the side and watched the
shimmering form slide by. 'Big fellow,' he said. 'They come bigger than that,' said Eskodas.
'I was on a ship once that sank in a storm off the Lentrian coast. Forty of us
survived the wreck, and struck out for shore. Then the sharks arrived. Only
three of us made it - and one of those had his right leg ripped away. He died
three days later.' 'A storm, you say?' ventured Druss. 'Aye.' 'Like that one?' asked Druss, pointing to
the east, where massive dark clouds were bunching. A flash of lightning speared
across the sky, followed by a tremendous roll of thunder. 'Yes, like that. Let's hope it is not
blowing our way.' Within minutes the sky darkened, the sea
surging and rising. The Thunderchild rolled and rose on the crests of
giant waves, sliding into ever larger valleys of water. Then the rain began,
faster and faster, icy needles that came from the sky like arrows. Crouching by the port rail Sieben glanced
to where the unfortunate archer was huddled. The man who had shot the dophin
was alone, and holding fast to a rope. Lightning flashed above the ship. 'I would say our luck has changed,'
observed Sieben. But neither Druss nor Eskodas could hear
him above the screaming of the wind. Eskodas hooked his arms around the port
rail and clung on as the storm raged. A huge wave crashed over the side of the ship,
dislodging several men from their precarious holds on ropes and bales, sweeping
them across the deck to crash into the dipping starboard rail. A post cracked,
but no one heard it above the ominous roll of thunder booming from the
night-dark sky. The Thunderchild rode high on the crest of an enormous
wave, then slid down into a valley of raging water. A sailor carrying a coiled
rope ran along the deck trying to reach the warriors at the starboard rail. A
second wave crashed over him, hurling him into the struggling men. The port
rail gave way, and within the space of a heartbeat some twenty men were swept
from the deck. The ship reared like a frightened horse. Eskodas felt his grip
on the rail post weaken. He tried to readjust his hold, but the ship lurched
again. Torn from his position of relative safety,
he slid headlong towards the yawning gap in the starboard rail. A huge hand clamped down around his ankle,
then he was hauled back. The axeman grinned at him, then handed him a length of
rope. Swiftly Eskodas slipped it around his waist, fastening the other end to
the mast. He glanced at Druss. The big man was enjoying the storm.
Secure now, Eskodas scanned the deck. The poet was clinging to a section of the
starboard rail that seemed none too secure, and high on the tiller deck the
bowman could see Milus Bar wrestling with the tiller, trying to keep The
Thunderchild ahead of the storm. Another massive wave swept over the deck.
The starboard rail cracked and Sieben slid over the edge of the deck. Druss
untied his rope and rose. Eskodas shouted at him, but the axeman either did not
hear, or ignored him. Druss ran across the heaving deck, fell once, then
righted himself until he came alongside the shattered rail. Dropping to his
knees Druss leaned over, dragging Sieben back to the deck. Just behind them the man who had shot the
dolphin was reaching for a rope with which to tie himself to a hauling ring set
in the deck. The ship reared once more. The man tumbled to the deck, then slid
on his back, cannoning into Druss who fell heavily. Still holding Seiben with
one hand, the axeman tried to reach the doomed archer, but the man vanished
into the raging sea. Almost at that instant the sun appeared
through broken clouds and the rain lessened, the sea settling. Druss rose and
gazed into the water. Eskodas untied the rope that held him to the mast and
stood, his legs unsteady. He walked to where Druss stood with Sieben. The poet's face was white with shock. 'I'll
never sail again,' he said. 'Never!' Eskodas thrust out his hand. 'Thank you,
Druss. You saved my life.' The axeman chuckled. 'Had to, laddie.
You're the only one on this boat who can leave our saga-master speechless.' Bodasen appeared from the tiller deck.
'That was a reckless move, my friend,' he told Druss, 'but it was well done. I
like to see bravery in the men who fight alongside me.' As the Ventrian moved on, counting the men
who were left, Eskodas shivered. 'I think we lost nearly thirty men,' he said. 'Twenty-seven,' said Druss. Sieben crawled back to the edge of the deck
and vomited into the sea. 'Make that twenty-seven and a half,' Eskodas added. Chapter FourThe young Emperor climbed down from the
battlement walls and strode along the quayside, his staff officers following;
his aide, Nebuchad, beside him. 'We can hold for months, Lord,' said Nebuchad,
squinting his eyes against the glare from the Emperor's gilded breastplate.
'The walls are thick and high, and the catapults will prevent any attempt to
storm the harbour mouth from the sea.' Gorben shook his head. 'The walls will not
protect us,' he told the young man. 'We have fewer than three thousand men
here. The Naashanites have twenty times that number. Have you ever seen tiger
ants attack a scorpion?' 'Yes, Lord.' 'They swarm all over it - that is how the
enemy will storm Capalis.' 'We will fight to the death,' promised an
officer. Gorben halted and turned. 'I know that,' he
said, his dark eyes angry now. 'But dying will not bring us victory, will it,
Jasua?' 'No, Lord.' Gorben strode on, along near-empty streets,
past boarded, deserted shops and empty taverns. At last he reached the entrance
to the Magisters' Hall. The City Elders had long since departed and the ancient
building had become the headquarters of the Capalis militia. Gorben entered the
hallway and stalked to his chambers, waving away his officers and the two
servants who ran towards him - one bearing wine in a golden goblet, the second
carrying a towel soaked with warm, scented water. Once inside, the young Emperor kicked off
his boots and hurled his white cloak across a nearby chair. There was one large
window facing east, and before it was a desk of oak upon which were laid many
maps, and reports from scouts and spies. Gorben sat down and stared at the
largest map; it was of the Ventrian Empire and. had been commissioned by his
father six years ago. He smoothed out the hide and gazed with
undisguised fury at the map. Two-thirds of the Empire had been overrun. Leaning
back in his chair, he remembered the palace at Nusa where he had been born and
raised. Built on a hill overlooking a verdant valley, and a glistening city of
white marble, the palace had taken twelve years to construct, and at one time
more than eight thousand workers had laboured on the task, bringing in blocks
of granite and marble and towering trunks of cedar, oak and elm to be fashioned
by the Royal masons and carpenters. Nusa - the first of the cities to fall. 'By
all the gods of Hell, Father, I curse thee!' hissed Gorben. His father had
reduced the size of the national army, relying on the wealth and power of his
Satraps to protect the borders. But four of the nine Satraps had betrayed him,
opening a path for the Naashanites to invade. His father had gathered an army
to confront them, but his military skills were non-existent. He had fought
bravely, so Gorben had been informed - but then they would say that to the new
Emperor. The new Emperor! Gorben rose now and walked
to the silvered mirror on the far wall. What he saw was a young, handsome man,
with black hair that gleamed with scented oils, and deep-set dark eyes. It was
a strong face - but was it the face of an Emperor? Can you overcome the enemy,
he asked himself silently, aware that any spoken word could be heard by
servants and repeated. The gilded breastplate had been worn by warrior Emperors
for two hundred years, and the cloak of purple was the mark of ultimate
royalty. But these were merely adornments. What mattered was the man who wore
them. Are you man enough? He gazed hard at his reflection, taking in the broad
shoulders and the narrow waist, the muscular legs and powerful arms. But these
too were merely adornments, he knew. The cloak of the soul. Are you man enough? The thought haunted him and he returned to
his studies. Leaning forward with his elbows on the table, Gorben stared down
at the map once more. Scrawled across it in charcoal was the new line of
defence: Capalis to the west, Larian and Ectanis to the east. Gorben hurled the
map aside. Beneath it lay a second map of the port city of Capalis. Four gates,
sixteen towers and a single wall which stretched from the sea in the south in a
curving half-circle to the cliffs of the north. Two miles of wall, forty feet
high, guarded by three thousand men, many of them raw recruits with no shields
nor breastplates. Rising, Gorben moved to the window and the
balcony beyond. The harbour and the open sea met his gaze. 'Ah, Bodasen, my
brother, where are you?' he whispered. The sea seemed so peaceful under the
clear blue sky and the young Emperor sank into a padded seat and lifted his
feet to rest on the balcony rail. On this warm, tranquil day it seemed
inconceivable that so much death and destruction had been visited upon the
Empire in so short a time. He closed his eyes and recalled the Summer Banquet
at Nusa last year. His father had been celebrating his forty-fourth birthday,
and the seventeenth anniversary of his accession to the throne. The banquet had
lasted eight days and there had been circuses, plays, knightly combat, displays
of archery, running, wrestling and riding. The nine Satraps were all present,
smiling and offering toasts to the Emperor. Shabag, tall and slim, hawk-eyed,
and cruel of mouth. Gorben pictured him. He always wore black gloves, even in
the hottest weather, and tunics of silk buttoned to the neck. Berish, fat and
greedy, but a wonderful raconteur with his tales of orgies and humorous
calamities. Darishan, the Fox of the North, the cavalryman, the Lancer, with
his long silver hair braided like a woman. And Ashac, the Peacock, the
lizard-eyed lover of boys. They had been given pride of place on either side of
the Emperor, while his eldest son was forced to sit on the lower table, gazing
up at these men of power! Shabag, Berish, Darishan, and Ashac! Names
and faces that burned Gorben's heart and soul. Traitors! Men who swore
allegiance to his father, then saw him done to death, his lands overrun and his
people slaughtered. Gorben opened his eyes and took a deep
breath. 'I will seek you out - each one of you,' he promised, 'and I will pay
you back for your treachery.' The threat was as empty as the treasury
coffers, and Gorben knew it. A soft tapping came at the outer door.
'Enter!' he called. Nebuchad stepped inside and bowed low. 'The
scouts are in, Lord. The enemy is less than two days' march from the walls.' 'What news from the east?' 'None, Lord. Perhaps our riders did not get
through.' 'What of the supplies?' Nebuchad reached inside his tunic and
produced a parchment scroll which he unrolled. 'We have sixteen thousand loaves
of unleavened bread, a thousand barrels of flour, eight hundred beef cattle,
one hundred and forty goats. The sheep have not been counted yet. There is
little cheese left, but a great quantity of oats and dried fruit.' 'What about salt?' 'Salt, Lord?' 'When we kill the cattle, how will we keep
the meat fresh?' 'We could kill them only when we need
them,' offered Nebuchad, reddening. 'To keep the cattle we must feed them, but
there is no food to spare. Therefore they must be slaughtered, and the meat
salted. Scour the city. And, Nebuchad?' 'Lord?' 'You did not mention water?' 'But, Lord, the river flows through the
city.' 'Indeed it does. But what will we drink
when the enemy dam it, or fill it with poisons?' 'There are artesian wells, I believe.' 'Locate them.' The young man's head dropped. 'I fear,
Lord, that I am not serving you well. I should have anticipated these
requirements.' Gorben smiled. 'You have much to think of
and I am well pleased with you. But you do need help. Take Jasua.' 'As you wish, Lord,' said Nebuchad
doubtfully. 'You do not like him?' Nebuchad swallowed hard. 'It is not a
question of "like", Lord. But he treats me with . . . contempt.' Gorben's eyes narrowed, but he held the
anger from his voice. 'Tell him it is my wish that he assist you. Now go.' As the door closed, Gorben slumped down on
to a satin-covered couch. 'Sweet Lords of Heaven,' he whispered, 'does my
future depend on men of such little substance?' He sighed, then gazed once more
out to sea. 'I need you, Bodasen,' he said. 'By all that is sacred, I need
you!' * Bodasen stood on the tiller deck, his right
hand shading his eyes, his vision focusing on the far horizon. On the main deck
sailors were busy repairing the rail, while others were aloft in the rigging,
or refastening bales that had slipped during the storm. 'You'll see pirates soon enough if they are
near,' said Milus Bar. Bodasen nodded and swung back to the
skipper. 'With a mere twenty-four warriors, I am hoping not to see them at
all,' he said softly. The captain chuckled. 'In life we do not
always get what we want, my Ventrian friend. I did not want a storm. I did not
want my first wife to leave me - nor my second wife to stay.' He shrugged.
'Such is life, eh?' 'You do not seem unduly concerned.' 'I am a fatalist, Bodasen. What will be
will be.' 'Could we outrun them?' Milus Bar shrugged once more. 'It depends
on which direction they are coming from.' He waved his hand in the air. 'The
wind. Behind us? Yes. There is not a swifter ship on the ocean than my Thunderchild.
Ahead and to the west - probably. Ahead and to the east - no. They would
ram us. They have a great advantage, for many of their vessels are triremes
with three banks of oars. You would be amazed, my friend, at the speed with
which they can turn and ram.' 'How long now to Capalis?' 'Two days - maybe three if the wind drops.' Bodasen moved across the tiller deck,
climbing down the six steps to the main deck. He saw Druss, Sieben and Eskodas
by the prow and walked towards them. Druss saw him and glanced up. 'Just the man we need,' said the axeman.
'We are talking about Ventria. Sieben maintains there are mountains there which
brush the moon. Is it so?' 'I have not seen all of the Empire,'
Bodasen told him, 'but according to our astronomers the moon is more than a
quarter of a million miles from the surface of the earth. Therefore I would
doubt it.' 'Such eastern nonsense,' mocked Sieben.
'There was a Drenai archer once, who fired a shaft into the moon. He had a
great bow called Akansin, twelve feet long and woven with spells. He fired a
black arrow, which he named Paka. Attached to the arrow was a thread of silver,
which he used to climb to the moon. He sat upon it as it sailed around the
great plate of the earth.' 'Mere fable,' insisted Bodasen. 'It is recorded in the library at Drenan -
in the Historic section.' 'All that tells me is how limited is your
understanding of the universe,' said Bodasen. 'Do you still believe the sun is
a golden chariot drawn by six white, winged horses?' He sat down upon a coiled
rope. 'Or perhaps that the earth sits upon the shoulders of an elephant, or
some such beast?' Sieben smiled. 'No, we do not. But would it
not be better if we did? Is there not a certain beauty in the tale? One day I
shall craft a bow and shoot at the moon.' 'Never mind the moon,' said Druss. 'I want
to know about Ventria.' 'According to the census ordered by the
Emperor fifteen years ago, and concluded only last year, the Greater Ventrian
empire is 214,969 square miles. It has an estimated population of fifteen and a
half million people. On a succession of fast horses, a rider galloping along
the borders would return to where he started in just under four years.' Druss looked crestfallen. He swallowed
hard. 'So large?' 'So large,' agreed Bodasen. Druss's eyes narrowed. 'I will find her,'
he said at last. 'Of course you will,' said Bodasen. 'She
left with Kabuchek and he will have headed for his home in Ectanis, which means
he will have docked at Capalis. Kabuchek is a famous man, senior advisor to the
Satrap, Shabag. He will not be hard to find. Unless . . .' 'Unless what?' queried Druss. 'Unless Ectanis has already fallen.' 'Sail! Sail!' came a cry from the rigging.
Bodasen leapt up, eyes scanning the glittering water. Then he saw the ship in
the east with sails furled, three banks of oars glistening like wings. Swinging
back towards the main deck, he drew his sabre. 'Gather your weapons,' he shouted. Druss donned his jerkin and helm and stood
at the prow, watching the trireme glide towards them. Even at this distance he
could see the fighting men thronging the decks. 'A magnificent ship,' he said. Beside him Sieben nodded. 'The very best.
Two hundred and forty oars. See there! At the prow!' Druss focused on the oncoming ship, and saw
a glint of gold at the waterline. 'I see it.' 'That is the ram. It is an extension of the
keel, and it is covered with reinforced bronze. With three banks of oars at
full stretch, that ram could punch through the hull of the strongest vessel!' 'Will that be their plan?' Druss asked. Sieben shook his head. 'I doubt it. This is
a merchant vessel, ripe for plunder. They will come in close, the oars will be
withdrawn, and they'll try to drag us in with grappling-hooks.' Druss hefted Snaga and glanced back along
the deck. The remaining Drenai warriors were armoured now, their faces grim.
Bowmen, Eskodas among them, were climbing the rigging to hook themselves into
place high above the deck, ready to shoot down into the enemy. Bodasen was
standing on the tiller deck with a black breastplate buckled to his torso. The Thunderchild swung away towards the west, then veered back. In the distance two
more sails could be seen and Sieben swore. 'We can't fight them all,' he said.
Druss glanced at the billowing sail, and then back at the newly sighted vessel. 'They don't look the same,' he observed.
'They're bulkier. No oars. And they're tacking against the wind. If we can deal
with the trireme, they'll not catch us.' Sieben chuckled. 'Aye, aye, captain. I bow
to your superior knowledge of the sea.' 'I'm a swift learner. That's because I
listen.' 'You never listen to me. I've lost count of
the number of times you've fallen asleep during our conversations on this
voyage.' The Thunderchild swung again, veering away from the trireme. Druss swore and ran back
along the deck, climbing swiftly to where Bodasen stood with Milus Bar at the
tiller. 'What are you doing?' he yelled at the
skipper. 'Get off my deck!' roared Milus. 'If you keep this course, we'll have three
ships to fight,' Druss snarled. 'What other choices are there?' queried
Bodasen. 'We cannot defeat a trireme.' 'Why?' asked Druss. 'They are only men.' 'They have close to one hundred fighting
men - plus the oarsmen. We have twenty-four, and a few sailors. The odds speak
for themselves.' Druss glanced back at the sailing-ships to
the west. 'How many men do they have?' Bodasen spread his hands and looked to
Milus Bar. The captain thought for a moment. 'More than two hundred on each
ship,' he admitted. 'Can we outrun them?' 'If we get a mist, or if we can keep them
off until dusk.' 'What chance of either?' enquired the
axeman. 'Precious little,' said Milus. 'Then let's at least take the fight to
them.' 'How do you suggest we do that, young man?'
the captain asked. Druss smiled. 'I'm no sailor, but it seems
to me their biggest advantage lies in the oars. Can we not try to smash them?' 'We could,' admitted Milus, 'but that would
bring us in close enough for their grappling-hooks. We'd be finished then;
they'd board us.' 'Or we board them!' snapped Druss. Milus laughed aloud. 'You are insane!' 'Insane and quite correct,' said Bodasen.
'They are hunting us down like wolves around a stag. Let's do it, Milus!' For a moment the captain stood and stared
at the two warriors, then he swore and leaned in to the tiller. The
Thunderchild swung towards the oncoming trireme. * His name was Earin Shad, though none of his
crew used it. They addressed him to his face as Sea Lord, or Great One, while
behind his back they used the Naashanite slang - Bojeeba, The Shark. Earin Shad was a tall man, slim and
round-shouldered, long of neck, with protruding eyes that glimmered pearl-grey
and a lipless mouth that never smiled. No one aboard the Darkwind knew
from whence he came, only that he had been a pirate leader for more than two
decades. One of the Lords of the Corsairs, mighty men who ruled the seas, he
was said to own palaces on several of the Thousand Islands, and to be as rich
as one of the eastern kings. This did not show in his appearance. He
wore a simple breastplate of shaped bronze, and a winged helm looted from a
merchant ship twelve years before. At his hip hung a sabre with a simple hilt
of polished wood and a fist-guard of plain brass. Earin Shad was not a man who
liked extravagance. He stood at the stern as the steady, rhythmic
pound of the drums urged the rowers to greater efforts, and the occasional
crack of the whip sounded against the bare skin of a slacker's back. His pale
eyes narrowed as the merchant vessel swung towards the Darkwind. 'What is he doing?' asked the giant Patek. Earin Shad glanced up at the man. 'He has
seen Reda's ship and he is trying to cut by us. He won't succeed.' Swinging to
the steersman, a short toothless old man named Luba, Earin Shad saw that the
man was already altering course. 'Steady now,' he said. 'We don't want her
rammed.' 'Aye, Sea Lord!' 'Make ready with the hooks!' bellowed
Patek. The giant watched as the men gathered coiled ropes, attaching them to
the three-clawed grappling-hooks. Then he transferred his gaze to the oncoming
ship. 'Look at that, Sea Lord!' he said, pointing at The Thunderchild's prow.
There was a man there, dressed in black; he had raised a double-headed axe
above his head in a gesture of defiance. They'll never cut all the ropes,' said
Patek. Earin Shad did not reply - he was scanning the decks of the enemy ship,
seeking any sign of female passengers. He saw none, and his mood darkened. To
compensate for his disappointment he found himself remembering the last ship
they had taken three weeks ago, and the Satrap's daughter she had carried. He
licked his lips at the memory. Proud, defiant, and comely - the whip alone had
not tamed her, nor the stinging slaps. And even after he had raped her
repeatedly, still her eyes shone with murderous intent. Ah, she was lively, no doubt
about that. But he had found her weakness; he always did. And when he had he
experienced, as always, both triumph and disappointment. The moment of
conquest, when she had begged him to take her - had promised to serve him
always, in any way that he chose - had been exquisite. But then sadness had
flowed within him, followed by anger. He had killed her quickly, which
disappointed the men. But then she had earned that, he thought. She had held
her nerve for five days in the darkness of the hold, in the company of the
black rats. Earin Shad sniffed, then cleared his
throat. This was no time to be considering pleasures. A cabin door opened behind him and he heard
the soft footfalls of the young sorcerer. 'Good day, Sea Lord,' said Gamara. Patek
moved away, avoiding the sorcerer's gaze. Earin Shad nodded to the slender Chiatze.
"The omens are good, I take it?' he asked. Gamara spread his hands in an elegant
gesture. 'It would be a waste of power to cast the stones, Sea Lord. During the
storm they lost half their men.' 'And you are sure they are carrying gold?' The Chiatze grinned, showing a perfect line
of small, white teeth. Like a child's, thought Earin Shad. He looked into the
man's dark, slanted eyes. 'How much are they carrying?' 'Two hundred and sixty thousand gold
pieces. Bodasen gathered it from Ventrian merchants in Mashrapur.' 'You should have cast the stones,' said
Earin Shad. 'We will see much blood,' answered Gamara.
'Aha! See, my good Lord, the sharks, as ever, follow in your wake. They are
like pets, are they not?' Earin Shad did not glance at the grey forms
slipping effortlessly through the water, fins like raised sword-blades. 'They
are the vultures of the sea,' he said, 'and I like them not at all.' The wind shifted and The Thunderchild swung
like a dancer on the white-flecked waves. On the decks of the Darkwind scores
of warriors crouched by the starboard rail as the two ships moved ever closer.
It will be close, thought Earin Shad; they will veer again and try to pull
away. Anticipating the move he bellowed an order to Patek, who now stood on the
main deck among the men. The giant leaned over the side and repeated the
instruction to the oars chief. Immediately the starboard oars lifted from the
water, the 120 rowers on the port side continuing to row. Darkwind spun
to starboard. The Thunderchild sped on, then veered towards the oncoming vessel. On the prow the
dark-bearded warrior was still waving the gleaming axe - and in that instant
Earin Shad knew he had miscalculated. 'Bring in the oars!' he shouted. Patek glanced up, astonished. 'What, Lord?' 'The oars, man! They're attacking us!' It was too late. Even as Patek leaned over
the side to shout the order The Thunderchild leapt to the attack,
swinging violently towards Darkwind, the prow striking the first ranks
of oars. Wood snapped violently with explosive cracks, mingled with the screams
of the slave rowers as the heavy oars smashed into arms and skulls, shoulders
and ribs. Grappling-lines were hurled out, iron claws
biting into wood or hooking into The Thunderchild's rigging. An arrow
slashed into the chest of a corsair; the man pitched back, struggled to rise,
then fell again. The corsairs hauled on the grappling-lines and the two ships
edged together. Earin Shad was furious. Half the oars on
the starboard side had been smashed, and the gods alone knew how many slaves
were crippled. Now he would be forced to limp to port. 'Ready to board!' he
yelled. The two ships crashed together. The
corsairs rose and clambered to the rails. In that moment the black-bearded warrior on
the enemy ship stepped up to the prow and leaped into the massed ranks of
waiting corsairs. Earin Shad could hardly believe what he was seeing. The
black-garbed axeman sent several men spinning to the deck, almost fell himself,
then swung his axe. A man screamed as blood sprayed from a terrible wound in
his chest. The axe rose and fell - and the corsairs scattered back from the
apparently deranged warrior. He charged them, the axe cleaving into
their ranks. Further along the deck other corsairs were still trying to board
the merchant ship and meeting ferocious resistance from the Drenai warriors,
but at the centre of the main deck all was chaos. A man ran in behind the
axeman, a curved knife raised to stab him in the back. But an arrow slashed
into the assailant's throat and he stumbled and fell. Several Drenai warriors leapt to join the
axeman. Earin Shad swore and drew his sabre, vaulting the rail and landing
smoothly on the deck below. When a swordsman ran at him he parried the lunge
and sent a riposte that missed the neck but opened the man's face from
cheekbone to chin. As the warrior fell back Earin Shad plunged his blade into
the man's mouth and up into the brain. A lithe warrior in black breastplate and
helm despatched a corsair and moved in on Earin Shad. The Corsair captain
blocked a fierce thrust and attempted a riposte, only to leap back as his
opponent's blade slashed by his face. The man was dark-skinned and dark-eyed,
and a master swordsman. Earin Shad stepped back and drew a dagger.
'Ventrian?' he enquired. The man smiled. 'Indeed I am.' A corsair
leapt from behind the swordsman. He spun and disembowelled the man, then swung
back in time to block a thrust from Earin Shad. 'I am Bodasen.' * The corsairs were tough, hardy men, long
used to battles and the risk of death. But they had never had to face a
phenomenon like the man with the axe. Watching from the tiller deck of The
Thunderchild, Sieben saw them fall back, again and again, from Druss's
frenzied, tireless assaults. Though the day was warm Sieben felt a chill in his
blood as he watched the axe cleaving into the hapless pirates. Druss was
unstoppable - and Sieben knew why. When swordsmen fought the outcome rested on
skill, but armed with the terrible double-headed axe there was no skill needed,
just power and an eagerness for combat - a battle lust that seemed
unquenchable. No one could stand against him, for the only way to win was to
run within the reach of those deadly blades. Death was not a risk; it was a
certainty. And Druss himself seemed to possess a sixth sense. Corsairs circled
behind him, but even as they rushed in he swung to face them, the axe-blades
slashing through skin, flesh and bone. Several of the corsairs threw down their
weapons, backing away from the huge, blood-smeared warrior. These Druss
ignored. Sieben flicked his gaze to where Bodasen
fought with the enemy captain. Their swords, shimmering in the sunlight, seemed
fragile and insubstantial against the raw power of Druss and his axe. A giant figure bearing an iron war hammer
leapt at Druss - just as Snaga became embedded in the ribs of a charging
corsair. Druss ducked under the swinging weapon and sent a left hook that
exploded against the man's jaw. Even as the giant fell, Druss snatched up his
axe and near beheaded a daring attacker. Other Drenai warriors ran to join him
and the corsairs backed away, dismayed and demoralised. 'Throw your weapons down!' bellowed Druss,
'and live!' There was little hesitation and swords,
sabres, cutlasses and knives clattered to the deck. Druss turned to see Bodasen
block a thrust and send a lightning counter that ripped across the enemy
captain's throat. Blood sprayed from the wound. The captain half fell, and
tried for one last stab. But his strength fled from him and he pitched face
first to the deck. A man in flowing green robes appeared at
the tiller deck rail. Slender and tall, his hair waxed to his skull, he lifted
his hands. Sieben blinked. He seemed to be holding two spheres of glowing brass
- no, the poet realised, not brass - but fire! 'Look out, Druss!' he shouted. The sorcerer threw out his hands and a
sheet of flame seared towards the axeman. Snaga flashed up; the flames struck
the silver heads. Time stopped for the poet. In a fraction of
a heartbeat he saw a scene he would never forget. At the moment when the flames
struck the axe, a demonic figure appeared above Druss, its skin iron-grey and
scaled, its long, powerful arms ending in taloned fingers. The flames rebounded
from the creature arid slashed back into the sorcerer. His robes blazed and his
chest imploded - a gaping hole appearing in his torso, through which Sieben
could see the sky. The sorcerer toppled from the deck and the demon
disappeared. 'Sweet mother of Cires!' whispered Sieben.
He turned to Milus Bar. 'Did you see it?' 'Aye! The axe saved him right enough.' 'Axe? Did you not see the creature?' 'What are you talking about, man?' Sieben felt his heart hammering. He saw
Eskodas climbing down from the rigging and ran to him. 'What did you see when
the flames came at Druss?' he asked, grabbing the bowman's arm. 'I saw him deflect them with his axe. What
is wrong with you?' 'Nothing. Nothing at all.' 'We'd better cut free these ropes,' said
Eskodas. 'The other ships are closing in.' The Drenai warriors on the Darkwind also
saw the two battle vessels approaching. With the defeated corsair standing by,
they hacked at the ropes and then leapt back to The Thunderchild. Druss
and Bodasen came last. None tried to stop them. The giant Druss had felled rose unsteadily,
then ran to the rail and leapt after the axeman, landing amidst a group of
Drenai warriors and scattering them. 'It's not over!' he yelled. 'Face me!' The Thunderchild eased away from the corsair ship, the wind gathering once more in
her sails as Druss dropped Snaga to the deck and advanced on the giant. The
corsair - almost a foot taller than the blood-drenched Drenai - landed the
first blow, a juddering right that split the skin above Druss's left eye. Druss
pushed through the blow and sent an uppercut that thundered against the man's
rib-cage. The corsair grunted and smashed a left hook into Druss's jaw, making
him stumble, then hit him again with lefts and rights. Dfuss rode them and
hammered an overhand right that spun his opponent in a half-circle. Following
up he hit him again, clubbing the man to his knees. Stepping back, Druss sent a
vicious kick that almost lifted the giant from the deck. He slumped down, tried
to rise, then lay still. 'Druss! Druss! Druss!' yelled the surviving
Drenai warriors as The Thunderchild slipped away from the pursuing
vessels. Sieben sat down and stared at his friend. No wonder you are so deadly, he thought.
Sweet Heaven, Druss, you are possessed! * Druss moved wearily to the starboard rail,
not even looking at the pursuing ships which were even now falling further
behind The Thunderchild. Blood was clotting on his face, and he rubbed
his left eye where the lashes were matted and sticky. Dropping Snaga to the
deck Druss peeled off his jerkin, allowing the breeze to cool his skin. Eskodas appeared alongside him, carrying a
bucket of water. 'Is any of that blood yours?' the bowman asked. Druss shrugged, uncaring. Removing his
gauntlets, he dipped his hands into the bucket, splashing water to his face and
beard. Then he lifted the bucket and tipped the contents over his head. Eskodas scanned his body. 'You have minor
wounds,' he said, probing at a narrow cut on Druss's shoulder and a gash in the
side. 'Neither are deep. I'll get needle and thread.' Druss said nothing. He felt a great
weariness settle on him, a dullness of the spirit that left him leached of
energy. He thought of Rowena, her gentleness and tranquillity, and of the peace
he had known when beside her. Lifting his head, he leaned his huge hands on the
rail. Behind him he heard laughter, and turned to see some of the warriors
baiting the giant corsair. They had tied his hands behind his back and were
jabbing at him with knives, forcing him to leap and dance. Bodasen climbed down from the tiller deck.
'Enough of that!' he shouted. 'It's just a little sport before we throw
him to the sharks,' replied a wiry warrior with a black and silver beard. 'No one will be thrown to the sharks,'
snapped Bodasen. 'Now untie him.' The men grumbled, but obeyed the order, and
the giant stood rubbing his chafed wrists. His eyes met Druss's gaze, but the
corsair's expression was unreadable. Bodasen led the man to the small cabin
door below the tiller deck and they disappeared from view. Eskodas returned and stitched the wounds in
the axeman's shoulder and side. He worked swiftly and expertly. 'You must have
had the gods with you,' he said. 'They granted you good luck.' 'A man makes his own luck,' said Druss. Eskodas chuckled. 'Aye. Trust in the Source
- but keep a spare bowstring handy. That's what my old teacher used to tell
me.' Druss thought back to the action on the
trireme. 'You helped me,' he said, remembering the arrow that had killed the
man coming in behind him. 'It was a good shot,' agreed Eskodas. 'How
are you feeling?' Druss shrugged. 'Like I could sleep for a
week.' 'It is very natural, my friend. Battle lust
roars through the blood, but the aftermath is unbearably depressing. Not many
poets sing songs about that.' Eskodas took up a cloth and sponged the blood
from Druss's jerkin, handing it back to the axeman. 'You are a great fighter,
Druss - perhaps the best I've seen.' Druss slipped on his jerkin, gathered Snaga
and walked to the prow where he stretched out between two bales. He slept for
just under an hour, but was woken by Bodasen; he opened his eyes and saw the
Ventrian bending over him as the sun was setting. 'We need to talk, my friend,' said Bodasen
and Druss sat up. The stitches in his side pulled tight as he stretched. He
swore softly. 'I'm tired,' said the axeman. 'So let's make this brief.' 'I have spoken with the corsair. His name
is Patek . . .' 'I don't care what his name is.' Bodasen sighed. 'In return for information
about the numbers of corsair vessels, I have promised him his liberty when we
reach Capalis. I have given him my word.' 'What has this to do with me?' 'I would like your word also that you will
not kill him.' 'I don't want to kill him. He means nothing
to me.' 'Then say the words, my friend.' Druss looked into the Ventrian's dark eyes.
'There is something else,' he said, 'something you are not telling me.' 'Indeed there is,' agreed Bodasen. 'Tell me
that you will allow my promise to Patek to be honoured, and I shall explain
all.' 'Very well. I will not kill him. Now say
what you have to say - and then let me get some sleep.' Bodasen drew in a long, deep breath. 'The
trireme was the Darkwind. The captain was Earin Shad, one of the leading
Corsair . . . kings, if you like. They have been patrolling these waters for
some months. One of the ships they . . . plundered . . .' Bodasen fell silent.
He licked his lips. 'Druss, I'm sorry. Kabuchek's ship was taken and sunk, the
passengers and crew thrown to the sharks. No one survived.' Druss sat very still. All anger vanished
from him. 'I wish there was something I could say or
do to lessen your pain,' said Bodasen. 'I know that you loved her.' 'Leave me be,' whispered Druss. 'Just leave
me be.' Chapter FiveWord soon spread among the warriors and
crew of the tragedy that had befallen the huge axeman. Many of the men could
not understand the depth of his grief, knowing nothing of love, but all could
see the change in him. He sat at the prow, staring out over the sea, the
massive axe in his hands. Sieben alone could approach him, but even the poet
did not remain with him for long. There was little laughter for the remaining
three days of the voyage, for Dross's brooding presence seemed to fill the
deck. The corsair giant, Patek, remained as far from the axeman as space would
allow, spending his time on the tiller deck. On the morning of the fourth day the
distant towers of Capalis could be seen, white marble glinting in the sun. Sieben approached Dross. 'Milus Bar intends
to pick up a cargo of spices and attempt the return journey. Shall we stay on
board?' 'I'm not going back,' said Dross. 'There is nothing here for us now,' pointed
out the poet. 'There is the enemy,' the axeman grunted.
'What enemy?' 'The Naashanites.' Sieben shook his head. 'I don't understand
you. We don't even know a Naashanite!' 'They killed my Rowena. I'll make them
pay.' Sieben was about to debate the point, but he stopped himself. The
Naashanites had bought the services of the corsairs and in Dross's mind this made
them guilty. Sieben wanted to argue, to hammer home to Dross that the real
villain was Earin Shad, and that he was now dead. But what was the use? In the
midst of his grief Dross would not listen. His eyes were cold, almost lifeless,
and he clung to the axe as if it were his only friend. 'She must have been a very special woman,'
observed Eskodas when he and Sieben stood by the port rail as The
Thunderchild eased her way into the harbour. 'I never met her. But he
speaks of her with reverence.' Eskodas nodded, then pointed to the
quayside. 'There are no dock-workers,' he said, 'only soldiers. The city must
be under siege.' Sieben saw movement at the far end of the
quay, a column of soldiers wearing black breastplates adorned with silver
marching behind a tall, wide-shouldered nobleman. 'That must be Gorben,' he
said. 'He walks as if he owns the world.' Eskodas chuckled. 'Not any more - but I'll
agree he is a remarkably handsome fellow.' The Emperor wore a simple black cloak above
an unadorned breastplate, yet he still - like a hero of legend - commanded
attention. Men ceased in their work as he approached, and Bodasen leapt from
the ship even before the mooring ropes were fastened, landing lightly and
stepping into the other man's embrace. The Emperor clapped him on the back, and
kissed Bodasen on both cheeks. Td say they were friends,' observed Eskodas
dryly. 'Strange customs they have in foreign
lands,' said Sieben, with a grin. The gangplank was lowered and a squad of
soldiers moved on board, vanishing below decks and reappearing bearing heavy
chests of brass-bound oak. 'Gold, I'd say,' whispered Eskodas and
Sieben nodded. Twenty chests in all were removed before the Drenai warriors
were allowed to disembark. Sieben clambered down the gangplank just behind the
bowman. As he stepped ashore he felt the ground move beneath him and he almost
stumbled, then righted himself. 'Is it an earthquake?' he asked Eskodas. 'No, my friend, it is merely that you are
so used to the pitching and rolling of the ship that your legs are unaccustomed
to solid stone. It will pass very swiftly.' Druss strode down to join them as Bodasen
stepped forward, the Emperor beside him. 'And this, my Lord, is the warrior I spoke
of - Druss the Axeman. Almost single-handedly he destroyed the corsairs.' 'I would like to have seen it,' said
Gorben. 'But there is time yet to admire your prowess. The enemy are camped
around our city and the attacks have begun.' Druss said nothing, but the Emperor seemed
unconcerned. 'May I see your axe?' he asked. Druss nodded and passed the weapon
to the monarch. Gorben accepted it and lifted the blades to his face.
'Remarkable workmanship. Not a nick or a rust mark - the surface is entirely
unblemished. A rare kind of steel.' He examined the black haft and the silver
runes. 'This is an ancient weapon, and has seen much death.' 'It will see more,' said Druss, his voice
low and rumbling. At the sound Sieben shivered. Gorben smiled and handed back the axe, then
turned to Bodasen. 'When you have settled your men into their quarters you will
find me at the Magisters' Hall.' He strode away without another word. Bodasen's face was white with anger. 'When
you are in the presence of the Emperor you should bow deeply. He is a man to
respect.' 'We Drenai are not well versed in
subservient behaviour,' Sieben pointed out. 'In Ventria such disrespect is punishable
by disembowelling,' said Bodasen. 'But I think we can learn,' Sieben told him
cheerfully. Bodasen smiled. 'See that you do, my
friends. These are not Drenai lands, and there are other customs here. The
Emperor is a good man, a fine man. Even so he must maintain discipline, and he
will not tolerate such bad manners again.' * The Drenai warriors were billeted in the
town centre, all save Druss and Sieben who had not signed on to fight for the
Ventrians. Bodasen took the two of them to a deserted inn and told them to
choose their own rooms. Food, he said, could be found at either of the two main
barracks, although there were still some shops and stalls in the town centre. 'Do you want to look at the city?' asked
Sieben, after the Ventrian general had left. Druss sat on a narrow bed staring
at his hands; he did not seem to hear the question. The poet sat alongside him.
'How are you feeling?' he asked softly. 'Empty.' 'Everyone dies, Druss. Even you and I. It
is not your fault.' 'I don't care about fault. I just
keep thinking about our time in the mountains together. I can still feel . . .
the touch of her hand. I can still hear . . .' He stumbled to silence, his face
reddened and his jaw set in a tight line. 'What was that about the city?' he
growled. 'I thought we could take a look around.' 'Good. Let's go.' Druss rose, gathere- his
axe and strode through the door. The inn was situated on Vine Street. Bodasen
had given them directions through the city and these were easy to follow, the
roads being wide, the signs in several languages including the western tongue.
The buildings were of white and grey stone, some more than four levels high.
There were gleaming towers, domed palaces, gardens and tree-lined avenues. The
scent of flowers, jasmine and rose, was everywhere. 'It is very beautiful,' observed Sieben.
They passed a near-deserted barracks and headed on towards the eastern wall.
From the distance they could hear the clash of blades and the thin cries of
wounded men. 'I think I've seen enough,' announced Sieben, halting. Druss gave a cold smile. 'As you wish,' he
said. 'There's a temple back there I'd like to
see more of. You know, the one with the white horses?' 'I saw it,' said Druss. The two men
retraced their steps until they came to a large square. The temple was domed,
and around it were twelve exquisitely sculpted statues of rearing horses, three
times larger than life. A huge arched gateway, with open gates of polished
brass and silver between beckoned the two men into the temple. The domed roof
had seven windows, all of coloured glass, and beams of light criss-crossed the
high altar. There were benches that could seat almost a thousand people, Sieben
calculated, and upon the altar was a table on which was set a hunting horn of
gold encrusted with gems. The poet walked down the aisle and climbed to the
altar. 'It's worth a fortune,' he said. 'On the contrary,' came a low voice, 'it is
priceless.' Sieben turned to see a priest in robes of grey wool, embroidered
with silver thread. The man was tall, his shaven head and long nose giving him
a birdlike appearance. 'Welcome to the shrine of PashtarSen.' 'The citizens here must be worthy of great
trust,' said Sieben. 'Such a prize as this would gain a man enormous wealth.' The priest gave a thin smile. 'Not really.
Lift it!' Sieben reached out his hand, but his
fingers closed on air. The golden horn, so substantial to the eye, was merely
an image. 'Incredible!' whispered the poet. 'How is it done?' The priest shrugged and spread his thin
arms. 'Pashtar Sen worked the miracle a thousand years ago. He was a poet and a
scholar, but also a man of war. According to myth he met the goddess, Ciris,
and she gave him the hunting horn as a reward for his valour. He placed it
here. And the moment it left his grasp it became as you see it.' 'What is its purpose?' Sieben asked. 'It has healing properties. Barren women are
said to become fertile if they lie upon the altar and cover the horn. There is
some evidence that this is true. And once every ten years the horn is said to
become solid once more and then, so we are told, it can bring a man back from
the halls of death, or carry his spirit to the stars.' 'Have you ever seen it become solid?' 'No. And I have been a servant here for
thirty-seven years.' 'Fascinating. What happened to Pashtar
Sen?' 'He refused to fight for the Emperor and
was impaled on a spike of iron.' 'Not a good ending.' 'Indeed not, but he was a man of principle
and believed the Emperor to be in the wrong. Are you here to fight for
Ventria?' 'No. We are visitors.' The priest nodded and turned to Druss.
'Your mind is far away, my son,' he said. 'Are you troubled?' 'He has suffered a great loss,' said Sieben
swiftly. 'A loved one? Ah, I see. Would you wish to
commune with her, my son?' 'What do you mean?' growled Druss. 'I could summon her spirit. It might bring
you peace.' , Druss stepped forward. 'You could do that?' 'I could try. Follow me.' The priest led
them into the shadowed recesses at the rear of the temple, then along a narrow
corridor to a small, windowless room. 'You must leave your weapons outside,'
said the priest. Druss leaned Snaga against the wall, and Sieben hung his
baldric of knives to the haft. Inside the room there were two chairs facing one
another; the priest sat in the first, beckoning Druss to take the second. 'This
room,' said the priest, 'is a place of harmony. No profane language has ever
been heard here. It is a room of prayer and kind thoughts. It has been so for a
thousand years. Whatever happens, please remember that. Now give me your hand.' Druss stretched out his arm and the priest
took hold of his hand, asking who it was that he wished to call. Druss told
him. 'And your name, my son?' 'Druss.' The man licked his lips and sat, eyes
closed, for several minutes. Then he spoke. 'I call to thee, Rowena, child of
the mountains. I call to thee on behalf of Druss. I call to thee across the
plains of Heaven, I speak to thee across the vales of Earth. I reach out to
thee, even unto the dark places below the oceans of the world, and the arid
deserts of Hell.' For a moment nothing happened. Then the priest stiffened and
cried out. He slumped down in the chair, head dropping to his chest. His mouth opened and a single word issued
forth: 'Druss!' It was a woman's voice. Sieben was startled. He glanced at the
axeman; all colour faded from Druss's face. 'Rowena!' 'I love you, Druss. Where are you?' 'In Ventria. I came for you.' 'I am here waiting. Druss! Oh no,
everything is fading. Druss, can you hear. . . ?' 'Rowena!' shouted Druss, storming to his
feet. The priest jerked and awoke. 'I am sorry,' he said. 'I did not find her.' 'I spoke to her,' said Druss, hauling the
man to his feet. 'Get her again!' 'I cannot. There was no one. Nothing
happened!' 'Druss! Let him go!' shouted Sieben,
grabbing Druss's arm. The axeman released his hold on the priest's robes and
walked from the room. 'I don't understand,' whispered the man.
There was nothing!' 'You spoke with the voice of a woman,'
Sieben told him. 'Druss recognised it.' 'It is most peculiar, my son. Whenever I
commune with the dead I know their words. But it was as if I slept.' 'Do not concern yourself,' said Sieben,
fishing in his money-pouch for a silver coin. 'I take no money,' said the man, with a shy
smile. 'But I am perplexed and I will think on what just happened.' 'I'm sure he will too,' said Sieben. * He found Druss standing by the altar,
reaching out to the shimmering golden horn, his huge fingers trying to close
around it. The axeman's face was set in concentration, the muscles of his jaw
showing through the dark beard. 'What are you doing?' asked Sieben, his
voice gentle. 'He said it could bring back the dead.' 'No, my friend. He said that was the legend.
There is a difference. Come away. We'll find a tavern somewhere in this
city, and we'll drink.' Druss slammed his hand down on to the
altar, the golden horn apparently growing through the skin of his fist. 'I
don't need to drink! Gods, I need to fight!' Snatching up the axe, the big man
strode from the temple. The priest appeared alongside Sieben. 'I
fear that, despite my good intentions, the result of my labour was not as I had
hoped,' he said. 'He'll survive, Father.' Sieben turned to
the priest. 'Tell me, what do you know of demon possession?' 'Too much - and too little. You think you
are possessed?' 'No, not I. Druss.' The priest shook his head. 'Had he been so
. . . afflicted . . . I would have sensed it when I touched his hand. No, your
friend is his own man.' Sieben sat down on a bench seat and told
the priest what he had seen on the deck of the corsair trireme. The priest
listened in silence. 'How did he come by the axe?' he asked. 'Family heirloom, I understand.' 'If there is a demonic presence, my son, I
believe you will find it hidden within the weapon. Many of the ancient blades
were crafted with spells, in order to give the wielder greater strength or
cunning. Some even had the power to heal wounds, so it is said. Look to the
axe.' 'What if it is just the axe? Surely that
will only help him in times of combat?' 'Would that were true,' said the priest,
shaking his head. 'But evil does not exist in order to serve, but to rule. If
the axe is possessed it will have a history - a dark history. Ask him of its
past. And when you hear it, and of the men who wielded it, you will understand
my words.' Sieben thanked the man and left the temple.
There was no sign of Druss, and the poet had no wish to venture near the walls.
He strolled through the near deserted city until he heard the sound of music
coming from a courtyard nearby. He approached a wrought-iron gate and saw three
women sitting in a garden. One of them was playing a lyre, the others were
singing a gentle love song as Sieben stepped into the gateway. 'Good afternoon, ladies,' he said, offering
them his most dazzling smile. The music ceased and the three all gazed at him.
They were young and pretty - the oldest, he calculated, around seventeen. She
was dark-haired and dark-eyed, full-lipped and slender. The other two were
smaller, their hair blonde, their eyes blue. They were dressed in shimmering
gowns of satin, the dark-haired beauty in blue and the others in white. 'Have you come to see our brother, sir?'
asked the dark-haired girl, rising from her seat and placing the lyre upon it. 'No, I was drawn here by the beauty of your
playing and the sweet voices which accompanied it. I am a stranger here, and a
lover of all things beautiful, and I can only thank the fates for the vision I
find here.' The younger girls laughed, but the older sister merely smiled. 'Pretty words, sir, well phrased, and I
don't doubt well rehearsed. They have the smooth edges of weapons that have seen
great use.' Sieben bowed. 'Indeed, my lady, it has been
my pleasure and my privilege to observe beauty wherever I can find it; to pay
homage to it; to bend the knee before it. But it makes my words no less
sincere.' She gave a full smile, then laughed aloud.
'I think you are a rascal, sir, and a libertine, and in more interesting times
I would summon a servant to see you from the premises. However, since we are at
war and that makes for the dullest entertainment, I shall welcome you - but
only for so long as you are entertaining.' 'Sweet lady, I think I can promise you
entertainment enough, both in word and deed.' He was delighted that she did not
blush at his words, though the younger sisters reddened. 'Such fine promises, sir. But then perhaps
you would feel less secure in your boasting were you aware of the quality of
entertainment I have enjoyed in the past.' Now it was Sieben's turn to laugh. 'Should
you tell me that Azhral, the Prince of Heaven, came to your chambers and
transported you to the Palace of Infinite Variety, then truly I might be mildly
concerned.' 'Such a book should not be mentioned in
polite company,' she chided. He stepped closer and took her hand,
raising it to his lips and turning it to kiss her palm. 'Not so,' he said
softly, 'the book has great merit, for it shines like a lantern in the hidden
places. It parts the veils and leads us to the paths of pleasure. I recommend
the sixteenth chapter for all new lovers.' 'My name is Asha,' she said, 'and your
deeds will need to be as fine as your words, for I react badly to
disappointment.' * 'You were dreaming, Pahtai,' said
Pudri as Rowena opened her eyes and found herself sitting in the sunshine
beside the lake. 'I don't know what happened,' she told the
little eunuch. 'It was as if my soul was dragged from my body. There was a
room, and Druss was sitting opposite me.' 'Sadness gives birth to many visions of
hope,' quoted Pudri. 'No, it was real, but the hold loosened and
I came back before I could tell him where I was.' He patted her hand. 'Perhaps it will happen
again,' he said reassuringly, 'but for now you must compose yourself. The
master is entertaining the great Satrap, Shabag. He is being sent to command
the forces around Capalis and it is very important that you give him good
omens.' 'I can offer only the truth.' 'There are many truths, Pahtai. A
man may have only days to live, yet in that time will find great love. The
seeress who tells him he is about to die will cause him great sorrow - but it
will be the truth. The prophet who says that love is only a few hours away will
also be telling the truth, but will create great joy in the doomed man.' Rowena smiled. 'You are very wise, Pudri.' He shrugged and smiled. 'I am old, Rowena.' 'That is the first time you have used my
name.' He chuckled. 'It is a good name, but so is Pahtai;
it means gentle dove. Now we must go to the shrine. Shall I tell you
something of Shabag? Would it help your talent?' She sighed. 'No. Tell me nothing. I will
see what there is to see - and I will remember your advice.' Arm in arm they strolled into the palace,
along the richly carpeted corridors, past the beautifully carved staircase that
led to the upper apartments. Statues and busts of marble were set into recesses
every ten feet on both sides of the corridor, and the ceiling above them was
embellished with scenes from Ventrian literature, the architraves covered with
gold leaf. As they approached the shrine room a tall
warrior stepped out from a side door. Rowena gasped, for at first she took the
man to be Druss. He had the same breadth of shoulder and jutting jaw, and his
eyes beneath thick brows were startlingly blue. Seeing her, he smiled and
bowed. 'This is Michanek, Pahtai. He is the
champion of the Naashanite Emperor - a great swordsman and a respected
officer.' Pudri bowed to the warrior. 'This is the Lady Rowena, a guest of the
Lord Kabuchek.' 'I have heard of you, lady,' said Michanek,
taking her hand and drawing it to his lips. His voice was low and vibrant. 'You
saved the merchant from the sharks, no mean feat. But now I have seen you I can
understand how even a shark would wish to do nothing to mar your beauty.'
Keeping hold of her hand he smiled and moved in close. 'Can you tell me my
fortune, lady?' Her throat was dry, but she met his gaze.
'You will . . . you will achieve your greatest ambition, and realise your
greatest hope.' His eyes showed his cynicism. 'Is that it,
lady? Surely any street charlatan could say the same. How will I die?' 'Not fifty feet from where we stand,' she
said. 'Out in the courtyard. I see soldiers with black cloaks and helms,
storming the walls. You will gather your men for a last stand outside these
walls. Beside you will be . . . your strongest brother and a second cousin.' 'And when will this be?' 'One year after you are wed. To the day.' 'And what is the name of the lady I shall
marry?' 'I will not say,' she told him. 'We must go, Lord,' said Pudri swiftly.
"The Lords Kabuchek and Shabag await.' 'Of course. It was a pleasure meeting you,
Rowena. I hope we will meet again.' Rowena did not reply, but followed Pudri
into the shrine room. * At dusk the enemy drew back, and Druss was
surprised to see the Ventrian warriors leaving the walls and strolling back
through the city streets. 'Where is everyone going?' he asked the warrior
beside him. The man had removed his helm and was wiping his sweat-streaked face
with a cloth. 'To eat and rest,' the warrior answered. Druss scanned the walls. Only a handful of
men remained, and these were sitting with their backs to the ramparts. 'What if
there is another attack?' asked the axeman. 'There won't be. That was the fourth.' 'Fourth?' queried Druss, surprised. The warrior, a middle-aged man with a round
face and keen blue eyes, grinned at the Drenai. 'I take it that you are no
student of strategy. Your first siege, is it?' Druss nodded. 'Well, the rules
of engagement are precise. There will be a maximum of four attacks during any
twenty-four-hour period.' 'Why only four?' The man shrugged. 'It's a long time since I
studied the manual, but, as I recall, it is a question of morale. When Zhan Tsu
wrote The Art of War he explained that after four attacks the spirit of
the attackers can give way to despair.' 'There won't be very much despair among them
if they attack now - or after night falls,' Druss pointed out. 'They won't attack,' said his comrade
slowly, as if speaking to a child. 'If a night attack was planned there would
have only been three assaults during the day.' Druss was nonplussed. 'And these rules were
written in a book?' 'Yes, a fine work by a Chiatze general.' 'And you will leave these walls virtually
unmanned during the night because of a book?' The man laughed. 'Not the book, the
rules of engagement. Come with me to the barracks and I'll explain a little
more.' As they strolled the warrior, Oliquar, told
Druss that he had served in the Ventrian army for more than twenty years. 'I
was even an officer once, during the Opal Campaign. Damn near wiped out we
were, so I got to command a troop of forty men. It didn't last. The General
offered me a commission, but I couldn't afford the armour, so that was it. Back
to the rankers. But it's not a bad life. Comradeship, two good meals a day.' 'Why couldn't you afford the armour? Don't
they pay officers?' 'Of course, but only a disha a day.
That's half of what I earn now.' 'The officers receive less than the
rankers? That's stupid.' Oliquar shook his head. 'Of course it
isn't. That way only the rich can afford to be officers, which means that only
noblemen - or the sons of merchants, who desire to be noblemen - can command.
In this way the noble families retain power. Where are you from, young man?' 'I am Drenai.' 'Ah, yes. I have never been there of
course, but I understand the mountains of Skeln are exceptionally beautiful.
Green and lush, like the Saurab. I miss the mountains.' Druss sat with Oliquar in the Western
Barracks and ate a meal of beef and wild onions before setting off back to the
empty tavern. It was a calm night, with no clouds, and the moon turned the
white, ghostly buildings to a muted silver. Sieben was not in their room and Druss sat
by the window, staring out over the harbour, watching the moonlit waves and the
water which looked like molten iron. He had fought in three of the four attacks
- the enemy, red-cloaked, with helms boasting white horsehair plumes, running
forward carrying ladders which they leaned against the walls. Rocks had been hurled
down upon them, arrows peppered them. Yet on they came. The first to reach the
walls were speared, or struck with swords, but a few doughty fighters made
their way to the battlements, where they were cut down by the defenders.
Half-way through the second attack a dull, booming sound, like controlled
thunder, was heard on the walls. 'Battering-ram,' said the soldier beside
him. "They won't have much luck, those gates are reinforced with iron and
brass.' Druss leaned back in his chair and stared
down at Snaga. In the main, he had used the axe to push back ladders, sliding
them along the wall, sending attackers tumbling to the rocky ground below. Only
twice had the weapon drawn blood. Reaching out Druss stroked the black haft,
remembering the victims - a tall, beardless warrior and a swarthy, pot-bellied
man in an iron helm. The first had died when Snaga crunched through his wooden
breastplate, the second when the silver blades had sheared his iron helm in
two. Druss ran his thumb along the blades. Not a mark, or a nick. Sieben arrived at the room just before
midnight. His eyes were red-rimmed and he yawned constantly. 'What happened to
you?' asked Druss. The poet smiled. 'I made new friends.'
Pulling off his boots he settled back on one of the narrow beds. Druss sniffed the air. 'Smells like you
were rolling in a flowerbed.' 'A bed of flowers,' said Sieben, with a
smile. 'Yes, almost exactly how I would describe it.' Druss frowned. 'Well, never mind that, do
you know anything about rules of engagement?' 'I know everything about my rules of
engagement, but I take it you are talking about Ventrian warfare?' Swinging his
legs from the bed, he sat up. 'I'm tired, Druss, so let's make this
conversation brief. I have a meeting in the morning and I need to build up my
strength.' Druss ignored the exaggerated yawn with
which Sieben accompanied his words. 'I saw hundreds of men wounded today, and
scores killed. Yet now, with only a few men on the walls, the enemy sits back
and waits for sunrise. Why? Does no one want to win?' 'Someone will win,' answered Sieben. 'But
this is a civilised land. They have practised warfare for thousands of
years. The siege will go on for a few weeks, or a few months, and every day the
combatants will count their losses. At some point, if there is no breakthrough,
either one or the other will offer terms to the enemy.' 'What do you mean, terms?' 'If the besiegers decide they cannot win,
they will withdraw. If the men here decide all is lost, they will desert to the
enemy.' 'What about Gorben?' Sieben shrugged. 'His own troops might kill
him, or hand him over to the Naashanites.' 'Gods, is there no honour among these
Ventrians?' 'Of course there is, but most of the men
here are mercenaries from many eastern tribes. They are loyal to whoever pays
them the most.' 'If the rules of war here are so
civilised,' said Druss, 'why have the inhabitants of the city fled? Why not
just wait until the fighting is over, and serve whoever wins?' 'They would, at best, be enslaved; at
worst, slaughtered. It may be a civilised land, Druss, but it is also a harsh
one.' 'Can Gorben win?' 'Not as matters stand, but he may be lucky.
Often Ventrian sieges are settled by single combat between champions, though
such an event would take place only if both factions were of equal strength,
and both had champions they believed were invincible. That won't happen here,
because Gorben is heavily outnumbered. However, now that he has the gold
Bodasen brought he will send spies in to the enemy camp to bribe the soldiers
to desert to his cause. It's unlikely to work, but it might. Who knows?' 'Where did you learn all this?' asked
Druss. 'I have just spent an informative afternoon
with the Princess Asha - Gorben's sister.' 'What?' stormed Druss. 'What is it with
you? Did you learn nothing from what happened in Mashrapur? One day! And
already you are rutting!' 'I do not rut,' snapped Sieben. 'I
make love. And what I do is none of your concern.' 'That's true,' admitted Druss, 'and when
they take you for disembowelling, or impaling, I shall remind you of that.' 'Ah, Druss!' said Sieben, settling back on
the bed. 'There are some things worth dying for. And she is very beautiful. By
the gods, a man could do worse than marry her.' Druss stood and turned away to the window.
Sieben was instantly contrite. 'I am sorry, my friend. I wasn't thinking.' He
approached Druss and laid his hand on his shoulder. 'I am sorry about what
happened with the priest.' 'It was her voice,' said Druss, swallowing
hard and fighting to keep his emotions in check. 'She said she was waiting for
me. I thought that if I went to the wall I might be killed, and then I'd be
with her again. But no one came with the skill or the heart. No one ever will.
. . and I don't have the courage to do the deed myself.' 'That would not be courage, Druss. And
Rowena would not want it. She'd want you to be happy, to marry again.' 'Never!' 'You are not yet twenty, my friend. There
are other women.' 'None like her. But she's gone, and I'll
speak no more of her. I'll carry her here,' he said, touching his chest, 'and
I'll not forget her. Now go back to what you were saying about Eastern
warfare.' Sieben lifted a clay goblet from a shelf by
the window, blew the dust from it, and filled it with water which he drained at
a single swallow. 'Gods, that tastes foul! All right . . . Eastern warfare.
What is it you wish to know now?' 'Well,' said Druss, slowly, 'I know that
the enemy can attack four times in a day. But why did they only attack one
wall? They have the numbers to surround the city and attack in many places at
once.' 'They will, Druss, but not in the first
month. This is the testing time. Untried new soldiers are judged on their
courage during the first few weeks; then they will bring up the siege-engines.
That should be the second month. After that perhaps ballistae, hurling huge
rocks over the walls. If at the end of the month there has been no success,
they will call in the engineers and they will burrow under the walls, seeking
to bring them down.' 'And what rules over the besieged?' asked
the axeman. 'I don't understand you?' 'Well, suppose we were to attack them.
Could we only do it four times? Can we attack at night? What are the rules?' 'It is not a question of rules, Druss, it's
more a matter for common sense. Gorben is outnumbered by around twenty to one;
if he attacked, he'd be wiped out.' Druss nodded, and lapsed into silence.
Finally he spoke. 'I'll ask Oliquar for his book. You can read it to me, then
I'll understand.' 'Can we sleep now?' asked Sieben. Druss nodded and took up his axe. He did
not remove his boots or jerkin and stretched out on the second bed with Snaga
beside him. 'You don't need an axe in bed in order to
sleep.' 'It comforts me,' answered Druss, closing
his eyes. 'Where did you get it?' 'It belonged to my grandfather.' 'Was he a great hero?' asked Sieben,
hopefully. 'No, he was a madman, and a terrible
killer.' 'That's nice,' said Sieben, settling down
on his own bed. 'It's good to know you have a family trade to fall back on if
times get hard.' Chapter SixGorben leaned back in his chair as his
servant, Mushran, carefully shaved the stubble from his chin. He glanced up at
the old man. 'Why do you stare so?' he asked. 'You are tired, my boy. Your eyes are
red-rimmed and there are purple patches beneath them.' Gorben smiled. 'One day you will call me,
"great Lord" or "my Emperor". I live for that day,
Mushran.' The old man chuckled. 'Other men can bestow
upon you these titles. They can fall to the ground before you and bounce their
brows from the stone. But when I look upon you, my boy, I see the child
that was before the man, and the babe who was before the child. I prepared your
food and I wiped your arse. And I am too old to crash my poor head to the
stones every time you walk into a room. Besides, you are changing the subject.
You need more rest.' 'Has it escaped your notice that we have
been under siege for a month? I must show myself to the men; they must see me
fight, or they will lose heart. And there are supplies to be organised, rations
set - a hundred different duties. Find me some more hours in a day and I will
rest, I promise you.' 'You don't need more hours,' snapped the
old man, lifting the razor and wiping oil and stubble from the blade. 'You need
better men. Nebuchad is a good boy - but he's slow-witted. And Jasua. . .'
Mushran raised his eyes to the ceiling. 'A wonderful killer, but his brain is
lodged just above his . . .' 'Enough of that!' said Gorben amiably. 'If
my officers knew how you spoke of them, they'd have you waylaid in an alley and
beaten to death. Anyway, what about Bodasen?' 'The best of them - but let's be fair, that
isn't saying much.' Gorben's reply was cut off as the razor
descended to his throat and he felt the keen blade gliding up over his jawline
and across to the edge of his mouth. 'There!' said Mushran proudly. 'At least
you look like an Emperor now.' Gorben stood and wandered to the window.
The fourth attack was under way; it would be repulsed, he knew, but even from
here he could see the huge siege-towers being dragged into place for tomorrow.
He pictured the hundreds of men pulling them into position, saw in his mind's
eye the massive attack ramps crashing down on to the battlements, and heard the
war-cries of the Naashanite warriors as they clambered up the steps, along the
ramp, and hurled themselves on to the defenders. Naashanites? He laughed
bitterly. Two-thirds of the enemy soldiers were Ventrians, followers of
Shabag, one of the renegade Satraps. Ventrians killing Ventrians! It was
obscene. And for what? How much richer could Shabag become? How many palaces
could a man occupy at one time? Gorben's father had been a weak man, and a poor
judge of character, but for all that he had been an Emperor who cared for his
people. Every city boasted a university, built from funds supplied by the Royal
treasury. There were colleges where the brightest students could learn the arts
of medicine, listen to lectures from Ventria's finest herbalists. There were
schools, hospitals, and a road system second to none on the continent. But his
greatest achievement had been the forming of the Royal Riders, who could carry
a message from one end of the Empire to another in less than twelve weeks. Such
swift communication meant that if any satrapy suffered a natural disaster -
plague, famine, flood - then help could be sent almost immediately. Now the cities were either conquered or
besieged, the death toll was climbing towards a mountainous total, the
universities were closed, and the chaos of war was destroying everything his
father had built. With great effort he forced down the heat of anger, and
concentrated coolly on the problem facing him at Capalis. Tomorrow would be a pivotal day in the
siege. If his warriors held, then dismay would spread among the enemy. If not.
. . He smiled grimly. If not we are finished, he thought. Shabag would have him
dragged before the Naashanite Emperor. Gorben sighed. 'Never let despair enter your mind,' said
Mushran. 'There is no profit in it.' 'You read minds better than any seer.' 'Not minds, faces. So wipe that expression
clear and I'll fetch Bodasen.' 'When did he arrive?' 'An hour ago. I told him to wait. You
needed the shave - and the rest.' 'In a past life you must have been a
wonderful mother,' said Gorben. Mushran laughed, and left the room. Returning,
he ushered Bodasen inside and bowed. 'The general Bodasen, great Lord, my
Emperor,' he said, then backed out, pulling shut the door behind him. 'I don't know why you tolerate that man,
Lord!' snapped Bodasen. 'He is always insolent.' 'You wished to see me, general?' Bodasen snapped to attention. 'Yes, sir.
Druss the Axeman came to see me last night, he has a plan concerning the
siege-towers.' 'Go on.' Bodasen cleared his throat. 'He wants to
attack them.' Gorben stared hard at the general,
observing the deep blush that was appearing on the warrior's cheeks. 'Attack
them?' 'Yes, Lord. Tonight, under cover of
darkness - attack the enemy camp and set fire to the towers.' 'You feel this is feasible?' 'No, Lord . . . well . . . perhaps. I
watched this man attack a corsair trireme and force fifty men to throw down
their weapons. I don't know whether he can succeed this time, but . . .' 'I'm still listening.' 'We have no choice. They have thirty
siege-towers, Lord. They'll take the wall and we'll not hold them.' Gorben moved to a couch and sat. 'How does
he intend to set these fires? And what does he think the enemy will be doing
while he does so? The timbers are huge, old, weathered. It will take a great
flame to bring one of them down.' 'I appreciate that, Lord. But Druss says
the Naashanites will be too busy to think of towers.' He cleared his throat.
'He intends to attack the centre of the camp, kill Shabag and the other
generals, and generally cause enough mayhem to allow a group of men to sneak
out from Capalis and set fires beneath the towers.' 'How many men has he asked for?' 'Two hundred. He says he's already chosen
them.' 'He has
chosen them?' Bodasen glanced down at the floor. 'He is a
very . . . popular man, Lord. He has fought every day and he knows many of the
men well. They respect him.' 'Has he chosen any officers?' 'Only one . . . Lord.' 'Let me guess. You?' 'Yes, Lord.' 'And you are willing to lead this . . .
insane venture?' 'I am, Lord.' 'I forbid it. But you can tell Druss that I
agree, and that I will choose an officer to accompany him.' Bodasen seemed about to protest, but he
held his tongue, and bowed deeply. He backed to the door. 'General,' called Gorben. 'Yes, Lord?' 'I am well pleased with you,' said Gorben,
not looking at the man. He walked out to the balcony and breathed the evening
air. It was cool and flowing from the sea. * Shabag watched the setting sun turn the
mountains to fire, the sky burning like the vaults of Hades, deep crimson,
flaring orange. He shuddered. He had never liked sunsets. They spoke of
endings, inconstancy - the death of a day. The siege-towers stood in a grim line
facing Capalis, monstrous giants promising victory. He gazed up at the first.
Tomorrow they would be dragged to the walls, then the mouths of the giants
would open, the attack ramps would drop to the ramparts like stiff tongues. He
paused. How would one continue the analogy? He pictured the warriors climbing
from the belly of the beast and hurling themselves on to the enemy. Then he
chuckled. Like the breath of death, like a dragon's fire? No, more like a demon
disgorging acid. Yes, I like that, he thought. The towers had been assembled from sections
brought on huge wagons from Resha in the north. They had cost twenty thousand
gold pieces, and Shabag was still angry that he alone had been expected to
finance them. The Naashanite Emperor was a parsimonious man. 'We will have him tomorrow, sir?' said one
of his aides. Shabag jerked his mind to the present and turned to his staff
officers. The him was Gorben. Shabag licked his thin lips. 'I want him alive,' he said, keeping the
hatred from his voice. How he loathed Gorben! How he despised both the man and
his appalling conceit. A trick of fate had left him with a throne that was
rightly Shabag's. They shared the same ancestors, the kings of glory who had
built an empire unrivalled in history. And Shabag's grandfather had sat upon
the throne. But he died in battle leaving only daughters surviving him. Thus
had Gorben's father ascended the golden steps and raised the ruby crown to his
head. And what happened then to the Empire?
Stagnation. Instead of armies, conquest and glory, there were schools, fine roads
and hospitals. And to what purpose? The weak were kept alive in order to breed
more weaklings, peasants learned their letters and became obsessed with
thoughts of betterment. Questions that should never have been voiced were
debated openly in city squares: By what right do the noble families rule our
lives? Are we not free men? By what right? By the right of blood, thought
Shabag. By the right of steel and fire! He thought back with relish to the day when
he had surrounded the university at Resha with armed troops, after the students
there had voiced their protests at the war. He had called out their leader, who
came armed not with a sword, but with a scroll. It was an ancient work, written
by Pashtar Sen, and the boy had read it aloud. What a fine voice he had. It was
a well-written piece, full of thoughts of honour, and patriotism, and
brotherhood. But then when Pashtar Sen had written it the serfs knew their
places, the peasants lived in awe of their betters. The sentiments were outworn
now. He had allowed the boy to finish the work,
for anything less would have been ill-mannered, and ill befitting a nobleman.
Then he had gutted him like a fish. Oh, how the brave students ran then! Save
that there was nowhere to run, and they had died in their hundreds, like
maggots washed from a pus-filled sore. The Ventrian Empire was decaying under
the old emperor, and the only chance to resurrect her greatness was by war.
Yes, thought Shabag, the Naashanites will think they have won, and I will
indeed be a vassal king. But not for long. Not for long . . . 'Excuse me, sir,' said an officer and
Shabag turned to the man. 'Yes?' 'A ship has left Capalis. It is heading
north along the coast. There are quite a number of men aboard.' Shabag swore. 'Gorben has fled,' he announced.
'He saw our giants and realised he could not win.' He felt a sick sense
of disappointment, for he had been anticipating tomorrow with great
expectation. He turned his eyes towards the distant walls, half expecting to
see the Herald of Surrender. 'I shall be in my tent. When they send for terms
wake me.' 'Yes, sir.' He strode through the camp, his anger
mounting. Now some whore-born corsair would capture Gorben, maybe even kill
him. Shabag glanced up at the darkening sky. Td give my soul to have Gorben
before me!' he said. * But sleep would not come and Shabag wished
he had brought the Datian slave girl with him. Young innocent, and exquisitely
compliant, she would have brought him sleep and sweet dreams. He rose from his bed and lit two lanterns.
Gorben's escape - if he managed to avoid the corsairs - would prolong the war.
But only by a few months, reasoned Shabag. Capalis would be his by tomorrow,
and after that Ectanis would fall. Gorben would be forced to fall back into the
mountains, throwing himself upon the mercy of the wild tribes who inhabited
them. It would take time to hunt him down, but not too much. And the hunt might
afford amusement during the bleak winter months. He thought of his palace in Resha, deciding
that after organising the surrender of Capalis he would return home for a rest.
Shabag pictured the comforts of Resha, the theatres, the arena and the gardens.
By now the flowering cherry trees would be in bloom by the lake, dropping their
petals to the crystal waters, the sweet scent filling the air. Was it only a month since he had sat by the
lake with Darishan beside him, sunlight gleaming upon his braided silver hair? 'Why do you wear those gloves, cousin?'
Darishan had asked, tossing a pebble into the water. A large golden fish
flicked its tail at the sudden disturbance, then vanished into the depths. 'I like the feel of them,' answered Shabag
irritated. 'But I did not come here to discuss matters sartorial.' Darishan chuckled. 'Always so serious? We
are on the verge of victory.' 'You said that half a year ago,' Shabag
pointed out. 'And I was correct then. It is like a lion
hunt, cousin. While he is in the dense undergrowth he has a chance, but once
you have him on open ground, heading into the mountains, it is only a matter of
time before he runs out of strength. Gorben is running out of strength and gold.' 'He still has three armies.' 'He began with seven. Two of them are now
under my command. One is under yours, and one has been destroyed. Come, cousin,
why the gloom?' Shabag shrugged. 'I want to see an end to
the war, so I can begin to rebuild.' 'I? Surely you mean we? 'A slip of the tongue, cousin,' said Shabag
swiftly, forcing a smile. Darishan leaned back on the marble seat and idly twisted
one of his braids. Though not yet forty his hair was startlingly pale, silver
and white, and braided with wires of gold and copper. 'Do not betray me, Shabag,' he warned. 'You
will not be able to defeat the Naashanites alone.' 'A ridiculous thought, Darishan. We are of
the same blood - and we are friends.' Darishan's cold eyes held to Shabag's gaze,
then he too smiled. 'Yes,' he whispered, 'friends and cousins. I wonder where
our cousin - and former friend - Gorben is hiding today.' Shabag reddened. 'He was never my friend. I
do not betray my friends. Such thoughts are unworthy of you.' 'Indeed, you are right,' agreed Darishan,
rising. 'I must leave for Ectanis. Shall we have a small wager as to which of
us conquers first?' 'Why not? A thousand in gold that Capalis
falls before Ectanis.' 'A thousand - plus the Datian slave girl?' 'Agreed,' said Shabag, masking his
irritation. 'Take care, cousin.' The men shook hands. 'I shall.' The silver-haired Darishan swung
away, then glanced back over his shoulder. 'By the way, did you see the wench?' 'Yes, but she told me little of use. I
think Kabuchek was swindled.' 'That may be true, but she saved him from
the sharks and predicted a ship would come. She also told me where to find the
opal brooch I lost three years ago. What did she tell you?' Shabag shrugged. 'She talked of my past,
which was interesting, but then she could easily have been schooled by
Kabuchek. When I asked her about the coming campaign she closed her eyes and
took hold of my hand. She held it for maybe three heartbeats, then pulled away
and said she could tell me nothing.' 'Nothing at all?' 'Nothing that made any sense. She said . .
. "He is coming!" She seemed both elated and yet, moments
later, terrified. Then she told me not to go to Capalis. That was it.' Darishan nodded and seemed about to speak.
Instead he merely smiled and walked away. Putting thoughts of Darishan from his mind,
Shabag moved to the tent entrance. The camp was quiet. Slowly he removed the
glove from his left hand. The skin itched, red open sores covering the surface
as they had done since adolescence. There were herbal ointments and emollients
that could ease them, but nothing had ever healed the diseased skin, nor fully
removed the other sores that stretched across his back and chest, thighs and
calves. Slowly he peeled back the right-hand glove.
The skin here was clean and smooth. This was the hand she had held. He had offered Kabuchek sixty thousand gold
pieces for her, but the merchant had politely refused. When the battle is over,
thought Shabag, I shall have her taken from him. Just as he was about to turn into the tent
Shabag saw a line of soldiers marching slowly down towards the camp, their
armour gleaming in the moonlight. They were moving in columns of twos, with an
officer at the head; the man looked familiar, but he was wearing a plumed helm
with a thick nasal guard that bisected his face. Shabag rubbed at his tired eyes
to focus more clearly on the man; it was not the face but the walk that aroused
his interest. One of Darishan's officers, he wondered? Where have I seen him
before? Pah, what difference does it make, he
thought suddenly, pulling shut the tent-flap. He had just blown out the first
of the two lanterns when a scream rent the air. Then another. Shabag ran to the
entrance, tearing aside the flap. Warriors were running through his camp,
cutting and killing. Someone had picked up a burning brand and had thrown it
against a line of tents. Flames rippled across the bone-dry cloth, the wind
carrying the fire to other tents. At the centre of the fighting Shabag saw a
huge warrior dressed in black, brandishing a double-headed axe. Three men ran
at him, and he killed them in moments. Then Shabag saw the officer - and
remembrance rose like a lightning blast from the halls of his memory. * Gorben's soldiers surrounded Shabag's tent.
It had been set at the centre of the camp, with thirty paces of clear ground
around it to allow the Satrap a degree of privacy. Now it was ringed by armed
men. Shabag was bewildered by the speed at which
the enemy had struck, but surely, he reasoned, it would avail them nothing.
Twenty-five thousand men were camped around the besieged harbour city. How many
of the enemy were here? Two hundred? Three hundred? What could they possibly
hope to achieve, save to slay Shabag himself? And how would that serve them,
for they would die in the act? Nonplussed, he stood - a still, silent
spectator as the battle raged and the fires spread. He could not tear his eyes
from the grim, blood-smeared axeman, who killed with such deadly efficiency,
such a minimum of effort. When a horn sounded, a high shrill series of notes
that flowed above the sounds of combat, Shabag was startled. The trumpeter was
sounding the truce signal and the soldiers fell back, momentarily bewildered.
Shabag wanted to shout at his men: 'Fight on! Fight on!' But he could not
speak. Fear paralysed him. The silent circle of soldiers around him stood
ready, their blades shining in the moonlight. He felt that were he to even move
they would fall upon him like hounds upon a stag. His mouth was dry, his hands
trembling. Two men rolled a barrel into view,
up-ending it and testing the top. Then the enemy officer stepped forward and
climbed on to the barrel, facing out towards the massed ranks of Shabag's men.
The Satrap felt bile rise in his throat. The officer threw back his cloak. Armour of
gold shone upon his breast and he removed his helm. 'You know me,' he bellowed, his voice rich
and resonant, compelling. 'I am Gorben, the son of the God King, the heir of
the God King. In my veins runs the blood of Pashtar Sen, and Cyrios the Lord of
Battles, and Meshan Sen, who walked the Bridge of Death. I am Gorben!' The name
boomed out, and the men stood silently, spellbound. Even Shabag felt the
goose-flesh rising on his diseased skin. Druss eased back into the circle and stared
out at the massed ranks of the enemy. There was a kind of divine madness about
the scene which he found himself enjoying immensely. He had been angry when
Gorben himself had appeared at the harbour to take command of the troops, and
doubly so when the Emperor casually informed him there would be a change of
plan. 'What's wrong with the plan we have?' asked
Druss. Gorben chuckled, and, taking Druss's arm,
led him out of earshot of the waiting men. 'Nothing is wrong with it, axeman -
save for the objective. You seek to destroy the towers. Admirable. But it is
not the towers that will determine success or failure in this siege; it is the
men. So tonight we do not seek to hamper them, we seek to defeat them.' Druss chuckled. Two hundred against
twenty-five thousand?' 'No. One against one.' He had outlined his
strategy and Druss had listened in awed silence. The plan was audacious and
fraught with peril. Druss loved it. The first phase had been completed. Shabag
was surrounded and the enemy were listening to Gorben speak. But now came the
testing time. Success and glory or failure and death? Druss did not know, but
he sensed that the strategy was now teetering on a razor's edge. One wrong word
from Gorben and the horde would descend upon them. 'I am Gorben!' roared the Emperor again.
'And every man of you has been
led into treachery by this . . . this miserable wretch here behind me.' He
waved his hand contemptuously in the direction of Shabag. 'Look at him!
Standing like a frightened rabbit. Is this the man you would set upon the
throne? It will not be easy for him, you know.
He will have to ascend the Royal steps. How will he accomplish this with
his lips fastened to a Naashanite arse?' Nervous laughter rose from the massed
ranks. 'Aye, it is an amusing thought,' agreed Gorben, 'or it would be were it
not so tragic. Look at him! How can warriors follow such a creature? He was
lifted to high position by my father; he was trusted; and he betrayed the man
who had helped him, who loved him like a son. Not content with causing the
death of my father, he has also done everything within his power to wreak havoc
upon Ventria. Our cities burn. Our people are enslaved. And for why? So that
this quivering rodent can pretend to be a king. So that he can creep on all
fours to lie at the feet of a Naashanite goat-breeder.' Gorben gazed out over the ranks. 'Where are
the Naashanites?' he called. A roar went up from the rear. 'Ah yes,' he said,
'ever at the back!' The Naashanties began to shout, but their calls were
submerged beneath the laughter of Shabag's Ventrians. Gorben raised his hands
for silence. 'No!' he bellowed. 'Let them have their say. It is rude to laugh,
to mock others because they do not have your skills, your understanding of
honour, your sense of history. I had a Naashanite slave once - ran off with one
of my father's goats. I'll say this for him, though - he picked a pretty one!'
Laughter rose in a wall of sound and Gorben waited until it subsided. 'Ah, my
lads,' he said at last. 'What are we doing with this land we love? How did we
allow the Naashanites to rape our sisters and daughters?' An eerie silence
settled over the camp. 'I'll tell you how. Men like Shabag opened the doors to
them. "Come in," he shouted, "and do as you will. I will be your
dog. But please, please, let me have the crumbs that fall from your table. Let
me lick the scrapings from your plates!" ' Gorben drew his sword and
raised it high as his voice thundered out. 'Well, I'll have none of it! I am
the Emperor, anointed by the gods. And I'll fight to the death to save my
people!' 'And we'll stand by you!' came a voice from
the right. Druss recognised the caller. It was Bodasen; and with him were the
five thousand defenders of Capalis. They had marched silently past the
siege-towers while the skirmish raged and had crept up to the enemy lines while
the soldiers listened to the voice of Gorben. As Shabag's Ventrians began to shift
nervously, Gorben spoke again. 'Every man here - save the Naashanites - is
forgiven for following Shabag. More than this, I will allow you to serve me, to
purge your crimes by freeing Ventria. And more than this, I shall give you each
the pay that is owed you - and ten gold pieces for every man who pledges to
fight for his land, his people and his Emperor.' At the rear the nervous
Naashanites eased away from the packed ranks, forming a fighting square a little
way distant. 'See them cower!' shouted Gorben. 'Now is
the time to earn your gold! Bring me the heads of the enemy!' Bodasen forced his way through the throng.
'Follow me!' he shouted. 'Death to the Naashanites!' The cry was taken up, and
almost thirty thousand men hurled themselves upon the few hundred Naashanite
troops. Gorben leapt down from the barrel and
strode to where Shabag waited. 'Well, cousin,' he said, his voice soft yet
tinged with acid, 'how did you enjoy my speech?' 'You always could talk well,' replied
Shabag, with a bitter laugh. 'Aye, and I can sing and play the harp, and
read the works of our finest scholars. These things are dear to me - as I am
sure they are to you, cousin. Ah, what an awful fate it must be to be
born blind, or to lose the use of speech, the sense of touch.' 'I am noble born,' said Shabag, sweat
gleaming on his face. 'You cannot maim me.' 'I am the Emperor,' hissed Gorben. 'My will
is the law!' Shabag fell to his knees. 'Kill me cleanly, I beg of you . . .
cousin!' Gorben drew a dagger from the jewel-encrusted scabbard at his hip,
tossing the weapon to the ground before Shabag. The Satrap swallowed hard
as he lifted the dagger and stared with grim malevolence at his tormentor. 'You
may choose the manner of your passing,' said Gorben. Shabag licked his lips, then held the point
of the blade to his chest. 'I curse you, Gorben,' he screamed. Then taking the
hilt with both hands, he rammed the blade home. He groaned and fell back. His
body twitched, and his bowels opened. 'Remove . . . it,' Gorben ordered the
soldiers close by. 'Find a ditch and bury it.' He swung to Druss and laughed
merrily. 'Well, axeman, the deed is done.' 'Indeed it is, my Lord,' answered Druss. 'My Lord? Truly
this is a night of wonders!' At the edge of the camp the last of the
Naashanites died begging for mercy, and a grim quiet descended. Bodasen
approached the Emperor and bowed deeply. 'Your orders have been obeyed,
Majesty.' Gorben nodded. 'Aye, you have done well,
Bodasen. Now take Jasua and Nebuchad and gather Shabag's officers. Promise them
anything, but take them into the city, away from their men. Interrogate them.
Kill those who do not inspire your confidence.' 'As you order it, so shall it be,' said
Bodasen. * Michanek lifted Rowena from the carriage.
Her head lolled against his shoulder, and he smelt the sweetness of her breath.
Tying the reins to the brake bar, Pudri scrambled down and gazed apprehensively
at the sleeping woman. 'She is all right,' said Michanek. 'I will
take her to her room. You fetch the servants to unload the chests.' The tall
warrior carried Rowena towards the house. A slave girl held open the door and
he moved inside, climbing the stairs to a sunlit room in the eastern wing.
Gently he laid her down, covering her frail body with a satin sheet and a thin
blanket of lamb's wool. Sitting beside her, he lifted her hand. The skin was
hot and feverish; she moaned, but did not stir. Another slave girl appeared and curtsied to
the warrior. He rose. 'Stay by her,' he ordered. He found Pudri standing in the main doorway
of the house. The little man looked disconsolate and lost, his dark eyes
fearful. Michanek summoned him to the huge oval library, and bade him sit on a
couch. Pudri slumped down, wringing his hands. 'Now, from the beginning,' said Michanek.
'Everything.' The eunuch looked up at the powerful
soldier. 'I don't know, Lord. At first she seemed merely withdrawn, but the
more the Lord Kabuchek made her tell fortunes the more strange she became. I
sat with her and she told me the Talent was growing within her. At first she
needed to concentrate her mind upon the subject, and then visions would follow
- short, disjointed images. Though after a while no concentration was needed.
But the visions did not stop when she released the hands of Lord Kabuchek's. .
. guests. Then the dreams began. She would talk as if she was old, and then in
different voices. She stopped eating, and moved as if in a trance. Then, three
days ago, she collapsed. Surgeons were called and she was bled, but to no
avail.' His lip trembled and tears flowed to his thin cheeks. 'Is she dying,
Lord?' Michanek sighed. 'I don't know, Pudri.
There is a doctor here whose opinions I value. He is said to be a mystic
healer; he will be here within the hour.' He sat down opposite the little man.
He thought he could read the fear in the eunuch's eyes. 'No matter what
happens, Pudri, you will have a place here in my household. I did not purchase
you from Kabuchek merely because you are close to Rowena. If she . . . does not
recover I will not discard you.' Pudri nodded, but his expression did not
change. Michanek was surprised. 'Ah,' he said softly, 'you love her, even as I
do.' 'Not as you, Lord. She is like a daughter
to me. She is sweet, without a feather's weight of malice in her whole body.
But such Talent as she has should not have been used so carelessly. She was not
ready, not prepared.' He stood. 'May I sit with her, Lord?' 'Of course.' The eunuch hurried from the room and
Michanek rose and opened the doors to the gardens, stepping through into the
sunlight. Flowering trees lined the paths and the air was full of the scent of
jasmine, lavender and rose. Three gardeners were working, watering the earth
and clearing the flower-beds of weeds. As he appeared they stopped their work
and fell to their knees, their foreheads pressed into the earth. 'Carry on,' he
said, walking past them and entering the maze, moving swiftly through it to the
marble bench at the centre where the statue of the Goddess was set in the
circular pool. Of white marble, it showed a beautiful young woman, naked, her
arms held aloft, her head tilted back to stare at the sky. In her hands was an
eagle with wings spread, about to fly. Michanek sat and stretched out his long
legs. Soon the story would spread all over the city. The Emperor's champion had
paid two thousand silver pieces for a dying seeress. Such folly! Yet, since the
day he had first seen her, he had not been able to push her from his
mind. Even on the campaign, while fighting against Gorben's troops, she had
been with him. He had known more beautiful women, but at twenty-five had found
none with whom he wished to share his life. Until now. At the thought that she might be
dying, he found himself trembling. Recalling the first meeting, he remembered
her prophecy that he would die in this city, in a last stand against
black-cloaked troops. Gorben's Immortals. The Ventrian Emperor
had re-formed the famous regiment, manning it with the finest of his fighters.
Seven cities had been retaken by them, two of them after single combat between
Gorben's new champion, a Drenai axeman they called Deathwalker, and two
Naashanite warriors, both known to Michanek. Good men, strong and brave,
skilful beyond the dreams of most soldiers. Yet they had died. Michanek had asked for the right to join
the army and challenge this axeman. But his Emperor had refused. 'I value you
too highly,' said the Emperor. 'But, Lord, is this not my role? Am I not
your champion?' 'My seers tell me that the man cannot be
slain by you, Michanek. They say his axe is demon-blessed. There will be no
more single-combat settlements; we will crush Gorben by the might of our
armies.' But the man was not being crushed. The last
battle had been no more than a bloody draw, with thousands slain on both sides.
Michanek had led the charge which almost turned the tide, but Gorben had
withdrawn into the mountains, two of his general officers having been slain by
Michanek. Nebuchad and Jasua. The first had little
skill; he had charged his white horse at the Naashanite champion, and had died
with Michanek's lance in his throat. The second was a canny fighter, fast and
fearless - but not fast enough, and too fearless to accept that he had met a
better swordsman. He had died with a curse on his lips. 'The war is not being won,' Michanek told
the marble goddess. 'It is being lost - slowly, day by day.' Three of the
renegade Ventrian Satraps had been slain by Gorben; Shabag at Capalis; Berish,
the fat and greedy sycophant, hanged at Ectanis; and Ashac, Satrap of the
south-west, impaled after the defeat at Gurunur. Only Darishan, the
silver-haired fox of the north, survived. Michanek liked the man. The others he
had treated with barely concealed contempt, but Darishan was a warrior born.
Unprincipled, amoral, but gifted with courage. His thoughts were interrupted by the sound
of a man moving through the maze. 'Where in Hades are you, lad?' came a deep
voice. 'I thought you were a mystic, Shalatar,' he
called. The response was both an obscenity and an instruction. 'If I could do
that,' replied Michanek, chuckling, 'I could make a fortune with public
performances.' A bald, portly man in a long white tunic
appeared and sat beside Michanek. His face was round and red and his ears
protruded like those of a bat. 'I hate mazes,' he said. 'What on earth is the
point of them? A man walks three times as far to reach a destination, and when
he arrives there's nothing there. Futile!' 'Have you seen her?' asked Michanek.
Shalatar's expression changed, and he turned his eyes from the warrior's gaze.
'Yes. Interesting. Why ever did you buy her?' 'That is beside the point. What is your
prognosis?' 'She is the most talented seer I have ever
known - but that Talent overwhelmed her. Can you imagine what it must be like
to know everything about everyone you meet? Their pasts and their
futures. Every hand you touch flashes an entire life and death into your mind.
The influx of such knowledge - at such speed - has had a catastrophic effect on
her. She doesn't just see the lives, she experiences them, lives them. She
became not Rowena but a hundred different people - including you, I might add.' 'Me?' 'Yes. I only touched her mind fleetingly, but your image was
there.' 'Will she live?' Shalatar shook his head. 'I am a mystic, my friend, but not a
prophet. I would say she has only one chance: we must close the doors of her
talent.' 'Can you do this?' 'Not alone, but I will gather those of my colleagues with
experience of such matters. It is not unlike the casting-out of demons. We must
close off the corridors of her mind that lead to the source of her power. It
will be expensive, Michanek.' 'I
am a rich man.' 'You will need to be. One of the men I need is a former Source
priest and he will ask for at least ten thousand in silver for his services.' 'He will have it.' Shalatar laid his hand on his friend's
shoulder. 'You love her so dearly?' 'More than life.' 'Did she share your feelings?' 'No.' 'Then you will have a chance to start anew.
For after we have finished she will have no memory. What will you tell her?' 'I don't know. But I will give her love.' 'You intend to marry her?' Michanek thought back to her prophecy. 'No,
my friend. I have decided never to marry.' * Druss wandered along the dark streets.of
the newly captured city, his head aching, his mood restless. The battle had
been bloody and all too brief, and he was filled with a curious sense of
anti-climax. He sensed a change in himself, unwelcome and yet demanding; a need
for combat, to feel the axe crushing bone and flesh, to watch the light of life
disappear from an enemy's eyes. The mountains of his homeland seemed an
eternity from him, lost in some other time. How many men had he slain since setting off
in search of Rowena? He no longer knew, nor cared. The axe felt light in his
hand, warm and companionable. His mouth was dry and he longed for a cool drink
of water. Glancing up, he saw a sign proclaiming 'Spice Street'. Here in more
peaceful times traders had delivered their herbs and spices to be packed into
bales for export to the west. Even now there was a scent of pepper in the air.
At the far end of the street, where it intersected with the market square, was
a fountain and beside it a brass pump with a long curved handle and a copper
cup attached by a slender chain to an iron ring. Druss filled the cup, then
resting the axe against the side of the fountain wall he sat quietly drinking.
Every so often, though, his hand would drop to touch Snaga's black haft. When Gorben had ordered the last attack on
the doomed Naashanites, Druss had longed to hurl himself into the fray, had
felt the call of blood and the need to kill. It had taken all of his strength
to resist the demands of his turbulent spirit. For the enemy in the keep had
begged to surrender and Druss had known with certainty that such a slaughter
was wrong. The words of Shadak came back to him: 'The true warrior lives by a code. He
has to. For each man there are different perspectives, but at the core they are
the same. Never violate a woman, nor harm a child. Do not lie, cheat or steal.
These things are for lesser men. Protect the weak against the evil strong. And
never allow thoughts of gain to lead you into pursuit of evil.' Numbering only a few hundred, the
Naashanites had had no chance. But Druss still felt somehow cheated, especially
when, as now, he recalled the warm, satisfying, triumphant surging of
spirit during the fight in the camp of Harib Ka, or the blood-letting following
his leap to the deck of the corsair trireme. Pulling clear his helm, he dipped
his head into the water of the fountain pool and then stood, removed his jerkin
and washed his upper body. Movement from his left caught his eye as a tall,
bald man in robes of grey wool came into sight. 'Good evening, my son,' said
the priest from the temple back in Capalis. Druss nodded curtly, then donned
his jerkin and sat down. The priest made no move to walk on but stood gazing
down at the axeman. 'I have been looking for you these past months.' 'You have found me,' said Druss, his voice even. 'May I join you for a few moments?' 'Why not?' responded Druss, making room on the seat where the priest
sat alongside the black-garbed warrior. 'Our last meeting troubled me, my son. I have spent many an
evening in prayer and meditation since then; finally I walked the Paths of Mist
to seek out the soul of your loved one, Rowena. This proved fruitless. I
journeyed through the Void on roads too dark to speak of. But she was not
there, nor did I find any souls who knew of her death. Then I met a spirit, a
grossly evil creature, who in this life bore the name Earin Shad. A corsair
captain also called Bojeeba, the Shark, he knew of your wife, for this
was the ship that plundered the vessel on which she was sailing. He told me
that when his corsairs boarded the ship a merchant named Kabuchek, another man
and a young woman leapt over the side. There were sharks everywhere, and much
blood in the water once the slaughter started on the deck.' 'I don't need to know how she died!'
snapped Druss. 'Ah, but that is my point,' said the
priest. 'Earin Shad believes that she and Kabuchek were slain. But they were
not.' 'What?' 'Kabuchek is in Resha, building more
fortunes. He has a seeress with him whom they call Pahtai, the little
dove. I have seen her, in spirit. I read her thoughts; she is Rowena, your
Rowena.' 'She is alive?' 'Yes,' said the priest softly. 'Sweet Heaven!' Druss laughed and threw his
arms around the priest's scrawny shoulders. 'By the gods, you have done me a
great service. I'll not forget it. If ever there is anything you need from me,
you have only to ask.' 'Thank you, my son. I wish you well in your
quest. But there is one more matter to discuss: the axe.' 'What about it?' asked Druss, suddenly
wary, his hands reaching down to curl around the haft. 'It is an ancient weapon, and I believe
that spells were cast upon the blades. Someone of great power, in the distant
past, used sorcery to enhance the weapon.' 'So?' 'There were many methods. Sometimes the
spell would merely involve the armourer's blood being splashed upon the blades.
At other times a binding spell would be used. This served to keep the edge
keen, giving it greater cutting power. Small spells, Druss. Occasionally a
master of the arcane arts would bring his skills to bear on a weapon, usually
one borne by a king or lord. Some blades could heal wounds, others could cut
through the finest armour.' 'As indeed can Snaga,' said Druss, hefting
the axe. The blades glittered in the moonlight and the priest drew back. 'Do
not be frightened,' said Druss. 'I'll not harm you, man.' 'I do not fear you, my son,' the priest
told him. 'I fear what lives within those blades.' Druss laughed. 'So someone cast a spell a
thousand years ago? It is still an axe.' 'Yes, an axe. But the greatest of spells
was woven around these blades, Druss. An enchantment of colossal skill was
used. Your friend Sieben told me that when you were attacking the corsairs a
sorcerer cast a spell at you, a spell of fire. When you lifted your axe Sieben
saw a demon appear, scaled and horned; he it was who turned back the fire.' 'Nonsense,' said Druss, 'it bounced from
the blades. You know, Father, you shouldn't take a great deal of notice when
Sieben speaks. The man is a poet. He builds his tales well, but he embroiders
them, adds little touches. A demon indeed!' 'He needed to add no touches, Druss. I know
of Snaga the Sender. For in finding your wife I also learned something of you,
and the weapon you bear: Bardan's weapon. Bardan the Slayer, the butcher of
babes, the rapist, the slaughterer. Once he was a hero, yes? But he was
corrupted. Evil wormed into his soul, and the evil came from that!' he said,
pointing to the axe. 'I don't believe it. I am not evil, and I
have carried this axe for almost a year now.' 'And you have noticed no change in
yourself? No lusting after blood and death? You do not feel a need to hold the
axe, even when battle is not near? Do you sleep with it beside you?' 'It is not possessed!' roared Druss. 'It is
a fine weapon. It is my. . . .' he stumbled to silence. 'My friend"? Is that what you were going to say?' 'What if I was? I am a warrior, and in war
only this axe will keep me alive. Better than any friend, eh?' As he spoke he
lifted the axe . . . and it slipped from his grip. The priest threw up his
hands as Snaga plunged down towards his throat, but in that instant Druss's
left hand slammed into the haft, just as the priest pushed at the shining
blades. The axe crashed to the stones, sending up a shower of sparks from the
flints embedded in the paving slabs. 'God, I'm sorry. It just slipped!' said
Druss. 'Are you hurt?' The priest rose. 'No, it did not cut me.
And you are wrong, young man. It did not slip; it wanted me dead, and had it
not been for your swift response, so would I have been.' 'It was an accident, Father, I assure you.' The priest gave a sad smile. 'You saw me
push away the blades with my hand?' 'Aye?' responded Druss, mystified. 'Then look,' said the priest, lifting his
hand with the palm outward. The flesh was seared and blackened, the skin burned
black, blood and water streaming from the wound. 'Beware, Druss, the beast
within will seek to kill any who threaten it.' Druss gathered the axe and backed from the
priest. 'Look after that wound,' he said. Then he turned and strode away. He was shocked by what he had seen. He knew
little of demons and spells, save what the storytellers sang of when they had
visited the village. But he did know the value of a weapon like Snaga -
especially in an alien, war-torn land. Druss came to a halt and, lifting the
axe, he gazed into his own reflection in the blades. 'I need you,' he said softly, 'If I am to
find Rowena and get her home.' The haft was warm, the weapon light in his hand.
He sighed. 'I'll not give you up. I can't. And anyway, damn it all, you are
mine!' You are mine! came an echo deep inside his mind. You are mine! BOOK THREE: The Chaos WarriorChapter OneVarsava was enjoying the first sip of his
second goblet of wine when the body hit the table. It arrived head-first,
splintering the central board of the trestle table, striking a platter of meat
and sliding towards Varsava. With great presence of mind the bladesman lifted
his goblet high and leaned back as the body hurtled past to slam head-first
into the wall. Such was the impact that a jagged crack appeared in the white
plaster, but there was no sound from the man who caused it as he toppled from
the table and hit the floor with a dull thud. Glancing to his right, Varsava saw that the
inn was crowded, but the revellers had moved back to form a circle around a
small group struggling to overcome a black-bearded giant. One fighter - a petty
thief and pickpocket Varsava recognised - hung from the giant's shoulders, his
arms encircling the man's throat. Another was slamming punches into the giant's
midriff, while a third pulled a dagger and ran in. Varsava sipped his wine. It
was a good vintage - at least ten years old, dry and yet full-bodied. The giant hooked one hand over his
shoulder, grabbing the jerkin of the fighter hanging there. Spinning, he threw
the man into the path of the oncoming knifeman, who stumbled and fell into the
giant's rising boot. There followed a sickening crack and the knifeman slumped
to the floor, either his neck or his jaw broken. The giant's last opponent threw a
despairing punch at the black-bearded chin and the fist landed - to no effect.
The giant reached forward and pulled the fighter into a head butt. The sound
made even Varsava wince. The fighter took two faltering steps backwards, then
keeled over in perfect imitation of a felled tree. 'Anyone else?' asked the giant, his voice
.deep and cold. The crowd melted away and the warrior strode through the inn,
coming to Varsava's table. 'Is this seat taken?' he asked, slumping down to sit
opposite the bladesman. 'It is now,' said Varsava. Lifting his hand
he waved to a tavern maid and, once he had her attention, pointed to his
goblet. She smiled and brought a fresh flagon of wine. The bench table was
split down the centre, and the flagon sat drunkenly between the two men. 'May I
offer you some wine?' Varsava asked. 'Why not?' countered the giant, filling a
clay goblet. A low moan came from behind the table. 'He must have a hard head,' said Varsava.
'I thought he was dead.' 'If he comes near me again, he will be,'
promised the man. 'What is this place?' 'It's called the All but One,' Varsava told
him. 'An odd name for an inn?' Varsava looked into the man's pale eyes.
'Not really. It comes from a Ventrian toast: may all your dreams - save one
- come true.'' 'What does it mean?' 'Quite simply that a man must always have a
dream unfulfilled. What could be worse than to achieve everything one has ever
dreamed of? What would one do then?' 'Find another dream,' said the giant. 'Spoken like a man who understands nothing
about dreams.' The giant's eyes narrowed. 'Is that an
insult?' 'No, it is an observation. What brings you
to Lania?' 'I am passing through,' said the man.
Behind him two of the injured men had regained their feet; both drew daggers
and advanced towards them, but Varsava's hand came up from beneath the table
with a huge hunting-knife glittering in his fist. He rammed the point into the
table and left the weapon quivering there. 'Enough,' he told the would-be attackers,
the words softly spoken, a smile upon his face. 'Pick up your friend here and
find another place to drink.' 'We can't let him get away with this!' said
one of the men, whose eye was blackened and swollen almost shut. 'He did get away with it, my friends. And
if you persist in this foolishness, I think he will kill you. Now go away, I am
trying to hold a conversation.' Grumbling, the men sheathed their blades and
moved back into the crowd. 'Passing through to where?' he asked the giant. The
fellow seemed amused. 'You handled that well. Friends of yours?' 'They know me,' answered the bladesman,
offering his hand across the table. 'I am Varsava.' 'Druss.' 'I've heard that name. There was an axeman
at the siege of Capalis. There's a song about him, I believe.' 'Song!' snorted Druss. 'Aye, there is, but
I had no part in the making of it. Damn fool of a poet I was travelling with -
he made it up. Nonsense, all of it.' Varsava smiled. 'They speak in hushed
whispers of Druss and his axe, even demons will scatter when this man attacks.' Druss reddened. 'Asta's tits! You know
there's a hundred more lines of it?' He shook his head. 'Unbelievable!' 'There are worse fates in life than to be
immortalised in song. Isn't there some part of it about a lost wife? Is that
also an invention?' 'No, that's true enough,' admitted Druss,
his expression changing as he drained his wine and poured a second goblet. In
the silence that followed, Varsava leaned back and studied his drinking
companion. The man's shoulders were truly immense and he had a neck like a
bull. But it was not the size that gave him the appearance of a giant, Varsava
realised, it was more a power that emanated from him. During the fight he had
seemed seven feet tall, the other warriors puny by comparison. Yet here,
sitting quietly drinking, Druss seemed no more than a large, heavily muscled
young man. Intriguing, thought Varsava. 'If I remember aright, you were also at the
relief of Ectanis, and four other southern cities?' he probed. The man nodded,
but said nothing. Varsava called for a third flagon of wine and tried to recall
all he had heard of the young axeman. At Ectanis, it was said, he had fought
the Naashanite champion, Cuerl, and been one of the first to scale the walls.
And two years later he had held, with fifty other men, the pass of Kishtay,
denying the road to a full legion of Naashanite troops until Gorben could
arrive with reinforcements. 'What happened to the poet?' asked Varsava,
searching for a safe route to satisfy his curiosity. Druss chuckled.'He met a woman . . .
several women, in fact. Last I heard he was living in Pusha with the widow of a
young officer.' He laughed again and shook his head. 'I miss him; he was merry
company.' The smile faded from Druss's face. 'You ask a lot of questions?' Varsava shrugged. 'You are an interesting
man, and there is not much of interest these days in Lania. The war has made it
dull. Did you ever find your wife?' 'No. But I will. What of you? Why are you
here?' 'I am paid to be here,' said Varsava.
'Another flagon?' 'Aye, and I'll pay for it,' promised Druss.
Reaching out, he took hold of the huge knife embedded in the table and pulled
it clear. 'Nice weapon, heavy but well balanced. Good steel.' 'Lentrian. I had it made ten years ago.
Best money I ever spent. You have an axe, do you not?' Druss shook his head. 'I had one once. It
was lost.' 'How does one lose an axe?' Druss smiled. 'One falls from a
cliff into a raging torrent.' 'Yes, I would imagine that would do it,'
responded Varsava. 'What do you carry now?' 'Nothing.' 'Nothing at all? How did you cross the
mountains to Lania without a weapon?' 'I walked.' 'And suffered no attacks from robbers? Did
you travel with a large group?' 'I have answered enough questions. Now it
is your turn. Who pays you to sit and drink in Lania?' 'A nobleman from Resha who has estates near
here. While he was away fighting alongside Gorben, raiders came down from the
mountains and plundered his palace. His wife and son were taken, his servants
murdered - or fled. He has hired me to locate the whereabouts - if still alive
- of his son.' 'Just the son?' 'Well, he wouldn't want the wife back,
would he?' Druss's face darkened. 'He would - if he
loved her.' Varsava nodded. 'Of course, you are a
Drenai,' he said. "The rich here do not marry for love, Druss; they wed
for alliances or wealth, or to continue family lines. It is not rare for a man
to find that he does love the woman he has been told to marry, but neither is
it common. And a Ventrian nobleman would find himself a laughing-stock if he
took back a wife who had been - shall we say - abused. No, he has already
divorced her; it is the son who matters to him. If I can locate him, I receive
one hundred gold pieces. If I can rescue him, the price goes up to one
thousand.' Another flagon of wine arrived. Druss
filled his goblet and offered the wine to Varsava, who declined. 'My head is
already beginning to spin, my friend. You must have hollow legs.' 'How many men do you have?' asked Druss. 'None. I work alone.' 'And you know where the boy is?' 'Yes. Deep in the mountains there is a
fortress called Valia, a place for thieves, murderers, outlaws and renegades.
It is ruled by Cajivak - you have heard of him?' Druss shook his head. 'The man
is a monster in every respect. Bigger than you, and terrifying in battle. He is
also an axeman. And he is insane.' Druss drank the wine, belched and leaned
forward. 'Many fine warriors are considered mad.' 'I know that - but Cajivak is different.
During the last year he has led raids which have seen mindless slaughter that
you would not believe. He has his victims impaled on spikes, or skinned alive.
I met a man who served him for almost five years; that's how I found out where
the boy was. He said Cajivak sometimes speaks with a different voice, low and
chilling, and that when he does so his eyes gleam with a strange light. And
always - when such madness is upon him - he kills. It could be a servant or a
tavern wench, or a man who looks up just as Cajivak's eyes meet his. No, Druss,
we are dealing with madness . . . or possession.' 'How do you intend to rescue the boy?' Varsava spread his hands. 'I was
contemplating that when you arrived. As yet, I have no answers.' 'I will help you,' said Druss. Varsava's eyes narrowed. 'For how much?' 'You can keep the money.' Then why?' asked the bladesman, mystified. But Druss merely smiled and refilled his
goblet. * Druss found Varsava an agreeable companion.
The tall bladesman said little as they journeyed through the mountains and up
into the high valleys far above the plain on which Lania sat. Both men carried
packs, and Varsava wore a wide-brimmed brown leather hat with an eagle feather
tucked into the brim. The hat was old and battered, the feather ragged and
without sheen. Druss had laughed when first he saw it, for Varsava was a
handsome man - his clothes immaculately styled from fine green wool, his boots
of soft lambskin. 'Did you lose a wager?' asked Druss. 'A wager?' queried Varsava. 'Aye. Why else would a man wear such a
hat?' 'Ah!' said the bladesman. 'I imagine that
is what passes as humour among you barbarians. I'll have you know that this hat
belonged to my father.' He grinned. 'It is a magic hat and it has saved my life
more than once.' 'I thought Ventrians never lied,' said
Druss. 'Only noblemen,' Varsava pointed out.
'However, on this occasion I am telling the truth. The hat helped me escape
from a dungeon.' He removed it and tossed it to Druss. 'Take a look under the
inside band.' Druss did so and saw that a thin-saw blade
nestled on the right side, while on the left was a curved steel pin. At the
front he felt three coins and slipped one clear; it was gold. 'I take it all
back,' said Druss. 'It is a fine hat!' The air was fresh and cool here and Druss
felt free. It had been almost four years since he had left Sieben in Ectanis
and journeyed alone to the occupied city of Resha, searching for the merchant
Kabuchek and, through him, Rowena. He had found the house, only to discover
that Kabuchek had left a month before to visit friends in the lands of Naashan.
He had followed to the Naashanite city of Pieropolis, and there lost all traces
of the merchant. Back once more in Resha, he discovered that
Kabuchek had sold his palace and his whereabouts were unknown. Out of money and
supplies, Druss took employment with a builder in the capital who had been
commissioned to rebuild the shattered walls of the city. For four months he
laboured every day until he had enough gold to head back to the south. In the five years since the victories at
Capalis and Ectanis the Ventrian Emperor, Gorben, had fought eight major
battles against the Naashanites and their Ventrian allies. The first two had
been won decisively, the last also. But the others had been fought to
stalemate, with both sides suffering huge losses. Five years of bloody warfare
and neither side, as yet, could claim they were close to victory. 'Come this way,' said Varsava. 'There is
something I want you to see.' The bladesman left the path and climbed a
short slope to where a rusted iron cage had been set into the earth. Within the
domed cage was a pile of mouldering bones, and a skull that still had vestiges
of skin and hair clinging to it. Varsava knelt down by the cage. 'This was
Vashad - the peacemaker,' he said. 'He was blinded and his tongue cut out. Then
he was chained here to starve to death.' 'What was his crime?' asked Druss. 'I have already told you: he was a
peacemaker. This world of war and savagery has no place for men like Vashad.'
Varsava sat down and removed his wide-brimmed leather hat. Druss eased his pack from his shoulders and
sat beside the bladesman. 'But why would they kill him in such a fashion?' he
asked. Varsava smiled, but there was no humour in
his eyes. 'Do you see so much and know so little, Druss? The warrior lives for
glory and battle, testing himself against his fellows, dealing death. He likes
to see himself as noble, and we allow him such vanities because we admire him.
We make songs about him; we tell stories of his greatness. Think of all the
Drenai legends. How many concern peacemakers or poets? They are stories of heroes
- men of blood and carnage. Vashad was a philosopher, a believer in something
he called the nobility of man. He was a mirror, and when warmakers
looked into his eyes they saw themselves - their true selves - reflected there.
They saw the darkness, the savagery, the lust and the enormous stupidity of
their lives. They could not resist killing him, they had to smash the mirror:
so, they put out his eyes and they ripped out his tongue. Then they left him
here . . . and here he lies.' 'You want to bury him? I'll help with the
grave.' 'No,' said Varsava sadly, 'I don't want to
bury him. Let others see him, and know the folly of trying to change the
world.' 'Did the Naashanites kill him?' asked
Druss. 'No, he was killed long before the war.' 'Was he your father?' Varsava shook his head, his expression
hardening. 'I only knew him long enough to put out his eyes.' He stared hard at
Druss's face, trying to read his reaction, then he spoke again. 'I was a
soldier then. Such eyes, Druss - large and shining, blue as a summer sky. And
the last sight they had was of my face, and the burning iron that melted them.' 'And now he haunts you?' Varsava stood. 'Aye, he haunts me. It was
an evil deed, Druss. But those were my orders and I carried them out as a
Ventrian should. Immediately afterwards, I resigned my commission and left the
army.' He glanced at Druss. 'What would you have done in my place?' 'I would not be in your place,' said Druss,
hoisting his pack to his shoulder. 'Imagine that you were. Tell me!' 'I would have refused.' 'I wish I had,' Varsava admitted, and the
two men returned to the trail. They walked on in silence for a mile, then
Varsava sat down beside the path. The mountains loomed around them, huge and
towering, and a shrill wind was whistling through the peaks. High overhead two
eagles were circling. 'Do you despise me, Druss?' asked Varsava. 'Yes,' admitted Druss, 'but I also like
you.' Varsava shrugged. 'I do so admire a plain
speaker. I despise myself sometimes. Have you ever done anything which shamed
you?' 'Not yet, but I came close in Ectanis.' 'What happened?' asked Varsava. 'The city had fallen several weeks
beforehand when the army arrived the walls were already breached. I went in
with the first assault and I killed many. And then, with the bloodlust on me, I
forced my way into the main barracks. A child ran at me. He was carrying a
spear and before I could think about what I was doing I cut at him with my axe.
He slipped, and only the flat of the blade caught him; he was knocked out. But
I had tried to kill him. Had I succeeded it would not have sat well with me.' 'And that is all?' 'It is enough,' said Druss. 'You have never raped a woman? Or killed an
unarmed man? Or stolen?' 'No. And I never shall.' Varsava rose. 'You are an unusual man,
Druss. I think this world will either come to hate you or revere you.' 'I don't much care which,' said Druss. 'How
far to this mountain city?' 'Another two days. We'll camp in the high
pines, where it will be cold but the air is wonderfully fresh. By the way, you
haven't told me yet why you offered to help me.' 'That's true,' said Druss, with a grin.
'Now let us find a campsite.' They walked on, through a long pass which
opened out on to a stand of pine trees and a wide pear-shaped valley beyond.
Houses dotted the valley, clustered in the main along both banks of a narrow
river. Druss scanned the valley. 'There must be fifty homes here,' he said. 'Yes,' agreed Varsava. 'Farmers mostly.
Cajivak leaves them alone, for they supply him with meat and grain during the
winter months. But it will be best if we make a cold camp in the trees, for
Cajivak will have spies in the village, and I don't want our presence
announced.' The two men moved out from the pass and
into the shelter of the trees. The wind was less powerful here and they walked
on, seeking a camp-site. The landscape was similar to the mountains of home and
Druss found himself once more thinking of days of happiness with Rowena. When
he had set out with Shadak to find her, he had been convinced that only a
matter of days separated them. Even on board ship he had believed his quest was
almost over. But the months, and years, of pursuit had gnawed at his
confidence. He knew he would never give up the hunt, but to what purpose? What
if she were wed, or had children? What if she had found happiness without him?
What then, as he walked back into her life? His thoughts were broken by the sounds of
laughter echoing through the trees. Varsava stopped and moved silently from the
trail and Druss followed him. Ahead and to the left was a hollow through which
ran a ribbon stream, and at the centre of the hollow a group of men were
throwing knives at a tree-trunk. An old man was tied to the trunk, his arms
spread. A blade had nicked the skin of his face, there were wounds to both arms
and a knife jutted from his thigh. It was obvious to Druss that the men were
playing a game wjth the old man, seeing how close they could come with their
knives. To the left of the scene three other men were struggling with a young
girl, who screamed as they tore her dress and pushed her to the earth. As Druss
loosed his pack and started down the slope, Varsava grabbed him. 'What are you
doing? There are ten of them!' But Druss shrugged him off and strode
through the trees to come up behind the seven knife-throwers. Intent as they
were on their victim, they did not notice his approach. Reaching out, he
grabbed the heads of the two nearest knifemen and rammed them together; there
followed a sickening crack and both men dropped without a murmur. A third man swung
at the sound, but had no time to register surprise as a silver-skinned gauntlet
slammed into his mouth, splintering teeth. Unconscious, the knifeman flew
backwards to cannon into a comrade. A warrior leapt at Druss, thrusting his
blade towards his belly, but Druss slapped the blade aside and hammered a
straight left into the man's chin. The remaining warriors ran at him, and a
knife-blade slashed through his jerkin, ripping a narrow gash across his hip.
Druss grabbed the nearest warrior, dragging him into a ferocious head butt,
then swung and backhanded another attacker. The man cartwheeled across the
hollow, struggled to rise, then sat back against a tree having lost all
interest in the fight. Grappling with two men, Druss heard a
bloodcurdling scream. His attackers froze. Druss dragged an arm free and struck
the first of the men a terrible blow to the neck. The second released his hold
on the axeman and sprinted from the hollow. Druss's pale eyes scanned the area,
seeking new opponents. But only Varsava was standing there, his huge
hunting-knife dripping blood. Two corpses lay beside him. Three other men Druss
had struck lay where they had fallen, and the warrior he had backhanded was
still sitting by the tree. Druss walked to where he sat, then hauled him to his
feet. 'Time to go, laddie!' said Druss. 'Don't kill me!' pleaded the man. 'Who said anything about killing? Be off
with you!' The man tottered away on boneless legs as
Druss moved to the old man tied to the tree. Only one of his wounds was deep. Druss
untied him and eased him to the ground. Swiftly he dragged the knife clear of
the man's thigh as Varsava came alongside. That will need stitching,' he said.
'I'll get my pack.' The old man forced a smile. 'I thank you,
my friends. I fear they would have killed me. Where is Dulina?' Druss glanced round, but the girl was
nowhere in sight. 'She was not harmed,' he said. 'I think she ran when the
fight started.' Druss applied a tourniquet to the thigh wound, then stood and
moved back to check the bodies. The two men who had attacked Varsava were dead,
as was one other, his neck broken. The remaining two were unconscious. Rolling
them to their backs, Druss shook them awake and then pulled them upright. One
of the men immediately sagged back to the ground. 'Who are you?' asked the warrior still
standing. 'I am Druss.' 'Cajivak will kill you for this. Were I
you, I would leave the mountains.' 'You are not me, laddie. I go where I
please. Now pick up your comrade and take him home.' Druss dragged the fallen warrior to his
feet and watched as the two men left the hollow. When Varsava returned with his
pack, a young girl was walking beside him. She was holding her ruined dress in
place. 'Look what I found,' said Varsava. 'She was hiding under a bush.'
Ignoring the girl, Druss grunted and moved to the stream where he knelt and
drank. Had Snaga been with him, the hollow would
now be awash in blood and bodies. He sat back and stared at the rippling water. When the axe was lost Druss had felt as if
a burden had been lifted from his heart. The priest back in Capalis had been
right: it was a demon blade. He had felt its power growing as the battles
raged, had enjoyed the soaring, surging blood-lust that swept over him like a
tidal wave. But after the battles came the sense of emptiness and
disenchantment. Even the spiciest food was tasteless; summer days seemed grey
and colourless. Then came the day in the mountains when the
Naashanites had come upon him alone. He had killed five, but more than fifty
men had pursued him through the trees. He had tried to traverse the cliff, but
holding to the axe made his movements slow and clumsy. Then the ledge had given
way and he had fallen, twisting and turning through the air. Even as he fell he
hurled the axe from him, and tried to turn the fall into a dive; but his timing
was faulty and he had landed on his back, sending up a huge splash, the air
exploding from his lungs. The river was in flood and the currents swept him on
for more than two miles before he managed to grab a root jutting from the
river-bank. Hauling himself clear he had sat, as now, staring at the water. Snaga was gone. And Druss felt free. "Thank you for
helping my grandfather,' said a sweet voice and he turned and smiled. 'Did they hurt you?' 'Only a little,' said Dulina. 'They hit me
in the face.' 'How old are you?' 'Twelve - almost thirteen.' She was a
pretty child with large hazel eyes and light brown hair. 'Well, they've gone now. Are you from the
village?' 'No. Grandfather is a tinker. We go from
town to town; he sharpens knives and mends things. He's very clever.' 'Where are your parents?' The girl shrugged. 'I never had any; only
grandfather. You are very strong - but you are bleeding!' Druss chuckled. 'I heal fast, little one.'
Removing his jerkin, he examined the wound on his hip. The surface skin had
been sliced, but the cut was not deep. Varsava joined them. 'That should also be
stitched, great hero,' he said, irritation in his voice. Blood was still flowing freely from the
wound. Druss stretched out and lay still while Varsava, with little gentleness,
drew the flaps of skin together and pierced them with a curved needle. When he
had finished the bladesman stood. 'I suggest we leave this place and head back
for Lania. I think our friends will return before too long.' Druss donned his jerkin. 'What about the
city and your thousand gold pieces?' Varsava shook his head in disbelief.
"This . . . escapade . . . of yours has put paid to any plan of mine. I
shall return to Lania and claim my hundred gold pieces for locating the boy. As
to you, well, you can go where you like.' 'You give up very easily, bladesman. So we
cracked a few heads! What difference does that make? Cajivak has hundreds of
men; he won't interest himself in every brawl.' 'It is not Cajivak who concerns me, Druss.
It is you. I am not here to rescue maidens or kill dragons, or whatever else it
is that makes heroes of myth. What happens when we walk into the city and you
see some. . . some hapless victim? Can you walk by? Can you hold fast to a plan
of action that will see us succeed in our mission?' Druss thought for a moment. 'No,' he said
at last. 'No, I will never walk by.' 'I thought not, damn you! What are you
trying to prove, Druss? You want more songs about you? Or do you just want to
die young?' 'No, I have nothing to prove, Varsava. And
I may die young, but I'll never look in a mirror and be ashamed because I let
an old man suffer or a child be raped. Nor will I ever be haunted by a
peacemaker who died unjustly. Go where you will, Varsava. Take these people
back to Lania. I shall go to the city.' 'They'll kill you there.' Druss shrugged. 'All men die. I am not
immortal.' 'No, just stupid,' snapped Varsava and
spinning on his heel, the bladesman strode away. * Michanek laid his bloody sword on the
battlements and untied the chin-straps of his bronze helm, lifting it clear and
enjoying the sudden rush of cool air to his sweat-drenched head. The Ventrian
army was falling back in some disarray, having discarded the huge battering-ram
which lay outside the gate, surrounded by corpses. Michanek walked to the rear
of the ramparts and yelled orders to a squad of men below. 'Open the gate and drag that damned ram
inside,' he shouted. Pulling a rag from his belt, he wiped his sword clean of
blood and sheathed it. The fourth attack of the day had been
repulsed; there would be no further righting today. However, few of the men
seemed anxious to leave the wall. Back in the city the plague was decimating
the civilian population. No, he thought, it is worse than decimation. Far more
than one in ten were now suffering the effects. Gorben had not dammed the river. Instead he
had filled it with every kind of corruption - dead animals, bloated and
maggot-ridden, rotting food, and the human waste from an army of eleven
thousand men. Small wonder that sickness had ripped into the population. Water was now being supplied by artesian
wells, but no one knew how deep they were or how long the fresh water would
last. Michanek gazed up at the clear blue sky: not a cloud in sight, and rain
had not fallen for almost a month. A young officer approached him. 'Two
hundred with superficial wounds, sixty dead, and another thirty-three who will
not fight again,' he said. Michanek nodded, his mind elsewhere. 'What
news from the inner city, brother?' he asked. 'The plague is abating. Only seventy dead
yesterday, most of them either children or old people.' Michanek stood and smiled at the young man.
'Your section fought well today,' he said, clapping his hand on his brother's
shoulder. 'I shall see that a report is placed before the Emperor when we
return to Naashan.' The man said nothing and their eyes met, the unspoken
thought passing between them: if we return to Naashan. 'Get some rest,
Narin. You look exhausted.' 'So do you, Michi. And I was only here for
the last two attacks - you've been here since before dawn.' 'Yes, I am tired. Pahtai will revive
me; she always does.' Narin chuckled. 'I never expected love to
last so long for you. Why don't you marry the girl? You'll never find a better
wife. She's revered in the city. Yesterday she toured the poorest quarter,
healing the sick. It's amazing; she has more skill than any of the doctors. It
seems that all she needs to do is lay her hands upon the dying and their sores
disappear.' 'You sound as if you're in love with her
yourself,' said Michanek. 'I think I am - a little,' admitted Narin,
reddening. 'Is she still having those dreams?' 'No,' lied Michanek. 'I'll see you this
evening.' He moved down the battlement steps and strode through the streets
towards his home. Every other house, it seemed, boasted the white chalked cross
denoting plague. The market was deserted, the stalls standing empty. Everything
was rationed now, the food - four ounces of flour, and a pound of dried fruit -
doled out daily from storehouses in the west and east. Why don't you marry her! For two reasons he could never share. One:
she was already wed to another, though she did not know it. And secondly, it
would be like signing his death warrant. Rowena had predicted that he would die
here, with Narin beside him, one year to the day after he was wed. She no longer remembered this prediction
either, for the sorcerers had done their work well. Her Talent was lost to her,
and all the memories of her youth in the lands of the Drenai. Michanek felt no
guilt over this. Her Talent had been tearing her apart and now, at least, she
smiled and was happy. Only Pudri knew the whole truth, and he was wise enough
to stay silent. Michanek turned up the Avenue of Laurels
and pushed open the gates of his house. There were no gardeners now, and the
flower-beds were choked with weeds. The fountain was no longer in operation,
the fish-pool dry and cracked. As he strode to the house, Pudri came running out
to him. 'Master, come quickly, it is the Pahtair' 'What has happened?' cried Michanek,
grabbing the little man by his tunic. 'The plague, master,' he whispered, tears
in his dark eyes. 'It is the plague.' * Varsava found a cave nestling against the
rock-face to the north; it was deep and narrow, and curled like a figure six.
He built a small fire near the back wall, below a split in the rock that
created a natural chimney. The old man, whom Druss had carried to the cave, had
fallen into a deep, healing sleep with the child, Dulina, alongside him. Having
walked from the cave to check whether the glare of the fire could be seen from
outside, Varsava was now sitting in the cave-mouth staring out over the
night-dark woods. Druss joined him. 'Why so angry, bladesman?'
he asked. 'Do you not feel some satisfaction at having rescued them?' 'None at all,' replied Varsava. 'But then
no one ever made a song about me. I look after myself.' 'That does not explain your anger.' 'Nor could I explain it in any way that would
be understood by your simple mind. Borza's Blood!' He rounded on Druss. 'The
world is such a mind-numbingly uncomplicated place for you, Druss. There is
good, and there is evil. Does it ever occur to you that there may be a vast
area in between that is neither pure nor malevolent? Of course it doesn't! Take
today as an example. The old man could have been a vicious sorcerer who drank
the blood of innocent babes; the men punishing him could have been the fathers
of those babes. You didn't know, you just roared in and downed them.' Varsava
shook his head and took a deep breath. 'You are wrong,' said Druss softly. 'I have
heard the arguments before, from Sieben and Bodasen - and others. I will agree
that I am a simple man. I can scarcely read more than my name, and I do not
understand complicated arguments. But I am not blind. The man tied to the tree
wore homespun clothes, old clothes; the child was dressed in like manner. These
were not rich, as a sorcerer would be. And did you listen to the laughter of
the knife-throwers? It was harsh, cruel. These were not farmers; their clothes
were bought, their boots and shoes of good leather. They were scoundrels.' 'Maybe they were,' agreed Varsava, 'but
what business was it of yours? Will you criss-cross the world seeking to right
wrongs and protect the innocent? Is this your ambition in life?' 'No,' said Druss, 'though it would not be a
bad ambition.' He fell silent for several minutes, lost in thought. Shadak had
given him a code, and impressed upon him that without such an iron discipline
he would soon become as evil as any other reaver. Added to this there was
Bress, his father, who had lived his whole life bearing the terrible burden of
being the son of Bardan. And lastly there was Bardan himself, driven by a demon
to become one of the most hated and vilified villains in history. The lives,
the words and deeds of these three men had created the warrior who now sat
beside Varsava. But Druss had no words to explain, and it surprised him that he
desired them; he had never felt the need to explain to Sieben or Bodasen. 'I
had no choice,' he said at last. 'No choice?' echoed Varsava. 'Why?' 'Because I was there. There wasn't anyone
else.' Feeling Varsava's eyes upon him, and seeing
the look of blank incomprehension, Druss turned away and stared at the night
sky. It made no sense, he knew that, but he also knew that he felt good for
having rescued the girl and the old man. It might make no sense, but it was right. Varsava rose and moved back to the rear of
the cave, leaving Druss alone. A cold wind whispered across the mountainside,
and Druss could smell the coming of rain. He remembered another cold night,
many years before, when he and Bress had been camped in the mountains of Lentria.
Druss was very young, seven or eight, and he was unhappy. Some men had shouted
at his father, and gathered outside the workshop that Bress had set up in a
small village. He had expected his father to rush out and thrash them but
instead, as night fell, he had gathered a few belongings and led the boy out
into the mountains. 'Why are we running away?' he had asked
Bress. 'Because they will talk a lot, and then
come back to burn us out.' 'You should have killed them,' said the
boy. 'That would have been no answer,' snapped
Bress. 'Mostly they are good men, but they are frightened. We will find
somewhere where no one knows of Bardan.' 'I won't run away, not ever,' declared the
boy and Bress had sighed. Just then a man approached the camp-fire. He was old and
bald, his clothes ragged, but his eyes were bright and shrewd. 'May I share your fire?' he asked and mess
had welcomed him, offering some dried meat and a herb tisane' which the man
accepted gratefully. Druss had fallen asleep as the two men talked, but had
woken several hours later. Bress was asleep, but the old man was sitting by the
fire feeding the flames with twigs. Druss rose from his blankets and walked to
sit alongside him. 'Frightened of the dark, boy?' 'I am frightened of nothing,' Druss told him. 'That's good,' said the old man, 'but I am.
Frightened of the dark, frightened of starvation, frightened of dying. All my
life I've been frightened of something or other.' 'Why?' asked the boy, intrigued. The old man laughed. 'Now there's a
question! Wish I could answer it.' As he picked up a handful of twigs and
reached out, dropping them to the dying flames, Druss saw his right arm was
criss-crossed with scars. 'How did you get them?' asked the boy. 'Been a soldier most of my life, son.
Fought against the Nadir, the Vagrians, the Sathuli, corsairs, brigands. You
name the enemy, and I've crossed swords with them.' 'But you said you were a coward.' 'I said no such thing, lad. I said I was frightened.
There's a difference. A coward is a man who knows what's right, but is
afraid to do it; there're plenty of them around. But the worst of them are easy
to spot: they talk loud, they brag big, and given a chance they're as cruel as
sin.' 'My father is a coward,' said the boy
sadly. The old man shrugged. 'If he is, boy, then
he's the first in a long, long while to fool me. And if you are talking about
him running away from the village, there's times when to run away is the
bravest thing a man can do. I knew a soldier once. He drank like a fish, rutted
like an alley-cat and would fight anything that walked, crawled or swam. But he
got religion; he became a Source priest. When a man he once knew, and had
beaten in a fist-fight, saw him walking down the street in Drenan, he walked up
and punched the priest full in the face, knocking him flat. I was there. The
priest surged to his feet and stopped. He wanted to fight - everything in him
wanted to fight. But then he remembered what he was, and he held back. Such was
the turmoil within him that he burst into tears. And he walked away. By the
gods, boy, that took some courage.' 'I don't think that was courage,' said
Druss. 'Neither did anyone else who was watching.
But then that's something you'll learn, I hope. If a million people believe a
foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing.' Druss's mind jerked back to the present. He
didn't know why he had remembered that meeting, but the recollection left him
feeling sad and low in spirit. Chapter TwoA storm broke over the mountains, great
rolls of thunder that made the walls of the cave vibrate, and Druss moved back
as the rain lashed into the cave-mouth. The land below was lit by jagged spears
of lightning which seemed to change the very nature of the valley - the gentle
woods of pine and elm becoming shadow-haunted lairs, the friendly homes looking
like tombstones across the vault of Hell. Fierce winds buffeted the trees and Druss
saw a herd of deer running from the woods, their movements seeming disjointed
and ungainly against the flaring lightning bolts. A tree was struck and seemed
to explode from within, splitting into two halves. Fire blazed briefly from the
ruined trunk, but died within seconds in the sheeting rain. Dulina crept alongside him, pushing herself
against him. He felt the stitches in his side pull as she snuggled in, but he
lifted his arm around her shoulders. 'Is is only a storm, child,' he said. 'It
cannot harm us.' She said nothing and he drew her to his lap, holding her
close. She was warm, almost feverish, he thought. Sighing, Druss felt again the weight of
loss, and wondered where Rowena was on this dark and ferocious night. Was there
a storm where she lay? Or was the night calm? Did she feel the loss, or was
Druss just a dim memory of another life in the mountains? He glanced down to
see that the child was asleep, her head in the crook of his arm. Holding her firmly but gently, Druss rose
and carried her back to the fireside, laying her down on her blanket and adding
the last of the fuel to the fire. 'You are a good man,' came a soft voice.
Druss looked up and saw that the old tinker was awake. 'How is the leg?' 'It hurts, but it will heal. You are sad,
my friend.' Druss shrugged. 'These are sad times.' 'I heard your talk with your friend. I am
sorry that in helping me you have lost the chance to help others.' He smiled.
'Not that I would change anything, you understand?' Druss chuckled. 'Nor I.' 'I am Ruwaq the Tinker,' said the old man,
extending a bony hand. Druss shook it and sat beside him. 'Where
are you from?' 'Originally? The lands of Matapesh, far to
the east of Naashan and north of the Opal Jungles. But I have always been a man
who needed to see new mountains. People think they are all the same, but it is
not so. Some are lush and green, others crowned with shining ice and snow. Some
are sharp, like sword-blades, others old and rounded, comfortable within eternity.
I love mountains.' 'What happened to your children?' 'Children? Oh, I never had children. Never
married.' 'I thought the child was your
grand-daughter?' 'No, I found her outside Resha. She had
been abandoned and was starving to death. She is a good girl. I love her
dearly. I can never repay the debt to you for saving her.' 'There is no debt,' said Druss. The old man lifted his hand and wagged his
finger. 'I don't accept that, my friend. You gave her - and me - the gift of
life. I do not like storms, but I was viewing this one with the greatest
pleasure. Because until you entered the hollow I was a dead man, and Dulina
would have been raped and probably murdered. Now the storm is a vision of
beauty. No one ever gave me a greater gift.' The old man had tears in his eyes
and Druss's discomfort grew. Instead of feeling elated by his gratitude he
experienced a sense of shame. A true hero, he believed, would have gone to the
man's aid from a sense of justice, of compassion. Druss knew that was not why
he had helped them. Not even close. The right deed . . . for
the wrong reason. He patted the old man's shoulder and returned to the
cave-mouth where he saw that the storm was moving on towards the east, the rain
lessening. Druss's spirits sank. He wished Sieben were with him. Irritating as
the poet could be, he still had a talent for lifting the axeman's mood. But Sieben had refused to accompany him,
preferring the pleasures of city life to an arduous journey across the
mountains to Resha. No, thought Druss, not the journey; that was just an
excuse. 'I'll make a bargain with you though, old
horse,' said Sieben on that last day. 'Leave the axe and I'll change my mind.
Bury it. Throw it in the sea. I don't care which.' 'Don't tell me you believe that nonsense?' 'I saw it, Druss. Truly. It will be the
death of you - or at least the death of the man I know.' Now he had no axe, no friend, and no
Rowena. Unused to despair Druss felt lost, his strength useless. Dawn brightened the sky, the land
glistening and fresh from the rain as Dulina came alongside him. 'I had a
wonderful dream,' she said brightly. 'There was a great knight on a white
horse. And he rode up to where grandfather and I were waiting, and he leaned
from his saddle and lifted me to sit beside him. Then he took off his golden
helmet and he said, "I am your father." And he took me to live in a
castle. I never had a dream like it. Do you think it will come true?' Druss did not answer. He was staring down
at the woods at the armed men making their way towards the cave. * The world had shrunk now to a place of
agony and darkness. All Druss could feel was pain as he lay in the windowless
dungeon, listening to the skittering of unseen rats which clambered over him.
There was no light, save when at the end of the day the jailer strode down the
dungeon corridor and a tiny, flickering beam momentarily lit the narrow grille
of the door-stone. Only in those seconds could Druss see his surroundings. The
ceiling was a mere four feet from the floor, the airless room six feet square.
Water dripped from the walls, and it was cold. Druss brushed a rat from his leg, the
movement causing him a fresh wave of pain from his wounds. He could hardly move
his neck, and his right shoulder was swollen and hot to the touch. Wondering if
the bones were broken, he began to shiver. How many days? He had counted to
sixty-three, but then lost track for a while. Guessing at seventy, he had begun
to count again. But his mind wandered. Sometimes he dreamt of the mountains of
home, under a blue sky, with a fresh northerly wind cooling his brow. At other
times he tried to remember events in his life. 'I will break you, and then I will watch
you beg for death,' said Cajivak on the day they had hauled Druss into the
castle Hall. 'In your dreams, you ugly whoreson.' Cajivak had beaten him then, pounding his
face and body with brutal blows. His hands tied behind him, a tight rope around
his neck, Druss could do nothing but accept the hammering. For the first two weeks he was kept in a
larger cell. Every time he slept men would appear alongside his narrow bed to
beat him with clubs and sticks. At first he had fought them, grabbing one man
by the throat and cracking his skull against the cell wall. But deprived of
food and water for days on end, his strength had given out and he could only
curl himself into a tight ball against the merciless beatings. Then they had thrown him into this tiny
dungeon, and he had watched with horror as they slid the door-stone into place.
Once every two days a guard would push stale bread and a cup of water through
the narrow grille. Twice he caught rats and ate them raw, cutting his lips on
the tiny bones. Now he lived for those few seconds of light
as the guard walked back to the outside world. 'We caught the others,' the jailer said one
day, as he pushed the bread through the grille. But Druss did not believe him.
Such was Cajivak's cruelty that he would have dragged Druss out to see them
slain. He pictured Varsava pushing the child up
into the chimney crack in the cave, urging her to climb, and remembered lifting
Ruwaq up to where Varsava could haul the old man out of sight. Druss himself
was about to climb when he heard the warriors approaching the cave. He had turned. And charged them. . . . But there were too many, and most bore
clubs which finally smashed him from his feet. Boots and fists thundered into
him and he awoke to find a rope around his neck, his hands bound. Forced to
walk behind a horseman, he was many times dragged from his feet, the rope
tearing the flesh of his neck. Varsava had described Cajivak as a monster,
which could not be more true. The man was close to seven feet tall, with an
enormous breadth of shoulder and biceps as thick as most men's thighs. His eyes
were dark, almost black, and no hair grew on the right side of his head where
the skin was white and scaly, covered in scar tissue that only a severe burn
could create. Madness shone in his eyes, and Druss had glanced to the man's
left and the weapon that was placed there, resting against the high-backed
throne. Snaga! Druss shook himself free of the memory now
and stretched. His joints creaked and his hands trembled in the cold that
seeped from the wet walls. Don't think of it, he urged himself. Concentrate on
something else. He tried to picture Rowena, but instead found himself
remembering the day when the priest of Pashtar Sen had found him in a small
village, four days east of Lania. Druss had been sitting in the garden of an
inn, enjoying a meal of roast meat and onions and a jug of ale. The priest
bowed and sat opposite the axeman. His bald head was pink and peeling, burned
by the sun. 'I am glad to find you in good health,
Druss. I have searched for you for the last six months.' 'You found me,' said Druss. 'It is about the axe.' 'Do not concern yourself, Father. It is
gone. You were right, it was an evil weapon. I am glad to be rid of it.' The priest shook his head. 'It is back,' he
said. 'It is now in the possession of a robber named Cajivak. Always a killer,
he succumbed far more swiftly than a strong man like yourself and now he is
terrorising the lands around Lania, torturing, killing and maiming. With the
war keeping our troops from the area, there is little that can be done to stop
him.' 'Why tell me?' The priest said nothing for a moment,
averting his eyes from Druss's direct gaze. 'I have watched you,' he said at
last. 'Not just in the present, but through the past, from your birth through
your childhood, to your marriage to Rowena and your quest to find her. You are
a rare man, Druss. You have iron control over those areas of your soul
which have a capacity for evil. And you have a dread of becoming like Bardan.
Well, Cajivak is Bardan reborn. Who else can stop him?' 'I don't have time to waste, priest. My
wife is somewhere in these lands.' The priest reddened and hung his head. His
voice was a whisper, and there was shame in the words. 'Recover the axe and I
will tell you where she is,' he said. Druss leaned back and stared long and hard
at the slender man before him. 'This is unworthy of you,' he observed. The priest looked up. 'I know.' He spread
his hands. 'I have no other . . . payment. . . to offer.' 'I could take hold of your scrawny neck and
wring the truth from you,' Druss pointed out. 'But you will not. I know you, Druss.' The warrior stood. 'I'll find the axe,' he
promised. 'Where shall we meet?' 'You find the axe - and I'll find you,' the
priest told him. Alone in the dark, Druss remembered with
bitterness the confidence he had felt. Find Cajivak, recover the axe, then find
Rowena. So simple! What a fool you are, he thought. His face
itched and he scratched at the skin of his cheek, his grimy finger breaking a
scab upon his cheek. A rat ran across his leg and Druss lunged for it, but
missed. Struggling to his knees, he felt his head touch the cold stone of the
ceiling. Torchlight flickered as the guard moved
down the corridor. Druss scrambled to the grille, the light burning his eyes.
The jailer, whose face Druss could not see, bent and thrust a clay cup into the
door-stone cavity. There was no bread. Druss lifted the cup and drained the
water. 'Still alive, I see,' said the jailer, his voice deep and cold. 'I think
the Lord Cajivak has forgotten about you. By the gods, that makes you a lucky
man - you'll be able to live down here with the rats for the rest of your
life.' Druss said nothing and the voice went on, 'The last man who lived in
that cell was there for five years. When we dragged him out his hair was white
and all his teeth were rotten. He was blind, and bent like a crippled old man.
You'll be the same.' Druss focused on the light, watching the
shadows on the dark wall. The jailer stood, and the light receded. Druss sank
back. No bread . . . You'll be able to live down here with
the rats for the rest of your life. Despair struck
him like a hammer blow. Pahtai felt
the pain recede as she floated clear of her plague-racked body. I am dying, she
thought, but there was no fear, no surging panic, merely a peaceful sense of
harmony as she rose into the air. It was night, and the lanterns were lit.
Hovering just below the ceiling, she gazed down on Michanek as he sat beside
the frail woman in the bed, holding to her hand, stroking the fever-dry skin
and whispering words of love. That is me, thought Pahtai, staring down
at the woman. 'I love you, I love you,' whispered
Michanek. 'Please don't die!' He looked so tired, and Pahtai wanted
to reach out to him. He was all the security and love she had ever known, and
she recalled the first morning when she had woken in his home in Resha. She
remembered the bright sunshine and the smell of jasmine from the gardens, and
she knew that the bearded man sitting beside her should have been known to her.
But when she reached into her mind she could find no trace of him. It was so
embarrassing. 'How are you feeling?' he had asked, the voice familiar but doing
nothing to unlock her memory. She tried to think of where she might have met
him. That was when the second shock struck, with infinitely more power than the
first. She had no memory! Nothing! Her face must
have reacted to the shock, for he leaned in close and took her hand. 'Do not
concern yourself, Pahtai. You have been ill, very ill. But you are
getting better now. I know that you do not remember me, but as time passes you
will.' He turned his head and called to another man, tiny, slender and
dark-skinned. 'Look, here is Pudri,' said Michanek. 'He has been worried about you.' She had sat up then, and seen the tears in
the little man's eyes. 'Are you my father?' she asked. He shook his head. 'I am your servant and
your friend, Pahtai.' 'And you, sir,' she said, turning her gaze
on Michanek. 'Are you my . . . brother?' He had smiled. 'If that is what you wish,
that is what I will be. But no, I am not your brother. Nor am I your master.
You are a free woman, Pahtai.' Taking her hand, he kissed the palm, his
beard soft as fur against her skin. 'You are my husband, then?' 'No, I am merely a man who loves you. Take
my hand and tell me what you feel.' She did so. 'It is a good hand, strong. And
it is warm.' 'You see nothing? No . . . visions?' 'No. Should I?' He shook his head. 'Of course not. It is
only . . . that you were hallucinating when the fever was high. It just shows
how much better you are.' He kissed her hand again. Just as he was doing now. 'I love you,' she
thought, suddenly sad that she was about to die. She rose through the ceiling
and out into the night, gazing up at the stars. Through spirit eyes they no
longer twinkled, but sat perfect and round in the vast bowl of the night. The
city was peaceful, and even the camp-fires of the enemy seemed merely a glowing
necklace around Resha. She had never fully discovered the secrets
of her past. It seemed she was a prophet of some kind, and had belonged to a
merchant named Kabuchek, but he had fled the city long before the siege began. Pahtai
remembered walking to his house, hoping that the sight of it would stir her
lost memories. Instead she had seen a powerful man, dressed in black and
carrying a double-headed axe. He was talking to a servant. Instinctively she
had ducked back into an alley, her heart hammering. He looked like Michanek but
harder, more deadly. Unable to take her eyes from him, she found the oddest
sensations stirring within her. Swiftly she turned and ran back the way she
had come. And had never since sought to find out her
background. But sometimes as she and Michanek were
making love, usually in the garden beneath the flowering trees, she would find
herself suddenly thinking of the man with the axe, and then fear would come and
with it a sense of betrayal. Michanek loved her, and it seemed disloyal that
another man - a man she didn't even know -could intrude into her thoughts at
such a time. Pahtai soared
higher, her spirit drawn across the war-torn land, above gutted houses, ruined
villages and ghostly, deserted towns. She wondered if this was the route to
Paradise? Coming to a range of mountains, she saw an ugly fortress of grey
stone. She was thinking of the man with the axe, and found herself drawn into
the citadel. There was a hall and within it sat a huge man, his face scarred, his
eyes malevolent. Beside him was the axe she had seen carried by the man in
black. Down she journeyed, to a dungeon deep and
dark, cold and filthy, the haunt of rats and lice. The axeman lay there, his
skin covered in sores. He was asleep and his spirit was gone from the body.
Reaching out she tried to touch his face, but her spectral hand flowed beneath
the skin. In that moment she saw a slender line of pulsing light radiating
around the body. Her hand stroked the light and instantly she found him. He was alone and in terrible despair. She
spoke with him, trying to give him strength, but he reached for her and his
words were shocking and filled her with fear. He disappeared then, and she
guessed that he had been woken from sleep. Back in the citadel she floated through the
corridors and rooms, the antechambers and halls. An old man was sitting in a
deserted kitchen. He too was dreaming, and it was the dream that drew her to
him. He was in the same dungeon; he had lived there for years. Pahtai entered
his mind and spoke with his dream spirit. Then she returned to the night sky.
'I am not dying,' she thought. 'I am merely free.' In an instant she returned to Resha and her
body. Pain flooded through her, and the weight of flesh sank down like a prison
around her spirit. She felt the touch of Michanek's hand, and all thoughts of
the axeman dispersed like mist under the sun. She was suddenly happy, despite
the pain. He had been so good to her, and yet . . . 'Are you awake?' he asked, his voice low.
She opened her eyes. 'Yes. I love you.' 'And I you. More than life.' 'Why did we never wed?' she said, her
throat dry, the words rasping clear. She saw him pale. 'Is that what you wish for? Would it make
you well?' 'It would . . . make me . . . happy,' she
told him. 'I will send for a priest,' he promised. * She found him on a grim mountainside
where winter winds were howling through the peaks. He was frozen and weak, his
limbs trembling, his eyes dull. 'What are you doing?' she asked. 'Waiting to die,' he told her. 'That is no way for you to behave. You
are a warrior, and a warrior never gives up.' 'I have no strength left.' Rowena sat beside him and he felt the
warmth of her arms around his shoulders, smelt the sweetness of her breath. 'Be
strong,' she said, stroking his hair. 'In despair there is only defeat.' 'I cannot overcome cold stone. I cannot
shine a light through the darkness. My limbs are rotting, my teeth shake in
their sockets.' 'Is there nothing you would live for?' 'Yes,' he said, reaching for her. I live
for you! I always have. But I can't find you.' * He awoke in the darkness amidst the stench
of the dungeon and crawled to the door-stone grille, finding it by touch. Cool
air drifted down the corridor and he breathed deeply. Torchlight flickered,
burning his eyes. He squinted against it and watched as the jailer tramped down
the corridor. Then the darkness returned. Druss's stomach cramped and he
groaned. Dizziness swamped him, and nausea rose in his throat. A faint light showed and, rolling painfully
to his knees, he pushed his face against the narrow opening. An old man with a
wispy white beard knelt outside the dungeon stone. The light from the tiny clay
oil lamp was torturously bright, and Druss's eyes stung. 'Ah, you are alive! Good,' whispered the
old man. 'I have brought you this lamp and an old tinder-box. Use it carefully.
It will help accustom your eyes to light. Also I have some food.' He thrust a
linen package through the door-stone and Druss took it, his mouth too dry for
speech. 'I'll come back when I can,' said the old man. 'Remember, only use the
light once the jailer has gone.' Druss listened to the man slowly make his
way down the corridor. He thought he heard a door shut, but could not be sure.
With unsteady hands he drew the lamp into the dungeon, placing it on the floor
beside him. Then he hauled in the package and the small iron tinder-box. Eyes streaming from the light, he opened
the package to find there were two apples, a hunk of cheese and some dried
meat. When he bit into one of the apples it was unbearably delicious, the
juices stinging his bleeding gums. Swallowing was almost painful, but the minor
irritation was swamped by the coolness. He almost vomited, but held it down,
and slowly finished the fruit. His shrunken stomach rebelled after the second
apple, and he sat holding the cheese and the meat as if they were treasures of
gems and gold. While waiting for his stomach to settle he stared around at his
tiny cell, seeing the filth and decay for the first time. Looking at his hands,
he saw the skin was split and ugly sores showed on his wrists and arms. His
leather jerkin had been taken from him and the woollen shirt was alive with
lice. He saw the small hole in the corner of the wall from which the rats
emerged. And despair was replaced by anger. Unaccustomed to the light, his eyes continued to stream. Removing
his shirt, he gazed down at his wasted body. The arms were no longer huge, the
wrists and elbows jutting. But I am alive, he told himself. And I will survive. He
finished the cheese and half of the meat. Desperate as he was to consume it
all, he did not know if the old man would come back, and he rewrapped the meat
and pushed it into his belt. Examining the workings of the tinder-box he saw
that it was an old design, a sharp piece of flint that could be struck against
the serrated interior, igniting the powdered tinder in the well of the box.
Satisfied he could use it in the dark, he reluctantly blew out the lamp. The old man did return - but not for two days. This time he
brought some dried peaches, a hunk of ham and a small sack of tinder. 'It is
important that you keep supple,' he told Druss. 'Stretch out on the floor and
exercise.' 'Why are you doing this for me?' 'I sat in that cell for years, I know what
it is like. You must build your strength. There are two ways to do this, or so
I found. Lie on your stomach with your hands beneath your shoulders and then,
keeping the legs straight, push yourself up using only your arms. Repeat this
as many times as you can manage. Keep count. Each day try for one more. Also
you can lie on your back and raise your legs, keeping them straight. This will
strengthen the belly.' 'How long have I been here?' asked Druss. 'It is best not to think of that,' the old
man advised. 'Concentrate on building your body. I will bring some ointments
next time for those sores, and some lice powder.' 'What is your name?' 'Best you don't know - in case they find
the lamp.' 'I owe you a debt, my friend. And I always
pay my debts.' 'You'll have no chance of that - unless you
become strong again.' 'I shall,' promised Druss. When the old man had gone Druss lit the
lamp and lay down on his belly. With his hands beneath his shoulders he forced
his body up. He managed eight before collapsing to the filthy floor. A week later it was thirty. And by the end
of a month he could manage one hundred. Chapter ThreeThe guard at the main gate narrowed his
eyes and stared at the three-riders. None was known to him, but they rode with
casual confidence, chatting to one another and laughing. The guard stepped out
to meet them. 'Who are you?' he asked. The first of the men, a slim blond-haired
warrior wearing a baldric from which hung four knives, dismounted from his bay
mare. 'We are travellers seeking lodging for the night,' he said. 'Is there a
problem? Is there plague in the city?' 'Plague? Of course there's no plague,'
answered the guard, hastily making the sign of the Protective Horn. 'Where are
you from?' 'We've ridden from Lania, and we're heading
for Capalis and the coast. All we seek is an inn.' 'There are no inns here. This is the
fortress of Lord Cajivak.' The other two horsemen remained mounted.
The guard looked up at them. One was slim and dark-haired, a bow slung across
his shoulder and a quiver hanging from the pommel of his saddle. The third man
wore a wide leather hat and sported no weapons save an enormous hunting-knife
almost as long as a short sword. 'We can pay for our lodgings,' said the
blond man with an easy smile. The guard licked his lips. The man dipped his
hand into the pouch by his side and produced a thick silver coin which he
dropped into the guard's hand. 'Well. . . it would be churlish to turn you
away,' said the guard, pocketing the coin. 'All right. Ride through the main
square, bearing left. You'll see a domed building, with a narrow lane running
down its eastern side. There is a tavern there. It's a rough place, mind, with
much fighting. But the keeper - Ackae - keeps rooms at the back. Tell him that
Ratsin sent you.' 'You are most kind,' said the blond man,
stepping back into the saddle. As they rode in to the city the guard shook
his head. Be unlikely to see them again, he thought, not with that much silver
on them and not a sword between them. * The old man came almost every day, and
Druss grew to treasure the moments. He never stayed long, but his conversation
was brief, wise and to the point. 'The biggest danger when you get out is to
the eyes, boy. They get too used to the dark, and the sun can blind them -
permanently. I lost my sight for almost a month after they dragged me out.
Stare into the lamp flame, close as you can, force the pupils to contract.' Druss was now as strong as he would ever be
in such a place, and last night he had told the man, 'Do not come tomorrow, or
the next day.' 'Why?' Tm thinking of leaving,' answered the
Drenai. The old man had laughed. Tm serious, my friend. Don't come for two
days.' 'There's no way out. The door-stone alone
requires two men to move it, and there are two bolts holding it in place.' 'If you are correct,' Druss told him, 'then
I will see you here in three days.' Now he sat quietly in the dark. The
ointments his friend had supplied had healed most of his sores, and the lice
powder - while itching like the devil's touch - had convinced all but the most
hardy of the parasites to seek alternative accommodation. The food over the
last months had rebuilt Druss's strength, and his teeth no longer rattled in
their sockets. Now was the time, he thought. There'll never be a better. Silently he waited through the long day. At last he heard the jailer outside. A clay
cup was pushed into the opening, with a hunk of stale bread by it. Druss sat in
the dark, unmoving. 'Here is it, my black-bearded rat,' the
jailer called. Silence. 'Ah well, suit yourself. You'll
change your mind before long.' The hours drifted by. Torchlight flickered
in the corridor and he heard the jailer halt. Then the man walked on. Druss
waited for an hour, then he lit his lamp and chewed on the last of the meat the
old man had left the night before. Lifting the lamp to his face he stared hard
into the tiny flame, passing it back and forth before his eyes. The light
didn't sting as once it had. Blowing out the light he turned over on to his
stomach, pushing himself through one hundred and fifty press raises. He slept.
. . And awoke to the arrival of the jailer. The
man knelt down at the narrow opening, but Druss knew he could not see more than
a few inches into the dark. The food and water was untouched. The only question
now was whether the jailer cared if his prisoner lived or died. Cajivak had
threatened to have Druss dragged before him in order to plead for death. Would
the Lord be pleased that his jailer had robbed him of such delights? He heard the jailer curse, then move off
back the way he had come. Druss's mouth was dry, and his heart pounded. Minutes
passed - long, anxious minutes. Then the jailer returned; he was speaking to
someone. 'It's not my fault,' he was saying. 'His
rations were set by the Lord himself.' 'So it's his fault? Is that what
you're saying?' 'No! No! It's nobody's fault. Maybe
he had a weak heart or something. Maybe he's just sick. That's it, he's
probably sick. We'll move him to a bigger cell for a while.' 'I hope you're right,' said a soft voice,
'otherwise you'll be wearing your own entrails for a necklace.' A grating sound followed, then another, and
Druss guessed the bolts were being drawn back. 'All right, together now,' came
a voice. 'Heave!' The stone groaned as the men hauled it clear. 'Gods, but it stinks in there!' complained
one of the guards as a torch was thrust inside. Druss grabbed the wielder by
the throat, hauling him in, then he dived through the opening and rolled. He
rose, but dizziness caused him to stagger and a guard laughed. 'There's your dead man,' he said, and Druss
heard the rasp of a sword being drawn. It was so hard to see - there were at
least three torches, and the light was blinding. A shape moved towards him. 'Back in your hole, rat!' said the guard.
Druss leapt forward to smash a punch to the man's face. The guard's iron helm
flew from his head as his body shot backwards, his head cannoning into the
dungeon wall. A second guard ran in. Druss's vision was clearing now and he saw
the man aim a blow at his head. He ducked and stepped inside the blow,
thundering his fist in the man's belly. Instantly the guard folded, a great
whoosh of air rushing from his lungs. Druss brought his clenched fist down on
the man's neck, there was a sickening crack and the guard fell to his face. The jailer was trying to wriggle clear of
the dungeon opening as Druss turned on him. The man squealed in fright and
elbowed his way back into the dungeon. Druss hauled the first guard to the
entrance, thrusting the unconscious body through into the cell. The second
guard was dead; his body followed the first. Breathing heavily Druss looked at
the door-stone. Anger rose in him like a sudden fire. Squatting down, he took
the stone in both hands and heaved it into place. Then he sat before it and
pushed it home with his legs. For several minutes he sat exhausted, then he
crawled to the door-stone and pushed the bolts home. Lights danced before Druss's eyes, and his
heart was hammering so fast he could not count the beats. Yet he forced himself
upright and moved carefully to the door, which was partly open, and glanced
into the corridor beyond. Sunlight was shining through a window, the beam
highlighting dust motes in the air. It was indescribably beautiful. The corridor was deserted. He could see two
chairs and a table with two cups upon it. Moving into the corridor, he halted
at the table and, seeing the cups contained watered wine, he drained them both.
More dungeons lined the walls, but these all had doors of iron bars. He moved
on to a second wooden door, beyond which was a stairwell, dark and unlit. His strength was fading as he slowly
climbed the stairs, but anger drove him on. * Sieben gazed down with undisguised horror
at the small black insect upon the back of his hand. This,' he said, 'is
insufferable.' 'What?' asked Varsava from his position at
the narrow window. 'The room has fleas,' answered Sieben,
taking the insect between thumb and forefinger and crushing it. 'They seem to prefer you, poet,' put in
Eskodas with a boyish grin. 'The risk of death is one thing,' said
Sieben icily. 'Fleas are quite another. I have not even inspected the bed, but
I would imagine it is teeming with wild-life. I think we should make the rescue
attempt at once.' Varsava chuckled. 'After dark would
probably be best,' he said. 'I was here three months ago when I took a child
back out to his father. That's how I learned that Druss was here. The dungeons
are - as you would expect - on the lowest level. Above them are the kitchens,
and above them the main Hall. There is no exit from the dungeons save through
the Hall, which means we must be inside the Keep by dusk. There is no night
jailer; therefore, if we can hide within the Keep until around midnight, we
should be able to find Druss and get him out. As to leaving the fortress, that
is another matter. As you saw, the two gates are guarded by day and locked by
night. There are sentries on the walls, and lookouts in the towers.' 'How many?' asked Eskodas. 'When I was here before, there were five
near the main gate.' 'How did you get out with the child?' 'He was a small boy. I hid him in a sack
and carried him out just after dawn, draped behind my saddle.' 'I can't see Druss fitting in a sack,' said
Sieben. Varsava moved to sit alongside the poet.
'Do not think of him as you knew him, poet. He has been over a year in a tiny,
windowless cell. The food would be barely enough to keep him alive. He will not
be the giant we all knew. And he's likely to be blind - or insane. Or both.' Silence fell upon the room as each man
remembered the axeman they had fought alongside. 'I wish I'd known sooner,'
muttered Sieben. 'I did not know myself,' said Varsava. 'I
thought they'd killed him.' 'It's strange,' put in Eskodas, 'I could
never imagine Druss being beaten - even by an army. He was always so - so
indomitable.' Varsava chuckled. 'I know. I watched him
walk unarmed into a hollow where a dozen or so warriors were torturing an old
man. He went through them like a scythe through wheat. Impressive.' 'So, how shall we proceed?' Sieben asked. 'We will go to the main Hall to pay our
respects to the Lord Cajivak. Perhaps he won't kill us outright!' 'Oh, that's a good plan,' said Sieben, his
voice dripping with sarcasm. 'You have a better?' 'I believe that I have. One would imagine
that a sordid place like this would be short of entertainment. I shall go alone
and announce myself by name; I will offer to perform for my supper.' 'At the risk of being considered rude,' said
Eskodas, 'I don't think your epic poems will be as well received as you think.' 'My dear boy, I am an entertainer. I can
fashion a performance to suit any audience.' 'Well, this audience,' said Varsava, 'will
be made up of the dregs of Ventria and Naashan and all points east and west.
There will be Drenai renegades, Vagrian mercenaries and Ventrian criminals of
all kinds.' 'I shall dazzle them,' promised Sieben.
'Give me half an hour to make my introductions, then make your way into the
Hall. I promise you no one will notice your entrance.' 'Where did you acquire such humility?'
asked Eskodas. 'It's a gift,' replied Sieben, 'and I'm
very proud of it.' * Druss reached the second level and paused
at the top of the stairwell. He could hear the sounds of many people moving
around, the scrape of pans being cleaned and of cutlery being prepared. He
could smell fresh bread cooking, mixed with the savoury aroma of roasting beef.
Leaning against the wall, he tried to think. There was no way through without
being seen. His legs were tired, and he sank down to his haunches. What to do? ' He heard footsteps approaching and pushed
himself upright. An old man appeared, his back hideously bent, his legs bowed.
He was carrying a bucket of water. His head came up as he approached Druss, his
nostrils quivering. The eyes, Druss saw, were rheumy and covered with an opal
film. The old man put down the bucket and reached out. 'Is it you?' he
whispered. 'You are blind?' 'Almost. I told you I spent five years in
that cell. Come, follow me.' Leaving the bucket, the old man retraced his
steps, round a winding corridor and down a narrow stair. Pushing open a door,
he led Druss inside. The room was small, but there was a slit window that
allowed a shaft of sunshine. 'Wait here,' he said. 'I will bring you some food
and drink.' He returned within minutes with a half-loaf
of fresh baked bread, a slab of cheese and a jug of water. Druss devoured the
food and drank deeply, then leaned back on the cot-bed. 'I thank you for your kindness,' he said.
'Without it I would be worse than dead; I would have been lost.' 'I owed a debt,' said the cripple. 'Another
man fed me, just as I fed you. They killed him for it - Cajivak had him
impaled. But I would never have found the courage had the goddess not appeared
to me in a dream. Was it she who brought you from the dungeon?' 'Goddess?' 'She told me of you,.and your suffering,
and she filled me with shame at my cowardice. I swore to her that I would do
all in my power to help you. And she touched my hand, and when I awoke all pain
had gone from my back. Did she make the stone disappear?' 'No, I tricked the jailer.' He told the man
of the ruse, and his fight with the guards. 'They will not be discovered until later
tonight,' said the cripple. 'Ah, but I would love to hear their screams as the
rats come at them in the dark.' 'Why do you say the woman in your dream was
a goddess?' asked Druss. 'She told me her name, Pahtai, and
that is the daughter of the earth mother. And in my dream she walked with me upon
the green hillsides of my youth. I shall never forget her.' 'Pahtai,' said
Druss softly. 'She came to me also in that cell, and gave me strength.' He
stood and laid his hand on the old man's back. 'You risked much to help me, and
I've no time left in this world in which to repay you.' 'No time?' echoed the old man. 'You can
hide here and escape after dark. I can get a rope; you can lower yourself from
the wall.' 'No. I must find Cajivak - and kill him.' 'Good,' said the old man. 'The goddess will
give you powers, yes? She will pour strength into your body?' 'I fear not,' said Druss. 'In this I shall
be alone.' 'You will die! Do not attempt this,'
pleaded the old man, tears streaming from the opal eyes. 'I beg you. He will
destroy you; he is a monster with the strength of ten men. Look at yourself. I
cannot see you clearly, but I know how weak you must be. You have a chance at
life, freedom, sunshine on your face. You are young -what will you achieve if
you attempt this foolishness? He will crush you, and either kill you or throw
you back into that hole in the ground.' 'I was not born to run,' said Druss. 'And,
trust me, I am not as weak as you think. You saw to that. Now tell me of the
Keep, and where the stairwells lead.' * Eskodas had no fear of death, for he had no
love of life - a fact he had known for many years. Ever since his father was
dragged from their home and hanged, he had known no depth.of joy. He felt the
loss, but accepted it in a calm and tranquil manner. On board ship he had told
Sieben that he enjoyed killing people, but this was not true. He experienced no
sensation whatever when his arrow struck home, save for a momentary
satisfaction when his aim was particularly good. Now, as he strolled with Varsava towards
the grey, forbidding Hall, he wondered if he would die. He thought of Druss
imprisoned beneath the Keep in a dark, dank dungeon, and found himself
wondering what such incarceration would do to his own personality. He took no
especial pleasure from the sights of the world, the mountains and lakes, the
oceans and valleys. Would he miss them? He doubted it. Glancing at Varsava, he saw that the
bladesman was tense, expectant. Eskodas smiled. No need for fear, he thought. It is only death. The two men climbed the stone steps to the
Keep gates, which were open and unguarded. Moving inside, Eskodas heard a roar
of laughter from the Hall. They walked to the main doors and looked inside.
There were some two hundred men seated around three great tables and, at the
far end, on a dais raised some six feet from the floor, sat Cajivak. He was
seated in a huge, ornately carved chair of ebony, and he was smiling. Before
him, standing on the end table, was Sieben. The poet's voice sang out. He was telling
them a tale of such mind-bending raunchiness that Eskodas's jaw dropped. He had
heard Sieben tell epic stories, recite ancient poems and discuss philosophy,
but never had he heard the poet talk of whores and donkeys. Varsava laughed
aloud as Sieben finished the story with an obscene double entendre. Eskodas gazed around the hall. Above them
was a gallery, and he located the recessed stairway that led to it. This might
be a good place to hide. He nudged Varsava. 'I'll take a look upstairs,' he
whispered. The bladesman nodded and Eskodas strolled unnoticed through the
throng and climbed the stairs. The gallery was narrow and flowed round the
Hall. There were no doors leading from it, and a man seated here would be
invisible to those below. Sieben was now telling the story of a hero
captured by a vicious enemy. Eskodas paused to listen: 'He was taken before the leader, and told
that he had one opportunity for life: he must survive four trials by ordeal.
The first was to walk barefoot across a trench filled with hot coals. The
second to drink a full quart of the most powerful spirit. Thirdly he had to
enter a cave and, with a small set of tongs, remove a bad tooth from a
mankilling lioness. Lastly, he was told, he had to make love to the ugliest
crone in the village. 'Well, he pulled off his boots and told
them to bring on the hot coals. Manfully he strode through them to the other
side of the trench, where he lifted the quart of spirit and drained it, hurling
the pot aside. Then he stumbled into the cave. There followed the most terrible
sounds of spitting, growling, and banging and shrieking. The listening men
found their blood growing cold. At last the warrior staggered out into the
sunlight. "Right," he said. "Now where's the woman with the toothache?"
' Laughter echoed around the rafters and
Eskodas shook his head in amazement. He had watched Sieben back in Capalis
listening to warriors swapping jests and jokes. Not once had the poet laughed,
or appeared to find the stories amusing. Yet here he was, performing the same
tales with apparent relish. Transferring his gaze to Cajivak, the
archer saw that the leader was no longer smiling, but was sitting back in his
chair, his fingers drumming on the arm-rest. Eskodas had known many evil men,
and knew well that some could look as fine as angels - handsome, clear-eyed,
golden-haired. But Cajivak looked what he was, dark and malevolent. He was
wearing Druss's jerkin of black leather, with the silver shoulder guards, and
Eskodas saw him reach down and stroke the black haft of an axe that was resting
against the chair. It was Snaga. Suddenly the colossal warrior rose from his
chair. 'Enough!' he bellowed and Sieben stood silently before him. 'I don't
like your performance, bard, so I'm going to have you impaled on an iron
spike.' The Hall was utterly silent now. Eskodas drew a shaft from his quiver
and notched it to his bow. 'Well? Any more jests before you die?' Cajivak
asked. 'Just the one,' answered Sieben, holding to
the madman's gaze. 'Last night I had dream, a terrible dream. I dreamt I was
beyond the gates of Hell; it was a place of fire and torture, exquisitely
ghastly. I was very frightened and I said to one of the demon guards, "Is
there any way out of here?" And he said there was only one, and no one had
ever achieved the task set. He led me to a dungeon, and through a narrow grille
I saw the most loathsome woman. She was leprous, with weeping sores, toothless
and old beyond time. Maggots crawled in what was left of her hair. The guard
said, "If you can make love to her all night, you will be allowed to
leave." And, you know, I was prepared to have a try. But as I stepped
forward I saw a second door, and I glanced through. And you know what I saw,
Lord? I saw you. You were making love to one of the most beautiful women I have
ever seen. So I said to the guard, "Why is it that I have to bed a crone,
when Cajivak gets a beauty?" "Well," he said, " 'tis only
fair that the women also have a chance to get out." ' Even from the gallery Eskodas could see Cajivak's
face lose its colour. When he spoke, his voice was harsh and trembling. 'I will
make your death last an eternity,' he promised. Eskodas drew back on his bowstring . . .
and paused. A man had appeared at the back of the dais, his hair and beard matted
and filthy, his face blackened with ingrained dirt. He ran forward, throwing
his shoulder into the high back ofCajivak's chair, which hurtled forward to
catapult the warlord from the dais. He fell head-first on to the table upon
which Sieben stood. The filth-covered warrior swept up the
shining axe, and his voice boomed out through the Hall: 'Now do you want me to
beg, you miserable whoreson?' Eskodas chuckled. There were moments in
life worth cherishing, he realised. * As he swept up the axe, feeling the cool,
black haft in his hand, power surged through him. It felt like fire roaring
through his veins to every muscle and sinew. In that moment Druss felt renewed,
reborn. Nothing in his life had ever been so exquisite. He felt light-headed
and full of life, like a paralysed man who regains the use of his limbs. His laughter boomed out over the Hall, and
he gazed down on Cajivak who was scrambling to his feet amongst the dishes and
goblets. The warlord's face was bloody, his mouth contorted. 'It is mine!' shouted Cajivak. 'Give it
back!' The men around him looked surprised at his
reaction. Where they had expected fury and violence, they saw instead their
dread Lord reaching out, almost begging. 'Come and get it,' invited Druss. Cajivak hesitated and licked his thin lips.
'Kill him!' he screamed suddenly. The warriors surged to their feet, the
nearest man drawing his sword and running towards the dais. An arrow slashed
into his throat, pitching him from his feet. All movement ceased then as scores
of armed men scanned the Hall, seeking the hidden bowman. 'What a man you chose to follow!' said
Druss, his voice booming in the sudden silence. 'He stands with his feet in
your stew, too frightened to face a man who has been locked in his dungeon and
fed on scraps. You want the axe?' he asked Cajivak. 'I say again, Come and get
it.' Twisting the weapon, he slammed it down into the boards of the dais where
it stood quivering, the points of the butterfly blades punching deep into the
wood. Druss stepped away from the axe and the warriors waited. Suddenly Cajivak moved, taking two running
steps and leaping towards the dais. He was a huge man, with immense shoulders
and powerful arms; but he leapt into a straight left from the former champion
of Mashrapur which smashed his lips into his teeth, and a right cross that hit
his jaw like a thunderbolt. Cajivak fell to the dais and rolled back to the
floor, landing on his back. He was up fast, and this time he slowly mounted the
steps to the dais. 'I'll break you, little man! I'll rip out
your entrails and feed them to you!' 'In your dreams!' mocked Druss. As Cajivak
charged, Druss stepped in to meet him, slamming a second straight left into
Cajivak's heart. The larger man grunted, but then sent an overhand right that
cannoned against Dross's brow, forcing him back. Cajivak's left hand snapped
forward with fingers extended to rip out Dross's eyes. Dross dropped his head
so that the fingers stabbed into his brow, the long nails gashing the skin.
Cajivak grabbed for him, but as his hands closed around Dross's shirt the
rotted material gave way. As Cajivak staggered back, Druss stepped in to
thunder two blows to his belly. It felt as if he were beating his hands against
a wall. The giant warlord laughed and struck out with an uppercut that almost
lifted Dross from his feet. His nose was broken and streaming blood, but as
Cajivak leapt in for the kill Dross side-stepped, tripping the larger man.
Cajivak hit the floor hard, then rolled and came up swiftly. Dross was tiring now, the sudden surge of
power from the axe fading away from his muscles. Cajivak lunged forward, but
Dross feinted with a left and Cajivak swayed back from it - straight into the
path of a right hook that hammered into his mouth, impaling his lower lip on
his teeth. Dross followed this with a left, then another right. A cut opened
above Cajivak's right eye, blood spilling to the cheek, and he fell back. Then
he pulled the punctured lip from his teeth - and gave a bloody grin. For a
moment Dross was nonplussed, then Cajivak leaned over and dragged Snaga from
the boards. The axe shone red in the lantern light.
'Now you die, little man!' Cajivak snarled. He raised the axe as Druss took one running
step and leapt, his right foot coming down hard on Cajivak's knee. The joint gave
way with an explosive crack and the giant fell screaming to the ground, losing
his hold on the axe. The weapon twisted in the air-then plunged down, the twin
points striking the warlord just below the shoulder-blades, lancing through the
leather jerkin and the skin beyond. Cajivak twisted and the axe ripped clear of
his body. Dross knelt and retrieved the weapon. Cajivak, his face twisted in pain, pushed
himself into a sitting position and stared at the axeman with undisguised
hatred. 'Let the blow be a clean one,' he said softly. Still kneeling Druss nodded, then swept
Snaga in a horizontal arc. The blades bit into Cajivak's bull neck, slicing
through the muscle, sinew and bone. The body toppled to the right, the head
falling left where it bounced once on the dais before rolling to the hall floor
below. Dross stood and turned to face the stunned warriors. Suddenly weary, he
sat down on Cajivak's throne. 'Someone bring me a goblet of wine!' he ordered. Sieben grabbed a pitcher and a goblet and
moved slowly to where the axeman sat. 'You took your damned time getting here,'
said Druss. Chapter FourFrom the back of the Hall Varsava watched
the scene with fascination. Cajivak's body lay on the dais, blood staining the
floor around it. In the Hall itself the warriors stood with their eyes locked
to the man sitting slumped on Cajivak's throne. Varsava glanced up at the
gallery where Eskodas waited, an arrow still strung to his bow. What now, thought Varsava, scanning the
Hall. There must be over a hundred killers here. His mouth was dry. At any
moment the unnatural calm would vanish. What then? Would they rush the dais?
And what of Druss? Would he take up his axe and attack them all? I don't want to die here, he thought,
wondering what he would do if they did attack Druss. He was close to the rear
door - no one would notice if he just slipped away into the night. After all,
he owed the man nothing. Varsava had done more than his share, locating Sieben
and setting up the rescue attempt. To die now, in a meaningless skirmish, would
be nonsense. Yet he did not move but stood silently,
waiting, with all the other men, and watched Druss drain a third goblet of
wine. Then the axeman rose and wandered down into the hall, leaving his axe on
the dais. Druss moved to the first table and tore a chunk of bread from a
fresh-baked loaf. 'None of you hungry?' he asked the men. A tall, slim warrior wearing a crimson
shirt stepped forward. 'What are your plans?' he asked. 'I'm going to eat,' Druss told him.
"Then I'm going to bathe. After that I think I'll sleep for a week.' 'And then?' The Hall was silent, the
warriors milling closer to hear the axeman's answer. 'One thing at a time, laddie. When you sit
in a dungeon, in the dark, with only rats for company, you learn never to make
too many plans.' 'Are you seeking to take his place?'
persisted the warrior, pointing to the severed head. Druss laughed. 'By the gods, look at him!
Would you want to take his place?' Chewing on the bread, Druss returned
to the dais and sat. Then he leaned forward and addressed the men. 'I am
Druss,' he said. 'Some of you may remember me from the day I was brought here.
Others may know of my service with the Emperor. I have no ill-will towards any
of you . . . but if any man here wishes to die, then let him take up his
weapons and approach me. I'll oblige him.' He stood and hefted the axe.
'Anyone?' he challenged. No one moved and Druss nodded. 'You are all fighting
men,' he said, 'but you fight for pay. That is sensible. Your leader is dead -
best you finish your meal, and then choose another.' 'Are you putting yourself forward?' asked
the man in the crimson shirt. 'Laddie, I've had enough of this fortress.
And I have other plans.' Druss turned back to Sieben, and Varsava
could not hear their conversation. The warriors gathered together in small
groups, discussing the various merits and vices of Cajivak's under-leaders, and
Varsava strolled out of the Hall, confused by what he had seen. Beyond the Hall
was a wide antechamber where the bladesman sat on a long couch - his feelings
mixed, his heart heavy. Eskodas joined him. 'How did he do it?' asked Varsava. 'A
hundred killers, and they just accepted his murder of their leader.
Incredible!' Eskodas shrugged and smiled. 'That's
Druss.' Varsava swore softly. 'You call that an
answer?' 'It depends what you are looking for,'
responded the bowman. 'Perhaps you should be asking yourself why you are angry.
You came here to rescue a friend, and now he is free. What more did you want?' Varsava laughed, but the sound was dry and
harsh. 'You want the truth? I half desired to see Druss broken. I wanted
confirmation of his stupidity! The great herol He rescued an old man and
child - that's why he's spent a year or more in this cesspit. You understand?
It was meaningless. Meaningless!' 'Not for Druss.' 'What is so special about him?' stormed
Varsava. 'He's not blessed with a fine mind, he has no intellect to speak of.
Any other man who has just done what he did would be ripped to pieces by that
mangy crew. But no, not Druss! Why? He could have become their leader - just
like that! They would have accepted it.' 'I can give you no definitive answers,'
said Eskodas. 'I watched him storm a ship filled with blood-hungry corsairs -
they threw down their weapons. It is the nature of the man, I suppose. I had a
teacher once, a great bowman, who told me that when we see another man we
instinctively judge him as either threat or prey. Because we are hunting,
killing animals. Carnivores. We are a deadly breed, Varsava. When we look at
Druss we see the ultimate threat - a man who does not understand compromise. He
breaks the rules. No, more than that, I think. For him there are no
rules. Take what happened back there. An ordinary man might well have killed
Cajivak - though I doubt it. But he would not have hurled aside the axe and
fought the monster hand to hand. And when he'd slain the leader he would have
looked out at all those killers and, in his heart, he would have expected
death. They would have sensed it . . . and they would have killed him. But
Druss didn't sense it; he didn't care. One at a time, or all at once. He'd have
fought them all.' 'And died,' put in Varsava. 'Probably. But that's not the point. After
he killed Cajivak he sat down and called for a drink. A man doesn't do that if
he expects further battles. That left them confused, uncertain - no rules, you
see. And when he walked down among them he left the axe behind. He knew
he wouldn't need it - and they knew too. He played them like a harp. But he
didn't do it consciously, it is just the nature of the man.' 'I can't be like him,' said Varsava sadly,
remembering the peacemaker and the terrible death he suffered. 'Few can,' agreed Eskodas. 'That's why he
is becoming a legend.' Laughter echoed from the Hall. 'Sieben is
entertaining them again,' said Eskodas. 'Come on, let's go and listen. We can
get drunk.' 'I don't want to get drunk. I want to be
young again. I want to change the past, wipe a wet rag over the filthy slate.' 'It's a fresh day tomorrow,' said Eskodas
softly. 'What does that mean?' 'The past is dead, bladesman, the future
largely unwritten. I was on a ship once with a rich man when we hit a storm,
and the ship went down. The rich man gathered as much gold as he could carry.
He drowned. I left behind everything I owned. I survived.' 'You think my guilt weighs more than his
gold?' 'I think you should leave it behind,' said
Eskodas, rising. 'Now, come and see Druss - and let's get drunk.' 'No,' said Varsava sadly. 'I don't want to
see him.' He stood and placed his wide leather hat upon his head. 'Give him my
best wishes, and tell him . . . tell him . . .' His voice faded away. Tell him what?' Varsava shook his head, and smiled
ruefully. 'Tell him goodbye,' he said. * Michanek followed the young officer to the
base of the wall, then both men knelt with their ears to the stone. At first
Michanek could hear nothing, but then came the sound of scraping, like giant
rats beneath the earth, and he swore softly. 'You have done well, Cicarin. They are
digging beneath the walls. The question is, from where? Follow me.' The young
officer followed the powerfully built champion as Michanek scaled the rampart
steps and leaned out over the parapet. Ahead was the main camp of the Ventrian
army, their tents pitched on the plain before the city. To the left was a line
of low hills with the river beyond them. To the right was a higher section of
hills, heavily wooded. 'My guess,' said Michanek, 'would be that they began
their work on the far side of that hill, about half-way up. They would have
taken a bearing and know that if they hold to a level course they would come
under the walls by around two feet.' 'How serious is it, sir?' asked Cicarin
nervously. Michanek smiled at the young man. 'Serious
enough. Have you ever been down a mine?' 'No, sir.' Michanek chuckled. Of course he hadn't. The
boy was the youngest son of a Naashanite Satrap who until this siege had been
surrounded by servants, barbers, valets and huntsmen. His clothes would have
been laid out each morning, his breakfast brought to him on a silver tray as he
lay in bed with satin sheets. 'There are many aspects to soldiering,' he
said. 'They are mining beneath our walls, removing the foundations. As they
dig, they are shoring up the walls and ceiling with very dry timber. They will
dig along the line of the wall, then burrow on to the hills by the river,
emerging somewhere around . . . there.' He pointed to the tallest of the low
hills. 'I don't understand,' said Cicarin. 'If
they are shoring up the tunnel, what harm can it do?' 'That's an easy question to answer. Once
they have two openings there will be a through draught of air; then they will
soak the timbers with oil and, when the wind is right, set fire to the tunnel.
The wind will drive the flames through, the ceiling will collapse and, if they
have done their job well, the walls will come crashing down.' 'Can we do nothing to stop them?' 'Nothing of worth. We could send an armed
force to attack the workings, maybe kill a few miners, but they would just
bring in more. No. We cannot act, therefore we must react. I want you to assume
that this section of wall will fall.' He turned from the parapet and scanned
the line of houses behind the wall. There were several alleyways and two major
roads leading into the city. 'Take fifty men and block the alleys and roads.
Also fill in the ground-floor windows of the houses. We must have a secondary
line of defence.' 'Yes, sir,' said the young man, his eyes
downcast. 'Keep your spirits up, boy,' advised
Michanek. 'We're not dead yet.' 'No, sir. But people are starting to talk
openly about the relief army; they say it's not coming - that we've been left
behind.' 'Whatever the Emperor's decision, we will
abide by it,' said Michanek sternly. The young man reddened, then saluted and
strode away. Michanek watched him, then returned to the battlements. There was no relief force. The Naashanite
army had been crushed in two devastating battles and was fleeing now towards
the border. Resha was the last of the occupied cities. The intended conquest of
Ventria was now a disaster of the first rank. But Michanek had his orders. He, and the
renegade Ventrian Darishan, were to hold Resha as long as possible, tying down
Ventrian troops while the Emperor fled back to the safety of the mountains of
Naashan. Michanek dug into the pouch at his side and
pulled clear the small piece of parchment on which the message had been sent.
He gazed down at the hasty script. Hold at all costs, until otherwise
ordered. No surrender. The warrior slowly shredded the message.
There were no farewells, no tributes, no words of regret. Such is the gratitude
of princes, he thought. He had scribbled his own reply, folding it carefully
and inserting it into the tiny metal tube which he then tied to the leg of the
pigeon. The bird soared into the air and flew east, bearing Michanek's last
message to the Emperor he had served since a boy: As you order, so shall it be. The stitched wound on his side was itching
now, a sure sign of healing. Idly he scratched it. You were lucky, he thought.
Bodasen almost had you. By the western gate he saw the first of the food
convoys wending its way through the Ventrian ranks, and he strode down to meet
the wagons. The first driver waved as he saw him; it
was his cousin Shurpac. The man leapt down from the plank seat, throwing the
reins to the fat man beside him. 'Well met, cousin,' said Shurpac, throwing
his arms around Michanek and kissing both bearded cheeks. Michanek felt cold,
the thrill of fear coursing through him as he remembered Rowena's warning: 'I
see soldiers with black cloaks and helms, storming the walls. You will gather
your men for a last stand outside these walls. Beside you will be . . . your
youngest brother and a second cousin.' 'What's wrong, Michi? You look as if a
ghost has drifted across your grave.' Michanek forced a smile. 'I did not expect
to see you here. I heard you were with the Emperor.' 'I was. But these are sad times, cousin; he
is a broken man. I heard you were here and was trying to find a way through.
Then I heard about the duel. Wonderful. The stuff of legends! Why did you not
kill him?' Michanek shrugged. 'He fought well, and
bravely. But I pierced his lung and he fell. He was no threat after that, there
was no need to make the killing thrust.' 'I'd love to have seen Gorben's face. He is
said to have believed Bodasen unbeatable with the blade.' 'No one is unbeatable, cousin. No one.' 'Nonsense,' announced Shurpac. 'You are
unbeatable. That's why I wanted to be here, to fight beside you. I think we'll
show these Ventrians a thing or three. Where is Narin?' 'At the barracks, waiting for the food. We
will test it on Ventrian prisoners.' 'You think Gorben may have poisoned it?' Michanek shrugged. 'I don't know . . .
perhaps. Go on, take them through.' Shurpac clambered back to his seat, lifted
a whip and lightly cracked it over the heads of the four mules. They lurched
forward into the traces and the wagon rolled on. Michanek strolled out through
the gates and counted the wagons. There were fifty, all filled with flour and
dried fruit, oats, cereal, flour and maize. Gorben had promised two hundred.
Will you keep your word? wondered Michanek. As if in answer a lone horseman rode from
the enemy camp. The horse was a white stallion of some seventeen hands, a
handsome beast built for power and speed. It charged towards Michanek, who held
his ground with arms crossed against his chest. At the last moment the rider
dragged on the reins. The horse reared, and the rider leapt down. Michanek
bowed as he recognised the Ventrian Emperor. 'How is Bodasen?' asked Michanek. 'Alive. I thank you for sparing the last
thrust. He means much to me.' 'He's a good man.' 'So are you,' said Gorben. 'Too good to die
here for a monarch who has deserted you.' Michanek laughed. 'When I made my oath of
allegiance, I do not recall it having a clause that would allow me to break it.
You have such clauses in your own oath of fealty?' Gorben smiled. 'No. My people pledge to
support me to the death.' Michanek spread his arms. 'Well then, my
Lord, what else would you expect this poor Naashanite to do?' Gorben's smile faded and he stepped in
close. 'I had hoped you would surrender, Michanek. I do not seek your death - I
owe you a life. You must see now that even with these supplies, you cannot hold
out much longer. Why must I send in my Immortals to see you all cut to pieces?
Why not merely march out in good order and return home? You may pass
unmolested; you have my word.' 'That would be contrary to my orders, my
Lord.' 'Might I ask what they are?' 'To hold until ordered otherwise.' 'Your Lord is in full flight. I have
captured his baggage train, including his three wives and his daughters. Even
now one of his messengers is in my tent, negotiating for their safe return. But
he asks nothing for you, his most loyal soldier. Do you not find that galling?' 'Of course,' agreed Michanek, 'but it
alters nothing.' Gorben shook his head and turned to his
stallion. Taking hold of rein and pommel, he vaulted to the horse's back. 'You
are a fine man, Michanek. I wish you could have served me.' 'And you, sir, are a gifted general. It has
been a pleasure to thwart you for so long. Give my regards to Bodasen - and if
you wish to stake it all on another duel, I will meet whoever you send.' 'If my champion was here I would hold you
to that,' said Gorben, with a wide grin. 'I would like to see how you would
fare against Druss and his axe. Farewell, Michanek. May the gods grant you a
splendid afterlife.' The Ventrian Emperor heeled the stallion
into a run and galloped back to the camp. * Pahtai was
sitting in the garden when the first vision came to her. She was watching a bee
negotiate an entry into a purple bloom when suddenly she saw an image of the
man with the axe - only he had no axe, and no beard. He was sitting upon a
mountainside overlooking a small village with a half-built stockade wall. As
quickly as it had come, it disappeared. She was troubled, but with the constant
battles upon the walls of Resha, and her fears for Michanek's safety, she
brushed her worries away. But the second vision was more powerful
than the first. She saw a ship, and upon it a tall, thin man. A name filtered
through the veils of her mind: Kabuchek. He had owned her once, long ago in the days
when Pudri said she had a rare Talent, a gift for seeing the future and reading
the past. The gift was gone now, and she did not regret it. Amid a terrible
civil war it was, perhaps, a blessing not to know what perils the future had to
offer. She told Michanek of her visions and
watched as the look of sorrow touched his handsome face. He had taken her into
his arms, holding her tight, just as he had throughout her sickness. Michanek
had risked catching the plague, yet in her fever dreams she drew great strength
from his presence and his devotion. And she had survived, though all the
surgeons predicted her death. True her heart was now weak, so they said, and
any exertion tired her. But her strength was returning month by month. The sun was bright above the garden, and Pahtai
moved out to gather flowers with which to decorate the main rooms. In her
arms she held a flat wicker basket in which was placed a sharp cutting knife.
As the sun touched her face she tilted her head, enjoying the warmth upon her
skin. In the distance a high-pitched scream suddenly sounded and her eyes
turned towards the direction of the noise. Faintly she could hear the clash
of-steel on steel, the shouts and cries of warriors in desperate combat. Will it never end? she thought. A shadow fell across her and she turned and
saw that two men had entered the garden. They were thin, their clothes ragged
and filthy. 'Give us food,' demanded one, moving in
towards her. 'You must go to the ration centre,' she
said, fighting down her fear. 'You don't live on rations, do you, you
Naashanite whore!' said the second man, stepping in close. He stank of stale
sweat and cheap ale, and she saw his pale eyes glance towards her breasts. She
was wearing a thin tunic of blue silk, and her legs were bare. The first man
grabbed her arm, dragging her towards him. She thought of grabbing for the
cutting knife, but in that instant found herself staring down at a narrow bed
in a small room. Upon it lay a woman and a sickly child; their names flashed
into her mind. 'What of Katina?' she said suddenly. The
man groaned and fell back, releasing his hold, his eyes wide and stricken with
guilt. 'Your baby son is dying,' she said softly. 'Dying while you drink and
attack women. Go to the kitchen, both of you. Ask for Pudri, and tell him that
. . .' she hesitated . . . 'that Pahtai said you could have food. There
are some eggs and unleavened bread. Go now, both of you.' The men backed away from her, then turned
and ran for the house. Pahtai, trembling from the shock, sat down on a
marble seat. Pahtai? Rowena
. . . The name rose up from the deepest levels of her memory, and she greeted
it like a song of morning after a night of storms. Rowena. I am Rowena. A man came walking along the garden path,
bowing as he saw her. His hair was silver, and braided, yet his face was young
and almost unlined. He bowed again. 'Greetings, Pahtai, are you well?' 'I am well, Darishan. But you look tired.' 'Tired of sieges, that's for sure. May I
sit beside you?' 'Of course. Michanek is not here, but you
are welcome to wait for him.' He leaned back and sniffed the air. 'I do
love roses. Exquisite smell; they remind me of my childhood. You know I used to
play with Gorben? We were friends. We used to hide in bushes such as these, and
pretend we were being hunted by assassins. Now I am hiding again, but there is
not a rose bush large enough to conceal me.' Rowena said nothing, but she gazed into his
handsome face and saw the fear lurking below the surface. 'I saddled the wrong horse, my dear,' he
said, with a show of brightness. 'I thought the Naashanites would be preferable
to watching Gorben's father destroy the Empire. But all I have done is to train
a younger lion in the ways of war and conquest. Do you think I could convince
Gorben that I have, in fact, done him a service?' He looked into her face. 'No,
I suppose I couldn't. I shall just have to face my death like a Ventrian.' 'Don't talk of death,' she scolded. 'The
walls still hold and now we have food.' Darishan smiled. 'Yes. It was a fine duel,
but I don't mind admitting that my heart was in my mouth throughout. Michanek
might have slipped, and then where would I have been, with the gates open to
Gorben?' 'There is no man alive who could defeat
Michanek,' she said. 'So far. But Gorben had another champion
once . . . Druss, I think his name was. Axeman. He was rather deadly, as I
recall.' Rowena shivered. 'Are you cold?' he asked,
suddenly solicitous. 'You're not getting a fever, are you?' Lifting his hand,
he laid his palm on her brow. As he touched her she saw him die, fighting upon
the battlements, black-cloaked warriors all around him, swords and knives
piercing his flesh. Closing her eyes, she forced the images
back. 'You are unwell,' she heard him say, as if from a great distance. Rowena took a deep breath. 'I am a little
weak,' she admitted. 'Well, you must be strong for your
celebration. Michanek has found three singers and a lyre player - it should be
quite an entertainment. And I have a full barrel of the finest Lentrian Red,
which I shall have sent over.' At the thought of the anniversary Rowena
brightened. It was almost a year since she had recovered from the plague . . .
A year since Michanek had made her happiness complete. She smiled at Darishan.
'You will join us tomorrow? That is good. I know Michanek values your
friendship.' 'And I his.' Darishan rose. 'He's a good
man, you know, far better than the rest of us. I'm proud to have known him.' 'I'll see you tomorrow,' she said. 'Tomorrow,' he agreed. * 'I have to admit, old horse, that life
without you was dull,' said Sieben. Druss said nothing, but sat staring into
the flames of the small fire, watching them dance and flicker. Snaga was laid
beside him, the blades upwards resting against the trunk of a young oak, the
haft wedged against a jutting root. On the other side of the fire Eskodas was
preparing two rabbits for the spit. 'When we have dined,' continued Sieben, 'I
shall regale you with the further adventures of Druss the Legend.' 'No, you damned well won't,' grunted Druss. Eskodas laughed. 'You really should hear
it, Druss. He has you descending into Hell to rescue the soul of a princess.' Druss shook his head, but a brief smile
showed through the black beard and Sieben was heartened. In the month since
Druss had killed Cajivak the axeman had said little. For the first two weeks
they had rested at Lania, then they had journeyed across the mountains, heading
east. Now, two days from Resha, they were camped on a wooded hillside above a
small village. Druss had regained much of his lost weight, and his shoulders
almost filled the silver-embossed jerkin he had removed from Cajivak's body. Eskodas placed the spitted rabbits across
the fire and sat back, wiping grease and blood from his fingers. 'A man can
starve to death eating rabbit,' he observed. 'Not a lot of goodness there. We
should have gone down to the village.' 'I like being outside,' said Druss. 'Had I known, I would have come sooner,'
said Sieben softly and Druss nodded. 'I know that, poet. But it is in the past
now. All that matters is that I find Rowena. She came to me in a dream while I
was in that dungeon; she gave me strength. I'll find her.' He sighed. 'Some
day.' 'The war is almost over,' said Eskodas.
'Once it is won, I think you'll find her. Gorben will be able to send riders to
every city, village and town. Whoever owns her will know that the Emperor wants
her returned.' 'That's true,' said Druss, brightening,
'and he did promise to help. I feel better already. The stars are bright, the
night is cool. Ah, but it's good to be alive! All right, poet, tell me how I
rescued the princess from Hell. And put in a dragon or two!' 'No,' said Sieben, with a laugh, 'you are
now in altogether too good a mood. It is only amusing when your face is dark as
thunder and your knuckles are clenched white.' 'There is truth in that,' muttered Druss.
'I think you only invent these tales to annoy me.' Eskodas lifted the spit and turned the
roasting meat. 'I rather liked the tale, Druss. And it had the ring of truth.
If the Chaos Spirit did drag your soul into Hell, I'm sure you'd twist his tail
for him.' Conversation ceased as they heard movement
from the woods. Sieben drew one of his knives; Eskodas took up his bow and
notched a shaft to the string; Druss merely sat silently, waiting. A man
appeared. He was wearing long flowing robes of dusty grey, though they shone
like silver in the bright moonlight. 'I was waiting for you in the village,'
said the priest of Pashtar Sen, sitting down alongside the axeman. 'I prefer it here,' said Druss, his voice
cold and unwelcoming. 'I am sorry, my son, for your suffering,
and I feel a weight of shame for asking you to take up the burden of the axe.
But Cajivak was laying waste to the countryside, and his power would have
grown. What you did . . .' 'I did what I did,' snarled Druss. 'Now
live up to your side of the bargain.' 'Rowena is in Resha. She . . . lives . . .
with a soldier named Michanek. He is a Naashanite general, and the Emperor's
champion.' 'Lives with?' The priest hesitated. 'She is married to
him,' he said swiftly. Druss's eyes narrowed. 'That is a lie. They
might force her to do many things, but she would never marry another man.' 'Let me tell this in my own way,' pleaded
the priest. 'As you know I searched long and hard for her, but there was
nothing. It was as if she had ceased to exist. When I did find her it was by
chance - I saw her in Resha just before the siege and I touched her mind. She
had no memory of the lands of the Drenai, none whatever. I followed her home
and saw Michanek greet her. Then I entered his mind. He had a friend, a mystic,
and he employed him to take away Rowena's Talent as a seeress. In doing this
they also robbed her of her memories. Michanek is now all she has ever known.' 'They tricked her with sorcery. By the
gods, I'll make them pay for that! Resha, eh?' Reaching out Druss curled his
hand around the haft of the axe, drawing the weapon to him. 'No, you still don't understand,' said the
priest. 'Michanek is a fine man. What he . . .' 'Enough!' thundered Druss. 'Because of you
I have spent more than a year in a hole in the ground, with only rats for
company. Now get out of my sight - and never, ever cross my path again.' The priest slowly rose.and backed away from
the axeman. He seemed about to speak, but Druss turned his pale eyes upon the
man and the priest stumbled away into the darkness. Sieben and Eskodas said nothing. * High in the cliffs, far to the east, the
Naashanite Emperor sat, his woollen cloak wrapped tightly around him. He was
fifty-four years of age and looked seventy, his hair white and wispy, his eyes
sunken. Beside him sat his staff officer, Anindais; he was unshaven, and the
pain of defeat was etched into his face. Behind them, down the long pass, the
rearguard had halted the advancing Ventrians. They were safe . . . for the
moment. Nazhreen Connitopa, Lord of the Eyries,
Prince of the Highlands, Emperor of Naashan, tasted bile in his mouth and his
heart was sick with frustration. He had planned the invasion of Ventria for
almost eleven years, and the Empire had been his for the taking. Gorben was
beaten - everyone knew it, from the lowliest peasant to the highest Satraps in
the land. Everyone, that is, except Gorben. Nazhreen silently cursed the gods for
snatching away his prize. The only reason he was still alive was because
Michanek was holding Resha and tying down two Ventrian armies. Nazhreen rubbed
at his face and saw, in the firelight, that his hands were grubby, the paint on
his nails cracked and peeling. 'We must kill Gorben,' said Anindais
suddenly, his voice harsh and cold as the winds that hissed through the peaks. Nazhreen gazed sullenly at his cousin. 'And
how do we do that?' he countered. 'His armies have vanquished ours. His
Immortals are even now harrying our rearguard.' 'We should do now what I urged two years
ago, cousin. Use the Darklight. Send for the Old Woman.' 'No! I will not use sorcery.' 'Ah, you have so many other choices then,
cousin?' The tone was derisive, contempt dripping from every word. Nazhreen
swallowed hard. Anindais was a dangerous man, and Nazhreen's position as a
losing Emperor left him exposed. 'Sorcery has a way of rebounding on those
who use it,' he said softly. 'When you summon demons they require payment in
blood.' Anindais leaned forward, his pale eyes
glittering in the firelight. 'Once Resha falls, you can expect Gorben to march
into Naashan. Then there'll be blood aplenty. Who will defend you, Nazhreen?
Our troops have been cut to pieces, and the best of our men are trapped in
Resha and will be butchered. Our only hope is for Gorben to die; then the
Ventrians can fight amongst themselves to choose a successor and that will give
us time to rebuild, to negotiate. Who else can guarantee his death? The Old
Woman has never failed, they say.' 'They say,' mocked
the Emperor. 'Have you used her yourself then? Is that why your brother died in
so timely a fashion?' As soon as the words were spoken he regretted them, for
Anindais was not a man to offend, not even in the best of times. And these were
certainly not the best of times. Nazhreen was relieved to see his cousin
smile broadly, as Anindais leaned in and placed his arm around the Emperor's
shoulder. 'Ah, cousin, you came so close to victory. It was a brave gamble and
I honour you for it. But times change, needs change.' Nazhreen was about to answer when he saw
the firelight glint from the dagger blade. There was no time to struggle or to
scream, and the blade plunged in between his ribs, cutting through his heart. There was no pain, only release as he
slumped sideways, his head resting on Anindais' shoulder. The last feeling he
experienced was of Anindais stroking his hair. It was soothing . . . Anindais pushed the body from him and
stood. A figure shuffled from the shadows, an old woman in a wolfskin cloak.
Kneeling by the body, she dipped her skeletal fingers into the blood and licked
them. 'Ah, the blood of kings,' she said. 'Sweeter than wine.' 'Is that enough of a sacrifice?' Anindais
asked. 'No - but it will suffice as a beginning,'
she said. She shivered. 'It is cold here. Not like Mashrapur. I think I shall
return there when this is over. I miss my house.' 'How will you kill him?' asked Anindais. She glanced up at the general. 'We shall
make it poetic. He is a Ventrian nobleman, and the sign of his house is the
Bear. I shall send Kalith.' Anindais licked his dry lips. 'Kalith is
just a dark legend, surely?' 'If you want to see him for yourself I can
arrange it,' hissed the Old Woman. Anindais fell back. 'No, I believe you.' 'I like you, Anindais,' she said softly.
'You do not have a single redeeming virtue - that is rare. So I will give you a
gift, and charge nothing for it. Stay by me and you will see the Kalith kill
the Ventrian.' She stood and walked to the cliff-face. 'Come,' she called and
Anindais followed. The Old Woman gestured at the grey rock and the wall became
smoke. Taking the general's hand, she led him through. A long dark tunnel beckoned and Anindais
shrank back. 'Not a single redeeming feature,' she repeated, 'not even courage.
Stay by me, general, and no harm will befall you.' The walk was not long, but to Anindais it
stretched on for an eternity. He knew they were passing through a world that
was not his own, and in the distance he could hear screams and cries that were
not human. Great bats flew in a sky of dark ash, and not a living plant could
be seen. The Old Woman followed a slender path, and took him across a narrow
bridge that spanned an awesome chasm. At last she came to a fork in the path,
and moved to the left towards a small cave. A three-headed dog guarded the
entrance, but it backed away from her and they passed through. Within was a
circular room stacked with tomes and scrolls. Two skeletons were hanging from
hooks in the ceiling, their joints bound with golden wire. A cadaver lay across
a long table, its chest and belly cut open, the heart lying beside the body
like a grey stone about the size of a human fist. The Old Woman lifted the heart and showed
it to Anindais. 'Here it is,' she said, 'the secret of life. Four chambers and
a number of valves, arteries and veins. Just a pump. No emotions, no secret
storehouse for the soul.' She seemed disappointed. Anindais said nothing.
'Blood,' she went on, 'is pumped into the lungs to pick up oxygen, then
distributed through the atria and the ventricles. Just a pump. Now, where were
we? Ah yes, the Kalith.' She sniffed loudly and threw the heart back
towards the table; it hit the cadaver, then fell to the dusty floor. Swiftly
she rummaged through the books on a high shelf, pulling one clear and flicking
through the yellowed pages. Then she sat at a second desk and laid the book on
the table. The left-hand page bore a neat script, the letters tiny. Anindais
could not read, but he could see the picture painted on the right-hand page. It
showed a huge bear, with claws of steel, its eyes of fire, its fangs dripping
venom. 'It is a creature of earth and fire,' said
the Old Woman, 'and it will take great energy to summon it. That is why I need
your assistance.' 'I know no sorcery,' said Anindais. 'You need to know none,' she snapped. 'I
will say the words, you will repeat them. Follow me.' She led him further back into the cave, to
an altar stone surrounded by gold wire fastened to a series of stalagmites. The
stone sat at the centre of a circle of gold, and she bade Anindais step over
the wires and approach the altar, upon which was a silver bowl full of water. 'Look into the water,' she said, 'and
repeat the words I speak.' 'Why do you stay outside the wire?' he
asked. 'There is a seat here and my old legs are
tired,' she told him. 'Now let us begin.' Chapter FiveOliquar was the first of the Immortals to
see Druss striding down the hill. The soldier was sitting on an upturned barrel
darning the heel of a sock when the axeman appeared. Laying the worn garment
aside, Oliquar stood and called out Druss's name. Several of the soldiers
sitting nearby looked up as Oliquar ran to meet him, throwing his brawny arms
around Druss's neck. Hundreds of other warriors gathered round,
craning to see the Emperor's champion, the famed axeman who fought like ten
tigers. Druss grinned at his old comrade. 'There are more grey hairs in that
beard than I remember,' he said. Oliquar laughed. 'I earned every one. By
the Holy Hands, it is good to see you, friend!' 'Life has been dull without me?' 'Not exactly,' answered Oliquar, gesturing
towards the walls of Resha. 'They fight well, these Naashanites. And they have
a champion too: Michanek, a great warrior.' The smile left Druss's face. 'We'll see how
great he is,' he promised. Oliquar turned to Sieben and Eskodas. 'We
hear that you did not need to rescue our friend. It is said he slew the great
killer Cajivak, and half the men of his fortress. Is it true?' 'Wait until you hear the song,' Sieben
advised. 'Aye, there are dragons in it,' put in
Eskodas. Oliquar led the trio through the silent
ranks of warriors to a tent set up near the river's edge. Producing a jug of
wine and several clay goblets, he sat down and looked at his friend. 'You are a
little thinner,' he said, 'and your eyes are tired.' 'Pour me a drink and you'll see them shine
again. Why the black cloaks and helms?' 'We are the new Immortals, Druss.' 'You don't look immortal, judging by that,'
said Druss, pointing to the bloodstained bandage on Oliquar's right bicep. 'It is a title - a great title. For two
centuries the Immortals were the Emperor's hand-picked honour guard. The finest
soldiers, Druss: the elite. But twenty or so years ago the Immortal general,
Vuspash, led a revolt, and the regiment was disbanded. Now the Emperor has
re-formed them - us! It is a wondrous honour to be an Immortal.' He leaned
forward and winked. 'And the pay is better - double, in fact!' Filling the goblets, he passed one to each
of the newcomers. Druss drained his in a single swallow and Oliquar refilled
it. 'And how goes the siege?' asked the axeman. Oliquar shrugged. 'This Michanek holds them
together. He is a lion, Druss, tireless and deadly. He fought Bodasen in single
combat. We thought the war would be over. The Emperor offered two hundred
wagons of food, for there is starvation in the city. The wager was that if
Bodasen lost, the food would be delivered, but if he won then the city gates
would be opened and the Naashanites allowed to march free.' 'He killed Bodasen?' put in Eskodas. 'He
was a great swordsman.' 'He didn't kill him; he put him down with a
chest wound, then stepped back. The first fifty wagons were delivered an hour
ago and the rest go in tonight. It will leave us on short rations for a while.' 'Why didn't he strike the killing blow?'
asked Sieben. 'Gorben could have refused to send the food. Duels are supposed
to be to the death, aren't they?' 'Aye, they are. But this Michanek, as I
said, is special.' 'You sound as if you like the man,' snapped
Druss, finishing the second goblet. 'Gods, Druss, it's hard not to like him. I
keep hoping they'll surrender; I don't relish the thought of slaughtering such
bonny fighters. I mean, the war's over - this is just the last skirmish. What
point is there in more killing and dying?' 'Michanek has my wife,' said Druss, his
voice low and cold. 'He tricked her into marrying him, stole her memory. She
does not know me at all.' 'I find that hard to believe,' said Oliquar. 'Are you calling me a liar?' hissed Druss,
his hand snaking round the haft of his axe. 'And I find this hard to believe,'
said Oliquar. 'What is the matter with you, my friend?' Druss's hand trembled on the haft, and he
snatched it clear and robbed at his eyes. Taking a deep breath, he forced a
smile. 'Ah, Oliquar! I am tired, and the wine has made me stupid. But what I
said was true; it was told to me by a priest of Pashtar Sen. And tomorrow I
will scale those walls, and I will find Michanek. Then we will see how special
he is.' Druss levered himself to his feet and
entered the tent. For a while the three men sat in silence, then Oliquar spoke,
keeping his voice low. 'Michanek's wife is called Pahtai. Some of the
refugees from the city spoke of her. She is a gentle soul, and when plague
struck the city she went to the homes of the sick and dying, comforting them,
bringing them medicines. Michanek adores her, and she him. This is well known.
And I say again, he is not the man to take a woman by trickery.' 'It doesn't matter,' said Eskodas. 'It is
like fate carved into stone. Two men and one woman; there must be blood. Isn't
that right, poet?' 'Sadly you are correct,' agreed Sieben.
'But I can't help wondering how she will feel when Druss marches in to her, drenched
in the blood of the man she loves. What then?' Lying on a blanket within the tent, Druss
heard every word. They cut his soul with knives of fire. * Michanek shielded his eyes against the
setting sun and watched the distant figure of the axeman walk down towards the
Ventrian camp, saw the soldiers gather round him, heard them cheer. 'Who is it, do you think?' asked his
cousin, Shurpac. Michanek took a deep breath. 'I'd say it
was the Emperor's champion, Druss.' 'Will you fight him?' 'I don't think Gorben will offer us the
chance,' answered Michanek. 'There's no need - we can't hold for long now.' 'Long enough for Narin to return with
reinforcements,' put in Shurpac, but Michanek did not reply. He had sent his
brother out of the city with a written request for aid, though he knew there
would be no help from Naashan; his one purpose had been to save his brother. And yourself. The thought leapt unbidden from deep within him. Tomorrow was the
first anniversary of his marriage, the day Rowena had predicted he would die
with Narin on one side of him, Shurpac on the other. With Narin gone, perhaps
the prophecy could be thwarted. Michanek squeezed shut his tired eyes. It felt
as if sand was lodged under the lids. The mining under the walls had stopped now
and soon, when the winds permitted, the Ventrians would fire the timbers in the
tunnel. He gazed out over the Ventrian camp. At least eleven thousand warriors
were now gathered before Resha, and the defenders numbered only eight hundred.
Glancing to left and right, Michanek saw the Naashanite soldiers sitting
slumped by the battlements. There was little conversation, and much of the food
that had just been carried up from the city was left untouched. Michanek moved to the nearest soldier, a
young man who was sitting with his head resting on his knees. His helm was
beside him; it was split across the crown, dislodging the white horsehair
plume. 'Not hungry, lad?' asked Michanek. The boy looked up. His eyes were dark
brown, his face beardless and feminine. 'Too tired to eat, general,' he said. 'The food will give you strength. Trust
me.' The boy lifted a hunk of salted beef and
stared down at it. 'I'm going to die,' he said, and Michanek saw a tear spill
to his dust-stained cheek. The general laid his hand on the boy's
shoulder. 'Death is merely another journey, lad. But you won't be walking that
road alone - I'll be with you. And who knows what adventures wait?' 'I used to believe that,' said the soldier
sadly, 'but I've seen so much death. I saw my brother die yesterday, his guts
spilling out. His screams were terrible. Are you frightened of dying, sir?' 'Of course. But we are soldiers of the
Emperor. We knew the risks when we first strapped on the breastplate and
greaves. And what is better, lad, to live until we are toothless and mewling,
our muscles like rotted string, or to face down our enemies in the fullness of
our strength? We are all destined to die one day.' 'I don't want to die; I want to get out of
here. I want to marry and father children. I want to watch them grow.' The boy
was openly weeping now and Michanek sat beside him, taking him in his arms and
stroking his hair. 'So do I,' he said, his voice barely above
a whisper. After a while the sobbing ceased and the
boy drew himself up. 'I'm sorry, general. I won't let you down, you know.' 'I knew that anyway. I've watched you, and
you're a brave lad: one of the best. Now eat your ration and get some sleep.' Michanek rose and walked back to Shurpac.
'Let's go home,' he said. 'I'd like to sit in the garden with Pahtai and
watch the stars.' * Druss lay still, his eyes closed, allowing
the buzz of conversation to drift over him. He could not remember feeling so
low - not even when Rowena was taken. On that dreadful day his anger had been
all-consuming, and since then his desire to find her had fuelled his spirit,
giving him a strength of purpose that bound his emotions in chains of steel.
Even in the dungeon he had found a way to fend off despair. But now his stomach
was knotted, his emotions unravelling. She was in love with another man. He formed the words in his mind, and they ground into his heart like
broken glass in a wound. He tried to hate Michanek, but even that
was denied him. Rowena would never love a worthless or an evil man. Druss sat
up and stared down at his hands. He had crossed the ocean to find his love, and
these hands had killed, and killed, and killed in order that Rowena could be
his once more. He closed his eyes. Where should I be? he
asked himself. In the front rank as they storm the walls? On the walls
defending Rowena's city? Or should I just walk away? Walk away. The tent entrance flapped as Sieben ducked
under it. 'How are you faring, old horse?' asked the poet. 'She loves him,' said Druss, his voice
thick, the words choking him. Sieben sat alongside the axeman. He took a
deep breath. 'If her memories were taken, then what she has done is no
betrayal. She does not know you.' 'I understand that. I bear her no ill-will
- how could I? She is the most . . . beautiful . . . I can't explain it, poet.
She doesn't understand hatred, or greed, or envy. Soft but not weak, caring but
not stupid.' He swore and shook his head. 'As I said, I can't explain it.' 'You're doing fine,' said Sieben softly. 'When I'm with her there is no . . . no
fire in my mind. No anger. When I was a child I hated to be laughed at. I was
big and clumsy - I'd knock over pots, trip over my own big feet. But when
people laughed at my clumsiness I wanted to. . . I don't know. . . crush them. But
I was with Rowena one day on the mountainside, and it had been raining. I lost
my footing and fell headlong into a muddy pool. Her laughter was bright and
fresh; I sat up, and I just laughed with her. And it was so good, poet, it was
so good.' 'She's still there, Druss. Just across the
wall.' The axeman nodded. 'I know. What do I do -
scale the wall, kill the man she loves and then march up to her and say,
"Remember me?" I cannot win here.' 'One step at a time, my friend. Resha will
fall. From what I gathered from Oliquar, Michanek will fight to the end, to the
death. You don't have to kill him, his fate is already sealed. And then Rowena
will need someone. I can't advise you, Druss, I have never truly been in love
and I envy you that. But let us see what tomorrow brings, eh?' Druss nodded and took a deep breath.
'Tomorrow,' he whispered. 'Gorben has asked to see you, Druss. Why
not come with me? Bodasen is with him - and there'll be wine and good food.' Druss stood and gathered Snaga to him. The
blades guttered in the light from the brazier burning at the centre of the
tent. 'A man's best friend is said to be a dog,' said Sieben, stepping back as
Druss lifted the axe. The axeman ignored him and stepped out into
the night. * Rowena stood by with a long robe as
Michanek stepped from the bath. Smiling, she brushed two rose petals from his
shoulder, then held the robe open. Michanek slid his arms into the sleeves,
then tied the satin belt and turned towards her. Taking her hand he led her
into the garden. Rowena leaned in towards him and he stopped and took her into
his arms, kissing the top of her head. His body was rich with the smell of rose
oil and she put her arms around him, snuggling in to the soft robe. Tilting
back her head, she looked up into his dark brown eyes. 'I love you,' she said. Cupping her chin he kissed her,
lingeringly. His mouth tasted of the peaches he had eaten while lazing in the
bath. But there was no passion in the kiss and he drew away from her. 'What is wrong?' she asked. He shrugged and
forced a smile. 'Nothing.' 'Why do you say that?' she chided. 'I hate
it when you lie to me.' 'The siege is almost over,' he said,
leading her to a small circular bench beneath a flowering tree. 'When will you surrender?' she asked. He shrugged. 'When I receive orders to do
so.' 'But the battle is unnecessary. The war is
over. If you negotiate with Gorben he will allow us to leave. You can show me
your home in Naashan. You always promised to take me to your estates near the
Lakes; you said the gardens there would dazzle me with their beauty.' 'So they would,' he told her. Slipping his
hands around her waist he stood and lifted her swiftly, lightly kissing her
lips. 'Put me down. You'll tear the stitches -
you know what the surgeon said.' He chuckled. 'Aye, I listened to him. But
the wound is almost healed.' Kissing her twice more, he lowered her to the
ground and they walked on. 'There are matters we must discuss,' he said, but
when she waited for him to continue he merely glanced up at the stars and the silence
grew. 'What matters?' 'You,' he said at last. 'Your life.' Rowena
looked at him, saw the lines of tension on his moonlit face, the tightening of
the muscle in his jaw. 'My life is with you,' she said. 'That's
all I want.' 'Sometimes we want more than we can have.' 'Don't say that!' 'You used to be a seer - a good one.
Kabuchek charged two hundred silver pieces for a single reading from you. You
were never wrong.' 'I know all this, you have told me before.
What difference does it make now?' 'All the difference in the world. You were
born in the lands of the Drenai, you were taken by slavers. But there was a man
. . .' 'I don't want to hear this,' she said,
pulling away from him and walking to the edge of the tiny lake. He did not
follow, but his words did. The man was your husband.' Rowena sat down
by the water's edge, trailing her fingers across the surface, sending ripples
through the moon's reflection. 'The man with the axe,' she said dully. 'You remember?' he asked, walking forward
and sitting beside her. 'No. But I saw him once-at the house of
Kabuchek. And also in a dream, when he lay in a dungeon.' 'Well, he is not in a dungeon now, Pahtai.
He is outside the city. He is Druss the Axeman, Gorben's champion.' 'Why are you telling me this?' she asked
him, turning to face him in the bright moonlight. His white robe shimmered, and he looked
ghostly, almost ethereal. 'Do you think I want to?' he countered. 'I'd sooner
fight a lion with my hands than have this conversation. But I love you, Pahtai.
I have loved you since our first meeting. You were standing with Pudri in
the main corridor of Kabuchek's home, and you told my future.' 'What did I tell you?' He smiled. 'You told me I would wed the
woman I loved. But that is not important now. I think soon you will meet your.
. . first . . . husband.' 'I don't want to.' Her heart was beating
fast and she felt faint. Michanek put his arms around her. 'I don't know much about him, but I do know
you,' he said. 'You are Drenai; your customs are different from ours. You were
not high-born, therefore it is likely you married for love. And think on this:
Druss has followed you across the world for seven years. He must love you
deeply.' 'I don't want to talk about this!' she
said, her voice rising as panic flooded her. She tried to rise, but he held her
close. 'Neither do I,' he whispered, his voice
hoarse. 'I wanted to sit here with you and watch the stars. I wanted to kiss
you, and to make love.' His head dropped, and she saw tears in his eyes. Her panic disappeared and the cold touch of
fear settled on her soul. She looked up-into his face. 'You talk as if you are
going to die.' 'Oh, I will some day,' he said, with a
smile. 'Now I must go. I am meeting Darishan and the other officers to discuss
tomorrow's strategy. They should be in the house now.' 'Don't go!' she pleaded. 'Stay with me a
little while . . . just a little while?' 'I'll always be with you,' he said softly. 'Darishan will die tomorrow. On the walls.
I saw it; it was a vision. He was here today and I saw him die. My Talent is
coming back. Give me your hand! Let me see our future.' 'No!' he said, rising and moving back from
her. 'A man's fate is his own. You read my future once. Once was enough, Pahtai.' 'I predicted your death, didn't I?' she
said, but it was not a question for she knew the answer even before he spoke. 'You told me about my dreams, and you
mentioned my brother, Narin. I don't remember much of it now. We'll talk
later.' 'Why did you mention Druss? You think that
if you die I will just go to him, and take up a life I know nothing of? If you
die, I will have nothing to live for.' Her eyes locked to his. 'And I will not
live,' she said. A figure moved out of the shadows. 'Michi,
why are you keeping us all waiting?' Rowena saw her husband flinch and glanced
up to see Narin striding towards them. 'I sent you away,' said Michanek.. 'What
are you doing here?' 'I made it as far as the hills, but the
Ventrians are everywhere. I came in through the sewers; the guards there
recognised me, thank the gods. What is the matter with you? Are you not pleased
to see me?' Michanek did not answer. Turning to Rowena
he smiled, but she saw the fear in his eyes. 'I'll not be long, my love. We'll
talk again later.' She remained on the seat as the two men
walked away. Closing her eyes she thought of the axeman, picturing the pale
grey eyes and the broad, flat face. But even as she pictured him, another image
came to her: The face of a terrible beast, with talons
of steel and eyes of fire. * Gorben leaned back on his couch and watched
with appreciation the sword jugglers before the huge fire, the five razor-sharp
blades spinning in the air between the two men. It was a display of rare skill
as the jugglers deftly caught the swords, before sending them soaring back
across the open ground. The men were clad in loincloths, their skin shone
red-gold in the firelight. Around them sat more than five hundred Immortals,
enjoying the martial display.' Beyond the dancing flames of the camp-fire
Gorben could see the walls of Resha, and the few defenders there. It was all
but over. Against all the odds he had won. Yet there was no sense of joy in his heart.
The years of battle, the stresses and the fears had taken their toll on the
young Emperor. For every victory he had seen childhood friends cut down:
Nebuchad at Ectanis, Jasua in the mountains above Porchia, Bodasen before the
gates of Resha. He glanced to his right where Bodasen was lying on a raised
bed, his face pale. The surgeons said he would live, and they had managed to
re-inflate his collapsed lung. You are like my Empire, thought Gorben, wounded
almost unto death. How long would it take to rebuild Ventria? Years? Decades? A great roar went up from the watching men
as the sword jugglers completed their performance. The men bowed to the
Emperor. Gorben rose and tossed them a pouch full of gold pieces. There was
great laughter when the first of the jugglers reached out and failed to catch
the pouch. 'You are better with blades than coins,'
said Gorben. 'Money has always slipped through his
fingers, Lord,' said the second man. Gorben returned to his seat and smiled down
at Bodasen. 'How are you feeling, my friend?' 'My strength is returning, Lord.' The voice
was weak, his breathing ragged as Gorben reached out and patted his shoulder.
The heat of the skin and the sharpness of the bone beneath his hand almost made
him recoil. Bodasen's eyes met his. 'Do not concern yourself about me, Lord.
I'll not die on you.' The swordsman's eyes flickered to the left, and he smiled
broadly. 'By the gods, there's a sight to gladden the eyes!' Gorben turned to see Druss and Sieben
walking towards them. The poet dropped to one knee, bowing his head. Druss gave
a perfunctory bow. 'Well met, axeman,' said Gorben, stepping
forward and embracing Druss. Turning, he took Sieben's arm and raised him to
his feet. 'And I have missed your talents, saga-master. Come, join us.' Servants brought two couches for the
Emperor's guests, and golden goblets filled with fine wine. Druss moved to
Bodasen. 'You look as weak as a three-day kitten,' he said. 'Are you going to
live?' 'I'll do my best, axeman.' 'He cost me two hundred wagons of food,'
said Gorben. 'I blame myself for believing him to be unbeatable.' 'How good is this Michanek?' asked Druss. 'Good enough to leave me lying here scarce
able to breathe,' answered Bodasen. 'He's fast, and he's fearless. The best I
ever met. I tell you truly, I wouldn't want to face him again.' Druss turned to Gorben. 'You want me to
take him?' 'No,' said Gorben. "The city will fall
in the next day or two - there is no need for single combat to decide the
issue. The walls are undermined. Tomorrow, if the wind is good, we will fire
them. Then the city will be ours and this ghastly war will be over. Now, tell
me about your adventures. I hear you were held captive?' 'I escaped,' Druss told him, then drained
his goblet. A servant ran forward to refill it. Sieben laughed. 'I will tell you, Lord,' he
said, and launched into a richly embroidered account of Druss's time in the
dungeons of Cajivak. The huge camp-fire was burning low and
several men moved forward to throw logs upon it. Suddenly the ground heaved
beneath one of them, pitching him to the earth. Gorben looked up, and watched
the man struggle to rise. All around the fire the seated men were scrambling
back. 'What is happening?' asked Gorben, rising and striding forward. The
ground lurched beneath him. 'Is it an earthquake?' he heard Sieben ask
Druss. Gorben stood still and gazed down. The
earth was writhing. The camp-fire suddenly flared, sending bright sparks into
the night sky. The heat was intense and Gorben moved back from it, staring into
the flames. Logs exploded out from the blaze and a huge shape appeared within
the fire, a beast with outspread arms. The flames died and Gorben found himself
staring at a colossal bear, more than twelve feet tall. Several soldiers carrying spears ran at the
creature, plunging their weapons into the great belly. The first of the spears
snapped on impact. The beast roared, a deafening sound like captured thunder.
One of the mighty arms swept down, steel talons ripping through the first
soldier, cutting him in half at the waist. Surging from the fading fire, the beast
leapt towards Gorben. * As the creature of fire appeared Sieben,
who was sitting alongside Bodasen, found all sensation of time and reality
slipping away from him. His eyes fastened on the beast, and an image flew from
the halls of his memory, linking what he could see in terrifying life to a
still, small moment three years ago in the main Library at Drenan. Researching
for an epic poem, he had been scanning the ancient leather-bound books in the
archives. The pages were dry and yellow, and much of the ink and paint had
faded from them, but on one page the colours were still vibrant, fierce hues
-glowing gold, savage crimsons, sun-bright yellows. The figure painted there
was colossal, and flames sprouted like blooms from its eyes. Sieben could still
picture the carefully painted letters above the painting . . . The Kalith of Numar Beneath the heading were the words: The Chaos Beast, the Stalker, the Hound
of the Invincible, whose skin no blade of man shall pierce. Where he walks,
death follows. As Sieben recalled the night of the monster
in later days, he would wonder anew at the lack of fear he experienced. He
watched men die horribly, saw a beast from the depths of Hell tear human limbs
asunder, disembowelling warriors, ripping their lives from them. He heard the
ghastly howling and smelt the stench of death on the night breeze. Yet there
was no fear. A dark legend had come to life and he, the
saga-master, was on hand to witness it. Gorben was standing stock-still, rooted to
the spot. A soldier Sieben recognised as Oliquar threw himself at the beast,
slashing at it with a sabre; but the blade clanged against the creature's side,
and the sound that followed was like the dim tolling of a distant bell. A
taloned paw swept down, and Oliquar's face and head disappeared in a bloody
spray of shattered bone. Several archers shot arrows, but these either
shattered on impact or ricocheted away. The creature advanced on Gorben. Sieben saw the Emperor flinch, then hurl
himself to his right, rolling to his feet smoothly. The enormous beast turned
ponderously, the glowing coals of its eyes seeking out Gorben. Loyal soldiers, showing incredible bravery,
threw themselves into the path of the beast, stabbing at it ineffectually. Each
time the talons slashed down, and blood sprayed across the camp-site. Within a
few heartbeats there were at least twenty dead or maimed soldiers. The Chaos
Beast's talons ripped into a soldier's chest, lifting him from his feet and
hurling him across the dying fire. Sieben heard the man's ribs snap, and saw
his entrails spill out like a tattered banner as the corpse sailed through the
air. Druss, axe in his hand, strode out towards
the creature. Soldiers were falling back before it, but still they formed a
wall between the beast and the Emperor. Looking tiny and insubstantial against
the colossal frame of the Kalith, Druss stepped into its path. The moon was
bright in the night sky, shining from his shoulder-guards and glinting on
Snaga's terrible blades. The Chaos Beast paused and seemed to stare
down at the tiny man before it. Sieben's mouth was dry, and he could feel the
hammering of his own heart. And the Kalith spoke, voice deep and
rumbling, words slurred by its foot-long tongue. 'Step aside, brother,' it said. 'I have not
come for you.' The axe began to glow as red as blood.
Druss stood his ground, with Snaga held in both hands. 'Step aside,' repeated the Kalith, 'or I
must kill you!' 'In your dreams,' said Druss. The creature lunged forward, one great paw
sweeping in towards the axeman. Druss dropped to one knee and swung the
blood-red axe, the blade striking the beast's wrist and cleaving through. As
the taloned paw fell to the ground beside the axeman, the Kalith reeled back.
No blood issued from the wound, but an oily smoke pumped out into the air,
billowing and growing. Fire blazed from the creature's mouth and it lunged
again at the mortal before it. But instead of jumping back Druss leapt in to
meet it, swinging Snaga high over his head and bringing the weapon down in a
lethal arc that clove into the Kalith's chest, smashing the sternum and ripping
a wound from throat to groin. Flames exploded from the beast, engulfing
the axeman. Druss staggered - and the Kalith fell back, and as the huge form
struck the ground even Sieben, some thirty feet away, felt the tremor of the earth.
A breeze blew up, the smoke disappearing. And there was no sign of the Kalith . . . Sieben ran to where Druss stood. The
axeman's eyebrows and beard were singed, but he bore no marks of burns. 'By the
gods, Druss,' Sieben shouted, slapping his friend's back. 'Now that'll make a
song to bring us both fame and riches!' 'It killed Oliquar,' said Druss, shrugging
off Sieben's embrace and letting fall the axe. Gorben moved alongside him. 'That was nobly
done, my friend. I'll not forget - I owe you my life.' Bending his body, he
lifted the axe. It was now black and silver once more. 'This is an enchanted
weapon,' whispered the Emperor. 'I will give you twenty thousand in gold for
it.' 'It is not for selling, my Lord,' said
Druss. 'Ah, Druss, and I thought you liked me.' 'I do, laddie. That's why I'll not sell it
to you.' * A cold wind swirled around the cave.
Anindais felt the chill and swung from the altar, looking back to see the Old
Woman rise from her seat outside the golden circle. 'What is happening?' he
asked. "The axeman has killed the beast. Can we send another?' 'No,' she told him. 'But he did not kill
it, he merely sent it back to the Pit.' 'Well, what now?' 'Now we pay for the services of the
Kalith.' 'You said the payment would be the blood of
Gorben.' 'Gorben did not die.' 'Then I do not understand you. And why is
it so cold?' A shadow fell across the Naashanite, who
swung round to see a huge shape rearing above him. Talons flashed down, slicing
into his chest. 'Not even intelligence,' repeated the Old
Woman, turning her back on his screams. Returning to her apartments, she sat
back in an old wicker chair. 'Ah, Druss,' she whispered, 'perhaps I should have
let you die back in Mashrapur.' Chapter SixRowena opened her eyes and saw Michanek
sitting at her bedside. He was wearing his ceremonial armour of bronze and
gold, the helm with the red crest, and the enamelled cheek-guards, the moulded
breastplate covered in sigils and motifs. 'You look very handsome,' she said
sleepily. 'And you are very beautiful.' Rubbing her eyes, she sat up. 'Why are you
wearing that today? It is not as strong as your old breastplate of iron.' 'It will lift morale among the men.' Taking
her hand he kissed her palm, then rose and moved towards the door. At the
doorway he paused and spoke without looking back. 'I have left something for
you - in my study. It is wrapped in velvet.' And then he was gone. Within minutes Pudri appeared, bearing a
tray which he laid down beside her. There were three honey-cakes and a goblet
of apple-juice. 'The Lord looks very magnificent today,' said the little man,
and Rowena saw that his expression was sorrowful. 'What is wrong, Pudri?' 'I don't like battles,' he told her. 'So much
blood and pain. But it is even worse when the reasons for battle have long been
overtaken by events. Men will die today for no reason. Their lives will be
snuffed out like midnight candles. And for why? And will it end here? No. When
Gorben is strong enough he will lead a vengeance invasion against the people of
Naashan. Futile and stupid!' He shrugged. 'Maybe it is because I am a eunuch
that I do not understand such matters.' 'You understand them very well,' she said.
'Tell me, was I a good seeress?' 'Ah, you must not ask me this, my lady.
That was yesterday, and it has flown away into the past.' 'Did the Lord Michanek ask you to withhold
my past from me?' He nodded glumly. 'It was for love that he
asked this of me. Your Talent almost killed you and he did not wish for you to
suffer again. Anyway, your bath is prepared. It is hot and steaming, and I
managed to find some rose oil for the water.' An hour later Rowena was walking through
the garden when she saw that the window to Michanek's study was open. This was
unusual, for there were many papers here and the summer breezes would often
scatter them around the room. Moving inside, she opened the door and pulled
shut the small window. Then she saw the package on the oak desk. It was small
and, as Michanek had said, was wrapped in purple velvet. Slowly she unwrapped the velvet to find a
small, unadorned wooden box with a hinged lid, which she opened. Within lay a
brooch which was simply, even crudely, made of soft copper strands surrounding
a moonstone. Her mouth was suddenly dry. A part of her mind told her the brooch
was new to her, but a tiny warning bell was ringing in the deep recesses of her
soul. This is mine! Her right hand dropped slowly towards the
brooch, then stopped, the fingers hovering just above the moonstone. Rowena
drew back, then sat down. She heard Pudri enter the room. 'You were wearing that when I first saw
you,' he said gently. She nodded, but did not answer. The little Ventrian
approached and handed her a letter, sealed with red wax. 'The Lord asked me to
give you this when you had seen his . . . gift.' Rowena broke the seal and opened the
letter. It was written in Michanek's bold, clear script. Greetings, Beloved. I am skilled with the sword, and yet, at
this moment, I would sell my soul to be as skilful with words. A long time ago,
as you lay dying, I paid three sorcerers to seal your Talents deep within you.
In doing so they closed also the doorways of memory. The brooch was, they told me, made for
you as a gift of love. It is the key to your past, and a gift for your future.
Of all the pain I have known, there is no suffering greater than the knowledge
that your future will be without me. Yet I have loved you, and would not change
a single day. And if, by some miracle, I was allowed to return to the past and
court you once more, I would do so in the same way, in ful knowledge of the
same outcome. You are the light in my life and the
love of my heart. Farewell, Pahtai. May your paths be made
easy, and your soul know many joys. The letter fell from her hands, floating to
the floor. Pudri stepped forward swiftly and placed his slender arm around her
shoulders. 'Take the brooch, my lady!' She shook her head. 'He's going to die.' 'Yes,' admitted the Ventrian. 'But he bade
me urge you to take the brooch. It was his great wish. Do not deny him!' 'I'll take the brooch,' she said solemnly,
'but when he dies, I shall die with him.' * Druss sat in the near deserted camp and watched
the attack on the walls. From this distance it seemed that the attackers were
insects, swarming up tiny ladders. He watched bodies topple and fall, heard the
sound of battle horns and the occasional high-pitched scream that drifted on
the shifting breeze. Sieben was beside him. 'The first time I've ever seen you miss a
fight, Druss. Are you mellowing in your old age?' Druss did not answer. His pale eyes watched
the fighting and saw the smoke seeping out from under the wall. The timber and
brushwood in the tunnels were burning now, and soon the foundations of the wall
would disappear. As the smoke grew thicker the attackers fell back and waited. Time passed slowly now in the great silence
that descended over the plain. The smoke thickened, then faded. Nothing
happened. Druss gathered his axe and stood. Sieben
rose with him. 'It didn't work,' said the poet. 'Give it time,' grunted Druss and he
marched forward, Sieben followed until they were within thirty yards of the
wall. Gorben was waiting here with his officers around him. No one spoke. A jagged line, black as a spider's leg,
appeared on the wall, followed by a high screeching sound. The crack widened
and a huge block of masonry dislodged itself from a nearby tower, thundering
down to crash on the rocks before the wall. Druss could see defenders
scrambling back. A second crack appeared . . . then a third. A huge section of
wall crumbled and a high tower pitched to the right, smashing down on the
ruined wall and sending up an immense cloud of dust. Gorben covered his mouth
with his cloak, and waited until the dust settled. Where moments before there had been a wall
of stone, there were now only jagged ruins like the broken teeth of a giant. The battle horns sounded. The black line of
the Immortals surged forward. Gorben turned to Druss. 'Will you join them
in the slaughter?' Druss shook his head. 'I have no stomach
for slaughter,' he said. * The courtyard was littered with corpses and
pools of blood. Michanek glanced to his right where his brother Narin was lying
on his back with a lance jutting from his chest, his sightless eyes staring up
at the crimson-stained sky. Almost sunset, thought Michanek. Blood ran
from a wound in his temple and he could feel it trickling down his neck. His
back hurt, and when he moved he could feel the arrow that was lodged above his
left shoulder-blade gouging into muscle and flesh. It made holding the heavy
shield impossible, and Michanek had long since abandoned it. The hilt of his
sword was slippery with blood. A man groaned to his left. It was his cousin
Shurpac; he had a terrible wound in his belly, and was attempting to stop his
entrails from gushing forth. Michanek transferred his gaze to the enemy
soldiers surrounding him. They had fallen back now, and were standing in a grim
circle. Michanek turned slowly. He was the last of the Naashanites still
standing. Glaring at the Immortals, he challenged them. 'What's the matter with
you? Frightened of Naashanite steel?' They did not move. Michanek staggered and
almost fell, but then righted himself. All pain was fading now. It had been quite a day. The undermined
wall had collapsed, killing a score of his men, but the rest had regrouped well
and Michanek was proud of them. Not one had suggested surrender. They had
fallen back to the second line of defence and met the Ventrians with arrows,
spears and even stones. But there were too many, and it had been impossible to
hold a line. Michanek had led the last fifty warriors
towards the inner Keep, but they were cut off and forced down a side road that
led to the courtyard of Kabuchek's old house. What were they waiting for? The answer came to him instantly: They
are waiting for you to die. He saw a movement at the edge of the
circle, the men moving aside as Gorben appeared - dressed now in a robe of
gold, a seven-spiked crown upon his head. He looked every inch the Emperor.
Beside him was the axeman, the husband of Pahtai. 'Ready for another duel . . . my Lord?'
called Michanek. A racking cough burst from his lungs, spraying blood into the
air. 'Put up your sword, man. It is over!' said
Gorben. 'Do I take it you are surrendering?'
Michanek asked. 'If not, then let me fight your champion!' Gorben turned to the axeman, who nodded and
moved forward. Michanek steadied himself, but his mind was wandering. He
remembered a day with Pahtai, by a waterfall. She had made a crown of
white water-lilies which she placed on his brow. The flowers were wet and cool;
he could feel them now . . . No. Fight! Win! He looked up. The axeman seemed colossal
now, towering above him, and Michanek realised he had fallen to his knees.
'No,' he said, the words slurring, 'I'll not die on my knees.' Leaning forward
he tried to push himself upright, but fell again. Two strong hands took hold of
his shoulders, drawing him upright, and he looked into the pale eyes of Druss
the Axeman. 'Knew. . .you would. . .come,' he said.
Druss half carried the dying warrior to a marble bench at the wall of the
courtyard, laying him gently to the cool stone. An Immortal removed his own
cloak and rolled it into a pillow for the Naashanite general. Michanek gazed up at the darkening sky,
then turned his head. Druss was kneeling alongside him, and beyond the axeman
the Immortals waited. At an order from Gorben they drew their swords and held
them high, saluting their enemy. 'Druss! Druss!' 'I am here.' Treat. . . her . . . gently.' Michanek did not hear his answer. He was sitting on the grass by a waterfall,
the cool petals of a water-lily crown against his skin. * There was no looting in Resha, nor any
organised slaughter amongst the population. The Immortals patrolled the city,
having first marched through to the centre past cheering crowds who were waving
banners and hurling flower petals beneath the feet of the soldiers. In the
first hours there were isolated outbursts of violence, as angry citizens
gathered in mobs to hunt down Ventrians accused of collaborating with the
Naashanite conquerors. Gorben ordered the mobs dispersed,
promising judicial inquiries at a later date to identify those who could be
accused of treason. The bodies of the slain were buried in two mass graves
beyond the city walls, and the Emperor ordered a monument built above the
Ventrian fallen, a huge stone Kon with the names of the dead carved into the
base. Above the Naashanite grave there was to be no stone. Michanek, however,
was laid to rest in the Hall of the Fallen, below the Great Palace on the Hill
that stood like a crown at the centre of Resha. Food was brought in to feed the populace,
and builders began work, removing the dams that had starved the city of water,
rebuilding the walls and repairing those houses and shops damaged by the huge
stones of the ballistae that had hurtled over the walls during the past three
months. Druss had no interest in the affairs of the
city. Day by day he sat at Rowena's bedside, holding to her cold, pale hand. After Michanek had died Druss had sought
out his house, the directions supplied by a Naashanite soldier who had survived
the last assault. With Sieben and Eskodas he had run through the city streets
until at last he had come to the house on the hill, entering it through a
beautiful garden. There he saw a small man, sitting weeping by an ornamental
lake. Druss seized him by his woollen tunic, hauling him to his feet. 'Where is
she?' he demanded. 'She is dead,' wailed the man, his tears
flowing freely. 'She took poison. There is a priest with the body.' He pointed
to the house, then fell to weeping again. Releasing him, Druss ran in to the
house and up the curved stairs. The first three rooms were empty, but in the
fourth he found the priest of Pashtar Sen sitting by the bedside. 'Gods, no!' said Druss as he saw the still
form of his Rowena, her face grey, her eyes closed. The priest looked up, his
eyes tired. 'Say nothing,' urged the priest, his voice
weak and seemingly far away. 'I have sent for a . . .a friend. And it is taking
all my power to hold her to life.' He closed his eyes. At a loss, Druss walked
to the far side of the bed and gazed down on the woman he had loved for so
long. It was seven years since last he had laid eyes on her, and her beauty
tore at his heart with talons of steel. Swallowing hard, he sat at the bedside.
The priest was holding to her hand; sweat was flowing down his face, making
grey streaks on his cheeks, and he seemed mortally weary. When Sieben and
Eskodas entered the room Druss waved them to silence, and they sat and waited. It was almost an hour before another man
entered: a bald, portly man with a round red face and comically protruding
ears, He was dressed in a long white tunic, and carried a large leather bag
slung from his shoulder by a long gold-embroidered strap. Without a word to the
three men he moved to the bedside, placing his fingers against Rowena's neck. The priest of Pashtar Sen opened his eyes.
'She has taken yasroot, Shalitar,' he said. The bald man nodded. 'How long ago?' 'Three hours, though I have prevented most
of it from spreading through the blood. But a minute part has reached the
lymphatic system.' Shalitar clicked his teeth, then delved
into the leather bag. 'One of you fetch water,' he ordered. Eskodas stood and
left the room, returning moments later with a silver jug. Shalitar told him to
stand close to the head of the bed, then from the bag he produced a small
packet of powder which he tipped into the jug. It foamed briefly, then settled.
Delving into the bag again, he pulled clear a long grey tube and a funnel.
Reaching down, he opened Rowena's mouth. 'What are you doing?' stormed Druss,
grabbing the man's hand. The surgeon was unperturbed. 'We must get
the potion into her stomach. As you can see, she is in no condition to drink,
therefore I intend to insert this tube in her throat and pour the potion in
through the funnel. It is a delicate business, for I would not want to flood
her lungs. It would be hard for me to do it correctly with a broken hand.' Druss released him, and watched in silent
anguish as the tube was eased into her throat. Shalitar held the funnel in
place and ordered Eskodas to pour. When half of the contents of the jug had
vanished, Shalitar nipped the tube between thumb and forefinger and withdrew
it. Kneeling by the bed, he pressed his ear to Rowena's breast. 'The heartbeat is very slow,' he said, 'and
weak. A year ago I treated her for plague; she almost died then, but the
illness left its mark. The heart is not strong.' He turned to the men. 'Leave
me now, for I must keep her circulation strong, and that will involve rubbing
oil into her legs, arms and back.' 'I'll not leave,' said Druss. 'Sir, this lady is the widow of the
Lord Michanek. She is well loved here - despite being wed to a Naashanite. It
is not fitting for men to observe her naked - and any man who causes her shame
will not survive the day.' 'I am her husband,' hissed Druss. The
others can go. I stay.' Shalitar rubbed his chin, but looked ready
to argue no further. The priest of Pashtar Sen touched the surgeon's arm. 'It
is a long story, my friend, but he speaks truly. Now do your best.' 'My best may not be good enough,' muttered
Shalitar. * Three days passed. Druss ate little and
slept by the bedside. There was no change in Rowena's condition, and Shalitar
grew ever more despondent. The priest of Pashtar Sen returned on the morning of
the fourth day. 'The poison is gone from her body,' said
Shalitar, 'yet she does not wake.' The priest nodded sagely. 'When first I
came, as she was sinking into the coma, I touched her spirit. It was fleeing
from life; she had no will to live.' 'Why?' asked Druss. 'Why would she want to
die?' The man shrugged. 'She is a gentle soul.
She first loved you, back in your own lands, and carried that love within as
something pure in a tarnished world. Knowing you were coming for her, she was
ready to wait. Her Talents grew astonishingly swiftly and they overwhelmed her.
Shalitar, and some others, saved her life by closing the pathways of that
Talent, but in doing so they also took her memory. So here she woke, in the
house of Michanek. He was a good man, Druss, and he loved her - as much as you
love her. He nursed her to health, and he won her heart. But he did not tell
her his greatest secret - that she had, as a seeress, predicted his death . . .
one year to the day after he was wed. For several years they lived together,
and she succumbed to the plague. During her illness and, as I have said, with
no knowledge of her life as a seeress, she asked Michanek why he had never
married her. In his fear at her condition, he believed that a marriage would
save her. Perhaps he was right. Now we come to the taking of Resha. Michanek
left her a gift - this gift,' he said, passing the brooch to Druss. Druss took the delicate brooch in his huge
hand and closed his fingers around it. 'I made this,' he said. 'It seems like a
lifetime ago.' 'This was the key which Michanek knew would
unlock her memory. He thought, as I fear men will, that a return of memory
would help her assuage her grief at his passing. He believed that if she
remembered you, and that if you still loved her, she would have a safe future.
His reasoning was flawed, for when she touched the brooch what struck her most
was a terrible guilt. She had asked Michanek to marry her, thus assuring
- as she saw it - his death. She had seen you, Druss, at the house of
Kabuchek, and had run away, frightened to find out her past, terrified it would
destroy her new-found happiness. In that one moment she saw herself as a betrayer,
and as a harlot and, I fear, as a killer.' 'None of it was her fault,' said Druss.
'How could she think it was?' The priest smiled, but it was Shalitar who
spoke. 'Any death produces guilt, Druss. A son dies of plague, and the mother
will berate herself for not taking the child away to somewhere safe before the
disease struck. A man falls to his death, and his wife will think, "If
only I had asked him to stay home today." It is the nature of good people
to draw burdens to themselves. All tragedy could be avoided, if only we knew
it; therefore when it strikes we blame ourselves. But for Rowena, the weight of
guilt was overpowering.' 'What can I do?' the axeman asked. 'Nothing. We must just hope she returns.' The priest of Pashtar Sen seemed about to
speak, but instead stood and walked to the window. Druss saw the change in the
man. 'Speak,' he said. 'What were you about to say?' 'It doesn't matter,' he said softly. 'Let me be the judge of that, if it
concerns Rowena.' The priest sat down and rubbed his tired
eyes. 'She hovers,' he said at last, 'between death and life, her spirit
wandering in the Valley of the Dead. Perhaps, if we could find a sorcerer, we
could send his spirit after her to bring her home.' He spread his hands. 'But I
do not know where to find such a man - or woman. And I don't think we have the
time to search.' 'What about your Talent?' asked Druss. 'You
seem to know of this place.' The man's eyes swung away from Druss's
gaze. 'I. . . I do have the Talent, but not the courage. It is a terrible
place.' He forced a smile. 'I am a coward, Druss. I would die there. It is no
place for men of little spirit.' 'Then send me. I'll find her.' 'You would have no chance. We are talking
of a . . .a realm of dark magic and demons. You would be defenceless against
them, Druss; they would overwhelm you.' 'But you could send me there?' 'There is no point. It would be madness.' Druss turned to Shalitar. 'What will happen
to her if we do nothing?' 'She has maybe a day . . . perhaps two.
Already she is fading.' 'Then there are no choices, priest,' said
Druss, rising and moving to stand before the man. 'Tell me how I reach this
Valley.' 'You must die,' the priest whispered. * A grey mist swirled, though there was no
discernible breeze, and strange sounds echoed eerily from all around him. The priest was gone now, and Druss was
alone. Alone? Around him shapes moved in the mist,
some huge, some low and slithering. 'Keep to the path,' the priest had said.
'Follow the road through the mist. Under no circumstances allow yourself to be
led from the road.' Druss glanced down. The road was
seamless and grey, as if it had been created from molten stone. It was smooth and
flat and the mist held to it, floating and swaying in cold tendrils that
swirled around his legs and lower body. A woman's voice called to him from the
side of the road. He paused and glanced to his right. A dark-haired woman,
scarce more than a girl, was sitting on a rock with legs apart, her right hand
stroking her thigh. She licked her lips and tossed her head. 'Come here,' she
called. 'Come here!' Druss shook his head. 7 have other business.' She laughed at him. 'Here? You have
other business here?' Her laughter rang out and
she moved closer to him, but he saw that she did not set foot upon the road.
Her eyes were large and golden but there were no pupils, merely black slits in
the gold. When her mouth opened a forked tongue darted between her lips, which
Druss now saw were grey-blue. Her teeth were small and sharp. Ignoring her he walked on. An old man
was sitting in the centre of the road with shoulders hunched. Druss paused.
'Which way, brother?' asked the old man. 'Which way do I go? There are so many
paths.' 'There is only one,' said Druss. 'So many paths,' repeated the other man.
Again Druss moved on, and behind him he heard the woman's voice speaking to the
old man. 'Come here! Come here!' Druss didn't look back, but only moments later
he heard a terrible scream. The road moved ever on through the mist,
level and straight as a spear. There were others on the road, some walking
tall, others shuffling. No one spoke. Druss moved through them silently,
scanning their faces, seeking Rowena. A young woman stumbled from the path,
falling to her knees. Instantly a scaled hand caught at her cloak, dragging her
back. Druss was too far back to help, and he cursed and moved on. Many pathways merged with the road and
Druss found himself travelling with a multitude of silent people, young and
old. Their faces were blank, their expressions preoccupied. Many left the path
and wandered through the mist. It seemed to the axeman that he had
walked for many days. There was no sense of time here, nor any fatigue, nor hunger.
Gazing ahead, he could see vast numbers of souls wending their way through the
mist-enveloped road. Despair touched him. How would he find
her among so many? Ruthlessly he pushed the fear from his mind, concentrating
only on scanning the faces as he moved ever on. Nothing would ever have been
achieved, he thought, if men had allowed themselves to be diverted by the scale
of the problems faced. After a while Druss noted that the road
was rising. He could see further ahead, and the mist was thinning. There were
no more merging pathways now; the road itself was more than a hundred feet
wide. On and on he moved, forcing his way
through the silent throng. Then he saw that the road was beginning to diverge
once more, into scores of pathways leading to arched tunnels, dark and
forbidding. A small man in a robe of coarse brown
wool was moving back through the river of souls. He saw Druss and smiled. 'Keep
moving, my son,' he said, patting Druss's shoulder. 'Wait!' called the axeman as the man
moved past him. Brown Robe swung back, surprised. Stepping to Druss, he
gestured him to the side of the road. 'Let me see your hand, brother,' he
said. 'What?' 'Your hand, your right hand. Show me the
palm!' The little man was insistent. Druss held out his hand and Brown Robe
grasped it, peering intently at the calloused palm. 'But you are not ready to
pass over, brother. Why are you here?' 'I am looking for someone.' 'Ah,' said the man, apparently relieved.
'You are the despairing heart. Many of you try to pass through. Did your loved
one die? Has the world treated you savagely? Whatever the answer, brother, you
must return whence you came. There is nothing for you here - unless you stray
from the path. And then there is only an eternity of suffering. Go back!' 'I cannot. My wife is here. And she is
alive - just like me.' 'If she is alive, brother, then she will
not have passed the portals before you. No living soul can enter. You do not
have the coin.' He held out his own hand. Nestling there was a black shadow,
circular and insubstantial. 'For the Ferryman,' he said, 'and the road to
Paradise.' 'If she could not pass the tunnels, then
where could she be?' asked Druss. 7 don't know, brother. I have never left
the path and I know not what lies beyond, save that it is inhabited by the
souls of the damned. Go to the Fourth Gateway. Ask for Brother Domitori. He is
the Keeper.' Brown Robe smiled, then moved away to be
swallowed up by the multitude. Druss joined the flow and eased his way through
to the Fourth Gateway where another man in a brown, hooded robe stood silently
by the entrance. He was tall and round-shouldered, with sad, solemn eyes. 'Are
you Brother Domitori?' asked Druss. The man nodded, but did not speak. 'I am looking for my wife.' 'Pass on, brother. If her soul lives you
will find her.' 'She had no coin,' said Druss. The man
nodded and pointed to a narrow, winding path that led up and around a low hill. 'There are many such,' said Domitori,
'beyond the hill. There they flicker and fade, and rejoin the road when they
are ready, when their bodies give up the fight, when the heart ceases.' Druss turned away, but Domitori called
out to him. 'Beyond the hill the road is no more. You will be in the Valley of
the Dead. Best you arm yourself.' 'I have no weapons here.' Domitori raised his hand and the flow of
souls ceased to move through the Gateway. He stepped alongside Druss. 'Bronze
and steel have no place here, though you will see what appear to be swords and
lances. This is a place of Spirit, and a man's spirit can be steel or water,
wood or fire. To cross the hill - and return - will require courage, and so
much more. Do you have faith?' 'In what?' The man sighed. 'In the Source? In
yourself? What do you hold most dear?' 'Rowena - my wife.' 'Then holdfast to your love, my friend.
No matter what assails you. What do you fear most?' 'Losing her.' 'What else?' 'I fear nothing.' 'All men fear something. And that is
your weakness. This place of the Damned and the Dead has an uncanny talent for
bringing a man face to face with what he fears. I pray that the Source will
guide you. Go in peace, brother.' Returning to the Gateway he lifted his
hand once more, and the entrance opened, the grim, silent flow of souls
continuing without pause. * 'You gutless whoreson!' stormed Sieben. 'I
should kill you!' The surgeon Shalitar stepped between Sieben
and the priest of Pashtar Sen. 'Be calm,' he urged. The man has admitted to
lacking courage and has no need to apologise for it. Some men are tall, some
short, some brave, others not so brave.' That may be true,' conceded Sieben, 'but
what chance does Druss have in a world of enchantment and sorcery? Tell me
that!' 'I don't know,' Shalitar admitted. 'No, but he does,' said Sieben. 'I have
read of the Void; a great many of my tales are centred there. I have spoken to
Seekers and mystics who have journeyed through the Mist. All agree on one point
- without access to the powers of sorcery a man is finished there. Is that not
true, priest?' The man nodded, but did not look up. He was
sitting beside the wide bed upon which lay the still figures of Druss and
Rowena. The axeman's face was pale, and he did not seem to be breathing. 'What will he face there?' insisted Sieben.
'Come on, man!' 'The horrors of his past,' answered the
priest, his voice barely audible. 'By the gods, priest, I tell you this: If
he dies, you will follow him.' * Druss had reached the brow of the hill
and gazed down into a parched valley. There were trees, black and dead,
silhouetted against the slate-grey earth, as if sketched there with charcoal.
There was no wind, no movement save for the few souls who wandered aimlessly
across the face of the valley. A little way down the hill he saw an old woman
sitting on the ground with head bowed and shoulders hunched. Druss approached
her. 'I am looking for my wife,' he said. 'You are looking for more than that,'
she told him. He squatted down opposite her. 'No, just
my wife. Can you help me?' Her head came up and he found himself
staring into deep-set eyes that glittered with malice. 'What can you give me,
Druss?' 'How is it you know me?' he countered. 'The Axeman, the Silver Slayer, the man
who fought the Chaos Beast. Why should I not know you? Now, what can you give
me?' 'What do you want?' 'Make me a promise.' 'What promise?' 'You will give me your axe.' 'I do not have it here.' 'I know that, boy,' she snapped. 'But in
the world above you will give me your axe.' 'Why do you need it?' 'That is no part of the bargain. But
look around you, Druss. How will you begin to find her in the time that is
left?' 'You can have it,' he said. 'Now, where
is she?' 'You must cross a bridge. You will find
her there. But the bridge is guarded, Druss, by an awesome warrior.' 'Just tell me where it is.' A staff lay beside the old woman and she
used it to lever herself to her feet. 'Come,' she said, and began to walk
towards a low line of hills. As they walked, Druss saw many new souls wandering
down into the valley. 'Why do they come here?' he asked. 'They are weak,' she told him. 'Victims
of despair, of guilt, of longing. Suicides, mostly. As they wander here their
bodies are dying - like Rowena.' 'She is not weak.' 'Of course she is. She is a victim of
love - just as you are. And love is the ultimate downfall of Man. There is no
abiding strength in love, Druss. It erodes the natural strength of man, it
taints the heart of the hunter.' 'I do not believe that.' She laughed, a dry sound like the
rattling of bones.'Yes, you do,'' she said. ''You are not a man of love, Druss.
Or was it love that led you to leap upon the decks of the corsair ship, cutting
and killing? Was it love that sent you over the battlements at Ectanis? Was it
love that carried you through the battles in the sand circles of Mashrapur?' She
halted in her stride and turned to face him.'Was it?' 'Yes. Everything was for Rowena - to
help me find her. I love her.' 'It is not love, Druss; it is perceived
need. You cannot bear what you are without her - a savage, a killer, a brute.
But with her it is a different story. You can leach from her purity, suck it in
like fine wine. And then you can see the beauty in a flower, smell the essence
of life upon the summer breeze. Without her you see yourself as a creature
without worth. And answer me this, axeman: If it was truly love, would you not
wish for her happiness above all else?' 'Aye, I would. And I do!' 'Really? Then when you found that she
was happy, living with a man who loved her, her life rich and secure, what did
you do? Did you try to persuade Gorben to spare Michanek?' 'Where is this bridge?' he asked. 'It is not easy to face, is it?' she
persisted. 'I am no debater, woman. I only know
that I would die for her.' 'Yes, yes. Typical of the male - always
look for the easy solutions, the simple answers.' She walked on, cresting the
hill, and paused, resting on her staff. Druss gazed down into the chasm beyond.
Far, far below a river of fire, at this distance a slender ribbon of flame,
flowed through a black gorge. Across the gorge stretched a narrow bridge of
black rope and grey timber. At the centre stood a warrior in black and silver
with a huge axe in his hands. 'She is on the far side,' said the old
woman. 'But to reach her you must pass the guardian. Do you recognise him?' 'No.' 'You will.' The bridge was secured by thick black
ropes tied to two blocks of stone. The wooden slats that made up the main body
of the structure were, Druss judged, around three feet long and an inch thick.
He stepped out on to the bridge, which immediately began to sway. There were no
guiding ropes attached by which a man could steady himself and, looking down,
Druss felt a sick sense of vertigo. Slowly he walked out over the chasm, his
eyes fixed to the boards.He was half-way to the man in black and silver before
he looked up. Then shock struck him like a blow. The man smiled, bright teeth shining
white against the black and silver beard. 'I am
not you, boy,' he said. 'I am everything you could have been.' Druss stared hard at the man. He
was the very image of Druss himself, except that he was older and his eyes,
cold and pale, seemed to hold many secrets. 'You are Bardan,' said Druss. 'And proud of it. I used my strength,
Druss. I made men shake with fear. I took my pleasures where I wanted them. I
am not like you, strong in body but weak in heart. You take after Bress.' 'I take that as a compliment,' said
Druss. 'For I would never have wanted to be like you - a slayer of babes, an
abuser of women. There is no strength in that.' 'I fought men. No man could accuse
Bardan of cowardice. Shemak's balls, boy, I fought armies!' 'I say you were a coward,' said Druss.
'The worst kind. What strength you had came from that,'
he said, pointing to the axe. 'Without it you were nothing. Without it you are
nothing.' Bardan's face reddened, then grew pale.
'1 don't need this to deal with you, you weak-kneed whoreson. I could take you
with my hands.' 'In your dreams,' mocked Druss. Bardan made as if to lay down the axe,
but then hesitated. 'You can't do it, can you?' taunted Druss. 'The mighty
Bardan! Gods, I spit on you!' Bardan straightened, the axe still in
his right hand. 'Why should I lay aside my only friend? No one else stood by me
all those lonely years. And here - even here he has been my constant aid.' 'Aid?' countered Druss. 'He destroyed
you, just as he destroyed Cajivak and all others who took him to their hearts.
But I don't need to convince you, Grandfather: You know it, but you are too
weak to acknowledge it.' 'I'll show you weakness!' roared Bardan,
leaping forward with axe raised. The bridge swayed perilously, but Druss leapt
in under the swinging axe, hammering a ferocious punch to Bardan's chin. As the
other man staggered, Druss took one running step and leapt feet first, his
boots thudding into Bardan's chest to hurl him back. Bardan lost his grip on
the axe and teetered on the edge. Druss rolled to his feet and dived at
the man. Bardan, recovering his footing, snarled and met him head-on. Druss
smashed a blow to the other man's chin, but Bardan rolled with the punch,
sending an uppercut which snapped the axeman's head back. The power in the blow
was immense and Druss reeled. A second blow caught him above the ear, smashing
him to the boards. Rolling as a booted foot slashed past his ear, he grabbed
Bardan's leg and heaved. The warrior fell heavily. As Druss pushed himself
upright, Bardan launched himself from the boards, his hands circling Druss's
throat. The bridge was swaying wildly now and both men fell and rolled towards
the edge. Druss hooked his foot into the space between two boards, but he and
Bardan were hanging now over the awesome drop. Druss tore himself free of Bardan's grip
and thundered a punch to the warrior's chin. Bardan grunted and toppled from
the bridge. His hand snaked out to grab Druss's arm - the wrenching grasp
almost pulled Druss over the edge. Bardan hung above the river of fire, his
pale eyes looking up into Druss's face. 'Ah, but you're a bonnie fighter,
laddie,' said Bardan softly. Druss got a grip on the other man's jerkin and
tried to pull him up on to the bridge. 'Time to die at last,' said Bardan. 'You
were right. It was the axe, always the axe.' Releasing his hold, he smiled.
'Let me go, boy. It's over.' 'No! Damn you, take my hand!' 'May the gods smile on you, Druss!'
Bardan twisted up and hit out at Druss's arm, dislodging his grip. The bridge
swayed again and the black and silver warrior fell. Druss watched him fall,
spinning down, down, until he was just a dark speck swallowed up by the river
of fire. Pushing himself to his knees he glanced
at the axe. Red smoke swirled from it to form a crimson figure - the skin scaled, the head horned at the temples. There was no
nose, merely two slits in the flesh above a shark-like mouth. 'You were correct, Druss,' said the
demon affably. 'He was weak. As was Cajivak, and all the others. Only you have
the strength to use me.' 'I want no part of you.' The demon's head lifted and his laughter
sounded. 'Easy to say, mortal. But look yonder.' At the far end of the bridge
stood the Chaos Beast, huge and towering, its taloned paws glinting, its eyes
glowing like coals of fire. Druss felt a swelling of despair and his
heart sank as the axe-demon stepped closer, his voice low and friendly. 'Why do
you hesitate, Man? When have I failed you? On the ship of Earin Shad, did I not
turn away the fire? Did I not slip in Cajivak's grasp? I am your friend,
Mortal. I have always been your friend. And in these long and lonely centuries
I have waited for a man with your strength and determination. With me you can
conquer the world. Without me you will never leave this place, never feel the
sun upon your face. Trust me, Druss! Slay the beast - and then we can go home.' The demon shimmered into smoke, flowing
back into the black haft of the axe. Druss glanced up to see the Chaos Beast
waiting at the far end of the bridge. It was even more monstrous now: massive
shoulders beneath the black fur, saliva dripping from its huge maw. Stepping
forward, Druss gripped the haft ofSnaga, swinging the blades into the air. Instantly his strength returned, and
with it a soaring sense of hatred and a lust to cleave and kill. His mouth was
dry with the need for battle, and he moved towards the flame-eyed bear. The
beast waited with arms at its sides. It seemed to Druss then that all the
evil of the world rested in the creature's colossal frame, all the frustrations
of life, the angers, the jealousies, the vileness - everything that he had ever
suffered could be laid upon the black soul of the Chaos Beast. Fury and madness
made his limbs tremble and he felt his lips draw back in a snarl as he lifted
high the axe and ran at the creature. The beast did not move. It stood still,
arms down and head drooping. Druss slowed in his charge. Kill it!
Kill it! Kill it! He reeled with the intensity of his need to destroy, then
looked down at the axe in his hand. 'No!' he shouted, and with one
tremendous heave hurled the axe high in the air and out over the chasm. It spun
glistening towards the ribbon of flame, and Druss saw the demon spew from it,
blackagainst the silver of the blades. Then the axe struck the river of fire.
Exhausted, Druss turned back to face the beast. Rowena stood alone and naked, her gentle
eyes watching him. He groaned and walked towards her.
'Where is the beast?' he said. 'There is no beast, Druss. Only me. Why
did you change your mind about killing me?' 'You? I would never hurt you! Sweet
heaven, how could you think it?' 'You looked at me with hate and then you
ran at me with your axe.' 'Oh, Rowena! I saw only a demon. I was
bewitched! Forgive me!' Stepping in close he tried to put his arms around her,
but she moved back from him. 'I loved Michanek,' she said. He sighed and nodded. 7 know. He was a good man - perhaps a great one. I was with him
at the end. He asked me. . . urged me to look after you. He didn't need
to ask that of me. You are everything to me, you always were. Without you there
was no light in my life. And I've waited so long for this moment. Come back
with me, Rowena. Live!' 'I was looking for him,' she said, tears
in her eyes, 'but I couldn't find him.' 'He's gone where you cannot follow,'
said Druss. 'Come home.' 'l am both a wife and widow. Where is my
home, Druss? Where?' Her head drooped and bright tears
fell to her cheeks. Druss took her in his arms, drawing her in to him.
'Wherever you choose to make your home,' he whispered,'I will build it for you.
But it should be where the sun shines, and where you can hear the birdsong,
smell the flowers. This place is not for you - nor would Michanek want you here.
I love you, Rowena. But if you want to live without me I will bear it. Just so
long as you live. Come back with me. We'll talk again in the light.' 'I don't want to stay here,' she said,
clinging to him. 'But I miss him so.' The words tore at Druss, but he held her
close and kissed her hair. 'Let's go home,' he said. 'Take my hand.' * Druss opened his eyes and drew in a great
gulp of air. Beside him Rowena slept. He felt a moment of panic, but then a
voice spoke. 'She is alive.' Druss sat up, and saw the Old Woman sitting in a
chair by the bedside. 'You want the axe? Take it!' She chuckled, the sound dry and cold. 'Your
gratitude is overwhelming, axeman. But no, I do not need Snaga. You exorcised
the demon from the weapon and he is gone. But I shall find him. You did well,
boy. All that hatred and lust for death - yet you overcame it. What a complex
creature is Man.' 'Where are the others?' asked Druss. Taking up her staff, she eased herself to
her feet. 'Your friends are sleeping. They were exhausted and it took little
effort to send them deep into dreams. Good luck to you, Druss. I wish you and
your lady well. Take her back to the Drenai mountains, enjoy her company while
you can. Her heart is weak, and she will never see the white hair of a human
winter. But you will, Druss.' She sniffed and stretched, her bones
creaking. 'What did you want with the demon?' asked Druss as she made her way
to the door. She turned in the doorway. 'Gorben is
having a sword made - a great sword. He will pay me to make it an enchanted
weapon. And I shall, Druss. I shall.' And then she was gone. Rowena stirred and woke. Sunlight broke through the clouds and
bathed the room. BOOK FOUR: Druss the LegendPrologueDruss took Rowena back to the lands-of the
Drenai, and, with the gold presented to him by a grateful Gorben, bought a farm
in the high mountains. For two years he lived quietly, struggling to be a
loving husband and a man of peace. Sieban travelled the land, performing his
songs and tales before princes and courtiers, and the legend of Druss spread
across the continent. At the invitation of the King of Gothir
Druss travelled north, and fought in the Second Campaign against the Nadir,
earning the title Deathwalker*. Sieban joined him and together they
travelled through many lands. *From
the Second Chronicles of Druss the Legend. And the legend grew. Between campaigns Druss would return to his
farm, but always he would listen for the siren call to battle and Rowena would
bid him farewell as he set off, time and again, to fight, what he assured her,
would be his last battle. Faithful Pudri remained at Rowena's side.
Sieban continued to scandalise Drenai society and his travels with Druss were
usually undertaken to escape the vengeance of outraged husbands. In the east the Ventrian Emperor, Gorben,
having conquered all his enemies, turned his attention to the fiercely
independent Drenai. Druss was forty five, and once more had
promised Rowena there would be no more journeying to distant wars. What he could not know was, this time, the
war was coming to him. The Battle of Skeln PassDruss sat in the sunshine, watching the
clouds glide slowly across the mountains, and thought of his life. Love and
friendship had been with him always, the first with Rowena, the latter with
Sieben, Eskodas and Bodasen. But the greater part of his forty-five years had
been filled with blood and death, the screams of the wounded and dying. He sighed. A man ought to leave more behind
him than corpses, he decided. The clouds thickened, the land falling into
shadow, the grass of the hillside no longer gleaming with life, the flowers
ceasing to blaze with colour. He shivered. It was going to rain. The soft,
dull, arthritic ache had begun in his shoulder. 'Getting old,' he said. 'Who are you talking to, my love?' He
turned and grinned. Rowena seated herself beside him on the wooden bench,
slipping her arm around his waist, resting her head on his shoulder. His huge
hand stroked her hair, noting the grey at the temples. 'I was talking to myself. It's something
that happens when you get old.' She stared up into his grizzled face and
smiled. 'You'll never get old. You're the strongest man in the world.' 'Once, princess. Once.' 'Nonsense. You hefted that barrel of sand
at the village fair right over your head. No one else could do that.' 'That only makes me the strongest man in
the village.' Pulling away from him, Rowena shook her
head, but her expression, as always, was gentle. 'You miss the wars and the
battles?' 'No. I. . . I am happy here. With you. You
give my soul peace.' 'Then what is troubling you?' 'The clouds. They move in front of the sun.
They cast shadows. Then they are gone. Am I like that, Rowena? Will I leave
nothing behind me?' 'What would you wish to leave?' 'I don't know,' he answered, looking away. 'You would have liked a son,' she said,
softly. 'As would I. But it was not to be. Do you blame me for it?' 'No! No! Never.' His arms swept around her,
drawing her to him. 'I love you. I always have. I always will. You are my
wife!' 'I would have liked to have given you a
son,' she whispered. 'I does not matter.'. They sat in silence until the clouds
darkened and the first drops of rain began to fall. Druss stood, lifting Rowena into his arms,
and began the long walk to the stone house. 'Put me down,' she commanded.
'You'll hurt your back.' 'Nonsense. You are as light as a sparrow
wing. And am I not the strongest man in the world?' A fire was blazing in the hearth, and their
Ventrian servant, Pudri, was preparing mulled wine for them. Druss lowered
Rowena into a broad-backed leather armchair. 'Your face is red with the effort,' she
chided him. He smiled and did not argue. His shoulder
was hurting, his lower back aching like the devil. The slender Pudri grinned at
them both. 'Such children you are,' he said, and
shuffled away into the kitchen. 'He's right,' said Druss. 'With you I am
still the boy from the farm, standing below the Great Oak with the most
beautiful woman in the Drenai lands.' 'I was never beautiful,' Rowena told him,
'but it pleased me to hear you say it.' 'You were - and are,' he assured her. The firelight sent dancing shadows on to
the walls of the room as the light outside began to fail. Rowena fell asleep
and Druss sat silently watching her. Four times in the last three years she had
collapsed, the surgeons warning Druss of a weakness in her heart. The old warrior
had listened to them without comment, his ice-blue eyes showing no expression.
But within him a terrible fear had begun to grow. He had forsaken his battles
and settled down to life in the mountains, believing that his presence nearby
would hold Rowena to life. But he watched her always, never allowing
her to become too tired, fussing over her meals, waking in the night to feel
her pulse, then being unable to sleep. 'Without her I am nothing,' he confided to
his friend Sieben the Poet, whose house had been built less than a mile from
the stone house. 'If she dies, part of me will die with her.' 'I know, old horse,' said Sieben. 'But I am
sure the princess will be fine.' Druss smiled. 'Why did you make her a
princess? Are you poets incapable of the truth?' Sieben spread his hands and chuckled. 'One
must cater to one's audience. The saga of Druss the Legend had need of a
princess. Who would want to listen to the tale of a man who fought his way
across continents to rescue a farm girl?' 'Druss the Legend? Pah! There are no real
heroes any more. The likes of Egel, Karnak and Waylander are long gone. Now
they were heroes, mighty men with eyes of fire.' Sieben laughed aloud. 'You say that only
because you have heard the songs. In years to come men will talk of you in the
same way. You and that cursed axe.' The cursed axe. Druss glanced up to where the weapon hung
on the wall, its twin silver steel blades glinting in the firelight. Snaga the
Sender, the blades of no return. He stood and moved silently across the room,
lifting the axe from the brackets supporting it. The black haft was warm to the
touch, and he felt, as always, the thrill of battle ripple through him as he
hefted the weapon. Reluctantly he returned the axe to its resting place. 'They are calling you,' said Rowena. He
swung and saw that she was awake and watching him. 'Who is calling me?' 'The hounds of war. I can hear them
baying.' Druss shivered and forced a smile. 'No one is calling me,' he told her, but
there was no conviction in his voice. Rowena had always been a mystic. 'Gorben is coming, Druss. His ships are
already at sea.' 'It is not my war. My loyalties would be
divided.' For a moment she said nothing. Then: 'You
liked him, didn't you?' 'He is a good Emperor - or he was. Young,
proud, and terribly brave.' 'You set too much store by bravery. There
was a madness in him you could never see. I hope you never do.' 'I told you, it is not my war. I'm
forty-five years old, my beard is going grey and my joints are stiff. The young
men of the Drenai will have to tackle him without me.' 'But the Immortals will be with him,' she
persisted. 'You said once there were no finer warriors in the world.' 'Do you remember all my words?' 'Yes,' she answered, simply. The sound of hoofbeats came from the yard
beyond, and Druss strode to the door, stepping out on to the porch. The rider wore the armour of a Drenai
officer, white plumed helm and silver breastplate, with a long scarlet cloak.
He dismounted, tied the reins of his horse to a hitching rail and walked towards
the house. 'Good evening. I am looking for Druss the
Axeman,' said the man, removing his helm and running his fingers through his
sweat-drenched fair hair. 'You found him.' 'I thought so. I am Dun Certak. I have a
message from Lord Abalayn. He wonders if you would agree to ride east to our
camp at Skeln.' 'Why?' 'Morale, sir. You are a legend. The Legend.
It would boost the men during the interminable waiting.' 'No,' said Druss. 'I am retired.' 'Where are your manners, Druss?' called
Rowena. 'Ask the young man to come in.' Druss stepped aside and the officer
entered, bowing deeply to Rowena. 'It is a pleasure to meet you, my lady. I
have heard so much about you.' 'How disappointing for you,' she replied,
her smile friendly. 'You hear of a princess and meet a plump matron.' 'He wants me to travel to Skeln,' said
Druss. 'I heard. I think you should go.' 'I am no speechmaker,' growled Druss. 'Then take Sieben with you. It will do you
good. You have no idea how irritating it is to have you fussing around me all
day. Be honest, you will enjoy yourself enormously.' 'Are you married?' Druss asked Certak, his
voice almost a growl. 'No, sir.' 'Very wise. Will you stay the night?' 'No, sir. Thank you. I have other
despatches to deliver. But I will see you at Skeln . . . and look forward to
it.' The officer bowed once more and backed away towards the door. 'You will stay for supper,' ordered Rowena.
'Your despatches can wait for at least one hour.' 'I'm sorry, my lady, but . . .' 'Give up, Certak,' advised Druss. 'You
cannot win.' The officer smiled and spread his hands.
'An hour then,' he agreed. * The following morning, on borrowed horses,
Druss and Sieben waved farewell and headed east. Rowena waved and smiled until
they were out of sight, then returned to the house, where Pudri was waiting. 'You should not have sent him away, lady,'
said the Ventrian sadly. Rowena swallowed hard, and the tears began to flow.
Pudri moved alongside her, his slender arms encircling her. 'I had to. He must not be here when the
time comes,' 'He would want to be here.' 'In so many ways he is the strongest man I
have ever known. But in this I am right. He must not see me die.' 'I will be with you, lady. I will hold your
hand.' 'You will tell him that it was sudden, and
there was no pain - even if it is a lie?' 'I will.' * Six days later, after a dozen changes of
mount, Certak galloped into the camp. There were four hundred white tents set
in unit squares in the shadow of the Skeln range, each housing twelve men. Four
thousand horse were picketed in the surrounding fields, and sixty cookfires
were blazing under iron pots. The odour of stew assailed him as he reined in
outside the large red-striped tent used by the general and his staff. The young officer handed over his
despatches, saluted and left to rejoin his company at the northern edge of the
camp. Leaving his lathered mount with a groom, he removed his helm and pushed
aside the tent flap of his quarters. Inside his companions were dicing and
drinking. The game broke up as he entered. 'Certak!' said Orases, grinning and rising
to meet him. 'Well, what was he like?' 'Who?' asked Certak innocently. 'Druss, you moron.' 'Big,' said Certak, moving past the burly
blond officer and throwing his helm to the narrow pallet bed. He unbuckled his
breastplate, letting it drop to the floor. Freed of its weight, he took a deep
breath and scratched his chest. 'Now don't be annoying, there's a good
fellow,' said Orases, his smile fading. 'Tell us about him.' 'Do tell him,' urged the dark-eyed
Diagoras. 'He's been talking about the axeman non-stop since you left.' 'That's not true,' muttered Orases,
blushing. 'We've all been talking about him.' Certak slapped Orases on the
shoulder, then ruffled his hair. 'You get me a drink, Orases, and then I'll
tell you all.' As Orases fetched a flagon of wine and four
goblets, Diagoras moved smoothly to his feet and pulled up a chair, reversing
it before sitting opposite Certak, who had streched out on the bed. The fourth
man, Archytas, joined them, accepting a goblet of light honey mead wine from
Orases and draining it swiftly. 'As I said, he is big,' said Certak. 'Not
as tall as the stories claim, but built like a small castle. The size of his
arms? Well, his biceps are as long as your thighs, Diagoras. He is bearded and
dark, though there is some grey in his hair. His eyes are blue, and they seem
to look right through you.' 'And Rowena?' asked Orases eagerly. 'Is she
as fabulously beautiful as the poem says?' 'No. She is nice enough, in a matronly sort
of way. I suppose she would have been lovely once. It's hard to tell with some
of these older women. Her eyes are gorgeous, though, and she has a pretty
smile.' 'Did you see the axe?' asked Archytas, a
wand-slender nobleman from the Lentrian border. 'No.' 'Did you ask Druss about his battles?'
asked Diagoras. 'Of course not, you fool. He may be only a
farmer now, but he's still Druss. You don't just march up and ask how many
dragons he's downed.' 'There are no dragons,' said Archytas
loftily. Certak shook his head, staring at the man
through narrowed eyes. 'It was a figure of speech,' he said.
'Anyway, they invited me to join them for supper and we chatted about horses
and the running of the farm. He asked my opinion about the war, and I told him
I thought Gorben would sail for Penrac Bay.' 'It's a safe bet,' said Diagoras. 'Not necessarily. If it's that safe, how
come we're stuck here with five regiments?' 'Abalayn is over-cautious,' answered
Diagoras, grinning. 'That's the trouble with you westerners,'
said Certak. 'You live so long with your horses that you start to think like
them. Skeln Pass is a gateway to the Sentran Plain. If Gorben took that we
would starve during the winter. So would half of Vagria, for that matter.' 'Gorben is no fool,' offered Archytas. 'He
knows Skeln can be defended forever with two thousand men. The pass is too
narrow for the numbers of his army to be of any real use. And there's no other
way through. Penrac makes more sense. It's only three hundred miles from Drenan
and the countryside around is as flat as a lake. There his army could spread
and cause real problems.' 'I don't particularly care where he lands,'
said Orases, 'as long as I'm close by to see it.' Certak and Diagoras exchanged glances. Both
had fought the Sathuli and had seen the true, bloody face of battle, and
watched the crows peck out the eyes of dead friends. Orases was a newcomer who
had urged his father to buy him a commission in Abalayn's lancers when news of
the invasion fleet reached Drenan. 'What about the Cuckold King?' asked
Archytas. 'Was he there?' 'Sieben? Yes, he arrived for supper. He
looks ancient. I can't see the ladies swooning over him any longer. Bald as a
rock and thin as a stick.' 'You think Druss will want to fight
alongside us?' asked Diagoras. 'That would be something to tell the children.' 'No. He's past it. Tired. You can see it in
him. But I liked him. He's no braggart, that's for sure. Down to earth. You'd
never believe he was the subject of so many songs and ballads. They say Gorben
has never forgotten him.' 'Maybe he sailed the fleet just for a
reunion with his friend Druss,' said Archytas, with a sneer. 'Perhaps you
should put that idea to the general. We could all go home.' 'It's an idea,' admitted Certak, biting
back his anger. 'But if the regiments separate, we'd be deprived of your
delightful company, Archytas. And nothing is worth that.' 'I could live with it,' said Diagoras. 'And I could do without being forced to
share a tent with a pack of ill-bred hounds,' said Archytas. 'But needs must.' 'Well, woof woof,' said Diagoras. 'Do you
think we've been insulted, Certak?' 'Not by anyone worth worrying about,' he
replied. 'Now that is an insult,' said Archytas,
rising. A sudden commotion from outside the tent cut through the gathering
drama. The flap was pulled aside. A young soldier pushed his head inside. 'The beacons are lit,' he said. The
Ventrians have landed at Penrac.' The four warriors leapt to their feet,
rushing to gather their armour. Archytas turned as he buckled his
breastplate. 'This changes nothing,' he said. 'It is a
question of honour.' 'No,' said Certak. 'It is a question of
dying. And you'll do that nicely, you pompous pig.' Archytas grinned mirthlessly back at him. 'We'll see,' he said. Diagoras pulled down the earflaps of his
bronze helmet and tied them under his chin. He leaned conspiratorially close to
Archytas. 'A thought to remember, goat-face. If you
kill him - which is extremely doubtful - I shall cut your throat while you're
sleeping.' He smiled pleasantly and patted Archytas' shoulder. 'You see, I'm no
gentleman.' The camp was in uproar. Along the coast the
warning beacons were blazing from the Skeln peaks. Gorben, as expected, had
landed in the south. Abalayn was there with twenty thousand men. But he would
be outnumbered at least two to one. It was a hard five days' ride to Penrac and
the orders were being issued at speed, the horses saddled, and the tents packed
away. Cooking fires were doused and wagons loaded as men scurried about the
camp in seeming chaos. By morning only six hundred warriors
remained in the mouth of Skeln Pass, the bulk of the army thundering south to
bolster Abalayn. Earl Delnar, Warden of the North, gathered
the men together just after dawn. Beside him stood Archytas. 'As you know, the Ventrians have landed,'
said the Earl. 'We are to stay here in case they send a small force to harry
the north. I know many of you would have preferred to head south, but, to state
the obvious, someone has to stay behind to protect the Sentran Plain. And we've
been chosen. The camp here is no longer suitable for our needs and we will be
moving up into the pass itself. Are there any questions?' There were none and Delnar dismissed the
men, turning to Archytas. 'Why you have been left here I do not
know,' he said. 'But I don't like you at all, lad. You are a troublemaker. I
would have thought your skills would have been welcome at Penrac. However, be
that as it may. You cause any trouble here and you will regret it.' 'I understand, Lord Delnar,' replied
Archytas. 'Understand this also: As my aide I will
require you to work, passing on my instructions exactly as I give them to you.
I am told you are a man of surpassing arrogance.' 'That is hardly fair.' 'Perhaps. I cannot see that it should be
true, since your grandfather was a tradesman and your nobility is scarce two
generations old. You will find as you grow older that it is what a man does
that counts, and not what his father did.' 'Thank you for your advice, ray lord. I
shall bear it in mind,' said Archytas stiffly. 'I doubt that you will. I do not know what
drives you, but then I don't care overmuch. We should be here about three weeks
and then I'll be rid of you.' 'As you say, my lord.' Delnar waved him away, then glanced beyond
him to the edge of the trees bordering the field to the west. Two men were
walking steadily towards them. Delnar's jaw tightened as he recognised the
poet. He called Archytas back. 'Sir?' 'The two men approaching yonder. Go out to
meet them and have them brought to my tent.' 'Yes, sir. Who are they, do you know?' 'The large one is Druss the Legend. The
other is the saga poet Sieben.' 'I understand you know him very well,' said
Archytas, barely disguising his malice. * 'It doesn't look much of an army,' said
Druss, shading his eyes against the sun rising over the Skeln peaks. 'Can't be
more than a few hundred of them.' Sieben didn't answer. He was exhausted.
Early the previous day Druss had finally tired of riding the tall gelding
borrowed in Skoda. He had left it with a stock breeder in a small town thirty
miles west, determined to walk to Skeln. In a moment - in which Sieben could
only consider he had been struck by transient and massive stupidity - he had
agreed to walk with him. He seemed to remember thinking that it would be good
for him. Now, even with Druss carrying both packs, the poet stumbled wearily
alongside, his legs boneless and numb, his ankles and wrists swollen, his
breathing ragged. 'You know what I think?' said Druss. Sieben
shook his head, concentrating on the tents. 'I think we're too late. Gorben has
landed at Penrac and the army's gone. Still, it's been a pleasant journey. Are
you all right, poet?' Sieben nodded, his face grey. 'You don't look it. If you weren't standing
here beside me I'd think you were dead. I've seen corpses that looked in better
health.' Sieben glared at him. It was the only response his fading strength
would allow. Druss chuckled. 'Lost for words, eh? This was worth coming for.' A tall young officer was making his way
towards them, fastidiously avoiding small patches of mud and the more obvious
reminders of the horses picketed in the field the night before. Halting before them, he bowed elaborately. 'Welcome to Skeln,' he said. 'Is your
friend ill?' 'No, he always looks like this,' said
Druss, running his eyes over the warrior. He moved well, and handled himself
confidently, but there was something about the narrow green eyes and the set of
his features that nettled the axeman. 'Earl Delnar asked me to conduct you to his
tent. I am Archytas. And you?' 'Druss. This is Sieben. Lead on.' The officer set a fast pace which Druss
made no effort to match on the last few hundred paces uphill. He walked slowly
beside Sieben. The truth of it was that Druss himself was tired. They had
walked most of the night, both trying to prove they still had a claim to youth. Delnar dismissed Archytas and remained
seated behind the small folding table on which were strewn papers and
despatches. Sieben, oblivious of the tension, slumped to Delnar's narrow bed.
Druss lifted a flagon of wine to his lips, taking three great swallows. 'He is not welcome here - and, therefore,
neither are you,' said Delnar, as Druss replaced the flagon. The axeman wiped his mouth with the back of
his hand. 'Had I been sure you were here, I would not have brought him,' he
said. 'I take it the army has moved on.' 'Yes. They travelled south. Gorben has
landed. You may borrow two horses, but I want you gone by sundown.' 'I came to give the men something to think
about besides waiting,' said Druss. They won't need me now. So I'll just rest
here for a couple of days then head back to Skoda.' 'I said you're not welcome here,' said
Delnar. The axeman's eyes grew cold as he stared at
the Earl. 'Listen to me,' said Druss, as softly as he could. 'I know why you
feel as you do. In your place I would feel the same. But I am not in your
place. I am Druss. And I walk where I will. If I say I will stay here then I
shall. Now I like you, laddie. But cross me and I'll kill you.' Delnar nodded and rubbed his chin. The
situation had gone as far as he could allow it. He had hoped Druss would leave,
but he could not force him. What could be more ludicrous than the Earl of the
North ordering Drenai warriors to attack Druss the Legend? Especially since the
man had been invited to the camp by the Lord of Hosts. Delnar did not fear
Druss, because he did not fear death. His life had been ended for him six years
before. Since then his wife, Vashti, had shamed him with many more affairs.
Three years ago she had delivered to him a daughter, a delightful child he
adored, even if he doubted his part in her conception. Vashti had run away to
the capital soon after, leaving the child at Delnoch. The Earl had heard his
wife was now living with a Ventrian merchant in the rich western quarter.
Taking a deep, calming breath, he met Druss' eyes. 'Stay then,' he said. 'But keep him from my
sight.' Druss nodded. He glanced down at Sieben.
The poet was asleep. 'This should never have come between us,'
said Delnar. 'These things happen,' said Druss. 'Sieben
always had a weakness for beautiful women.' 'I shouldn't hate him. But he was the first
I knew about. He was the man who destroyed my dreams. You understand?' 'We will leave tomorrow,' said Druss
wearily. 'But for now let's walk in the pass. I need some air in my lungs.' The Earl rose and donned his helm and red
cape, and together the two warriors walked through the camp and on up the steep
rocky slope to the mouth of the pass. It ran for almost a mile, narrowing at
the centre to less than fifty paces, where the ground dropped away gently in a
rolling slope down to a stream that flowed across the valley floor, angling
towards the sea some three miles distant. From the mouth of the pass, through
the jagged peaks, the sea glittered in the fragmented sunlight, glowing gold
and blue. A fresh easterly wind cooled Druss's face. 'Good place for a defensive battle,' said
the axeman, scanning the pass. 'At the centre any attacking force would be
funnelled in and numbers would be useless.' 'And they would have to charge uphill,'
said Delnar. 'I think Abalayn was hoping Gorben would land here. We could have
sealed him in the bay. Left his army to starve, and brought the fleet round to
harry his ships.' 'He's too canny for that,' said Druss. 'A
more wily warrior you will not find.' 'You liked him?' 'He was always fair with me,' said Druss,
keeping his tone neutral. Delnar nodded. 'They say he's become a
tyrant.' Druss shrugged. 'He once told me it was the
curse of kings.' 'He was right,' said Delnar. 'You know your
friend Bodasen is still one of his top generals?' 'I wouldn't doubt it. He's a loyal man,
with a good eye for strategy.' 'I should think you are relieved to miss
this battle, my friend,' commented the Earl. Druss nodded. 'The years I served with the
Immortals were happy ones, I'll grant that. And I have other friends among
them. But you are right, I would hate to come up against Bodasen. We were
brothers in battle, and I love the man dearly.' 'Let's go back. I'll arrange some food for
you.' The Earl saluted the sentry at the mouth of
the pass and the two men made their way up the slope to the camp. Delnar took
him to a square white tent, lifting the flap for Druss to enter first. Within
were four men. They leapt to their feet as the Earl followed Druss inside. 'Stand easy,' said Delnar. 'This is Druss,
an old friend of mine. He'll be staying with us for a while. I'd like you to
make him welcome.' He turned to Druss. 'I believe you know Certak and Archytas.
Well, this black-bearded reprobate is Diagoras.' Druss liked the look of the
man; his smile was quick and friendly, and the gleam in his dark eyes bespoke
humour. But more than this he had what soldiers call 'the look of eagles' and
Druss knew instantly he was a warrior born. 'Nice to meet you, sir. We've heard a lot
about you.' 'And this is Orases,' said Certak. 'He's
new with us. From Drenan.' Druss shook hands with the young man,
noting the fat around his middle and the softness of his grip. He seemed
pleasant enough, but beside Diagoras and Certak he seemed boyish and clumsy. 'Would you like some food?' asked Diagoras,
after the Earl had departed. 'I certainly would,' muttered Druss. 'My
stomach thinks my throat's been sliced.' 'I'll get it,' said Orases swiftly. 'I think he's a little in awe of you,
Druss,' said Diagoras as Orases raced from the tent. 'It happens,' said Druss. 'Why don't you ask
me to sit down?' Diagoras chuckled and pulled up a chair.
Druss reversed it and sat. The others followed suit and the atmosphere eased.
The world is getting younger, thought Druss, wishing he had never come. 'May I see your axe, sir?' asked Certak. 'Certainly,' said Druss, pulling Snaga
smoothly from the oiled sheath. In the older man's hands the weapon seemed
almost weightless, but as it passed to Certak the officer grunted. 'The blade that smote the Chaos Hound,'
whispered Certak, turning it over in his hands, then returning it to Druss. 'Do you believe everything you hear?' said
Archytas, sneering. 'Did it happen, Druss?' said Diagoras,
before Certak could answer. 'Yes. A long time ago. But it scarce
pierced its hide.' 'Was it true they were sacrificing a
princess?' asked Certak. 'No. Two small children. But tell me about
yourselves,' said Druss. 'Wherever I go people ask me the same questions and I
get very bored.' 'If you're that bored,' said Archytas, 'why
do you take the poet with you on all your adventures?' 'What does that mean?' 'Quite simply that it seems strange for a
man as modest as you seem to be to take a saga master with him. Although it
proved very convenient.' 'Convenient?' 'Well, he created you, didn't he? Druss the
Legend. Fame and fortune. Surely any wandering warrior with such a companion
could have been boosted into legend?' 'I suppose that's true,' said Druss. 'I've
known a lot of men in my time whose deeds are forgotten, but who were worthy of
remembrance in song or tale. I never really thought of it before.' 'How much of Sieben's great saga is
exaggerated?' asked Archytas. 'Oh do shut up,' snapped Diagoras. 'No,' said Druss, lifting his hand. 'You've
no idea how good this is. Always people ask me about the stories, and whenever
I tell them they are - shall we say - rounded, they disbelieve me. But it's
true. The stories are not about me. They are based on the truth, but they have
grown. I was the seed; they have become the tree. I never met a princess in my
life. But to answer your first question. I never took Sieben on my quest. He
just came. I think he was bored and wanted to see the world.' 'But did you slay the werebeast in the
mountains of Pelucid?' said Certak. 'No. I just killed a lot of men in a lot of
battles.' 'Then why do you allow the poems to be
sung?' asked Archytas. 'If I could have stopped them I would,'
Druss told him. 'The first few years of my return were a nightmare. But I've
got used to it since. People believe what they want to believe. The truth
rarely makes a difference. People need heroes, and if they don't have any, they
invent them.' Orases returned with a bowl of stew and a
loaf of black bread. 'Have I missed anything?' he asked. 'Not really,' said Druss. 'We were just
chatting.' 'Druss has been telling us that his legend
is all lies,' said Archytas. 'It's been most revealing.' Druss chuckled with genuine humour and
shook his head. 'You see,' he told Diagoras and Certak, 'people believe what
they want to believe, and hear only what they wish to hear.' He glanced across
at the tight-lipped Archytas. 'Boy, there was a time when your blood would now
be staining the walls of this tent. But I was younger then, and headstrong. Now
I get no delight from killing puppies. But I am still Druss, so I tell you
this, walk softly around me from now on.' Archytas forced a laugh. 'You cause me no
concern, old man,' he said. 'I don't think . . .' Druss rose swiftly and backhanded, him
across the face. Archytas hurtled backwards over his chair to lie groaning on
the tent floor, his nose smashed and leaking blood. 'No, you don't think,' said Druss. 'Now
give me that stew, Orases. It must be getting cold.' 'Welcome to Skeln, Druss,' said Diagoras,
grinning. * For three days Druss remained at the camp.
Sieben had woken in Delnar's trent, complaining of chest pains. The regimental
surgeon examined him and ordered him to rest, explaining to Druss and Delnar
that the poet had suffered a serious spasm of the heart. 'How bad is it?' asked Druss. The surgeon's eyes were bleak. 'If he rests
for a week or two he could be fine. The danger is that the heart might cramp
suddenly - and fail. He's not a young man, and the journey here was hard for
him.' 'I see,' said Druss. 'Thank you.' He turned
to Delnar. 'I am sorry, but we must stay.' 'Do not concern yourself, my friend,'
responded the Earl, waving his hand. 'Despite what I said when you arrived, you
are welcome. But, tell me, what happened between you and Archytas? It looks
like a mountain fell on his face.' 'His nose tapped my hand,' grunted Druss. Delnar smiled. 'He's a somewhat loathsome
character. But you had better watch out for him. He's stupid enough to
challenge you.' 'No, he won't,' said Druss. 'He may be
foolish, but he's not in love with death. Even a puppy knows to hide from a
wolf.' On the morning of the fourth day, as Druss
sat with Sieben, one of the lookout sentries came running headlong into the
camp. Within minutes chaos reigned as men raced for their armour. Hearing the
commotion, Druss walked from the tent. A young soldier ran by. Druss's arm
snaked out, catching the man's cloak and wrenching him to a stop. 'What's going on?' asked Druss. 'The Ventrians are here!' shouted the
soldier, tearing himself loose and running towards the pass. Druss swore and
strode after him. At the mouth of the pass he halted, staring out over the
stream. Standing in armoured line upon line, their
lances gleaming, were the warriors of Gorben, filling the valley from
mountainside to mountainside. At the centre of the mass was the tent of the
Emperor, and around it were massed the black and silver ranks of the Immortals. Drenai warriors scurried past him as Druss
made his slow way to Delnar's side. 'I told you he was cunning,' said Druss.
'He must have sent a token force to Penrac, knowing it would draw our army
south.' 'Yes. But what now?' 'You're not left with many choices,' said
Druss. True.' The Drenai warriors spread out across the
narrow centre of the pass in three ranks, their round shields glinting in the
morning sun, their white horsehair-crested helms flowing in the breeze. 'How many here are veterans?' asked Druss. 'About half. I've placed them at the
front.' 'How long will it take a rider to reach
Penrac?' 'I've sent a man. The army should be back
in about ten days.' 'You think we've got ten days?' asked
Druss. 'No. But, as you say, there aren't too many
choices. What do you think Gorben will do?' 'First he'll talk. He'll ask you to
surrender. You'd better request a few hours to make up your mind. Then he'll
send the Panthians in. They're an undisciplined bunch but they fight like
devils. We should see them off. Their wicker shields and stabbing spears are no
match for Drenai armour. After that he'll test all his troops on us . . .' 'The Immortals?' 'Not until the end, when we're weary and
finished.' 'It's a gloomy picture,' said Delnar. 'It's a bitch,' agreed Druss. 'Will you stand with us, axeman?' 'Did you expect me to leave?' Delnar chuckled suddenly. 'Why shouldn't
you? I wish I could.' * In the first Drenai line Diagoras sheathed
his sword, wiping his sweating palm on his red cloak. "There are enough of
them,' he said. Beside him Certak nodded. 'Masterly
understatement. They look like they could run right over us.' 'We'll have to surrender, won't we?'
whispered Orases from behind them, blinking sweat from his eyes. 'Somehow I don't think that's likely,' said
Certak. 'Though I admit it's a welcome thought.' A rider on a black stallion forded the
stream and galloped towards the Drenai line. Delnar walked through the ranks,
Druss beside him, and waited. The rider wore the black and silver armour
of a general of the Immortals. Reining in before the two men, he leaned forward
on the pommel of his saddle. 'Druss?' he said. 'Is that you?' Druss studied the gaunt features, the
silver-streaked dark hair hanging in two braids. 'Welcome to Skeln, Bodasen,' answered the
axeman. 'I'm sorry to find you here. I was meaning
to ride for Skoda as soon as we took Drenan. Is Rowena well?' 'Yes. And you?' 'As you see me. Fit and well. Yourself?' 'I'm not complaining.' 'And Sieben?' 'He's asleep in a tent.' 'He always knew when to avoid battles,'
said Bodasen, forcing a smile. 'And that's what this is looking like unless
commonsense prevails. Are you the leader?' he asked Delnar. 'I am. What message do you bring?' 'Merely this. Tomorrow morning my Emperor
will ride through this pass. He would consider it a courtesy if you could
remove your men from his path.' 'We will think on it,' said Delnar. 'I would advise you to think well,' said
Bodasen, turning his mount. 'I'll be seeing you, Druss. Take care!' 'You too.' Bodasen spurred the stallion back towards
the stream and on through the Panthian ranks. Druss beckoned Delnar aside, away from the
men. 'It's pointless standing here all day staring at them,' he said. 'Why
don't you order them to stand down and we'll send half of them back to bring up
some blankets and fuel?' 'You don't think they'll attack today?' 'No. Why should they? They know we'll not
be reinforced tonight. Tomorrow will come soon enough.' Druss tramped back to
the camp, stopping in to see the poet. Sieben was asleep. Druss pulled up a
chair and stared down at the poet's lined face. Uncharacteristically he stroked
the balding head. Sieben opened his eyes. 'Oh it's you,' he said. 'What's all the
fuss about?' 'The Ventrians tricked us. They're on the other
side of the mountain.' Sieben swore softly. Druss chuckled. 'You
just lie here, poet, and I'll tell you all about it once we've sent them
running.' 'The Immortals are here too?' asked Sieben. 'Of course.' 'Wonderful. A nice little outing you
promised me. A few speeches. And what do we get? Another War.' 'I saw Bodasen. He's looking well.' 'Marvellous. Maybe after he's killed us we
can have a drink together and chat about old times.' 'You take things too seriously, poet. Rest
now, and later I'll have some men carry you up to the pass. You'd hate to miss
the action, now, wouldn't you?' 'Couldn't you get them to carry me all the
way back to Skoda?' 'Later,' grinned Druss. 'Anyway, I must be
getting back.' The axeman walked swiftly up the mountain
slopes and sat on a boulder at the mouth of the pass, gazing intently at the
enemy camp. 'What are you thinking about?' asked
Delnar, moving up to join him. 'I was remembering something I told an old
friend a long time ago.' 'What was that?' 'If you want to win: Attack.' * Bodasen dismounted before the Emperor and
knelt, pressing his forehead to the earth. Then he rose. From a distance the
Ventrian looked as he always had, powerful, black-bearded and keen of eye. But
he could no longer stand close inspection. His hair and beard showed the
unhealthy sheen of heavy, dark dye, his painted face glowed with unnatural
colour and his eyes saw treachery in every shadow. His followers, even those
like Bodasen who had served him for decades, knew never to stare into his face,
addressing all their remarks to the gilded griffin on his breastplate. No one
was allowed to approach him bearing a weapon, and he had not granted a private
audience to anyone in years. Always he wore armour - even, it was said, when he
slept. His food was tasted by slaves, and he had taken to wearing gloves of
soft leather, in the belief that poison might be spread on the outside of his
golden goblets. Bodasen waited for permission to speak,
glancing up swiftly to read the expression on the Emperor's face. Gorben was
staring moodily. 'Was that Druss?' he asked. 'Aye, my lord.' 'So even he has turned against me.' 'He is a Drenai, my lord.' 'Do you dispute with me, Bodasen?' 'No, sire. Of course not.' 'Good. I want Druss brought before me for
judgement. Such treachery must be answered with swift justice. You understand?' 'Yes, sire.' 'Will the Drenai give us the way?' 'I think not, sire. But it will not take
long to clear the path. Even with Druss there. Shall I order the men to stand
down and prepare camp?' 'No. Let them stay in ranks for a while.
Let the Drenai see their power and their strength.' 'Yes, sire.' Bodasen backed away. 'Are you still loyal?' asked the Emperor,
suddenly. Bodasen's mouth was dry. 'As I have always
been, lord.' 'Yet Druss was your friend.' 'Even though that is true, sire, I will see
him dragged before you in chains. Or his head presented to you, should he be
slain in the defence.' The Emperor nodded, then turned his painted
face to stare up at the pass. 'I want them dead. All dead,' he whispered. * In the cool of the pre-dawn haze the Drenai
formed their lines, each warrior bearing a rounded shield and a short stabbing
sword. Their sabres had been put aside, for in close formation a swinging
longsword could be as deadly to a comrade standing close as to an enemy bearing
down. The men were nervous, constantly rechecking breastplate straps, or
discovering the bronze greaves protecting their lower legs were too tight, too
loose, too anything. Cloaks were removed and left in tight red rolls by the
mountain wall behind the ranks. Both Druss and Delnar knew this was the time a
man's courage was under the greatest strain. Gorben could do many things. The
dice were in his hands. All the Drenai could do was wait. 'Do you think he'll attack immediately the
sun comes up?' asked Delnar. Druss shook his head. 'I don't think so.
He'll let the fear work for about an hour. But then again - you can never tell
with him.' The two hundred men in the front rank
shared the same emotions now, with varying intensity. Pride, for they had been
singled out as the best; fear, for they would be the first to die. Some had
regrets. Many had not written home for weeks, others had left friends and
relatives with bitter words. Many were the thoughts. Druss made his way to the centre of the
first line, calling for Diagoras and Certak to stand on either side of him. 'Move away from me a little,' he said.
'Give me swinging room.' The line shuffled apart. Druss loosened his shoulders,
stretching the muscles of his arms and back. The sky lightened. Druss cursed.
The disadvantage for the defenders - apart from the numbers of the enemy - was
that the sun rose in their eyes. Across the stream the black-skinned
Pahthians sharpened their spears. There was little fear among them. The
ivory-skins facing them were few in number. They would be swept away like
antelope before a veldt blaze. Gorben waited until the sun cleared the peaks,
then gave the order to attack. The Panthians surged to their feet, a swelling
roar of hatred rising from their throats, a wall of sound that hurtled up into
the pass, washing over the defenders. 'Listen to that!' bellowed Druss. 'That's
not strength you hear. That's the sound of terror!' Five thousand warriors raced towards the
pass, their feet drumming a savage beat on the rocky slopes, echoing high into
the peaks. Druss hawked and spat. Then he began to
laugh, a rich, full sound that brought a few chuckles from the men around him. 'Gods, I've missed this,' he shouted. 'Come
on, you cowsons!' he yelled at the Panthians. 'Move yourselves!' Delnar, at the centre of the second line,
smiled and drew his sword. With the enemy a bare hundred paces
distant, the men of the third line looked to Archytas. He raised his arm. The
men dropped their shields and stooped, rising with barbed javelins. Each man
had five of them at his feet. The Panthians were almost upon them. 'Now!' yelled Archytas. Arms flew forward and two hundred shafts of
death hurtled into the black mass. 'Again!' bellowed Archytas. The front ranks of the advancing horde
disappeared screaming, to be trampled by the men behind them. The charge faltered
as the tribesmen tripped and fell over fallen comrades. The mountain walls,
narrowing like an hour-glass, slowed the attack still further. Then the lines clashed. A spear lunged for Druss. Blocking it with
his axe blades, he dragged a back-hand cut that sheared through the wicker
shield and the flesh beyond. The man grunted as Snaga clove through his
ribcage. Druss tore the weapon clear, parried another thrust and hammered his
axe into his opponent's face. Beside him Certak blocked a spear with his shield,
expertly sliding his gladius into a gleaming black chest. A spear sliced his
upper thigh, but there was no pain. He counter-thrust, and his attacker fell
across the growing pile of corpses in front of the line. The Panthians now found themselves leaping
upon the bodies of their comrades in their desperation to breach the line. The
floor of the pass became slippery with blood, but the Drenai held. A tall warrior threw aside his wicker
shield and hurdled the wall of dead, spear raised. He hurtled towards Druss.
Snaga buried itself in his chest, but the weight of the man bore Druss back,
tearing his axe from his hands. A second man leapt at him. Druss turned aside
the thrusting spear with his mail-covered gauntlets, and smashed a cruel punch
to the man's jaw. As the warrior crumpled Druss grabbed him by the throat and
groin and hoisted the body above his head, hurling him back over the corpse
wall into the faces of the advancing warriors. Twisting, he wrenched his axe
clear of the first man's body. 'Come on, my lads,' he bellowed. 'Time to
send them home!' Leaping up on the corpses, he cut left and
right, opening up a space in the Panthian ranks. Diagoras couldn't believe his
eyes. He swore. Then leapt to join him. The Drenai advanced, clambering over the
Panthian dead, their swords red, their eyes grim. At the centre the tribesmen struggled first
to overcome the madman with the axe, then to get back from him, as other Drenai
warriors joined him. Fear flashed through their ranks like a
plague. Within minutes they were streaming back
across the valley floor. Druss led the warriors back into position.
His jerkin was stained with blood, and his beard spotted with crimson. Opening
his shirt, he removed a towel and wiped his sweating face. Doffing his helm of
black and silver, he scratched his head. 'Well, lads,' he called out, his deep voice
echoing in the crags, 'how does it feel to have earned your pay?' 'They're coming again!' someone shouted. Druss' voice cut through the rising fear.
'Of course they are,' he bellowed. 'They don't know when they're beaten. Front
rank fall back, second rank stand to. Let's spread the glory!' Druss remained with the front line,
Diagoras and Certak alongside him. By dusk they had beaten off four charges
for the loss of only forty men - thirty dead, ten wounded. The Panthians had lost over eight hundred
men. It was a macabre scene that night as the
Drenai sat around small campfires, the dancing flames throwing weird shadows
across the wall of corpses in the pass making it seem as if the bodies writhed
in the darkness. Delnar ordered the men to gather all the wicker shields they
could find and recover as many javelins and spears as were still usable. Towards midnight many of the veterans were
asleep-, but others found the excitement of the day too fresh, and they sat in
small groups, talking in low tones. Delnar walked from group to group, sitting
with them, joking and lifting their spirits. Druss slept in the tent of Sieben,
high in the mouth of the pass. The poet had watched part of the day's action
from his bed, and fallen asleep during the long afternoon. Diagoras, Orases and Certak sat with half a
dozen other men as Delnar approached and joined them. 'How are you feeling?' asked the Earl. The men smiled. What answer could they
give? 'Can I ask a question, sir?' asked Orases. 'Certainly.' 'How is it that Druss has stayed alive so
long? I mean, he has no defence to speak of.' 'It's a good point,' said the Earl, doffing
his helm and running his fingers through his hair, enjoying the cool of the
night. "The reason is contained in your question. It is because he has no
defence. That terrible axe rarely leaves a man with a non-mortal wound. To kill
Druss you have to be prepared to die. No, not just prepared. You would have to
attack Druss in the sure knowledge that he will kill you. Now, most men want to
live. You understand?' 'Not really, sir,' admitted Orases. 'Do you know the one kind of warrior no one
wants to face?' asked Delnar. 'No, sir.' 'The baresark, sometimes called the
berserker, a man whose killing frenzy makes him oblivious to pain and uncaring
about life. He throws his armour away and attacks the enemy, cutting and
killing until he himself is cut to pieces. I saw a baresark once who had lost
an arm. As the blood spewed from the stump he aimed it in the faces of his
attackers and carried on fighting until he dropped. 'No one wants to fight such a man. Now,
Druss is even more formidable than the berserker. He has all the virtues, but
his killing frenzy is controlled. He can think clearly. And when you add the
man's awesome strength he becomes a veritable machine of destruction.' 'But surely a chance thrust amid the
melee,' said Diagoras. 'A sudden slip on a pool of blood. He could die as well
as any other man.' 'Yes,' admitted Delnar. 'I do not say that
he won't die in such a way; only that the odds are all with Druss. Most of you
saw him today. Those who fought alongside him had no time to study his
technique, but others of you caught a glimpse of the Legend. He's always
balanced, always moving. His eyes are never still. His peripheral vision is
incredible. He can sense danger even amid chaos. Today a very brave Panthian
warrior hurled himself on the axe, dragging it from Druss's hand. A second
warrior followed. Did anyone see it?' 'I did,' said Orases. 'But you didn't really learn from it. The
first Panthian died to remove Druss's weapon. The second was to engage him
while the others breached the line. Had they come through then, our force might
have been split and pushed back into the walls of the mountain. Druss saw that
instantly. That's why, although he could have just knocked his attacker
senseless and retrieved his axe, he hurled the man back into the breach. Now
think on this: In that instant Druss had seen the danger, formulated a plan of
action, and carried it out. More even than this. He retrieved the axe and took
the battle to the enemy. That's what broke them. Druss had judged exactly the
right moment to attack. It's the instinct of the born warrior.' 'But how did he know we would follow him?'
asked Diagoras. 'He could have been cut to pieces.' 'Even in this he was confident. That's why
he asked you and Certak to stand alongside him. Now that's a compliment. He
knew you would respond, and that others who might not follow him would follow
you.' 'He has told you this?' asked Certak. The Earl chuckled. 'No. In a way Druss
would be as surprised to hear it as you are. His actions are not reasoned. As I
said, they are instinctive. If we live through this you will leam much.' 'Do you think we will?' asked Orases. 'If we are strong,' lied Delnar smoothly,
surprised at himself. * The Panthians came again at dawn, creeping
up through the pass as the Drenai waited, swords drawn. But they did not
attack. Under the bewildered eyes of the defenders, they hauled away the bodies
of their comrades. It was a bizarre scene. Delnar ordered the
Drenai back twenty paces to make room for the work, and the warriors waited.
Delnar sheathed his sword and moved alongside Druss in the front line. 'What do you think?' 'I think they're preparing the ground for
chariots,' said Druss. 'Horses will never attack a solid line.
They'll pull up short,' the Earl pointed out. 'Take a look yonder,' muttered the axeman. On the far side of the stream, the Ventrian
army had parted, making way for the gleaming bronze chariots of the Tantrians.
With their huge wheels bearing sickle blades, serrated and deadly, each chariot
was drawn by two horses and manned by a driver and a spear carrier. For an hour the clearing of bodies
continued, while the chariots formed a line in the valley below. As the
Panthians withdrew, Delnar ordered forward thirty men carrying the wicker
shields retrieved from the battle the day before. The shields were spread in a
line across the pass and doused with lantern oil. Delnar placed his hand on Druss's shoulder.
'Take the line fifty paces forward, beyond the shields. When they attack, break
formation left and right and make for the cover of the rocks. Once they are
through we will fire the shields. Hopefully that will stop them. The second
rank will engage the chariots while your line holds the following infantry.' 'Sounds good,' said Druss. 'If it doesn't work we won't try it again,'
said Delnar. Druss grinned. Along the line of chariots the drivers were
pulling silken hoods over the eyes of the horses. Druss led his two hundred men
forward, hurdling the wall of wicker shields, Diagoras, Certak and Archytas
beside him. The thunder of hooves on the valley floor
echoed through the crags as two hundred charioteers whipped their horses into
the gallop. With the chariots almost upon them Druss
bellowed the order to break ranks. As men raced to the safety of the mountain
walls on either side, the enemy thundered on towards the second line. Flaming
torches were flung upon the wall of oil-soaked wicker shields. Black smoke
billowed instantly, followed by dancing flames. The breeze carried the smoke
towards the east, burning the flaring nostrils of the hooded horses. Whinnying
their terror, they tried to turn, ignoring the biting whips of the charioteers. Instantly all was confusion. The second
line of chariots tore into the first, horses falling, vehicles overturning,
hurling screaming men to the jagged rocks. And into the milling chaos leapt the
Drenai, hurdling the dying flames to fall upon the Ventrian spearmen, whose
lances were useless at such close quarters. Gorben, from his vantage point a half-mile
away, ordered a legion of infantry into the fray. Druss and the two hundred Drenai swordsmen
re-formed across the pass, locking shields against the new attack, presenting a
glittering wall of blades to the silver-armoured infantry. Crushing the skull of one man and gutting a
second, Druss stepped back, casting a lightning glance to left and right. The line held. More Drenai fell in this attack than on the
previous day, but their numbers were few compared with the losses suffered by
the Ventrians. Only a handful of chariots burst back
through the Drenai front line, there to crash and cut a path through their own
infantry in their desire to be free of the pass. Hour upon bloody hour the battle continued,
savagely fought by both sides, with no thought of quarter. The silver-clad Ventrian infantry continued
to press their attack, but by dusk their efforts lacked conviction and weight. Furious, Gorben ordered their general
forward into the pass. 'Lead them hard, or you'll beg to be
allowed to die,' he promised. The general's body fell within the
hour, and the infantry slunk back across the stream in the gathering gloom of
twilight. * Ignoring the dancing troupe performing
before him, Gorben lay back on the silk-covered couch, conversing in low tones
with Bodasen. The Emperor wore full battle-dress, and behind him stood the
massively muscled Panthian bodyguard who for the last five years had been
Gorben's executioner. He killed with his hands, sometimes by strangling his
victims slowly, at other times gouging his thumbs through the eye sockets of
the hapless prisoners. All executions were performed before the Emperor, and
scarcely a week passed without such a grisly scene. The Panthian had once killed a man by
crushing his skull between his hands, to the applause of Gorben and his courtiers. Bodasen was sickened by it all, but he was
caught within a web of his own making. Through the years, naked ambition had
driven him to the heights of power. He now commanded the Immortals and was,
under Gorben, the most powerful man in Ventria. But the position was perilous.
Gorben's paranoia was such that few of his generals survived for long, and Bodasen
had begun to feel the Emperor's eyes upon him. Tonight he had invited Gorben to his tent,
promising him an evening of entertainment, but the king was in a surly,
argumentative mood, and Bodasen trod warily. 'You thought the Panthians and the chariots
would fail, did you not?' asked Gorben. The question was loaded with menace. If
the answer was yes, the Emperor would ask why Bodasen had not stated his view.
Was he not the Emperor's military advisor? What was the use of an advisor who
gave no advice? If the answer was no, then his military judgement would prove
to be lacking. 'We have fought many wars over the years,
my lord,' he said. 'In most,of them we have suffered reverses. You have always
said "Unless we try we will never know how to succeed".' 'You think we should send in my Immortals?'
asked Gorben. Always before the Emperor had called them your Immortals.
Bodasen licked his lips and smiled. 'There is no doubt they could clear the
pass swiftly. The Drenai are fighting well. They are disciplined. But they know
they cannot withstand the Immortals. But that decision is yours alone, my lord.
Only you have the divine mastery of tactics. Men like myself are mere
reflections of your greatness.' 'Then where are the men who can think for
themselves?' snapped the Emperor. 'I must be honest with you, sire,' said
Bodasen quickly. 'You will not find such a man.' 'Why?' 'You seek men who can think as rapidly as
you yourself, with your own penetrating insight. Such men do not exist. You are
supremely gifted, sire. The gods would visit such wisdom on only one man in ten
generations.' 'You speak truly,' said Gorben. 'But there
is little joy in being a man apart, separated from his fellows by his god-given
gifts. I am hated, you know,' he whispered, eyes darting to the sentries beyond
the tent entrance. 'There will always be those that are
jealous, sire,' said Bodasen. 'Are you jealous of me, Bodasen?' 'Yes, sire.' Gorben rolled to his side, eyes gleaming.
'Speak on.' 'In all the years I have served and loved
you, lord, I have always wished I could be more like you. For then I could have
served you better. A man would be a fool not to be jealous of you. But he is
insane if he hates you because you are what he never can be.' 'Well said. You are an honest man. One of
the few I can trust. Not like Druss, who promised to serve me, and now thwarts
my destiny. I want him dead, my general. I want his head brought to me.' 'It shall be done, sire,' said Bodasen. Gorben leaned back, gazing around him at
the tent and its contents. 'Your quarters are almost as lavish as my own,' he
said. 'Only because they are filled with gifts
from you, sire,' answered Bodasen swiftly. * Faces and armour blackened by dirt mixed
with oil, Druss and fifty swordsmen silently waded the narrow stream under a
moonless sky. Praying the clouds would not part, Druss led the men single-file
towards the eastern bank, axe in hand, blackened shield held before him. Once
ashore Druss squatted at the centre of the small group, pointing towards two
dozing sentries by a dying fire. Diagoras and two others ghosted from the
group, approaching the sentries silently, daggers in hand. The men died without
a sound. Removing torches hastily constructed from the wicker shields of
Panthian warriors, Druss and the soldiers approached the sentries' fire. Stepping over the bodies, Druss lit his
torch and ran towards the nearest tent. His men followed suit, racing from tent
to tent, until flames leapt thirty feet into the night sky. Suddenly all was chaos, as screaming men
burst from blazing canopies to fall before the swords of the Drenai. Druss
raced ahead, cutting a crimson path through the confused Ventrians, his eyes
fixed on the tent ahead, its glowing griffin outlined in the towering flames.
Close behind came Certak and a score of warriors bearing torches. Wrenching
open the flaps, Druss leapt inside. 'Damn,' he grunted, 'Gorben's not here!
Curse it!' Setting torch to silk, Druss shouted for
his men to regroup, then led them back towards the stream. No concerted effort
was made to stop them, as Ventrians milled in confusion, many of them
half-clothed, others filling helmets with water, forming human chains to battle
the fierce inferno racing on the wings of the wind throughout the Ventrian
camp. A small group of Immortals, swords in hand,
collided with Druss as he raced towards the stream. Snaga leapt forward,
braining the first. The second died as Diagoras back-handed a slash across his
throat. The battle was brief and bloody, but the element of surprise was with
the Drenai. Bursting through the front line of swordsmen, Druss crashed his axe
through one man's side before reversing a slashing swipe across another's
shoulder. Bodasen ran from his tent, sword in hand.
Swiftly gathering a small group of Immortals, he raced past the flames towards
the battle. A Drenai warrior loomed before him. The man aimed a thrust at
Bodasen's unprotected body. The Ventrian parried and launched a devastating
riposte that tore open the man's throat. Bodasen stepped over the body and led
his men forward. Druss killed two men, then bellowed for the
Drenai to fall back. The pounding of feet from behind caused him
to swivel and face the new force. With the fire behind them Druss could not
make out faces. Nearby Archytas despatched a warrior, then
saw Druss standing alone. Without thinking, he raced towards the
Immortals. In that instant Druss charged. His axe rose and fell, shearing
through armour and bone. Diagoras and Certak joined him, with four other Drenai
warriors. The battle was brief. Only one Ventrian broke clear, hurling himself
to the right and rolling to his feet behind Archytas. The tall Drenai turned on
his heel and engaged the man. Archytas grinned as their swords met. The man was
old, though skilful, and no match for the young Drenai. Their swords glittered
in the firelight: parry, riposte, counter, thrust and block. Suddenly the
Ventrian seemed to trip. Archytas leapt forward. His opponent ducked and rolled
to his feet in one flowing movement, his sword ramming into Archytas' groin. 'You live and learn, boy,' hissed Bodasen,
dragging his blade clear. Bodasen turned as more Immortals ran forward. Gorben
wanted Druss's head. Tonight he would give it to him. Druss wrenched his axe from a man's body
and sprinted for the stream and the relative sanctuary of the pass. A warrior leapt into his path. Snaga sang
through the air, smashing the man's sword to shards. A back-hand cut shattered
his ribs. As Druss passed him, the man reached out, grabbing his shoulder. In
the gleam of the flames, the axeman saw it was Bodasen. The dying Immortal
general gripped Druss's jerkin, trying to slow him. Druss kicked him aside and
ran on. Bodasen fell heavily and rolled, watching
the burly figure of the axeman and his companions fording the stream. The Ventrian's vision swam. He closed his
eyes. Weariness settled on him like a cloak. Memories danced in his mind. He
heard a great noise like the crashing of the sea, and saw again the corsair
ship bearing down upon them, gliding out of the past. Once more he raced with
Druss to board her, carrying the fight to the aft deck. Damn! He should have realised Druss would
never change. Attack. Always attack. He opened his eyes, blinking to clear his
vision. Druss was safely on the other side of the stream now, leading the
warriors back to the Drenai line. Bodasen tried to move, but agony lanced
him. Carefully he probed the wound in his side, his sticky fingers feeling the
broken ribs and the rush of arterial blood from the gaping gash. It was over. No more fear. No more insanity. No more
bowing and scraping to the painted madman. In a way he was relieved. His whole life had been an anticlimax after
that battle with Druss against the corsairs. In that one towering moment he had
been alive, standing with Druss against . . . They brought his body to the Emperor in the
pink light of dawn. And Gorben wept. Around them the camp was a shambles.
Gorben's generals stood beside the throne, uneasy and silent. Gorben covered
the body with his own cloak and dried his eyes on a white linen towel. Then he
turned his attention to the man kneeling before him, flanked by Immortal
guards. 'Bodasen dead. My tent destroyed. My camp
in flames. And you, you pathetic wretch, were the officer of the guard. A score
of men invade my camp, killing my beloved general, and you still live. Explain
yourself!' 'My lord, I sat with you in Bodasen's tent
- by your order.' 'So now it is my fault the camp was
attacked!' 'No, sire . . .' 'No, sire,' mimicked Gorben. 'I should
think not. Your sentries were sleeping. Now they are dead. Do you not think it
fitting for you to join them?' 'Sire?' 'Join them, I say. Take your blade and
slice your veins.' The officer drew his ornamental dagger,
reversed it, then plunged the blade into his belly. For a moment there was no
movement. Then the man began to scream and writhe. Gorben drew his sword,
slashing the blade through the man's neck. 'He couldn't even do that right,' said
Gorben. * Druss entered Sieben's tent and hurled his
axe to the floor. The poet was awake, but lying silently watching the stars
when Druss arrived. The axeman sat down on the floor, his great head slumped to
his chest, staring at his hands, clenching and unclenching his fists. The poet
sensed his despair. He struggled to sit up, the ache in his chest becoming a
stabbing pain. He grunted. Druss's head came up, his back straightened. 'How are you feeling?" asked Druss. 'Fine. I take it the raid failed?' 'Gorben was not in his tent.' 'What is wrong, Druss?' The axeman's head slumped forward and he
didn't answer. Sieben climbed from the bed and made his way to Druss, sitting
beside him. 'Come along, old horse, tell me.' 'I killed Bodasen. He came at me out of
shadows and I cut him down.' Sieben put his arm on Druss's shoulder.
'What can I say?' 'You could tell me why - why it had to be
me.' 'I can't tell you that. I wish I could. But
you did not travel across the ocean, seeking to kill him, Druss. He came here.
With an army.' 'I only ever had a few friends in my life,'
said Druss. 'Eskodas died in my home. I've killed Bodasen. And I've brought you
here to die for a pile of rock in a forgotten pass. I'm so tired, poet. I
should never have come here.' Druss rose and left the tent. Dipping his
hands in the water- barrel outside, he washed his face. His back was painful,
especially under the shoulder-blade where the spear had cut him so many years
before. A swollen vein in his right leg nagged at him. 'I don't know if you can hear me, Bodasen,'
he whispered, staring up at the stars, 'but I am sorry it had to be me. You
were a good friend in happier days, and a man to walk the mountains with.' Returning to the tent, he found Sieben had
fallen asleep in the chair. Druss lifted him gently and carried him to his
bed,.covering him with a thick blanket. 'You're worn out, poet,' he said. He
felt for Sieben's pulse. It was ragged but strong. 'Stay with me, Sieben,' he
told him. 'I'll get you home.' As the dawn's rays bathed the peaks Druss
walked slowly down the rocky slope to stand again with the Drenai line. For eight terrible days Skeln became a
charnel house, littered with swelling corpses and the foul stench of
putrefaction. Gorben threw legion after legion up into the pass, only to see
them stumble back defeated and dejected. The dwindling band of defenders was
held together by the indomitable courage of the black-garbed axeman, whose
terrifying skill dismayed the Ventrians. Some said he was a demon, others a god
of war. Old tales were recalled. The Chaos Warrior walked again in the
stories told around Ventrian camp-fires. Only the Immortals stayed aloof from the
fears. They knew it would fall to them to clear the pass, and they knew it
would not be easy. On the eighth night Gorben at last gave in
to the insistent demands of his generals. Time was running out. The way had to
be taken tomorrow lest the Drenai army trap them in this cursed bay. The order was given and the Immortals honed
their swords. At dawn they rose silently, forming their
black and silver line across the stream, staring stonily ahead at the three
hundred men who stood between them and the Sentran Plain. Tired were the Drenai, bone-weary and
hollow-eyed. Abadai, the new general of the Immortals,
walked forward and lifted his sword in silent salute to the Drenai, as was the
Immortal custom. The blade swept down and the line moved forward. To the rear
three drummers began the doleful marching beat, and the Immortals' swords
flashed into the air. Grim were the faces as the cream of
Ventria's army slowly marched towards the Drenai. Druss, bearing a shield now, watched the
advance, his cold blue eyes showing no expression, his jaw set, his mouth a
tight line. He stretched the muscles of his shoulders, arid took a deep breath. This was the test. This was the day of
days. The spear-point of Gorben's destiny against
the resolution of the Drenai. He knew the Immortals were damned fine
warriors, but they fought now for glory alone. The Drenai, on the other hand, were proud
men, and sons of proud men, descended from a race of warriors. They were
fighting for their homes, their wives, their sons, and sons yet unborn. For a
free land and the right to make their own way, run their own lives, fulfil the
destiny of a free race. Egel and Karnak had fought for this dream, and
countless more like them down through the centuries. Behind the axeman, Earl Delnar watched the
nearing enemy line. He was impressed by their discipline and, in a strangely
detached way, found himself admiring them. He transferred his gaze to the
axeman. Without him they could never have held this long. He was like the
anchor of a ship in a storm, holding the prow into the wind, allowing it to
ride clear and face the might of the elements without being broken upon the
rocks or overturned by the power of the sea. Strong men drew courage from his
presence. For he was a constant in a world of shifting change - a colossal
force that could be trusted to endure. As the Immortals loomed ever nearer, Delnar
could feel the fear spreading among the men. The line shifted as shields were
gripped more firmly. The Earl smiled. Time for you to speak, Druss, he thought. With the instinct of a lifetime of war,
Druss obliged. Raising his axe he bellowed at the advancing Immortals. 'Come in and die, you whoresons! I am Druss
and this is death!' * Rowena was picking flowers in the small
garden behind the house when the pain struck her, cutting beneath her ribs
through to her back. Her legs collapsed beneath her and she toppled into the
blooms. Pudri saw her from the meadow gate and ran to her side, shouting for
help. Sieben's wife, Niobe, came running from the meadow and between them they
lifted the unconscious woman and carried her into the house. Pudri forced a
little foxglove powder into her mouth, then poured water into a clay goblet.
Holding it to her lips, he pinched her nostrils, forcing her to swallow. But this time the pain did not pass, and
Rowena was carried upstairs to her bed while Niobe rode to the village for the
physician. Pudri sat by Rowena's bedside, his lined
leathery face sunken and filled with concern, his large dark eyes moist with
tears. 'Please do not die, lady,' he whispered.
'Please.' Rowena floated from her body and opened her
spirit eyes, gazing down with pity at the matronly form in her bed. She saw the
wrinkled face and greying hair, the dark rings below the eyes. Was this her?
Was this tired, worn-out shell the Rowena that had been taken to Ventria years
before? And poor Pudri, so shrunken and old. Poor
devoted Pudri. Rowena felt the pull of the Source. She
closed her eyes and thought of Druss. On the wings of the wind, the Rowena of
yesterday's dreams soared above the farm, tasting the sweetness of the air,
enjoying the freedom of those born to the sky. Lands swept below her, green and
fertile, dappled with the gold of cornfields. Rivers became satin ribbons, seas
rippling lakes, cities peopled with insects scurrying without purpose. The world shrank until it became a plate
studded with gems of blue and white, and then a stone, rounded as if by the
sea, and finally a tiny jewel. She thought of Druss once more. 'On, not yet!' she begged. 'Let me see him
once. Just once.' Colours swam before her eyes, and she fell,
twisting and spinning through the clouds. The land below her was gold and
green, the cornfields and meadows of the Sentran Plain, rich and verdant. To
the east it seemed as if a giant's cloak had been carelessly thrown on to the
land, grey and lifeless, the mountains of Skeln merely folds in the cloth.
Closer she flew until she hovered over the pass, gazing down on the embattled
armies. Druss was not hard to find. He stood, as always, at the centre of the
carnage, his murderous axe cutting and killing. Sadness touched her then, a sorrow so deep
it was like a pain in her soul. 'Goodbye, my love,' she said. And turned her face to the heavens. * The Immortals hurled themselves on the
Drenai line, and the clash of steel on steel sounded above the insistent drums.
Druss hammered Snaga into a bearded face, then sidestepped a murderous thrust,
disembowelling his assailant. A spear cut his face, a sword-blade ripped a
shallow wound in his shoulder. Forced back a pace, Druss dug his heel into
the ground, his bloody axe slashing into the black and silver ranks before him. Slowly the weight of the Immortals forced
back the Drenai line. A mighty blow to Druss's shield split it
down the middle. Hurling it from him, the axeman gripped Snaga with both hands,
slashing a red swathe through the enemy. Anger turned to fury within him. Druss's eyes blazed, power flooding his
tired, aching muscles. The Drenai had been pushed back nearly
twenty paces. Ten more and the pass widened. They would not be able to hold. Druss's mouth stretched in a death's-head
grin. The line was bending like a bow on either side of him, but the axeman
himself was immovable. The Immortals pushed towards him, but were cut down with
consummate ease. Strength flowed through him. He began to laugh. It was a terrible sound, and it filled the
veins of the enemy with ice. Druss lashed Snaga into the face of a bearded
Immortal. The man was catapulted into his fellows. The axeman leapt forward,
cleaving Snaga into the chest of the next warrior. Then he hammered left and
right. Men fell back from his path, opening a space in the ranks. Bellowing his
rage to the sky, Druss charged into the mass. Certak and Diagoras followed. It was suicidal, yet the Drenai formed a
wedge, Druss at the head, and sheared into the Ventrians. The giant axeman was unstoppable. Warriors
threw themselves at him from every side, but his axe flashed like quicksilver.
A young soldier called Eericetes, only accepted into the Immortals a month
before, saw Druss bearing down on him. Fear rose like bile in his throat.
Dropping his sword he turned, pushing at the man behind him. 'Back,' he shouted. 'Get back!' The men made way for him, and the cry was
taken up by others, thinking it was an order from the officers. 'Back! Back to the stream!' The cry swept
through the ranks and the Immortals turned, streaming towards the Ventrian
camp. From his throne Gorben watched in horror as
his men waded the shallow stream, disorganised and bewildered. His eyes flicked up to the pass, where the
axeman stood waving Snaga in the air. Druss's voice floated down to him, echoing
from the crags. 'Where is your legend now, you eastern sons
of bitches?' Abadai, blood streaming from a shallow cut
in his forehead, approached the Emperor, dropping to his knees, head bowed. 'How did it happen?' demanded Gorben. 'I don't know, sire. One moment we were
pushing them back, and then the axeman went mad, charging our line. We had
them. We really had them. But somehow the cry went up to fall back, and then
all was chaos.' In the pass Druss swiftly honed the dulled
blades of his axe. 'We beat the Immortals,' said Diagoras,
slapping Druss on the shoulder. 'By all the gods in Missael, we beat the damned
Immortals.' 'They'll be back, lad. And very soon. You'd
better pray the army is moving at speed.' With Snaga razor-edged once more, Druss
looked to his wounds. The cut on his face stung like the devil, but the flow of
blood had ceased. His shoulder was more of a problem, but he strapped it as
best he could. If they survived the day, he would stitch it that night. There
were several smaller cuts to his legs and arms but these had congealed and
sealed themselves. A shadow fell across him. He looked up.
Sieben stood there, wearing breastplate and helm. 'How do I look?' asked the poet. 'Ridiculous. What do you think you're
doing?' 'I'm getting into the thick of it, Druss
old horse. And don't think you can stop me.' 'I wouldn't dream of it.' 'You're not going to tell me I'm stupid?' Druss stood and grabbed his friend's
shoulders. 'These have been good years, poet. The best I could have wished for.
There are few treasures in a man's life. One of them comes with the knowledge
that a man has a friend to stand beside him when the hour grows dark. And let's
be honest, Sieben . . . It couldn't get much darker, could it?' 'Now you come to mention it, Druss my dear,
it does seem a tiny bit hopeless.' 'Well, everybody has to die sometime,' said
Druss. 'When death comes for you, spit in his eye, poet.' 'I'll do my best.' 'You always did.' The drums sounded again and the Immortals
massed. Fury was in their eyes now, and they glared balefully at the defenders.
They would not be turned back. Not by Druss. Not by the pitiful two hundred
facing them. From the first clash the Drenai line was
forced back. Even Druss, needing room to swing his axe, could find space only
by retreating a pace. Then another. Then another. He battled on, a tireless
machine, bloody and bloodied, Snaga rising in a crimson spray and falling with
pitiless efficiency. Time and again he rallied the Drenai. But
ever on came the Immortals, striding across the bodies of their dead, their
eyes grim, their mood resolute. Suddenly the Drenai line broke, and the
battle degenerated in moments to a series of skirmishes, small circles of
warriors forming shield rings amid the black and silver sea filling the pass. The Sentran Plain lay open to the
conqueror. The battle was lost. But the Immortals were desperate to erase
the memory of defeat. They blocked the pathway to the west, determined to kill
the last of the defenders. From his vantage point on the eastern hill
Gorben threw down his sceptre in fury, turning on Abadai. 'They have won. Why are they not pushing
on? Their bloodlust leaves them blocking the pass!' Abadai could not believe his eyes. With
time a desperate enemy waiting to betray them, the Immortals were unknowingly
continuing the work of the defenders. The narrow pass was now gorged with
warriors as the rest of Gorben's army jostled behind them, waiting to sweep
through to the plain beyond. Druss, Delnar, Diagoras and a score of
others had formed a ring of steel by a cluster of jutting boulders. Fifty paces
to the right Sieben, Certak and thirty men were surrounded and fighting
furiously. The poet's face was grey and terrible pain grew in his chest.
Dropping his sword he scrambled atop a grey boulder, pulling his throwing knife
from its wrist sheath. Certak parried one thrust, but a spear
punched through his breastplate, ripping into his lungs. Blood welled in his
throat and he fell. A tall Ventrian leapt to the boulder. Sieben hurled his
blade. It took the man through the right eye. A spear flashed through the air, lancing
Sieben's chest. Strangely, far from causing him pain, it released the agony
from his cramped heart. He toppled from the rock, to be swallowed by the black
and silver horde. Druss saw him fall - and went berserk. Breaking from the shield ring, he launched
his giant frame into the massed ranks of the warriors before him, cutting them
aside like wheat before a scythe. Delnar closed the ring behind him,
disembowelling a Ventrian lancer and locking shields with Diagoras. Surrounded now by Immortals, Druss hammered
his way forward. A spear took him high in the back. He swung round, braining
the lancer. A sword bounced from his helm, gashing his cheek. A second spear
pierced his side, and a clubbing blow from the flat of a sword thundered into
his temple. Grabbing one assailant, he hauled him forward, butting him
viciously. The man sagged in his grip. More enemies closed in around the
axeman. Using the unconscious Ventrian as a shield, Druss dropped to the
ground. Swords and spears slashed at him. Then came the sound of bugles. Druss struggled to rise, but a booted foot
lashed into his temple and he fell into darkness. * He awoke and cried out. His face was
swathed in bandages, his body racked with pain. He tried to sit, but a hand
pushed gently on his shoulder. 'Rest, axeman. You've lost a lot of blood.' 'Delnar?' 'Yes. We won, Druss. The army arrived just
in time. Now rest.' The last moments of battle surged back into
Druss's mind. 'Sieben!' 'He is alive. Barely.' 'Take me to him.' 'Don't be a fool. By rights you should be
dead. Your body was pierced a score of times. If you move, the stitches will
open and you'll bleed to death.' 'Take me to him, damn you!' Delnar cursed and helped the axeman to his
feet. Calling an orderly who took the weight on the left side, he half-carried
the wounded giant to the back of the tent and the still, sleeping form of
Sieben the Sagamaster. Lowering Druss into a seat by the bedside,
Delnar and the orderly withdrew. Druss leaned forward, gazing at the bandages
around Sieben's chest, and the slowly spreading red stain at the centre. . 'Poet!' he called softly. Sieben opened his eyes. 'Can nothing kill you, axeman?' he
whispered. 'It doesn't look like it.' 'We won,' said Sieben. 'And I want you to
note that I didn't hide.' 'I didn't expect you to.' 'I'm awfully tired, Druss old horse.' 'Don't die. Please don't die,' said the
axeman, tears causing him to blink furiously. 'There are some things even you cannot
have, old horse. My heart is almost useless. I don't know why I've lived this
long. But you were right. They have been good years. I wouldn't change
anything. Not even this. Look after Niobe and the children. And make sure some
sagamaster does me justice. You'll do that?' 'Of course I will.' 'I wish I could be around to add to this
saga. What a fitting climax.' 'Yes. Fitting. Listen, poet. I'm not good
with words. But I want to tell you . . . I want you to know you've been like a
brother to me. The best friend I ever had. The very best. Poet? Sieben?' Sieben's eyes stared unseeing at the tent
ceiling. His face was peaceful and looked almost young again. The lines seemed
to vanish before Druss's eyes. The axeman began to shake. Delnar approached and
closed Sieben's eyes, covering his face with a sheet. Then he helped Druss back
to his bed. 'Gorben is dead, Druss. His own men slew
him as they ran. Our fleet has the Ventrians bottled up in the bay. At the
moment one of their generals is meeting with Abalayn to discuss surrender. We
did it. We held the pass. Diagoras wants to see you. He made it through the
battle. Can you believe it, even fat Orases is still with us! Now, I'd have
laid ten to one odds he wouldn't survive.' 'Give me a drink, will you,' whispered
Druss. Delnar came back to his side, bearing a goblet
of cool water. Druss sipped it slowly. Diagoras entered the tent, carrying
Snaga. The axe had been cleaned of blood and polished to shine like silver. Druss gazed at it, but did not reach out.
The dark-eyed young warrior smiled. 'You did it,' he said. 'I have never seen
the like. I would not have believed it possible.' 'All things are possible,' said Druss.
'Never forget that, laddie.' Tears welled in the axeman's eyes, and he
turned his head away from them. After a moment he heard them back away. Only then
did he allow the tears to fall. |
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