Chapter 87
'Better to die free than to live in chains,' Maquin said.
'Is it?' Raina asked, glancing between her son and Maquin.
'Aye, it is,' Maquin said with conviction. 'And no one knows the truth of that better than I do.' He felt Fidele's hand brush his back.
'We will taste freedom,' Raina said, 'even if it is only for a short while.'
They all strode down the corridor into a square room before a set of stairs. Two guards were sprawled on the floor. Alben shrugged. Krelis took their cloaks and gave them to the giants.
'Probably won't help much,' he muttered.
'I'll go up first, make a distraction for you,' Veradis said. 'When you hear it walk fast, turn right at the top of the stairs and-'
'I know the way,' Maquin said.
'Veradis,' Fidele said. 'You're not coming with us?'
'No,' Veradis said. His eyes flickered between them all.
'What?' bl.u.s.tered Krelis. 'But you must come with us.'
'No. I have something to do.'
Maquin recognized that look. Had seen it many times in his own reflection.
Honour. Or death. And sometimes one follows the other.
'Come with us, friend,' Maquin said, stepping close to Veradis.
Veradis just shook his head.
'We'll see you again, then,' Maquin said, squeezing Veradis' shoulder.
'Aye,' Veradis nodded grimly. 'This side or the other.'
'What are you staying here for?' Krelis called after him.
Veradis paused and looked back.
'Brother, please. Come with us,' Krelis pleaded.
Veradis shook his head. 'I cannot. But I will join you if I can.'
'Why? Why will you not come with us now?'
'Because I am going to kill Calidus.'
CHAPTER SEVENTY-FIVE.
ULFILAS.
Ulfilas reined his horse in, Dag beside him. He had ridden back from the front line to find Jael, pa.s.sing over two thousand men filling the road they had carved through the heart of Forn Forest. He felt a thrill of pride at seeing the road receding as far as his eye could see, branches arching over it as if they bowed to some royal procession.
Quite a feat.
He felt another thrill of excitement at what he had just discovered, or more accurately been told by Dag. He wanted to give the news to King Jael himself.
We started out with closer to three thousand men, Ulfilas thought as he rode through the throng. Hundreds had been lost to the cold and the predators of Forn.
And some of them have walked away on their own two feet, I am sure.
Many of the losses Ulfilas and Dag had attributed to enemy raids. They had kept their thoughts to themselves, not wanting to fuel the rumours that the Black Sun and his demons were hunting them at night. Nevertheless the fear had spread. The only thing that had stopped men deserting in large numbers was the fact that those who did desert were usually found dead within a day of leaving, victims of Forn's denizens.
'There he is.' Dag pointed, and Ulfilas saw Jael standing before his tent, watching it being raised for another night in the forest. Winter was breaking now, the cold air fresh rather than bitter, the ground softer underfoot. All about them branches were flouris.h.i.+ng with the green of new leaves. Days were lasting longer, allowing them to work later each day. Ulfilas jerked his reins and guided his horse down the embankment the road was being built upon, great lengths of timber laid over the crumbling stone of this ancient giants' road. Jael was surrounded by his usual guards, Fram and a dozen men, they in turn circled by a score of the Jehar warriors, Sumur close to Jael.
He is always close to Jael. A permanent reminder of Nathair and his threat, or promise, no doubt.
Jael looked up as Ulfilas and Dag approached.
'You have news?' he asked.
'We do, my King,' Ulfilas said.
'Come, then, tell me over a cup of wine,' Jael said and marched into his tent; servants inside were lighting
Within short moments Ulfilas was handed a cup of wine that had been warmed over a fire. He drank, allowing Jael to settle himself into his fur-draped chair.
'Well?' Jael asked when he was comfortable, a jewelled cup in his hand.
'We've found Dra.s.sil,' Ulfilas said.
Jael blinked at that, the words seeping in.
'You're sure?' was the first thing he said.
'Aye,' Dag said. 'Seen it with my own eyes.'
'What's it like, man?' Jael asked, leaning forward. That had been the first question Ulfilas had asked of the huntsman.
'It's big,' Dag said. 'Like nothing you've ever seen.'
'How long?' asked Jael, looking both excited and scared.
'Half a day,' Dag replied. 'We can stop building the road now, make a base camp here, use the old road to get there on the morrow.'
'The old road? Is it fit for purpose?'
'Good enough. We'll have to walk, not ride. But clearing the way and laying the new road would cost another half a ten-night.' He shrugged. 'Depends how desperate you are to get there.'
'We are the first, then,' Jael said.
'Oh aye, there were no other warbands camped outside the walls.'
'So I shall be ruler of Carnutan and Helveth. Gundul and Lothar will be my va.s.sals.' He smiled viciously.
'Do you think they'll just allow that to happen?' Ulfilas said, not able to keep the scepticism from his voice.
'Do you think Nathair lacks the ability to enforce it?' Jael replied.
Ulfilas remembered the display of Sumur against Fram, thought of a hundred like him. A thousand.
'No, I don't, now that you mention it.'
'Neither do I,' Jael said. 'So we shall march with dawn and attack on the morrow.'
'Would it not be wiser to wait?' Ulfilas said. 'Now that we have found Dra.s.sil. We could scout it out and wait for the others to arrive?'
'No,' a voice said behind them. Sumur, who had entered the tent silently. 'Meical is there. His puppet is there. I will taste their flesh before the sun sets on the morrow.'
They all looked at him in silence.
Taste their fles.h.!.+
'We have not carved our way through Forn to sit and wait,' Jael said, trying his best to ignore Sumur and avoid the flat stare of his eyes. 'Haelan is in there. I will not give him a chance to flee once again. And what of Gundul or Lothar? If we wait and they arrive from the south and west they will likely dispute my claim as first here! No. We shall be standing upon Dra.s.sil's walls by the time they arrive.' His grin widened. 'This is a good day. And the morrow will be better. Now, let's discuss how we are going to win the coming battle.'
CHAPTER SEVENTY-SIX.
VERADIS.
Veradis stood on the spiral of the tower steps and stared out of the window.
Below him was the courtyard of Brikan, where great iron pots blazed and crackled with fire, creating pools of light amidst the darkness. He watched as Fidele and the others, the giants stooping like ancients, ludicrous to any eyes that lingered upon them, made their way through the busy chaos. Horses were stamping and whinnying, men calling out, marching or mounting up. Making it worse, the cauldron's wain filled a large section of the courtyard, Jehar forming an unforgiving perimeter around it.
I have done all I can for them. My task here is too important to accompany them.
With relief he saw the escaping group pa.s.s through the arched gates that led to the encampment beyond, where according to Alben the men of Ripa were awaiting them.
Good.
He turned and strode up the stairs, grim-faced and determined.
Calidus' chamber was situated on the first floor of the tower, with two Jehar standing guard. Flies buzzed languidly around one of them. It didn't seem to bother him. They regarded Veradis with their black eyes as he knocked on the door and entered, not waiting for an invitation.
Calidus was bending over a small chest, silhouetted by a huge fireplace built into the wall. Unaware of Veradis' presence he was focused on placing something a doll-like figure with crude arms and legs into the chest.
Alcyon was standing to the left, before a huge unshuttered window that looked out onto the river as it curled tight to the rear of the tower.
Focus on your task.
'Ah,' Calidus said. He closed the lid of the chest with a snap. 'I was starting to think you had abandoned us.'
'That is not who I am,' Veradis said. He glanced at Alcyon, saw the giant regarding him with sombre eyes.
'No, it is not,' Calidus said. 'But a man of your mind-set. I imagine it is hard to come to terms with such a s.h.i.+ft in reality, almost like the ground changing beneath your feet.'
'I have had to think long and hard on it.'
'Indeed,' said Calidus, head c.o.c.ked to one side, studying Veradis intensely, like one of the vultures that circled a battlefield. Veradis walked to a table and poured himself a cup of wine, unable to meet Calidus' gaze.
'Have you visited Nathair first?' Calidus asked him.
'No,' Veradis said, sipping dark red wine and taking a step towards Calidus.
'That is unexpected,' Calidus frowned.
'I had some questions,' Veradis said and took another step closer. 'For you.'
'I would be happy to answer them for you, Veradis. You are a valued part of our campaign. Deeply talented at what you do. There is much you can accomplish for us.'
What I do. Kill people. A blunt instrument of war. And, oh, how many I have killed for your cause already...