Hell's Gate - David Weber and Linda Evans
Launching a Blazing New SF Adventure Series!
HELL'S GATE—ARC
David Weber
& Linda Evans
Advance Reader Copy
Unproofed
This is a work of fiction. All the
characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
Copyright ©2006 by David Weber and Linda Evans
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this
book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN-10: 1-4165-0939-9
ISBN-13:
978-1-4165-0939-4
First printing, November 2006
Cover Art by Kurt Miller
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Weber, David, 1952-
Hell's gate / by David
Weber & Linda Evans.
p. cm.
"A Baen Books original"--T.p. verso.
ISBN 1-4165-0939-9
1. Space
warfare--Fiction. 2. Life on other planets--Fiction. I. Evans,
Linda. II. Title.
PS3573.E217H45 2006
813'.54--dc22
2006019700
Typesetting by Joy Freeman, PagesByJoy.com
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
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of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Baen Books by David Weber
Honor Harrington:
On Basilisk Station
The Honor of the Queen
The Short Victorious War
Field of Dishonor
Flag in Exile
Honor Among Enemies
In Enemy Hands
Echoes of Honor
Ashes of Victory
War of Honor
At All Costs
Honorverse:
Crown of Slaves (with Eric Flint)
The Shadow of Saganami
edited by David Weber:
More than Honor
Worlds of Honor
Changer of Worlds
The Service of the Sword
Mutineers' Moon
The Armageddon Inheritance
Heirs of Empire
Empire from the Ashes
In Fury Born
The Apocalypse Troll
The Excalibur Alternative
Bolos!
Old Soldiers
Oath of Swords
The War God's Own
Wind Rider's Oath
with Steve White:
Crusade
In Death Ground
The Stars At War
The Shiva Option
Insurrection
The Stars At War II
with Eric Flint:
1633
with John Ringo:
March Upcountry
March to the Sea
March to the Stars
We Few
with Linda Evans:
Hell's Gate
Hell Hath No Fury (forthcoming)
Baen Books by Linda Evans
Far Edge of Darkness
Time Scout (with Robert Asprin)
For King and Country (with Robert Asprin)
Chapter One
The tall noncom could have stepped
straight out of a recruiting poster. His fair hair and height were a
legacy from his North Shalhoman ancestors, but he was far, far
away—a universe away—from their steep cliffs and
icy fjords. His jungle camo fatigues were starched and ironed to
razor-sharp creases as he stood on the crude, muddy landing
ground with his back to the looming hole of the portal. His
immaculate uniform looked almost as bizarrely out of place
against the backdrop of the hacked-out jungle clearing as the
autumn-kissed red and gold of the forest giants beyond the portal,
and he seemed impervious to the swamp-spawned insects zinging
about his ears. He wore the shoulder patch of the Second Andaran
Temporal Scouts, and the traces of gray at his temples went
perfectly with the experience lines etched into his hard, bronzed
face.
He gazed up into the painfully bright
afternoon sky, blue-gray eyes slitted against the westering sun,
with his helmet tucked into the crook of his left elbow and his
right thumb hooked into the leather sling of the dragoon arbalest
slung over his shoulder. He'd been standing there in the blistering
heat for the better part of half an hour, yet he seemed unaware of
it. In fact, he didn't even seem to be perspiring, although that had
to be an illusion.
He also seemed prepared to stand
there for the next week or so, if that was what it took. But then,
finally, a black dot appeared against the cloudless blue, and his
nostrils flared as he inhaled in satisfaction.
He watched the dot sweep steadily
closer, losing altitude as it came, then lifted his helmet and settled
it onto his head. He bent his neck, shielding his eyes with his left
hand as the dragon back-winged in to a landing. Bits of debris flew
on the sudden wind generated by the mighty beast's iridescent-
scaled wings, and the noncom waited until the last twigs had
pattered back to the ground before he lowered his hand and
straightened once more.
The dragon's arrival was a sign of
just how inaccessible this forward post actually was. In fact, it was
just over seven hundred and twenty miles from the coastal base, in
what would have been the swamps of the Kingdom of Farshal in
northeastern Hilmar back home. Those were some pretty
inhospitable miles, and the mud here was just as gluey as the
genuine Hilmaran article, so aerial transport was the only real
practical way in at the moment. The noncom himself had arrived
back at the post via the regular transport dragon flight less than
forty-eight hours earlier, and as he'd surveyed the much below,
he'd been struck by just how miserable it would have been to slog
through it on foot. How anyone was going to properly exploit a
portal in the middle of this godforsaken swamp was more than he
could say, but he didn't doubt that the Union Trans-Temporal
Transit Authority would find a way. The UTTTA had the best
engineers in the universe—in several universes, for
that matter—and plenty of experience with portals in terrain
even less prepossessing than this.
Probably less prepossessing, anyway.
The dragon went obediently to its
knees at the urging of its pilot, and a single passenger swung down
the boarding harness strapped about the beast's shoulders. The
newcomer was dark-haired, dark-eyed, and even taller than the
noncom, although much younger, and each point of his collar bore
the single silver shield of a commander of one hundred. Like the
noncom, he wore the shoulder flash of the 2nd ATS, and the name
"Olderhan, Jasak" was stenciled above his breast pocket. He said
something to the dragon's pilot, then strode quickly across the
mucky ground towards the waiting one-man welcoming
committee.
"Sir!" The noncom snapped to
attention and saluted sharply. "Welcome back to this shithole,
Sir!" he barked.
"Why, thank you, Chief Sword
Threbuch," the officer said amiably, tossing off a far more casual
salute in response. Then he extended his right hand and gripped the
older man's hand firmly. "I trust the Powers That Be have a
suitable reason for dragging me back here, Otwal," he said dryly,
and the noncom smiled.
"I wish they hadn't—dragged
you back, that is, Sir—but I think you may forgive them in
the end," he said. "I'm sort of surprised they managed to catch you,
though. I figured you'd be well on your way back to Garth
Showma by now."
"So did I," Hundred Olderhan
replied wryly. He shook his head. "Unfortunately, Hundred
Thalmayr seems to've gotten himself delayed in transit somewhere
along the way, and Magister Halathyn was quick enough off the
mark to catch me before he got here. If the Magister had only
waited another couple of days for Thalmayr to get here to relieve
me, I'd have been aboard ship and far enough out to sea to get
away clean."
"Sorry about that, Sir." The chief
sword grinned. "I hope you'll tell the Five Thousand I tried to get you home for your birthday."
"Oh, Father will forgive you,
Otwal," Jasak assured him. "Mother,
now . . . "
"Please, Sir!" The chief sword
shivered dramatically. "I still remember what your lady mother had
to say to me when I got the Five Thousand home late for their
anniversary."
"According to Father, you did well
to get him home at all," the hundred said, and the chief sword
shrugged.
"The Five Thousand was too tough
for any jaguar to eat, Sir. All I did was stop the bleeding."
"Most he could have expected out
of you after he was stupid enough to step right on top of it." The
chief sword gave the younger man a sharp look, and the hundred
chuckled. "That's the way Father describes it, Otwal. I
promise you I'm not being guilty of filial disrespect."
"As the Hundred says," the chief
sword agreed.
"But since our lords and masters
appear to have seen fit to make me miss my birthday, suppose you
tell me exactly what we have here, Chief Sword." The hundred's
voice was much crisper, his brown eyes intent, and the chief sword
came back to a position midway between stand easy and parade
rest.
"Sir, I'm afraid you'll need to ask
Magister Halathyn for the details. All I know is that he says the
potential tests on this portal's field strength indicate that there's at
least one more in close proximity. A big one."
"How big?" Jasak asked, his eyes
narrowing.
"I don't really know, Sir," Threbuch
replied. "I don't think Magister Halathyn does yet, for that matter.
But he was muttering something about a class eight."
Sir Jasak Olderhan's eyebrows rose,
and he whistled silently. The largest trans-temporal portal so far
charted was the Selkara Portal, and it was only a class seven. If
Magister Halathyn had, indeed, detected a class eight, then
this muddy, swampy hunk of jungle was about to become very
valuable real estate.
"In that case, Chief Sword," he said
mildly after a moment, "I suppose you'd better get me to Magister
Halathyn."
* * *
Halathyn vos Dulainah was very
erect, very dark-skinned, and very silver-haired, with a wiry build
which was finally beginning to verge on frail. Jasak wasn't certain,
but he strongly suspected that the old man was well past the age at
which Authority regs mandated the retirement of the Gifted from
active fieldwork. Not that anyone was likely to tell Magister
Halathyn that. He'd been a law unto himself for decades and the
UTTTA's crown jewel ever since he'd left the Mythal Falls
Academy twenty years before, and he took an undisguised, almost
child-like delight in telling his nominal superiors where they could
stuff their regulations.
He hadn't told Jasak exactly why he
was out here in the middle of this mud and bug-infested swamp,
nor why Magister Gadrial Kelbryan, his second-in-command at the
Garth Showma Institute, had followed him out here. He'd insisted
with a bland-faced innocence which could not have been bettered
by a twelve-year-old caught with his hand actually in the cookie
jar, that he was "on vacation." He certainly had to the clout within
the UTTTA to commandeer transportation for his own amusement
at that was what he really wanted, but Jasak suspected he was
actually engaged in some sort of undisclosed research. Not that
Magister Halathyn was going to admit it. He was too delighted by
the opportunity to be mysterious to waste it.
He was also, as his complexion and
the "vos" in front of his surname proclaimed, both a Mythalan and
a member of the shakira caste. As a rule, Jasak Olderhan
was less than fond of Mythalans . . .
and considerably less fond than that of the shakira. But
Magister Halathyn was the exception to that rule as he was to so
many others.
The magister looked up as Chief
Sword Threbuch followed Jasak into his tent, the heels of their
boots loud on its raised wooden flooring. He tapped his stylus on
the crystal display in front of him, freezing his notes and the
calculations he'd been performing, and smiled at the hundred over
the glassy sphere.
"And how is my second-favorite
crude barbarian?" he inquired in genial Andaran.
"As unlettered and impatient as
ever, Sir," Jasak replied, in Mythalan, with an answering smile.
The old magister chuckled appreciatively and extended his hand
for a welcoming shake. Then he cocked his canvas camp chair
back at a comfortable, teetering angle and waved for Jasak to seat
himself in the matching chair on the far side of his worktable.
"Seriously, Jasak," he said as the
younger man obeyed the unspoken command, "I apologize for
yanking you back here. I know how hard it was for you to get
leave for your birthday in the first place, and I know your parents
must have been looking forward to seeing you. But I thought
you'd want to be here for this one. And, frankly, with all due
respect to Hundred Thalmayr, I'm not sorry he was delayed. All
things being equal, I'd prefer to have you in charge just a
little longer."
Jasak stopped his grimace before it
ever reached his expression, but it wasn't the easiest thing he'd
ever done. Although he genuinely had been looking forward to
spending his birthday at home in Garth Showma for the first time
in over six years, he hadn't been looking forward to
handing "his" company over to Hadrign Thalmayr, even
temporarily. Partly because of his jealously possessive pride in
Charlie Company, but also because Thalmayr—who was
senior to him—had only transferred into the Scouts
seventeen months ago. From his record, he was a perfectly
competent infantry officer, but Jasak hadn't been impressed with
the older man's mental flexibility the few times they'd met before
Jasak himself had been forward-deployed. And it was pretty clear
his previous line infantry experience had left him firmly imbued
with the sort of by-the-book mentality the Temporal Scouts
worked very hard to eradicate.
Which wasn't something he could
discuss with a civilian, even one he respected as deeply as he did
Magister Halathyn.
"The Chief Sword said something
about a class eight," he said instead, his tone making the statement
a question, and Magister Halathyn nodded soberly.
"Unless Gadrial and I are badly
mistaken," he said, waving a hand at the letters and esoteric
formulae glittering in the water-clear heart of his crystal, "it's
at least a class eight. Actually, I suspect it may be even larger."
Jasak sat back in his chair,
regarding the old man's lined face intently. Had it been anyone
else, he would have been inclined to dismiss the preposterous
claim as pure, rampant speculation. But Magister Halathyn wasn't
given to speculation.
"If you're right about that, Sir," the
hundred said after a moment, "this entire transit chain may just
have become a lot more important to the Authority."
"It may," Magister Halathyn agreed.
"Then again, it may not." He grimaced. "Whatever size this portal
may be—" he tapped the crystal containing his notes
"—that portal—" he pointed out through the
open fly of his tent at the peculiar hole in the universe which
loomed enormously beyond the muddy clearing's western
perimeter "—is only a class three. That's going to
bottleneck anything coming through from our putative class eight.
Not to mention the fact that we're at the end of a ridiculously
inconvenient chain at the moment."
"I suppose that depends in part on
how far your new portal is from the other side of this one," Jasak
pointed out. "The terrain between here and the coast may suck, but
it's only seven hundred miles."
"Seven hundred and nineteen-point-
three miles," Magister Halathyn corrected with a crooked smile.
"All right, Sir." Jasak accepted the
correction with a smile of his own. "That's still a ridiculously
short haul compared to most of the portal connections I can think
of. And if this new portal of yours is within relatively close
proximity to our class three, we're talking about a twofer."
"That really is a remarkably
uncouth way to describe a spatially congruent trans-temporal
transfer zone," Halathyn said severely.
"I'm just a naturally uncouth sort of
fellow, Sir," Jasak agreed cheerfully. "But however you slice it,
it's still a two-for-one."
"Yes, it is," Halathyn
acknowledged. "Assuming our calculations are sound, of course.
In fact, if this new portal is as large as I think it is, and as closely
associated with our portal here, I think it's entirely possible that
we're looking at a cluster."
Despite all of the magister's many
years of discipline, his eyes gleamed, and he couldn't quite keep
the excitement out of his voice. Not that Jasak blamed him for
that. A portal cluster . . . In the better
part of two centuries of exploration, UTTTA's survey teams had
located only one true cluster, the Zholhara Cluster. Doubletons
were the rule—indeed, only sixteen triples had ever been
found, which was a rate of less than one in ten. But a cluster like
Zholhara was of literally incalculable value.
This far out—they were at
the very end of the Lamia Chain, well over three months' travel
from Arcana, even for someone who could claim transport dragon
priority for the entire trip—even a cluster would take years
to fully develop. Lamia, with over twenty portals, was already a
huge prize. But if Magister Halathyn was correct, the entire transit
chain was about to become even more
valuable . . . and receive the highest
development priority UTTTA could assign.
"Of course," Magister Halathyn
continued in the tone of a man forcing himself to keep his
enthusiasm in check, "we don't know where this supposed portal
of mine connects. It could be the middle of the Great Ransaran
Desert. Or an island in the middle of the Western Ocean, like
Rycarh Outbound. Or the exact center of the polar ice cap."
"Or it could be a couple of
thousand feet up in thin air, which would make for something of a
nasty first step," Jasak agreed. "But I suppose we'd better go find it
if we really want to know, shouldn't we?"
"My sentiments exactly," the
magister agreed, and the hundred looked at the chief sword.
"How soon can we move out on the
Magister's heading, Chief Sword?"
"I'm afraid the Hundred would have
to ask Fifty Garlath about that," Threbuch replied with absolutely
no inflection, and this time Jasak did grimace. The tonelessness of
the chief sword's voice shouted his opinion (among other things)
of Commander of Fifty Shevan Garlath as an officer of the Union
of Arcana. Unfortunately, Sir Jasak Olderhan's opinion exactly
matched that of his company's senior non-commissioned officer.
"If the Hundred will recall," the
chief sword continued even more tonelessly, "his last decision
before his own departure was to authorize Third Platoon's
R&R. That leaves Fifty Garlath as the SO here at the base
camp."
Jasak winced internally as Threbuch
tactfully (sort of) reminded him that leaving Garlath out here at
the ass-end of nowhere had been his own idea. Which had seemed
like a good one at the time, even if it had been a little petty of him.
No, more than a little petty. Quite a bit more, if he wanted to be
honest. Chief Sword Threbuch hadn't exactly protested at the time,
but his expression had suggested his opinion of the decision. Not
because he disagreed that Fifty Therman Ulthar and his men had
earned their R&R, but because Shevan Garlath was arguably
the most incompetent platoon commander in the entire brigade.
Leaving him in charge of anything more complicated than a hot
cider stand was not, in the chief sword's considered opinion, a
Good Idea.
"We'd have to recall Fifty Ulthar's
platoon from the coast, if you want to use him, Sir," the chief
sword added, driving home the implied reprimand with exquisite
tact.
Jasak was tempted to point out that
Magister Halathyn had already dragged him back from the
company's main CP at the coastal enclave, so there was really no
reason he shouldn't recall Fifty Ulthar. Except, of course,
that he couldn't. First, because doing so would require him to
acknowledge to the man who'd been his father's first squad lance
that he'd made a mistake. Both of them might know he
had, but he was damned if he was going to admit it.
But second, and far more
important, was the patronage system which permeated the Arcanan
Army, because patronage was the only thing that kept Garlath in
uniform. Not even that had been enough to get him promoted, but
it was more than enough to ensure that his sponsors would ask
pointed questions if Jasak went that far out of his way to invite
another fifty to replace him on what promised to be quite possibly
the most important portal exploration on record. If Magister
Halathyn's estimates were remotely near correct, this was the sort
of operation that got an officer noticed.
Which, in Jasak's opinion, was an
even stronger argument in favor of handing it to a competent
junior officer who didn't have any
patrons . . . and whose probable
promotion would actually have a beneficial effect on the Army.
But—
"All right, Chief Sword," he sighed.
"My respects to Fifty Garlath, and I want his platoon ready to
move out at first light tomorrow."
* * *
The weather was much cooler on
the other side of the base portal. Although it was only one hour
earlier in the local day, it had been mid-afternoon—despite
Jasak's best efforts—before Commander of Fifty Garlath's
First Platoon had been ready to leave base camp and step through
the immaterial interface between Hilmaran swamp and subarctic
Andara in a single stride. The portal's outbound side was located
smack on top of the Great Andaran Lakes, five thousand miles
north of their departure portal, in what should have been the
Kingdom of Lokan. In fact, it was on the narrow neck of land
which separated Hammerfell Lake and White Mist Lake from
Queen Kalthra's Lake. It might be only one hour east of the base
camp, but the difference in latitude meant that single step had
moved them from sweltering early summer heat into the crispness
of autumn.
Jasak had been raised on his
family's estates on New Arcana, less than eighty miles from the
very spot at which they emerged, but New Arcana had been settled
for the better part of two centuries. The bones of the Earth were
the same, and the cool, leaf-painted air of a northern fall was a
familiar and welcome relief from the base camp's smothering
humidity, but the towering giants of the primordial forest verged
on the overpowering even for him.
For Fifty Garlath, who had been
raised on the endless grasslands of Yanko, the restricted sightlines
and dense forest canopy were far worse than that. Hundred
Olderhan, CO of Charlie Company, First Battalion, First
Regiment, Second Andaran Temporal Scouts, couldn't very well
take one of his platoon commanders to task in front of his
subordinates for being an old woman, but Sir Jasak Olderhan felt
an almost overpowering urge to kick Garlath in the ass.
He mastered the temptation sternly,
but it wasn't easy, even for someone as disciplined as he was.
Garlath was supposed to be a temporal scout, after all.
That meant he was supposed to take the abrupt changes in climate
trans-temporal travel imposed in stride. It also meant he was
supposed to be confident in the face of the unknown, well versed
in movement under all sorts of conditions and in all sorts of
terrain. He was not supposed to be so obviously
intimidated by endless square miles of trees.
Jasak turned away from his
troopers to distract himself (and his mounting frustration) while
Garlath tried to get his command squared away. He stood with his
back to the brisk, northern autumn and gazed back through the
portal at the humid swamp they had left behind. It was the sort of
sight with which anyone who spent as much time wandering about
between universes as the Second Andarans did became intimately
familiar, but no one ever learned to take it for granted.
Magister Halathyn's tone had been
dismissive when he described the portal as "only a class three."
But while the classification was accurate, and there were
undeniably much larger portals, even a "mere" class three was the
better part of four miles across. A four-mile disk sliced out of the
universe . . . and pasted onto another
one.
It was far more than merely
uncanny, and unless someone had seen it for himself, it was
almost impossible to describe properly.
Jasak himself had only the most
rudimentary understanding of current portal theory, but he found
the portals themselves endlessly fascinating. A portal appeared to
have only two dimensions—height, and width. No one had
yet succeeded in measuring one's depth. As far as anyone could
tell, it had no depth; its threshold was simply a line, visible
to the eye but impossible to measure, where one universe
stopped . . . and another one began.
Even more fascinating, it was as if
each of the universes it connected were inside the other
one. Standing on the eastern side of a portal in Universe A and
looking west, one saw a section of Universe B stretching away
from one. One might or might not be looking west in that
universe, since portals' orientation in one universe had no
discernible effect on their orientation in the other universe to
which they connected. If one stepped through the portal into
Universe B and looked back in the direction from which one had
come, one saw exactly what one would have expected to
see—the spot from which one had left Universe A. But, if
one returned to Universe A and walked around the portal
to its western aspect and looked east, one saw Universe B
stretching away in a direction exactly 180° reversed from
what he'd seen from the portal's eastern side in Universe A. And if
one then stepped through into Universe B, one found the portal
once again at one's back . . . but this
time looking west, not east, into Universe A.
The theoreticians referred to the
effect as "counterintuitive." Most temporal scouts, like Jasak,
referred to it as the "can't get there" effect, since it was impossible
to move from one side to the other of a portal in the same
universe without circling all the way around it. And, since that
held true for any portal in any universe, no one could simply step
through a portal one direction, then step back through it to emerge
on its far side in the same universe. In order to reach the far side of
the portal at the other end of the link, one had to walk all the way
around it, as well.
Frankly, every time someone tried
to explain the theory of how it all worked to Jasak, his brain hurt,
but the engineers responsible for designing portal infrastructure
took advantage of that effect on a routine basis. It always took
some getting used to when one first saw it, of course. For
example, it wasn't at all uncommon to see two lines of slider cars
charging into a portal on exactly opposite headings—one
from the east and the other from the west—at the exact
same moment on what appeared to be exactly the same track. No
matter how carefully it had all been explained before a man saw it
for the first time with his own eyes, he knew those two
sliders had to be colliding in the universe on the other side of that
portal. But, of course, they weren't. Viewed from the side in that
other universe, both sliders were exploding out of the same space
simultaneously. . . but headed in exactly opposite directions.
From a military perspective,
the . . . idiosyncrasies of trans-
temporal travel could be more than a little maddening, although
the Union of Arcana hadn't fought a true war in over two
centuries.
At the moment, Jasak stood
roughly at the center of the portal through which he had just
stepped, looking back across it at the forward base camp and the
swamp they'd left behind. The sunlight on the far side fell from a
noticeably different angle, creating shadows whose shape and
direction clashed weirdly with those of the cool, northern forest in
which he stood. Swamp insects bumbled busily towards the
immaterial threshold between worlds, then veered away as they hit
the chill breeze blowing back across it.
This particular portal was relatively
young. The theorists were still arguing about exactly how and why
portals formed in the first place, but it had been obvious for better
than a hundred and eighty years that new ones were constantly, if
not exactly frequently, being formed. This one had formed long
enough ago that the scores of gigantic trees which had been sliced
in half vertically by its creation had become dead, well dried hulks,
but almost a dozen of them still stood, like gaunt, maimed
chimneys. It wouldn't be long before the bitter northern winters
toppled them, as well, yet the fact that it hadn't happened yet
suggested that they'd been dead for no more than a few years.
Which, Jasak told himself acidly,
was not so very much longer than it appeared to be taking Fifty
Garlath to get his platoon sorted out.
Eventually, however, even Garlath
had his troopers shaken down into movement formation. Sort of.
His single point man was too far from the main body, and he'd
spread his flank scouts far too wide, but Jasak clamped his teeth
firmly against a blistering
reprimand . . . for now. He'd already
intended to have a few words with Garlath about the totally
unacceptable delay in getting started, but he'd decided he'd wait
until they bivouacked and he could "counsel" his subordinate in
private. With Charlie Company detached from the Battalion as the
only organized force at this end of the transit chain, it was
particularly important not to undermine the chain of command by
giving the troops cause to think that he considered their platoon
CO an idiot.
Especially when he did.
So instead of ripping Garlath a new
one at the fresh proof of his incompetence, he limited himself to
one speaking glance at Chief Sword Threbuch, then followed
along behind Garlath with Threbuch and Magister Kelbryan.
Although Jasak had enjoyed the
privilege of serving with Magister Halathyn twice before, this was
the first time he'd actually met Kelbryan. She and Halathyn had
worked together for at least twenty years—indeed, she was
one of the main reasons the UTTTA had acquired the exclusive
use of Halathyn's services in the first place—but she
normally stayed home, holding down the fort at the institute at
Garth Showma on New Arcana which Halathyn had created from
the ground up for the Authority. Jasak had always assumed, in a
casual sort of way, that that was because she preferred civilization
to the frontier. Or, at least, that she would have been unsuited to
hoofing it through rugged terrain with the Andaran Scouts.
He still didn't know her very well.
In fact, he didn't know her at all. She'd only reached their base
camp three weeks earlier, and she seemed to be a very private
person in a lot of ways. But he'd already discovered that his
assumptions had been badly off base. Kelbryan was a couple of
years older than he was, and her Ransaran ancestry showed in her
almond eyes, sandalwood complexion, and dark, brown-black hair.
At five-eight, she was tall for a
Ransaran . . . which meant she was
only eight inches shorter than he was. But delicate as she seemed
to him, she was obviously fit, and she'd taken the crudity of the
facilities available at the sharp end of the Authority's exploration
in stride, without turning a hair.
She was also very, very good at her
job—as was only to be expected, given that Magister
Halathyn must have had his choice of any second-in-command he
wanted. Indeed, Jasak had come to realize that the true reasons
she'd normally stayed home owed far less to any "delicacy" on her
part than to the fact that she was probably the only person
Magister Halathyn fully trusted to run "his" shop in his absence.
Her academic and research credentials were impressive proof of
her native brilliance, and despite the differences in their cultural
heritages, she and her boss were clearly devoted to one another.
It had been obvious Magister
Halathyn longed to accompany them this morning, but there were
limits in all things. Jasak was prepared to go along with the fiction
that vos Dulainah wasn't far past mandatory retirement age as long
as the old man stayed safely in base camp; he was not about to risk
someone that valuable, or of whom he was so fond, in an initial
probe. Magister Kelbryan had supported him with firm tactfulness
when the old man turned those longing, puppy-dog eyes in her
direction, and Magister Halathyn had submitted to the inevitable
with no more than the odd, heartfelt sigh of mournful regret when
he was sure one of them was listening.
Now the hundred watched the
team's junior magister moving through the deep drifts of leaves
almost as silently as his own troopers. Despite—or possibly
even because of—the fact that he'd never worked with
Kelbryan before, he was impressed. And, he admitted, attracted.
She opened a leather equipment
case on her belt and withdrew one of the esoteric devices of her
profession. Jasak was technically Gifted himself, although his own
trace of the talent was so minute that he was often astonished the
testing process had been able to detect it at all. Now, as often, he
felt a vague, indefinable stirring sensation as someone who was
very powerfully Gifted indeed brought her Gift to bear. She gazed
down into the crystal display, and her lips moved silently as she
powered it up.
Jasak saw the display flicker to life
and moved a little closer to look over her shoulder. She sensed his
presence and looked up. For an instant, he thought she was going
to be annoyed with him for crowding her, but then she smiled and
tilted her wrist so that he could see the display more clearly.
In many ways, it looked a great deal
like a standard Authority navigation unit. He quickly identified the
latitude and longitude readouts, and the built in clocks—
one set to the base camp's time, and one which automatically
adjusted to local time on this side of the portal—and the
compass and directional indicator Barris. But there was another
arrow in the glassy heart of the sphere of sarkolis crystal, and it
was flanked by two waterfall displays which had never been part
of any navigation unit he'd ever used.
"This one," she said quietly, tapping
the green waterfall, "indicates the approximate distance. And this
one," she tapped the red waterfall, "indicates its measured field
strength. And the arrow, of course," she grinned, "indicates the
direction."
"I've never seen a unit quite like
that one," Jasak admitted, and she snorted in amusement.
"That's because Magister Halathyn
and I built it ourselves," she told him. "Actually, he did most of
the design work—I was just the grunt technician who put it
together."
"Oh, I'm sure," he said, shaking his
head.
"No, it's true!" she insisted. "The
beauty of it is in the theoretical conception. Once he'd done the
intellectual heavy lifting, actually building the spells was
relatively easy. Time consuming, but not difficult."
"Maybe not for you," Jasak
said dryly, and she shrugged. "But the important thing," he
continued, allowing her to drop the subject of her own
competency, "is that I've never had a nav unit that pointed me
directly at an unexplored portal before. It beats the hell, if you'll
pardon the language, out of humping the standard detectors
around the countryside on a blind search pattern. Especially
someplace like this—" he waved a hand at the heavy tree
cover "—where it's all but impossible to get a dragon, or
even a gryphon, in for aerial sweeps."
"That's exactly why Magister
Halathyn's been working on it for several years now," Kelbryan
agreed. "In fact, the whole reason I let him come out here in the
first place—" somehow, Jasak felt confident, her choice of
the verb "let" was probably painfully accurate "—was still
let him field test the spellware."
"And is that the reason you're
out here, if I may ask?" Jasak inquired.
"Well, for
that . . . and to keep an eye on
Magister Halathyn," she admitted with a slight smile.
"Which suggests to my keen
intelligence that you were, indeed, being overly modest about your
contribution to the project," Jasak said. "Somehow I don't see the
Institute letting both of its top magisters wander around three or
four months' travel from home if they weren't both needed."
"I suppose there might be some
truth to that," she conceded after a moment. "Although, to be
completely honest, and without trying to undervalue my own
contributions to the R&D, the real reason I insisted on
coming was to keep him from wandering around out here
to handle any field modifications the spellware might require.
Besides," she smiled infectiously, "it's the first 'vacation' I've taken
in over five years!"
"But why all the secrecy?" Jasak
asked. She looked at him, and he shrugged. "The UTTTA must the
champing at the bit to get this deployed, so why was Magister
Halathyn so busy insisting that he wasn't really up to
anything?"
"I didn't have anything to do with
UTTTA, or any other official part of the Union," she replied. It
seemed evident from her toad and her expression that she really
would have preferred to leave it at that, but after glancing at him
consideringly for a second or two, she shrugged.
"You may have heard that
magisters can be just a
little . . . paranoid about their
research." She smiled briefly, and Jasak managed to turn a laugh
into a not particularly convincing cough. "A little paranoid," in
this case, was rather like saying that White Mist Lake was "a little
damp."
"Well, all right, maybe it goes a bit
further than that," she said with a reluctant grin. But the grin faded
quickly, and she shook her head. "In fact, it goes a lot further than
that where Magister Halathyn is concerned. Especially for
something like this. There's no way he was going to let even a
whisper about this project out where the Mythalans might hear
about it before he was ready to publish."
Jasak nodded in suddenly sober
understanding of his own.
"While I'd never like to suggest
that Magister Halathyn doesn't hold you in the highest respect,
Hundred Olderhan," she continued, "the real reason we're out
here? It's the farthest away from the Mythal Falls Academy he
could get for his field test. And—"
She paused, looking at him with
the sort of measuring, considering look he was unused to
receiving. After a moment, she seemed to reach some inner
decision and leaned closer to him, lowering her voice slightly.
"Actually," she said quietly,
"we've done a bit of refining on his original theoretical work, as
well. The sort which requires absolute validation before anyone
publishes. I have to admit that I didn't really expect to be able to
test all of the features in a single trip, but take a look at this."
She tapped the unit with her wand,
and both waterfalls and the arrow disappeared instantly. A brief
moment passed, and then they lit
again . . . but this time, they were
noticeably different.
She looked up at Jasak, one
eyebrow crooked, and he frowned. Then, suddenly, his eyes
widened and he gave her a very sharp glance indeed.
"Exactly," she said, even more
quietly. "Magister Halathyn's original idea was to produce a unit
which would detect the closest portal and home a survey team in
on it. But once we got into the theory, we discovered that we
could actually nest the spells."
"So that—" Jasak indicated
the display, "—means there's a second gate out
here?"
"If it's working properly.
And—"
She tapped the display again. And
again. And a fourth time. With each tap, the process
repeated, producing new directional arrows and new distance and
strength displays, and Jasak swallowed.
"Is that why Magister
Halathyn's been talking in terms of a cluster?" he asked, and she
nodded.
"Either the thing's completely
screwed up—which is always possible, however little we
might want to admit it—or else there are at least a
total of five portals associated with this one." A jerk of her head
indicated the swamp portal. "Or, more precisely, this one is one of
at least five associated with this one," she amended,
bringing up the original display on the strongest and nearest of the
other portals.
"You said 'at least,'" Jasak
observed intently, and she nodded again.
"We never expected to hit
anything like this on our first field test, Sir Jasak, so there are only
a total of six 'slots' in the spellware. In theory, we could nest as
many as fifteen or twenty—it just never occurred to us to
do it. I suppose that was partly because the Zholhara Cluster only
has six portals, and it seemed unlikely anyone might find one even
bigger."
"Gods," Jasak breathed. He stared
at the unit for several seconds, then shook himself. "I'm beginning
to see why you were keeping this whole thing so quiet!"
"I thought you might. Still," her
eyes brightened, "as happy as I am with how well it seems to be
performing, I think you may still be missing something about this
cluster as compared to Zholhara."
"What?" He moved his gaze from
the unit to her face,
"The Zholhara portals are as much
as three thousand miles apart. The maximum range on our
detector—assuming we got our sums right—is only
about nine hundred miles. In fact, according to the readouts, the farthest one we've detected is less than six hundred miles
from this portal right here."
Jasak sucked in a deep, hard
breath. A minimum of five virgin portals, all within a
radius of only six hundred miles of one another? Gods!
They could have five entirely new transit chains radiating from
this single spot! It took him several seconds to wrap his mind
around the implications, and then he smiled crookedly.
"So that's why Magister
Halathyn's like a gryphon in a henhouse!"
"Oh, that's exactly what
he's like," she agreed with a grin. "And it'd take a special act of
God to get him out of here before every one of these portals is
nailed down. Assuming, of course, that they're really there. Don't
forget that this is our first field trial. It's going to be mighty
embarrassing if it has us out here chasing some sort of wild
goose!"
"Not very likely with both of you
involved in chasing the goose in question, Magister Kelbryan," he
told her with a grin. She waved one hand in an almost
uncomfortable gesture, and he gave a tiny nod of acknowledgment
and shifted conversational gears.
"Well, I guess we'll know one way
or the other pretty soon," he said. "How far away from the nearest
are we now?"
"Assuming Magister Halathyn and
I got it right when we built this thing, it's about thirty miles that
way," she replied, pointing almost due north, directly away from
White Mist Lake.
"About fifteen hours hard hike, in
this terrain," Jasak said thoughtfully. "Twice that with rest breaks,
a bivouac, and the need to find the best trails. And that assumes
basically decent going the entire way."
He glanced at the local time
display, then craned his neck, looking up through a break in the
autumnal canopy at the sun, and grimaced. The local days were
getting short at this time of year, and there was absolutely no way
they were going to make it before dusk, he decided, and raised his
voice.
"Fifty Garlath!"
"Sir?" Shevan Garlath was a lean,
lanky, dark-haired man, almost ten years older than Jasak, despite
his junior rank. Although he'd been born in Yanko, his family had
migrated from one of the smaller Hilmaran kingdoms barely fifty
years earlier, and it showed in his strong nose and very dark eyes
as he turned towards the hundred.
"We need to swing a little further
east," Jasak said, chopping one hand in the direction indicated by
Kelbryan's illuminated needle. "About another thirty miles. We'll
move on for another three or four hours, then bivouac. Keep an
eye out for a good site. "
"Yes, Sir," Garlath responded
crisply enough to fool a casual bystander into thinking he was
actually a competent officer. Then he nodded to his platoon
sword.
"You heard the Hundred, Sword
Hernak," he said.
"Yes, Sir," the stocky, neatly
bearded noncom acknowledged, and went trotting briskly ahead to
overtake the platoon's point and redirect its course. Jasak watched
him go and reflected on how fortunate Garlath was to have
inherited a platoon sword good enough to make even him look
almost capable.
Platoon-Captain Janaki chan
Calirath jerked upright in his sleeping bag so suddenly the nearest
sentry jumped in surprise. Under-Armsman chan Yaran whipped
around at his platoon commander's abrupt movement, then
flinched as a huge, dark-barred peregrine falcon launched itself
from the perch beside the's sleeping bag. The bird screamed in
hard, angry challenge, hurling itself into the clear, cold night to
circle overhead furiously . . .
protectively.
Yaran stood for a moment,
waiting for the platoon-captain to say something—
anything. But the platoon-captain only sat there. He didn't even
move.
"Sir?" chan Yaran said tentatively.
There was no response, and the under-armsman stepped a little
closer. "Platoon-Captain?"
Still no response, and chan Yaran
began to sweat, despite the chill breeze blowing across the
encampment. There was
something . . . ominous about the
officer's total immobility. That would have been true under any
circumstances, but Janaki chan Calirath wasn't any old Imperial
Marine officer. No one was supposed to take any official notice of
that, but every member of the platoon-captain's command was a
Ternathian (which, chan Yaran knew, wasn't exactly an accident),
and that made this officer's petrified lack of response
downright frightening.
Chan Yaran moved to the side
until he could see his CO's face in the firelight. The platoon-
captain's eyes were wide open, unblinking, glittering with reflected
fire, and chan Yaran swallowed hard. What the hell was he
supposed to do now?
He looked around, then leaned
closer to the officer.
"Your Highness?" he said very,
very quietly.
The wide, fixed eyes never even
flickered around their core of firelight, and he muttered a soft,
heartfelt curse. Then he drew a deep breath and crossed to another
sleeping bag and touched its occupant's shoulder lightly.
Chief-Armsman Lorash chan
Braikal twitched upright almost as abruptly as the platoon-captain
had. Unlike the officer, however, Third Platoon's senior noncom
was instantly and totally aware of his surroundings. chan Braikal
hadn't drawn his present slot by random chance, and his eyes
tracked around to chan Yaran like twin pistol muzzles.
"What?"
The one-word question was quiet
and remarkably clear of sleepiness for someone so abruptly
awakened. It came out almost conversationally, but chan Yaran
wasn't deceived. chan Braikal wasn't the sort to jump down
anyone's throat without thorough justification. Gods help you if
you screwed up so seriously enough to give him that
justification, though.
"It's the Platoon-Captain, Chief,"
chan Yaran said, and chan Braikal's eyes snapped wider. "He
just . . . sat up," the under-armsman
said. "Now he's just staring straight ahead, right into the fire. He's
not even blinking, Chief!"
"Vothan's chariot," chan Braikal
muttered. He shoved himself upright and crossed to the platoon-
captain's side. He knelt there, looking into the young officer's
eyes, but taking extraordinary care not to touch him.
"Shouldn't
we . . . well, do something,
Chief?" chan Yaran asked. chan Braikal only snorted harshly,
never looking away from Third Platoon's commanding officer.
"There's fuck-all anyone can
do," the senior chief-armsman growled. "Not till it runs its
course, anyway."
"Is . . . is
it a Glimpse?" chan Yaran's voice was almost a whisper, and chan
Braikal barked a laugh deep in his throat.
"You've seen just as many
Glimpses as I have," he said. "But I'm damned if I can think of
anything else that would hit him like this. Can you?"
chan Yaran shook his head
wordlessly.
"What I thought," chan Braikal
grunted, and sat back on his heels. He gazed at the Crown Prince
of Ternathia's profile for several seconds, then sighed.
"One thing we can do," he said,
looking up at chan Yaran at last. "Break out that bottle of whiskey
in my saddlebag. He may just need it in a little while."
chan Yaran nodded again and
hurried off. The chief-armsman scarcely even noticed his
departure, although half his reason for sending chan Yaran off had
been to give the other Marine something to do as a distraction.
Now if someone could just distract him, as well.
The tough, experienced noncom
snorted again, without a trace of humor. Third Platoon was still a
week out from Fort Brithik on its way forward to reinforce
Company-Captain Halifu. The mountains were far behind them
them, as they headed out across the broad stretch of plains to
Brithik, but the autumn nights were cold under the brilliant stars.
They were also indescribably lonely out here under the endless
canopy of the prairie heavens. The ninety-seven men of Third
Platoon—outfits this close to the frontier were always at
least a little understrength, and Third Platoon was lucky to be only
eleven men short of establishment—were a tiny band of
humanity amid these ancient mountains which had never known
the step of man.
Lorash chan Braikal had joined
the Imperial Marines seventeen years before largely because he'd
known Marines tended to get sent places just like this. Places on
virgin worlds, where the emptiness stretched out forever, wild and
free. Over his career, he'd seen thousands of them, and along the
way he'd discovered that he'd made exactly the right choice when
he enlisted.
But tonight, he felt the vast
emptiness of a planet not yet home to man stretching out around
him in all directions, sucking at his soul like a vacuum as he knelt
here in this fragile bubble of firelight, watching the heir to the
imperial crown in the grip of a precognitive Glimpse of terrifying
power.
Gods, the chief-armsman thought. Gods, I wish we'd
never left
Fort Raylthar!
But they had, and there was
nothing he could do but wait until Prince Janaki woke back up and
told them what vision had seized him by the throat.
Well, wait and pray.
The next morning dawned clear
and considerably chillier. There was frost on their bedrolls, and
Jasak found it difficult to radiate a sense of lighthearted adventure
as he dragged himself out of his sleeping bag's seductive warmth.
Magister Kelbryan, on the other hand, looked almost disgustingly
cheerful. She'd taken being the only woman in the expedition in
stride, but Jasak had unobtrusively seen to it that her sleeping bag
was close to his. Not because he distrusted his men—the
Second Andarans were an elite outfit, proud of their
reputation—but because his father's maxim that it was
always easier to prevent problems than to solve them had been
programmed into him at an almost instinctual level.
And, he admitted cheerfully as he
watched her rolling her bag as tightly as any of his troopers,
because he enjoyed her company. It was even more enjoyable
talking with her than looking at her, and that was saying quite a
bit.
He chuckled, shaking his head in
self-reproving amusement, but then his humor faded a bit as he
listened to Fifty Garlath issuing his morning orders.
His "discussion" with Garlath the
evening before had been even more unpleasant than he'd
anticipated. The fifty had always resented Jasak. Everyone in the
Second Andarans—and in the entire Arcanan Army, for that
matter—knew Sir Jasak Olderhan was the only son of
Commander of Five Thousand Sir Thankhar Olderhan, Arcanan
Army, retired. Who also happened to be His Grace Sir Thankhar
Olderhan, Governor of High Hathak, Duke of Garth Showma,
Earl of Yar Khom, and Baron
Sarkhala . . . and more to the point,
perhaps, the man who had commanded the Second Andaran Scout
Brigade for over fourteen years before his medical retirement. The
Second Andarans were, for all intents and purposes, an hereditary
command of the Dukes of Garth Showma, and had been for
almost a hundred and seventy years. In fact, they had originally
been raised as "The Duke of Garth Showma's Own Rangers."
All of which meant that although
Jasak might on paper be only one of the brigade's twelve company
commanders, he was actually a little more equal than any of the
others. Jasak himself had always known that, and the knowledge
had driven him to demonstrate that he deserved the preferential
treatment an accident of birth had bestowed upon him.
Unfortunately, not everyone recognized that, and the Arcanan
Army's tradition, particularly in its Andaran units, was for officers
and noncoms to remain within their original brigade or division
for their entire careers. It produced a powerful sense of unit
identification and was an undoubted morale enhancer, but it could
also enhance petty resentments and hostilities. Family quarrels,
after all, are almost always nastier than quarrels between strangers.
Shevan Garlath remembered the
day a skinny, gawky young Squire Olderhan, fresh out of the
Academy, had reported for duty. Shevan Garlath had been a
commander of fifty then . . . and he
still was. Barring a miracle or the direct intervention of the gods
themselves, and despite the fact that he was the younger cousin of
a baron, he would still be a commander of fifty when he reached
mandatory retirement age. Not even his aristocratic cousin
possessed the pull to get someone of his demonstrated inability
promoted any higher than that. But since he wasn't prepared to
admit that it was because of his own feckless incompetence, it had
to be because other people—people like then-Squire and
now-Commander of One Hundred Olderhan—had stolen
the promotions he deserved because their connections
were even loftier then his own.
He'd listened to Jasak
expressionlessly, without saying a word . . .
and certainly without ever acknowledging that a single one of the
Jasak's tactful criticisms or suggestions was merited. Jasak had
wanted to strangle him, but he'd been forced to admit that it was
his own fault. He ought to have jerked Garlath up short six weeks
ago, when the man was first transferred from Baker Company to
Charlie Company as an emergency medical relief for Fifty Thaylar.
But he'd told himself it was only a temporary arrangement, just
until Thaylar returned from hospital and he could pack Garlath
back off to Baker. So instead of sorting the idiot out—or
getting rid of him—then, Jasak had let things slide. And
now, as his father had always warned him, he was discovering just
how much more difficult it was to correct a problem than it would
have been to prevent it in the first place.
"I regret that the Hundred is
dissatisfied with my efforts," Garlath had said in a cool voice
when Jasak finished. "I believe, however, that my deployment of
the men under my command has been both prudent and adequate."
Despite everything, Jasak had been
flabbergasted.
"I don't believe you quite
understand my point, Fifty Garlath," he'd said after several
seconds, once he was confident he could control his own tone.
"My point is that we were very slow getting started this morning
and that I disagree with your assessment as to the adequacy of our
formation once we did get moving. I want it changed."
"I believe, Sir, that—as my
report will make clear—the reasons for any delay in our
departure time were beyond my control. And my understanding of
Regulations is that my chosen formation and interval fall within
my own discretion, as this unit's commanding officer, so long as
my deployment meets the standards laid down by Army doctrine
and general field orders."
"This isn't about standards," Jasak
had replied, trying to keep the anger out of his tone as he realized
Garlath truly intended to defy him. "And it certainly isn't about
regulations, Fifty. It's about getting the job done."
"I understand that, Sir. And I
would point out that First Platoon, under my command, has
successfully accomplished every task the Hundred has assigned to
it."
"Whenever you finally got around
to it." Jasak's response had come out a bit more icily even than
he'd intended, but the defiance flickering in Garlath's eyes—
the challenge, which was what it amounted to, to officially
reprimand him, despite his patrons, when there was no overt
failure in the field to point to—had infuriated him. As, he'd
suddenly recognized, it had been intended to. Garlath, he'd
realized, was actually attempting to provoke him into words or
actions which the fifty would be able to claim proved the
hundred's no doubt scathing endorsement of his efficiency report
stemmed solely from the fact that Jasak nourished some sort of
private vendetta against him.
It was the kind of cunning which
proved the other man's fundamental stupidity, but that hadn't
changed the parameters of Jasak's current problem, and he'd
inhaled deeply.
"Listen to me, Fifty," he'd said
then, "this isn't a debate, and this isn't some sort of Ransaran
democracy. Tomorrow morning, you will place your point
element the required two hundred yards ahead of your main body.
You will place a man between your point element and your main
body, in visual contact with each, and you will deploy scouts a
maximum of one hundred yards out on either flank, where they
can maintain adequate contact with the main body. Moreover,
you will maintain one squad at immediate readiness, with
its dragon locked and loaded. And when we return to base camp,
you and I will . . . discuss our little
differences of opinion about the adequacy of your command
performance. Is all of that understood, Fifty Garlath?"
Garlath's already dark face had
darkened further, yet he'd been left little room for maneuver. His
jaw had clenched, and his eyes had blazed hotly, but he'd drawn
himself up and saluted with a precision that was a wordless act of
insubordination in its own right.
"Yes, Sir. Understood. And I
assure the Hundred that his instructions will be obeyed to the
letter. Is that all, Sir?"
"Yes, it is."
"By your leave, then, Sir," Garlath
had said with frozen formality, pivoted on his heel, and stalked off
to find Sword Harnak.
"I hope I'm not out of line, Sir
Jasak, but you and Fifty Garlath don't exactly seem to like one
another."
"Oh?" Jasak looked across at
Magister Kelbryan, once more following along behind Garlath
with him, and his mouth quirked in a humorless smile. "What
makes you say that?"
"I could say it's because I'm
Gifted, and that I was always good at social analysis spells. Which
happens to be true, actually." Her smile had considerably more
amusement in it than his had. "On the other hand, those spells have
always been overrated in the popular press. They work quite well
for mass analyses, like the polling organizations undertake, but
they're pretty much useless on the microlevel." She shrugged. "So
instead of falling back on the prestige and reputation of my Gift,
I'll just say that he seems a trifle . . .
sullen this morning."
The magister had a pronounced
gift for understatement, Jasak reflected. In fact, Garlath's
"sullenness" had communicated itself to his platoon. Sword
Harnak had obviously done his best to defuse the worst of it, but
Garlath had made his own air of martyred exasperation only too
plain when he ordered his troopers to assume the formation Jasak
had insisted upon. He'd been careful about the actual words he
used, obviously determined to provide the hundred with no overt
ammunition if it came to charges of insubordination. But tone and
body language could be remarkably eloquent.
Jasak had considered making a
point of just that. Punishable offenses under the articles of war
included one defined as "silent insubordination," which could
certainly be stretched to cover Garlath's attitude. He was tempted
to trot it out—Garlath was busy creating the very situation
Jasak had hoped to avoid by refraining from criticizing him in
front of his men—but he resisted the temptation. Whatever
else he might be doing, the fifty was complying, however
ungraciously, with the specific instructions he'd been given.
Of course, he was sending out
only a single point man, instead of the entire section Jasak himself
would have assigned. The hundred recognized that as yet another
petty defiance, but Garlath had obviously figured out that Jasak
was reluctant to ream him out in front of his men. So the fifty was
challenging him to demand that he change his orders, or to simply
overrule him and "usurp" command of his platoon. And Jasak had
been almost overwhelmingly tempted to do just that.
But the very strength of the
temptation had warned him that it was born at least as much of
anger as of professional judgment, and anger was not the best
basis for making command decisions. Better to wait until he was
certain his own temper wasn't driving
him . . . and until he could bring the
hammer down as Garlath deserved without doing any more
damage to the platoon's internal discipline while they were in the
field. If there'd been any prospect of running into some sort of
opposition, or even any dangerous predator, it might have been
different. But this was a virgin portal. There wouldn't be even the
threat of the frontier brigands or claim jumpers the Army was
occasionally called upon to suppress.
"I'm afraid the Fifty and I don't
exactly see eye to eye on the proper conduct of a first survey," he
said after a moment, answering the magister with rather more
frankness than he'd initially intended.
"And I'm afraid that that's
because the Fifty is a frigging idiot," Magister Kelbryan replied
tartly.
Jasak blinked in surprise, and she
giggled. It was an astonishingly bright, silvery sound, almost as
unexpected as her earthy language had been.
"I'm sorry, Sir Jasak!" she said, her
tone genuinely contrite despite the laughter still bubbling in the
depths of her voice. "It's just that Magister Halathyn and I had to
put up with him for almost six full days after your departure, and
I've never met a man more invincibly convinced of his own
infallibility. Despite, I might add, the overwhelming weight of the
evidence to the contrary."
"I'm afraid it would be quite
improper for me to denigrate the abilities of one of my officers,
especially in front of a civilian," Jasak said after a moment.
"And the fact that you feel
constrained to say that tells me everything I really need to know,
doesn't it, Hundred?" she asked. He said nothing, only looked at
her, smiling ever so faintly, and she giggled again. Then she eased
the straps of her pack across her shoulders, inhaled hugely, and
looked up at the crystal blue patches of autumn sky showing
between the dark needles of evergreens and the paint brush glory
of seasonal foliage.
"My, what a magnificent day!" she
observed.
Trooper 2/c Osmuna swore under
his breath as the rock shifted under his right heel. His left arm
rose, flailing for balance as he teetered in the middle of the broad,
shallow stream. The heavy infantry arbalest in his right hand
threatened to pull him the rest of the way off center and down, and
the prospect of tumbling into the crystal clear, icy water rushing
over its stony bed wrung another, more heartfelt obscenity out of
him.
He managed, somehow, not to
fall. Which was a damned good thing. Sword Harnak would have
had his guts for garters (assuming that Gaythar Harklan, Osmuna's
squad shield didn't rip them out first) if he'd fucked up and given
Fifty Garlath an excuse to pitch another damned tantrum. Garlath
was a piss-poor substitute for Fifty Thaylar, and he was already in
a crappy enough mood. Fifty Thaylar would only have laughed it
off if his point man fell into a river; Garlath would probably rip
everyone involved a new anal orifice just to relieve his own
emotional constipation.
Personally, Osmuna reflected, as
he continued on across the stream, stepping more cautiously from
stone to stone, he thought the bee the Old Man had obviously
gotten into his bonnet was probably a bit on the irrational side.
Oh, sure, The Book insisted that point elements and flanking
scouts be thrown out and that they maintain visual contact with
one another at all times. But despite all of that, it wasn't like they
were going to run into hordes of howling savages, and everyone
knew it. No one ever had, in two centuries of steady exploration
and expansion. Still, between the Old Man and Garlath, Osmuna
knew which he preferred. Officers who let themselves get
sloppy about one thing tended to get sloppy about other
things . . . and officers who got
sloppy, tended to get their troopers killed.
His thoughts had carried him to
the far bank, and he started up a shallow slope. The line of the
stream had opened a hole in the forest canopy, which permitted the
growth of the sort of dense, tangled brush and undergrowth which
had been choked out elsewhere in the virgin mature forest. As he
began to force his way through it, a flicker of movement higher up
the slope, on the edge of the trees, caught his attention. He looked
at it, and froze.
Faslan chan Salgmun froze in
disbelief, staring down at the river.
The man—and it was,
indisputably, a man, however he'd gotten here—
looked completely out of place. And not simply because this was a
virgin world, which meant, by definition, that no one lived there.
It wasn't just his uniform,
although that pattern of dense green, black, and white would have
been far better suited to a tropical rain forest somewhere than to
the mixed conifers and deciduous trees towering above him. Nor
was it his coloring, which, after all, was nothing extraordinary. It
was the totality of his appearance—the peculiar spiked
helmet, covered in the same inappropriate camouflage fabric of
which his uniform was made; the clubbed braid of bright, golden
hair spilling over the back of his collar; the knee-high, tightly
laced boots; the short sword at his left
hip . . . and the peculiar looking
crossbow carried in his right hand.
It was like some weird composite
image, some insane juxtapositioning of modern textiles and
manufactured goods with medieval weaponry, and it couldn't be
here. Couldn't exist. In eighty years of exploration under the Portal
Authority's auspices, no trace of any other human civilization had
ever been discovered.
Until, chan Salgmun realized,
today.
And what the fuck do I do now?
* * *
Trooper Osmuna stared at the
impossible apparition. It wore brown trousers, short boots, and a
green jacket, and its slouch hat looked like something a Tukorian
cattle herder might have worn. It had a puny looking sheath knife
at one hip, certainly not anything anyone might have called a
proper sword, and something else—something with
a handgrip, almost like one of the hand crossbows some hunters
used for small game—in an abbreviated scabbard on the
other hip. It was also holding something in both hands. Something
like an arbalest, but with no bow stave.
It couldn't be here, he thought.
Not after two hundred years! Despite all of his training, all of his
experience, Osmuna discovered that he'd been totally unprepared
for what had been laughingly dismissed as "the other guy
contingency" literally for generations.
His heart seemed to have stopped
out of sheer shock, but then he felt his pulse begin to race and
adrenaline flooded his system. He didn't know exactly what the
other man was holding, or how it worked, but he knew from the way he held it that it was a weapon of some sort.
And what the fuck do I do now? he wondered
frantically.
chan Salgmun shook himself. He
was only a private employee of the Chalgyn Consortium these
days, working for one of the private firms licensed by the Portal
Authority to explore the links between the universes. But in his
day, he'd served in the Ternathian Army, which considered itself
the best on Sharona, with reason, and he recognized the other
man's confusion. Confusion that could be dangerous, under the
circumstances.
Here we both stand, armed, and scared as shit, he thought.
All we need is for one of us to fuck up. And that damned
crossbow of his is cocked and ready to go. I know I don't
intend to do anything stupid . . . but
what about him?
His thumb moved, very carefully
disengaging the safety on his Model 9 rifle.
Osmuna saw the not-arbalest
move slowly, stealthily, and the level of adrenaline flooding his
system rocketed upward. Doctrine was clear on this point. In the
inconceivable event that another human civilization was
encountered, contact was to be made peacefully, if at all possible.
But the overriding responsibility was to ensure that news of the
encounter got home. Which meant the people who had
that news had to be alive—and free—to deliver it.
And if Osmuna intended to stay
alive and uncaptured, it probably wouldn't be a very good idea to
let this stranger point an unknown weapon at him.
He moved his left hand to the
forearm of his arbalest and tipped it upward slightly.
Craaaaccccckkkkk!
"What the he—?"
Jasak's head snapped up at the
sharp, totally unexpected sound. He'd never heard anything like
that flat, hard explosion. It was almost like a tiny sliver bitten off a
roll of thunder. Or perhaps the sound a frozen branch made
shattering under an intolerable weight of winter ice. But it was
neither of those things, and whatever it was, it wasn't a
natural sound, either. He didn't know how he could be so positive,
yet he was, and his first instant flare of astonishment disappeared
into a sudden, terrible suspicion.
Chapter Two
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr ducked
under the open flap of her tent, stepped out into the early chill, and
sucked in a deep double lungful of morning. The crisp autumn air
tasted like heaven, and she stretched, closing her eyes to sort out
the delightful scents floating on the breeze. Cinnamon-dry leaves
underfoot mingled with the soft, green fragrance of moss, and the
deep, rich scent of wet earth from the forest floor. She grinned in
sheer delight, then opened her eyes to watch the gold-tinted mist
that hung in a thick, whisper-soft curtain along the stream they'd
been following for three days. She could hear the broad
creek—it nearly qualified as a river—gurgling and
chuckling its way through the ravine it had cut through the forest.
Her husband, Jathmar Nargra,
emerged from the tent behind her, and slanting sunlight turned his
thinning sandy hair into copper fire. The ends curled slightly from
the dampness, like the baby curls in the pictures Jathmar's mother
had shown her after their marriage. Field equipment festooned his
sturdy canvas web gear: metal canteen, waterproofed compass,
field glasses, canvas rucksack. He had his rifle slung across one
shoulder for greater ease in carrying, and a Halanch and Welnahr
revolver rode his belt.
The lever action rifle and heavy
single-action pistol were for protection against inimical
wildlife—today, at least. There was literally no chance that
they'd run into anything like claim jumpers or a gang of portal
pirates in a virgin universe, but that wasn't always the case out
here on the leading edge of the frontier. Shaylar was more than a
little relieved that he wasn't going to need all that hardware today,
but she had to admit he made a brave and dashing figure, standing
there in the golden sunlight that filtered down like shafts of
molten butter through the gorgeously colored leaves overhead.
Jathmar's sun-bronzed face broke
into a broad grin as her delight sparkled to him through their
marriage bond.
"It is a good morning, isn't
it?" he observed. "Even with my unheroic figure squarely in the
middle of it."
"Oh, absolutely!" Shaylar laughed.
"You wound me, woman." His
long face took on a crestfallen tragedy that would have fooled
anyone else. "You weren't supposed to agree with me!"
"My dear, you're armed and
dangerous enough to take on any black bears, timber wolves, wild
boars, or cougars native to this part of the world." She batted her
eyelashes at him. "What more could any delicately reared maiden
ask?"
"Hah! That's more like it!"
He waggled his eyebrows and
swaggered over for his good-morning kiss. Rather, his fifth good-morning kiss since they'd rolled out of their sleeping bags,
twenty minutes previously, she thought with an inner laugh as he
enfolded her in his arms. Jathmar Nargra was nothing if not an
opportunist. And since they'd spent the vast bulk of the past four
years in the company of forty unmarried men—give or take
the odd one or two security types who'd hired on, then decided to
homestead, or gotten eaten by the odd crocodile—Jathmar
made the most of whatever opportunities came his way.
So did Shaylar, for that matter.
Since most of the universes explored to date did have cougars in
this region, and since—so far as anyone had been able to
tell after eighty years of constant exploration—every
portal's universe was very nearly identical to every other, Shaylar
didn't mind in the least Jathmar's tendency to run about armed like
a proper brigand. His various bits and pieces of lethal hardware
might get in the way at moments like this, but that was just fine
with her.
When Jathmar finally decided
their kiss had been adequate, for now, at least, he stepped back,
and she grinned as she noticed the sketchbook peeking out of his
rucksack.
"Planning to loaf today, are we?"
she inquired sweetly, and his clear hazel eyes twinkled.
"Tease me all you like, faithless
wench. One of these days, I'll have to beat the art buyers off with a
club, and we'll find ourselves retired, rich, and happy."
"I'm happy now," she smiled. "And
with all of this," she swept an expansive arm at the pristine
wilderness surrounding them, "who needs to be rich?"
"Who, indeed?" he echoed,
brushing a lock of raven-black hair from her brow. A few strands
always escaped the practical braids she wore while in the field.
"You really are happy," he said, smiling as he read her
emotions through the special bond between married Talents. "I
worried about it, you know. When we first started our crusade to
place you on a field team."
"Yes, I know," she said softly.
"And I know how hard you pushed the Board to pull it off."
"Halidar Kinshe turned the tide of
opinion, not me," Jathmar demurred. "And you've known the
Parliamentary Representative a lot longer than I have, dear heart.
Still," he grinned, "if you want to lavish thanks on your husband's
humble head, far be it from me to discourage you."
"You," she said severely, swatting
him with her rolled up tube of charts, "are incorrigible!"
"Not at all. Encouragable,
now . . . "
She laughed as he waggled his
eyebrows again. Then he tipped his head up to peer through the
crimson and golden clouds of fall foliage high overhead.
"It is a grand morning for
sketching, isn't it? Not to mention perfect weather for a survey.
The mist ought to burn off early, I think."
"Not that you need a clear
day," Shaylar chuckled. Jathmar's Talent was the ability to "see"
terrain features in a five-mile circle around him, regardless of
weather or ambient light—or the complete lack thereof.
"But weather like this should make the hike more exhilarating. I'll
give you that. In fact, I think I'm jealous about being stuck in camp
while you go gadding about!"
"You're happy as a pearl in a bed
of oysters," he told her, tweaking her nose gently. "Besides, after
that last universe, you should be thrilled by any sunshine we can
get."
"I'll say."
Shaylar's shudder of memory was
only half-feigned. The universe they'd mapped prior to entering
this one had connected via a portal in the middle of what had to be
one of the rainiest spots in any known universe. Back home, it
would have been northwest Rokhana, near the mouth of the
Yirshan River where it spilled into the immense Western Ocean.
They'd been incredibly lucky in that their arrival portal and the
portal leading to this universe were less than three
hundred miles apart, and they knew it. Portals in such close
proximity to one another were almost unheard of, and
correspondingly valuable.
Despite that, and despite the
guidance Darcel Kinlafia, their Portal Hound, had been able to
give them, it had taken them almost a month and a half to cover
the two hundred and sixty-five dripping wet miles between them,
and the last three weeks had been horrible. They hadn't seen the
sun for twenty-three straight days, and most of their gear had
sprouted mold that had required copious amounts of bleach once
the rains finally stopped. After six weeks spent in perpetually
soggy clothes, squelching through perpetually soggy wetlands,
pushing through perpetually thick undergrowth with machetes,
and sleeping under perpetual shrouds of mosquito netting and the
smoke of smudge pots, this crisp, clear autumn air was heaven
itself.
"I'm not complaining," she said
cheerfully. "At least we could come through the portal and leave
the rain behind. Poor Company-Captain Halifu had to build a
fort in that mess. I don't think I've ever seen such an
abundance of unenthusiastic soldiers in my life."
Grafin Halifu had favored Jathmar
and Shaylar—carefully out of earshot of the men of his
command—with a piquant rendition of his opinion of the
multiverse's inconsiderate ill manners in placing a portal in that
particular godsforsaken spot. And since Uromathians worshiped
just about as many deities as there were individual Uromathians, a
spot had to be nigh well lost at the back of forever before all
the Uromathian gods decided to forsake it.
For some odd reason, the
company-captain had seemed less than amused by Ghartoun chan
Hagrahyl's decision to name that universe "New Uromath" in
honor of Halifu's homeland.
"No, Grafin's troops weren't very
happy, were they?" Jathmar chuckled. "Of course, I
wouldn't have been very happy if Regs had required me to
build on the already-mapped side of that particular portal, either.
There they sit, sinking slowly into the mud, and right in front of
them is all of this."
It was his turn to wave
expansively at the towering forest giants all about them.
"At least Darcel wasn't bound by
the PAAF's policy," Shaylar pointed out.
"I think some of Grafin's troopers
were ready to commit mayhem when they realized he was bugging
out for a better spot," Jathmar agreed.
"They couldn't possibly blame
him," Shaylar replied primly, eyes laughing wickedly. "He's a
telepath. And everyone knows that not even the best Voice can
transmit through a portal."
"That's what all of you keep
telling the rest of us, anyway," Jathmar said. "I'm not too sure
Grafin's troopers were buying it this time around, though."
Shaylar chuckled. Like her, Darcel
Kinlafia was a Voice, a Talented long-distance communications
specialist. Voices, who were born with the gifts of perfect recall
and the ability to connect, mind-to-mind, with other Voices, were
essential in many aspects of Sharonian society.
Governments, the Portal
Authority, and private industries ranging from manufacturing to
news broadcasters used Voices to transmit complex messages that
were word-and image-perfect. The military used Voices, as well,
for its long-range communications. But as useful as Voices were
throughout Sharona's multiple-universe civilization, they were
utterly indispensable to the work of surveying new
universes.
Every survey crew fielded a bare
minimum of two Voices. One remained at the portal giving access
to a new universe, serving as a link between the field team
conducting the survey and the established settlements in the
universes behind them. The more portals a field team surveyed, the
more Voices it needed to cover the portals in their particular
transit chain. And when their team reached the distance limit of
Shaylar's transmission ability, they would need to move Darcel
forward and replace him with a new Voice in a game of telepathic
leapfrog.
This portal, in particular, was part
of the reason they were so stretched for manpower. During the
past ten months, Chalgyn Consortium's teams had found no less
than three new portals, including New Uromathia and this one,
which they hadn't named yet. That had forced them to split up,
trying to claim and explore them all, and that was before they
crossed into this universe and started to realize what they might
have stumbled across. Their discoveries were going to be a
massive windfall, and not just for them and their employer. In all
of its eighty previous years of exploration, the Portal Authority
had located and charted only forty-nine portals. The Chalgyn teams
had already increased that total by over six percent, and if Darcel
was right about this portal, the consequences for their
entire civilization (not to mention their own bank accounts)
would be stupendous.
All of that was wonderful, but it
also left them incredibly shorthanded. Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl
had split their team twice, already, claiming the other two portals
and exploring the universes beyond them. As a result, they were
down to only two Voices and a bare minimum of other crewmen,
not to mention supplies, but nobody was complaining.
Fortunately, the Portal Authority
was in charge of all portal transit traffic, which meant the units of
the PAAF—the Portal Authority Armed Forces, composed
of multinational military units assigned to the Authority
duty—built the portal forts and provided most of the
personnel to man them, including at least one Portal Authority
Voice. Or, that was the way it was supposed to work, at any rate.
This portal was so new, and there were so many other
portals along what had been designated the Karys Chain that
needed forts, as well, that the military hadn't been able to bring in
a new Voice, yet.
All of which left Darcel Kinlafia
holding down the listening post for their team until a fort-based
Voice could be moved in. Darcel would pass their field reports
along from one Voice to the next, creating a chain of rapid
communications. They could, if emergency required it, get a
message all the way back to humanity's birth world, Sharona, in
little little more than a week. If not for the water gaps between
some of the portals, which had to be crossed by ship, since no one
could permanently post a relay Voice in the middle of an ocean,
they could have gotten a message home in a matter of hours.
Shaylar was grateful that she
would never be the Voice stuck at the portal, just waiting for
someone else's messages. She wasn't merely the Voice assigned to
the survey team, she was married to—and inextricably
linked with—its primary Mapper. That made her not only an
integral part of the survey, but meant she was critical to the team's
primary mission: mapping a new universe. Jathmar could "See"
the terrain around him, but Shaylar was the team's actual
cartographer. It was her job to translate Jathmar's mental
"pictures" of distant terrain features into the maps which would
guide later exploration and settlements. Even if they stumbled
across another portal, they wouldn't—couldn't—
leave Shaylar there to cover it. They would have to send word
back to field another survey crew to explore the new universe, or
else to take over the exploration of this one so that they
could concentrate on the new one.
Then again, they couldn't really
leave Darcel, either. Not for long, anyway. He might not be as
essential to the everyday operations of the field team as Shaylar
and Jathmar were, but his secondary Talent was, in its own way,
even more important to the Consortium's long term operations.
She knew exactly how lucky she
was. Not just to escape the tedium of portal sitting, while others
enjoyed all the fun of exploration, but to be out here at all. On the
whole, Sharonian women enjoyed equal status with Sharonian
men, although legal rights varied from one kingdom or republic to
the next. After all, there was no question about female intelligence
or inherent capabilities in a population where one in five people
possessed at least some degree of Talent. That sort of
discrimination had gone out with the dark ages, thousands upon
thousands of years ago, during the first Ternathian Empire.
But mapping virgin universes was
arduous, frequently dangerous work. The Portal Authority, whose
governing members were drawn from each of Sharona's dozens of
nations and city-states—not to mention the current
Ternathian Empire—had decreed that women should not
risk the dangers routinely braved by virgin-portal survey teams.
Shaylar was the Portal Authority's
first exception to that ironclad rule, which had carried the weight
of eighty years of precedent. She was very much aware that her
performance was under scrutiny. She had the chance of a
lifetime—the chance to blaze the way for other women who
wanted to explore where no other human had ever set
foot—but she was equally conscious of her responsibility
to prove once and for all that it was time to set that long-standing
rule permanently aside.
Shaylar had helped survey two
other virgin universes before this expedition, not to mention
putting in her time, along with Jathmar, pushing back the frontiers
of other, already claimed universes. Each portal gave access to an
entire planet, after all, and however physically similar all of those
duplicate worlds might be, they still had to be explored and
surveyed. And that wasn't the sort of chore which could be
accomplished in the snap of your fingers. Besides, that sort of
exploration was the final training period—the
internship—the Authority required before it was prepared
to turn a team loose on the far side of an unexplored portal.
It was just as rugged a life as
everyone had warned her it would be. The frontier wasn't gentle,
and it didn't make allowances for the "frailer sex." But despite the
worries of the general public and the dire predictions of the
naysayers—not to mention the very real harshness of
conditions, and the ever-present dangers any pioneer faced in the
wilderness—she was profoundly happy. Not to mention
tremendously successful.
Having Jathmar at her side to
share the experience only deepened the wonder of at all. Her eyes
met his and the love that came rolling to her through their
marriage bond was so strong and sweet tears prickled her eyelids.
Jathmar leaned down the seven inches between their mismatched
heights and placed a gentle kiss on her brow, a more tender
expression of his feelings than a mere ardent lip-lock. Then he
grinned and jerked his head towards the deep timber.
"Time's a-wasting," he said. "Let's
see how much we can get mapped before lunch. And the sooner
we talk to Ghartoun, the sooner we'll get started."
Their camp was nestled in a
natural clearing where the stream looped its way through the
timber. It had taken them three days to come this far, and they'd
been here for nearly three more days, mapping the region. Shaylar
knew she would miss the campsite when they moved on, but she
was just as anxious as the others to see what lay ahead. Any survey
was always slow work, of course, but it had taken five full days
just to map the portal itself. Not surprisingly, since it was by far
the largest any of them had ever seen, far less mapped.
In fact, at over thirty miles wide, it
was actually larger than the Calirath Gate. That made it the largest
portal ever discovered, and their first task on stepping through it
had been to map the actual portal and lay out the grid coordinates
of what would become this universe's primary base camp, one
day's journey from Company-Captain Halifu's fort. This one
would be a substantial affair—a fully manned fort and
forward supply depot that would house portal Authority
administrators, medical teams, more soldiers, and enough
equipment and supplies to serve as the staging area for other
exploration teams, construction crews, miners, and the settlers
who would inevitably follow.
One they'd found a suitable site
for that base of operations and sent its coordinates back for the
Chalgyn Consortium to begin organizing the follow-on
construction crews, they'd set out along a line to the south. As
they pushed forward, they'd built small brush enclosures at the end
of each full day's travel, designed to keep out unfriendly local
wildlife. They'd remained in place at each camp long enough to
thoroughly map the surrounding region—which meant
hiking far enough to telepathically Map a twenty-mile
grid-square—then pushed forward another full day's
journey and built another camp to start the process all over again.
It was no accident that the Portal
Authority had drawn upon the Ternathian Empire's method of
expansion. Ternathia had been building empires for five thousand
years, after all. That was an immense span of time in which to
develop methods that worked, and the Portal Authority
had borrowed heavily whenever and wherever appropriate,
including the custom of building fortified camps along any line of
exploratory advance through virgin territory. The fact that
Ternathia provided over forty percent of the PA's multinational
military contingent, and something like half of its total attached
officers, might also have had a little something to do with it,
Shaylar supposed.
With only twenty people on their
currently understrength crew, she and her crewmates couldn't
build the elaborate stockades which had comprised the Ternathian
system of day-forts. But they could construct a perimeter of
interwoven branches that served to keep out anything short of a
herd of charging elephants. There were even tales from veteran
crews of stampeding cattle and bison herds numbering in the tens
of thousands, turning aside and flowing around the camp, rather
than run directly into the jagged, sharp projecting branches of its
brush wall. All in all, the system worked as well for the Portal
Authority as it had for the Ternathians.
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl was
intimately familiar with that system, since he'd served with the
Ternathian Army, as the honorific "chan" in his name
proclaimed. He'd been an engineer, and after fulfilling his
commitment to the Army, he'd returned to school. He taken
advantage of a major scholarship offer to pursue graduate studies
in engineering and actually taught engineering at the branch of the
Ternathian Imperial University in New Estafel on New Sharona,
the first major colony established outside Sharona's home
universe.
After a decade in the classroom,
however, he'd succumbed to the lure of the portals. That had been
almost twenty years ago, and for the last seven, he'd been with the
Chalgyn Consortium.
She and Jathmar both found
Ghartoun's experience comforting. Jathmar was especially
conscious of it, since he himself had never served in any military
force. The Republic of Faltharia, colonized long after the last real
shooting war had rampaged across Sharona, had only two
neighbors, neither of whom were interested in expanding their
territories through conquest. Not when there was free land for the
taking in unexplored universes, just waiting to be colonized.
Jathmar had learned his woodcraft during his childhood, living
near and honing his Talent in the trackless Kylie Forest, the
greatest of Faltharia's protected state forests, which preserved the
wilderness Faltharia's earliest settlers had found when they arrived
from Farnalia nearly three hundred years ago.
Jathmar was grateful that
Farnalians—and their Faltharian descendents—
understood the multiple values that large tracts of wilderness
bestowed on a nation. And for giving him a place to hone the
skills which had helped earn him a slot on a survey crew.
And if he lacked formal military
training, he'd been through the Portal Authority's own rigorous
training program. Coupled with a lifetime as a hunter, he felt more
than capable of holding up his end of anything that came his team's
way. Not that he spent very much of his time in camp.
His Mapping duties were the main
reason it had taken them three days to move this far south. They
could have made the same trip much more quickly—they
were little more than a single day from their entry portal for
someone hiking at his best emergency speed—but you
simply couldn't Map that quickly. While Darcel Kinlafia loafed
around at the portal with a fishing pole and a stewpot full of
whatever he could bring down with his rifle, Jathmar and Shaylar
were hard at work, earning every cent of their fat paychecks.
They frequently toiled well past
darkness to lay down their expanding grid. Jathmar didn't need
daylight to "see" terrain features, and Shaylar could work by the
light of the oil lamps they carried in their packs, with reflectors to
give her plenty of light to fill in the charts and field reports she
was responsible for creating. With any luck, their chosen direction
would carry them straight toward some kind of valuable real
estate that they could claim for the Chalgyn Consortium.
The consortium's main income, of
course, would come from portal-usage fees. Once a survey crew
discovered a new portal, the company which employed them
earned the right to charge fees for every person and every load of
goods that traveled through it. The Portal Authority actually ran
the portals and set the fees, which were very low on an individual
basis. But the cumulative totals added up to a staggering annual
income for busy portals.
That was the driving force behind
fielding survey crews. Any crew that found a new portal
guaranteed a potentially massive income for its company. Mineral
wealth and other natural resource rights simply added to the
lucrative venture, and the team which found them shared in the
money derived from them.
Now Jathmar offered his wife an
arm, and Shaylar giggled as she laid her hand regally on his elbow.
The gesture was curiously refined, in that subtle and mysterious
way Harkalian women seemed to master in their cradles. For just
an instant, the grubby, dirt stained dungarees and scuffed hiking
boots wavered as his mind's eye showed him a vision of his wife
in High Harkalian formal dress. She looked stunning in its
multitude of embroidered layers, each one dyed a different,
luminous color, setting her skin aglow with the colors of sun-
struck emeralds and gold-flecked lapis and the rich, burgundy
tones of Fratha wine.
Blue lapis remained to this day the
most precious gemstone in any Harkalian culture, for
reasons Jathmar still wasn't sure he entirely grasped. Harkalian
mythology tended toward the complex, with layers of meaning
Shaylar was still explaining after nearly ten years of wedded bliss.
Of course, most of Shaylar's lessons ended prematurely, since
virtually all of Harkalian mythology revolved around the pleasures
of intimacy shared between willing
participants. . . .
Shaylar caught the drift of his
emotions and smiled gently, with a seductive promise that hit
Jathmar like a blow to the gut. That smile made him grateful all
over again for the victory they'd won, securing Shaylar's place in
this survey crew. He couldn't have done field work without her. Wouldn't have, rather, for the simple reason that being
separated from her for extended periods of time would have felt
entirely too much like premature death.
"I love you, too," Shaylar
murmured, drawing his head down for another kiss that was
altogether too brief. He sighed regretfully and promised himself
an early end to the evening, thankful that they'd pitched their tent
just a little further from the others, for privacy's sake. Shaylar
picked up that emotion through their marriage bond, too,
and her eyes smoldered as they met his. Then she schooled her
features, patted his arm in a decorous, wifely fashion, and headed
him toward the center of camp, where Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's
voice rang out clearly above the chatter of birds defending their
chosen territories.
"Ghartoun sounds just like them,
doesn't he?" Shaylar chuckled, nodding toward the deep timber
and its glorious explosion of birdsong. "Defending what we've
marked on our charts and figuring ways to outfox our competition
when the rival survey teams arrive."
"I'd lay money that nobody else
has ever suggested that Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl shares
anything in common with birds," Jathmar laughed. The stocky
Ternathian looked more like a Tadewian bison than anything
avian. The former soldier's black hair was cut short, military
fashion, despite thirty years on the civilian economy, and his blue
eyes were as crisp as the morning air.
He wasn't a brilliant man, but he
knew his job, and a lively intelligence lived behind those intense
blue eyes. At six-feet-one-inch, he was taller than Jathmar, and far
more heavily built, brawny with muscle. At five-two, Shaylar
looked like a child beside him. Her chin barely reached his chest,
and she weighed a hundred and five pounds, soaking wet, but
appearances were deceiving. She was an experienced
outdoorswoman, capable of holding her own on any march they'd
ever had to make—and that ghastly three weeks-slog
through wetlands and riverine floods had taxed all of them
to the limits of their endurance.
"You're ready?" chan Hagrahyl
asked, glancing up from sharpening his camp ax at their approach.
He tested the edge with a cautious thumb, then grunted in
satisfaction. He'd dulled it thoroughly yesterday, cutting branches
for the camp's brush fence.
"Do you have a preference for
which direction we start this morning?" Jathmar asked.
"Not really. Just bear in mind that
Falsan headed southwest about thirty minutes ago, following our
creek downstream. He's after something he can bag for supper. I
told Cookie that if he served up another slop-pot of trail-rats, I'd
scalp him alive."
Jathmar laughed. He was
delighted that their team leader was such an ardent believer in
saving their dried and canned emergency rations for genuine
emergencies. He enjoyed eating fresh meat from the game they
brought down, along with whatever edible plants were in season
where they'd camped. Still . . .
"Fair's fair, Ghartoun, and we're
lucky to have him," he pointed out. "Naldar's the best cook on any
team this side of Sharona. He can even make trail-rats edible."
"That's what you say,"
Shaylar muttered. "I'd almost as soon eat shoe leather."
"A woman after my own heart,"
chan Hagrahyl chuckled. "At any rate, I trust Falsan's judgment.
He's not going to shoot at something he can't see, but there's no
point taking chances. I'd just as soon you didn't jostle his elbow
when he's trying to stalk whatever's out there, either. If you head
straight south, you might cross his firing line, so I'd recommend
going east."
"Agreed," Jathmar said dryly.
Unlike his wife, Falsan was not a telepath, and without something
like their own marriage bond, not even a Voice as strong as
Shaylar could contact someone who wasn't telepathically
Talented. Falsan chan Salgmun was as steady and reliable as they
came, but accidents happened, and Jathmar didn't want to risk
trailing a man with a loaded rifle in unknown territory. Not when
the man didn't realize he was being trailed.
"All right, I'll hike a mile out
along the eastern line and work around the perimeter toward the
terminus of the southern transit. That'll let Shaylar build up a
detailed record of everything within six miles of our camp in that
grid quarter. My terrain scans are picking up a fork in the stream,
about a mile east of here. The main creek runs almost straight east,
and the other branch flows south, so I'll follow those as a rough
guide. I'll use the compass for directional corrections when the
streams twist out of true with the baselines."
"You always were a cautious
fellow, Jathmar," chan Hagrahyl observed with another chuckle.
"You've got the best directional sense of any terrain scanner I've
worked with—and that's saying a lot, I might add. But you
still carry a compass."
Jathmar shrugged off the
compliment to his skill, although Shaylar's grin could have
cracked solid oak and her delight fizzed in his awareness.
"A careful Mapper lives to map
the next portal, my friend," he smiled. "Careless Mappers, on the
other hand, can get themselves and their crews killed." He wrapped
an arm around Shaylar's shoulders. "And just between you, me,
and the fence we put up yesterday, I plan to survive long enough to
see worlds we never dreamed were out here!"
chan Hagrahyl grinned and
clouted him across one shoulder.
"Well spoken, Jathmar. Well
spoken, indeed." Then his manner settled back into
professionalism. "Will you be able to complete the baseline grid
today?"
Jathmar frowned thoughtfully up
at the sky as he considered the question. Then he tossed his head in
something which was almost a nod.
"Probably," he said, "although it
should take us most of the day, at a minimum. At least this," he
waved one hand at the towering trees of the mature climax forest
about them, "means we don't have much underbrush to slash our
way through, thank the gods. But I'll be following streambeds for
a fair portion of the day, and there's enough understory along these
banks to slow me down a good bit. Once I start the perimeter
swing down toward the southern baseline, the terrain ought to be
easier going."
Jathmar would essentially be
walking along an L-shaped path that would fill in a square-shaped
area of ground. Survey base grids were always square, given the
nature of a terrain scanner's Talent. This morning's first square
would begin the newest section of their base grid for this day-fort.
Once that grid was completed, they would decide which direction
to move to begin the next grid-square of exploration. Ideally, that
would depend on where they were, and what valuable resources
might be nearby.
"If we can get a good look at the
stars tonight," Shaylar said hopefully, "we ought to be able to
place our location a little more precisely."
"That'll make me feel better, I
don't mind admitting," chan Hagrahyl agreed with a nod. "It's one
thing to know approximately where you are, but I'll be happier
when a star-fix pinpoints our location more accurately."
The clear autumn day was
welcome for more than the simple absence of rain. The skies had
remained overcast since their arrival, almost as though the rain
clouds had followed them through the portal and dogged their
heels before finally attenuating with distance. That was actually
possible, Jathmar mused, given the size of that portal and the
collision of air masses between the two universes.
The simple expedient of pouring
water through a funnel to see which way it spiraled had told them
they'd stepped through into the northern hemisphere. Based on the
vegetation and wildlife, Jathmar was betting they were somewhere
in the northern portion of what would have been his own birth
country, back on Sharona. The massive oak trees, sugar maples,
tulip poplars, and sycamores, coupled with the cardinals and
chipmunks, and the majestic white-tail deer they'd spotted, all
suggested a spot within perhaps two or three hundred miles of the
lakeshore city of Serikai in his native Faltharia.
If so, the five immense lakes of
Faltharia—larger than many a Sharonian sea—
should lie very close to their present position. Jathmar had made a
private bet with himself that they would end up fixing their
position of within a few days' hike of this universe's analog of
Emlin Falls. Emlin was one of the two most spectacular
waterfalls on Sharona—and, of course, on any of its many
duplicates which had already been discovered and at least partially
explored. But Jathmar wasn't thinking solely about the scenery. If
they were near Emlin Falls, they wouldn't be too terribly far from
some valuable iron ore deposits. Still, he didn't want to raise
anyone's hopes yet, so he said nothing about his suspicion to chan
Hagrahyl.
"We'll get started, then," Jathmar
told their expeditionary leader instead. "I'll plan to rendezvous
back at camp around noon."
chan Hagrahyl grunted his
satisfaction and turned back to carefully finish sharpening his ax
blade.
Jathmar and Shaylar headed for
the eastern end of the camp, passing Rilthan's tent, where the
gunsmith was busy making field repairs to one of the rifles which
had started jamming yesterday. The tools of his trade were spread
out around him, along with pieces of the partially disassembled
weapon. It was one of the Model 9's. The Ternathian Army had
disposed of thousands of the lever-action .48-caliber rifles on the
civilian market over the last several years. They were powerful,
reliable weapons, especially with the newly developed
"smokeless" powders, even if their tubular magazines made it
unsafe to use the equally new (and ballistically far superior)
"Spitzer-pointed" rounds. They were certainly sufficient for any
civilian need, at any rate, and the Army had just about completed
reequipping its active-duty formations with the newer bolt-action
Model 10.
Past Rilthan, the drovers were
working on the pack saddles, examining their tack carefully while
a dozen sturdy donkeys stood slack-footed and bored in the
temporary pen. Pack animals were essential to a long expedition,
and donkeys were sturdy enough to require very little veterinary
care. They were also rugged enough to subsist on vegetation on
which horses would have starved, although they couldn't match
the speed and carrying capacity of the mules the military used as
pack animals. The mingled scents of gun oil, dust, warm hide, and
dung lent a pungent note to the early morning air.
Several of the little animals shook
their heads and followed Jathmar and Shaylar with hopeful eyes,
wanting fresh carrots or a handful of grain. Shaylar reached across
the rope that served to pen the animals into one corner of the
stockade and scratched one of them between its ears. It butted her
hand, begging for more, and she laughed.
"Sorry, pet. That's all the
scratching I have time for. And I'm fresh out of carrots."
Jathmar grinned as Shaylar
followed him out through the rough gate in the stockade and
trailed him a short distance into the trees. Her dark hair caught the
early sunlight with a silky gloss, like a blackbird's wing. She
looked . . . not out of place in this
towering timberland, but still somehow alien. Like a visitor from
another, very different world, not just another universe.
Perhaps it was just that Jathmar
knew exactly what world she'd been born to, for he'd visited
Shaylar's home before marrying her. The diminutive beauty who'd
captured his heart was not Faltharian. Shaylar had been born in
Shurkhal, a prosperous kingdom of ancient Harkala that sprawled
across a hot and arid peninsula between the eastern coast of
Ricathia and the great triangular jut of land that lay a thousand
miles across the Harkalian Ocean.
Shaylar's features bore the
unmistakable stamp of Harkalian ancestry, as well they might,
since Shurkhal had once been the cultural center of the Harkalian
Empire. Swallowed up by the massive Ternathian Empire, ancient
Harkala had prospered, thanks to its placement along the trade
routes running east and west. When Ternathia had finally
dissolved most of its empire, retreating back to its core provinces,
the Harkalian kingdoms had come into their own again as
independent realms. Shaylar's family wasn't part of the wealthy
traders' class, let alone the ruling families, but they had welcomed
him—a genuine outsider—with open arms and that
worlds-famous, genuine Shurkhali welcome that Ternathian bards
once had written of so eloquently.
Shaylar's dark eyes lifted, meeting
his as she caught the nuances of his emotions.
"Well, why wouldn't my family
welcome you?" she asked softly. "You were quite a coup for a girl
like me."
"A girl like you?" He chuckled.
"Do you have any idea how many Mappers at the Portal Authority
I had to knock over the head to get myself assigned to you?"
Shaylar laughed out loud.
"Jath, you never had a chance! Not
after I'd made up my mind. Which I did about five minutes after
meeting you in Halidar Kinshe's office."
He grinned, hazel eyes dancing
impishly with the delight that could speed her pulse even after ten
years of marriage. They'd met while interning at the Portal
Authority during the early phases of their training. Halidar Kinshe
was a Royal Parliamentary Representative from Shaylar's
kingdom, who also held a position on the Portal Authority's board
of governors. No portal survey crewman—or crew
woman—could accept employment from anyone, not
even a private consortium like Chalgyn, without being bonded by
the Portal Authority. And the Authority wouldn't bond anyone
who hadn't completed its rigorous coursework successfully. Part
of that included a political internship with a Board director, whose
evaluation of an intern's performance literally made or destroyed
that intern's hope of future employment.
Shaylar had sometimes despaired
of surviving those grueling years of intensive classwork,
combined with field expeditions and mandatory training in things
like marksmanship and self-defense. They'd taxed her to the utter
limits of her intelligence, Talent, and endurance. But she'd made
it—one of only sixteen women who'd ever completed the
full course, and the only one allowed to join an active survey
team. While Halidar Kinshe had proven himself an unexpected ally
and mentor, for which she would always be grateful, it was
Jathmar who'd helped get her through the classwork and the
agonizing fieldwork, which was designed to weed out as many
applicants as possible. She'd fallen hard for Jath, as he'd been
called then, long before their graduation from the Portal Authority
Academy.
He'd done the same. He'd even
adopted the customary "-ar" suffix married couples from Shurkhal
added to their first names once they'd exchanged wedding vows. It
wasn't a Faltharian custom, but he'd told her he wanted to follow
it before she could work up the nerve to ask if he might consider
it. His offer had melted her heart with joy, and not just because it
had underscored how much he loved her. She'd also recognized
what it would mean to her family, and she'd been more afraid than
she'd been prepared to admit even to herself that her family
wouldn't approve of her independent-minded Faltharian and his
republican notions and dreams that her father, at least, would
never fully understand.
Her father was, at heart, a simple
agriculturalist, tending admittedly large flocks of russet-wool
sheep, silk-hair goats, and the surly, hump-backed dune-treaders
that Shurkhali merchants had used for centuries to cross the desert
trade routes between their coast and the rich markets far to the
east. He couldn't understand the dream that drove
Jathmar . . . and he understood
Shaylar's dreams even less well.
But he loved her, and he seemed
to realize that her mother's dreams had been reborn and reshaped
in her own heart. Shaylar's mother was a cetacean translator. A
very good one, in fact, employed by one of the largest cetacean
institutes on Sharona. Thalassar Kolmayr-Brintal had come to
Shurkhal as a young woman, following her own dreams. She'd
helped found the Cetacean Institute's Shurkhali Aquatic Realms
Embassy, which was—as sheer happenstance would have
it—located on land the Institute had purchased from Amin
Kolmayr. Their unexpected courtship was still Institute legend.
Shaylar had grown up with
"playmates" whose playground was the long, narrow Finger Sea
that lapped against Shurkhal's eastern shoreline, linking the the
Mbisi Sea—by way of the Grand Ternathian Canal—
with the Rindor Ocean. Dolphins and whales from the Rindor
Ocean swam to the Embassy to pass messages and conduct treaty
negotiations with the Cetacean Institute, by way of the Embassy.
The Embassy passed those messages to the cetacean Institute's
headquarters in Tajvana, as well as passing the Institute's messages
to the whales and dolphins.
Jathmar had been as delighted as
an eager adolescent, not only meeting but swimming with
dolphins who could hold actual conversations with Shaylar's
mother. Their approval of Jathmar had gone a long way
toward endearing him to her mother's heart. Like all cetacean
translators, Thalassar had a high opinion of Sharona's ocean-
dwelling citizens. An opinion that Shaylar—and now
Jathmar—shared.
But there wasn't all that much
wealth in dune-treaders and goats, no matter how you added up
the small change. And while her mother was a respected and
Talented professional, there wasn't a great deal of money in
cetacean translation, either. Not even at the embassy level.
Of course, if that black liquid
seeping up through the sand in her family's ancient holding proved
to be as valuable as some of the Ternathian engineers thought it
might, Clan Kolmayr might just find itself possessed of more
wealth than their entire lineage—stretching back nearly two
thousand years—had ever possessed. That was what
everyone else seemed to think, at any rate, although Shaylar wasn't
so sure there was enough of the "crude oil" beneath the family
holdings to make it worth the developers' while. Investing the time
and machinery necessary to drill wells and pump out whatever oil
might be there would surely take a hefty chunk of money up front.
And once they'd pumped out
whatever was there, what would they use it for? She
couldn't help feeling skeptical about those newfangled engines
that used the refined products made from oil. She couldn't imagine
a world where the noisy, smelly, dirty things would ever be as
widespread and useful as the more wide-eyed fanatics claimed
they would. But the thought of her parents and cousins wearing
silks and building fancy houses and gardens was enough to tickle
her sense of humor. Those images flickered across the marriage
bond into Jathmar's awareness, and his eyes twinkled.
"Of course they'll be rich as kings.
Why do you think I married you, my little sand flower?"
Shaylar thumped him solidly on
the shoulder with the best glower she could produce. It wasn't very
convincing. Jathmar was the least money-oriented human being
she'd ever known.
He laughed and kissed her likely,
then sighed.
"Time to get busy," he said. "Give
me time to get into position before making contact. Call it at least
half-an-hour, given that underbrush."
He was eying the thick growth
along the stream's steep banks.
"Half-an-hour, then," Shaylar
nodded, and he turned and headed east along the creek.
Shaylar watched him vanish
around the bend, allowed a small sigh to escape her—
mostly because she wanted to go with him this morning—
then shook herself firmly and returned to camp. She set up her
work table, which was a lap desk that unfolded to give her a
smooth writing surface. The donkey assigned to them carried it,
when they were on the move, since that level writing surface was a
necessity. Mapping was ninety percent of the reason they were out
here, after all.
She chose a spot on the eastern
edge of camp, outside the stockade, since chan Hagrahyl had most
of the survey crewmen taking their gear apart to check for damage.
It was a ritual they performed each time they stopped. Frayed
straps could lead to damaged equipment, which could put lives at
risk, and chan Hagrahyl was too good team leader to risk that kind
of sloppiness.
While most of the crew busied
themselves inside the stockade, Shaylar laid out her materials,
sitting within visual range of the remaining three crewmen who
were busy along the stream. Braiheri Futhai, the team's naturalist,
was peering through the weeds, sketching something in his
notebook. Elevu Gitel, the team's geologist, was dutifully
absorbed in taking soil samples. Futhai had already laid out his
collecting nets, waiting until the mist burned off and the dew dried
from the grass before scooping butterflies and other insects out of
the air. Both men were self-absorbed, scarcely aware of one
another.
The third man caught Shaylar's
eye, rolled his own at the scientists, and gave her an irreverent
grin. Boris Kasell was a former soldier, an Arpathian who'd served
his time in the infantry of his native kingdom, which made him
something of an oddity. Most Arpathians were horsemen,
renowned for their equestrian skill and ferocity, both of which
they needed to guard their borders from the powerful Uromathian
kingdoms and empires south and east of them.
Unlike chan Hagrahyl, Kasell had
a wicked sense of humor. He usually drew guard duty, watching
over the scientists—and her, as well—because he
didn't mind the job and was extremely diligent. His almond-shaped
eyes, legacy of the mixed blood in that region of Arpathia,
twinkled after.
Shaylar wore her own handgun at
her hip, as did every other member of chan Hagrahyl's team. But
she couldn't do her job and pay attention to her
surroundings, so Kasell watched out for danger while she charted
and the others did their collecting.
The heavily forested region
around them teemed with birdlife and dozens of small mammal
species, one of which had already sent Futhai into fits of ecstasy,
since it was a completely unknown type.
"A black-and-white chipmunk!
Gods and thunders, a black-and-white chipmunk! And
look—there are dozens of them, so it's not an
isolated deviant individual!" Over the course of their three-day
march, that had become Futhai's favorite cry. "They're everywhere!
It's not an isolated population! Black-and-white chipmunks! A
true new subspecies!"
Braiheri Futhai was a man whose
fastidious nature showed itself not so much in the way he carried
himself, or engaged his surroundings—he was every bit as
good a woodsman as any other member of the team—but in
the way he thought, down deep at the core of his Ternathian soul.
Futhai was not Braiheri chan Futhai, for
he'd never served in Ternathia's military. Not because he was
unpatriotic, but because soldiering was not a gentleman's
occupation.
Futhai was a very good naturalist,
with a veritable treasure trove of scientific information stored in
memory. His knowledge ranged from geology to meteorology,
from zoology and botany to physics, and the mathematical
precision with which all worlds—including their beloved
Sharona—whirled through the ether in their journeys
around duplicates of Sharona's sun. He had a keen eye and a keen
mind, and a gift for detailed observation that made him a valuable
member of the survey team.
Unfortunately, those excellent
qualities shared brain space with all too many notions about
proper attitudes and behaviors for a certifiable (by birthright and
exalted pedigree) gentleman of Sharona's most ancient, prestigious
empire. Worse, he expected others to treat him with the deference
he, himself, believed he merited, as the grandson of a Ternathian
duke. And he treated everyone else in accordance with those same
social rules, as carefully learned as his science. He wasn't
demanding or petty, or even rude about it, which only made
matters worse, as far as Shaylar was concerned. He was
insufferably polite, in fact, particularly with her, treating her to an
unending barrage of courtesies, looking after her every
need . . . whether she wanted him to
or not.
But the thing that drove Shaylar
craziest was his unshakable conviction that his notions and
customs were as unalterably and exclusively correct as the
physical laws of the University so delighted in studying. It had
simply never occurred to Braiheri Futhai that not everyone on
Sharona thought the Ternathian way of doing things was the best
way. He possessed just enough Talent for Shaylar to realize he
truly believed, in his innermost heart, that someday every
enlightened Sharonian would metamorphose himself or herself
into a clone of a Ternathian gentleman or lady. He simply didn't
grasp the basic truth that Shaylar preferred her Harkalian
viewpoint and beliefs, just as Jathmar preferred his Faltharian
ones, and Elevu Gitel preferred his Ricathian ones.
Not that there weren't profound
similarities between most of Sharona's great societies. With
psionic Talents running through at least a fifth of the world's
population, there were bound to be some similarities. And given
the enormous territory the Ternathian emperors had once ruled,
and the colonies that had spread across vast oceans from
Ternathian shores, at least half of Sharona's population could
claim at least some Ternathian heritage, whether it was by blood
relation or the holdovers of colonial civic administration.
Personally, Shaylar preferred Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's
straightforward military mindset to Futhai's more civilized
notions. It was probably rude of her, but she simply couldn't help
it when Futhai went to such pains to make himself so utterly,
unctuously disagreeable.
So she grinned back at Kasell,
rolled her own eyes toward the self-absorbed naturalist, then sat
down facing the stream and tuned out the distractions around her
with the practiced ease of an experienced professional. She
unrolled the chart they'd compiled to date, weighted it down so
that it couldn't roll up again, and marked off the section due east
of their campsite. Then she laid out her tools: compass with pencil
fixed in place, steel ruler, protractor, a second pencil, and a
template with precut map symbols to speed and simplify her work.
She wouldn't ink the chart until she and Jathmar had gone over it
tonight, doublechecking her accuracy after supper.
She also laid out her field
notebook, and one of the piston-fill pens she and countless other
survey crew members—not to mention ordinary clerks and
officials—blessed on a daily basis. She filled the pen from a
metal flask of ink she'd carried with her through three virgin
universes, made sure the flask's cap was screwed into place, and
carried it back to her tent.
By the time she returned to her
work table, Jathmar had hiked far enough to start picking up new
terrain features. When Shaylar reached out to contact him—
the nature of his Talent meant she had to contact him, since he
could See but wasn't able to transmit to her or anyone
else—the pictures in his mind started flowing into hers. The
process was second nature to her, now, although she paused now
and again to reflect on how dull life must be without any Talent at
all to turn the multiple universes into a maze of fascinating
playgrounds.
The glorious, crisp morning and
the sunshine that glowed across her shoulders combined to keep
her contented with life. She hummed under her breath, not even
really aware that she did so, and concentrated on what Jathmar was
seeing—and on what he was Seeing, since there was a
distinct difference. When she'd first begun her training, Shaylar
had found it difficult to sort out the images Jathmar saw with his
two physical eyes from those the Saw with his "third eye." The
screen in Jathmar's brain Saw a far wider slice of terrain than mere
eyes could take in, and that screen was what Shaylar tapped when
establishing her link with him.
Her husband was actually looking
at a bend in the creek that already existed on their chart, since it
was well within his five-mile radius from camp. Although that
image was the stronger of the two, she ignored it with practiced
ease and focused on the other, ghostlier image he was Seeing.
For Jathmar, the mechanics
involved seemed to be a sort of looking "up" and then "out" along
an invisible gridwork that registered as faint threads of light. He
Saw terrain superimposed across that gridwork, like shadows
glimpsed through mist. For Shaylar, the mechanics of her Talent
took the form of a sudden gestalt, a totality of impressions that
simply appeared, complete, in her own mind's eye. She Saw what
he did as a whole, complete image—like a stage play
containing nothing but scenery. Had Shaylar been in contact with
another Voice, the images would have been far sharper, more like
seeing it with her own eyes, rather than catching shadows that had
the look of a watercolor painting left too long in strong sunlight.
She had to reach out consciously
to pluck the images from Jathmar's mind, which took
concentration. But he was close enough to camp that it wasn't
particularly taxing. The further apart she and Jathmar—or
another telepath—were, the more concentration it took to
make contact and maintain it. Shaylar's maximum range was just
over eight hundred miles. That put her in the top ten percent of all
Voices, although at that distance it took every ounce of
concentration she could summon to hold contact.
Other Voices had even more
limited ranges, which gave her team a distinct advantage. When
she and Darcel had first been assigned to the same team, Darcel
had been startled at the range she achieved. Startled and a little
worried, since his own maximum range was barely two-thirds as
great as hers. It was entirely possible for Shaylar to go far enough
out of his range that he could pick up her transmissions, yet be too
far away for him to transmit a reply back to her. They'd worked
carefully together in a well-established colony world before
heading for the wilderness, using the railroads in a very serious
game of leapfrog to gauge effective distances at which they could
both make contact. In the end, they'd found that he could Hear her
at up to eight hundred miles, whereas she could Hear him at
almost six hundred and fifty. Unfortunately, at anything over five
hundred and eighty miles, he could Hear her only if he knew she
would be trying to contact him and went into Voice trance to
Listen for her, which limited their effective maximum
range to that figure.
Once deployed, that maximum
effective range dictated how far they could travel from any new
portal before a relay team had to follow them out, to serve as a
connection that would enable them to push deeper into the
wilderness. It was an awkward arrangement, in some respects, but
far better than the alternative would have been. If the survey crews
hadn't been able to report without physically sending a member all
the way back to the portal, it would have taken decades longer to
reach as many portals and virgin universes as Sharonian teams had
already mapped. As it was, the exploration of the intricately
connected universes was moving forward at a steady pace. The one
thing everyone wished for was a Talent that would lead
them directly to new portals.
The best they could manage at the
moment was to push outward with as many teams as they could
reasonably field, with at least one member of each team sensitive
to the still unexplained physics behind portal formation.
Some—and only a few—Talented people, like
Darcel, could actually sense the presence of other portals well
enough to at least provide a compass direction to them, which was
enormously better than nothing. Still, the task of actually locating
no more than one or two portals anywhere within any given
universe, when an entire planet identical to their own had to be
searched, was far worse than hunting a needle in a haystack.
Shaylar shuddered every time she
thought about the Haysam Portal, for example. The inbound portal
from New Sharona was almost eight thousand miles from the
outbound portal to Reyshar, and over six thousand of those miles
were across the Western Ocean. Getting to that portal
must have been an indescribable nightmare, she often thought.
Indeed, she considered it remarkable that Sharonian exploration
teams had managed to find as many portals as they had, even after
eighty years of steady exploration.
Meanwhile, she and her husband
were doing their part to further that exploration. The Portal
Authority had already sent a full contingent of soldiers and
supplies down the transit chain to build forts at each of the new
portals they'd opened up. The Authority didn't conduct
exploration, but it maintained absolute jurisdiction over every
portal into a new universe. Private companies hired teams like
Shaylar and Jathmar's to push forward into new universes, with
the greatest incentive known to humanity: profit. The Portal
Authority charged only "users' fees" on traffic through a portal,
but it was the internationally appointed guardian of all of the other
rights and commerce which passed through the portals. And the
rights to land and minerals and other valuable natural resources
belonged to whatever company or individual got there first and
staked a claim to them.
That was one reason Shaylar's
notebooks and charts were so valuable. The Chalgyn Consortium
could lay claim to everything she and Jathmar—and the rest
of the team, who made their presence here possible—could
map. Other companies' teams could, and eventually would, follow
them through the portal, but the first-comers held all the
advantages.
As soon as a team could figure
out exactly where it was, which took a combination of painstaking
mapping and star-fixes, combined with strong backgrounds in the
natural sciences—geology and biology in
particular—all the team had to do was compare their
location here with master charts of Sharona to figure out which
areas to reach first. If, for instance, they had emerged near
a spot where valuable iron deposits existed on Sharona, they
would head straight there and claim them before any other
company's teams got word that a new portal had opened at all, let
alone where it led.
The team which made it through a
portal first could make a great deal of money for the company
which employed it. And since survey crews were paid, in part, on a
system of shared stocks in the assets of the company, team
members could get rich, as well, with just one or two lucky
breaks. This was the third virgin universe Shaylar and Jathmar had
"pushed" on behalf of of Chalgyn. There wasn't much in the way
of value anywhere near the swampy mess just behind them, but
they'd mapped some valuable terrain in the one prior to that, which
meant they would have quite a nest egg built up for their
retirement years. As for what they might yet find in this
universe . . .
They'd had to wait for the Portal
Authority's garrison to arrive before stepping through into this
universe, but they were the only team anywhere near this end of
this particular transit chain. The other major consortiums were
going to chew nails and spit tacks when word of this lovely little
cluster of portals filtered back. Shaylar grinned at the very
thought, having been on the other end of the stick all too often.
She'd lost track of the number of times they'd jumped through
portals somebody else had already opened up, crossing miles and
miles of someone else's claim in the hopes of reaching a valuable
area nobody else had claimed, or—best of all—
finding a new portal of their own.
This time, she told herself happily, we get first choice
of what's out here.
But for now, Jathmar's images
were coming through steadily as he began a long, leisurely sweep
from the eastern edge of his morning's hike, turning toward the
south to begin the leg that led him down parallel to the end of the
southern transit. By the time he finished the long day's hike, they
would have filled in the blanks remaining in the southeastern
transit zone. The portal lay behind them, almost due north of their
present camp, clearly marked on Shaylar's chart. Once they'd filled
in the entire region around their current day-fort, they would
compare what they had to the master charts and see if they could
come up with a correlation to Sharona. She doubted it, given the
immense sweep of land that usually had to be charted before a
terrain feature large enough or distinctive enough emerged to
make that accurate a determination possible. But a few more days
of charting ought to do the trick. Then all they had to do was
decide which way to head to secure the best chunks of land for the
Chalgyn Consortium.
Shaylar plotted out more terrain
features as Jathmar sent new images, with new topographical
features—gullies, a deep ravine, another stream that came
trickling in from the east of Jathmar's current position. She jotted
down a running commentary, as well, on the images flickering
through her awareness. She and Jathmar would go over her notes
tonight, while the information and both their impressions
remained fresh. They would make whatever amendments were
necessary before calling it a night, then begin again the next
morning.
When Jathmar halted for a rest at
midmorning, Shaylar sat back and was almost startled by the
sound of voices behind her. They'd gone virtually subliminal
during the previous two hours, no more noticeable than the
murmuring sound of insects. The noise was startling, now that
she'd come up for air, so to speak. From the sound of things,
Futhai was trying to talk chan Hagrahyl into letting him hike
further along the stream than the team leader thought prudent.
"—if you would just
authorize a guard, that wouldn't be a factor!"
"Not until Jathmar and Shaylar
complete the basic grid around this camp," chan Hagrahyl rumbled
in the tone that most of their team understood as "subject closed;
don't bother to debate it." Futhai, however, was a zealous
naturalist surrounded by new species—several of them, in
fact. He'd also already established a most unusual co-mingling of
species from different climatic regions. As far as he was
concerned, that clearly confirmed Darcel's belief that they'd found
an actual cluster. How else could so many species that didn't
belong here have wandered into the area?
He obviously wanted to be out
there collecting more specimens, and it appeared he wasn't
prepared to take "no" for an answer. Not when his professional
standing in the community of scientists was virtually guaranteed
by the notes he was making in this camp alone. His enthusiasm for
discovery was wreaking havoc with standard protocol, however,
and chan Hagrahyl didn't sound amused.
If he hadn't been such an irritant,
Shaylar might have felt a sneaking sympathy for Futhai. She knew
only too well what it felt like to have something wonderful
dangled in front of her, only to be told "no, you can't." Braiheri
Futhai was only doing what she herself had done: fight to get what
she wanted. Unfortunately for Futhai, chan Hagrahyl was a
tougher customer than the combined weight of the Portal
Authority's governing board and her own people's conservatism.
She grinned at that thought, then
caught a glimpse of blackberry brambles all around Jathmar, along
with a hint of deep satisfaction that the birds hadn't gotten all of
the berries yet. Shaylar chuckled aloud, then relaxed back from the
discipline of prolonged telepathic contact. She rose from her
makeshift desk and shook the cramps out of her fingers and
shoulders. Her work with Jathmar wasn't difficult, so much as
intense. Her concentration needed a breather almost as much as
Jathmar's legs—and taste buds—did.
She strolled west along the bank
of the creek, casting a sharp woods-wise eye around the entire
area, looking for any trace of hostile wildlife. She didn't expect
any, given the amount of noise they'd made since setting up camp
yesterday, but you could never be certain in a virgin universe.
None of the animals in this Sharona had ever even seen a
human being. They had no reason to be afraid of humans, which
could be delightful, but could also be dangerous, since it meant
their reactions to the presence of those humans was often difficult
to predict. Personally, however charming she might find it to have
wild deer willing to take food from her hand, Shaylar was in favor
of having cougars or grizzly bears be wary enough of humans to
leave her in peace.
She was also too experienced a
field operative to take her safety for granted in the wilderness. All
it would take to injure her, possibly fatally, would be a moment's
carelessness, and the presence of several armed men in camp did
nothing to absolve her of the responsibility for her own safety.
This lovely forest doubtless had snakes in it, at the very least, and
a rattle-tail's bite would be serious, indeed, even with Tymo
Scleppis available. The telempathic Healer could speed the healing
of deep cuts or broken bones, or help repair internal injuries, but
pharmacological trouble like snake venom was another matter
entirely, and their team was a long way from the nearest medical
clinic. She scanned the terrain for potential trouble, aware almost
peripherally of the weight of the handgun at her hip. She'd never
needed it, but it was there, just in case of danger, and she knew
how to use it. Very well, as a matter of fact.
Once she was sure of her
environs, Shaylar descended the steep bank and crouched down to
wash smudges of graphite off her hands. The water was shockingly
cold, sending an ache up the bones of her hands to her wrists.
Somewhere far upstream, several miles away, from the sound of
it, a distant CRACK of rifle fire split the silence. Shaylar grinned,
wondering what Falsan had bagged for the cookpot. He'd have
plenty of time to clean the carcass, lug it back to camp, and
butcher it properly before it was time to throw supper on the fire.
Given the distance, she doubted
he'd brought down a deer, since he would've had to dress and haul
the carcass all the way back alone. A wild turkey, maybe, she
thought, straightening up and shaking excess water from her
hands. Then she dried them on her heavy twill pants, and her grin
turned into a fond smile as she recalled her father's reaction when
he'd learned Shaylar would be wearing trousers all the time.
"But, my dear!
That's—it's—"
"Practical, Papa," she'd said
firmly. "That's the word you're looking for: practical. You don't
object when Mama swims with her dolphin clients. She wears less
in the water than I'll have on anytime I'm outside our
sleeping tent."
"Yes, but your mother stays in
the water. She doesn't traipse out and about on land dressed
that way, and even when she comes out of the water, she's
still on our property, after all."
"Oh, Papa, try to understand. The
world is changing. Our little corner of Shurkhal isn't the whole
multiverse, you know."
Her drollery had coaxed a wan
chuckle from her father, which had, of course, been the beginning
of the end to his resistance. It hadn't taken much more to convince
him that she knew what she was doing, regardless of what her
aunts and cousins would think about her running about the
universes without a single skirt or tunic in sight.
Shaylar looked around the
towering forest giants and shook her head, still bemused by her
parents' notions of decorum and still a little mystified by her own
determination to be so stubbornly independent. Most of her
relatives halfway suspected she was a changeling of some sort,
since no other member of Clan Kolmayr had ever evinced a desire
to wander as far as Dahdej, the capital city of Shurkhal, let alone
through even one portal, never mind the fifteen or twenty-odd
between Sharona and this glorious forest.
She peered into one of the deep
pools nearby and thought about trying a dip net on the truly
immense trout she could see lurking in the dark water, back under
the overhanging rocks that jutted out just a little farther along the
bank. They would be mighty tasty eating, and she licked her lips as
a hunger that matched Jathmar's made itself felt in her midsection.
Maybe she could try netting the fish during lunch. Of course, they
wouldn't need fish if Falsan brought back something substantial.
Shaylar smiled a farewell at the fish, at least for now.
Another day, maybe.
She stood there for several more
minutes, just looking at all the incredible beauty around her. The
great forest was like a shrine, unlike anything Shaylar had known
growing up in the arid Shurkhali peninsula. The motes of sunlight
drifting down through the bright foliage danced and shifted on the
dappled, dark water of the stream, which flashed an almost painful
gold where of light struck ripples and eddies in the swift moving
current. The whispering laughter of the water was a hushed and
beautiful sound.
This, she sighed, stretching luxuriously, is the way to
really live.
Shaylar consulted her pocket
watch, which hung from her neck on a sturdy silver chain—
steel would rust under most field conditions—and realized
her fifteen minutes of break time were up. She climbed the bank,
resettled herself at her field desk, and contacted Jathmar. She
caught a brief glimpse of the blackberry brambles—greatly
denuded, now—then he shook the dust out of his trousers
and got busy again.
The ghostly pictures began to
flow once more as she and her husband settled back into the
familiar routine.
Chapter Three
The sharp cracking sound echoed
and faded into a silence that was as unnatural as the sound which
had produced it. Not a single bird was singing; even the squirrels
ceased their barking chatter for a long, startled moment, and
Gadrial Kelbryan looked at Sir Jasak Olderhan.
"What was that?" Her voice was
hushed, as though she feared the answer.
"I intend to find out."
The hundred kept his voice to a
whisper, too, prompted by an intuition he couldn't explain. But he
meant every word of it, and one glance at Fifty Garlath had already
told Jasak that he was going to have to be the one who did
the finding out. Any officer worth his salt would already have
ordered teams out to contact their drag and point men, their
flanking screen. Garlath hadn't done that. He simply stood there,
gazing thoughtfully at the same stretch of forest canopy he'd been
contemplating before the sudden, sharp sound.
If Jasak hadn't been looking at the
fifty at exactly the right moment, he might not have seen the way
the older officer had jerked. The way his head had snapped around
toward the mysterious sound. The flash of fear in those dark eyes
before Garlath returned to that pose of studied nonchalance.
But Jasak had seen those things,
all too clearly, and his jaw tightened. Unfortunately, he couldn't
accuse the platoon leader of the cowardice his current indifference
screened. Despite his own sudden, intuitive suspicion that
something was wrong—terribly wrong—Jasak had
no proof that it was. And a gut feeling wasn't grounds for making
a charge as serious as "cowardice in the face of the enemy,"
despite the fact that both of them knew exactly why Garlath wasn't
responding to the crackling danger that sound represented.
Or might represent, Jasak reminded himself. It
wasn't easy, but he made himself step back just a little,
determined to keep an open mind precisely because he recognized
his own hairtrigger willingness to attribute the worst possible
motives to Garlath's conduct as an officer of the Second Andaran
Scouts.
All the fifty had really done, after
all, was to ignore a sound that might be nothing more threatening
than an old tree coming down somewhere. Jasak might be willing
to bet his next five paychecks that the cause of that sound had been
nothing so benign, but until he had more information—
Squad Shield Gaythar Harklan
burst suddenly through a screen of brilliantly colored poplars,
crushing a patch of toadstool mushrooms underfoot in his wild,
headlong rush. He actually shot straight past Fifty Garlath and
came to a gasping halt directly in front of Jasak.
"Sir!" His salute was a hasty
affair, sketched with a hand that shook violently. "Sir, I beg leave
to report a hostile contact—"
"Hostile contact?" Garlath
snarled, abandoning his contemplation of the treetops to charge
forward like an angry palm-horned bull moose. "Don't play the
Hundred for a fool! And how dare you desert your post
without orders?"
"S-Sir—" Harklan
stuttered, swinging irresolutely between Jasak and the irate
Garlath. "It's just that Osmuna—he's dead, Sir!"
"Dead?" Jasak asked sharply,
cutting off another vitriolic outburst from Garlath with a
brusquely raised hand. "What killed him?"
He'd meant to ask "who," rather
than "what," but he had a sudden feeling that his meager Gift must
be functioning, because Harklan's answer should have shocked the
living daylights out of him.
"That's just it, Sir. I don't
know what killed him. None of us know. I-I think he missed
the halt order for the rest break, Sir. I was just about to pass the
word to our flankers that I was moving forward, trying to catch up
with him, when that sound came." He gulped hard. "It was right on
the line to Osmuna, whatever it was, but it took me a while to get
through the brush and find him. He's dead, Sir. Just fucking
dead, and the right-flank patrol caught up to me, and we can't
any of us figure out why he's dead or even how—"
"That is quite enough!" Garlath's
dark complexion had acquired a nearly wine-purple hue. "You're
hysterical, soldier! Place yourself on report and—"
"Fifty Garlath."
The ice-cold voice cut Garlath off
in mid-snarl.
"Sir?" The fifty's response was
strangled.
"We have a dead soldier, Fifty. I
might suggest making that our immediate priority. Discipline can
wait."
Garlath's jaw muscles bunched
visibly, and the enraged flush spread abruptly down his neck and
under the line of his uniform's collar. His furious, frightened eyes
snapped to Jasak's face, and for just a moment, it looked as if he
might actually explode. But then his eyes fell.
"Of course, Sir," he grated.
If his jaw had been any stiffer, the
bone would have shattered like ice, and the glare he turned on
Harklan was deadly with a promise of vengeance. Jasak took note
of that, too, and made himself a promise of his own where Shevan
Garlath and the squad shield were concerned. Then the fifty
wheeled away and began barking furious orders of his own.
Despite that, it took him nearly
ten minutes to shake First Platoon into anything approaching
proper threat-response posture.
Jasak watched the platoon
commander with eyes of brown ice. At least half of Garlath's
snarled orders only contributed to the confusion of the moment,
and the fifty's collar was soaked with sweat, despite the morning
air's persistent chill.
It was simple fear, Jasak realized.
Or perhaps not so simple, given the dynamics at play. It didn't
require a major Gift to detect the sources of Garlath's pronounced
lack of courage: fear of whatever had killed Osmuna, fear of
making a mistake grave enough to finally get him cashiered, fear
that he'd already made that fatal
mistake. . . .
Well, a man can dream, can't he? Jasak
thought sourly, wondering once again how Garlath had managed
to outlast every other commander of one hundred assigned to ride
herd on him.
"When we move out," he told
Gadrial quietly without looking at her, his attention fully focused
on the abruptly hostile shadows, "stay close to me."
He glanced at her, and she gave
him a choppy nod. She looked tense, but not overtly frightened.
Or, rather, on a second and longer look, she was scared spitless,
but she wasn't letting the fear dominate her. Fifty Garlath ought to
take lessons from this mere civilian—if anything about this
particular civilian could be labeled "mere."
His brief glance lingered on her
longer than he'd intended for it to. She didn't notice, because she
was too busy sweeping the forest with an alert and piercing gaze
that tracked any motion instantly. Her focused attention had a sort
of dangerous elegance, almost a beauty, like a hunting falcon's, or
a gryphon searching for a target to strike, and Jasak wondered
quite abruptly if the slim magister had any self-defense warding
spells tucked away as part of her extensive training in magical
theory and applications. That might explain her composure. Then
again, she struck Jasak as a thorough and competent professional,
well aware of her skills—and weaknesses—and
more than capable of weathering whatever unpleasant surprise the
multiple universes might conspire to throw her way.
He reminded himself sternly of his
own responsibilities and turned his attention away from her. It was
surprisingly difficult. His attraction to the magister was deepening
rapidly into profound respect as she resolutely refused to let
death's unexpected arrival tumble her into panic.
It took nine and a half minutes too
long, but Garlath did get his troopers moving within ten minutes,
which was undoubtedly a personal record. He even managed to
deploy them in the correct formation for responding to an
unknown threat in close terrain. Privately, Jasak was willing to bet
that it had taken Garlath those extra nine and a half minutes to
remember the correct formation.
Once underway, it took almost
twice as long as it should have to reach Osmuna's resting place.
Mostly because Garlath was jumping at
shadows . . . and a forest this size had
a lot of shadows.
Jasak put Gadrial directly behind
him as they moved through the trees.
"Stay right behind me," he told
her.
With another civilian, he might
have added a warning to keep quiet, but this civilian made
considerably less noise than Garlath did as they moved cautiously
forward through the brittle autumn leaf litter. The scent of the
crisp leaves underfoot—a dry, incongruous cinnamon
smell—reminded Jasak of holiday pastries. Unfortunately,
that scent mingled with the stink of electric tension flashing from
trooper to trooper as Garlath's insecurity filtered through the
entire platoon. Jasak felt the fifty's fear corroding the confidence
of the men under him and once again stamped on the
overwhelming desire to take direct command of the platoon.
The temptation was the next best
thing to overwhelming, but bad as things were, taking over from
Garlath right in the middle of things would only have made them
even worse. They didn't need anything confusing the chain of
command at a time when half the platoon was out of visual
contact with its CO and senior NCOs. He had no choice but to let
the commander of fifty do his job, so he hugged his irritated
impatience tightly to himself and took comfort in the fact that
Gadrial remained a constant, exact two paces behind him.
Which, perversely, only made his
frustration still worse. Garlath was supposed to be trained to do
what Magister Kelbryan was actually doing.
Despite his concentration on
Garlath and the men of First Platoon, a corner of the hundred's
attention noted that Otwal Threbuch had stationed himself as his
own silent shadow. Actually, it was a tossup as to whether the
chief sword had taken that position more to protect Jasak or the
petite woman behind him. It scarcely mattered, since Jasak had
carefully placed her close enough to himself for the chief sword to
do both, but he nursed a mild intellectual curiosity as to
Threbuch's primary motivation.
Even odds he just doesn't want to explain to Mother if
anything goes wrong on his watch, the hundred thought with
a small, tight grin.
The men of Shevan Garlath's
platoon finally reached the contact zone and deployed under
Jasak's—and Threbuch's—silent scrutiny. Garlath,
for once, actually followed the Book as he directed the platoon's
squads to set up a perimeter defense to completely secure the area.
He probably did it for the wrong (and entirely personal) reasons,
but at least he'd done something right for a change.
As three of the platoon's four
squads disappeared into the forest on divergent lines, the troopers
communicated via the birdcall signals the Andaran Scouts had
developed for covert movement. Somebody had even remembered
to use the correct bird species for this part of this particular
universe. Somehow, Jasak doubted that it was Fifty Garlath who'd
drilled the platoon in proper communications procedure.
While they waited for the rest of
the platoon to move into position, Jasak glanced at Gadrial and
raised a finger to his lips, signaling for silence. The warning was
pure reflex, and almost certainly superfluous. She was alert,
motionless except for her eyes, which continued to study their
surroundings with a strange blend of intense concentration and
something that puzzled Jasak for a moment. He couldn't quite put
a finger on it, until he realized that she hovered somewhere
between fear and excitement.
She was certainly afraid—
only an idiot, which she manifestly was not—wouldn't have
been. But she wasn't terrified, which put her considerably
ahead of Garlath, and she was deeply, intensely curious. Where the
fifty looked like a man who wanted nothing so much as to run
away and hide, she sensed the mystery as clearly as Jasak
did, and she wanted to understand what was happening. No one
needed to tell her that she—and they—could die at
any moment, but the brain inside that lovely head was still
working, still sifting clues, still looking for answers.
A sharp, trilling whistle finally
sounded from the heavier brush just ahead to signal a successful
perimeter deployment. Garlath twitched at the signal, but he didn't
respond. Chief Sword Threbuch's nostrils flared, and he glanced at
Jasak, who nodded slightly.
Threbuch whistled the approved
counter signal Garlath had failed to give, and leaves parted as
Jugthar Sendahli stepped from concealment. The dark-skinned
soldier who'd fled Mythal and his menial status as a member of the
non-Gifted garthan caste was one of Jasak's best troopers.
He was also smart as they came, and he proceeded to prove it once
again. He met the chief sword's gaze and glanced respectfully at
Jasak, but wisely saluted Fifty Garlath, instead.
"Sir, beg leave to report the area is
secure. The perimeter screen is in place. Arbalestiers are cocked
and locked, and the dragons' accumulators are loaded and primed.
Osmuna is this way, Sir."
Jasak frowned behind his eyes.
Despite an obvious effort to keep his delivery cool and
professional, Sendahli's voice was violin-string tight. What the
devil had these men so spooked? They were seasoned veterans,
who'd fought claim jumpers, border brigands, and commerce
pirates. Death was hardly new to any of them, but the men of Fifty
Garlath's platoon were shaken to their bones.
A trickle of sweat ran down
Garlath's temple as he reacted to his command's mood, and Jasak
glanced again at Gadrial. Her frown was narrow-eyed and
speculative as a she, too, took note of the fear in Sendahli's eyes.
The trooper turned to lead the
way, and Jasak, Garlath, Threbuch, and Gadrial followed him,
pushing cautiously through dense undergrowth towards the sound
of running water.
They halted at the edge of a good-
sized stream's embankment. The men who'd provided Osmuna's
original flankers had sorted themselves out properly, forming an
outward-facing picket line against any hostiles. They'd remained in
position, even though the rest of the platoon had extended their
own perimeter by several dozen yards. They hadn't slacked off
despite the new arrivals, and Jasak reminded himself to say a few
words of praise to Platoon Sword Harnak.
Osmuna's body lay in the stream
itself. Garlath had already started down the slope, moving like a
man who devoutly wished he were somewhere else. The hundred
followed him wordlessly, wondering if Garlath even suspected
how much Jasak wished the fifty were someplace far, far
away. Chief Sword Threbuch followed Jasak, in turn, watching his
back more closely than ever, but Gadrial stayed where she was,
looking more than happy to obey Jasak's restraining hand signal.
Osmuna was dead, all right. His
body lay half-submerged in the boulder-strewn creek. He'd struck
one of the boulders on the way down, and flies were already busy
about the huge smear of blood he'd left across the luxuriant green
moss which covered it. He'd rolled off that boulder, and splashed
into the stream, with his entire head immersed in a deep pool
between the rocks. Had he drowned after being struck by whatever
had produced that much blood?
Jasak frowned and stepped
cautiously closer. The Scout had come to rest on his right side, so
that his chest, back, and left shoulder were above water, and Jasak
could see the hole in his chest. It was a very small hole, almost
insignificant looking, and Jasak's frown deepened as he tried to
imagine what the devil could have made a wound like that?
It wasn't the right size or shape for
a crossbow quarrel. Nor was there any sign of a quarrel, or even
an ordinary arrow. He'd seen what both of those missiles did when
they entered flesh, and Osmuna's odd wound didn't look like that.
Nor did it look like the sort of wound left behind when someone
pulled a quarrel or arrow out again, either. The hole had drilled
straight through Osmuna's camo uniform blouse as easily as a hot
poker thrust through cheese. But the fibers hadn't been slashed
through—not the way a knife would have cut them. They'd
been stretched and ripped by the force of something which had
driven bits of fabric into Osmuna's chest. A powerful enough
arbalest might have produced that effect, but the wound would
have been much larger. And it couldn't have come from a sharp-
pointed blade, not even something like an ice pick, either, because
a weapon like that wouldn't have stretched, ripped, and embedded
those fibers into the wound.
Jasak balanced carefully on the
rocks, moving around to look at Osmuna's back, and froze in
sudden, ice-cold shock.
Graholis' bollocks! What the hell caused that?
Jasak abruptly understood the
shaken look in the men's faces.
Osmuna's back had been blown
open.
Literally.
The hole just to the right of
Osmuna's left shoulder blade was almost the size of a human fist.
In fact, Gadrial could probably have pushed her fist deep
into that gaping wound without the slightest trouble. The flesh
was mangled, looking as if someone had set off an explosive
incendiary spell inside Osmuna's body.
Horror, sudden and total, crawled
down Jasak's spine and lodged in the vicinity of his belt buckle.
He'd never heard of any explosive spell that would penetrate
human flesh like a crossbow quarrel, then blow up from the
inside, and Sir Jasak Olderhan's education had been the finest any
Andaran noble's son could have hoped to acquire. He'd studied the
bloody history of Arcana, including its Wizard Wars—
during which hair-raising atrocities had been unleashed on
helpless, non-Gifted populations—but no one had ever
come up with a battle spell that would do what Jasak was looking
at right now.
Movement at his shoulder jerked
his head around. Otwal Threbuch hissed between his teeth at his
first sight of the victim's back, then lifted worried, deeply shocked
eyes to Jasak's.
"Do you have any idea what did
that, Sir?" he asked, clearly hoping Jasak's education might have
the answer the chief sword needed to hear.
"No. I don't." Jasak shook his
head, and Threbuch cursed foully under his breath.
"I was afraid you're going to say
that," he muttered through clenched teeth. "What the fuck
do we do now, Sir?"
Jasak looked pointedly at Shevan
Garlath. The platoon commander was also staring at Osmuna's
back, swallowing hard. Every few seconds he looked away, darting
wild-eyed glances up the stream banks toward the ominous trees,
but every time, that gaping wound dragged his unwilling eyes back
to the corpse at his feet.
"Fifty Garlath?"
"Sir?" Garlath's voice sounded
constricted, and his eyes were unsteady as they skated across to
Jasak's.
"I would suggest you try to find
the bastards who did this."
Garlath nodded, the motion
choppy and strained. It took him three deep gulps of air to find
enough of his voice—or courage—to begin issuing
orders.
"Spread out. Look for any trace of
the attackers. We're going to find the whoreson who did this."
Oh, yes, Jasak promised the slain man's ghost. We
most certainly are.
Shaylar was busy filling in yet
another new stream on her chart when a sudden sound broke her
concentration. It was a hoarse, gasping cry, so faint it was almost
inaudible in the background noise of the stream, and it came from
very nearly under her feet.
"Shaylar!"
She jumped as though stung, her
pencil skidding across the paper. Then she peered down the bank
toward the creek and gave a sharp cry of her own. Someone was
trying to crawl up the bank. Even as she realized who it was, the
wiry scout slithered weakly back into the water with a mewling
pain sound.
"Falsan!"
She cast one wild glance around
the clearing, searching for Barris Kasell. He was a good fifteen
yards further east along the bank, where Braiheri Futhai was
poking into more bushes.
"Barris!" Her cry snapped
him around in surprise. "Get Tymo!"
Then she flung herself down the
bank, skidding through damp leaves and a slick spot of clay.
Falsan was struggling doggedly to get his hands under himself,
trying to stand back up. She reached him, braced him with one arm
as she tried to help him up, and—
Pain struck with a brutal fist. It
caught her right in the chest, robbing her of breath even as a
ghastly sound broke through Falsan's lips. He collapsed again,
sliding sideways, away from her, down the bank. He splashed into
the stream and rolled almost prone in the icy water. He came to
rest on his back—which let her see the dreadful red stain on
his shirt. It had soaked the whole front, spreading outward from
something that had penetrated cloth and flesh.
"Ghartoun!" she screamed
in a voice edged with knife-sharp horror.
Falsan clutched at her blouse with
one blood smeared, shaking hand. He whispered through grey lips,
his thready voice almost too weak to catch.
"Man . . .
shot me . . . stayed
in . . . water . . .
no trail . . . can't foll—
"
His breath wheezed away to
nothing. His eyes didn't close. They remained open. Horribly,
sightlessly open.
She felt him go. Felt the unseen
force that was Falsan chan Salgmun vanish like smoke in her
hands, even as she searched frantically for the wound. Her fingers
touched metal. Stupid with shock, she stared down at it, found a
thick steel shaft protruding nearly two inches from his flesh. Her
hands were hot with his blood, but the rest of her was frozen. She
sat half immersed in ice-cold water, shaking violently and trying to
focus her spinning mind on the impossibility of what he'd just
said.
A man had shot him.
A man . . .
Theirs was the only team
anywhere in this universe. That meant—
Barris Kasell, Tymo Scleppis, and
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl plunged down the bank, literally on one
another's heels. chan Hagrahyl cursed horribly as he splashed into
the water beside her. Their healer slithered down next, took one
look, and groaned.
"Too late," Shaylar heard him say.
"He's gone."
She lifted her head. It took
forever, that simple effort, like lifting a mountain with her bare
hands. She met Ghartoun's stunned gaze.
"Somebody shot him." Her words
came out like ax blows on solid ice. "He said a man shot him."
chan Hagrahyl wrenched his gaze
away from her face and stared at the ghastly metal shaft buried in
Falsan's flesh.
"My gods," he whispered.
Suddenly the whole stream was
looping and rolling in wild gyrations. Shaylar felt rough hands on
her shoulders, heard somebody saying her name, and fought the
roaring in her ears and the black tide trying to suck away her
consciousness.
I will not faint like a schoolgirl! a small, hard
voice grated somewhere deep inside her, and she shook off the
hands trying to drag her up the bank. She went to her knees as they
released her, but she forced her wildly spinning senses to steady.
She found herself kneeling in a
tangle of tree roots, panting and trembling, but in control once
more. She raised her head, and a worried pair of dark eyes swam
into focus. Barris was crouched beside her, one hand bracing her
so she didn't slide back down the bank.
"That's better," he said softly. "For
a minute there, I thought you were going to collapse."
Her face tried to heat up. But she
was still too shocky and pale to flush with humiliation, and his
next words eased some of the shame which had wrapped around
her like a blanket.
"You've had a nasty psychic
shock, Shaylar, and you're not combat trained."
"Combat trained?" she parroted,
appalled by the hoarse croak which had replaced her voice, and
Barris nodded.
"When a Talented recruit joins the
military, he's trained to handle something as brutal as combat
death shock, especially at point-blank range. Nobody teaches that
to civilian survey scouts."
The rough burr in Barris' voice
seeped through the numb ice encasing her. Anger, she realized
slowly. It was anger that she'd been exposed to something that
ugly, that unexpected. And a deeper anger that one of their own
had been murdered. Even shame that he hadn't seen Falsan
struggling along the streambed.
When that realization sank in,
some of her own shame eased. The abrupt loosening of her grip on
her shuddering emotions was followed almost instantly by a flood
of tears and violent tremors. She struggled grimly to hold them
back, but without much success. Barris took her by one elbow and
Tymo took the other. They helped her to climb to the top of the
bank, and Tymo slipped an arm around her.
"Let them come, Shaylar. Let the
shakes run their course. That's the way emotional shock will drain,
as it should, not fester in your mind and poison your body."
That almost made sense. The fact
that it didn't make complete sense, when it should have, rang faint
alarm bells. But Tymo knew what he was talking about, if anyone
did, so she sat there in the warm sunlight and waited for the
tremors to ease up. When they did, she drew down a final, ragged
gulp of air and looked up again.
"I heard his rifle," she said. "That
must've been when . . . "
"Yes, I heard it, too." Barris
nodded, his voice bitter with self-condemnation. "To think he'd
been struggling all that time, trying to make it back, and we didn't
do anything—"
"It's not your fault, Barris!"
Ghartoun's voice interrupted sharply, and Kasell looked up at the
team leader.
"I used to be a soldier,
curse it!" he snarled almost defiantly. "I should've—"
"Done what?" Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl demanded, his own expression angry and shaken.
"Snatched the truth out of thin air? You're not Talented. Neither
was Falsan. Shaylar's a Voice—the best telepath in
the five nearest universes—and she didn't feel a
thing. There's not a Voice that's ever been born who could have
picked up something like that from a non-telepath. So just stow
the frigging guilt, right now!"
Kasell's jaw muscles clenched for
a moment. Then he nodded and relaxed a fraction.
"Yes, Sir. You're right, of course.
It's just . . . "
"I know. Triad, but I
know. And I'd like to know where his rifle is, too. It's not with
him."
Kasell swore one filthy, ugly
word.
"Fanthi," Ghartoun called to a
rugged hulk of a man who'd always given Shaylar the impression
that every stretch of ground he walked across was a potential
battlefield, "set sentries in a perimeter fifty yards out in all
directions. We don't know where these bastards are, or how close
they might be, let alone how many of them there are."
Fanthi chan Himidi, who'd served
a double stint in the Ternathian infantry before signing on with
Chalgyn Consortium, nodded sharply and organized the rest of the
survey crew with swift, efficient dispatch. They had eight men
with at least some military experience, who took charge of the
others, sending their cook, their drovers, their smith—even
Ghartoun's clerk—out to form a circular guard around their
little camp. Shaylar felt better just watching the process chan
Himidi had set in motion.
Ghartoun hesitated, looking
unhappily into her eyes, then crouched down beside her.
"Shaylar," he said gently, "I have
to ask. Did Falsan say anything?"
"He—" She drew an
unsteady breath and made herself repeat those pitiful few words,
then added, "I'm pretty sure he started to say 'They can't follow,'
there at the last. But he didn't get the whole thing out before
he—"
She stopped and swallowed hard.
"They?" Ghartoun asked,
his voice sharp. "You're sure of that? Not 'he'?"
"No," she said slowly. "I'm not
sure. He said 'can't follow,' but the impression I got was 'they.' I
don't know if that means he saw several of them, Ghartoun, or if
he was simply afraid there might be more of them nearby."
The expedition's leader exchanged
grim glances with Barris Kasell. Then he looked back at Shaylar.
"Did you pick up anything else?
Anything at all that could help us figure out what in the gods'
names really happened out there?"
Shaylar drew another deep breath
and shook her head to clear it, then held up one impatient hand
when he misconstrued her meaning and started to speak. She
closed her eyes and sorted through every impression she'd been
able to catch during those fleeting seconds of contact. Falsan
hadn't been Talented, but Shaylar had been touching him, which
helped. She couldn't See anything that he'd seen, but the emotions
behind those gasped-out words of warning had slammed their way
into her awareness, along with the words themselves. If she could
just get a solid grasp on them . . .
"I don't think there was more than
one when he was actually shot, Ghartoun," she finally said. "I'm
not picking up a sense of 'me versus them'. It's more a 'me versus
him'. I think he was just afraid that there would be
others who could follow a blood trail back to us."
"Which is why he stayed in the
water," Ghartoun muttered.
"Where there's one, there are
bound to be more," Kasell said with quiet intensity. "And did you
get a good look at what killed him?"
"Oh, yes. A crossbow bolt."
"Crossbow?" Shaylar
stared at the expedition's leader. "But that's—that's
medieval!"
"So are clubs and rocks,"
Ghartoun snapped, his eyes crackling with suppressed fury. "And
they'll still kill a man just as dead as a rifle will. Crossbows were
weapons of war in our history for damned near a thousand years,
come to that, until we finally figured out how to make
gunpowder. These people don't have to be our technological
equals to kill us."
"That's a fact," Kasell muttered in
a voice of steel, and Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl glanced back at
Shaylar.
"Can you pick anything
else out of those impressions?"
She tried, but nothing else came.
"I'm sorry," she whispered
miserably. "I only touched him for just a few seconds,
and . . ." Her voice went unsteady. "I'm
sorry. I just can't get anything more."
"I'm grateful you got as much as
you did," chan Hagrahyl told her, squeezing her shoulder with
surprising force, as though he'd forgotten she was barely the size
of a half-grown Ternathian child.
"All right." He stood up, hands
curling around the butt of his handgun and the hilt of his camp
knife, both sheathed at his wide leather belt. "We don't know
exactly who or what we're up against, but we do know they're
nasty tempered and don't like company." He met Barris Kasell's
gaze, his own hard and grimly determined. "We may have
some time, especially if Shaylar's impression is right and there
really was only one of the bastards. If Falsan hadn't nailed him
with his first shot, we'd probably have heard at least two. And if
Falsan got him, it may be a little while before his friends figure
out he's not coming home. But we have to assume that there were
others of them fairly close by, and that they'll at least be able to
backtrack him to camp. And they will, too, after
something like this. So we've got to get back to the portal before
these bastards overrun us, and it's been a while since we heard that
rifle shot."
Shaylar's breath caught. She hadn't
thought about that, and the thick woods, so hushed and lovely,
suddenly menaced their little party from every shadow, every
movement of sun-dappled leaves in the breeze. In a single blink of
her eyelashes, the entire forest seemed to be in sinister motion,
tricking the eye and confusing the senses. And somewhere out
there, well over two miles east of their camp, Jathmar was alone
and unaware of what had just happened. She started to make
contact when Elevu Gitel's voice jolted her out of her reverie.
"We've got to warn Company-
Captain Halifu. Shaylar has to send a message. Immediately."
Shaylar looked up, and chan
Hagrahyl nodded, meeting her gaze.
"Contact Darcel. Let him know
what's happening. Have him take the message to Company-
Captain Halifu, then come back to our side of the portal to listen
for additional messages from you. Then try to contact Jathmar. I
know you can't talk to him, but we've got to warn him to break off
the survey and rendezvous with us."
"Rendezvous?" Braiheri Futhai's
voice was incredulous. "Don't you mean return to camp?"
chan Hagrahyl met the naturalist's
astonished gaze.
"No, I do not mean return.
We're abandoning this camp as fast as humanly possible. I want
everyone to pack up the absolute essentials and be ready to march
in ten minutes."
"We can't possibly be ready to
leave in only ten minutes!" Futhai protested.
"If you can't pack it that fast, leave
it," Ghartoun snapped. "And if you can't carry it at a dog-trot from
now until we reach the portal, abandon it. Is that clear enough?"
"But—but what about
Falsan?"
"Falsan's dead! And it's my job to
make sure none of the rest of us join him!"
Futhai's eyes widened at the
harshness in the expedition's leader's voice. But his jaw muscles
clenched, and he gave chan Hagrahyl the obstinate glare Shaylar
had come to associate with the naturalist at his absolute worst.
"We are not leaving this
camp until that poor man is properly buried!"
"We don't have time." chan
Hagrahyl's voice was a glacier grinding up boulders.
"We are civilized people, sir, and
civilized people bury their dead," Futhai shot back, and Kasell's
nostrils flared as he rounded on the naturalist.
"Not when the godsdamned
natives are shooting at them!" he snarled in a voice of
withering contempt.
"Nobody is shooting at us.
" Futhai pointed out in maddeningly reasonable, patiently
courteous, patronizing tones. "And since we're not in
immediate danger, we can at least behave with respect for that
poor man's death."
Barris Kasell's right hand
clenched into a white-knuckled fist around the carrying sling of
his rifle. From his expression, he would have vastly preferred to
have the naturalist's neck in that fist's grasp, instead.
"If you're that nonchalant about
the danger," he grated, "you stay behind to bury him. But
don't, by all the gods, expect the rest of us to hang around
here waiting for a pack of murdering bastards to follow Falsan's
trail back to us!"
"He stayed in the water, so there
isn't a trail to follow," Futhai pointed out almost pityingly. "You
said as much yourself, and—"
"Enough!" chan
Hagrahyl's bellow silenced the entire clearing. "We don't have the
luxury of time—not for funerals; not for arguments. Yes,
Braiheri, he stayed in the stream on his way back to us, but
there wasn't any reason for him to try to hide his tracks on the way
out, was there? It may take them a little while to get
organized, but they won't have any trouble finding as once they
do!"
He glared at the naturalist for a
moment, then turned back to Shaylar.
"Shaylar, send the message to
Darcel immediately. Then pack your essential gear and abandon
the rest. And don't leave behind anything that would let
Falsan's murderers trace us beyond the portal. Carry all your maps,
your notes—everything."
He shifted his gaze to include the
others.
"Don't abandon any technology
higher than knives and sticks, either. These people don't know a
solitary thing about us, and I'd like to keep it that way. Braiheri, if
it'll make you feel better, strip Falsan's gear and cover him with a
cairn of rocks. Preferably in the stream, so they don't find his body
and realize they've killed one of us. You can pack your notes, or
bury him: your choice. And that's all you have time for."
He switched his attention back to
Shaylar again.
"You understand why Jathmar
will have to rendezvous with us en route? Or catch up
with us as best he can? My duty's to get as many of us out as
possible. I can't wait for anyone."
He held Shaylar's gaze, pleading
with her to understand.
Her heart cried out with the need
to protest, but he was right. She nodded, stiffly, instead, her
muscles rigid with the knowledge that Jathmar was completely
alone out there in a forest where someone had already committed
murder.
Thank you, chan Hagrahyl's gaze seemed to say. Then he
turned back to the others.
"Let's get busy, then. Take only
enough trail rations to get us to the portal. We're marching light
and fast."
Shaylar saw eyelids twitch as
several of the men started to glance down at her. All of
them—except Futhai—managed to abort the
movement. But their thoughts were as clear as if each of them had
been a full-blown Voice, and she swallowed hard as the import of
those not-quite-glances sank in.
I'm going to slow us down. They know it; and I know it. And
we can't afford it.
Something hard and alien stirred
deep inside, giving her strength as she pushed herself to her feet.
She surprised herself when she realized she'd already shoved aside
the shock of Falsan's death. She had a job to do. It wasn't precisely
the job she'd signed up for, since a shooting war with unknown
people was the last thing anyone had expected to occur out here.
But that didn't change the facts.
"I'll send the message to Darcel
from my tent," she said in a hard voice she barely recognized.
"While I'm packing. And I'll do my best to warn Jathmar."
Her voice actually held steady,
and Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl looked into her eyes for long
moment, taking careful measure of what he saw reflected there.
Then he nodded.
"Good. Let's rip this camp apart
and hit the trail."
Chapter Four
They found the footprints first,
naturally.
"Whoever it was," Gaythar
Harklan said, pointing toward the far bank, "they came down that
into the water."
Jasak studied the steep slope
opposite them, and his eyes narrowed speculatively. The other
bank was steeper, rising a good ten or eleven feet above Osmuna's
body. Had the killer entered the water before he attacked? Or to
investigate the body after the killing was done? Or, the hundred's
eyes hardened, to make certain his victim was dead?
Nothing offered any answers, just
as nothing he saw could explain the sharp cracking sound which
had split the morning apart.
"What's up there?" he asked
Osmuna's squad shield.
"Nothing much, Sir. Looks like
he'd been following the stream bank when he spotted Osmuna."
"Show me."
"Yes, Sir."
Harklan started back across the
stream, with Jasak wading alongside. Threbuch followed the
hundred, and Garlath tagged sullenly along behind.
"Here's where he slid down the
bank, Sir," Harklan said. "See the gouges and footmarks?"
Jasak saw them clearly. Whoever
had come down that bank had been clumsy as hell doing it. No
Andaran Scout worth the uniform on his back would have left a
trail like that to follow. In fact, Jasak couldn't think of anyone
who would have.
He very carefully didn't glance at
Fifty Garlath for his reaction. Instead, he stooped closer to
the mud, peering intently.
"Send a couple of men both
directions along this creek, Fifty Garlath. Tell them to look for a
blood trail."
"Blood trail?" Chief Sword
Threbuch muttered to himself. He peered more closely at the same
marks, then grunted.
"By damn, Sir, you're right.
Osmuna nailed the bastard. I didn't even think to check his arbalest
to see if he'd fired it," the chief sword admitted in a chagrined
tone.
"We're all a little rattled," Jasak
answered, his voice dry as brittle weeds. "What I can't tell from
this is how badly Osmuna nailed him."
There were only a few drops of
blood splashed into the mud, but whoever had slithered down this
bank had been wounded when he did it.
"Search this whole area," he told
Garlath. "I want every inch of this ground run through a sieve, if
necessary. Get me some gods-cursed facts to look at
here!"
Garlath nodded sharply and turned
to spit orders with a brisk efficiency that Jasak
tried—hard—to give him credit for, since they were
actually the right orders for a change. Search teams spread
out, looking for a trail to follow and whatever else might be out
there waiting to be discovered.
"Fifty Garlath!" someone called
only moments later. "I've got something, Sir. I just don't know
what it is."
Jasak followed Garlath to the top
of the bank. Evarl Harnak, the platoon sword, was crouched down
in a tangle of weeds almost directly above Osmuna's body.
"Look here, Sir," he said. "Here's a
set of footprints. You can see where he must've been standing
when Osmuna came along."
The noncom pointed to a distinct
pair of footprints in the soft earth. Unlike the prints on the slope,
these were undistorted and crisp, and Jasak studied them closely.
The feet which had made them had
been wearing boots, he realized. Not soft-soled ones, either. They
showed deeply ridged treads, the sort of treads found in the
footgear of soldiers, or civilian outdoor enthusiasts. A design had
been worked into the tread, he noticed uneasily. The kind of design
an Arcanan bootmaker would use as a maker's mark, cut into the
thick leather of the sole. If that footprint hadn't been left by a
manufactured boot, Sir Jasak Olderhan would eat the ones on his
own feet.
The realization chilled him even
further. Osmuna's killer was no primitive half-wild savage. He
was wealthy and sophisticated enough to wear manufactured
boots and wield weapons of frightening, unknown power.
"You said you'd found something
you couldn't understand?"
"Yes, Hundred." Harnak nodded
and pointed into the clump of weeds. "The sunlight caught it as I
was bending down to look at the footprints. It's metal, Sir. But I'm
hanged if I can figure out what it is."
Jasak crouched for a closer look
of his own.
It was a metal cylinder, closed on
one end, open on the other. There was a small, distinct ridge or lip
formed into the metal around the closed end, as if to form a base,
and there were faint marks on the metal. Striations that were
discolored. It smelled sharp, sulfurous, a deeply unsettling smell.
Jasak measured the distance
between the footprint and cylinder with his eyes. Four and a half
feet, give or take. It hadn't been dropped, he realized. It had been thrown into the weeds. Deliberately? Or had the man hurled
it away accidentally, in reflex perhaps, when Osmuna's quarrel
struck flesh? It didn't look like a weapon, or even a part of one.
And it was certainly far too small to hold anything big enough to
punch a hole that big through solid flesh. Unless—
Jasak frowned in fresh
speculation. The hole in Osmuna's back was enormous, yes. But
the hole in his chest was small. Very small. Just about the
diameter of that cylinder, in fact.
"He used this to kill Osmuna."
"How?"
Jasak hadn't realized he'd spoken
aloud until the chief sword's one-word question told him he had.
Threbuch didn't sound incredulous—quite. But he did
sound . . . perplexed, and Jasak
scowled up at the grizzled noncom.
"Beats hell out of me, Otwal. But
look." He fished the thing gingerly out of the weeds, picking it up
by inserting a small twig into the open end. "It's the same diameter
as the hole in Osmuna's chest."
"That couldn't possibly have gone
through Osmuna." Fifty Garlath's tone was scathing enough to
cross the line into open insolence. "There's no blood on it, and the
angles are wrong, and it landed in the wrong place. If that thing
had gone through Osmuna, it would've landed on the other side of
the creek, not up here."
"I didn't say this had gone
through the poor bastard," Jasak snapped, gripping his temper in
both hands.
"Maybe whatever was in it
went through him? Chief Sword Threbuch mused, and Jasak tilted
the cylinder so that sunlight fell into it as he peered inside.
"If there was anything in here,
there's barely a trace of it left." He sniffed again. "Something
smells . . . burnt?"
He reached into the open neck
with one fingertip and felt some kind of residue inside. The chief
sword twitched violently, as though he'd just suppressed a need to
jerk Jasak's hand away, and the hundred managed to summon a
wry smile.
"I think it's fairly safe to say
Osmuna wasn't poisoned," he said.
"And you're sure of that
because—?" Threbuch growled.
"Point taken. So I won't lick my
finger, all right?"
"Sir!" Threbuch's eyes widened. "
Look at your finger."
Jasak glanced down, startled, and
discovered a black smudge on his fingertip.
"That's carbon," he said
wonderingly. "It's like ordinary lampblack."
"But—" Garlath began,
then clicked his teeth on whatever he'd been about to say.
"Go on, Fifty," Jasak said quietly.
"It doesn't make sense,
Sir. Osmuna wasn't burned, any more than he was poisoned!"
"No," Jasak agreed thoughtfully.
"No, he wasn't. But something was burned inside this thing,
burned so completely that all that's left is a film of lampblack. And
the end of this cylinder is the same size as Osmuna's wound. So
there's a connection somewhere, even if we can't see it."
"An incendiary spell-thrower,
Sir?" Gaythar Harklan asked nervously, and Jasak glanced at him.
"I'm not ruling anything out at this
point, Shield," he said. "How close were you to Osmuna when he
died?"
"About thirty yards away, Sir.
Maybe forty." The trooper pointed to the other stream bank, where
Gadrial sat on a boulder in the sun, waiting with commendable
calm for a civilian plunged into the middle of a military
emergency an entire universe away from the nearest help. "I was
behind all that mess of underbrush. Shartahk's own work getting
through it, too, Sir."
"And how loud was that cracking
sound we all heard?"
"Damned loud, Sir. Hurt my ears,
and that's no lie."
"It was loud enough where we
were that I can well believe it," Jasak said, nodding absently.
He stood frowning at the enigma
perched on the palm of his hand. Harklan was certainly right about
how obstructive the underbrush was. The noncom's own
nervousness—not to mention his military training's
insistence on advancing cautiously in the face of the
unknown—undoubtedly meant it had taken him even longer
to get through it. Which, unfortunately, had given Osmuna's
murderer a priceless gift of time in which to make his own escape.
He realized that his frown at the
bland metal cylinder had become a glower, instead, and felt a
burning frustration that he couldn't make any of the puzzle pieces
fit together.
But whether he could do that or
not, they still had a wounded killer to track.
"He went into the water," Jasak
said. "After he threw this into the weeds. Was he just
trying to rinse his wound, or was he trying to accomplish
something else? Was anything of Osmuna's missing?"
He glanced at Evarl Harnak, who
gave him a hangdog look of sudden guilt.
"I don't know, Sir," he admitted.
"We, uh, didn't look."
"Then look now, curse
you!" Garlath snapped so viciously Harnak paled.
"Yes, Sir!"
The platoon sword threw a sharp
salute and scrambled down the bank, and Jasak bit back an acid
comment. Harnak should have checked Osmuna's gear
immediately; he and Garlath actually shared that opinion. But the
men were already shaken, as it was. Snarling at them would only
make them more nervous—and mistake-prone—than
ever.
Garlath caught Jasak's tightlipped
disapproval and glared back defiantly, as though daring Jasak to
reprimand him for ordering a trooper to repair his dereliction of
duty. But the hundred couldn't do that, of course, however
severely tempted he might be. If he reprimanded Garlath, even in
private, it would only add weight to any charge of personal
prejudice against Garlath the fifty might make.
In that moment, Jasak realized just
how much he truly hated Shevan Garlath. Any man who abused
shaken troops in the middle of a crisis—let alone a crisis
bigger than anything the Union of Arcana had weathered since its
founding—was a man who deserved to be cashiered.
Preferably with his head stuffed up his nether parts.
Jasak wanted, more than he'd ever
wanted anything in his life, to do that stuffing. The fact that he
couldn't only fanned his cold fury, and his voice was an icy
whiplash when he spoke.
"I want that killer's trail found and
followed, Fifty. Send First Squad west, with one section on this
side of the creek, and the other section on the far bank. Have them
look for a place our man might've crawled out of the streambed.
We know he's been hit, but we don't know how seriously, or
which way he went. It'd be rough going for a wounded man to
wade very far through all those boulders, though, so send them,
say, half a mile.
"If we haven't found any trace of
him by then, chances are he headed back east again. His footprints
certainly appear to have come from that direction. So, in the
meanwhile, send Third Squad east, looking for the same thing."
"And you, Sir?" Garlath bit out.
Jasak held the older man's eyes
coolly, staring down the hostility in them. Hostility and a dark
flare of pure hatred. Both of them knew precisely how badly Jasak
wanted to be rid of Shevan Garlath, yet both of them also knew
they were stuck with one another—at least for the duration
of this crisis—and Jasak's reply would have frozen a lump
of lava.
"Chief Sword Threbuch and I will
backtrack the only solid evidence the bastard left behind. That
trail." He pointed toward the faint line of footprints along the
stream bank, prints that disappeared into the tangle of
undergrowth. "Give me a couple of point men—preferably
a fire team that's trained together."
He needed someone to watch out
for Gadrial, and neither he nor Threbuch could devote the proper
attention to that job. Not while tracking a murderer through
this terrain. But they couldn't leave her behind, either. The
multiple Mythalan hells would freeze solid before Jasak Olderhan
entrusted Magister Gadrial Kelbryan's safety to the likes of Shevan
Garlath.
"Yes, Sir!" Garlath made the
snappy precision of his salute an insult in itself. Then he spun
away and started snarling orders.
"Begging your pardon, Sir,"
Threbuch muttered, "but whoever this bastard is, he would have
done us a grand favor if he'd killed that asshole instead of poor
Osmuna."
Jasak didn't respond. The chief
sword was way too far out of line for a noncom of his seniority,
and he knew it. Worse, though, he obviously didn't care. And,
worse still, Jasak couldn't blame him. So he simply ignored the
remark entirely and gave the order no commanding officer liked to
give.
"Chief Sword, please see to it that
someone collects Osmuna's personal effects. We'll have to
forward them to his widow. Then find Kurthal. He's the best
draftsman we have. Have him render a sketch of those wounds,
front and back, to proper scale."
Threbuch nodded, and Jasak drew
a shallow breath.
"When he's done," he said, his
voice flat as the ice on Monarch Lake, "prepare Osmuna's body for
field rites. We can't just leave him, and we can't spare anyone to
take him back to camp."
"Yes, Sir."
The older man's expression told
Jasak he was about as happy with those orders as Jasak was.
Nobody enjoyed that particular duty, least of all Threbuch, who'd
conducted field rites over the years for more troopers than any
man cared to recall. Jasak's father had very nearly been one of
those troopers, and something in the chief sword's eyes said he
was determined to make certain Jasak didn't become one,
either.
While Threbuch went to deal with
that unpleasant chore, Jasak glanced across the stream to where
Gadrial sat, unobtrusively watched over by troopers who stood a
yard or so above her with loaded arbalests, their gazes roaming
ceaselessly for possible danger. She was watching Jasak. Even at
this distance he could practically see her blazing curiosity over
what they'd found. Not out of any ghoulishness, but because she
was worried. More than worried, however splendidly she was
concealing the fear he knew she must be feeling.
There was no point keeping her in
suspense, and he motioned for her to join him.
Gadrial rose from her perch on the
boulder, waded carefully across the swiftly moving stream, and
climbed the far bank to join Jasak. She carefully kept her face
calm, her manner composed, but she feared her eyes would betray
her inner agitation. She wasn't afraid, precisely, but she was
gripped by a strong emotion she couldn't readily identify. She was
unsure whether to call it anxiety, worry, nervous jitters, or healthy
caution, but whatever it was, she was determined to remain in
control of it.
She dug her boots into the soft
earth of the stream bank, resisting the temptation to rub her
posterior, which hadn't enjoyed its stony resting place. It was a
steep scramble, but she finally reached the top, where Sir Jasak
Olderhan stood watching her through hooded eyes.
Military secrets, she thought, and sighed mentally. He
would tell her only what he thought she needed to know. Which
wouldn't be much. That was going to be frustrating enough, but
the slight chill in his manner distressed her almost more, since she
knew its probable source.
She hadn't looked at Osmuna as
she waded the stream.
Sir Jasak didn't understand that,
she was sure. Mired in his rigid Andaran codes of behavior, he
probably thought she was being callous, possibly even
coldhearted. He'd expected her to stare, perhaps blink on tears and
bite her lip in an emotional display, because she wasn't Andaran,
and therefore didn't share an Andaran woman's set of responses to
such situations. He'd expected her to display curiosity, at the least,
particularly since his men hadn't let her get close enough to see the
wounds that had killed the poor man.
She had yet to meet any Andaran
male who'd bothered to learn the attitudes held by other cultures'
women on much of anything, let alone something as rigidly
prescribed as the Andarans' views on death and the proper
responses to it. Gadrial, on the other hand, wasn't particularly
interested in learning the proper responses to death, because she
held a profound respect for the sanctity of life, and murder
violated that sanctity unforgivably.
Staring at a murdered person's
remains was deeply disrespectful to the soul which had inhabited
those remains. Worse, that soul was usually still there, confused
by the sudden, brutal shift in its state and unwilling to move on
until the shock had worn off. But more importantly even than that,
her main concern—as always—was for the living,
not the dead. There was nothing she could do to help Osmuna's
brutalized soul, whereas there were a number of thing she could
do to help Sir Jasak Olderhan and his soldiers. If Hundred
Olderhan allowed her to help. Being a stiffnecked Andaran
noble, he was far more likely to order her wrapped up in cotton
gauze and protected like a child.
She bit back a sigh and scrambled
up the last two feet of the bank to level ground. She found herself
more upset than she'd expected to be by Jasak's cool manner. It
disturbed her that she wanted so deeply for him to
understand, even if none of the others did. But there was nothing
she could do about that, so she simply drew a deep breath and
looked up a long way to meet his hooded eyes.
"Did you find anything?" she
asked quietly.
"Nothing but more mysteries," he
admitted. "That, and a trail to follow. More precisely, to
backtrack. We're still looking for traces of where he went after he
splashed into the stream."
"At least we've got something
to follow," she said with a wan smile that lightened a little of
the grim chill in his brown eyes. He studied her for a silent
moment, then seemed to come to a decision.
"Ever see anything like this?"
He held a small metal cylinder on
the palm of his hand. Gadrial peered closely without touching it,
then frowned as she realized what she was seeing.
"Somebody burned something
inside that," she said, and he nodded, one eyebrow flicking slightly
upward.
"Yes, they did," he agreed.
"What?"
"I was hoping you might be able
to tell me that."
The morning air felt suddenly
colder. He didn't know what had killed Osmuna. He had no more
idea than she did, and she stared at the object on his hand.
"It's so simple there's nothing you
could use as a clue, trying to figure out what it does," she
said. "Of course," she frowned, "someone who'd never seen a
personal crystal might wonder what it was for, let alone
how to retrieve any notes stored in it."
"Why do you say that?"
She looked up, a bit startled by the
sharp edge in his voice and the sudden intensity of his eyes.
"What?"
"What in particular made you
think about someone who'd never seen a PC before?" he
amplified, and she pursed her lips.
"Well," she said, "the men under
your command are scared. I mean, really scared. There's something
wrong—terribly wrong—about Osmuna's death.
None of you seem to know what caused the poor man to die, and
now you're showing someone who isn't even a soldier an
unknown device found near the dead man. That suggests to me
that you have no idea who killed Osmuna, no idea how. And that
means . . . "
Her voice trailed off as the full
import of her own subconscious insight came sputtering up to the
surface.
"That means somebody who isn't
Arcanan did the killing," she said finally, slowly, and realized she
was rubbing her arms in an effort to persuade the fine hairs to lie
back down. She wanted desperately to stare into the woodline, and
kept her gaze on Sir Jasak's face instead through sheer willpower.
"I'm right, aren't I? Otherwise, you
wouldn't have asked me if I'd seen something like that."
He drew breath, visibly stepped
back from whatever white lie he'd been about to utter, and nodded.
"Right on all counts," he said
simply, and she shivered.
"You're sure it isn't a spell
accumulator of some kind, Magister?" Chief Sword Threbuch
asked. The question startled her, since she'd been concentrating
too hard on what Sir Jasak was saying to realize the noncom had
returned behind her.
And that's not the only reason it 'startled' you, either,
is it? she told herself tartly. There was something unnerving
about having a grizzled combat veteran old enough to be her
grandfather ask her such a question. Especially, in a voice filled
with such flagging hope. She wished she didn't have to, but she
shook her head.
"No, Chief Sword," she said
almost gently, hating to kill even that tiny hope. "It isn't an
accumulator. At least, it's nothing like any accumulator I've ever heard of, and I've had plenty of exposure to odd bits and
pieces of experimental equipment. It doesn't seem to contain any
sarkolis at all, so I don't see any way it could have been charged in
the first place. And there isn't even the faintest whiff of magical
energy clinging to it. Not even a faint residue. It's not connected to
anything arcane."
When she glanced at Jasak again,
she found a curious blend of relief and unhappiness in his eyes.
"Well," he muttered, "at least you
didn't identify it as some sort of super weapon cooked up by a
theoretical magician."
She couldn't stop the glance she
cast at Osmuna, sprawled so obscenely below their vantage point.
"You're afraid it's a super
weapon?"
"I don't know what the hell it is,"
he admitted with a frankness which astonished her.
"Then you really don't
know what killed him?" she said, and Jasak's mouth went hard as
marble.
"We know exactly what killed
him." His voice was as hard and flat as his expression. "Something
was driven through his body, straight through the heart."
"But you don't know what went
through him?"
"No."
Gadrial peered at the innocuous
metal cylinder again, then sighed.
"I'm sorry, Sir Jasak, but I haven't
the faintest idea what that thing might be." She met his gaze once
more. "And you have no idea how much I wish I could help you
with this."
His response surprised her.
"If anything crops up that you
can help with, be sure I'll call on you. We're a long way from
home. A long way from the nearest help. Before this business is
done, we may need the Gifts of every Gifted person we have.
Meanwhile, stay close to the Chief Sword and me, but stay behind
us."
She started to speak, but he held
up one hand and surprised her again.
"That isn't Andaran chivalry," he
added, his eyes glinting briefly with what might almost have been
an odd little flash of humor. "It's my duty to see that any civilian is
as safe as possible during a military emergency. That goes double
for a magister with a Gift strong enough for Magister Halathyn to
handpick her to head his theoretical research department."
His eyes dared her to protest that
assessment, when both of them knew his standing orders contained
no such official statement. Besides, Gadrial wasn't a
civilian—not precisely, since she was officially on the
payroll of the UTTTA and currently on sabbatical from her
Academy position to serve as a research liaison to the Second
Andaran Scouts.
But she wasn't about to take that
particular gryphon bait, much less run with it. She was no
adolescent, and the agony she'd endured at the Mythal Academy
had taught her which battles were worth fighting, so she conceded
the point.
"I appreciate your position,
Hundred Olderhan."
The relief in his eyes told her he'd
expected her to protest. She was, after all, Ransaran, with notions
most Andarans regarded as rife with anarchy and social chaos.
Gadrial didn't know whether to be irritated or amused. Then his
eyes darkened, and she was suddenly gazing at another person, a
grim stranger with skulls reflected in his suddenly frightening
gaze.
"We're trying to find a wounded
killer, Magister Kelbryan," he said softly, his near whisper far
more chilling than another man's ranting. "This isn't going to be a
simple hike through the woods. We're hunting the most dangerous
quarry any human can hunt, and the only thing we have to track
him by is the trail he left walking to this spot. I don't mean to give
offense, but you're not an experienced tracker. You could damage
a faint spoor without even realizing it."
"No offense taken. I'm a good
outdoorswoman, but I'm no soldier, and I won't pretend to possess
skills I don't."
"I appreciate your honesty. We're
going to be moving fast. Very fast. You're not combat trained,
Magister—"
"Gadrial," she interrupted, and one
of his eyebrows quirked. The light in his eyes changed, the
balefires flickering and dimming as surprise misted through the
flame.
"I beg your pardon?"
"My name is Gadrial. If were
going to face death together, I'd just as soon do it on a first-name
basis. Death is a little personal, don't you think? Much too
intimate to face with a stiff formality between us. If I were soldier,
it would be one thing. But I'm not. Frankly, I'll feel better if you
stop being so aristocratically formal and just talk to me."
He blinked. Actually blinked,
started to speak, and paused. He blew out his breath, and then a
tiny smile crooked one corner of his mouth.
"You have a point. Several points,
all of them valid." The smile flickered larger for a moment. "In
fact, you rather remind me of someone else. All right." He nodded.
"Where was I?"
"You were telling me I'm not
combat trained," she said in a dry voice which surprised another
tiny smile from him. Then he regained his equilibrium.
"Yes. Well, the point I was going
to make is that we'll be moving fast, trying to catch up. You may
find it difficult to keep up the pace," he said, not formally, but
certainly diplomatically, and she grinned.
"Is that all that's worrying
you? My dossier must not have mentioned that I run
competitively. Distance running. I may not match your speed," she
added with a droll glance at all those muscles in a body that was
certainly easy on the eyes, "but I've got endurance, and that's what
we'll need most, isn't it?"
Jasak was beginning to think this
delightful woman was just this side of perfection. But before he
could decide how to respond, she continued.
"There's something else you need
to know about me. You know I have a very strong primary Gift,
but I have two or three minor arcanas, as well. One of
those may be useful before this business is done."
"Oh?"
Gadrial tilted her head, studying
him for a moment before answering. His tone sounded hopeful,
rather than challenging or dismissive. Sir Jasak Olderhan might be
a blue-blooded Andaran noble to his bootsoles—he was,
after all, destined to become the next Duke of Garth Showma, Earl
of Yar Khom, Baron Tharkala, and at least another half-dozen
equally improbable titles—but that didn't seem to have
atrophied any of his brain cells.
"I would be grateful for
anything you can contribute, he said very quietly.
"Thank you. I'll be glad to help
however I can. And among other things, I possess a minor Gift for
healing. I'm no miracle worker, mind. Not even remotely in the
same class as a school-trained magistron, or even
an army surgeon with a fair dollop of Gift. But I can heal
relatively minor wounds all day long, if necessary. And if a man's
injured critically, I might be able to save his life. At the very least,
I could probably stabilize him until a real healer can take
over and do a proper job of tissue renewal."
"Magister Kelbryan—
Gadrial," he said softly, "you have no idea how glad I am to hear
that."
The glorious sunlight faded to a
pale blur, and the sounds of birdcalls, wind in the treetops, and the
bubbling wash of water below their feet all vanished from her
awareness when the depth of worry behind those quiet words hit
home. He was expecting trouble. Big trouble. Injuries worse than
his platoon medics could handle. His surgeon was with Fifty
Therman Ulthar, a universe away and seven hundred miles from
the swamp portal. No one had expected to run into anything like
this, and she glanced down at her hands, which could heal minor
things. Sprains and contusions, broken toes or fingers. Those lay
within her capabilities, and she hoped with sudden desperation that
she wouldn't be called upon to handle more than that.
For the first time since their
departure from the swamp portal, Gadrial Kelbryan was truly
afraid.
Chapter Five
Jathmar felt wondrously alive as
he sent his mind questing across the surrounding folds and dips of
land.
Mapping was as close to flying as
he ever expected to come. Oh, he'd gone ballooning, of course.
That was part of every licensed survey crewman's mandatory
training. But ballooning was a slow-motion, ponderous activity,
and the balloon was merely pushed hither and thither by whatever
capricious winds happened to be blowing. He'd heard rumors
about balloons fitted with one of the newfangled "internal
combustion" engines some of the more wild-eyed lunatics were
tinkering with back on Sharona. He didn't expect much to come of
it, though. And even if it did, the earsplitting racket and stink
wasn't going to be very conducive to enjoying the experience.
But Mapping, now. Mapping felt
more like what Jathmar imagined birds must feel, soaring silently
across the sky as forests and fields flashed beneath one's wings.
Jathmar had always envied birds, even drab and commonplace
little sparrows.
But, then again, sparrows can't Map.
Jathmar grinned at the thought,
but Mapping was a Talent only humanity possessed, and only a
tiny fraction of the ten billion or so human souls in existence
could lay claim to that specific Talent. Of course, that was still a
pretty damned large absolute numbers. Nearly a fifth of the
population had been blessed with some kind of psionic Talent.
Given the best current estimate, that worked out to around two
billion Talented people, of whom only two percent had inherited
the ability to Map. That meant there were—theoretically, at
least—something like forty million Mappers, but there
were several subtypes within the Talent, and they were clearly
concentrated in specific bloodlines. Not to mention the fact that at
least half of those technically Talented with the ability had Talents
too weak to bother training for professional use. Both of
Jathmar's parents had been Mappers, however, and so had three of
his grandparents, which explained why his own Talent was so
strong.
Unlike Shaylar, Jathmar's mother
and grandmother hadn't been able to join survey crews. But they'd
found ways to make use of their Talents on the home front,
working for the Park Service: mapping virgin woodland without
impinging on it, doing geological survey work, planning new
highway routes, doing the occasional Search and Rescue work for
lost hikers. Even taking on odd jobs like inspecting dams and
culverts for structural soundness.
Mapping was a Talent which was
always in high demand in the commercial sectors. Considerably
higher demand than his wife's usually was, actually. Voices were
always valuable, but they were also among the most numerous of
all the psionic Talents, the true telepaths of Sharonian society,
with nearly as much variety in potential employment as there were
individual variations between Voices. Shaylar was a very special
case, however. Very few Voices could match her sheer strength
and range, which would have been more than enough to make her
extremely valuable to someone like the Chalgyn Consortium. But
when the sheer strength of her Talent was combined with the
precision with which she was able to use it and her
marriage bond with Jathmar, it produced a team which could have
written its own ticket with just about any survey concern.
Jathmar's professional assessment
of his own Talent was tempered by a realistic view of his
shortcomings, as well as his strengths. He knew he was a good
Mapper—very good—and that Shaylar was a first-
class Voice. But it was the combination of their Talents, they way
they interlocked and complemented one another, which made them
such a truly formidable team, especially in virgin wilderness.
The reasons for that were simple
enough. Jathmar could See not only the topography of the
ridgeline that lay two miles due south of him, and the abrupt turn
this creek took a mile northeast, frothing through a white-water
staircase of rapids, but he could also See what lay under
the ground. Only a small percentage of Mappers had that degree of
Talent, and that was what made Jathmar so valuable to a survey
crew.
And Shaylar's ability to share that
Sight with him was one of the reasons Halidar Kinshe, her
government sponsor, had fought so hard to put them into the field
together as team.
Now, as he stretched his
awareness to its furthest limits, Jathmar caught a glimpse of
something vast and dense beneath the soil. It was large enough to
cause a wavering, almost like heat-shimmer, in the faint but
discernible—to a Mapper—magnetic field.
That magnetic field lay across his
Sight of the world like a precisely cast fishnet of crosshatched
lines. But the line just ahead of him was bent slightly out of true.
That caught his immediate, full attention, for he'd come to know
exactly what spawned that dark, massive magnetic anomaly. There
was a major iron deposit in this region, big enough to warrant
immediate investigation. If the deposit were large enough—
and if the clues they'd gathered so far added up to what he
suspected, it would be enormous—it would shortly be a
magnet (Jathmar grinned at his own word choice) for development
by the Chalgyn Consortium's Division of Mining and Mineral
Extraction.
If DOMME developed the deposit
into a profitable mining venture, every ton of ore extracted,
smelted, and turned into tools would put finder's royalties into
this survey crew's bank accounts. And if he really had stumbled
across the same iron deposit as Sharona's fabulously valuable
Darjiline Mines, the Consortium certainly would develop it.
It was one of the conundrums of
trans-temporal exploration that in a society with access to
multiple, duplicate worlds, with all the vast treasure troves of
mineral resources, rich untouched farmland, and incalculable
numbers of wild birds and animals that implied, there were
actually a limited number of key resources and all too many
companies in competition to grab them. With no fewer than
fifteen major corporations and consortiums—not to
mention nearly a hundred smaller independent outfits which
operated survey crews on a shoestring budget—contending
for the riches on the far side of any new portal, prizes like the
Darjiline Mines were actually scarce.
Which was the whole reason
survey crews worked so hard to figure out where they were when
they crossed the eerie boundary of a new portal. News that the
Portal Authority had sent troops to construct a new portal fort
would race outward through the web of development companies
literally at the speed of thought, despite all that a company's
Voices could do to encrypt their transmitted reports.
No telepath was ever permitted to
invade another's mind without permission. Prison sentences went
with that kind of abuse, not to mention massive fines and the ever-
present threat of closing down any company which knowingly
used or tolerated such practices. But industrial espionage tiptoed
around that particular law with increasingly sophisticated ways of
deducing the truth. Once the Portal Authority had taken the step of
sending out a troop detachment to build the fort, rival teams
would start sweeping into the area, looking for the fastest way to
reach the most valuable tracts of land before anyone else.
Shipyards went up first, in many
cases, built with surprising speed, since the only practical way of
reaching many of those valuable tracts would be to sail there. The
company that owned the forests and iron mines necessary to build
those ships would make a ton of money selling them to rival
outfits. Once they'd grabbed the best land for themselves first, of
course.
It was usually a free-for-all along
any portal border, which was why the Portal Authority insisted on
building its forts. Portal Authority troops weren't there to fight a
war, since there was nobody in any of the worlds they'd ever
explored. They were there to prevent claim jumping and timber
piracy and all the other uncivilized behaviors which went with the
territory when multiple groups jockeyed for position along a vast,
steadily expanding frontier. And, of course, to collect the
Authority's portal transit fees.
It was, on the whole, a delightful
and exhilarating time to be alive. He grinned and pulled out his
field notebook and pencil, making careful notations that included
compass headings, then set out again, eager to finish the routine
work so they could get to the iron deposit.
Jathmar's Talent was strained to
its utmost, feathered-out edge, feeling out the contours of the iron
deposit he couldn't quite See from its distortions of the magnetic
field, when it struck.
The psychic blow was so savage
that he literally lost stride, stumbled, and went to one knee.
Shaylar!
He exploded back to his feet and
whirled, blindly seeking the source of his wife's abrupt anguish,
and his hand blurred toward his hip. Steel hissed with an angry-
snake sound in the suddenly menacing silence as the H&W
cleared leather. But there was nothing to shoot. He was miles
from camp. Whatever was happening, he couldn't possibly get
there in time to do anything about it. Fright chittered along his
nerves while the rest of him stood frozen for long, soul-shaking
moments.
Shaylar's terror and shock rolled
across him in battering waves, but Jathmar wasn't a telepath. He didn't know what was happening. Couldn't glean the tiniest
detail from the jagged emotions tearing through him. Every nerve
in his body quivered with the need to run towards camp, but he bit
down on the panic and remained where he was, forcing himself to
breathe deeply.
You can't help anyone if you go crashing through the trees in
a headlong charge.
The steel in that mental voice, put
there by years of intense training and hardscrabble field
experience, steadied him. It was hard to do—the hardest
thing he'd ever done—but he managed to disassociate
himself from the tidal wave of Shaylar's emotions. He stood silent
for several more moments, just listening to the forest, but he
couldn't detect anything out of the ordinary. The birds still
chirruped and called through the trees. Squirrels and chipmunks
still frolicked like happy children on a scavenger hunt. Wind
rustled in the glorious crimson-golden foliage high overhead, and
rattled through the thickets of blackberry brambles. The stream
still bubbled its way across the rocks, splashing from one boulder
to the next on its long journey to the sea.
In all that ordinary sound, Jathmar
could detect not one single, solitary thing that might have
threatened Shaylar. And, by extension, the entire camp, since
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl would never have permitted Shaylar to
wander away from the base camp's protection. Nor was she
foolish enough to do so. All of which meant one simple thing; if
he wanted to find out what was wrong, he would have to return.
Immediately.
Jathmar eased his slung rifle off
his shoulder, holding the pistol one-handed while he clicked the
safety off the long gun. There was no sign of danger in his
immediate vicinity, but Jathmar wasn't taking any chances. He
holstered the revolver and worked the lever on the rifle,
chambering a round in one easy, fluid motion.
The metallic sound of the action
was profoundly reassuring. The Sherthan Model 70 had been
designed as a short, handy saddle gun, but it was still a powerful
weapon. Chambered for a .48 caliber, three hundred-grain round
based on the old Ternathian Army Model 9's. Its muzzle velocity
was lower then the military weapon's, due to its shorter barrel, but
with the new "smokeless powder," it still pushed the heavy,
hollow-pointed round at over nineteen hundred feet per second,
producing a muzzle energy of over two thousand foot-pounds.
That gave the weapon a nasty kick, but it was also sufficient to
blow a hole right through a man and lethal enough to deal with
anything short of one of the huge grizzlies.
At the moment, Jathmar found
that thought comforting. Very comforting.
Some survey crewmen routinely
carried their rifles pre-chambered, so a bullet was available to fire
instantly if a man needed to shoot in a hurry. Jathmar had more
shooting experience than most scouts, however. He could load,
lock, and fire a rifle or handgun in a fraction of a second, in total
darkness or blinding rain, and under normal circumstances a round
carried in the chamber was an accident waiting to happen.
This, however, was not a normal
circumstance.
So he loaded the chamber, then
moved forward cautiously, Model 70 in both hands (and trigger
finger outside the trigger guard), senses alert for the slightest hint
of danger. The emotional link with Shaylar had shifted. Horror had
faded away into a sense of desperate urgency that threatened to
swamp his hard-won calm. He literally could not imagine what
was happening at their base camp, but he commanded himself
once again not to panic and moved forward at a steady pace.
He forced himself to move more
slowly than he would have preferred, repeating to himself the
Authority mantra that coolheadedness was both a survey
scout's first line of defense and his most effective weapon. Yet the
urgency in the bond tugged at him, urged him forward as it grew
stronger. It felt almost as though Shaylar was shouting "Hurry!
"
Which, given the strength of her
Talent and their marriage bond, might be exactly what she was
doing.
Despite his determination to move
with caution, Jathmar found himself speeding up. He couldn't help
it. The forest was utterly normal, yet Shaylar's emotions were a
goad, driving him faster with every passing minute.
He was never sure when he'd
broken into a run, but he realized he was, in fact, running when he
slid down a leaf-slick gully, thrashing through the underbrush, and
found himself hurtling up the other side.
He paused at the top, panting,
cursing his carelessness, and listened again. Still he heard nothing.
Not a solitary, damned thing out of the ordinary. He checked his
watch and tried to calculate how far he'd come. Half a mile,
maybe. Jathmar grimaced, then set out again, opting for a
compromise between the utter silence of caution and the pell-mell
dash of panic.
Pushing through the dense
underbrush along the stream was heavy work. The luxuriant
growth's widespread, tangling limbs and brambles caught at his
rugged clothing and slowed him down. He slogged through it,
cursing its hindrance, then paused with another curse—this
one directed at himself.
He was a Mapper, damn
it. He was following the stream out of sheer habit, because it was
the way he'd come on his way out. But the sense of direction
which came with his Talent told him the precise bearing to the
base camp, and he changed course, angling sharply away from the
creek. The open forest floor away from the streambed's understory
was vastly easier—and quicker—going, and his
ability to See the terrain in front of him let him pick the best,
fastest way through it.
I should've thought of this sooner, he told himself
savagely. Guess I'm not quite as calm as I'd like to think I am
.
There was no point in kicking
himself over it, and he settled down to the steady lope the better
going permitted.
It took Jathmar another thirty
agonizing minutes to reach the campsite, where he found a rude
surprise.
It was empty.
He stood in a screen of thick
shrubs at the edge of the clearing, too uneasy to just step out into
the open without taking a careful look first. The brushwork
palisade stood silent in the glorious autumn sunlight, a circle of
protection lacking only its gate. He could see the tents inside it,
still pitched where they'd been this morning. The donkeys were
still there, too, looking bewildered and lonely. But there wasn't a
single person in sight, and not a single man-made sound
anywhere in the clearing.
An icy fingertip touched Jathmar's
heart. Deadly cold, unreasoning, it robbed him of breath for
several shuddering, superstitious moments. Then his gaze,
wandering in shock from one edge of the camp to the other,
caught on something totally unexpected. His eyes jerked to a halt,
fixed with sudden white-faced horror on something that shouldn't
have been there.
It was a cairn.
Someone had piled rocks across
something sickeningly man-sized and human-shaped. It lay at the
top of the stream bank, in the shadow of the abandoned brush
wall, and for a truly agonizing moment, Jathmar feared the worst.
But then reason reasserted itself. He could still feel Shaylar
through the marriage bond, closer than before. She was alive, not
buried under that pile of cold stone. He shuddered and forced
himself to push that terrifying image away, forced his mind to
begin functioning once more.
He frowned. He'd heard a distant
rifle shot, quite some time ago. Had someone accidentally shot
one of their teammates? It was hard to credit. Every member of
this crew, including Shaylar, knew weapons-handling inside and
out. You didn't shoot at a target you couldn't see. You didn't point
the muzzle at anything—like someone else on your
team—that you didn't want a bullet to go through.
You didn't carry your gun with a round chambered.
So who the hell was dead? And how? They hadn't even been felling timber, so there were no
fallen trees to have crushed anyone.
He pondered for a moment longer,
then moved cautiously into the open with the rifle butt snugged
into the pocket of his shoulder, muzzle down, so no one could
knock the barrel aside or rip it out of his hands. His finger was no
longer outside the trigger guard. Instead, it rested on the trigger
itself, ready to fire in an instant as Jathmar stepped through the
unfinished gate.
Nothing stirred but the wind. The
tent flaps, left open as though abandoned in a great rush, whiffled
in the breeze that wandered in over the tops of the interwoven
branches. Jathmar walked a quick perimeter recon inside the
palisade, making sure no one was hiding out of sight in one of the
tents. He felt like a fool, hunting for brigands who couldn't
possibly be there. And he was right. No one was there. The
camp was deserted.
He went back to chan Hagrahyl's
tent. The expedition's leader had obviously raked hastily through
his possessions, and Jathmar frowned again. What in the names of
all the infinite number of Uromathian gods could have rattled
chan Hagrahyl badly enough to simply abandon camp and run for
the portal? That was an unheard of decision for any expeditionary
leader. Teams only broke and ran from certifiable disasters:
volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, forest fires. Even when facing
brigands, running was inherently more risky than standing one's
ground in a prepared camp. Their team was large enough, and well
enough armed, to have dealt with any typical band of border
brigands. But the ex-soldier had run for the portal. Run so fast
he'd left Jathmar behind.
Jathmar was so rattled by the
implications that he found himself wondering why he was so
convinced his team was, in fact, running.
Because, idiot, his common sense muttered in some
exasperation, you're married to a Voice who's trying her
damnedest to warn you to follow as fast as your big, flat feet will
carry you.
A swift check of his own tent
confirmed his suspicions. Shaylar had packed in the same haste
evident from chan Hagrahyl's tent. She'd abandoned clothing, food
supplies, cooking utensils—everything but her camp ax,
guns, and charts. Or that was what he thought, until he suddenly
spotted his own backpack leaning against his sleeping bag.
She'd pinned a note inside the flap,
written in obvious haste.
Someone's murdered Falsan. We don't know who or how
many there are or where they came from. Ghartoun says we can't
wait for you. Head for the portal—and be careful, beloved
.
That was
all . . . and it was more than enough.
The shock burst between his ears
like an artillery shell. Falsan had been murdered? His
shoulder blades twitched as a chill crawled its way down his spine.
He'd felt foolish, looking for someone in the abandoned camp, but
his instincts had been correct. There was someone out here
besides themselves. Someone who'd already killed once. Someone
unknown.
"Dear gods
above . . ." he whispered.
An unknown human
contact?
No wonder chan Hagrahyl had
bolted for the portal. They were in over their heads, way
over, and Jathmar didn't hesitate a second longer. He paused only
to swiftly check the contents of his pack, nodding approval at
Shaylar's selections—rations for two days, pistol and rifle
ammunition, and his camp ax. Every one of their charts and
notebooks was missing, undoubtedly in her pack.
Jathmar slung the pack onto his
back, abandoning the rest of their meager possessions, then filled
his canteen at the stream and headed out at a hard jog. Falsan's
killers might well be mere minutes behind him—it had been
a long time since he'd heard that rifle shot—which made
speed more important than caution.
He made no particular effort to
cover his tracks. Any experienced tracker would have no trouble
following their trail, regardless of anything he might do. The
footprints, broken branches, and bruised leaves left behind by
eighteen people in a hurry would be as easy to follow as a
Ternathian imperial highway. The more quickly he left the vicinity,
the safer he'd be, and if it came to a fight, his two guns might
make the difference between survival and something else.
He refused to think about a
pitched battle between Falsan's killers and their survey crew, with
Shaylar caught in the middle of it. The very thought robbed him of
breath he needed for running, and Jathmar was grateful—
profoundly so—that Falsan's route this morning had been
nearly a hundred and twenty degrees off the bearing directly back
to the portal. Whoever had killed him would have to locate their
camp first, before following their tracks back to the portal. If they
ran fast enough, there was a chance they could reach the
Company-Captain Halifu's fort and its contingent of soldiers in
time.
He found himself cursing silently
in time with his strides. Eighty years! Sharonian
expeditions had spent eighty years exploring the
multiverse, and not once had they found a trace of other humans.
Why now? Why them?
He stamped on the anger. He
knew it was merely a smokescreen, a way to diverge his mind
from his own terror, and he couldn't afford to let either emotion
distract him. Nor was there any point in railing at the multiverse
for putting Shaylar in danger. He'd done that, fighting to
get her included on the field teams.
Well, he told himself grimly, you got her into this, so
you'll just have to get her out again.
The whisper of her presence
through their marriage bond seemed to chide him for blaming
himself. They'd both fought to put her out here, not just
him. Jathmar grimaced, knowing she was right, and tried to stop
kicking himself. But he couldn't help it. So he tried to at least
seethe at himself more quietly as he followed the trail the others
had left. He scanned for pitfalls ahead, where he might twist or
even break an ankle if he put his foot wrong, and listened intently
for any hint of pursuit.
The one thing he couldn't do, and
wished bitterly that he could—was to See what was behind
him. Or, rather, who. Unfortunately, Jathmar could See
only the land itself, not animals or people moving across it. It
wasn't like looking with his eyes. He didn't See the land as a
faithful image of reality. He Saw contours, shapes, protrusions
and depressions, dense places and less dense ones, that he had
learned to recognize as streambeds, mineral deposits, soil types,
and all the other features which made up the bones of the world.
He would have given a great deal to be able to scan the terrain
behind him for the people who'd murdered Falsan, but what they
needed for that was a Plotter, or a Distance Viewer.
What they had was one
outclassed and nervous Mapper.
He ignored the crawling itch
between his shoulder blades, told his spine to stop anticipating a
blow from concealment, and concentrated on moving as rapidly as
possible.
The trail—of
course—led uphill all the way. Jathmar was in excellent
physical condition—anyone who spent as much time hiking
as a survey crewman had to be in good shape—but he hadn't
pushed himself this hard in a long time. His thighs and calves were
feeling the strain, and his breathing was heavier than he would
have liked it to be. His Model 70 grew heavier with every stride,
but he gritted his teeth and kept going. He'd been running for the
better part of fifteen minutes when he heard a low voice from
behind a screen of wild spirea bushes just ahead.
"Jathmar!"
He slid to an instant halt,
breathing hard and turning his head to follow the sound.
"Ghartoun?" he panted, and the
stocky ex-soldier rose from a cautious crouch.
"Any sign of pursuit?" he asked,
his voice urgent but quiet, and relief jellied Jathmar's knees. He
shook his head, stiffening both weary legs in grim resolution.
"Not yet. The camp hadn't been
disturbed when I got there. And I haven't heard anything behind
me."
"That's something, at least," chan
Hagrahyl muttered. "You made good time catching up to us. Let's
hope to hell Falsan's killer doesn't to the same. All right, we're
moving out."
Jathmar pushed through the spirea
behind chan Hagrahyl, and Shaylar flung himself into his arms,
holding on tightly. She wasn't quite trembling, but he felt the
distress tightening her muscles, and spikes of emotion ripped
through their bond.
"I was so scared," she
whispered against his chest. "Thank all the gods you made it back
to us!"
"Shhh." He lifted her chin and
kissed her gently, then frowned as he glanced at her bulging pack.
"That's too heavy for you."
"Yes, but I didn't dare leave any of
this behind, in case . . . "
She swallowed hard, and he
brushed a fingertip across her lips.
"Never say it, love. It didn't
happen. Here." He slid off his pack, opened hers, and redistributed
the weight. "That ought to help."
She gave a sigh of relief when he
helped her shrug the straps back across her shoulders.
"Oh, that's lovely. Thanks."
"Don't mention it, M'lady," he said
with a courtly bow, and her smile wavered only slightly as she
squeezed his hand.
She headed out behind the others,
and Jathmar followed, carefully placing himself between her and
whatever might be coming up behind them. They moved at a rapid
pace, not quite jogging, but the difference was so tiny as to hardly
matter. The trail wasn't a friendly one. It still drove inexorably
uphill, and it was littered with underbrush, deadfalls, and deep
gullies that hindered their progress. It hadn't seemed like such
rough country coming through in the other direction, he thought
bitterly, then gave himself another mental shake.
Be fair, he told himself. It isn't that
rough—you're just scared too death and trying to get
through it five times as fast!
chan Hagrahyl kept them moving
for two hours without stopping. Shaylar strode grimly forward,
outwardly holding her own, but Jathmar could feel her aching
weariness and the need for rest that she managed to keep hidden
from the others. He'd never been so proud of her, nor so
frightened for her, but he wasn't surprised when chan
Hagrahyl finally called a halt and she cast pride to the winds and
simply sank to the ground, panting.
The stocky Ternathian who'd once
been an imperial officer cast uneasy glances at the forest behind.
Probing glances that tried to see into the shadows behind far too
much underbrush, far too many trees. Barris Kassel and the other
ex-soldiers spread themselves into a defensive ring without a
word, silently standing guard while everyone gulped a few
swallows of water and caught their breath. Shaylar had her
breathing under control again, but he could feel the aching
weariness in her.
She can't keep going hour after hour at this pace, Jathmar
thought despairingly. Not all the way to the portal.
He wasn't sure the rest of
them could keep up this wicked pace, for that matter. Jathmar
already felt the strain, and Braiheri Futhai was at least as badly
winded as Shaylar. Jathmar tried to keep his worries quiet, tried to
keep Shaylar from catching them, but he didn't succeed. When she
lifted her head, meeting his gaze levelly, he tried to smile, and her
answering smile's courage, and the strength of her love, nearly
broke his heart.
Being here with you is worth it, worth the risk and the
danger, her smile told him, and he smiled back, aware that
he'd never loved her more.
Far too soon, chan Hagrahyl gave
the soft-voiced order to move out again.
Chapter Six
"That's not a campsite, Sir. It's the
next best thing to a godsdamned fortress," Chief Sword
Threbuch breathed in Sir Jasak Olderhan's ear, and Jasak nodded
grimly. It was an exageration . . . but
not much of one.
They'd found no trace of where
their quarry had gone after murdering Osmuna, which told Jasak
that he'd turned back in the direction from which he'd come,
keeping to the stream to throw off the scent. It also meant the only
clue they had to follow was the trail he'd left on his way to the site
of the murder.
So they'd backtracked him. It
hadn't been especially difficult; whoever he was, he hadn't
bothered to cover his tracks when walking towards his murderous
rendezvous with Osmuna, so the trail itself was easy to pick up.
On the other hand, that trail had wound its way through the
underbrush along the stream like something a snake with epilepsy
might have left behind, and after what had happened to Osmuna,
Fifty Garlath's men moved with a certain understandable caution.
Jasak told himself the killer
couldn't be very far in front of them now. Not when he was
wounded and struggling through the boulder-strewn stream. Jasak
had halfway expected to overtake the bastard somewhere along the
creek, but they'd found no trace of him. And he had to admit that
they'd taken at least two or three times longer than they ought to
have to get their pursuit organized in the first place. He knew he
could legitimately blame most of that delay on Garlath's
inefficiency, but innate honesty forced him to admit that he'd been
more than a little slow off the mark himself.
In fairness to himself—and
Garlath—the sheer, stunning impossibility of what had
already happened would have thrown anyone off stride.
And despite the importance of finding the killer and anyone else
who might be with him, Jasak knew he'd been right to take the
time to try to learn everything he could before setting out in
pursuit.
However little "everything" turned out to be in the end, he
thought glumly, lying belly-down beside Threbuch with his chin
on his folded forearms while they studied the natural clearing on
the far side of the stream.
The camp in the middle of that
clearing made it painfully obvious that whoever he was, Osmuna's
killer wasn't out here alone. One man could never have built the
palisade-like wall they were studying from their vantage point
across the streambed. Not by himself. That high brush barrier of
interwoven branches and cut saplings surrounded an area at least
thirty yards in diameter, and it was too high to see over from their
present position.
There was too much timber down
around the edge of the clearing, too, all of it showing the white
scar of newly cut wood, for one man to have felled it all. If he'd
cut down that many branches and small trees by himself, the oldest
cuts would have started losing that raw, pale look of just-hacked-
down timber.
"At least fifteen or twenty, you
think?" he murmured to Threbuch.
"Couldn't be much less than that,
Sir," the chief sword replied. "Not from all the work the
bastards've put in over there."
Jasak nodded again and thought
some more.
If that estimate was accurate, First
Platoon had the mysterious strangers substantially outnumbered.
In addition to the fifty-seven men of his four line squads, Garlath
had an attached six-man engineer section, four quartermaster
baggage handlers, and a hummer handler. Adding Jasak himself,
and Chief Sword Threbuch, that came to seventy men, which
ought to provide Jasak with a comfortable superiority.
But he couldn't be sure of that.
Threbuch's estimate was based on the minimum number
the construction of that palisade would have required, but it was
large enough to house a considerably bigger number. A simple
division of labor could easily have put fifteen or so to work
building it while others hunted for food, prospected for
minerals—there was a substantial iron deposit in the area,
Jasak knew—or even pillaged some nearby village
unfortunate enough to have been targeted by pirates. There simply
wasn't any way to know from out here how many people really
were occupying that camp. Which meant someone had to go inside
to find out. Yet Jas didn't feel like rushing forward and risking the
lives of more of his men unnecessarily.
The palisade was strong enough to
repel anyone who wanted to get inside, unless he had a convenient
field-dragon to blast it down with explosive spells, which Jasak
didn't. The thick wall of saplings—cut from the stream
bank where there was enough open sunlight to allow heavy shrubs
and saplings to grow—had been interwoven with tough
brush, much of it thorn-covered, to create a high, virtually
impenetrable barrier. His scouts' infantry-dragons, far lighter than
the field-dragons the artillery used, would find it extremely
difficult to blow gaps in it.
Despite the chief sword's
comment, it wasn't quite a fortification. But it was more than
stout enough to keep out any wild animals, and the number of
people who could have been concealed in the area inside that high,
thorny wall was dismayingly
large . . . especially when those
people were equipped with whatever unknown sort of weaponry
they'd used against Osmuna.
Worse, the camp had been placed
by someone with an excellent eye for terrain. The land rose
towards it from the streambed, not steeply but steadily, and that
location and its wall—higher than necessary to stop any
native predator, but perfect for hiding its interior from an
aggressor and preventing him from seeing the placement of men
and weaponry on the other side—spoke of military
planning. That much was unmistakable, but who had built it?
And—more to the point—why?
In the face of so many unknowns,
Jasak was unwilling to assume anything. What he needed was hard
evidence, the answers to at least his most pressing questions, and
he had nothing. For all he knew, this might not even be be killers'
encampment. It might belong to someone else entirely—
someone the killer had been scouting, prior to attacking.
Yet Jasak didn't believe that for a
moment. Indeed, he was becoming more and more convinced that
what he was looking at was a base camp for another multi-
universal civilization. The very notion was absurd, but no more
absurd than what had already happened. And they were close to
what Magister Halathyn and Gadrial strongly believed was a class
eight portal. If they were right, no one could possibly have lived in
the vicinity without literally stumbling across the thing. A class
eight wasn't the sort of thing that could escape notice for very
long. The class three portal leading to their own swampy
encampment was almost four miles across; a class eight would be
closer to twenty-five or even thirty.
With something that size and the
swamp portal only a couple of days travel apart by foot, Jasak
couldn't believe any natives in the general vicinity would have
failed to notice them. Which meant they should have built cities,
or at least villages and transportation systems, to take advantage of
them. Yet all the Andaran Scouts had found was this tiny, semi-
fortified camp.
Which meant Osmuna's killer had
probably been doing much the same thing they were: mapping and
exploring.
Jasak conscientiously ordered
himself not to wed himself to any sweeping conclusions without
more evidence. They could be in the middle of some noble's huge
game preserve, after all. Whoever had killed Osmuna might have
thought he was eliminating a locally born trespasser or poacher.
Or Jasak and his men might have unknowingly trespassed upon
sanctified or unsanctified ground, in which case Osmuna might
have been killed for blasphemy. But however firmly he reminded
himself of those possibilities, he kept coming back to the totally
alien nature of whatever had been used to kill his man.
This isn't getting me anywhere, he told himself. And
every minute I waste speculating is another minute for anyone
inside that camp to make his ambush nastier, if he's planning one
.
The problem was what to do
about it. Anyone who stepped out into that open clearing would
undoubtedly find out if there was someone waiting inside that
palisade with a terror weapon in his hands. Getting holes blown
through more of his troopers didn't exactly strike Jasak as the best
way of going about finding out, though. Oh, for one lowly
reconnaissance gryphon to do an aerial sweep!
That gave him an idea.
He caught Fifty Garlath's eye,
which wasn't all that difficult since the platoon commander was
staring at Jasak with something close to panic in his eyes. The
hundred pointed silently toward the nearest tree, then upwards into
its widespreading branches. It stood along the bank of the creek
where they lay prone, and Garlath nodded convulsively, with a
look of relief that would have been comical under other
circumstances but managed to look mostly pathetic under these.
The fifty signaled to Sword
Harnak, then pointed at the same tree. Harnak, in turn, signaled to
Jugthar Sendahli, who nodded, tapped one of his squad mates on
the shoulder, and disappeared into the concealing brush.
It took the two troopers the better
part of six sweat-filled minutes to work their way around to the
back of the tree through the brush. Its trunk was more than broad
enough to conceal them when they finally reached it, and Jasak
heard the slightest of rustles as Sendahli's squad mate boosted the
garthan high enough to reach the lowest of the
widespreading limbs.
The dark-skinned scout went up
the tree in slow motion, each movement silent with caution, each
toehold tested gently before he used it to boost himself higher. He
scarcely jostled a single leaf on his way up, and Jasak gave an
internal nod of approval, pleased that Garlath's tenure hadn't
ruined the garthan yet. Jasak had recommended Sendahli
for promotion, and he hoped it went through.
The man was Mythalan, but hardly
shakira or even multhari. The garthan
caste was the lowest of the low in Mythalan society, comprised of
the vast masses born without any Gift at all. In most parts of the
Union of Arcana, those born without the ability to use magic were
simply ordinary citizens. They might not be able to aspire to the
magistery like Gadrial, but they could look forward to ordinary
careers and the same basic opportunity to earn a good living as
anyone else.
But not in Mythal.
Jasak's jaw muscles knotted as he
watched Sendahli's slow, skillful execution of his orders and felt
his Andaran sense of civilized behavior towards other human
beings rising up in fresh indignation. A garthan wasn't
legally property any longer. Chattel slavery had been outlawed two
centuries ago, under the Union of Arcana's founding accords. But
the accords had only limited power inside a country's national
borders, which meant most local laws had remained the same. And
in countries which had embraced the Mythalan culture and its rigid
stratifications, those born without the ability to use magic faced
lives little if any better than those of a Hilmaran serf from
Andara's first age of conquest.
People born to the garthan
caste lived painfully limited lives. Their employment choices were
a matter of heredity—a butcher's son became a butcher,
even if he was better suited to building wagon wheels—
unless the whim of their shakira lords and masters willed
otherwise. The magic-using castes and sub-castes, with the
ruthless support of the traditional multhari military caste,
still ruled Mythal and her allied colonies—including those
in several new universes—with an iron hand. They
jealously guarded their hereditary privileges and frothed at the
mouth at the slightest suggestion of abolishing the caste system
that relegated men like Sendahli to third-class citizenship and a
grimly limited future.
Jasak had never learned the details
of the debacle which had finally driven Magister Halathyn to sever
all connection with the great Mythal Falls Academy, the
premier magic research and development academy in all of
Arcana's many universes. Much as he personally detested the
shakira caste, Jasak had to admit that, historically, the
majority of the great breakthroughs in magical theory had
originated with the Mythalans. Which, of course, only made them
even more insufferably overbearing and arrogant.
It undoubtedly also helped to
explain what had happened with Magister Halathyn. Jasak did
know that Halathyn had infuriated many of his shakira
peers by devoting so much of his time and talent to the needs of
the UTTTA even before he left the academy. It wasn't so much that
they'd objected to trans-temporal exploration, but the shakira
as a caste harbored a fierce resentment for the fact that the
military (which meant Jasak's native Ardana) dominated trans-
temporal exploration. The Mythalans had tried for years to
secure control of the Union's exploration policies, only to be
frustrated by Andara and Ransar. Whatever their own differences
might be, the Andarans and Ransarans had formed a unified front
against shakira arrogance literally for centuries, which had
only made Mythal's resentment of the UTTTA's policies worse.
Halathyn had never had much patience with that particular view,
and he'd actually taken the time to find out how he could best aid
in the exploration process.
And then had come Gadrial
Kelbryan. She'd been only a lowly undergraduate, at the
time—not yet seventeen, which had been an almost unheard
of age for anyone, even a shakira, far less a
Ransaran, to win admission to the academy—but every
story agreed that she'd been at the heart of whatever had driven
Halathyn vos Dulainah out of Mythal Falls forever in a white-hot
rage. Given what Jasak had come to know of Halathyn, added to
the obvious strength of Gadrial's Gift and the deep and abiding
Ransaran faith in the individual, he rather suspected he could
guess how it had happened. And he was absolutely certain that the
Mythalan version—that Gadrial had been
Halathyn's out-of-caste lover, trading sexual favors for better
grades—was a total fabrication.
Ransaran and Mythalan societies,
and the religious beliefs which underpinned them, could not have
been more different. Mythalans believed in the reincarnation of the
soul, and that lives of virtue were rewarded by successive
incarnations in steadily higher castes on the path to a fully
enlightened existence. Virtually all Ransaran religions, whatever
else they might disagree about, were monotheistic and believed in
a single mortal incarnation and a direct, personal
relationship with God.
The Mythalan belief structure
validated the superiority of the shakira and bolstered the
monolithic stability of the structure which rested upon the
garthan's total subjugation. After all, how could someone
become a member of the shakira in the first place, unless
he had attained the right to it in his previous incarnations? But
Ransaran theology engendered a passionate belief in the right and
responsibility of the individual to take command of his own life,
to make of himself all that his own God-given abilities and talent
made possible. The Mythalan caste system was a loathsome
perversion in their eyes, and the clash between the two cultures
was long-standing and bitter.
The discovery that a Ransaran
possessed such a powerful Gift would have been gall-bitter
for most shakira, and it was widely believed that the
Mythal Falls faculty had a habit of washing out "unsuitable"
students any way it had to. Or, if the student in question was too
academically strong for that, using the requisitely brutal form of
harassment to drive him—or her—away.
Jasak had no way of knowing if
that was what had happened in Gadrial's case, but the towering
fury of Halathyn's vitriolic letter of resignation when he broke off
completely with his fellow shakira and formally joined the
faculty of the academy that served the Union of Arcana's military
headquarters at Garth Showma was legendary. And Gadrial
Kelbryan, then a lowly third-year undergrad, had accompanied him
as his protégée and student.
Over the two decades since,
Magister Halathyn had assembled the staff—including
Gadrial—which had built the Garth Showma Institute into a
true rival for Mythal Falls and improved the UTTTA's field
capabilities by at least twenty-five percent. In the process, he'd
carved out his own special niche in field
operations . . . and continued his
ruthless demolition of Mythalan stereotypes wherever he
encountered them.
It had been one of the greatest
pleasures of Jasak's military career to watch the aging magister
convert the suspicious garthan soldier now swarming so
carefully up the massive oak—a man who'd joined the
Andaran Army as a way to escape Mythal and buy a better future
and higher social status for his children—into an ally and
friend.
There was only one Magister
Halathyn, he thought. And the swamp portal where Halathyn was
currently camped, in a flimsy tent with only a single squad to
provide security, was far too close to whoever had come out of this fortified camp.
Jasak peered upward, trying to
spot Sendahli, but he couldn't see a trace of the trooper. Good. If
he couldn't see Sendahli, even knowing he was there,
nobody inside the palisade ought to see him, either.
On the heels of that thought, a
piercing trill came wafting down from the treetop.
All clear.
Jasak grimaced. So their mystery
camp was empty, but was it merely unoccupied at the moment, for
abandoned?
He glanced at Fifty Garlath, who
was sweating profusely again. Garlath darted a nervous glance
back at Jasak, then motioned to Gaythar Harklan. The squad shield
lay prone at the edge of the creek, but he rose at the gesture and
scrambled his way down the bank, across the swift-moving main
current, and up the other side. He scuttled across the ground in a
swift, crouching dash that carried him to the base of the palisade,
then came fully upright. He kept his back as close as he could to
the brush wall's outermost, sharply jutting branches, taking no
chances Sendahli's all clear might have been mistaken, but at least
no one was shooting at him with anything.
So far, so good, Jasak thought. And
now . . .
Harklan edged sideways along the
wall, then whipped through the opening in a rollover prone that
took him into enemy territory literally at ground level. Silence
gripped the waiting platoon. Flies whirred and buzzed past Jasak's
ears, and still the silence held. Then Harklan reappeared.
"It's abandoned," he called across,
"but they haven't been gone long. There are several fire pits in
here, and the coals're still hot enough to cook over. And they've
left their pack animals."
Jasak exchanged glances with
Threbuch.
"Whoever they are, they're in a
tearing hurry to be somewhere else, Sir," the chief sword observed
quietly, and Jasak nodded, then glanced at Gadrial.
"They're headed for your class
eight portal, is my guess," he said.
"It's not my class eight,"
she muttered. "If it's anyone's, I'd say it's theirs." She
waved at the abandoned camp. "They obviously got to it before we
did. It's even possible the class eight leads into their home
universe."
"You don't think they're from this
one?" Jasak was curious to see if her logic paralleled his own.
"I don't see how they could be,"
she said, shaking her head. "I'm no soldier, but it seems to me that
if there were more of them nearby, they'd have sent a messenger
for help and holed up behind those spiky walls while they waited
for it. But they didn't do that. They ran. That suggests they're
feeling outnumbered, guilty, or maybe just scared to death.
Whatever their motives, they're obviously determined to go
someplace where they can get help. That camp may look
formidable from out here, but it's actually pretty rudimentary. If
there weren't very many of them, they could've built that just to
keep out bears and panthers and what-have-you so they wouldn't
have to post a sentry to watch for predators."
Jasak was impressed. She might
be "no soldier," but her reasoning tallied closely with his own.
And from the flicker of respect in the chief sword's expression, it
tallied with Otwal Threbuch's, too.
"You'd have made an effective
military analyst, Gadrial," the hundred said, and her eyes glinted.
"One of these days, you Andaran
bully boys will be civilized enough to let us ladies join your ranks.
The effect ought to be bracingly beneficial."
"Ladies in uniform?" The chief
sword snorted. "Carrying arbalests and throwing war spells?
Ransaran democratic madness."
"I'm qualified expert with a hand
arbalest," she said tartly. "And I can throw spells that would singe
your braided Shalomarian hair. Literally," she added sweetly.
The chief sword just grinned,
unrepentant.
"I would suggest," Jasak
interrupted, before Threbuch succeeded in digging himself in any
deeper, "that we discover what we can about that."
He nodded toward the palisade,
and Fifty Garlath took his cue from that and ordered the platoon
forward. First and Second Squads split up and did a sweep of the
treeline surrounding the clearing, looking for possible ambushes
or snipers. Third Squad unlimbered its crew-served infantry-
dragon, setting it up in a cover position on this side of the stream.
Fourth Squad followed First and Second across the creek and
bellied down under cover of the far bank, waiting.
Gadrial watched with quiet
intensity from her vantage point in the scrub. She was perfectly
aware that Jasak had no intention of walking out there until the
security sweep was complete and the platoon's heavy weapons
were in place to respond to any threat. Had she not been present,
he would probably be out there already himself, but she was along
for the ride, so he was left with the responsibility for her safety.
He obviously placed a high
priority on keeping her in one piece, and she was scared enough to
appreciate that, yet independent-minded enough to flush with
embarrassment as she admitted to herself that she wasn't
able to hold her own out here. She had no formal military training.
She truly was a crack shot with a hand-sized arbalest, but she'd
never fired a shoulder weapon in her life, and she couldn't even
give the dragon gunners a hand. As strong as her various Gifts
were, she'd never used artillery and had only the vaguest sense of
how it operated.
Gadrial's main interest in the
infantry-dragons, and the heavier field-dragons of the true
artillery, was in the battle spells that powered them. She'd spoken
to combat engineers and knew battle spells were complex.
Building them demanded intense concentration frequently under
conditions that were challenging, to say the least, and not all of
them were directly related to the artillery. Infantry companies
included not just the dragons and their gunners, but also an
attached squad of combat spell engineers with multiple
responsibilities.
Combat spell engineers were
among the highest-skilled and highest-paid men in the Union of
Arcana's armed forces. There were never enough of them to go
around, though, and they were too valuable to put at the sharp end
and get them shot at if it could be avoided, so units like Hundred
Olderhan's routinely carried plenty of extra spell packs for
emergency use.
Infantry platoons were built
around squads, each twelve men strong. A squad was subdivided
into two maneuver teams, each consisting of three arbalestiers
commanded by a noncom, and supported by an infantry-dragon. It
took both of a dragon gunner's assistant gunners and two of the
squad's six arbalestiers to carry enough accumulator reloads to
fight any sort of sustained engagement, but in the absence of
someone who could recharge them, a team had only the
ammunition it could carry.
Now Gadrial shivered, watching
the heavy weapons deploy defensively. She was afraid a battle was
exactly what was going to happen. The question was whether it
would break loose here, or somewhere else.
When the final "all clear" whistled
across the open space, Fourth Squad rose out of its cover, spread
into a skirmish line, and headed into the abandoned camp. Jasak
strode ahead, leaving Gadrial in the care of two men assigned as
her bodyguards. She deliberately fell behind his rapid stride,
making sure she didn't get in anyone's way. Still, she'd nearly
reached the gap in the brush walls when she realized Jasak had
stopped dead in his tracks.
He stopped so abruptly she almost
collided with him, and when she stepped around him to see what
he was staring at, she caught her breath. A cairn of rocks lay in the
shadow of the brush wall, piled up between the interwoven
branches and the edge of the stream, and she felt a tremor in her
knees, and another in her chest, as she recognized its shape and
depth.
The fact that someone had died
here shouldn't have shocked her so brutally. She knew that. But as
she stared down at the pile of rocks over what had been a human
being, there was no doubt in Gadrial's mind that they'd found the
man who'd killed Osmuna.
Dismay stabbed deep as the
sickening import crashed home. There'd been only one man on the
bank above the creek where Osmuna had died. Only one trail
through the forest led back to this camp. Which meant that only
two men knew what had happened out there in the wilderness.
And both of them were dead.
She recognized the same
understanding in the grim look in Jasak Olderhan's eyes, the
knotted muscles in his jaw and the tension in his shoulders. She
wondered what he was thinking, then decided she didn't really
want to know. Then Jasak raised his gaze, granite eyes tracking
like a hunting gryphon after prey as they sought out his
commander of fifty.
"Search this camp," he said flatly.
"I want to know how many men were here. What they left behind.
Anything that might give us an idea of where they're from, and
why they're here."
"Yes, Sir!"
Garlath started spitting orders.
They sounded industrious enough, but they lacked a certain clarity,
and Jasak locked eyes with his chief sword. The grizzled noncom
nodded crisply and moved immediately to organize the search
Garlath was attempting to direct.
Once Chief Sword Threbuch
waded in, the swift, methodical search went so smoothly it was
like watching a choreographed dance, Gadrial thought. Except for
the fact that there was no music but the jittery rattle of wind in
dead leaves that scuttled across the rocky cairn where Osmuna's
killer lay, that was. She supposed she ought to be glad—in a
retributive, just-desserts fashion—that the man who'd
murdered Osmuna was dead, and a portion of her did want to be
glad, shocking as that seemed. But it was only a small part of her,
and the rest was horrified by what had transpired out here.
The Union Accords, the
cornerstone of the Union of Arcana, had put an end to the savagery
of the Portal Wars two centuries previously. They had united the
various warring kingdoms and republics into one cooperative
entity, dedicated to exploring the multiple universes and giving
everyone in the Union a better life. The opportunity to build
something new and worthwhile in pristine universes, the chance to
amass wealth in a civilization which was wealthy in a way pre-
portal Arcanans couldn't possibly have imagined.
Those Accords had governed the
use of portals and new universes for two hundred years. And they
also laid out the rules and contingency plans for contact with
another human civilization in the clearest possible terms. Every
soldier in the Union's military forces was put through training on
how to conduct such a first contact, which aimed above all else to
be peaceful. The last thing anyone had wanted was a shooting war
with another human civilization.
Yet in all the years of the Union's
existence, no such other civilization had ever been encountered.
The rules were still there, the troops were still trained in them, but
only as a contingency. No one had actually expected to
ever require them. Not really. Surely if there'd been other human
beings in existence, Arcana would have discovered them long ago.
But they
hadn't . . . until today. Until two total
strangers had met in a trackless wood. Met in fear and suspicion,
and despite the strictures of the Accords, promptly slaughtered one
another. Gadrial hadn't known Osmuna, but he'd seemed a bright
enough fellow, dedicated to his duty in the Andaran Scouts. He'd
seemed unhappy with Fifty Garlath, but proud to serve Hundred
Olderhan, and Gadrial found it difficult to believe he would have
thrown the Accords into the garbage can without extremely good
cause.
Her gaze returned again and again
to the silent grave while Jasak's men searched the camp for clues.
Ten minutes elapsed in grim silence, punctuated by the sounds of
angry men ransacking what had been an orderly camp, and their
ugly mood frightened her. These men had blood in their eyes,
looking for something—or someone—to rip
apart in retaliation for a comrade's murder. She couldn't really
blame them, but that made their anger no less frightening, and
when she glanced at Jasak, she saw him frowning as he, too,
watched the camp's destruction.
The facts they shook loose were
few and far between.
"We're not looking at more than
eighteen or nineteen people, at most," Chief Sword Threbuch
reported to Jasak and Garlath. "There's damn near nothing here but
spare clothes, sleeping rolls, and abandoned foodstuffs. We found
more of those little metal things we recovered on the bank above
Osmuna's body, though, and you're right, Sir. There is something
inside."
He produced several shiny metal
cylinders, each of which had a duller metal object stuffed into the
top. They weren't all identical; some were larger, some smaller.
Most of the metal caps were round-nosed, although some were
flatter than others. All of those had hollows in their tips, but there
were also three longer ones, each of which had a solid, sharply
pointed tip.
"That looks like lead," Jasak
frowned as he touched one of the round-nosed cylinders. "But this
one—" he took one of the three pointy ones "—looks
more like . . . copper?"
He glanced up at Threbuch, but
the chief sword's expression was baffled. Jasak looked at Gadrial,
who extended her hand. He laid the cylinder in her palm, and she
turned it, examining it from all angles.
"It is copper," she agreed. "But
look here." She tapped the end. "It's not solid copper. It's
more like a jacket around something else. And I think you're right
about that, too. The core is lead."
"I
wonder . . ." Jasak murmured as he took the
mysterious object back from her.
"Sir?" Threbuch asked.
"I wonder how much force it
would take to propel this," Jasak tapped the cylinder's pointed cap
with one fingernail, "across fifteen or twenty feet of space and
drive it through a human body?"
Garlath lost color and made a
strangled sound that drew Jasak's eyes to him.
"That—that's barbaric!" the
fifty protested.
"But damned effective," Jasak
pointed out.
"You can't be sure that's what
happened," Garlath objected. "There's not enough of anything
inside that little cylinder to do such a thing."
"Just because we can't imagine
how to do it, Fifty Garlath, doesn't mean someone else couldn't figure out how to do it," Jasak observed.
Garlath flushed, the color looking
even darker against his fearful pallor, and Jasak turned back to
Threbuch.
"Go on, Chief Sword," he said,
and Threbuch produced some other odd cylinders of metal. These
were much larger, as broad as his palm, and six inches long.
"There's a whole stash of these,
whatever they are, Sir. We found them in every tent. They don't
seem to be weapons of any sort, but there something inside them.
You can feel it slosh when you shake the thing."
"You shook one of them?" Jasak
frowned, and Threbuch snorted.
"One of the men had already been
shaking them, Sir. It didn't explode in his hand, so after I'd
ripped him a new asshole—pardon, Magister." He glanced
at Gadrial and colored slightly himself. "Anyway, I figured it was
probably safe enough to handle them."
"See if someone can cut into one
of them. But not here. Take it out to the woodline, just in case."
As the unhappy trooper who'd
drawn that particular job headed out with the dense metal object
and his short sword, Threbuch continued his situation report, such
as it was.
"They haven't been here more than
a couple of days, Sir. If I were to hazard a guess, I'd say this was a
forward observation post, or a base camp of some kind. A relay
station, maybe, for others to follow. They're no primitives,
whoever they are and wherever they've come from. You've seen
their metalwork. That matches ours, but it's just the beginning."
He motioned to another trooper,
who brought over an armload of examples.
"Their cloth is high quality," he
said, holding up a length of what looked like sturdy canvas. "If this
wasn't machine-loomed, I'll—" he flicked another glance at
Gadrial and amended the phrase on his tongue to "—eat my
shirt."
The magister just grinned, which
stained the hard-bitten noncom's cheeks pink once more. Then he
jerked his gaze back to his commanding officer.
"The same pattern repeats
everywhere you look, Sir," he said, doggedly ignoring the humor
glinting in Hundred Olderhan's eyes, despite the tension of the
moment. "We found high quality leather goods sewn on a
machine. Metal mess kits, with eating utensils and plates tucked
inside collapsible cookpots. Personal toiletry kits with combs and
brushes that look like something manufactured for a mass market,
not locally produced by some village shop."
"If they left dishes and combs
behind, they left in a damned hurry," Garlath muttered.
"And they weren't too worried
about replacing them, either," Threbuch replied. "That kind of
gear's hard to replace when you're at the end of a long transit
chain."
"They may not be at the end of a
long chain," Jasak said quietly.
Utter silence reigned for a long
moment, broken only by the wind and rustling leaves.
"They're running for the portal we
came out here to find," he continued after a moment. "I'm certain
of it. Not only did they abandon most of their gear so they could
move faster, they abandoned the donkeys they used to carry it here,
as well." He nodded toward the sturdy little beasts pinned in one
corner of the camp behind a fence made of rope. "I'm betting they
have another fortified base on the other side. Not a little camp like
this, either. A large base, with plenty of troops."
The chief sword swore colorfully.
Then he stopped himself abruptly. He looked at Gadrial again,
started to say something apologetic, then obviously decided he had
more serious things to worry about than her possible reaction to a
little rough language.
"We can't afford to let them reach
that portal ahead of us, Sir," he said. "If you're right, and if they get
to a bigger fort before we get to them, we'll be outnumbered.
Given what they did to Osmuna, and how fast they did it, I don't
like that scenario. Not one damned bit."
He glanced at Gadrial again as he
spoke, but this time his expression was very different. The tough-
as-dragons-scales chief sword looked terrified. And not, she
realized abruptly, for himself. He was horrified by the thought that
someone would kill her the same way they'd killed
Osmuna. She had to blink hard, and she looked away, unwilling to
embarrass him with her abruptly watery emotions.
"Hundred Olderhan," Fifty
Garlath said before Jasak could respond to Threbuch, "given the
Chief Sword's astute analysis, I respectfully recommend a course
of extreme prudence. The enemy has an unknown troop strength
and a head start. They're moving fast and light, whereas we're
burdened with considerable equipment, including the dragons.
Magister Kelbryan's calculations suggest that the portal's close
enough they'll undoubtedly reach it well ahead of us. And with
Fifty Ulthar's platoon at the coast, instead of the swamp portal,
we're badly understrength."
"Your point?" Jasak tried hard to
keep the acid out of his voice.
"In my considered opinion, Sir,
pursuing at this time would be the height of folly. The only
prudent response is to return immediately to our base camp in the
swamp and send for reinforcements from the coast before
attempting to run these people down."
Jasak stared at the older man,
disbelief warring with rage as Garlath looked defiantly back. An
ugly, triumphant glow lit the backs of his eyes, and Jasak felt his
jaw muscles aching as he clenched his teeth in comprehension.
Garlath's spineless cowardice was
equaled only by his incompetence as an officer and his hatred for
any officer promoted past him. But he was clever in his own way.
So damned clever it turned Jasak's stomach. Clever enough to
wrap his desire to flee from anything that looked remotely like
danger in the mantle of considered, prudent tactics.
Volcanic rage sizzled through
Jasak Olderhan, but before it could boil over Gadrial Kelbryan
shocked him by rounding on Garlath like a hissing basilisk. Her
almond eyes flashed with lethal lightning as she advanced on
Garlath, who actually backed away from her slender fury with an
expression of almost comical astonishment.
"Don't you dare use
my research as an excuse to cut and run!" she snarled.
"Magister Kelbryan, you mistake
my meaning!" Garlath replied, speaking so quickly the words came
out gabbled. "I didn't say we should run away. Not at all!
That would be as foolish as rushing forward. All I'm
recommending is a tactical retreat, just a temporary maneuver to
concentrate our forces. If we stay scattered, we won't be able to
withstand a united attack by an enemy of unknown strength using
weapons we can't even understand. We can't afford to risk walking
into some sort of ambush. We have to be sure we survive to carry
word of this staggering discovery to our superiors. And then
there's your own value as one of our finest magisters. If anything
were to happen to you, or if you, gods forbid, fell into
enemy hands, then—"
"Oh, stuff it someplace
interesting, Garlath!" Gadrial snapped.
"Magister," Garlath said almost
fawningly, "I only meant—"
"I know exactly what you meant!
I've been trapped in your revolting company for weeks,
Shevan Garlath. You are the most pathetic excuse for an officer
I've ever seen. One of your own men has been murdered—
murdered, damn you!—and the only thing you
want to do about it is run away and hide someplace safe! And
you have the unmitigated gall to use me as an excuse for
your cowardice?!"
Gadrial realized she was literally
shaking with fury, and a corner of her mind wondered how much
of that stemmed from her own fear and her own need to find
something to lash out at. Not that it made her contempt for
Garlath any less merited, even if it did.
"We have to find out what's going
on out here," she continued in a marginally calmer, icy voice. "We
have to find out now, before things get any further out of
hand. If we can't do that—and do it before it all goes totally
out of control—then I'm not going to be the only one at
risk. And I warn you, Fifty Garlath. If anything
happens to Magister Halathyn because of your fuck-ups, I will
come after you for blood debt. And I'll keep coming, through as
many godsdamned universes as it takes to track you down and feed
your miserable excuse for a soul to the crows!"
Naked shock flared behind
Garlath's eyes, and Jasak stepped in quickly.
"Magister Kelbryan, I fully
appreciate your concern for Magister Halathyn's safety. Believe
me, I want to protect him as much as you do. As for getting a
message back to our superiors," he swung his gaze to Garlath,
who flushed dark red under its withering contempt, "that's why we
carry hummers. Chief Sword, see to it. Send a priority message to
Javelin Krankark at the forward base, and another to Commander
of Five Hundred Klian, at the coast. Given the urgency of the
situation, I want Fifty Ulthar and his platoon recalled immediately.
And I'm sure Five Hundred Klian will also want to get a message
off to Five Hundred Grantyl at the Chalar base. Record and release
immediately with my chop on the header."
"Yes, Sir!" Threbuch saluted
crisply and darted one disgusted glance at Garlath before heading
for Javelin Iggar Shulthan, Charlie Company's senior hummer
specialist. Jasak watched him go, then turned back to the
infuriated woman still glaring at Garlath.
"Magister Kelbryan," he said
quietly and formally, breaking her concentration and drawing her
carefully away from the object of her rage, "I would consider it a
great personal favor if you would add your own message. Your
Gifts are far superior to mine, and I want Five Hundred Klian to
have as much information as possible."
"Of course," she said stiffly. "I
would be delighted to help in any way I can."
She flicked one final, fiery glance
at Garlath, then strode vigorously across the camp to join the chief
sword and their hummer handler. Jasak watched her for a moment,
then took a firm grip on his own temper and returned his attention
to Fifty Garlath.
As much as he wanted to, he
couldn't follow Gadrial's explosive example and call the man a
sniveling coward. She was dead-on accurate, but that didn't matter.
Garlath had given too many plausible, outwardly militarily sound
reasons to retreat. He knew how to play the game, all right. Jasak
had to give him that. That skill—playing the nasty little
game of power politics which was the worst curse of the
patronage system within the Arcanan military—was the one
thing Shevan Garlath was actually good at.
A deep and abiding hatred
crystallized in Jasak's blood, turning him cold as ice, and Garlath
backed up another involuntary step before his expression.
"Your tactical concerns are noted,
Fifty Garlath." Jasak's eye was granite-hard as he bit his words out
of solid ice and spat them at the older man like hailstones. "Your
assessment of the situation does not tally with mine, however. It's
imperative that we stop these people before they reach the portal. I
don't want a damned battle, Garlath. I want answers. And I
want to control the situation. Until we get those answers, until we
get to the bottom of what happened out here, we don't know
anything. But if these people are as confused as we are, and if
they get back to their superiors and tell them we
started it, it's going to change from a disaster to a godsdamned
catastrophe.
"We won't get any answers if they
reach the portal—and whatever base may lie
beyond—before we've caught up. And we won't be able to
put the brakes on this, either. Shartahk seize it, we don't even have
any idea how to communicate with them if we do catch up
with them! So the only option I see is to find them, stop
them, and try to make some sort of controlled contact with them,
just like the first contact protocols require. And, failing that, we at
least need to take them into custody and return them to base where
someone else, with the kind of diplomatic experience none of us
has, can try to figure out how to talk to them and, gods willing,
straighten this fucking mess back out. Do you read me on this,
Fifty Garlath?"
Garlath's jaw worked as he glared
back at Jasak. The fusion of fear, resentment, and hatred bubbling
away inside the man must be like basilisk venom, Jasak thought.
He doubted that explaining his own analysis had done a bit of
good, but he'd had to at least try to get through to this excuse for
an Andaran officer.
"Do you read me?" he
repeated very softly, and Garlath jerked his head in a spastic nod.
"Good," Jasak said, still softly.
"Because we're facing a fast, hard march, and I expect you to pull
your weight. Is that clear?"
"Yes, Sir." Garlath's tone was so
brittle Jasak wondered why his tongue hadn't shattered.
"Then get the men ready to march
within the next three minutes. May I assume you're capable of
carrying out that order, Fifty?"
"Yes, Sir." Hatred seethed in
Garlath's dark eyes. For a moment they met Jasak's. Then they
skittered away, and the fifty jerked out a salute and turned on a
bootheel, snarling orders at his men.
But they were, by the gods, ready
to march in three minutes.
Chapter Seven
Jathmar frowned as Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl and Barris Kasell exchanged grim looks for the
fifth time in ten minutes. He glanced at Shaylar for a moment, then
moved closer to them.
"Trouble?" he asked quietly, and
chan Hagrahyl nodded choppily.
"We're being followed."
Jathmar's stomach did a creative
dip and dive. His eyes went instantly to Shaylar, then he wrenched
them back to the other two.
"You're sure?" he asked, and
Barris nodded.
"For the last two miles, at least.
They're still behind as a good ways. Probably haven't spotted us
yet. But it's only a matter of time."
"Then how can you be sure
anyone's there?"
"Look," Ghartoun grunted, and
jerked his head sideways.
Jathmar frowned again. Then his
eyes followed the gesture, and it was his turn to grunt as if
someone had just slugged him in the belly.
A rabbit bounded past, not loping
from place to place but moving at a determined run. Moments
later he saw another, then a third. Chipmunks, too, were running
through the sparse undergrowth, and a quick glance at the trees
revealed agitated squirrels bounding from branch to branch,
streaking along in the same direction their survey crew was
traveling.
His jaw clenched in instant
understanding, mingled with chagrin. He'd grown up in these
woods, damn it. He should have seen it for himself, even sooner
than chan Hagrahyl and Kasell.
And you probably would have, if you weren't so worried
about Shaylar, a little voice told him.
"Something's spooked them," he
said, knowing it was unnecessary even as he spoke, and both the
others nodded.
"My guess is," Barris said as they
continued to move steadily forward themselves, "that they've hit
our trail and fanned out into a line. They're trying to circle around
and cut off any escape attempt. If I'm right, we're going to see
animals cutting across our path from the sides any moment now."
Jathmar grimaced. He drew breath
to ask what he could do . . . just as a
good-sized rabbit shot past, running on a diagonal path that
slashed from their right to their left. His eyes tracked it, and he
swore with quiet, heartfelt passion.
"We're not going to make the
portal, are we?" he said quietly.
"No." Barris Kasell was watching
the trees, not the rabbit, but he answered anyway. "We aren't."
Jathmar worried his lower lip
with his teeth.
"I'm no soldier, but there's got to
be something we can do. Something I can do. What do you
suggest?"
chan Hagrahyl was also watching
the forest. Now he looked back at Jathmar, his gaze like sharpened
steel.
"There's not much we can
do, except try to find a place to make a stand of some kind, and
out here, that isn't likely. There's nothing here but forest. No high
ground, no streambeds or gullies, not even a mountain pass to
defend—just open trees. Gods know how many of them out
there, let alone what they intend to do once they overtake us.
"We've only got four real
choices," he continued in a low tone, flipping his eyes back to the
trees. "We can keep going, even try to pick up the pace. We
might outrun them over a short distance, especially since we
have the advantage of already knowing where were going. But we
can't run all the way to the portal; we're a long, hard day's march
away. Or, we could pick a spot to make a stand, but Ghartoun's
right. There's not much out here that lends itself to digging in
against a siege. We certainly can't hide, not from trained trackers,
and given how quickly they've overtaken us, we're up against men
who know their business."
"So we can run, make a stand, or
fight. What's the fourth option?" Jathmar asked, not liking any of
the others.
"We can turn and carry the fight
to them," Kasell said. "I doubt they'd expect us to do that,
which would give us the advantage of surprise, initially at least."
"I thought about that," chan
Hagrahyl agreed, "but there are several major drawbacks. Among
other things, we don't have any idea how badly outnumbered we
might be, and we don't have all the ammunition in the world,
either. Judging by the number of animals they've spooked into
running, I'd say there's a fair sized group out there, so we'd
probably need all the ammo we've got and then some."
"I could take Fanthi," Kasell said
very quietly. "Maybe Rilthan and Elevu. Load up with all our
spare ammo. This kind of terrain—" he jerked his head at
the trees "—three or four experienced grunts could do a
hell of a lot of damage to somebody armed with crossbows."
"But Ghartoun just said—
" Jathmar began, only to be cut off by chan Hagrahyl.
"He's not talking about a stand,
Jathmar. He's talking about slowing them down, forcing them to
deploy and waste time. And he's right, the four of them could do a
lot of damage. But," he moved his eyes from Jathmar to Kasell, "I
don't think you could do enough. Not to buy us long enough to
get all the way to the portal. Besides, I'm kind of fond of all four
of you."
"Four of us against all these
civilians," Kasell replied quietly, and Jathmar swallowed as he
realized Barris was arguing in favor of a virtual suicide mission.
"I know."
For just a moment, Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl's face was simultaneously hard and haggard, but
then he shook his head again.
"No," he said. "And not just to
keep you from getting your stubborn Arpathian self killed, Barris.
We still don't know what happened out there, and I'm beginning to
wonder if they know for certain, either. Judging from how
long it took these people to catch up with us, they certainly
weren't hard on Falsan's heels. And Falsan couldn't have moved
very quickly with that damned crossbow bolt in his chest before
somebody who wasn't wounded could have caught up with him.
I'm starting to think he really did run into just one of them,
initially, at least. Maybe their man is wounded—maybe
even dead—too. They may have been delayed giving him
first aid. Hell, they may even have needed time just to find
him after they heard the shot! That might just explain why it could
have taken them so long to backtrack Falsan."
"You're saying this is all some
kind of misunderstanding?" Kasell demanded
incredulously.
"I'm saying it might be.
And even if it isn't, so far we've only lost one man and, as far as
we know, they haven't lost any of theirs. At the moment,
it's still at least remotely possible we could settle this whole thing
without anybody else getting killed. But to be effective at slowing
them down, you'd have to open fire from ambush. That's definitely
a hostile act—the kind that ups the stakes all around."
Kasell looked for a moment as if
he were prepared to continue arguing. But then he grunted
unhappily and nodded in acquiescence.
"So what do we do?"
Jathmar asked.
"A variant of forting up." chan
Hagrahyl sounded like a man who'd made his mind up. "Can you
See anything we might use for shelter, Jathmar? Anything at all?"
"I can't guarantee what I'll find,
but I'll Look."
"That's all I ask."
Jathmar had already crossed this
ground once, on their outbound leg, which helped. The dips and
low undulating hills, masked from ordinary eyesight by the dense
covering the forest, stretched for long, unchanging miles. The land
revealed to his inner eye was stark and easy to read. Unfortunately,
there wasn't a single spot in any of that rolling terrain that would
shelter them, or at least give them a fighting chance to defend
themselves.
He blinked, returning his
awareness fully to his body, and met chan Hagrahyl's worried eyes.
"Did you—" the
expedition's leader began, only to break off as a magnificent ten-
point buck came crashing through the trees at an oblique. Only
this time, the animal crossed their path from left to right.
"Nothing, Ghartoun." Jathmar
shook his head. "I'm sorry."
Ahead of them, Fanthi chan
Himidi broke abruptly left, signaling for the others to remain
where they were. He moved swiftly and silently, vanishing
between the thick tree trunks like a ghost.
Jathmar halted, heart pounding,
breathing heavily, and gripped Shaylar's hand. Her slim fingers
trembled against his, but they both drew comfort from the contact.
She peered worriedly up into his face, and he tried to summon a
smile, but she could read his agitation too easily through the
marriage bond.
A moment later, Fanthi returned,
jogging straight up to chan Hagrahyl.
"There's a clearing we can use.
Looks like a twister touched down at some point in the past year
or so. Lots of trees down. Tangled brush, tree trunks the size of
temple pillars. Good cover, as well as plenty of concealment. We
won't find a better spot."
Even Jathmar knew the
difference between "cover" and "concealment." The former was a
physical barrier between you and enemy bullets, like a shield. The
latter merely hid you from view. A screen of leaves concealed, but
nothing to stop incoming fire; a solid tree trunk did both.
chan Hagrahyl looked at chan
Himidi for a moment, then nodded.
"Take point." He raised his
voice. "Listen up, people. We're following Fanthi. Move it!"
chan Himidi had, indeed, found a
good spot. Little more than an acre across, the clearing
overflowed with raw distraction. A spinning funnel of wind from
some long-ago storm had ripped trees out of the earth, snapped
them like kindling, and twisted them apart, leaving jagged knife
blades of wood stabbing the sky. Small splinters had been driven
into other, still standing trees with such force that they were
embedded like nails. Tree trunks had crashed to earth in a jumbled
pile, digging broken branches into the ground.
"We know they're coming at us
from three sides," chan Hagrahyl said quietly. "We'll take position
there." He pointed to a confusion of tangled wood on the far side
of the clearing. "I want clear firing lanes, and someone to watch
our backs, in case the bastards succeed in circling all the way
around us."
"I'll cover our rear until your all
in position," chan Himidi volunteered through clenched teeth.
"Good." chan Hagrahyl nodded.
"But listen to me, everyone! No one shoots unless I say so.
Got that? Nobody shoots. I know we all want revenge for
Falsan, but there are men out there with weapons. If we have to
fight, we fight all out, but first we try and work things out so that
nobody else gets killed. Is that understood?"
Heads nodded all around, one or
two of them a bit unwillingly, and he grinned tightly at them all.
"Good," he said again. "In that
case, let's get under cover and dig in."
They took their positions in utter
silence, facing south, the direction from which the bulk of their
pursuers would approach, and fanning out slightly. Jathmar
stationed himself and Shaylar in a sheltered pocket where a
massive black walnut trunk, nearly five feet in diameter, formed a
solid barricade. It was the best protection he could find, and
branches thicker than his own torso jutted up and out from the
main trunk, forming angled braces he could use to steady the rifle
if it came to that.
Tymo Scleppis took up a
position to Jathmar's left, near the center of their all-too-ragged
line. The healer was opening his pack, trying to ready himself for
casualties if it came to open fighting. Rilthan—their best
marksman, by a wide margin—crawled in just to Shaylar's
right. The gunsmith was the only member of their party armed
with the new Ternathian Model 10 bolt-action rifle, with its
twelve-round box magazine. He said nothing as he settled into
position, but he flicked one glance briefly in Shaylar's direction
before meeting Jathmar's gaze. It was only a fleeting look, but it
told Jathmar that Rilthan had chosen his spot deliberately, and
Jathmar's throat was tight as he nodded, acknowledging Rilthan's
intention to protect her.
Beyond Rilthan was chan
Hagrahyl's clerk, a dark-skinned Ricathian who'd joined straight
out of high school. Not yet nineteen, Divis' color was closer to
last week's ashes than its normal warm chocolate hue, and his
hands shook as he tried to load his own rifle. The drovers formed
their flank guards, such as they were, but they had barely five men
on either side.
Jathmar crawled up onto one of
the immense branches, using it as a firing step to get just high
enough to shoot over the top of the trunk. It was too tall for him
to shoot across standing on the ground, but thanks to other
branches that had slammed into the earth, the fallen tree bole didn't
quite reach the forest floor. There was a gap, about fourteen
inches high, which allowed Shaylar to lie prone behind one of the
big branches, protected from incoming fire, yet able to shoot
through the gap if need be.
Everyone was checking
weapons, including Shaylar, and Jathmar's hands felt clumsy as he
pulled cartridge boxes out of his pack. He'd fired hundreds of
rounds through the Model 70, and thousands of rounds through
other rifles he'd owned, over the years. He'd hunted for food and
for sport, and he'd run into bandits more than once, trading shots
with desperate, lawless men. But he'd never seen real combat, and
his hands refused to hold steady as the reality of what they faced
hit home.
He slid his H&W out of its
holster and curled his fingers around the reassuring solidity of its
walnut grips. The big .44 caliber, seven-shot revolver was single-
action. The hammer had to be pulled back for each shot, but the
six-and-a-half-inch-barreled pistol was deadly accurate, and it had
immense stopping power.
It was also too big and heavy for
Shaylar to shoot accurately. She carried a Polshana—a
much smaller and lighter .35 caliber weapon, with a four-inch
barrel and smaller grip. Unlike the H&W, the Polshana was
double-action, and Rilthan had worked long and hard to tune its
action for her until it was glass-smooth. It held only six shots to
the H&W's seven, but unlike Jathmar, Shaylar had four
speedloaders, and he watched her tuck them into her the right hand
pocket of her jacket.
He swung out the H&W's
cylinder and loaded the chamber he normally left empty for the
hammer to rest on. Then he slipped it back into its holster and
finished arranging his ammunition boxes around him. At his feet,
Shaylar was doing the same thing with the ammo boxes from her
pack. From his slightly elevated vantage point, Jathmar could see
others settling into equally favorable spots amongst the fallen
trees.
Fanthi chan Himidi had
abandoned his post, watching for pursuers from the south, now
that everyone else had gotten into position. He settled into a new
spot of his own, behind everyone else, facing north into the forest
behind them and scanning restlessly for any sign of the men trying
to circle around to close the trap. Jathmar spotted chan Hagrahyl
at the center of their little group, hunkered down in an angle where
two tree trunks had fallen against one another as they crashed
down.
Braiheri Futhai had crawled as
far as possible from the expected line of fire, hiding in visible
terror and doing nothing to prepare for self-defense. Elevu Gitel
had hunkered down between Jathmar and chan Hagrahyl. The
geologist was loading his rifle in grim silence, and glancing in the
other direction, Jathmar found Barris Kasell less than a yard
beyond Rilthan.
Try as he might, he couldn't see
the others, which he took as a good sign. They settled in, uneasy,
on edge—waiting in a classic ambush position to see what
their pursuers would do.
Shevan Garlath had never seen a
likelier spot for an ambush.
He stared, mesmerized, at the
jumble of timber a tornado must have toppled in some relatively
recent storm. The entire clearing was a twisted mass of jagged,
broken wood, tree trunks, and branches that jutted out like the
sharp stakes of a basilisk trap.
And he had to search it.
Had to go out there, into that
deadly maze, and search it.
There was no question that their
quarry had gone into it. The trail was clear to see—even he
could follow it without difficulty—and the birdcall signals
from the Scouts who'd worked their way around to the other side
indicated that they hadn't come back out again. But the question
was why they'd stopped
here . . . and what they intended to do
next.
And of all the thousands of
soldiers spread out through this multi-universe, godsforsaken
transit chain it had to be him that drew the job of finding
out. Finding out if the murdering whoresons who'd killed
Osmuna—that lazy-assed, sleep-on-duty, worthless
piece of dragon-bait—planned on killing anybody else
today. Garlath cursed the dead man, wishing desperately that there
was a way to weasel out of this particular duty. If he'd dared, he
would have sent his point men in alone. Would have stayed back
here in the trees, where it was safe.
But Hundred fucking
Olderhan—the name and rank stuck in his craw like a
fishbone—was watching him. Watching, waiting with bated
breath for Garlath to screw up. Regs—and
tradition—were clear: a commander of fifty went out with
his platoon. He had to be right on top of the action, especially in
close terrain like this, to coordinate his troopers' movements and
respond instantly to any change in the situation.
Garlath cursed the Regs, cursed
the officers who'd written them, cursed the "follow-me" junior
officer tradition of the Andaran military, cursed the judge
advocates who'd established the punishments for failing to follow
Regs . . . and, with a passion and a
fervor which surprised even him, cursed Sir Jasak Olderhan for
ever having been born to make Garlath look so bad in comparison.
The Duke's Golden Brat could
do no wrong, he thought viciously. Fine, then. Garlath would just
have to do such an outstanding job on this operation that he'd
make Olderhan look sorry-assed inadequate for a change.
He ground his teeth together,
bitterly aware that it would take a miracle to do that, given
Olderhan's infernally good luck—not to mention his
fucking birthright. But there was nothing he could do about
that, either, and so he forced himself to stand there and listen
to the bastard's voice.
"Remember," Jasak said, making
his voice as calm and matter-of-fact as he could. "We want this
situation contained. We know they're in there somewhere,
and we need to make certain we don't lose any of them. But I want
this settled without shooting, if it's at all possible."
He looked at Garlath, trying to
will him to comprehend.
"Understand me, Fifty. We're
responsible for the lives of our own people, but our overriding
responsibility is to the Union. To preventing this from getting
any further out of hand. You and your men will not fire
unless and until you are attacked."
Garlath stared at him, face
sweaty and eyes wide. Jasak could almost literally feel the protest
just barely locked behind the other man's teeth.
"I understand your concern for
your men's safety," he said, his voice as soft and reasonable as he
could make it even as both of them knew whose safety Garlath
was truly concerned about, "and no officer likes giving an order
like that. But it's a direct order, and it will be obeyed, Fifty
Garlath. On the other hand, I'll understand if you feel unable to
order your men to obey my instructions under these
circumstances. If you do, I will relieve you without prejudice and
assume command of your platoon and responsibility for any
casualties it may suffer."
He felt Gadrial stiffen where she
stood beside Chief Sword Threbuch, but he kept his own gaze on
Garlath's, staring deep into the fifty's eyes, almost begging the man
to accept his offer. Jasak didn't feel any more eager than the next
man to wade out into that tangled, torn mass of timber, but he was
completely willing to offer Garlath a way out of the duty which
obviously terrified him.
Shevan Garlath
managed—somehow—not to glare back at the
officious, sanctimonious bastard in front of him. Relieve him
"without prejudice"! Oh, yes. Garlath believed that, didn't
he? If he declined the "honor" of walking out into that maze, his
career would be over. Whatever he might say now,
Olderhan's official report would slam him for "cowardice in the
face of the enemy," and his own request for relief would "prove"
the charge.
Which was a capital offense, if a
court-martial convicted.
Besides, he told himself, searching frantically for
something to bolster his own courage, he knows perfectly
well that whoever's actually in command when we finally make
contact with these bastards—however it comes
out—is going to be made for life. And if he has to
relieve me for "cowardice" to take over command, it'll only make
him look better!
"No, Sir," he grated. "It's my
platoon, my job. I'll do it."
Jasak swallowed a vicious, silent
curse as Garlath spurned the offer. But there was nothing he could
do about it. Whatever he might suspect, or even know, about
Garlath's terror, he had no overt evidence of cowardice, and
Garlath was right. It was his platoon, and under both
Union military law and the Andaran code of honor, Jasak had
to leave him in command unless he requested relief or openly
violated regulations or the articles of war.
"Very well, Fifty Garlath," he
said frostily. "You have your orders. Good luck."
Garlath clenched his jaw so
tightly it hurt all the way down his neck as he nodded to Gaythar
Harklan. The Second Squad shield nodded back, and started
forward, slowly and gingerly, with the squad's arbalestiers
deployed in a skirmish line.
Garlath followed behind them,
hands wet with sweat as he gripped his loaded arbalest. The squad
advanced slowly, painstakingly searching every twisted pile of
branches that offered a hiding place, and the fifty felt his heart
battering against his rib cage like a hammer.
Whoever these bastards were,
wherever they'd come from, they were not going to get the
drop on Shevan Garlath.
Shaylar watched the advancing
men from her hiding place through a screen of barren branches,
long since deprived of their leaves.
These men meant trouble. Big
trouble. They were dressed in military style uniforms, practical
and suited to an active life in rough country. Yet their appearance
was so incongruous, so odd, that it took a concentrated effort to
focus on them and what they were doing, rather than what they
wore and the anachronisms they carried.
Their bizarre, medieval weapons
made them look like play actors . . . until
you got a good look at their faces. Even at a distance of fifty
yards, it was clear the men behind those grim expressions were
capable of carrying out any kind of violence to which they might
set their hand. Shaylar hadn't grown up around soldiers, but she'd
seen a lot of them since joining the survey crews, and the tough air
of dangerous competence which surrounded these men left her
trembling.
Not even a rabbit could have
evaded their meticulous search. In fact, several didn't. Rabbits and
chipmunks darted into the open several times, running in panic as
men with swords—honest-to-goodness
swords—poked them into hiding places into which no
human being above the age of six months could possibly have
shoehorned himself.
Each animal that exploded out of
hiding tightened the thumbscrews on Shaylar's ragged nerves.
From the reactions of the soldiers, particularly the man behind
their advancing line, who seemed to be in charge, the strain was no
less acute on their side. On an immature, emotional level Shaylar
wanted to be glad these killers were afraid of them, but common
sense and a chilling voice at the base of her skull told her how
dangerous their fear could be.
Their advance narrowed the gap
steadily, bringing them within thirty yards of her hiding place.
They continued to search with methodical, terrifying
thoroughness. It was only a matter of time before one of those
grim faced men thrust a sharp steel blade through a pile of
branches and came sword-point-to-gun-muzzle with Shaylar or
one of her companions. She didn't dare move her head even to
look for Jathmar or Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl. She scarcely dared
to breathe. Surely it couldn't be much longer now!
The same thought must have
crossed chan Hagrahyl's mind. The nearest soldier was twenty
yards out, and chan Hagrahyl stood up.
Without his rifle. Without even a
handgun. He simply stood up, in the most stunning display
of pure, cold courage Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had ever seen in
her life.
"If you don't mind, that's far
enough," he said in a voice that sounded like someone talking to
his grandmother, not to a pack of armed strangers who'd already
murdered a friend of his.
He held his hands out in the
open, empty, nonthreatening, trying to show them he was no
danger. The men in the clearing whirled at the sound of his voice,
then froze where they stood, taking stock through wide eyes. They
stared from chan Hagrahyl's empty hands to his tense but pleasant
smile, and two or three of them turned uncertainly toward the
trees behind them, rather than towards the man Shaylar had
thought was in charge.
Then she realized that that man wasn't frozen in surprise.
The sound of a voice shouting
alien gibberish sent terror scalding through Garlath even as his
mind shrieked the word: Enemy! The jabbering stranger
thrust himself violently out of hiding, ready to strike with some
terrifying murder weapon, and the sorry-assed men of Second
Squad weren't even moving.
Terror fluttered at the back of
Garlath's throat, like a trapped basilisk, yet even as it strangled
him, a sudden wild exultation swept through him, as well.
I've got him! He's mine! Not Jasak Olderhan's, not anyone else's, but mine!
Visions of glory, of promotions
and the adoration of all of Arcana roared through him like
dragonfire, spreading to his fingertips and toes, and his arm came
up.
Jasak saw Garlath's arbalest
twitch as the stranger stood up, calling out in a friendly voice. He
saw the weapon start to swing up, start to track around towards
the voice.
"Hold fire!" he shouted. "
Hold fire, Fifty Garlath! Damn it, I said hold—"
Thwack!
The crossbow quarrel hit chan
Hagrahyl directly in the throat.
Shaylar screamed under
Jathmar's feet, echoing his own shock. Blood drenched the pile of
wood, spraying hot and terrible over chan Hagrahyl's hands as he
clawed at the shaft, choking on blood and steel. And then he was
falling backwards, against the pile of wood.
Jathmar snarled and threw his
rifle to his shoulder, but Barris Kasell beat him to the first shot.
The ex-soldier's rifle cracked like doomsday, and the bastard with
the crossbow staggered. Jathmar's shot slammed into him a sliver
of a second later, and then the entire survey crew opened up.
Sir Jasak Olderhan stared in
horror. Thunder shook the world. Crack after sharp, ear-splitting
crack tore the air, and he couldn't even see the weapons,
let alone the men using them. Puffs of smoke jetted from the
toppled timber here and there, and blood fountained from his
commander of fifty. The projectiles smashing into Garlath
exploded out of his back, ripping it open, turning him into so
much torn and shredded meat.
He went down, and before Jasak
could react to the stunning, horrifying response, Shield Harklan's
skirmish line returned fire. They brought their arbalests up,
shooting at the puffs of smoke which were the only targets they
could see, and then the entire clearing erupted.
Chapter Eight
Darcel Kinlafia was worried.
The initial message from
Shaylar—terse, shaken—had been to wild to believe,
too threatening to grasp with anything but cold horror, and yet too
vividly accurate to doubt. She'd sent him not only the message
from chan Hagrahyl, but also the images of herself splashing down
into the creek, watching Falsan die under her hands. Darcel had
felt everything she'd felt, and he wanted to do murder. He
wanted his hands around the throat of whoever had killed Falsan
and put Shaylar through something so horrifying.
Worst of all, there was
absolutely nothing Darcel could do to help. Even if Company-
Captain Halifu emptied the entire half-built fort and set out
now, Shaylar and Jathmar, Barris and Ghartoun—all of
the people who'd become his family over the past several years
were simply too far away.
And so he paced his solitary
camp, not wanting even the company of Halifu's soldiers, since
anyone's presence would rub him raw, like sand in a open wound.
My fault, he thought bitterly, even though he
knew—in his saner moments—that it was a lie. He
wasn't responsible for whatever was happening out there, but he
was the one who'd sent them to meet it, because Darcel Kinlafia
wasn't just a Voice; he was also a Portal Hound.
That wasn't the technical name
for his secondary Talent, but it was the one everyone associated
with the Portal Authority used. No one had yet found a way to
actually detect and pinpoint the locations of portals, but a Hound
had a special affinity to whatever disturbance in the fabric of
creation brought them into existence. No Hound could reliably
quantify what he sensed, he couldn't pluck distances and
classifications out of thin air, and yet Darcel simply "knew" the
compass bearing to the nearest portal. He had absolutely no way
of knowing how far away it might be, but he knew which way to
go to find the closest one.
Well, that wasn't entirely correct.
A larger portal might appear to be closer than a smaller
one which was actually much nearer to a Hound's physical
location. But the Hounds, who were even rarer than Mappers of
Jathmar's strength, were utterly invaluable to any exploration
team.
It was Darcel who'd found the
immense portal which had first admitted them to this universe. It
was Darcel who'd realized that they'd stumbled upon yet another
lobe of the cluster which had brought them here.
And it was Darcel Kinlafia
who'd sent his dearest friends towards the nearest/strongest portal
he'd been able to "scent" . . . and
directly into the horror which had been awaiting Falsan.
Stop that! he snapped at himself. Ghartoun's one of
the most experienced people in the game. He knows how
to handle himself and a crew. They'll be all right.
Surely they'll be all right.
Shalana's mercy, please let them be all right.
He'd already relayed Shaylar's
message. Even now, it was rushing back along the transit chain,
Voice to Voice, portal to portal, universe to universe, through
dozens—hundreds—of telepathic Voices, all passing
along the frantic message.
Warn the homeworld!
The Portal Authority wasn't
designed to meet this kind of emergency. Oh, the notion had been
bandied about, but not seriously. Not in the eighty years mankind
had been exploring through the portals. There were—thank
all the gods—forts at every portal, and larger military bases
at central nodes, even this far out. But that was entirely to police
the homeworld's own portal traffic and to provide security for
settlers and survey crews threatened by bandits. The possibility of
something like this had been only a theoretical one, and
one which had become increasingly less likely seeming as
exploration spread further and further outward with absolutely no
sign of any other human civilization.
When Shaylar's warning had
come in, he'd gone back through the portal to relay, then found
Company-Captain Halifu and delivered the disturbing message to
him in person. Grafin Halifu had dispatched Platoon-Captain
Hulmok Arthag and half his cavalry platoon—the only one
assigned to him—to find the civilian crew and escort them
safely back, if they could only make rendezvous with one another
in time.
Darcel had asked—almost
begged—for permission to accompany that platoon, but
Halifu had denied it. And rightfully so, Darcel admitted, however
grudgingly. He was the only Voice Halifu had. If anything
happened to him, Halifu would have no one to relay his own
reports further up the chain.
And so, Darcel could only stay
here, pacing, worrying, wondering if Arthag and his men would
reach Shaylar and the rest of his family in time. But that, he knew,
was up to the unknown adversary, to the faceless person or
persons who'd killed poor Falsan. Blood had already been shed,
but surely it wouldn't come to open warfare? Only madmen would
want to provoke that kind of—
We're under attack!
The scream was a knife, tearing
into his brain.
Then the connection deepened,
and the images thundered like a runaway freight train into his
shocked senses. He staggered, actually went to his knees. Men in
uniforms were shooting at him—shooting with
crossbows. A quarrel thudded into thick wood two feet from
his head. Gunfire cracked everywhere. Men screamed. A hail of
bullets mowed down the uniformed soldiers standing out in the
open. Only one of them survived long enough to drop and
disappear in the tangled timber about him, and Darcel gasped as
his gaze swung to another pile of shattered trees.
Ghartoun!
Dead, sprawled obscenely across
a tangle of broken branches. Sightless eyes widened shocked, face
twisted in pain and terror.
"Reload!" Boris Kasell was
shouting from somewhere just to his right. "There's more of them
back in the trees, trying to work around! Rilthan, watch our flank!"
"Shaylar." It was Jathmar, his
voice choked with fright. "Shaylar—are you all right?"
"Yes. Yes, I'm—Here
they come!"
Three men appeared,
carrying . . . something. A strange
object, perhaps four feet long and two or three inches in diameter,
made out of what looked like glass. No, not glass. Rock crystal? It
didn't seem to be either, but it certainly wasn't metal, and—
Crossbow fire screamed out of
the woodline to their right. Somebody shrieked in agony behind
him. Darcel—or Shaylar, if there was a difference—
jerked around and saw Braiheri Futhai writhing on the ground. A
steel shaft protruding from his chest, high and to the right. Blood
was pooling, foaming on his lips, and—
Flame erupted from nowhere at
all.
A huge, incandescent fireball
ripped into the toppled trees. Smoke blinded him. Someone else
was screaming.
"Shoot the gunners!"
It was Barris, shouting through
the smoke and confusion, and Darcel's eyes whipped back to the
men with the not-crystal tube. It was mounted on a tripod, now,
pointed in their direction, like some sort of weird fieldgun.
"Shoot the gunners!"
Barris bellowed again.
Darcel felt his hands move as
Shaylar snatched up the rifle. It shook wildly.
Steady! he told the portion of his mind that was Shaylar. Better . . . Yes, much
better . . . Brace
it . . . That's right. Sight
picture—front sight—center it—NOW!
The rifle kicked, the bullet
cracked, and one of the enemy gunners jerked, screamed, and went
to one knee.
Again!
Others were shooting, too,
picking off the gunners steadily.
"They're coming in from the
right!" Elevu Gitel shouted, and Jathmar spat curses above
Darcel's head and twisted around, shooting at the fresh
crossbowmen coming in along their vulnerable flank. Two men
went
down . . . three . .
.
"How many of them are
there?" the Mapper gasped. A quarrel thwacked wood two inches
from his cheek, buried in the tree trunk he crouched behind.
"Bastards!"
He fired at them again, cursed,
and ducked down to reload, shoving the cartridges into the loading
gate while all the universe roared and screamed madly about him.
Another fireball erupted from
somewhere. Dried leaves and twigs burst into flame. Someone
was screaming—high and mindless, on and on.
"Where's it coming
from?" Jathmar demanded hoarsely.
There were two of the not-
artillery things out there now, and the original one had acquired a
new crew. The other was fifty yards from the first one, identical to
it. And pointed almost dead at Darcel. It started to glow,
like eldritch fire, or the northern lights at midwinter, and—
Flame was everywhere.
Darcel flung himself to the
ground. Heat seared its way past, just above his back. He didn't
dare breathe. He squeezed both eyes shut. Heard ghastly howls that
belonged to human beings in mortal
agony. . . .
Blessed cool air rushed in. He
gulped down, coughed on smoke and the acrid stench of burnt
wood and what smelled sickeningly like roasting meat. The tree
trunk above him was smoking, bark blasted off in places.
"What the fuck was
that?" It was Jathmar's voice. Thick, terrified.
"DOWN!" Shaylar
screamed.
Another fireball ripped across
them. Someone was still shooting. Cursing monotonously and
shooting, mindless with terrible rage. Darcel grabbed for the rifle
he'd dropped, shouted at Shaylar's stunned mind.
They're coming in a mass! Shoot!
Infantry erupted across the
smoldering wreckage of the clearing. Fifteen, maybe twenty of
them. Shaylar snatched the rifle to her shoulder, pulled the trigger.
Worked the lever, took another
shot . . . worked the
lever . . . took another shot.
They fired the rifle dry, and the
bastards were still coming. No time to reload. Darcel weget. nt for
Shaylar's Polshana, but it was Shaylar who acquired the first
tarShe brought the gun up two-handed, centered a charging
soldier, squeezed the double-action trigger. The man staggered,
clutched at his chest, and then his face exploded as their second
hollow-nosed slug hit him squarely in the forehead and she shot
him down like carrion.
Rilthan wreaked havoc on the
center of the charging line. Each time his rifle cracked, a soldier
screamed and sprawled in the debris, leaving a widening gap in the
middle of their line. Shaylar tracked to the side, acquiring a target
at the right hand end of the charge and firing, again and again, as
she worked her way inward, and Darcel knew their revolver was
almost empty.
The charge wavered. Halted.
Broke apart. Shaken soldiers ran back into the cover of the trees,
and someone was shouting orders from back there. More men
were moving into position. Gods—how many of them
were there?
Reload! Darcel shrieked at Shaylar through their
connected minds. Reload!
Shaylar swung out the
Polshana's cylinder, tipped it up, hit the ejection rod. Empty cases
fell glittering to the leaves, and her left hand steadied the cylinder
as her right snatched the speedloader from her pocket. The fresh
rounds slid into the cylinder, perfectly aligned despite her choking
terror, and she twisted the speedloader's release knob and dropped
it, even as her left hand snapped the cylinder back into place. Then
she reholstered the revolver and reached for the ammunition box
ready at her elbow. Reloaded the rifle with hands which had
steadied down to a mind-numbed, rote-smooth motion. Cartridge
in, press it down, next cartridge in, press it down—
Darcel caught motion from the
corner of his eye. He slewed around, and Shaylar brought the rifle
with them, rising to a half-crouch and firing as a third
artillery crew laid in their fire mission.
"Jathmar! Down!"
Two blasts erupted from the
mouth of hell.
A fireball ripped through the
fallen trees again—and writhing through the incandescent
flames came a jagged streak of lightning. It slammed into Barris
Kasell, who was still shouting orders. For one horrifying second,
he twisted in midair, lit by blue actinic fire that burst from his very
skin.
Thunder struck. Fire crackled
everywhere. The entire world was ablaze. Then the cool air was
back again, and they gasped, shuddering fighting for breath.
Shaylar passed her rifle to
Jathmar to give him a backup weapon and fumbled for her pack.
She yanked it open and started dragging out her maps, her
notebooks—the records of every universe they'd mapped,
with the locations of every portal in the cluster they'd been
exploring, and—far worse—every portal between
here and Sharona itself.
She dragged them out, snatched a
branch from a blazing pile of deadwood, touched flame to each
and every map in her possession. Burned them to ash. Ripped out
notebook pages and fed them to the flames, as well. Rifles
cracked, men screamed horribly, and still she consigned pages to
the flames, destroying her work in a desperate bid to keep the
savage killers from overrunning every portal they could reach.
And even as she burned them, Darcel heard fewer and fewer rifles
still firing, knew his friends—his family—were
dying around her under the fury of those impossible, horrifying
balls of flame and bolts of lightning.
She set the final page aflame,
then tossed the leather binder and map case themselves into the
burning deadwood. Only a handful of rifles were still spitting
defiance, and she snatched out her Polshana again, turned back
towards her firing position.
And then it happened.
Jathmar had realized what she
was doing, and how important it was. He'd stood over her, firing
steadily, protecting her while she worked. But as she tossed the
final load into the flames, he jumped down to pull her back to a
safer spot . . . just as another fireball
struck. It caught his back, flung him against a fallen, crosswise
tree branch. His belly and chest struck hard, and he doubled up
around the wood, pinned for horrible seconds with flames
scorching his back.
His clothes ignited. Fire crisped
hair and skin.
"JATHMAR!"
This scream tore her throat.
Shaylar and Darcel were scrambling forward, trying to reach
Jathmar as he slid off a branch and fell to the ground. Lightning
branched and slammed inches away. The concussion of thunder
hurled them sideways. Their head struck something incredibly hard
with bone-crushing force—
Darcel exploded back into his
own body.
The air was clear. No smoke. No
screams. No dying men. The portal, silent as sunlight, stood thirty
yards to his left as he lay sprawled across the ground. Psychic
shock held him immobile for long, soul-shaking moments. He
heard distant voices shouting and saw someone running toward
him from the far side of the portal, where a slow but steady rain
was falling. Darcel shoved himself into a sitting position, groped
for a rifle that wasn't there. Then he realized who it was running
toward him. Grafin Halifu, himself. Commander of the new fort
that was only three hundred yards from where Darcel lay sprawled,
stunned, in the sunlight.
"What's wrong?" Halifu
demanded, his own rifle in his hand as he closed the last ten yards.
"You started shouting something about soldiers in the woodline!"
Darcel lifted unsteady hands,
scrubbed his face, tried to reorient himself.
"Attack," he managed to say in a
wheezing groan. "Our crew's under attack. Infantry, artillery
fire—"
"What?" Halifu's face washed white with shock.
"I was linked with Shaylar."
Darcel shut his eyes. "Oh, gods—Shaylar!"
He tried to contact her, tried
frantically to get through. But he found only deathly cold silence.
"She's not—" Halifu's
horror-choked voice broke off, unwilling—or
unable—to complete the question.
"I don't know." Darcel was
shaking, unable to control the runaway tremors. "We were hit by
an artillery blast of some kind. Thrown by the concussion. Hit our
head on something."
He wrapped his arms about
himself, gulped down air.
"Ghartoun's dead. So are Barris
Kasell and Braiheri Futhai. Elevu Gitel. And if Jathmar's still
alive—oh, gods, the burns were horrible—"
He realized he was rocking back
and forth only when someone else's arm around his shoulders
steadied him and Halifu pressed something metallic against his
chattering teeth.
"Drink!"
Darcel gulped, choked, wheezed
as the whiskey went down. His eyes
smarted . . . but his whirling senses
steadied.
"Thanks," he whispered as the
world stopped looping around him.
More people were arriving from
the fort, armed for battle and staring a little wildly at the trees
around Darcel's camp. Company-Captain Halifu got a second deep
gulp of whiskey into him, then waited until the worst of the shakes
had eased up.
"Can you give me a report
now?" he asked quietly.
Darcel couldn't look into the
officer's worried eyes. He knew if he did, he wouldn't be able to
speak at all. So he stared at the ground instead and started to talk.
He rambled, his voice unsteady
and hoarse, trying to convey the horror, the terrifyingly alien
attack, the inexplicable weapons that had sent death crashing
across the terrified, outnumbered survey crew. Most of them were
civilians, totally unprepared to deal with something as
brutal as an all-out attack by trained troops.
Darcel realized he'd finished
talking when Company-Captain Halifu ripped out a hideous oath.
He clenched his jaws so tightly his teeth creaked, still sitting on
the ground.
"Stinking bastards!"
Halifu snarled. "I may be supposed to have a company here, but all
I've got is two understrength platoons, less than a hundred and
fifty men, and Platoon-Captain Arthag's cavalry detachment. And
he's riding straight into a trap with half of his men right
fucking now! I can't possibly meet an attack by weapons like
that—not without reinforcements—and we're over
five thousand miles from the nearest railhead! The column from
Fort Salby's due any day, but how close it is yet is anyone's guess."
The fort's commander made
himself stop, draw a deep breath. He stepped back from his rage
and fear and shook his head.
"Armsman chan Therson!"
"Sir!"
Chief-Armsman Dunyar chan
Therson, Bronze Company's senior noncom, snapped to attention.
"Get Bantha. Tell him we need
to get a dispatch to Petty Captain Arthag at once. He's to
stop where he is and hold position."
"Yes, Sir!" Therson said.
"Then find Petty Captain chan
Shermayr. His infantry's going to have to assume full
responsibility for our security here; I want the rest of Arthag's men
in the saddle and moving up to reinforce him inside the next five
minutes. See to it that Arthag knows they're coming and that he's
not to move another yard until the rest of the rescue party catches
up with him."
"Rescue party?" Darcel
choked out. "What's the fucking point?"
Company-Captain Halifu went
white again.
"Surely there must be some
survivors," he said hoarsely.
Darcel never knew what showed
on his face, but suddenly Halifu was crouched in front of him,
gripping his shoulders with bruising force.
"Don't give up yet," the
Uromathian said in a voice full of gravel and steel grit. "I'm sure as hell not giving up, not until we've seen proof. If I
were the Commander of that military force, I'd want
survivors, someone I could question—"
Darcel flinched, and Halifu bit
his lip.
"I'm sorry, Darcel. I know they're
friends, almost family."
"Shaylar," Darcel groaned,
closing his eyes and despair. He was half in love with her himself.
He'd treated her like a kid sister, mostly to convince his heart it
didn't actually feel what it stubbornly insisted it felt. Oh, yes, he'd
loved Shaylar, just as he'd loved Jathmar for treating her like a
queen, as well as a beloved spouse and professional partner.
Shaylar, he whispered into the dead silence of his broken
telepathic link. Wake up, please. Please, Shay!
But her voice remained lost in a
black nothingness at the center of his soul, and Darcel slowly
lifted his head. He came to his feet, scrubbed at wet eyes while the
others scuffed tufts of grass with their boots and dug divots out of
the ground rather than embarrass him by noticing the tears.
"Company-Captain Halifu," he
said in a voice of steel-sharp hatred. "I believe you said something
about needing reinforcements?"
Halifu met his gaze
levelly—met and held it. Then he nodded.
"Yes, I did. If you'd be so kind as
to transmit a message for me, requesting them we'll get started on
that rescue mission."
"Compose your message, Sir,"
Darcel said very, very softly. "I'll be waiting when you're ready to
send it."
He turned away than, without
another word, and started breaking out the ammunition boxes in
his gear.
Chapter Nine
"Cease fire! Cease fire!"
Jasak plowed into the nearest
infantry-dragon's crew. He caught the closer assistant gunner by
the collar and heaved him bodily away from the weapon. The
gunner didn't even seem to
notice . . . until Jasak kicked him
solidly in the chest.
"Cease fire,
godsdamn you!"
The gunner toppled over with an
absolutely astonished expression. For just an instant, he didn't
quite seem to understand what happened. Then his expression
changed from confusion to horrified understanding, and he shook
himself visibly.
Two of First Platoon's four
dragons were still firing, blasting round after round into the tangle
of fallen timber. There hadn't been a single return shot in well over
a minute, but the gunners didn't even seem to realize it. They were
submerged in a battle frenzy, too enraged by the slaughter of their
fellow troopers—and too terrified by the enemy's
devastating weapons—to think about things like that.
"Graholis seize you, cease
fire!" Jasak bellowed, charging into a second dragon's crew
while Chief Sword Threbuch waded into the third.
The fourth dragon hadn't fired in
some time; its entire crew, and six other troopers who'd taken their
places, were sprawled around it, dead or wounded.
Threbuch tossed the last
operable dragon's gunner into a tangle of blackberry bushes at the
clearing's edge just as a final lightning bolt sizzled from the focus
point and slammed into a fallen tree trunk. Bark flew, smoke
billowed up with the concussive sound of thunder, and then the
discharge fizzled out.
Silence, alien and strange, roared
in Jasak's ears.
He stood panting for breath, his
pulse kicking at the insides of his eardrums like a frantic
drumbeat. He made himself stand there, fighting his shakes under
control, then dragged his sleeve across his face to clear his eyes of
sweat and grime. Only then did he make himself look, make
himself count the bodies.
His men lay sprawled like gutted
marionettes across ground that was splashed with far too much
blood. There were bodies everywhere, too many of them
motionless, not even moaning, and his stomach clenched in the
agony only a commanding officer could know.
Graholis' balls. Half his entire platoon was down out
there. Half!
"You're bleeding, Sir."
The quiet, steady voice punched
through his numb horror. Shocked, he slewed around to find his
chief sword tearing open a medical kit.
"What?"
"You're bleeding, Sir. Let's have
a look."
"Fuck that!" Jasak snapped. "It
can't be more than a scratch. We've got to search for the
wounded—all the wounded. Theirs as well as
ours."
"So order a search. But you're
still bleeding, and I'm still going to do something about that."
"I'm not—"
"Do I have to knock you down
and sit on you, Hundred?" Otwal Threbuch snarled so
harshly Jasak stared at him in total shock.
"You're our only surviving
officer Sir," Threbuch's voice was like harsh iron, fresh from the
furnace, "and you will damned well hold still until I find
out why there's blood dripping off your scalp and pouring down
your side!"
Jasak closed his mouth. He
hadn't realized he was bleeding quite that badly, and he made
himself sit quietly while the chief sword swabbed at the scalp cut
he hadn't even felt. Worse was the furrow that something
had plowed through the flesh along the edge of his ribs. Whatever
it was, it had barely grazed him, but it had left a long, stinging
wound in his side, ripped his uniform savagely, and left an
impressive bloodstain that had poured down over his side.
Another few inches inward, and it would have gone straight
through a lung, or even his heart.
Jasak gritted his teeth, directing
his surviving noncoms—there weren't many—to
search for the wounded while Threbuch applied a field dressing.
The instant the chief sword finished, Jasak strode out into the
clearing, checking on his own wounded as he headed for his real
objective: the enemy.
Some of his men had already
reached them.
"We've got a survivor, Sir!"
Evarl Harnak called out. "He's in bad shape."
Jasak hurried over to Garlath's
platoon sword wondering what miracle had brought the sword
through alive, since Harnak had led the charge the other side's
weapons had torn apart. It was hard to believe that any of
those troopers could have survived, Jasak thought bitterly. And
that, too, was his fault—he'd been the one who'd thought
the dragons had suppressed the enemy's fire.
He climbed through a tangle of
fallen tree limbs and hunkered down beside Harnak. The sword
was kneeling beside a man whose entire left side was badly
burned. He'd taken a crossbow bolt through the belly, too, doing
untold and probably lethal damage, even without the burns and the
inevitable severe shock.
He was breathing, but just
barely. It was a genuine mercy that he was unconscious, and Jasak
was torn by conflicting emotions, conflicting duties and priorities.
This whole disaster was his fault, which meant this man's
brutal injuries were his fault. He reached for the wounded man's
unburnt wrist and found the pulse. It was faint, thready, failing
fast. Helpless to do anything else, he watched the stranger die.
"More survivors, Sir!" another
shout rang across the smoke-filled clearing. "Oh, gods! One of
them's a woman!"
Jasak ran, sickness twisting in
his gut. He cursed the debris in his way, fighting to find a path
through it, then flinging himself down, crawling under a fallen
tree trunk to reach them. There were four survivors, fairly close
together. Three had been burned badly; the fourth was scorched,
but the infantry-dragon's breath had barely brushed her, thank
Graholis.
She was unconscious. One slim
hand was still wrapped around a weapon that was the most alien
thing Jasak had ever seen. Drying blood caked the hair on the right
side of her head, and a ghastly bruise was already swelling along
that side of her face. A nasty lump ran from her temple to the back
of her head.
"She must've been thrown
against the tree trunk," he said, turning his head, eyes narrowed.
Yes, there was hair and blood
caught in the rough bark, and it took all of Sir Jasak Olderhan's
discipline not to slam his bare fist into the bark beside them. His
only medic was dead—had been shot down, trying to reach
wounded dragon gunners—and at least three of these
people were so badly hurt they probably wouldn't have survived
even with a medic.
"I need Magister Kelbryan," he
barked over his shoulder, turning back to the savagely wounded
survivors. "Now, damn it!"
Somebody ran, shouting for
Gadrial, and Jasak bent over the unknown woman. Her pulse was
slow under his fingers, but it was steady, strong, thank the gods.
She was tiny, even smaller than Gadrial, with a beautiful, delicate
face. She looked like a fragile glass doll lying crumpled in the
ruins, and Jasak's heart twisted as he raged at Garlath and even at
this woman's companions for coming here, for killing Osmuna
and starting this whole disaster. And worst of all, for bringing this
lovely girl into the middle of the killing his men—and
hers—had unleashed in this clearing.
He'd kept Gadrial back at the
very edge of their own formation, flat in a shallow ravine where
she—and the men he'd assigned specifically to guard
her—were out of the line of fire. Why the hell
hadn't these men done the same?
Because, the stubborn back of his mind whispered in self-
loathing and disgust, you left them no choice, circling around
them to cut off their escape. . . .
Someone came crashing toward
him through the underbrush, and he lifted his gaze to see Gadrial
running recklessly through the tangled wood, past dead soldiers
and smoking rubble.
"Where?" she gasped, and Jasak
reached out and lifted her across the five-foot fallen trunk as if
she'd been a child. He set her down beside the wounded, and her
breath choked on a sound of horror.
All three of the male survivors
were burned. Two had been caught facing the fireball when the
dragon's breath detonated amongst them, and their crisped skin and
the stench of their burnt flesh twisted Jasak's stomach all over
again. The third man had been facing away, or at least partially
away, leaving him burned across the back. His shirt was a tattered
wreck of blackened cloth. He'd been slammed into a jutting limb
and fallen sideways, landing on one shoulder before sprawling
across the ground, and broken ribs were visible through the
tattered shirt.
"Rahil," Gadrial whispered.
Jasak looked at her, saw her eyes, and flinched inwardly.
"Can you save them?" he asked,
his voice hoarse. "Can you save any of them?"
She swallowed hard and nerved
herself to test the pulse of the nearest burn victim. He was semi-
conscious, and a hideous, gurgling scream ripped loose as his arm
shifted. Gadrial whimpered, but she didn't let go.
"Rahil's mercy," she breathed,
then forced herself to inhaled deeply. "The others?"
Jasak led her to them. She tested
their pulses in turn, her eyes closed, whispering under her breath.
Power stirred about her, gripping hard enough to twist Jasak with
a sharper nausea.
"It's bad—Heavenly Lady,
it's bad. I can't save them all. I'm sorry. I might—I can
probably keep one of them alive.
Maybe . . . "
She stood, staring down at them,
and Jasak felt her inner, helpless horror as she realized the hideous
choice which lay before her. He started to open his mouth, to
tell her which to try to save, to take the burden of that choice
from her. It was both his responsibility and all he could offer her,
but before he could speak, her shoulders twitched suddenly.
"Look!" She pointed at the
woman's wrist, and Jasak frowned. The tiny, unconscious stranger
wore a bracelet—a cuff of flexible metal that looked like
woven gold. He'd already noticed that, but Gadrial was pointing at
one of the wounded men, as well. He wore a matching cuff.
"That one," the magister said.
"I'll—"
Her voice broke as she turned
away from the others, the two who would die. The two she must
let die.
She knelt beside the man with
the wrist cuff. He was broken, as well as burned. The savagery of
his wounds bled back through her hands, carried by her minor
healing Gift, and she moaned involuntarily in the face of so much
pain, so much damage. . . .
She closed her eyes, rested her
hands carefully on his chest, and summoned the power of her Gift.
Whispered words poured from her lips, helping her shape and
direct the energy she plucked from the air about her. That energy
was everywhere, a vast, unseen, seething sea that rolled and
thundered like a storm-swept tide. It poured out of the emptiness
between mortal thoughts and the power of God and scorched
down her arms, out through her hands into the injured man. It was
enormous, that sea of energy, an unimaginable, infinite boil of
power flying loose and wild for anyone with the Gift strong
enough to touch and take it.
But Gadrial's healing Gift was
only a minor arcana. She could take only a little, only a sliver of
the power someone with a major healing Gift could have taken,
and even that small an amount had a price.
"He's . . .
stabilized . . ." she managed to whisper, and
the smoke-filled clearing looped and whirled around her.
Someone caught her shoulders,
steadied her, and she leaned against a shoulder that took her
weight effortlessly.
She needed that support—
badly—as voices swam in and out of focus. The universe
seemed to dip and swerve, curtsying like a ship in a heavy sea, and
the start of a brutal headache throbbed somewhere behind her eyes.
Gift shock, her trained mind told her through the chaos.
The strain of someone pushing a Gift far beyond its safe limits. It
had been a long time since she'd felt it, and she wandered through
seconds and minutes which stretched and contracted wierdly as
she tied to find her way through the chaos of the backlash.
It took what seemed a very long
time, but then her senses finally cleared, and she realized she was
sitting propped against Sir Jasak Olderhan himself. His arm was
about her, holding her there, while he issued a steady stream of
orders.
"—and when that's done,
Chief Sword, I want you to take one man and confirm that class
eight portal. I want to finish that, at least, whatever else we do. I
hate to give you up, but I want my best man in charge out there.
Just be damned careful. We didn't—I
didn't—mean to massacre these people, and I don't
want anyone shooting at anyone else. Is that clear?"
"Very clear, Sir."
"Good. Just tiptoe in and tiptoe
out, do whatever it takes to avoid further contact. Any questions?"
"No, Sir."
"Move out, then. The sooner you
go, the likelier you are to get there and back before anyone realizes
these people aren't coming home."
Jasak's voice went bleak and
grim on the final few words. He could only hope the other side
hadn't sent a runner ahead with a message. If they
had . . .
"Keep your eyes open, Chief
Sword, but don't dawdle. If they've dispatched a runner, I want
him—alive and unharmed."
"Yes, Sir."
Threbuch saluted and turned
away. Jasak watched him go, then noticed that Gadrial was
watching him.
"Feeling better?" he asked
quietly, moving the arm which had held her upright, and she
nodded and sat up.
"Yes. Thanks." Her voice was
hoarse, but it didn't quiver. "What we do now?"
Jasak glanced at the still-
unconscious woman and the man Gadrial had pulled back from
the brink.
"We have to get them back to the
swamp portal before we can airlift them out. We can't get a dragon
here in time. The nearest is at the coast, seven hundred miles from
our entry portal. First it'd have to get there, then fly cross-country
to meet us, and once it touched down out here—" he
pointed at the clearing "—it wouldn't be able to take off
again. Not enough wing room to get airborne fast enough to clear
the trees. A battle dragon might be different—they're
smaller, faster. They can dive, strike, and lift off again in a much
smaller space. But transport dragons need a lot of wing room."
He sounded so calm, so
controlled, Gadrial thought. Except for the fact that that calm
controlled voice of his was telling her things he knew perfectly
well she already knew.
"What about clearing a landing
zone?" she asked. "Could you burn down some of the trees with
the infantry-dragons?"
Jasak shook his head and
gestured at the scorched trunks the enemy had found shelter
among. They were smoldering, badly scorched, but mostly intact.
"Look for yourself. A dragon is
designed to burn people," he said bitterly, "not to knock down
trees. We do have some incendiary charges that could bring down
even a tree that size," he nodded towards a towering giant, six feet
thick at the base, "but not enough to clear a landing field long
enough for a dragon to take off again. We'd need ten times as
many as we've got to do that.
"We're Scouts, Magister
Kelbryan, not heavy-combat engineers. No. The only hope is to get
the wounded back to the swamp portal, or at least to someplace
with enough open space for a transport dragon to take off, as well
as land." Jasak glanced at the man Gadrial had saved. "Can he be moved? Without jeopardizing his life?"
"I don't know." She ran a weary
hand through her hair while she struggled to focus her thoughts.
"Probably. I'll know more when I touch him again. He shouldn't be
moved right away, though. We'll have to get them out of this, I
know." She motioned at the smoldering wreckage surrounding
them. "But not far—not yet. Even the little I've done so far
will have exhausted him."
Jasak nodded somberly. He'd
seen what saving the man had done to Gadrial, and the healing Gift
drew deeply upon the reserves of the injured person, as well.
"We can do that," he said. "And
he'll have at least a little while to stabilize before we can pull out.
We have a few things to do that will take some time."
He looked out across the open
ground where so many of his men—good men, among the
best in the Andaran Scouts—had died because of one man's
colossal stupidity. And because of another man's even greater
stupidity in not relieving a dangerous, incompetent fool of
command, whatever regulations and the articles of war said.
Gadrial turned her head,
following his gaze, and her eyes were dark.
"What will you do with them?"
she asked softly.
"The same thing the Chief Sword
did for Osmuna." Jasak had to clamp his jaw tighter for a moment.
"Field rites," he said then, and
looked down at her. She looked back, her expression puzzled, and
his lips tightened. "I take it you've never seen them?" he said
almost harshly.
Gadrial shook her head. The only
thing she knew about "field rites" was that military commanders
were sometimes forced by necessity to abandon their dead.
Procedures had been developed for just that sort of emergency,
but that was all she knew about it. She thought he might explain,
but he didn't. Instead, he turned to Platoon Sword Harnak, his
senior noncom now that he'd sent Otwal Threbuch away, and
indicated the other two wounded men with a gentle, curiously
vulnerable wave of his hand.
"Have someone stay with these
men until . . . until they're not
needed, Sword. No man should die alone."
Harnak nodded grimly, and Jasak
inhaled and nodded at the girl and the man Gadrial had saved.
"I want these two moved
out of this hellish pile of timber. But for pity's own sake, take care
with him. He's got to survive, Harnak."
Gadrial realized there was more
to Jasak's almost desperate insistence than any mere intelligence
value living prisoners might represent. Jasak Olderhand was a
soldier, but no murderer, Gadrial realized, and even she
recognized that these people hadn't stood a chance once his
support weapons opened fire on them. Now she felt his granite
determination to snatch at least some of them back from the jaws
of death . . . whatever it took.
"Yes, Sir." Harnak's
acknowleding salute, like his voice, was subdued. Exhausted.
Gadrial knew how the sword
felt. She watched Jasak smooth a tendril of long, dark hair away
from the unconscious woman's face. His fingertips were so gentle,
so tender, Gadrial felt tears prickle at the corners of her eyes.
"I'm sorry," she thought she
heard him whisper, but it might have been only the wind. Then he
pulled himself together and got busy organizing his surviving
troopers for the farewell they would soon bid to far too many
brave men.
And to one arrant coward, a small voice whispered deep
inside Gadrial Kelbryan. She looked at the wounded, the dying,
the dead, and knew it would be hard not to spit on Garlath's grave.
* * *
Shaylar didn't want to wake up.
She wanted to be dead. For long moments, she couldn't remember
why—she was just certain that whatever ghastly thing
waited for her was too terrible to bear living through. She
whimpered, wanting her mother. Wanting someone who could
hold her close and whisper that everything was all right. That
everything would be as it should, and not as it was, torn with
screams and flame, the sight of her beloved—
She jerked back from the
memory, but not in time. Pain—hot and terrible—
gripped her heart with savage, shredding claws.
Jathmar!
She tried to touch him through
the bond, but there was something wrong, dreadfully wrong,
inside her head. Pain throbbed relentlessly, leaving her dizzy and
sick. And, far worse, Voiceless. She couldn't Hear Jathmar, and
even though she tried, she couldn't Hear Darcel, either. There was
nothing but pain. Nothing else in the
universe . . .
Someone touched her.
She flinched violently,
whimpering again as fresh pain exploded through her. But the
touch returned, gentle, soothing her, drawing her back from the
crumbling edge of sanity. Reluctantly, she opened her eyes and
blinked in the dappled light streaming down through golden
treetops.
A woman knelt beside her. Not a
uniformed soldier—a woman, dressed much the way
Shaylar was, in sturdy and practical clothes. She was lovely, in the
delicate, porcelain way of Uromathian women, but Shaylar knew
this woman didn't come from Uromathia. Nor from anywhere else
Sharonians had ever set foot.
The stranger's dark eyes were
shadowed with grief and the lingering shock of having witnessed
something too horrible to face. There was strength in those eyes,
the strength of gentle compassion and something else Shaylar
couldn't quite define.
The not-Uromathian woman
moved slowly and carefully, as if she understood without words
that a rapid movement would send Shaylar skittering in terror. She
held up a canteen—despite its unfamiliar shape, it couldn't
be anything else—and poured carefully into a small metal
cup. A hand eased under Shaylar's head, lifted a little—
—and pain exploded
through her. A cry choked loose, and her hands dug into the
ground in spastic response. But she felt the other woman touch the
side of her head. She murmured something, so softly Shaylar
wasn't even sure she'd heard words at all, and then the pain in her
head eased a little. Shaylar opened her eyes and stared, wondering
what had just happened. She knew from experience what the touch
of a telempathic healer felt like, and this was nothing like
that.
Fear stirred uneasily once more,
despite the dampening down of the pain and nausea.
Whoever—and whatever—she was, the woman held
the cup to Shaylar's lips, and Shaylar drank deeply. The water felt
glorious to a throat made raw by screams and smoke.
Memory struck her down again.
Smoke. Flame. Jathmar burning in the center of the
fireball. She began to cry, helplessly, and the woman held her,
rocked her gently.
Shaylar's Talent roared wide
open. She couldn't hear thoughts; her wounded head throbbed
without mercy, and the language would have been wrong, in any
case. But the other woman's emotions spilled into her, hot as
peppered Ricathian whiskey, yet gentle and filled with sorrow and
compassion.
They didn't mean for this to happen.
She didn't know how she knew
it, but Shaylar knew. As certainly as if the woman had told
her, mind to mind, she knew . . . and
knew it was the truth. They hadn't meant for the fighting, the
death, to happen at all. Deep currents of someone else's emotions
washed over her: bitter regret, a sorrow so deep it ached, a sense
of helpless grief, smoldering anger at someone—a specific
person, somehow to blame for all the agony and destruction.
Shaylar felt it all, and with it came a bleak, terrible desolation all
her own.
Deep, wrenching sobs shook her,
and then the other woman was urging her to turn around. Was
speaking softly but urgently, pointing at something nearby. Shaylar
turned reluctantly, resisting the pressure, unwilling to face
whatever it was, but the not-Uromathian was gently, implacably
insistent, and Shaylar was too weak to resist.
And then her breath caught. He
lay beside her. His hair was singed; his shirt—what little
remained of it—was scorched; and her breath faltered at the
sight of the raw, oozing burns along his back. But his ribs were
lifting and falling, slowly, steadily.
"Jathmar!"
The shriek came from her soul,
and she tried to fling herself at him. But the other woman caught
her back, speaking urgently again. Her fear gradually seeped
through Shaylar's wild need to throw her arms about her husband
and protect him from further harm. The other woman had captured
Shaylar's face between her hands, was speaking in a frantic tone,
trying to make Shaylar understand something vitally important.
And then she did. Jathmar was
badly, desperately injured. He might yet die, and Shaylar stopped
struggling to reach him. The relief in the other woman was so
strong it caused the slender not-Uromathian to sag and gulp in air.
Then she released Shaylar, and watched as Shaylar ruffled
Jathmar's flame-damaged hair, brushed a fingertip across his
cheek.
Shaylar's eyes were wet. When
she looked up, so were the other woman's. They sat beside
Jathmar, both of them weeping, and somehow the worst of the
horror faded away. Whoever these people were, whatever ghastly
"mistake" had ended in such carnage, there were decent and caring
people among them.
Other sounds gradually
penetrated Shaylar's awareness. Voices—men's voices,
close by, sounding well organized, busy, and deeply grim. She
looked around, trying to find other survivors, and saw no one else
she knew. They were no longer in the clearing at all. Someone had
carried them under the trees, away from the toppled timber and the
scene of the massacre.
But some of that massacre's
slaughter had come with them. She, Jathmar, and the woman
trying to help them were surrounded by other men, men in torn
and bloody uniforms. Many of them were swathed in bandages.
Some lay motionless, faces waxen, hardly breathing. Others
moaned in pain, and Shaylar felt a sudden, shockingly vicious stab
of satisfaction as she saw the proof that her friends—her
family—had not gone easily into death.
There were two other people in
sight. Two more men in uniform, but these weren't wounded. They
stood less than two yards away, although they weren't watching
Shaylar, which both surprised and relieved her. She felt far too
fragile to be stared at by men who had, just minutes previously,
tried their best to murder.
Instead, they were staring into
the trees, their gazes sharp and alert. Sentries, Shaylar realized
abruptly, and bitterness choked her. They might as well have saved
themselves the effort standing guard. They'd already slaughtered
the only Sharonians and this universe, except Darcel Kinlafia, and
he was probably on his way back to the previous portal, taking
with him the horrifying last minutes they'd spent in linked
communication.
He probably thought she was
dead—that all of them were dead. They would be no rescue
attempt, unless she somehow found a way around the pain and the
fracture in her Talent that had left her Voiceless. Without that,
Darcel would have to believe they were dead, and Company-
Captain Halifu had too few men to risk confronting the these
people's terrible firepower just to recover a dozen dead bodies.
Her fragile self-control wavered,
threatened to break apart. She was alone, cut off from anyone who
could help her, awaiting only the gods knew what
fate . . . Then she thought of Jathmar
and his terrible injuries. He would need her even more desperately
than she would need him, she told herself fiercely, and felt fear
and the beginnings of hysteria recede. They were alive and
together, and Jathmar needed her. That was all that mattered.
She looked up dully as someone
walked across and stopped in front of her. He was tall and
ruggedly handsome, but his eyes were burnt holes, filled with the
afterimage of what he'd witnessed. There was a huge, invisible
weight on his shoulders, one she'd seen a handful of times in her
life. Most recently, it had rested on Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's
shoulders. It had been there when he decided they couldn't wait for
Jathmar. And again, when he stood up and faced armed men
without so much as a pocket knife in his hands.
He's their commander, she realized with a shock like
icewater. He was simply standing there, looking at her, and his
eyes held hers the way Ghartoun's had, pleading with her to
understand. To somehow refrain from hating him.
Jasak watched the play of
emotions across the tiny woman's face. They were as transparent
as glass, and his heart ached. He'd never felt so helpless in his
entire life, but there was literally nothing he could do to erase the
agony that lived behind her eyes. He didn't even dare to step closer;
he didn't want to see her flinch away from him.
He looked at Gadrial. She'd been
crying, but she wiped her face dry, waiting for him to say what
he'd come to tell her.
"Were ready to begin the field
rites," he said quietly. "If you'd rather not
watch . . ."
"I knew some of those men well
enough to grieve for them," she said, her own voice low but steady
as she stood.
"Field rites aren't for the faint of
heart."
"Not everyone has an Andaran
view of death." Her voice was as level as before, but it had
suddenly turned much cooler.
"No, not everyone does," he said,
holding her eyes steadily. "But there's been too much burning of
flesh already for anyone to relish witnessing more. That's what
field rites do, Gadrial. Cremation."
He'd heard the harsh burr in his
own voice, and her face changed. The cool aloofness vanished,
replaced by something almost like contrition.
"I'm sorry," she said. "I was
thoughtless and rude. They were your
men. . . . "
She looked away, but not before
he saw fresh tears glittering on her eyelashes. That nearly proved
his undoing, but she pulled herself back together and her eyes met
his once more.
"Thank you for letting me know
it was time," she said softly, and glanced down at the woman Jasak
had carried here. Then she looked back at him.
"If I were her, I'd want to know,"
she said, even more softly.
Jasak's soul flinched, but he
nodded, and Gadrial crouched beside the other woman, speaking
very softly. She urged the tiny, injured woman to her feet and
steadied her as her balance wavered. She was probably suffering
from a concussion, at the very least, Jasak thought bitterly, hoping
fervently that the blow hadn't fractured her skull.
Don't be stupid, he told himself sharply. Gadrial
wouldn't have let her stand up if there were broken bones
anywhere in her body.
Shaylar had to lean heavily on
the other woman, but she managed to take the few tottering steps
back to the open clearing. The smoke had dissipated, but the smell
lingered, and Shaylar swallowed nausea, certain she would carry
this stench to her grave. Then they reached the edge of the trees,
and her footsteps faltered. She would have fallen, if the other
woman hadn't been holding her so tightly.
She couldn't count the bodies.
They were too many of them, and the world was spinning again,
trying to drag her down into darkness. She fought off the vertigo
and the tremors, fought to regain control of her swimming senses.
Why had they brought her out here? Why did they wanted to see
the pitiful remains of the people she loved—and the foul
remains of the men who'd killed them? She wanted to scream at
them for make in her come out here and face this again.
What finally caught her attention
was the way the surviving soldiers were standing. They were
silent, helmets in hand, and then the tall man began to speak. His
voice was very quiet, and Shaylar finally realized what he was
doing. It was a eulogy—sacred rites for the dead.
And not just his own, she
noticed, forcing herself to look again. She saw the bodies of her
own companions, laid out with the same care they'd taken with
their own dead. Limbs had been straightened, hands crossed over
breasts, crossbow quarrels
removed . . .
Her crippled, frustratingly erratic
Talent was still functioning well enough to catch the emotions of
the woman she leaned against, and she winced as they flooded
through her. These people were nearly as devastated as she was,
with guilt added to the grief. They were trying to show proper
respect, according her people the same honors and rites as their
own. Someone was moving among the bodies, now, laying a small
object on each man's chest. Whatever the objects were, they were
placed with reverence and care. Rectangular and dense, they
caught the sunlight with the same odd, crystalline sheen as the
terrifying weapons which had hurled fire and lightning at them.
The last one was placed, and the
man who'd placed them returned to the edge of the clearing and
rejoined his companions. Their commander said something
further, then turned once again and looked at Shaylar, with
something terrifying and almost pleading in his eyes. He took
something from the pocket of his uniform blouse, looked at his
men, and spoke again.
His voice was harsh with
command, and every one of his men snapped to attention. Their
right hands struck their left shoulders in what was obviously a
salute, and they held it as the commander drew a quick breath, as if
for courage, and touched something on the object he taken from
his pocket.
Light flared, so bright Shaylar
had to look away, her eyes clenching shut in reflex. When she got
them open again, her entire body stiffened. The bodies laid so
carefully on the ground were burning.
She choked, tried to whirl away,
and lost her precarious balance. She was falling, dragging the
other woman with her. Someone was screaming mindlessly, and a
corner of her mind realized it was her. Strong hands caught her,
kept her from sprawling across the ground, and she fought like a
wildcat, striking out with her fists and nails, frantic to escape this
newest horror. She might as well have tried hitting a mountain.
The hands were strong, terrifyingly strong, yet strangely gentle,
and their owner was saying something in a voice filled with raw
pain.
And then her Talent betrayed her
once again.
His emotions battered her
bleeding senses with someone else's regret, so sharp it was like a
knife in her own heart. And that wasn't all. She felt his aching
desire to erase her suffering, and a bitter acknowledgment that his
attempt to show respect to her people had backfired hideously. He
would have done anything in that moment to ease her pain,
and she knew it. Knew it with the absolute certainty possible only
to a telepath.
It was the cruelest thing he could
have done to her. She needed an enemy to hate, and he gave her this—his bleeding heart and the agony of a man
whose every instinct was to protect and who knew, with a
certainty which matched her own, that he'd destroyed her very life,
instead.
Shaylar opened her eyes and
stared up into his, and then shuddered violently and went limp,
undone by that last realization.
Jasak stared helplessly at the
tiny, wounded figure slumped in his arms. He'd tried to show her
companions the same honor he'd paid his own fallen men. He'd
hoped—prayed—she could understand that there
were too many dead, too few living to carry them home again. Too
many for them to bury in earthen graves if they had any hope of
getting the wounded back to safety in time for it to do any good.
He
couldn't—wouldn't—leave any of them for the
buzzards and the carrion crows. Her companions had been as
human as his own men, and he was already beginning to suspect
that they hadn't been soldiers at all. They'd been civilians,
but they'd fought trained soldiers with a courage—and a
ferocity—any man of honor must respect. If anyone had
ever deserved proper treatment from their enemies, these men had.
But he should have realized what
those fiery bursts of light and flame would do to someone who'd
just seen all of her companions slaughtered in deadly explosions
of fire. Especially when there was no way for any of them to
explain to her what they were doing.
Jasak didn't know what to do.
No training manual, no officers' course, covered something like this, and he glanced up at Gadrial, hoping for enlightenment,
or even a simple suggestion. But he found her biting her lip, her
own face twisted with guilt and a sense of helplessness which
matched his own.
But then the slender woman he
held lifted her head. Her eyes were wet and wounded, reddened
from too many tears, but they studied him for a brief, dreadful
eternity. He was unaware he'd been holding his breath until she
turned that deadly gaze away, releasing him from the paralysis
which had gripped him, and looked out at the still fiercely blazing
funeral pyres.
She wrenched away from him
and stood watching the flames, her body swaying for balance, her
face ashen. When she started to speak, Jasak's pulse jumped in
shock. Her voice was a thin, fragile sound against the roar of
magic-induced flames. He couldn't know if she was invoking a
deity, or speaking a eulogy, or simply saying their names, but a
chill ran across his skin as he watched her face the flames and all
they meant.
Everyone else was staring at her,
as well, and several of his men shivered. Jasak wondered how
many of his men she'd killed. She'd still had a weapon in her hand
when they found her. Who was she? They didn't even know her
name, much less what she was, or why she was here, and the
totality of his ignorance appalled him.
She finished speaking at last and
closed her eyes. She stood silently for long moments, tears sliding
down her cheeks. Her face was bruised and swollen, blood had
dried in her hair, and the poignancy of her grief tore at his heart
like considers. She nearly crumpled when Gadrial wrapped an arm
around her shoulders, and Jasak started forward to capture. But
she caught herself, stiffened her knees, and stayed on her feet.
"Jathmar," she whispered
brokenly, and Jasak watched Gadrial guide her back into the trees
and help her sit down beside the man who wore the cuff that
matched hers.
Jasak watched for a moment
longer, then dragged his attention away and focused on the next
task at hand. Somehow, he had to transport his own wounded, a
woman with an obvious concussion, and a man so badly injured
he literally hovered at death's door, through almost twenty miles
of rough wilderness. And somehow, he had to figure out what
happened here, and how a handful of people had slaughtered Fifty
Garlath's command in such a tiny handful of minutes. First
Platoon had gone into the fight with fifty-six arbalestiers and
dragon gunners. Twenty-seven of them were dead, and another
nineteen were wounded, some of them critically.
With Threbuch and one other
trooper dispatched to find the other side's portal, he had fewer
uninjured men than he had wounded, even counting his six
engineers and the baggage handlers.
He didn't look forward to the
rest of the day.
Haliyar Narmayla struggled to
hold back tears as the carriage clattered through the cobbled
streets of New Ramath. The cavalry escort riding in front of her
cleared the way, giving her carriage absolute priority, and the port
master had already been alerted to expect her arrival. The dispatch
boat was undoubtedly raising steam even as the well-sprung,
rubber-tired carriage swayed and vibrated over the cobbles.
It was impossible to see much,
or would have been, if she'd had the heart to look out the window
in the first place. New Ramath was a respectable small
city—or very large town, depending on one's
standards—but it was no huge metropolis. It was also out
towards the end of the explored multiverse. In fact, it's only reason
for existence was to serve Fort Tharkoma, perched in its
mountainous aerie almost four hundred miles inland, where it
covered both the exit portal from the universe of Salym and also
the railhead from Sharona itself. Additional track was being laid
beyond Tharkoma, of course. In fact, the actual railhead
was currently no more than a few hundred miles short of Fort
Salby in the universe of Traisum.
But New Ramath was a critical
link in the chain which bound the ever expanding frontier to the
home universe. The entry portal for Salym was guarded by Fort
Losaltha, almost fourteen hundred miles from Fort Tharkoma.
The rail line could have been extended from Losaltha directly to
Tharkoma, but Losaltha was located at the Salym equivalent of
Barkesh in Teramandor, where the fist of the Narhathan Peninsula
and the Fist of Bolakin closed off the eastern end of the Mbisi Sea.
A rail line would have had to skirt the northern coast of the Mbisi
and penetrate some of the most rugged mountains to be found in
any universe. With its long experience, the Portal Authority and
the shareholders of the Trans-Temporal Express had opted to
avoid the huge construction costs and delay that would have
entailed and utilize the water route, instead.
The city of Losaltha, built on the
splendid harbor which had served Barkesh for so many thousands
of years back in Sharona, was in the process of becoming a major
industrial city. For now, however, the Express and Portal
Authority were still shipping steamships through to Salym by rail.
They arrived as pre-manufactured modules, which were assembled
at Losaltha and then put into service, closing the water gap
between Losaltha and New Ramath. In fact, it had amazed Haliyar
when she realized just how big the modules the Trans-Temporal
Express's specialized freight cars could transport really were. Of
course, most of the shipping here in Salym was still of local
manufacture—small, wooden-hulled, and mostly powered
by sail. That was the norm in the out-universes, after all.
But given the fact that New
Ramath's sole reason for being was to handle the bigger, faster
TTE freighters and passenger vessels plying back and forth
between Losaltha and the Tharkoma Portal, its dockyards and
wharves were several times the size one might have expected, with
not a few luxury hotels under construction. But it remained a
provincial city, for the most part, with few of the amenities those
closer to the heart of civilization took for granted. Which had
struck Haliyar as particularly amusing when she was first assigned
here, since Tharkoma was little more than two hundred miles from
Larakesh, the Ylani Sea seaport serving the very first portal ever
discovered, and little more than three hundred miles from Tajvana
itself. Or, rather, from the locations Larakesh and Tajvana
occupied in Sharona.
And why are you letting your mind run on like a crazed tour
guide at a moment like this?
Her mouth tightened as the
question drove through her brain, but she knew the answer. It was
to keep from thinking about the message locked in the agonized
depths of that self-same mind.
If only Josam hadn't taken ill, she thought bitterly.
But he had. Josam chan Rakail
was the Voice assigned to Fort Tharkoma, and he had the range to
reach Chenrys Hordan, in the small town of Hurkaym. Hurkaym
was actually little more than a village, built on the island which
would have been Jerekhas off the toe of the boot of the Osmarian
Peninsula to serve as a link in the Voice chain between Fort
Tharkoma and Fort Losaltha. Josam could reach Hurkaym easily,
but Haliyar's range was far more limited. That was why she'd been
assigned to serve as the New Ramath Voice and link the city to the
portal fortress. But Josam had come down with what sounded like
pneumonia, and his assistant Voice at Tharkoma had even less
maximum range than Haliyar did. Which meant all he'd been able
to do was to relay the message to her for her to pass on to
Chenrys.
And since I don't have the range to do it from here, either,
I'm going to have to get into range in the first place
, she thought.
She finally glanced out the
window. It was the middle of the night in New Ramath, and
without gas streetlamps, the city was wrapped in slumbering
darkness, sleeping peacefully. She wondered how that would
change when its inhabitants discovered the news she was about to
pass on.
Her fingertips traced the hard,
round outline of the pocket watch in the breast pocket of her
warm jacket. It was hard to believe, even for a Voice, that less
than half an hour had passed since the vicious attack on the
Chalgyn Consortium's survey crew, five universes, two
continents, and an ocean away from New Ramath. Haliyar bit her
lip, fighting back a fresh burst of tears.
She'd met Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr and her husband on their way through Salym. As a Voice
herself, although never one in Shaylar's league, she'd been unable
to avoid feeling the echoes of their mutual devotion. Their
marriage bond was so strong that no telepath—whether of
Voice caliber, or not—could spend five minutes in their
company without feeling it, whether she wanted to or not.
And that made the agony of Seeing Jathmar's horrible death before
Shaylar's very eyes, and then Seeing—and feeling—
the even more terrible moment when Shaylar's Voice went
abruptly silent, even worse. The experience had been like an ax
blow, and now it was her job to pass that dreadful, soul-
searing experience on to Chenrys in all its horrifying detail.
She wouldn't have had to do this
if Josam hadn't fallen ill. She might have managed to avoid the
unbearable immediacy of knowing exactly what had
happened to two people she had both liked and admired
deeply . . . and envied more deeply
still.
The carriage slowed, and she
drew a deep breath, preparing to climb down when the door
opened. The dispatch boat—an incredibly fast little vessel,
powered by the new steam turbines and capable of sustained
speeds of thirty knots or more—lay waiting for her, smoke
pluming from its two strongly raked funnels. It wouldn't have to
take her all the way to Hurkaym. Haliyar's range was almost three
hundred miles; getting her as far as the west coast of Osmaria
would allow her to reach Chenrys, and that would take the
dispatch boat less than four hours. Then the message—and
all its grim, horrible imagery—would go flashing further
along the transit chain literally at the speed of thought.
There were still water gaps
which couldn't be closed by convenient relay stations like
Hurkaym, Haliyar thought as the carriage came fully to a halt.
Those were going to impose delays much greater than just four
hours. Still, the message would reach Tajvana and the Portal
Authority's headquarters there in less than a week.
And what happens then, she thought as the coachman's
assistant opened the door for her, scarcely bears thinking on
.
She stood for a moment, gazing
at the dispatch boat under the bright, gas-powered lights of the
TTE wharf, and tried not to shiver.
Chapter Ten
Jasak had to send another
message. However little he might relish the thought, he had no
choice, and he strode over to Iggar Shulthan.
"Iggy, I need two more
hummers."
"Yes, Sir. I thought you would,
Sir."
The hummer handler opened a
small wire cage, made of heavy gauge mesh rather than the sort of
wires and crosspieces wealthy ladies used to house chirping
canaries or rainbow-winged near-sprites.
He moved carefully and gently,
whispering the whole time, as he retrieved one of the ten
remaining hummers from the dozen he carried everywhere First
Platoon—or whichever of Charlie Company's subunits he
was attached to at the moment—went.
Hummers were so aggressive
they required not simply soothing handling, but also carefully
controlled incantations that turned off their natural attack instinct.
The bird Shulthan had retrieved was a beautiful creature, with
iridescent green feathers and a ruby throat. And it was also five
times the size of any wild hummingbird, with a stiletto beak that
was even larger in proportion.
The Andaran Scouts, like all
other trans-universal military organizations, bred magically
augmented hummers by the hundreds of thousands. Incredibly fast
in the air—a hummer could top a hundred and fifty miles
per hour—male hummers were aggressive enough to ward
off attacks by any airborne creature smaller than a gryphon. They
formed the backbone of the Union of Arcana's long-distance
communication network, routinely flying distances of well over a
thousand miles.
The most remarkable thing about
hummers, to Jasak's thinking, was how they transported messages.
Rather than strap a message to the outside of a large, slow bird
vulnerable to gryphon attacks, the inventor of the hummer
system—an Andaran Scout, Jasak thought, with a touch of
familiar smugness even know—had found a way to embed
a message inside a smaller, faster bird. Every hummer in service
was surgically implanted with a message crystal, wafer thin yet
capable of storing complex and surprisingly long messages.
Just as Gadrial and Halathyn
used spells to store their notes and personal-crystal displays,
hummer handlers used spells to store urgent messages which
could be retrieved by the receiving hummer handler. Dragons
always gave Jasak's spirits a lift, but hummers were sheer artistry.
"Ready to record your messages,
Sir," Shulthan said. "Destination?"
"First bird to the coast," Jasak
said. "The second to Javelin Kranark at the portal."
Shulthan nodded and spoke the
proper spell to implant the first destination's coordinates, then
looked back up at Jasak.
"Begin message, Sir."
"Hundred Olderhan, second
Andarans Scouts to Five Hundred Klian, Commander, Fort
Rycharn. Urgent. First Platoon of my company has sustained
heavy combat casualties. The platoon's combat strength has been
reduced to eight—I repeat, eight—effectives after an
encounter with what I believe to have been a survey party from
another trans-temporal civilization." Even as he said the words,
they still sounded impossible, even to him. "Several of my
casualties have serious internal injuries," he continued. "They are
in critical condition and urgently require a healer's services. I am
transporting them to our base camp as quickly as possible, but I
estimate that it will require twenty-plus hours from the time chop
on this message to return."
Jasak paused, considering what
he'd said, wondering if he should say still more. But what
could he say until he got back to report in person and answer
all of the no doubt incredulous questions Five Hundred Klian was
certain to have?
He grimaced and tossed his head.
"Hundred Olderhan reporting,"
he said. "End of message."
Shulthan spoke again, locking
the message properly into the crystal. Then he stroked the hummer
gently, whispered to it, and tossed it into the air. It sped away so
rapidly Jasak couldn't follow the motion with his eyes even
though he'd been waiting for it.
He drew a deep breath, trying to
visualize the consternation that hummer was going to create when
it reached Fort Rycharn. Then he turned back to Shulthan.
"Second hummer, please," he
said.
At least he could include one
piece of good news with the message to Kranark. He could
reassure Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah that Gadrial had taken
no harm, despite the fact that Halathyn had trusted her safety to Sir
Jasak Olderhan.
He recorded the message and
tried to watch the second bird streak away through the forest. He
failed again, as always, and steeled himself to turned back to the
remnants of his shattered platoon. He'd done all he could; it
remained to be seen whether that—and Gadrial's minor Gift
for healing—would keep the wounded alive.
He hoped twenty-five hours of
travel time wouldn't turn out to have been an overly optimistic
estimate.
Andrin Calirath felt twitchy.
It was an uncomfortable
sensation, like feeling swarms of honeybees buzzing just under her
skin. It plucked at her nerve endings with a constant, jarring twang,
until it threatened to drive her mad. It had plagued her most of the
afternoon, too vague to consider a true Glimpse, yet far too
insistent to ignore.
The weather hadn't helped. The
last week had been fair and fine, like a holdover of summer, but
today had set out to remind everyone that autumn was upon them.
Like the sensations under her skin, the weather was maddeningly
neither one thing nor another, for today had been one of those
perpetually drizzling days, too wet to call a mist, too halfhearted
to call rain. Below the vast expanse of glass that served the Rose
Room as a window, the gardens were all but obscured by the
combination of misting rain and approaching evening, and her
mood matched the garden—cold, foul, and unsociable. The
cheerful chatter of her younger sisters was almost enough to drive
her from the room, ripping out handfuls of hair as she went.
Andrin bit down on the
impulse—hard. A grand princess of the Ternathian Empire
did not display public fits of temper, no matter what the
provocation. That stricture—not to mention
responsibility—weighed heavy on shoulders that had seen
only seventeen changings of the seasons, but she didn't really mind
the pressure of her birth rank. Not much, anyway. She enjoyed her
many opportunities to help people, to make a difference in their
lives. She was grateful for what she had, and for what she could
do, but she never forgot who—and what—she
was. She was a Calirath, born to a tradition of service to her
people, her family, and to herself. Everything else, including any
private dreams she might nourish, was secondary.
A coal fire burned steadily
behind her in a fireplace built when coal had been little more than
a funny sort of black rock and trees and peat had been the only fuel
on the island. The vast fire pit could have held half a mature oak
tree; instead, it held five separate coal fires, spaced evenly along
the length of the fireplace. The scent of coal dust, sharp and thick
at the back of her throat, was just one more irritant to be
weathered. Winter in Ternathia was nothing like the snow-laden
ordeal of Farnalia, and it was still only early October, but the wet,
raw day had brought an early chill to the Palace. It was more than
enough to make her grateful for the fire's heat, and she'd draped a
woolen shawl around her shoulders, as well. Its soft, warm touch
was like a soothing caress, offering at least a little comfort against
the angry honeybees.
The little clock on the mantle
chimed the hour with a sprinkling of liquid crystal notes, and the
silver-sweet bells were a reminder that yet another hour of her life
had been devoured by someone else's schedule. The honeybees
snarled louder at the thought, whittling away another few notches
of her temper, and she sighed. She loved her mother and her
sisters, but on days like this, with the Talent riding hard with
sharpened spurs, Andrin desperately needed time alone. Time to
focus inward, to ask—demand—of this inner
agitation what message lay beneath it.
Another clock chimed, farther
down the mantle, setting her teeth on edge. Her mother loved
fussy little bric-a-brac, like clocks that chimed with the sound of
real birdcalls. The Rose Room, Empress Varena's private domain,
was filled with her collection of delicate breakables. Andrin had
been terrified to move in this room for the first ten years of her
life, for graceful deportment had not come naturally to her. Unlike
her younger sisters, she'd been forced—grimly—to
learn it in the same way a fractious schoolboy might be forced to
learn his arithmetic.
I want out of here! her soul cried out. Out of
this room, this Palace, this awful sensation of
doom . . .
Andrin's Talent never made itself
felt for joyous things. That blistering injustice was the reason she
was so agitated—no, be honest, afraid, she thought
harshly—standing here beside the window, staring hard at
the garden she could barely see through the mist and the misery.
On days like this, she would have given a piece of her soul to be
an ordinary milk maid or shop clerk somewhere, untroubled by
anything more serious than helping some wealthy fribble choose
which color of ribbon looked best with a card of lace. Shop clerks
didn't have inscrutable portents buzzing like angry bees under their
skin.
Precognition was a curse of
royalty.
At least Janaki is the heir, she consoled herself.
The stiff set of her face eased a
little at that thought. Her older brother was in the Imperial
Ternathian Marines, assigned to border patrol in a newly colonized
world at the edge of Sharonian exploration. She envied him
enormously. The open sky, the freedom to gallop one's horse for
the sheer mad delight of it, the ability to actually step through
portals, not just read about them from the confines of stone walls
and garden hedges. She would have been happy just to ride her
palfrey through the streets of Estafel today, despite the drizzling
rain that had—by now—turned the capital city's
cobbled streets into slick and dangerous ribbons of stone.
She started to sigh again, but
checked the impulse before it could become audible. She didn't
want to inflict her sour mood on her mother or sisters.
The door clicked open.
Andrin turned, grateful for any
diversion, yet so anxious about what might be happening
somewhere in the many universes Sharonians now called home
that her heart stuttered until she saw that the sound was merely her
father's arrival for dinner.
She tried to summon a smile,
grateful that bad news hadn't actually arrived on their
doorstep . . . yet, at least. Her father
was a large man, as were most Ternathians. Not stocky, and
certainly not fleshy, but he was built like a bull, with the massive
shoulders and thick neck that were the hallmark of the Calirath
Dynasty. To her private dismay, and the despair of her dressmaker,
Andrin looked altogether too much like her father, and not a bit
like her mother. The Empress Varena might stand nearly five feet
eleven inches in her stockings, but she looked delicate, almost
petite, standing beside His Imperial Majesty, Zindel XXIV, Duke
of Ternath, Grand Duke of Farnalia, Warlord of the West,
Protector of the Peace, and by the gods' Grace, Emperor of
Ternathia.
The emperor who, at that
moment, wore a look which so nearly matched Andrin's own
mood that she felt herself trying not to gape open mouthed.
Zindel chan Calirath caught the
grim set of his daughter's jaw, the stiffness of her shoulders, and
knew, without a word spoken, that Andrin felt it, too. He halted in
the doorway, halfway in and halfway out, and nearly had the door
rapped into his heels. The doorkeeper had been opening and
closing the Rose Room door every day at six p.m. sharp for the
last twenty years, and not once in all that time had the Emperor
stopped dead in the middle of the doorway.
But Zindel couldn't help it. The
warning that vibrated through him when his gaze locked with his
eldest daughter's was as brutal as it was unexpected. He sucked in
a harsh breath, totally oblivious to the doorkeeper's frantic, last-
minute grab at the door handle. He never even realized how close
the door had come to slamming into him as his entire body
vibrated with the Glimpse.
Something was going to smash
her life to pieces. Soon.
Dear gods, no, not Andrin, a voice whispered inside his
head, and his eyes clenched shut for just an instant. Clenched shut
on a bewildering dazzle of half-guessed images, so fleeting, so
jumbled, they were impossible to capture. Explosions of flame.
Weeping faces. A powerful locomotive thundering along a desert
rail line, with the Royal Shurakhalian coat of arms displayed on
either side of its cab. A great whale rising from the sea in an
explosion of foam. Gunfire stabbing through darkness and rain. A
city he'd never seen yet almost recognized, a ship flaming
upon the sea, a magnificent ballroom, and his tall young daughter
weeping like a broken child. . . .
His nostrils flared under the
dreadful cascade of almost-knowledge which had been the greatest
gift and most bitter curse of his line for twice a thousand years and
more. He was no Voice, yet he could taste the same splinters of
vision ripping through Andrin, as if the proximity of their Talents
had somehow sharpened the fragmented Glimpse for both of them,
and he bit his lip as he felt her anguish.
But then he fought his eyes open
again and saw Andrin biting down on her own distress. He
understood the tension singing just beneath her skin, the shadows
in her eyes. They were echoes of his own fear, his own gnawing
worry, and his eyes held hers as the cheerful greetings from his
wife and younger daughters splashed unheard against him,
drowned out by the terrible prescience. Andrin's eyes were dark
with its heavy weight, all the more terrible because they could give
it neither shape nor name, and when she smiled anyway, it broke
his heart.
She'd grown so tall, these last
two years, too tall for mere courtly beauty. She was strong beneath
the silks and velvets of an imperial princess. She wasn't a beautiful
girl, his Andrin, not in the conventional sense. Her chin was too
strong, her nose too proud, her face too triangular, for that, but
strength lived in those unquiet eyes and the firm set of her mouth.
Her long sweep of raven hair, shot through with the golden strands
which were borne only by those of Talented Calirathian blood,
lent her an almost otherworldly grace she was entirely unaware
she possessed, and her eyes were as clear and gray as the
Ternathian Sea.
"Hello, Papa," she said, holding
out one hand.
He crossed the Rose Room
swiftly and took her into a careful embrace, denying himself the
need to crush her close, to protect her. He was careful, as well, to
hug each of his younger daughters in turn—and his
wife—in exactly the same manner, for exactly the same
amount of time. He didn't want Varena to guess his Talent was
riding him with cruel spurs. Not yet. Not until he'd Glimpsed
more of whatever terrifying thing he might yet See.
"Now, then." He smiled at
Razial, who'd just turned fifteen, and Anbessa, whose eleventh
birthday had been celebrated two months previously. "How did
your lessons go today?"
He let their youthful voices wash
across him, finding comfort and even mild humor in little
Anbessa's complaint that she saw no need to learn what Ternathia's
imperial borders had been eight hundred years previously, since
the Empire's current borders were far smaller. Then there was
Razial. His middle daughter's bubbling enthusiasm over her latest
art lesson was, Zindel knew, motivated more by the physical
attractiveness of her art tutor than it was by any real love of
watercolor painting. But he also knew the tutor's proclivities did
not include nubile young grand princesses. And since Janaki was
not only old enough to hold his own in affairs of the bedroom, but
out of the Palace and several universes removed, Zindel had no
real worry about the safety of his offspring under the roving eye of
a handsome young art instructor. Razial's current infatuation was
merely entertaining, in a gentle and soothing way that dispelled
some of the gloom after a day like today. He gave Razial another
six months, at most, before some other gloriously handsome devil
caught her eye and the tension of her raging hormones. He'd worry
about that devil when the day came.
Meanwhile . .
.
Zindel sat beside his wife,
drawing comfort from Varena's warmth at his side, while they
waited for the servants to arrive with their supper. Varena's
needlework—a new cover for their kneeling bench at
Temple—was a work of art in its own right. Varena's
designs were copied eagerly throughout the Empire, viewed as
instantaneous must-haves for anyone on the Society list, or anyone
with the aspiration to be on it, and not simply because of who she
was.
Her Imperial Majesty Varena
smiled as her husband sat beside her, but her skilled hands never
paused in their work. She drew no small pleasure from the work
she created with nimble fingers, needle, and
thread . . . and if her hands were busy
making something beautiful, no one would see them twist into the
knots of fear which came all too often for an imperial wife.
She was Talented, of course; it
was legally required for any Calirath bride. But hers wasn't a very
strong Talent, just a middling dollop of precognition. It
was nothing like the Glimpses her husband and her older children
experienced, yet it was enough to set up tremors in her abdomen
which threatened to upset the balanced poise of her busy fingers.
Something was wrong. She could feel it in her own limited way,
and she knew the signs to look for in her husband and her
daughter, but she let them think they were succeeding at hiding
their inner agitation, because it was kinder to give them that
illusion.
Neither of them wanted to add
stress to her life, so she carefully hid her own disquiet, aware that
whatever was wrong would come in its own good time. She saw
no sense in rushing to meet trouble before it arrived, unless one
had a clear enough Glimpse and sufficient time to alter what
might be coming.
Which happened all too seldom.
"Well," Zindel said to Razial at
last, "while I'm delighted to hear your art studies are coming so
well, I'm not at all sure Master Malthayr is quite prepared to pose
nude for you." He glanced down at Varena with a tender, droll
humor which was heartbreaking against the background tension
she felt quivering through him. "What do you think,
love?" he asked her.
"I think," she said
calmly, setting her needlework aside as the doors opened quietly
and supper began to arrive, "that your sense of humor requires a
sound whacking, Your Imperial Majesty."
"No!" He laid one hand on his
heart, gazing at her soulfully. "How could you possibly say such a
thing?" he demanded while Anbessa giggled and Razial looked
martyred.
"I believe it has something to do
with having been married to you for over twenty years," she said
with a smile.
He chuckled and took her hand
as she stood. But the darkness still lingered behind his eyes, and
she squeezed his strong fingers tightly for just a moment.
Awareness flickered through his expression at the silent admission
that she was only too well aware of the frightening black cloud of
tension wrapped around him and Andrin. Then she smiled again.
"And now, it's time to eat," she
said calmly.
After the gut-wrenching
cremation of the dead, Shaylar's captors stayed where they were
for over an hour, camped mercifully upwind of the remains in the
toppled timber. Despite the insight her Talent had given her into
these people and their intentions, Shaylar felt an inescapable
measure of grim satisfaction as she contemplated the heavy price
they'd paid for slaughtering her friends. They didn't have enough
unhurt men to carry all of their wounded, she thought fiercely, and
she also felt a slight, fragile stir of hope as she thought about what
that might mean.
Darcel probably thought she was
dead, but he couldn't be positive, and as far as he could know,
some of the others might have survived, even if she hadn't. Under
the circumstances, Company-Captain Halifu would almost
certainly have to be sending out a party to rescue any possible
survivors, and if these people couldn't retreat because of their own
injured men . . .
The woman who'd been trying so
hard to comfort her was moving among the wounded who lay
sprawled in the trees. She paused at each man, touching him
lightly and whispering something. She also consulted frequently
with their commander, but she obviously wasn't a soldier. Shaylar
was virtually certain of that. She'd already noticed the other
woman's lack of a uniform, but Shaylar wondered if she might be
a civilian healer assigned to this military unit. Certainly what she'd
done for Shaylar's throbbing head and her current attentiveness to
the wounded suggested that might be the case, which surprised
Shaylar on two separate levels.
Healers assigned to the
Sharonian military were full-fledged members of that military,
part of the Healers' Corps. They were also all men. Women didn't
serve in the Sharonian military. Even in Ternathia, which was
deplorably "progressive" by the standards of other Sharonian
cultures, only a tiny handful had ever been accepted for military
service, and then, inevitably, only in staff positions or as nurses
well to the rear. Officers and even enlisted men could marry, of
course, and their wives and children could travel with them to
their assigned duty posts. But those wives and children remained
in military-built and financed housing in the civilian towns which
sprang up around the portal forts. They didn't accompany their
men on missions, whether in the wilderness or to put down the
occasional outbreak of banditry in more settled country, and not
even Ternathian female nurses were ever assigned to the Healer
Corps which served units in the field.
Whoever this woman was, she
finished tending the wounded and returned to Shaylar's side. She
sat beside her, looked into Shaylar's eyes, and pointed to herself as
she spoke slowly and clearly.
"Gadrial," she said. It was an odd
name, but a name was clearly what it was.
"Jathmar?" she continued,
pointing at Jathmar and confirming Shaylar's guess.
"Yes." Shaylar nodded, wincing
at the movement of her aching head. "Jathmar."
Gadrial nodded back, then
cocked her head, waiting expectantly, and Shaylar touched her own
breastbone.
"Shaylar," she said, and a lovely
smile flickered like sunlight across Gadrial's face.
"Shaylar," she repeated, then said
something else. Shaylar tried desperately to make contact with
Gadrial's mind, hoping that this woman might be some sort of
telepath, but she could touch nothing. The place inside her own
mind where such connections were made was a throbbing mask of
blackness and pain. She was still Voiceless, and panic nibbled at
the edge of her awareness. If the damage proved
permanent . . .
Don't borrow trouble.
Her mother's voice echoed
through her memory, and grief and the fear that she would never
see her mother again were nearly Shaylar's undoing. She felt her
mouth quiver, felt fresh tears brimming in her swollen eyes, but
then Gadrial took her hand gently and pulled her back from that
brink.
"Shaylar," she said again, then
something else. She pointed to Jathmar and the others, then to the
south. Shaylar frowned, and Gadrial pantomimed walking with
two fingers on the ground, then pointed again.
Shaylar felt herself tensing
internally once more. They were leaving, walking toward
something in the south . . . which was
the direction Darcel had sent them to locate the nearest portal to
another universe.
She looked at all of the other
wounded, then back at Gadrial, cursing the whirling unsteadiness
of her own senses and thoughts. She couldn't imagine how the
remaining fit soldiers could possibly transport all of their
wounded fellows, and her heart sank as she realized Gadrial might
be referring only to her and Jathmar. If their own portal to this
universe was as close at hand as Darcel had thought, they might
want to get their prisoners safely away for future interrogation,
and that thought was terrifying.
But if they want prisoners to interrogate, they'll have to keep
us alive until they can start asking questions, a little voice
said somewhere deep inside her. And that means they'll have
to get Jathmar proper healing as quickly as possible.
Her jaw clenched as the
exquisite anguish of her plight gripped her like pincers. Every step,
every inch, toward the south would take them further and further
from any possibility of rescue. But those same steps might very
well take Jathmar towards healing and survival.
Shaylar had known the risks
when she signed up for this job, but she'd never dreamed how
devastating it would be to face a moment like this, knowing her
beloved needed medical care only their enemies could provide.
Yet in the end, that was the only chance fate was likely to put into
her trembling hands, and so she nodded, and felt as if she were
somehow sealing their doom.
And either way, it's not as if I have very much choice, she
thought grimly.
"I know you're frightened,"
Gadrial said gently to the other woman—Shaylar—
and touched her arm. "But I swear Sir Jasak will do everything he
can to save Jathmar for you."
Shaylar's mouth trembled again
briefly at the sound of her companion's name. She reached down,
touching Jathmar's forehead with heartbreaking gentleness, and
Gadrial's own heart twisted as she recognized the grief and despair
in the gesture.
Then she heard the sound of
approaching footsteps, and she and Shaylar both looked up as
Jasak went to one knee beside them. Weariness showed in the
commander of one hundred's face and the set of his shoulders. It
was obvious from the way he moved that the wound along his
ribs, especially, was causing considerable pain, but the shadows in
his eyes as he looked down at Jathmar and Shaylar had nothing to
do with his wounds.
"How's it going?" he asked.
"I've got their names," Gadrial
said. "And I think I just got her to understand and agree to walk
with us to the swamp portal."
"Gods, I hope so." His voice was
full of smoke and gravel. "She's suffered enough without us
having to drag her every step of the way."
"They're your prisoners."
Gadrial tried to keep from
speaking between clenched teeth, but it was hard. She wasn't at all
happy in her own mind about taking Shaylar and Jathmar back as
military prisoners. Surely they'd already done these people enough
hurt! The thought of what Shaylar and Jathmar might face at the
hands of government and military interrogators, on top of all
they'd already suffered, was enough to stiffen her with rage.
It must have showed, despite her
effort to control her voice, because Jasak gave her a quick, very
sharp look. Then he nodded.
"Yes, they are," he said flatly.
"And my responsibility."
Ah, yes—responsibility,
Gadrial thought. That most Andaran of all traits. Noblesse
oblige. The duty to codes of honor instilled into Andaran
children—girls, as well as boys—from the cradle
itself. She wanted to ask if that responsibility would protect these
battered people from the military hierarchy that would want to
peel their minds like apples. She had no idea what kind of magic
might be brought to bear on the mind of the prisoner of war, and,
frankly, she didn't want to find out. But if the Union of Arcana and
its military decided that extracting information from Shaylar and
Jathmar was vital to the security of the Union, there wouldn't be a
single damned thing Gadrial could do about it.
So she did the only thing she
could do. She introduced Sir Jasak Olderhan, son of the Duke
of Garth Showma, to his prisoners.
Jasak saw the worry and anger in
Gadrial as clearly as he saw the terror and exhaustion in Shaylar.
The slender girl repeated his given name with a bruised weariness
he recognized as post-battle trauma. He hated seeing it in Shaylar's
eyes as much as he hated seeing the suspicion in Gadrial's, but he
couldn't expect the magister to understand that. She was Ransaran,
raised in a culture where the formality of military duty, of
knowing one's obligations to a stratified social order, wasn't an
ingrained part of everyone's basic childhood training. She didn't
understand what Jasak's responsibility entailed. Not yet. But she
would, he promised himself, and hoped that the worry and anger
would fade from Gadrial's eyes as quickly as he hoped the terror
and shock would fade from Shaylar's.
Yet neither of those things was
going to happen quickly enough, and Gadrial's worry—and
Shaylar's exhaustion—were probably both going to get
worse before they got better. And that, too, would result from his
responsibilities. His responsibility to push everyone, including this
poor, brutalized young woman, ruthlessly, even brutally, in a
relentless effort to get Jathmar the healing he so desperately
needed.
He doubted either of the women
would understand why that was so important to him. Important to
Jasak Olderhan, not to Commander of One Hundred Olderhan.
And there was no way in this universe, or any other, that he could
hope to explain it to them in the time he had.
So he did what he could do to try
to reassure both of them. He lifted Shaylar's hand and stroked it
the way he would have stroked a frightened kitten.
"Don't be afraid," he said gently.
"No one will hurt you again. No one. I know you don't
understand, yet, but I swear that on my honor, Shaylar. And I'll do
everything I can to help you understand it."
Her hand was limp, broken
feeling, in his grip, and her dark eyes were glazed. He sighed and
turned back to Gadrial.
"We'll strike camp as soon as
you determine it's safe to move him." He nodded at Jathmar. "My
baggage handlers survived, so at least we'll be able to lift the most
critically wounded. But even so, it's not going to be a picnic stroll
through the park getting them safely back to the portal and
transport.
He glanced again at Jathmar,
wondering if the wounded man's unconsciousness was a mercy or
a bad sign.
"We'll rig a field litter for him,"
he said. "And one for her, as well, if she needs it."
"Get it ready, then," Gadrial said.
"The sooner we move him, the faster we'll getting back. As long as
his litter doesn't jostle him too much, he should be all right. I'll do
what I can for him as well as your men."
"I appreciate that. Immensely."
He smiled, the expression tight with worry and fatigue, yet
genuine. "I'll get right on it, then."
It took only minutes to break out
the collapsible field stretchers that were part of the baggage his
platoons carried in the field. Jasak couldn't imagine what battle
must have been like before the development of Gifts made it
possible to move heavy loads with spells, rather than muscle
power.
All four of his baggage handlers
had survived, along with their equipment. The most critically
wounded were placed on proper field litters, canvas slings
mounted between poles to which the handlers attached standard
spell storage boxes. They didn't have enough of the standard litters
for the less critically hurt, but Sword Harnak threw together field
expedient substitutes, using uniform tunics for slings and hastily
cut branches for poles. They looked like hell, but they ought to do
the job, and Jasak watched the baggage handlers attaching the
sarkolis crystal storage boxes.
The storage devices were all
pretty much the same size and shape. Only the markings varied,
with a color coding that told the soldier at a glance whether it
contained spells that powered infantry-dragons, spells that lifted
baggage, or spells that illuminated a landing area to guide living
dragons during night airlifts. As an added precaution, those which
carried weapon-grade spells featured carefully contoured shapes
which would fit only into the weapons they were intended to
power, but that wasn't immediately apparent at first glance.
Jasak supervised preparations
closely, speaking to wounded men in a low, reassuring voice.
Gripping shoulders where a bracing moment of support was
required to stiffen a man's weary spine. Making sure every bit of
captured equipment was secured for analysis back home. He still
didn't understand how the long, hollow tubes they'd found beside
the dead—or the smaller versions several had carried, as
well—had managed to wreak such havoc, but he intended
to find out.
When it was time to shift the
unconscious Jathmar onto one of the litters, Jasak abandoned the
captured equipment to the handlers he'd detailed to haul it out and
personally accompanied Lance Erdar Wilthy. Wilthy was the
senior, most experienced of First Platoon's baggage handlers, and
Jasak had assigned him specific responsibility for transporting
Jathmar. The lance had been doing his job for years, but Jasak
found himself hovering, unable to restrain himself from taking
personal charge of the delicate operation of getting Jathmar onto
the litter despite the fact that he knew Wilthy had far more
experience than he.
Shaylar sat beside her husband,
one hand resting gently on his scorched brown hair, when Jasak
and Wilthy approached. Her unguarded expression was full of
anguish, and Jasak crouched down beside her.
"Shaylar," he said gently. She
looked up, and he pointed to the canvas sling Wilthy was unrolling
on the ground beside Jathmar.
"We're going to put Jathmar on
this stretcher," he continued, pantomiming the act of picking
something up and setting it down again. "We won't hurt him. I
promise."
Shaylar looked at him, and then
at the litter. Since they would have to transport Jathmar face
down, the litter had to be rigid, or the sling would bend his spine
painfully in the wrong direction, not to mention the tension it
would put on the burned skin of his back. Harnak's improvised
stretchers would never have worked, Jasak thought, watching
Wilthy slide crosswise slats into place, turning the canvas sling
into a rigid platform.
When it was ready, Jasak
pantomimed their intentions to Shaylar again, and she nodded.
"Easy, now," Jasak cautioned
Wilthy. "I'll take his shoulders, Erdar. You take his feet. Gadrial,
support his waist. We only need to lift him a couple of inches off
the ground. On the count of three. One, two, three—"
They lifted him two inches and
slid him smoothly onto the canvas. Shaylar hovered, holding
Jathmar's head, biting her lips when he stirred with a sound of
pain. Gadrial whispered over him, and he subsided again, lying
quietly on the litter.
So far, so good, Jathmar thought.
"All right, attach the
accumulator and let's lift him, Erdar."
"Yes, Sir," Wilthy said, and
pulled out the box and attached it to receptacle on the litter.
Shaylar had been looking down
at Jathmar's face, but she looked up again, attracted by the lance's
movement. For just a moment, she showed no reaction, but then
her eyes flew wide and she came to her feet with a bloodcurdling
scream.
Jasak flinched in astonishment as
she leapt past him, snatched the box off the litter, and hurled it
violently away. Then she spun to face him—to face all
of them, every surviving member of First Platoon. She was a
single, tiny woman, smaller than Jasak's own twelve-year-old
sister, but he could literally feel the savagery of her fury as her
fingers curled into defensive claws. She was prepared to attack
them all, he realized. To rip out the throat of any man who
approached Jathmar with her bare teeth, and he recoiled from her
desperate defiance, trying frantically to understand its cause.
"Oh, dear God!" Gadrial cried.
"She thinks we're going to cremate him alive! They all
look alike to her—the accumulator boxes!"
Comprehension exploded
through Jathmar, and he swore with vicious self-loathing.
"Get that box, Wilthy!" he
snapped. "Fasten it to something else—anything
else. Show her what it does."
The white-faced trooper, his
expression as shaken and horrified as Jasak's own, scrambled to
retrieve the accumulator. He scrabbled it up out of the leaves
where Shaylar had thrown it and fastened it to the nearest object he
could find—a section of decaying log about three feet long
and eighteen inches in diameter. The box was equipped with
twenty small chambers, each with its own control button, and he
pressed one of them, releasing the spell inside.
The log lifted from its leafy bed.
It floated silently into the air and hovered there, effortlessly.
Shaylar watched, her eyes wide.
Then she sagged to her knees, gasping as she panted for breath, and
Gadrial knelt beside her.
"It's all right, Shaylar," she said
gently, reassuringly. "It's all right. We're not going to hurt him. It'll
just pick him up. See, it lifts the log."
She pointed, pantomiming
moving the accumulator back to Jathmar's litter, then lifting
Jathmar the same way. Shaylar trembled violently in the circle of
Gadrial' left arm, and the magister glanced over her shoulder at
Jasak.
"For the love of God, lift the
other wounded men. She's half crazed with terror!"
"Get them airborne!" Jasak
barked to the other handlers, who were watching with open
mouths. "Damn it, get them airborne now!"
Wilthy's subordinates obeyed
quickly, lifting all of the critically wounded. Shaylar watched
them, her body taut, her eyes wide. But the wildness was fading
from them, and she began to relax again, ever so slowly.
"It's all right," Gadrial told her
again and again. "Let us help him, Shaylar. Let us help Jathmar.
Please."
Jasak watched as Shaylar's
obvious terror began to ease. The furious fear for Jathmar which
had given her strength seemed to flow out of her. Her mouth went
unsteady, and her eyes overflowed. Then she crumpled, and
Gadrial caught her, held her close, rocked her like a frightened
child, stroking her hair and soothing her.
A badly shaken Jasak turned back
to Wilthy.
"Lift Jathmar's stretcher, Erdar.
But move carefully, whatever you do. She's not strong enough to
take many more shocks like that one."
"Yes, Sir. I'll be gentle as a
butterfly, Sir."
Gadrial urged Shaylar to her feet
as Wilthy slowly and carefully, pausing between each movement
to let Shaylar see every step of the process, lifted Jathmar's litter
until it floated just above waist level.
Shaylar watched, still panting,
and Gadrial wiped the other woman's cheeks dry with the corner
of her own shirt. Then the magister gave her a smile and squeezed
her hand for just a moment, before moving it to rest on Jathmar's.
Wilthy had tucked the injured man's arms down at his sides, which
was an awkward placement, but better than leaving them hanging
over the edges of the litter.
Shaylar curled her slender
fingers carefully, delicately, around her husband's. Then she drew
a deep breath. Her chin came up, and she met Jasak's gaze once
again.
"All right, People." Jasak gave
the order. "Move out."
Chapter Eleven
"What?" Company-
Captain Balkar chan Tesh stared at Petty Captain Rokam Traygan
in total disbelief. "You can't be serious!"
"I wish to all the Uromathian
hells I wasn't, Sir," Traygan said harshly. The Ricathian Voice's
face was the color of old ashes, and his hands shook visibly. He
looked away from chan Tesh and swallowed hard.
"I—" He swallowed
again. "I threw up twice receiving the message, Sir," he admitted.
"It was . . . ugly."
chan Tesh stared at the petty-
captain, then shook himself. He didn't know Traygan as well as he
might have wished, hadn't even met the man before the Voice
caught up with his column in Thermyn. But they'd traveled over a
thousand miles together on horseback since then, from the rolling
grasslands of what would have been central New Ternathia and
across the continent's deserts and rocky western spine. The
heavyset, powerfully muscled Voice hadn't struck chan Tesh as a
weakling, yet he was obviously shaken—badly
shaken—and chan Tesh was suddenly glad that he
wasn't a Voice.
"Tell me," he said quietly, almost
gently, and Traygan turned back to face him.
"Company-Captain Halifu didn't
know exactly where we were," the Voice said, "and I've never
worked with the Chalgyn Voice, Kinlafia. So instead of trying to
contact us directly, he had Kinlafia pass the report straight up the
chain with a request that Fort Mosanik relay to us. I got Kinlafia's
entire transmission."
He swallowed again and shook
his head.
"I never imagined anything like
it, Sir," he said, his voice a bit hoarse around the edges. "It
was—It was like Hell come to life. Fireballs, explosions, lightning bolts, for the gods' sake! And Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr and her husband caught right in the middle of it."
chan Tesh felt his own face turn
pale. He was Ternathian, himself, not Harkalian, but Nargra-
Kolmayr was virtually a Sharona-wide icon. The first woman to
win the battle for a place on a temporal survey crew; one of the
most powerful Voices Sharona had ever produced; daughter of
one of Sharona's most renowned cetacean ambassadors; half of
one of Sharona's storybook, larger than life romantic sagas. The
fact that she was beautiful enough to be cast to play herself in any
of the (inevitable) dramatizations of her own life had simply been
icing on the cake.
"Was she hurt?" he asked
urgently.
"Yes," Traygan half-groaned.
"She was linked with Kinlafia, and somehow she held the link to
the end. Held it even while whoever the bastards were slaughtered
her crew—even her husband!—all around
her. And then—"
His face twisted with what chan
Tesh realized was the actual physical memory of the last moments
of Nargra-Kolmayr's transmission.
"She's dead?" chan Tesh
almost whispered.
"We don't know. We think she
hit her head, so she might just be unconscious." Traygan sounded
like a man whose emotions clung desperately to what his intellect
knew was false hope, chan Tesh thought grimly.
"All right, Rokam," he said. "Tell
me exactly what you know. Take your time. Make sure you tell me
everything."
It was the news a transport pilot
least wanted to hear.
Squire Muthok Salmeer's
quarters, such as they were, were almost adjacent to the hummer
tower. The handler on watch had handed the message straight to
Salmeer, and Salmeer had run all the way from his quarters to the
CO's office to deliver the ghastly news.
"Combat casualties?
Combat with what?" Commander of Five Hundred Sarr
Klian demanded incredulously as he scanned the message
transcript the duty communications tech had pulled off the
incoming hummer's crystal. It was, Salmeer recognized, what was
known as a rhetorical question, and the pilot waited tensely for the
five hundred to finish reading.
By the time he was done, Klian
was swearing blisters into Fort Rycharn's roughly finished
wooden walls. He glared at the authorizing sigil at the foot of the
message, then shook his head, looked up, and glared at Salmeer.
"He met someone from another
universe and attacked? Has Hundred Olderhan lost his
blue-blooded mind?"
"Sir," Salmeer said, leaning
forward and jabbing a finger at the two words in the entire
message which had meant the most to him, "I don't know who
attacked who, but he says he's got heavy casualties, Sir.
Whatever his reasons, whatever's going on out there, he needs a
med team. We've got to scramble one now, Five Hundred.
My dragon's got seven hundred miles to fly just to reach
the portal."
The pilot was almost dancing in
impatience. Sarr Klian swore once more, explosively. Then, as
Salmeer opened his mouth to protest the delay, Fort Rycharn's
commander shook his head savagely.
"Yes, yes, of course! Throw a
medical team into the saddle and go," he said sharply.
Salmeer paused just long enough
to throw an abbreviated salute. The five hundred returned it with
equal brevity, and Salmeer whipped around. He was already back
up to a run by the time he hit the door, but even so, he heard Klian
muttering behind him before the door closed.
"He attacked them?
What the fuck is Olderhan doing out there?"
Twenty minutes later, Fort
Rycharn's sole permanently assigned transport dragon was
lumbering out to the flightline, loaded with an emergency medical
transport platform, several canvas bags of medical supplies, two
surgeons, four herbalists, and Sword Naf Morikan, Charlie
Company's journeyman Gifted healer, whose R&R had just
been cut brutally short.
"Sir Jasak attacked?"
Morikan demanded as he fumbled his way into the saddle on the
already-moving dragon. "Attacked what, in the gods'
names? There's nothing out there!"
Salmeer bit his tongue to keep
himself from pointing out that there obviously was
something out there, since Sir Jasak Olderhan had gotten into a
blood-and-guts fight with whatever it was. The pilot found it
impossible to believe it really had been representatives of another
trans-universal civilization. That was simply too preposterous for
him to wrap his mind around without a lot more evidence.
But he didn't have any better explanation for what it might have
been than anyone else at Fort Rycharn did, and he reminded
himself that Morikan was Olderhan's company healer. He knew
every one of the men of Fifty Garlath's platoon personally. Of
course the noncom was worried half out of his mind.
"I have no idea, Sword," he said
instead. "Be sure your safety straps are buckled tight."
"Yes, Sir," Morikan replied.
"Ready when you are, Squire," he added after a moment, and
Salmeer gave Windclaw the signal.
The dragon launched quickly, as
if he'd caught his pilot's urgency, and he probably had. Windclaw
was a fine old beast, a century old last month, and as smart as a
transport ever got. Of course, that wasn't much compared to a
battle dragon, but Windclaw was no mental midget, and his
experience made him doubly valuable in the field, particularly in
an emergency. A canny old beast like Windclaw knew every trick
in the book for coaxing extra speed during an emergency flight.
Salmeer wished bitterly that
they'd had even one more dragon available to send with Windclaw,
but this universe was at the ass-end of nowhere, almost ninety
thousand miles from Old Arcana. Worse, it was over twenty-six
thousand miles back to the nearest sliderhead at the Green Haven
portal, and almost ten thousand of those miles were over-water. A
transport dragon like Windclaw could cover prodigious
distances—up to a thousand miles, or possibly a bit more in
a single day's flight—but then he had to rest. That
meant landing on something, and the water gaps between Fort
Rycharn and Green Haven were all wider than a dragon could
manage in a single leg.
That made getting anything
all the way to the fort an unmitigated pain in the ass. But
Salmeer was used to that, just as he was used to the fact that
Transport Command promotion was slow to the point of
nonexistence. Muthok Salmeer himself had almost thirty years in,
but he was never going to be a combat pilot, and he still hadn't
been promoted as high as a fifty. Taken for granted, overworked,
underappreciated, and underpaid: that was a Transport Command
pilot's lot in life, and most of them took the same sort of perverse
pride in it that Salmeer did.
None of which made his current
problem any more palatable.
The Arcanan military—
and the UTTTA civilian infrastructure, for that matter—
were notoriously casual about extending the slide rails out into
the boondocks. It was hard to fault their sense of priorities,
Salmeer supposed in his more charitable moments. After all, even
Green Haven boasted a total population of considerably less than
eight hundred thousand. That wasn't a lot of people, spread over
the surface of an entire virgin planet the size of Arcana itself, and
it wasn't as if other portals, much closer to Arcana, couldn't
supply anything the home world really needed. Exploration and
expansion were worthwhile in their own right, of course, and there
were always homesteaders, eager to stake claims to places of their
own. But simple economic realities meant the inner portals were
far more heavily developed and populated and invariably received
a far greater proportion of the Transit Authority's maintenance
resources as a result.
And it's the poor bloody transport pilots who make it all
possible, Salmeer thought bitterly. Not that anyone ever
notices.
He supposed it was inevitable,
but every bureaucrat, whether uniformed or civilian, seemed to
assume there would always be a transport dragon around when he
needed one. The sheer range a dragon made possible was
addictive, despite the fact that even a big, powerful, fully mature
beast like Windclaw could carry only a fraction of the load a slider
car could manage. Most of the freight that needed moving on the
frontiers was relatively light, after all. But the demands placed
upon the Air Force's Transport Command were still brutal. The
Command was always short of suitable dragons, and Cloudsail,
Windclaw's partner in the two-dragon teams which were supposed
to be deployed, had torn three of the sails in his right wing
colliding with a treetop. They'd had to ship him back to the main
portal for treatment, and, of course, there'd been no
replacement in the pipeline.
All of which explained why
Windclaw was the only dragon currently assigned to Fort Rycharn
when Salmeer was desperately afraid that Sir Jasak Olderhan
might well need far more than a single beast.
He glanced back, craning around
in the saddle which ran securely around the base of Windclaw's
neck, to be sure his passengers were still with him. Straps passed
behind the dragon's forelegs, as well, to keep the saddle from
slipping sideways. It put Salmeer in the best position to see where
Windclaw was going and to communicate his orders to the
dragon. Behind the saddle, Windclaw's back supported the
emergency medical lift platform—a low-slung,
aerodynamically streamlined lozenge made of canvas, leather, and
steel tubing.
The platform was broad enough
to accommodate two people lying flat beside one another, and
deep enough to allow for a bottom shelf and top shelf for the
storage of reasonably small items of cargo. It also ran most of the
way down Windclaw's spine, which made it long enough to permit
the transport of up to twenty critically injured people on stretchers
laid end-to-end. A turtle-backed windbreak of taut canvas was
stretched over the front two thirds of the framework to keep the
slipstream off the medical casualties during transport.
Passengers who weren't
incapacitated could ride in one of three saddles strapped in front
of the lozenge, and both surgeons and the Gifted healer had opted
to do so. All three wore helmets with full-length visors to keep the
wind—and insects—out of their faces during flight.
The herbalists, the most junior members of the medical team, rode
inside the transport lozenge itself.
The terrain below them was a
morass of mud, standing water, low-growing swamp forest, and
vast stretches of reed-filled marsh. Waterbirds by the hundreds of
thousands—probably by the millions, if he'd been able to
count them—were visible below, some winging their way
above the swamps, some dotting the marshes like a variegated
carpet in shades of gray, white, brown, and pink. Still others rested
among the trees, in what Salmeer suspected were vast rookeries,
given the season in this part of this particular universe.
It was a breathtaking sight, even
for a man accustomed to piloting transport dragons through empty
universes. He loved the vast sweep of nature at its pristine best,
and vistas like this one still raised his spirits. A wry grin formed
behind the wind shield fastened to his leather-padded steel riding
helmet. Despite all of his complaining about overwork and lack of
respect, there was a reason he'd signed up for the Air Force, after
all! He always felt sorry for the soldiers who had to slog across
most universes on foot, like the Andaran Scouts did.
Shaylar walked in a daze,
stumbling forward at Jathmar's side. He lay so still she would
have been afraid he was dead if not for the faintest of flutters
under her fingertips, where his pulse beat against the skin. It was
the only way she could tell he wasn't, because she couldn't sense
him through the marriage bond at all. Black acid lay at the core of
her brain, preventing anything—even Jathmar—from
connecting.
It was terrifying, that silence.
And yet, given the agony he was in, or would be when he awoke, it
might be a mercy, as well.
Her world had shrunk to a tightly
constricted sphere around herself and Jathmar's hand. Everything
beyond was lost in a haze, out of focus and rumbling with a
strange, muted roar, like freight trains whispering in the distance.
The strongest reality was the unrelenting, raw agony inside her
own head—an ache with spiked heels, doing a raucous
Arpathian blade dance behind her temples and eyelids.
She had no idea how much time
had passed since the attack, no idea how far she would be forced
to struggle through this endless wilderness. Her awareness faded
in and out, unpredictably, with an occasional louder noise close
by. An explosive crack as a dried branch broke under someone's
foot; a murmur of voices speaking alien gibberish. The sounds
whirled around her like a slow cyclone, leaving her lost and dizzy
in the middle of nothing at all . . .
She awoke brutally, with her
face against something rough and uneven. Ground, she thought
distantly. The roughness was the ground, covered with drifts of
leaves. Confusion shook her like a terrier with a wounded rat, and
voices rose in alarm on all sides. For long, terrifying moments she
had no idea where she was, or why. Then memory slammed her
down, and she bit back the scream building in her throat. She
wanted to fall back into the delicious nothingness, couldn't find
the strength to face what had happened or was yet to happen.
Someone was sobbing
uncontrollably, and she realized slowly that it was her.
Then a voice came to her. It was
a gentle voice, the voice of a woman whose name she knew but
couldn't find in her broken memory. An equally gentle hand
touched her hair, and the whirling confusion steadied. The voice
came again, more sharply focused this time, and someone's arms
were around her. They lifted her gently, laid her on a soft surface.
Cloth, she realized. Cloth
cradling her from head to toe. She collapsed against it, sinking
into its supporting embrace, boneless with gratitude for the chance
to simply lie still and rest.
"Is she asleep?"
Gadrial glanced up. Sir Jasak
Olderhan was bent over her shoulder, peering worriedly at Shaylar,
his eyes dark.
"Very nearly," she said. "Let's get
her litter up to transport height."
She let Wilthy adjust the
levitation spell in the accumulator. Once Shaylar was floating
between waist and hip height, Wilthy passed guidance control to a
strapping soldier with a bandage on one thigh and livid bruises
across the right side of his face. The trooper's expression as he
gazed down at the slender girl was a curious blend of wonder and
apprehension, as though he expected her to mutate into a basilisk
at any moment. Given the damage Shaylar had helped inflict on the
soldier's unit, Gadrial supposed the analogy might be apt, at that.
She watched the litter float away,
then drew a deep breath and looked up at the afternoon sky visible
through occasional breaks in the leaf canopy. It was later than she
liked, for their progress had been agonizingly slow, with twelve
litters to guide through primeval wilderness and far too few able-
bodied soldiers to do the piloting. They should have been no more
than twelve hours' hike from the portal when they began their
homeward trek, but she was beginning to fear that Jasak's twenty-
five-hour estimate had been too optimistic.
"You're worried," Jasak said
quietly.
"Terrified!" she snapped, then bit
her lip. "I'm sorry. But Shaylar isn't strong. I think there's some
internal injury, something inside her skull. I'm trying to keep it
stabilized, but it takes constant attention, and I think she's slipping
away from me slowly, anyway. And Jathmar—"
She lifted both hands helplessly
in admission of a deep, unfamiliar sense of total inadequacy, and
saw Jasak's face tighten.
"If we could only get a transport
dragon in here," he murmured. His voice trailed off, but then,
suddenly, his eyes snapped to life. He, too, glanced skyward for a
moment, obviously thinking hard, then nodded sharply.
"It might just be possible," he
muttered to himself, then refocused on Gadrial. "Excuse me," he
said, almost abruptly, and wheeled away, walking straight to
Javelin Shulthan.
"Send another hummer back to
camp, Iggy," he said. "Tell Krankark to send the medical
evacuation team through the portal the instant it reaches camp.
Have them meet us at the stream where Osmuna was mur—
"
He paused, glancing at the litters
where Jathmar and Shaylar lay crumpled and broken, and the verb
he'd been about to use died in his throat.
"At the stream where Osmuna
died," he said instead, looking back at Shulthan. "A transport
dragon should have the wing room to take off if he flies down the
streambed. Tell Krankark to send a reply hummer, homed in on
these coordinates, to confirm receipt of our message. Stay here
until it returns, then catch up to us at the stream. It's less than ten
minutes from here to the portal for a hummer, so you shouldn't
have to wait too long."
"Yes, Sir!"
The hummer shot away through
the trees less than two minutes later, like a feathered crossbow
bolt. Jasak watched it disappear into the towering forest, willing it
to even greater speed, then turned to find Sword Harnak with his
eyes.
"Let's get them moving again,
Sword," he said briskly. "We're heading for the stream where
Osmuna died."
Jasak was grateful that he'd
entered the exact coordinates for the spot of Osmuna's death into
his personal navigation unit. He'd done it for the purposes of
making sure his report was complete and accurate, of course, but
now it was going to serve a second, even more important purpose.
With that for guidance, they could follow a cross-country course
directly to the same place, and they set back out, moving
steadily . . . and unbearably slowly.
Someone's litter hung up on something every few
moments, which made walking a straight line—difficult in
this kind of terrain, under any circumstances—outright
impossible. Only the coordinates in Jasak's nav unit made it
possible to follow a reliable bearing towards their destination at
all, and the terrain was actually rougher on their new heading.
Jasak winced inside every time
one of his wounded men stumbled, or cursed under his breath, or
blanched, flinching as an unexpected, leaf-hidden foot-trap jarred
his ripped and torn flesh. As a first combat experience, it—
and he—had been a dismal failure, he thought. Too many
good men were wounded or dead, and he still had no answers. He
hadn't prayed—really prayed, and meant it—in years,
but he did now. He prayed no one else would die out here; that no
one else would pay for his errors in judgment. And while he
prayed, he moved among his men as they struggled forward,
pausing to murmur an encouragement here, to jolly someone into
a painful smile there, anything to keep them on their feet and
moving forward.
He wasn't sure he'd made the
right decision now, either. But he'd made it, for good or ill, and
the sound of the stream, musical and lovely in the silence, was a
blessed sound as it guided them across the last, weary stumbling
yards to its banks several hours later.
The sun was barely a hand's
width above the treetops when they finally caught sight of the
rushing, sparkle-bright water. Jasak longed to fling himself down,
surrender at least briefly to his fatigue and the pain of his own
wounded side, give himself just a few moments of rest as a reward
for getting his survivors this far. But this late in the season, and
this far north, full darkness would be upon them quickly. The
rescue party couldn't possibly reach them before nightfall, and
probably not before dawn, and the night promised to be clear and
cold. Some of his wounded would die before sunrise without a
hot fire . . . and Jathmar would be
among them.
So Jasak didn't fling himself
down. Instead, he ordered his exhausted men to pitch camp. He put
those still capable of heavy manual labor to work cutting enough
firewood to keep half a dozen bonfires going all night, asked
Gadrial to check on his own wounded as soon as she'd tended to
Jathmar and Shaylar, and then got a work party of walking
wounded organized to assemble the tiny two-man tents they used
only during the worst rainstorms into a single tarpaulin large
enough to shelter all of the critically injured.
Lance Inkar Jaboth got busy
cobbling together a hot meal from trail rations, local wild plants,
and what Jasak had always suspected was a dollop of magic.
Something made the concoctions Jaboth whipped up for
special occasions—and emergencies—not just
edible, but actually palatable. Whatever it was, it would be
a gift from the gods themselves, under conditions like these. Jasak
wished it had been possible to detach someone to hunt game for
the pot, but he'd needed every able-bodied man he still had just to
transport the wounded. Besides, if there were soldiers close
enough to that other portal, out there, Jasak might find himself
facing counterattack tonight. Under the circumstances, he
had no arbalest bolts to waste.
He set perimeter guards and
established a sentry rotation that would take them through the
night. He put his best, most reliable troopers on the graveyard
watch, the long, cold hours between midnight and first dawn. The
men were spooked enough, as it was; he didn't want some
overwrought trooper with a bad case of vengeance on his mind
firing an infantry-dragon at shadows. Or worse, at Otwal
Threbuch, returning from the portal they'd come here to find.
By the time darkness fell, half a
dozen small bonfires crackled, driving back the pitch-black
shadows under the trees and warming the crisp night air. Jasak
worried about providing a homing beacon for a possible enemy
scouting force or counterattack, but they had to have the warmth.
So he did his best by moving his sentries as far out as he dared,
then saw to his people, pausing at each fire to speak with
exhausted soldiers, praising their courage under fire and seeing
that their wounds were properly dressed.
Those wounds horrified him.
The sheer amount of trauma
made him wonder just how much force was behind those tiny lead
lumps. None of the bland metal cylinders they'd found looked
dangerous enough to cause this kind of damage. Some of the
wounds, they'd inflicted like the one in his own stiffening,
throbbing side, were long, shallow trenches gouged out of skin
and muscle at the surface. Others were more serious. Korval, one
of his assistant dragon gunners, would never have the use of his
left hand again. Not, at least, without some very serious Gifted
healing. Korval had just unwrapped the bloodied bandages,
waiting white-faced while the water heated over the fires so the
wound could be properly washed, as Jasak crouched down to
look. The bones had shattered, and the muscles and tendons
looked as if they had literally exploded from within.
Korval looked up, met his
shocked gaze, and managed a wan smile.
"Could've been worse, Sir.
Might've been through m'balls, eh?"
"Watch your language, Soldier,"
Jasak growled. "There are ladies present." But he gave Korval's
shoulder a hard squeeze and said. "You did a damned fine job
today, keeping that dragon crewed under heavy fire. I've never seen
anyone operate an infantry-dragon one-handed. Frankly, I don't
know how you did it. I'll send Ambor to dress that properly; there
should be some herbs in his kit to help with pain, at least," he
added.
"That'd be just fine with me,
Sir," Korval said, and Jasak smiled and gave the wounded man's
shoulder another squeeze.
Then he moved on, still smiling,
while behind his expression he cursed his own decision to send his
company surgeon back to the coast with Fifty Ulthar's platoon for
R&R. Layrak Ambor was rated surgeon's assistant, but he
was only an herbalist, with neither the trained skill of a field
surgeon, nor a Gift. But he was doing his dead level best, and he
was far better than nothing. However limited his skills might be,
Jasak was thankful they had at least that much medical help to add
to Gadrial's healing Gift.
The men who'd been shot
through the body, rather than an extremity, were in serious
condition. Most were still shock-pale, and the low moans of
grievously wounded men, floating above the steady, musical tones
of rushing water, left Jasak Olderhan feeling helpless and useless.
Anything he could do for them was hopelessly inadequate, and
while cursing Garlath relieved some of his own emotional
pressure, it did nothing to ease their suffering.
He paused briefly at the
makeshift tent where Ambor worked frantically to keep their
worst casualties alive. When Jasak hunkered down beside him, the
herbalist was nearly wild-eyed, overwhelmed by the sheer number
of ghastly wounds he had to treat, and by the appalling number of
lives held in his trembling hands.
"You're doing a fine job,
Ambor," Jasak said quietly. "Under conditions like these, no one
could do better. Where can Magister Kelbryan help the most?"
A little of the wild panic left
Ambor's eyes. He swallowed, then looked around his charges,
obviously thinking hard.
"Ask her to look after Nilbor and
Urkins, if you would, Sir. They're in bad shape. Gut wounds, the
both of them, Sir. Unconscious and in shock, despite everything
I've tried, and they're getting weaker. Without the
Magister—"
He shrugged helplessly, and
Jasak nodded.
"I'll send her in immediately."
"Thank you, Sir."
Ambor looked and sounded
steadier, and the heat of the fire just outside the casualty tent was
beginning to take hold, radiating at least a fragile comfort over the
semi-conscious wounded. Jasak paused for just a moment,
looking back at the herbalist over his shoulder, then strode quickly
back out into the darkness.
He found Gadrial kneeling
beside his injured prisoners. The tender look on her face as she
stroked Jathmar's scorched hair with gentle fingertips, sounding
his pulse with her other hand, touched something deep inside
Jasak. He, too, was worried about the unconscious man. Jathmar
hadn't roused even once, although that might have been as much
Gadrial's doing as the result of his injuries.
Gadrial looked up as Jasak
approached Jathmar's litter, which someone had adjusted to float
ten inches above the ground.
"You need me for someone
else?" she asked, and he nodded, his expression unhappy at the
demands he was placing upon her.
"How are you holding up?" he
asked quietly, and her eyes widened, as though his question had
surprised her. Then a smile touched her lips.
"I'm tired, Sir Jasak, but I'll
manage. Where do you need me?"
"In the tent. We've got two men
Ambor's losing—belly wounds, both of them. They've
slipped into a coma."
She paled and bit her lower lip,
then simply nodded and rose in one graceful, fluid motion he
couldn't possibly have duplicated. He escorted her into the tent,
then stepped back outside, giving her privacy to work.
He looked around the bivouac
one last time, then inhaled deeply. He'd done everything he could
to settle everyone safely, however little it felt like to him, and
curiosity was riding him with spurs of fire. Since there wasn't
much else he could do about any of their other problems, he
decided he could at least scratch that itch, and pulled out some of
the strange equipment they'd recovered, both from the stockade
and from the massive toppled timber.
He took great care with the long,
tubular weapons every man—and women—had
carried. There seemed to be several different types or varieties of
them, and he rapidly discovered that they were intricate
mechanical marvels, far more complex than any war staff his own
people had built. Of course, war staffs—including the
infantry and field-dragons which had been developed from
them—were actually quite simple, mechanically speaking.
They merely provided a place to store battle spells, and a sarkolis-
crystal guide tube, down which the destructive spells were
channeled on their way to the target.
Jasak had no idea what
mysterious properties these tubular weapons operated upon. Nor
could he figure out what many of the parts did, but he
recognized precision engineering when he saw it.
A dragoon arbalest, like the one
Otwal Threbuch favored, used a ten-round magazine and a spell-
enhanced cocking lever. The augmented lever required a force of
no more than twenty pounds to operate, and an arbalestier could
fire all ten rounds as quickly as he could work the lever. It had
almost as much punch—albeit over a shorter
range—as the standard, single-shot infantry weapon, and a
vastly higher rate of fire, but no man ever born was strong enough
to throw the cocking lever once the enhancing spell was
exhausted. Infantry weapons were much heavier, as well as bigger,
and used a carefully designed mechanical advantage. They
might be difficult to span without enhancement, but it could be
done—which could be a decided advantage when the magic
ran out—and they were considerably longer ranged.
The workmanship which went
into a dragoon arbalest had always impressed Jasak, but the
workmanship of whoever had built these weapons matched it, at
the very least. Still, he would have liked to know what all of that
craftsmanship did. Even the parts whose basic function he
suspected he could guess raised far more questions than they
answered.
For example, the weapon he was
examining at the moment was about forty-two inches long, over
all. The tube through which those small, deadly projectiles passed
was shorter—only about twenty-four inches long—
and it carried what he recognized as at least a distant cousin of the
ring-and-post battle sights mounted on an arbalest. But the rear
sight on this weapon was set in an odd metal block
mounted on a sturdy, rectangular steel frame about one inch
across. The sides of the rectangle were no more than a thirty-
second of an inch across, as nearly as his pocket rule could
measure, and it frame could either lie flat or be flipped up into a
vertical position.
When it was flipped into the
upright position, a second rear sight, set into the same
metal block as the first, but at right angles, rotated up for the
shooter's use. But the supporting steel rectangle was notched, and
etched with tiny lines with some sort of symbols which (he
suspected) were probably numbers, and the sight could be slid up
and down the frame, locked into place at any one of those tiny,
engraved lines by a spring-loaded catch that engaged in the side's
notches.
Jasak had spent enough time on
the arbalest range to know all about elevating his point of aim to
allow for the drop in the bolt's trajectory at longer ranges. Unless
he missed his guess, that was the function of this weapon's
peculiar rear sight, as well. If so, it was an ingenious device,
which was simultaneously simple in concept and very
sophisticated in execution. But what frightened him about it was
how high the rear sight could be set and the degree of elevation
that would impose. Without a better idea of the projectiles'
velocity and trajectory, he couldn't be certain, of course, but
judging from the damage they'd inflicted, this weapon's projectiles
must move at truly terrifying velocities. Which, in turn, suggested
they would have a much flatter trajectory.
Which, assuming the
sophisticated, intelligent people who'd designed and built it hadn't
been in the habit of providing sights to shoot beyond the weapon's
effective range, suggested that it must be capable of accurate
shooting at ranges far in excess of any arbalest he'd ever
seen.
There was a long metal oval
underneath the weapon. It was obviously made to go up and down,
and he suspected that it had to be something like the cocking lever
on Threbuch's dragoon arbalest. In any case, he had absolutely no
intention of fiddling with it until they were in more secure
territory, away from potential enemy contact. And when he let the
very tip of his finger touch the curved metal spur jutting down
into the guarded space created by a curve in the metal oval, his
fingertips jerked back of their own volition. That startled him,
although only for a moment. Obviously, that curved spur was the
weapon's trigger—it even looked like the trigger on one of
his own men's arbalest's—and his meager Gift was warning
him that it was more dangerous than the cocking lever (if that is
what it was).
The metal tube itself was made
from high-grade steel, and when he peered—very
cautiously—into it, adjusting it to get a little firelight into
the hollow bore, he saw what looked like spiraling grooves cut
into the metal. Interesting. The Arcanan Army understood the
principal of spinning a crossbow bolt in flight to give it greater
stability and accuracy. He couldn't quite imagine how it might
work, but was it possible that those spiraling grooves could do the
same thing to the deadly little leaden projectiles this thing
threw?
He put that question aside and
turned his attention to the snug wooden sleeve into which the tube
had been fitted. It was held in place with three wide bands of metal
that weren't steel. They looked like bronze, perhaps. The wood
itself continued behind the tube to form a buttplate—again,
not unlike an arbalest's—so a full third of the weapon's
length was solid wood.
The long, tapering section of
wood, narrowest near the tube, widest at the weapon's base, had
been beautifully checkered by some intricate cutting process. It
was the only decoration on the weapon, and it was obviously as
much a practical design feature as pure decoration. As Jasak
handled it, he realized that the checkering would serve exactly the
same function as the fishscale pattern cut into the forestocks of
arbalests, making them easier to grip in wet weather.
Other items ranged from the
obvious—camp shovels, hatchets, backpacks—to the
completely mysterious, and he gradually realized that what
wasn't there was as interesting as what was. Although
Jasak searched diligently, he found no trace of maps or charts
anywhere in their gear. He found notebooks, with detailed
botanical drawings and startlingly accurate sketches of wildlife,
but no trace of a single chart.
The implication was clear; they'd
realized—or, feared, at least—that their position was
hopeless, so they'd destroyed the evidence of where they'd been. If
they were, indeed, a civilian version of Jasak's Scouts, working to
survey new universes and map new portals, they would have
carried detailed charts that showed the route back to their home
universe. From a military standpoint, losing those maps was a
major disaster for Arcana. From a political
standpoint . . .
Jasak thought about the reaction
news of this battle was bound to trigger—particularly in
places like rabidly xenophobic Mythal, whose politicians trusted
no one, not even themselves. Especially not themselves.
As he thought about them and their probable response, Jasak
Olderhan was abruptly glad these people had destroyed their maps,
even as the Andaran officer in him recoiled from such blatant
heresy.
He told the Andaran officer to
shut up, and that shocked him, too. Yet he couldn't help it, for a
shiver had caught him squarely between the shoulder blades, an
odd prescience quivering through him like a warning of bloodshed
and disaster.
Than a log snapped in the fire,
jolting him out of his eerie reverie, and the uncanny shiver passed,
leaving him merely chilled in the night air. He rubbed the prickled
hairs on the back of his neck, trying to smooth them down again,
and his glance was caught by a small, flat circular object lying
wedged into the box of jumbled gear at his feet. He picked it up,
and was surprised by its weight. The object was made of metal,
rolled or cast to form a strong metal casing. After fiddling with it
for a couple of moments, he determined that the top section was a
lid that unscrewed. He removed
it . . . and stared.
Inside were
two . . . machines, he decided, not
knowing what else to call them. In the lid section, there was a
glass cover that sealed off a thin metallic needle, flat and dark
against a white background. Tiny hatchmarks were spaced evenly
around the circular "face" with neat, almost military precision.
More alien symbols—letters or numbers, he was
certain—marked off eight points around the perimeter.
Someone moved beside the
casualty tent, and Jasak glanced up, automatically checking to see
if it had been Gadrial. It hadn't, and when he turned back to the
device in his hand, his gaze snapped back to the needle. He'd
moved the case with the rest of his body, but the needle—
which appeared to be floating on a post, able to spin
freely—hadn't moved with the rest of the case. Or, rather, it
had moved, swinging stubbornly around to point in the
same direction as before despite the case's movement.
The discovery startled him, so he
experimented, and found that no matter how he turned the case
around, the needle swung doggedly to point in the exact same
direction: north.
Understanding dawned like a
thunderclap. It was a navigation device. But this was no
spell-powered personal crystal that oriented its owner to the
cardinal directions, as every Arcanan compass ever built did. It
was nothing but a flat needle on a post, an incredibly simple
mechanical device, powered by nothing he could see. How the
devil did it work?
The bottom section of the metal
case was much heavier than the lid, providing most of the heft he'd
noticed when he first picked it up. Clearly, it housed something
dense, and this object, too, had a flat glass face, under which lay
another dial with hatchmarks, and another series of letters or
numbers of some kind, beside each of the twelve longest hatch
lines. There were three needles on this device: a short one
which scarcely seemed to move at all; a long one which moved
slowly; and a very thin one that moved continuously, sweeping
around the dial in endless circles.
Its purpose, too, came in a flash
of understanding as the slow, audible click-click of the long
needle reminded him of the changing numbers in his personal
crystal's digital time display. Yet this was no spell-powered
device, either. Or, he didn't think so, at any rate. He discovered a
small knob at one side which could be pulled out slightly to
change the positions of the needles, or simply turned in place.
Turning it without pulling it out resulted in a slight clicking sound
inside the device, and a gradually stiffening resistance which
increased the pressure needed to turn the knob. He stopped before
it got too stiff to turn at all, lest he damage it by trying to force it.
He laid the two halves of the
case in his lap, gazing down at them in the firelight, and frowned
in unhappy contemplation. He was no magister, but his touch of
Gift should have been enough to at least recognize the presence of
any sort of spellware. Yet he hadn't detected even the slightest
twitch of magic. He would have liked to believe that that meant
the weapons he'd examined had exhausted whatever powered
them, but he knew that wasn't the case.
Instead, what he had was a
weapon which had amply proved its deadly efficiency; a navigation
device which, for all its simplicity, looked damnably effective; and
another device which obviously kept very precise track of time,
indeed.
And none of them—not one of them—depended on spellware or a Gift. Which
meant they would work for anyone, anytime, anywhere.
The night wind blew suddenly
chill, indeed.
Chapter Twelve
The sun had disappeared into
darkness when Windclaw reached the swamp portal camp after
almost seven, arduous hours of high-speed flight. There were few
landmarks to navigate by, but the camp's scattered lights stood out
sharply against the unrelieved blackness of a world mankind had
discovered considerably less than a year earlier.
Windclaw backwinged neatly to
a landing between the base camp's tents and the portal itself. An
icy breeze blew across the camp from the portal, rustling the dead
trees that speared into the sky on the other side, rattling the reeds
on this one. The vast sweep of black-velvet heaven visible above
the trees revealed brilliant stars, in an unnerving northern
constellation pattern, vastly different from the southern
skies it was pasted across.
It didn't seem to matter how
many portals Salmeer saw or stepped through; the spine tingling
awe never changed, and he'd been flying portal hops for the better
part of thirty years.
Windclaw had barely furled his
wings when a soldier ran across the muddy ground, holding what
proved to be the transcript of another hummer message. He
climbed up the foreleg Windclaw had been trained to offer, and
Salmeer recognized him. He didn't know Javelin Kranark
especially well, but he'd always impressed Salmeer as a competent
trooper, utterly dedicated not only to the second Andaran Scouts,
but also to Hundred Olderhan.
"Thank the gods you're here,
Squire!" Kranark panted as he handed Salmeer the transcript. "The
Hundred's halted at these grid coordinates. He didn't dare keep
moving his wounded after dark. He needs you to bring the dragon
through for an emergency evacuation of the worst wounded."
Salmeer stared at Kranark in
disbelief. He hadn't taken Windclaw through the portal, but he'd
made enough deliveries to the base camp when it was daylight on
the far side to have a pretty fair grasp of the sort of
terrain—and tree cover—waiting on the other side.
"Is he out of his mind?" the pilot
demanded harshly. "He wants me to try to set a dragon
down out in the middle of those fucking woods?"
"You can't do it?" The javelin's
expression was barely visible in the darkness, but the horror in his
voice was clear, and Salmeer winced. The critically wounded men
out there were this man's brothers in arms, the closest thing he had
to a family out here.
"I've seen that canopy out there,
and it's murder," the pilot said in a marginally gentle voice,
waving one hand at the looming portal. "I haven't actually flown
over it, not in that universe, anyway. But I've seen plenty
of forests like it. That's a solid sea of trees, Kranark, stretching for
hundreds of miles. A transport dragon can't slide sideways
between branches that are damned near interwoven!"
"Is that all?" Kranark replied,
hope glittering in his voice once more. "The Hundred said he's
camped along an open stream. He says there's plenty of wing room
for a skilled dragon to get in and take off again."
"'Skilled dragon,' huh?"
Salmeer muttered, interpreting that phrase to mean there was just
enough clear space for it to be dangerous as hell, but doable. . . if
your set was big enough, and your brain small enough, to
try it.
In, of course, the opinion of a
man who wasn't—and never had been—a qualified
dragon pilot himself.
There are old pilots, and there are bold pilots, but
there are no old, bold pilots. The flight school training
mantra ran through the back of his mind, and he hovered on the
brink of refusing. After all, Windclaw was an incredibly valuable
asset out here. If Salmeer flew him into a treetop, then the
possibility of evacuating any of the wounded to Fort
Rycharn went straight out the window.
"Just how many casualties are
there?" he asked, temporizing while common sense fought against
his own sense of urgency.
Kranark's muscles seemed to
congeal. The javelin went absolutely motionless, and his voice
went wooden and hollow.
"There were twenty-one. There
are only twenty now. Hundred Olderhan took a full platoon
through the portal—sixty-seven men, counting the
supports. Twenty-five of them are dead now."
"Mother Jambakol's eyelashes!"
The filthy curse broke loose before he could stop it, and he made a
furtive sign to ward off "Mother Jambakol's" evil glance.
"Please, Sir." Krankark gripped
his arm. "Please, at least try," he begged. "All the
Hundred's got out there is an herbalist. We've got men
unconscious, and the Hundred says Ambor can't bring them out of
the coma. . . . "
Krankark's voice shook, and
Sword Morikan leaned forward behind Salmeer's shoulder.
"Their situation's desperate, Sir.
You've got to get me to those men. I can't Heal that many with
magic alone, but I can save the most critically wounded, and we've
got trained surgeons for the others. Except that unless I get there
soon—and from the sound of it, we're talking about
minutes, not hours—the death count's going to get worse.
Feel that wind blowing through the portal? Badly wounded men
won't last the night in that, even with a good hot campfire."
Salmeer swore again.
"All right. All right, I'll get you
there, Sword. I won't take Windclaw in unless I decide
there's enough room to get airborne again, but I'll lower you
through the trees on a frigging rope, if I have to."
Morikan nodded sharply, and
Salmeer looked past the healer at the two surgeons and the
herbalists.
"I need to lighten the payload,
especially if I've got wounded to haul out," he said. "You two
dismount and wait for us here."
One of the surgeons looked a
question at Morikan, who nodded again, as sharply as before.
"Go ahead, Traith," he said. "I'll
take Vormak and two of the herbalists with me; you and the other
two can set up here and be ready to work by the time the Squire
and I get back. Don't worry," he smiled grimly, "it sounds like
we're all going to have plenty to keep us occupied."
Salmeer snorted in bitter
amusement and agreements, then turned back to Krankark as two
of the herbalists and the surgeon Morikan had addressed began
unstrapping and climbing down with their equipment.
"OK, Javelin. You've convinced
me," he said. "Jump down so I can get this boy airborne." The pilot
smiled thinly. "Hell, he may just be crazy enough to actually try
landing if I ask him to!"
He took the printout the javelin
thrust into his hand, with the all-important coordinates of
Hundred Olderhan's camp. Then, the moment Krankark and the
others were clear, Salmeer patted Windclaw's neck and urged the
dragon back aloft.
Windclaw took a running start,
snapped his great wings wide, and lifted slowly, rumbling into the
air across the open campsite. Windclaw needed nearly a hundred
yards just to reach treetop height, because he was big, even for a
transport dragon. That gave him lots of lifting power, but he was
simply too large and too slow to lift off on his tail, the way some
of the smaller fighting dragons could. The fighters—
especially the ones bred to go after enemy gryphons—had
to be fast and agile, since gryphons were small, swift, and brutally
difficult to catch in midair.
Salmeer didn't usually mind
Windclaw's lack of agility. Tonight, though, it might pose a major
problem. But it might not, too, he reminded himself loyally, for he
was proud of his dragon. He and Windclaw didn't share any sort of
special bond, like the ones bred into some of the more
spectacularly expensive pets wealthy Arcanans sometimes
commissioned. No pilot or dragon did. But he'd come to know his
beast's moods and temperament. They'd come
to . . . respect one another, and
Windclaw was fond enough of him—in a dragonish sort of
way—to make their working relationship satisfying on both
sides, and tonight, Windclaw's decades of experience might just
make up for his lack of nimbleness.
Now Salmeer whistled sharply,
and the dragon made a wide circle, building speed as he flew.
Starlight and moonlight burnished his wings with a metallic
shimmer, glittering as they touched the elaborate wing patterns
that represented Windclaw's pedigree, as well as his current unit
assignment, They swept around toward the opening between
universes, gaining speed and more altitude with every wing stroke.
By the time he actually reached the portal, Windclaw was moving
at very nearly his top velocity and climbing steeply to clear the
trees on its far side.
They flashed through the portal,
with the inevitable pop of equalizing air pressure in one's inner
ear; then they were climbing through clear, cold night air.
Windclaw straightened the angle of his climb and leveled out,
cruising through a crystalline night sky ablaze with stars and a
wondrous moon which wasn't the same one they'd left behind.
Salmeer tapped his personal
crystal with the spell-powered stylus that allowed him to plug in
Hundred Olderhan's grid coordinates, even though Salmeer
himself had no Gift at all, and the crystal obediently displayed a
standard navigational grid, with the familiar compass points in a
sphere around the circle that represented Windclaw. A blinking
green arrow pointed the direction to fly, giving Salmeer a
beautifully clear, easy-to-read three-dimensional display to
follow. When they reached the target zone, a steady red circle
would appear, directly at the grid coordinates Hundred Olderhan
had sent.
But before that red circle
appeared, they had a good, swift bit of flying to
do . . . not to mention the minor
matter of figuring out how to thread the needle and land a dragon
Windclaw's size, in the middle of the night, along the banks of a
frigging stream, of all godsdamned things!
Squire Muthok Salmeer shook
his head, not quite able to believe even now that he'd agreed to
this. Then he set himself to ignore the biting chill and concentrated
instead on the warmth of the extra layer of clothes under his flying
jacket and a truly spectacular sky awash with brilliant stars.
Shaylar awoke to darkness,
confusion, and the scent of woodsmoke. For long moments, she
lay completely still, trying to figure out where she was. She
remembered the attack, the frightful cremation of the dead, the
strange device they'd used to lift Jathmar and their other wounded
on floating stretchers. She even remembered walking beside
Jathmar, holding his hand as they evacuated the contact area. But
she couldn't figure out where she was now, which suggested a
prolonged period of unconsciousness. That made sense, although
very little else did. Her head still throbbed with a fierce rhythm,
and she still couldn't hear Jathmar, but she felt more rested, which
was a mercy.
Unfortunately, she was also
beginning to feel the bruises and contusions where that last
fireball had blasted her into the fallen tree. Her face was painfully
scraped along one cheek and jaw, and the deep abrasions stung like
fire. Bruises left that whole side of her face swollen, and they
were probably a lurid shade of purple-black by now. She reached
up to touch the damage, only to abort the movement when her
entire shoulder locked up. A white-hot lance of fire shot straight
up the side of her neck, and she hissed aloud in pain.
Someone spoke practically into
her ear, and she gasped in surprise, skittered sideways—
—and promptly rolled off
the edge of whatever she'd been lying on. She bit off a scream, but
the fall to the ground was only about ten inches. Which was still
more than enough to knock the wind out of her and jar her
painfully, especially with her previous injuries.
Whoever had spoken leaned over
her almost before she landed, making worried sounds that quickly
turned soothing. Gentle hands straightened her bent limbs and
tested her pulse, and Shaylar whimpered, cursing the pain that
exploded through her with every movement.
Her eyes opened, and she looked
up.
She couldn't remember his name,
but she knew his face: the enemy commander. He was speaking
softly to her, his gaze worried and intense. She hissed aloud and
flinched back when he touched the bruises along her jaw with a
gentle finger, and his face drained white at the pain sound. What
was obviously a stuttering apology broke from him, and she
wanted to reassure him. But the unending pain and fear and the
silence in her mind left her weak, and far too susceptible to new
shocks. She was horrified to discover that all she could do was lie
on the cold ground and weep large, silent tears that stung her eyes
and clogged her nose.
He bit his lip, then very carefully
lifted her. Even through her misery, she was astonished by his
strength. She knew she wasn't a large woman, but he lifted her as
easily as if she'd been a child, and he held her as if she'd been one,
too. A part of her was bitterly ashamed of her weakness, but as he
held her close, she rested the undamaged side of her face against
his broad shoulder.
He'd been wounded himself, her
muzzy memory told her, yet there was no evidence of any
discomfort on his part as he held her. He didn't rock her, didn't
croon any lullabies, didn't even speak. He simply held her, and
despite everything, despite even the fact that he was the
commander of the men who'd massacred her entire survey team,
there was something immensely comforting about the way he did
it.
Perhaps, a small, lucid corner of
her brain thought, her Talent was still working, at least a little.
That was the only explanation she could think of for why she
should feel so safe, so . . . protected
in the arms of these murderers' commanding officer.
She was never clear afterward on
how long he held her, but, finally, her tears slowed, then stopped.
He held her a moment longer, then very carefully placed her back
onto one of the eerie, floating stretchers. When she began to
shiver, he produced something like a sleeping bag, which he
tucked around her. Then he moved her entire stretcher with a
single touch, guiding it closer to a bonfire that warmed her
deliciously within moments.
The shivers eased away, leaving
her limp and exhausted, but she didn't go back to sleep. Her mind
was strangely alert, yet wrapped in fog. It was a disquieting
sensation, but she found it easier to cope if she just relaxed and let
herself drift, rather than struggling to make everything come clear.
Thinking clearly was obviously important, perhaps even critical, in
her current predicament, but she couldn't see any sense in
struggling to do something physically impossible at the moment.
So she lay still on her strange,
floating bed, and wondered in a distant, abstracted sort of way,
how these people made their stretchers float. There was no logical
explanation for it, any more than there were logical explanations
for the other mysteries she'd already witnessed: glassy tubes that
threw fireballs with no visible source of flame. Seemingly
identical tubes that hurled lightning, instead of fire. The odd little
cubes that had somehow packed enough explosive force to
immolate an entire human body—yet did so without any
actual explosion, just a sudden and inexplicable burst of flame.
Sorcery, the back of her wounded brain whispered, and
Shaylar was so befuddled, so lost in this unending bad dream, that
she didn't even quibble with her own choice of words. Whatever
these people used for technology, it looked, sounded, and even
smelled like magic. At least, it did to her admittedly addled
senses.
As she drifted there in the
darkness, she gradually became aware of something else. The scent
of food tickled her nostrils, and despite the pounding in her head
and the lingering bite of nausea in her throat, sudden, ravening
hunger surged to life. The last food she'd eaten had been a hastily
bolted lunch, just before Falsan staggered into camp and died in
her arms. She had no idea how long ago that had been, or what
time it was now, but the stars were brilliant overhead, and the
moon was high, nearly straight overhead. It had obviously been up
for hours.
It was the middle of the night,
then, which left her puzzled by the smell of something cooking
over a fire. Most people tramping about in the wilderness did their
cooking early in the evening, at or shortly after sundown. But then
the commander returned to her, with a bowl and spoon. He smiled
and said something that sounded reassuring, and helped her sit up.
Her stretcher continued to float, rock steady despite the fact that it
was only canvas and ought to have shifted as she moved. Its
motionlessness was yet another strangeness she couldn't
understand . . . and didn't want to
think about yet.
She would much rather think
about the contents of the bowl. When he handed it to her, after
making sure she was able to grip it, she discovered a surprisingly
thick stew, with what looked and smelled like wild
carrots—thin and pale golden in the firelight—
chunks of what might have been rabbit, and other things she
couldn't readily identify. She took a tentative taste, unsure how her
uneasy stomach would react to food, and was instantly transported
to a state of near-ecstasy.
She actually moaned aloud,
wondering how any camp cook could create something this
magnificent under such primitive conditions. Then she forgot
everything else in this or any other universe and simply
ate. Flavors rich and savory with spices she couldn't
identify exploded across her tongue, and the hot food warmed her
from the inside out. Some of the pounding in her head eased as her
body responded to its first nourishment in hours, and she didn't
even mind the savage ache in her bruised jaw when she chewed.
By the time she'd ravened her
way through the entire bowl, she felt almost human again. A
battered and bedamned one, but human, nonetheless. When she
lifted her head, she found the enemy commander watching her, his
expression wavering between intense curiosity, pleasure at how
much she'd obviously enjoyed the food, deep concern, and
lingering guilt. She looked back at him for several seconds, and
his name finally floated to the surface of her memory.
"Jasak?" she asked tentatively,
and his eyes lit with pleasure.
"Jasak," he agreed, nodding. He
touched his chest and added. "Olderhan. Jasak Olderhan."
He waited expectantly, and
Shaylar considered the intricacies of Shurkhali married names.
Better to opt for simplicity, she decided.
"Shaylar Nargra," she said, and
he repeated her name carefully, then glanced at Jathmar. His
stretcher floated less than a yard from hers, close enough to the
fire to keep him warm, and someone had laid a lightweight cover
over him, so that the blistered skin and scorched clothing wasn't
visible. He was still unconscious though, which terrified her, and
her eyes burned.
"Jathmar Nargra," she said
through a suddenly constricted throat, and an expression of
profound contrition washed across Jasak Olderhan's face.
He said something, then gestured
helplessly, unable to convey what he obviously wanted to tell her.
His frustration with the insurmountable language barrier was
obvious, and he took her hand, trying to reassure her.
Shaylar stiffened in shock. The
rest or the food, or possibly the combination of both, had restored
at least a bit of her Talent. She remained Voiceless, yet his
emotions were so powerful, so strong and uncontrolled, that they
rolled through her like thunder anyway. It was all she could do not
to jerk her hand away from that sudden, roiling tide, but she didn't
dare antagonize him, and she could learn more—much
more—when he touched her. If he became aware he was
transmitting information, he would almost certainly stop doing it,
and she couldn't risk that. The understanding she might glean was
the tiniest of weapons, but it was also the only one she had.
He was speaking in low, earnest
tones, and she fought the blackness and pain in her head, soaking
in as much information as she could. He was trying to help them.
There was a sense of waiting for something or someone, with a
feeling of great importance and urgency behind the need to wait.
Someone was coming, she realized with a sense of shock.
Someone who could help.
It shouldn't have surprised her,
she realized a moment later. This universe didn't strike her as the
home of these people. Contact with Jasak Olderhan reinforced that
impression, but if they were as much strangers to this universe as
Shaylar's survey crew had been, who was coming? More soldiers,
undoubtedly—Jasak must have sent a message to another
group of his people. But how many more soldiers? And
from where?
Shaylar had no idea how his
message had gone out. Did these people have a Voice with them?
Or had Olderhan been forced to send a messenger on foot? In
either case, they needed medical help urgently, given the
seriousness of Jathmar's injuries and how many wounded
Olderhan had. Yet he was waiting here, rather than pushing on.
The help he expected must be close, then, however he'd summoned
it. She didn't know whether to feel relieved that help for Jathmar
might arrive soon, or alarmed by the threat another, probably
larger, military force posed to Darcel Kinlafia and to Company-
Captain Halifu's understrength force.
Once more, she tried desperately
to contact Darcel, but her Voice remained nothing but a black
whirlpool of pain and disorienting vertigo. The effort to establish
contact turned the whirlpool into a thundering maelstrom so
intense, so jagged with anguish, she actually cried out.
She jerked back, breaking
contact with Olderhan to clutch at her temples and bending
forward on the stretcher, hunched over with the torment in her
head. And then she felt large, capable hands cradle her face.
Fingers rubbed gently above her pounding temples, then moved
down to her neck, where her muscles had knotted painfully. They
massaged with surprising gentleness and skill, and she could sense
Olderhan's genuine horror at the sudden onslaught of her pain, as
well as his anxiousness to alleviate it.
That helped, as well, but her
strength abruptly faded away to nothing. One moment, she was
sitting up with Olderhan's fingers rubbing her neck; the next, she
lay draped bonelessly against a broad chest once more, cheek
pillowed against his shoulder yet again. She hated her own
weakness. Hated the injuries that left her reeling in confusion,
helpless to do anything.
She felt a tentative touch on her
hair. The effort to use her Voice had scrambled her ability to
sample his emotions once more, but he spoke to her, the words
low and soothing, and it felt as if he were making vows of some
sort. Promises to protect, or perhaps to defend; she couldn't grasp
the nuances with no words or shared concepts, and with her Talent
so crippled. Still, it was sufficiently reassuring to leave her limp
against his shoulder, at least for the moment.
She'd rested against him for
quite some time. She was actually drifting back towards sleep
once more, when they were abruptly interrupted. A strange sound
penetrated her awareness—a rhythmic flapping, like
someone shaking out the largest carpet ever woven. Then someone
shouted, and Olderhan responded with what sounded and felt like
intense relief. He eased her back down onto the stretcher and
hurried to the edge of the broad stream their camp had been
pitched beside.
He stood there, peering out into
the stream. But, no, she realized, that wasn't quite right. He was
peering above the stream, with his head tipped back. He
stared up at the stars, and the sound of shaken cloth was louder,
much louder. Within moments, it had changed from rhythmic
flapping to equally rhythmic thunder. A huge, black shadow
swooped suddenly between Olderhan and the stars, then an
overpressure of air blasted across the camp. The bonfires flared
wildly as sparks, ash, and scattered autumn leaves flew before the
whirlwind, and she jerked her gaze upward.
Scales, like a crocodile's
armored hide in glowing, iridescent colors like shoaling fish.
Immense wings, so thin the firelight glowed through them. Bats'
wings the size of the sails on a ninety-foot twin-masted schooner.
Claws, a foot-long and razor-sharp, glittering bronze as they
reached down to grasp boulders in the stream when it landed. A
long, sinuous neck, like a serpent twenty feet long, still as thick as
her own torso where it met the triangular, adder-shaped head.
Spikes, immense spikes, jutting out over eyes of crimson flame,
and an eagle's beak of metallic bronze, sparkling in the wildly
flaring firelight.
Its mouth opened, revealing
rows of sickle-bladed teeth, and it was looking directly at her
. Shaylar's wounded mind shrieked at her to run, even as she
sensed an alien, inhuman presence behind those fiery eyes,
malevolent and barely under control.
The nightmare apparition hissed.
The sound was an angry steam-engine shriek, and Shaylar flinched
back, drew breath to scream—
—and the man strapped to
its neck spoke sharply. He emphasized his words with a jab from
an implement that looked part-cattle prod and part-harpoon. It
would have to be sharp, she realized through waves of
unreasoning terror, to make itself—and its owner's
displeasure—felt through hide that tough.
Wings rattled angrily, like
agitated snakes, and the prod came down again, sharper and harder
than before. The beast reared skyward and let out a shriek of rage
that battered Shaylar's bleeding senses. She did scream, this time,
and cowered down with both arms over her head—not to
keep the creature's teeth off her neck, but to keep its fury out of
her mind.
She heard men's voices raised in
angry shouts and what sounded like bafflement. Someone touched
her shoulder, and she flinched, then realized it was Gadrial. The
other woman seemed as baffled as the men—baffled,
surprised, still half-asleep. But she also seemed determined to
interpose her own body between Shaylar and the enraged beast in
the streambed if that was what it took to protect her.
Gadrial cradled Shaylar in a
protective embrace, blinking in still-sleepy confusion and utterly
perplexed. She'd never personally seen an angry dragon, but that
was the only way to describe this one, and it was glaring
unnervingly straight at her. Or, rather, she amended, at Shaylar
. The injured young woman was trembling, and Gadrial spoke
quietly, soothingly, stroking her hair while she felt the tremors
rippling through that slender body. Fear had stiffened Shaylar's
muscles so tightly the tremors were like an earthquake shaking
solid stone.
She's been through too much in too little time, Gadrial
thought grimly. No wonder she's all but hysterical!
Despite the distance to
streambed's edge, Gadrial could hear Sir Jasak speaking with the
dragon's pilot. They could probably hear him back at the base
camp, she thought, and the pilot didn't look too happy at being on
the receiving end of the . . .
discussion. But then Jasak paused, hands on hips, head cocked,
and the pilot shook his head.
"I've never seen Windclaw react
like that, Sir," Muthok Salmeer said. "Never! He's an old fellow,
smart as a transport dragon gets, with plenty of lessons in good
manners. He's no war dragon, to be hissing at everyone but his
pilot. He's spent his entire life in Transport and Search and Rescue
work. It beats hell out of me, Hundred, and that's no lie. It's like he
took one look at the girl there, and went berserk."
The squire's tone sounded as
confused and upset as Jasak felt. It was obvious Salmeer was
completely and totally perplexed, but the pilot had reacted quickly
and decisively to his dragon's impossible-to-predict rage. That
fact, coupled with his obvious concern, disarmed much of Jasak's
initial fury.
The hundred made himself step
back mentally and draw a deep breath. He glanced back at his
prisoner, who sat huddled against Gadrial. Shaylar looked up, her
face ashen as she risked a glance at Windclaw, then instantly
pressed her face back against the magister, and he frowned as he
got past his immediate reaction and started considering the
implications of the dragon's behavior.
"That's . . .
interesting, Muthok," he said after a moment, turning back to the
pilot. "Damned interesting."
"You don't have any idea who
they are, Sir?" Salmeer asked. "You could've knocked me down
with a puff of air when that hummer message arrived, and that's a
fact."
"No, we don't know who they
are. But I intend to find out, and we won't do that if we lose them.
The girl's hurt—I don't know how badly—but the
man's critical. He won't last the night if we don't get him to a true
healer, and some of my own men are almost as bad."
"Then it's a good thing I brought
you one, Sir," Salmeer said with a smile. He gestured to the
passengers still strapped to the saddles on the Windclaw's back,
and Jasak's eyes followed the gesture. The dragon's reaction to
Shaylar had kept him from paying much attention to Windclaw's
other riders, but now his face lit with delight as he recognized
Sword Morikan.
"Naf!"
"Good to see you on your feet,
Sir," the healer replied. "And Muthok brought more than just me.
I've got Vormak and two good herbalists riding the evacuation
deck, and Traith and two more herbalists are waiting back at the
base camp. Muthok needed to lighten Windclaw, and I figured it
would be better to avoid doing any surgery we don't absolutely
have to do out here. It's a hell of a lot warmer on that side of the
portal, and we'll have tents to work in, as well."
"Good man!" Jasak said, nodding
hard. "Good work, both of you."
"Least we could do, Sir,"
Salmeer said. "On the other hand, this isn't exactly what I'd call a
proper landing ground you've got out here, if you'll pardon my
saying so. We can probably take out most of your critically
wounded now, but getting airborne before we run into the trees is
going to be tricky, and Windclaw's already flown a long way
today. He's going to need at least several hours rest after we get
back to camp, so we'll have to come back for the others
tomorrow." His eyes glinted. "Next time you decide to fight a
battle, Sir, try to pick a spot easier to get dragons into, eh?"
"I'll bear that in mind," Jasak
replied, with a smile he hoped didn't look forced. Then he smiled
more naturally. "And I'm more grateful than you'll ever know to
you for reaching us this quickly."
Jasak angled his head up to
watch as Morikan, the surgeon, and the herbalists started to
dismount. They hauled their gear down Windclaw's shoulder, then
stepped across from his foreleg to the stream bank, where several
of First Platoon's troopers waited to help them with their baggage.
Firelight caught the dragon's
iridescent scales and set him aglow when he rustled his wing
pinions or took a breath. He still looked agitated, and the sound of
his breathing, the deep rush of air through cavernous lungs which
no one could ever forget, once he'd heard it, was faster than usual.
It was also higher pitched, almost whistling.
It's the sound a fighting dragon makes just before battle,
Jasak realized with a sudden, shocking flash of insight. Humanity
hadn't pitted dragons against one another in almost two centuries,
and no one living had ever heard that pre-battle steam-kettle
sound. Not in earnest, at any rate. But it had been too frequently
described in the history books and the aerial training
volumes—even in those silly romances his younger sister
mooned over—for him to mistake what he was hearing
now.
Which didn't make any more
sense than all the other impossible things which had already
happened this day.
Jasak stared up at the furious
transport beast, towering over him, and wondered a little wildly
what had set off Windclaw's battle stress. Salmeer had been right
about one thing, though; he was sure of that. Shaylar Nargra was
the source of the dragon's anger. Yet what in all the myriad
universes about that terrified, injured girl could cause a dragon to
react so violently to her mere presence?
The question simmered in the
back of his brain. Intuition and logic alike argued that it was an
important one, but he had more immediately urgent problems at
the moment.
"Can you keep him under control
well enough to put her on his back?" he asked Salmeer, twitching
his head at Shaylar. "Her and the others?"
The pilot had been gazing at
Shaylar, as well, obviously asking himself the same questions
which had occurred to Jasak. Now he refocused his attention on
the hundred, and his jaw muscles bunched.
"Oh, yeah, Sir. I'll keep him in
line, all right. He might get around some greenhorn handler, but he
won't try any tricks with me. If I might make a suggestion, though,
Hundred?"
"Suggest away," Jasak said with
a sharp nod. "You know your beast—and your job—
better than I ever will."
Salmeer's eyes narrowed, as if
Jasak's tone had surprised him. Then he twitched his own head in
Shaylar's direction.
"Put her up last," he said. "He
won't try anything that would endanger his passengers once he's
got wounded aboard. He's a smart old beast, Windclaw is, Sir, and
he knows his duty. He's responsible for the safe transport of
wounded men, and he knows it. Not like a man would, you
understand, but he's smarter than any dog you'll ever own, and
dogs are smart enough to look out for those under their care."
"Yes, they are. It's a good
suggestion, Muthok, and one I appreciate. Deeply."
Salmeer ducked his head in an
abbreviated nod of acknowledgment, then gave Jasak a grim little
smile.
"I've answered the call of more
than a few commanders of one hundred, Sir, and I'll tell you
plain—you're the first who's ever given a good godsdamn
about the opinions of a transport pilot."
Jasak frowned, his gaze locking
with Salmeer's, and his nostrils flared.
"I can't say that fact makes me
very happy, Muthok. But thank you for the information. It won't
be wasted."
Salmeer blinked. Then his eyes
narrowed as he remembered whose son he was speaking to. Jasak
saw the memory in the pilot's eye and felt a flicker of harsh inner
amusement.
No, Muthok, he thought. It won't be wasted, I
assure you.
The Duke of Garth Showma,
who also happened to be Commander of Five Thousand Thankhar
Olderhan (retired), would light quite a few fires under certain
officers when that piece of intelligence hit his desk.
Officers too haughty—or stupid—to consider the
insights of specialists with experience far superior to their own
were officers who got their men killed when things went to hell.
Rather like I managed to do this afternoon, he
thought, and felt his face tighten for an instant.
Salmeer met Jasak's gaze for a
moment longer, almost as if he could hear the younger man's
thoughts, then gave him a sharp salute.
"You take care of the wounded
then, Sir. I'll start prepping the platform cocoons."
Jasak nodded, then turned as Naf
Morikan finished passing his own equipment over to Sword
Harnak and waded ashore.
Morikan was a North
Shalomarian—one of the towering variety. A big, rawboned
man, nearly six-foot-seven in his bare feet, he still managed to
move so quietly, almost noiselessly, that Jasak had sometimes
wondered if it was a part of his Gift. The healer had huge
shoulders, enormous physical strength, and a Gift for healing
which made the hulking giant one of the gentlest souls Jasak had
ever known. He'd never pursued the research necessary to earn the
formal title of magistron, the healer's equivalent of Gadrial's
magister's rank, so he was technically only a journeyman, which
also explained why he wasn't a commissioned officer in the
Healer's Corps, himself. But Jasak wasn't about to complain about
that today. Not when it meant having a healer as powerfully Gifted
as Morikan out at the sharp end when the remnants of First
Platoon needed one so desperately.
"It's good to see you, Naf," he
said quietly, clasping the sword's hand. "I've got four men in
comas, and one of them's the only male survivor from the people
we ran into out here. That girl there," he pointed at Shaylar, "was
with him."
Morikan's eyes glinted. Jasak
could almost physically feel the questions simmering under the
big noncom's skin, but the healer visibly suppressed them.
"Five Hundred Klian wants a
full briefing, Sir. I'm dying of curiosity myself, for that matter.
But that can wait, and the wounded can't. Which one is most
critical?"
Jasak led him straight to
Jathmar. Morikan knelt beside the injured man's litter, then hissed
aloud when he touched him.
"Gods, Sir! I'm a healer,
not a miracle worker! He's holding on by a thread! And it's so
frayed, it's about to snap!"
"You think I don't know that?"
Jasak snapped back. "Magister Gadrial is the only reason he still
alive at all!"
The big healer looked up, then
whistled softly.
"Magister Gadrial kept
him alive? With nothing but a minor arcana for healing?" He
glanced at Gadrial, who'd given him a demonstration of her minor
Gift when she'd first arrived in-universe. "Magister, you have my
deep respect, ma'am. I wouldn't have believed this was possible."
He gestured at Jathmar, and
Gadrial nodded to him across Shaylar's shoulder.
"Thank you," she said quietly.
"And for Rahil's sake, do whatever it takes to save him. I'm
convinced he's this girl's husband." She tightened her embrace
around Shaylar, who was watching them, her hazy eyes wide and
frightened. "She's hurt, herself, and she's in a fragile state. If she
loses him—"
The magister broke off, her
mouth tight, and Morikan nodded in comprehension.
"Their last names are the same,"
Jasak added. "I found that out when she woke up. They're either
married or brother and sister, and I'm inclined to agree with
Magister Gadrial's theory that they're married."
The big healer looked into
Shaylar's eyes, took in the ghastly bruises that had turned half her
face into a swollen, black mass of pain, and his jaw turned to
granite.
"Start getting your less critically
wounded onto the dragon, Sir Jasak," he said briskly. "I'll tend to
them once we get back to the base camp, but I don't dare wait that
long with this one."
Jasak nodded tightly and turned
away to begin giving orders, and Naf Morikan crouched down
over Jathmar's still form. He drew a deep breath, closed his eyes,
and reached out, summoning the healing trance that gave him the
power to work the occasional miracle.
Shaylar had no clear idea what
the giant leaning over her husband was doing, but it was obvious
he was the person Jasak Olderhan had been waiting for so
anxiously. The newcomer was so huge he reminded her painfully
of Fanthi chan Himidi, but the difference in his personality and
chan Himidi's was blindingly evident, even to her presently
crippled Talent. chan Himidi had been one of Shaylar's dearest
friends, yet she'd always been aware of his capacity for violence.
Trained and disciplined, it had always been firmly under control,
yet it had always been there, as well.
This man might wear the uniform of a soldier, and his
personality was certainly just as strong as chan Himidi's had ever
been, but his battles weren't the sort one fought with
weapons.
The newcomer had lifted the
blanket off Jathmar's burnt back and hissed aloud at the damage
he'd found. But he didn't appear to be doing anything else
at all. He was just kneeling there, hands extended over Jathmar's
stretcher, eyes unfocused, staring at
nothing. . . .
And then, suddenly, Jathmar
began to glow.
Shaylar gasped. Light poured
from the big man's hands, enveloping Jathmar's entire body. Then,
despite the whirling black pain in her head, the marriage bond
roared wide. Shaylar flinched violently in Gadrial's arms as
Jathmar's pain blasted through her. She sensed Gadrial's sudden
twitch of hurt as her fingers sank deep into the other woman's
upper arms, but she couldn't help it. Her back was a mass of fire,
her chest a broken heap of agony wrapped around ribs shattered
like china someone had dropped to the floor, and her insides were
bleeding.
Then she felt an odd presence,
like a tide of warm syrup flowing over her—into
her—and there was intelligence in the syrup. There were
thoughts and emotions, a sense of awe that she was alive at all,
and a determination to keep her among the living.
A soothing wave of light and
energy she could sense but couldn't see sank down into her
blistered back. The sensations were soul-shaking. She could
literally feel her skin growing as blisters popped, drained,
vanished. The damage ran deep . . .
and so did whatever was sinking into her, repairing the deep layers
of skin and tissue damaged in the hellish vortex of the enemy's
fire.
It sank deeper still, down into
her bleeding abdomen. She felt half-glued wounds knitting
themselves together as new tissue closed the gaps and fissures in
blood vessels, intestinal walls, muscles and organs. Pain flashed
through her, bright and terrible, as ribs shifted, moving on their
own, grating back into proper alignment. She writhed,
whimpering, and the pain in her chest burst free in an agonized cry.
Shaylar's sudden scream yanked
Naf Morikan straight out of healing trance. His head whipped
around, and he stared, shaken and confused, as Shaylar writhed in
Gadrial's arms. Motion under his hands jerked his attention back
to Jathmar, and his eyes went wider still as he realized Jathmar
was moving in exactly the same way.
"What the living hell is going
on?" the healer breathed in shock.
"I don't know," Gadrial Kelbryan
gasped, her own face wrung with pain from the crushing grip of
Shaylar's daggered fingers as they sank into her biceps. "I don't
know, but for pity's sake, man, finish the job! They're both
in agony!"
The magister was right, and
Morikan returned to the trance. He was shaken, intrigued, and
utterly mystified, but he forced all of that aside, out of the
forefront of his attention, and reached out to that healing flood of
power once more.
Now that Jathmar was semi-
conscious, the healer took care to stimulate the centers of the
brain and spinal cord that produced natural pain killers. The
patient's body flooded with his own internally produced pain-
fighting serum in moments, which quickly put an end to his semi-
aware thrashing about, and Morikan was dimly aware that his
wife's cries had faded as well.
By the time the job was done,
Morikan felt as if he'd spent the day slogging through a jungle
under a hundred-pound pack. But Jathmar's grievous wounds were
healed, and the healer let his hands drop into his lap.
"He's sleeping naturally," he
sighed, sitting up from his hunched position over the stretcher.
"He'll sleep for several hours, while his body replenishes its
energy, mending itself. We'll need to wake him briefly to take
some nourishment, but I'd rather wait until we've got him back to
our side of the portal before doing that."
Jasak Olderhan had returned
from overseeing the loading of his other wounded, and he arrived
in time to overhear the healer's last sentence.
"Thank you, Naf. Thank you."
He clasped the sword's hand in a firm grip. "Now let's get you
back into the saddle. And let's get Shaylar onto the dragon, too.
Magister Gadrial, I'd like you to go with us. Shaylar trusts you
more than anyone else, and she'll need you to keep her steady."
"I'll just get my pack," Gadrial
agreed, and bent her head, murmuring into Shaylar's ear.
Shaylar roused from deep
confusion and the oddest dreams of her life and realized Gadrial
was urging her to get up. She managed to obey, still supported by
the other woman's arms, and realized Jathmar's stretcher had
moved. She looked around, quick alarm cutting through her
confusion, then relaxed—slightly—as she discovered
that several men were maneuvering Jathmar and his stretcher
upwards, toward a long platform strapped to the back of the
immense animal still crouched in the stream.
At least the beast that couldn't
possibly exist—the dragon, her mind insisted,
because that fairytale label was the only one she could think
of—wasn't still staring at her. That was a massive
relief.
It had swiveled its head to watch
the men climbing up its side with an almost absurdly attentive air,
instead. The way its head was cocked, the intentness with which it
watched what was going on, reminded her of the freight master on
one of the famous Trans-Temporal Express' endless trains.
Cinches like the belly bands of
an ordinary saddle, but far larger, were drawn up tight every four
feet and buckled securely, securing the platform on its back.
Sidewalls around the top of the platform, a foot and a half high,
bore plenty of cleats for ropes or straps, and the purpose became
clear as Jathmar's stretcher was hoisted up and roped into place so
that his "bed" couldn't shift. They fastened straps to Jathmar, as
well, so that he wouldn't roll off the stretcher.
It's a mobile hospital, Shaylar marveled. Or, rather, an
aerial ambulance for evacuating wounded to the nearest real
hospital.
They didn't load all the wounded
soldiers onto it, however; only those with wounds serious enough
to prevent them from walking out on their own. There were quite
a lot of them, and she was glad of that. So fiercely glad it
frightened her that Sharonian lives hadn't been sold cheaply. She
only wished there were more dead soldiers, because
however kindly Gadrial might treat her, however gentle and
patient Jasak might be, she could not forget the slaughter they'd
perpetrated. She would never forget it. Whether or not she
could ever forgive it was a question for the future, and she
was too battered to think even a few minutes ahead, far less weeks
or months.
Then it was her turn.
Any faint hope Shaylar had
nourished that they might release her, at least, died when Jasak
himself escorted her toward the waiting dragon. She didn't want to
go near that beast. Didn't want to come within striking distance of
those lethal bronze claws, or those dagger-sized teeth. She was
three or four yards away when it angled its head back around to
glare at her. It started to hiss—
The dragon's handler spoke in a
sharp, angry voice and swatted the beast smartly between its ears
with his long, metal-tipped pole. At least, it looked like the blow
had landed between its ears; they might have been mere armored
spikes with hollow cores, but they were in the right place
for ears. A cavernous, disgruntled grumble thunder-muttered from
its sharp-toothed jaws, but it offered no further protest.
Men in uniform, balanced on the
dragon's foreleg and shoulder, reached out to steady her across,
then hauled her unceremoniously up to the low-walled platform.
She trembled violently on the way up and would have fallen
without the grip of strong hands on her wrists and hips.
At the top, she found herself
seated beside Jathmar. The cushioned pallet, several inches thick,
had been laid across the wood to form a softer surface for the
wounded men, or their stretchers, to lie on, but Shaylar scarcely
even noticed. She was too busy staring at her husband in
disbelieving wonder.
The healthy, pink skin visible
beneath his scorched shirt was a soul-deep shock. She'd felt it healing, but the very idea of such an uncanny miracle had been
so alien that she'd more than half-feared it was no more than an
illusion brought about by her own head injury. Something she'd
wanted so badly, so desperately, that she had imagined it entirely.
But she hadn't. His hair was still
a singed mess, but the terrible burns were gone, and her eyes stung
as she leaned down to press a kiss across his cheek. She wished
she could fling her arms around him and cradle him close, but the
webbing around his body made that impossible. Straps stretched
taut to either side, fastened securely to cleats that looked strong
enough to hold a full-sized plow horse in place. The other injured
men had been webbed down, as well, and lay head-to-foot along
the narrow platform, filling it for almost its entire length. The man
who'd healed Jathmar was kneeling beside another unconscious
man, whose body glowed with that same eerie light.
Then Gadrial climbed up beside
her and helped Shaylar with the unfamiliar webbing. Unlike the
wounded men, Shaylar and Gadrial sat up, able to see over the low
side walls, and the straps around her waist gave Shaylar a sense of
security, despite their height above the ground. A few moments
later, Jasak Olderhan scrambled up and helped the dragon's handler
rig a windbreak around the front of the platform. It was made of
sailcloth, and she was surprised—and grateful—that
it didn't extend above her, Gadrial, and Jasak, as well. Instead, the
dragon's handler gave each of them a set of goggles made of wood
and round panes of glass that fit snugly around the head. Then he
climbed into the oddest saddle Shaylar had ever seen.
The pommel and cantle rose high
before and behind the rider's body, creating a snug cradle that
hugged his waist. Straps from front to back held him firmly in
place, adding to his security. Iron stirrups secured his booted feet,
and a wide leather saddle skirt protected his legs from the dragon's
tough neck scales, some of which were spiked in the center. The
saddle skirt was soft, supple leather, and while it was well worn,
showing signs of extensive use, it was also ornately tooled and
bore flashes of silver where studs and roundels had been fastened
to it. Intricate patterns in a totally alien design teased Shaylar's
somewhat fuzzy eyesight.
Beneath the broad leather skirt
was a thick pad of what looked like fleece from a purple sheep.
She stared, unsure of her own senses in the uncertain, flickering
light from the bonfires, but the fleece certainly looked
purple. She wondered a little wildly if it had been died, or if
people who raised genuine dragons also produced jewel-toned
sheep.
Beneath the fleece pad, in turn,
lay a saddle blanket woven in geometric patterns, and she blinked
in surprise when she realized that the pattern in the saddle blanket
was repeated in the dragon's scaly hide. Despite the straps and the
bulky platform which hid so much of the beast, and despite the
dimness of the firelight, she could see the same intricate, ornate
swirls and chevrons in the iridescent scales along the dragon's
side. She wondered whether the blanket had been woven to match
a naturally occurring pattern, or if the beast had been decorated
somehow to match the blanket. She was still trying to see more of
the beast's hide when the man in the saddle called out a command.
The dragon crouched low,
muscles bunching in a smooth ripple. Then they catapulted
forward as the dragon's huge feet gripped tight on the stream's
boulders and its powerful legs hurled them almost straight
upward. The force of the sudden movement clacked her teeth
together with bone-jarring force, but before she could even groan,
the wide wings snapped open. The sheer breadth of the dragon's
wingspan came as a distinct shock, despite its size for that they
were even larger than she'd initially thought. They beat strongly,
far more rapidly than she would have believed possible, and she
felt the creature climbing in elevator-like bursts with each
downstroke.
They flew parallel to the stream,
barely clearing the water and the brush-filled banks to either side
at first, for more than a hundred yards. Then the creek turned
south, forcing the dragon to follow the curve of its bed. Another
hundred-yard straight stretch gave it the room it apparently needed
to get fully airborne.
Each massive sweep of its
wings, loud as thunder cracks in her ears, lifted them steadily
higher. By the time they reached the end of the second
straightaway, the immense dragon had finally cleared the treetops.
They flashed past a rustling canopy of leaves, argent and ebony in
the moonlight, then sailed into clear air above the forest.
Shaylar discovered that she'd
been holding her breath and her fingers had dug into the straps
holding her securely in place. She glanced back and saw a brilliant
spot of light in the darkness, where the bonfires in the camp they'd
left burned like jewels against velvet. Moonlight poured across the
treetops with an unearthly beauty, creating a billowing silver leaf-
sea which stretched for miles in all directions. Wind set the silver
sea in motion, with a constant ripple and swirl that was dizzying,
exhilarating, like nothing Shaylar had ever experienced before. The
windbreak shielded her from about mid-torso down, but the skin
of her face was cold, except where the goggles shielded it, in the
icy wind buffeting past its upper edge.
We're flying, she breathed silently. Actually flying!
For a time, the sheer delight of
the experience pushed everything else out of the front of her brain.
But as the novelty of it began to wear off in the cold wind, the
implications of a military force which possessed aerial
transport—and the far more frightening capacity for aerial
combat—made itself abruptly known. Given the dragon's
tough armor, not to mention its sheer size, Shaylar wondered if a
rifle shot could be effective against it. There were hunters who
took big game, of course, especially in sparsely settled universes
where elephants, rhinos, immense—and aggressive—
cape buffalo, thirty-foot crocodiles, and even vast herds of bison
were a serious danger to colonists. There were some pretty heavy
guns and cartridges for that kind of shooting, but Shaylar
wondered if even those weapons could be effective at much
greater ranges than point-blank into a dragon's belly or throat.
And what kind of weapons might
something like a dragon bring to combat? Would it do what the
legends of her home world said dragons could do? Breathe fire?
Eat maidens for breakfast? She recalled the beast's fury at her, its
rage battering her senses, the firelight glinting on claws and teeth
as it reared up, and could imagine only too clearly what it would
be like to have something like that actually attack her with lethal
intent.
I have to warn our people! she thought desperately.
She closed her eyes behind the
goggles, fought the black pain in the center of her head, and
reached frantically through the spinning vortex to contact Darcel
Kinlafia. The headache exploded behind her clenched eyelids, but
she faced its anguish, refused to surrender to it.
Darcel! she cried into the black silence. Darcel, can
you hear me? Please, Darcel!
She tried to send an image of the
beast she now rode, tried to project the memory of it rearing above
her in hissing fury, but her head spun. The whole world revolved
in dizzy swoops and plunges, a drunken ship at sea in a
typhoon. . . .
Gadrial's voice reached her,
repeating her name with some urgency. Shaylar felt the touch of
gentle hands on her temples, felt Gadrial trying to ease the pain.
But she flinched back, clinging to the effort—and the
pain—as she fought to reach Darcel, whatever the cost to
herself, and—
A massive, metal-bending
screech tore the air.
The dragon slewed sideways in
midair. It actually bucked, and Shaylar's eyes flew open as
her teeth jolted together and the whole platform creaked against
the violent motion of the beast under it. Her head jerked, and she
felt herself bounced backward against her safety straps as a raging
red fury lashed at her mind.
The dragon bellowed again,
whipped its own head violently around, and snapped at her with
huge teeth. Shaylar screamed, then clutched her head, her senses
bleeding. Someone was shouting, a voice white-hot with fury, and
the dragon's violent gyrations ceased as abruptly as they'd begun.
The rage in her mind was still there, still hot as lava, but the beast
was no longer trying to throw her off or bite her in half, and she
collapsed against Gadrial, shuddering.
"Help me," she pleaded brokenly,
fingers clutching at the other woman's clothing. "Get it out of my
mind!" she moaned. "Please. Oh,
please . . ."
Gadrial had both arms around
her, and, gradually, the pain receded and the nausea dropped away.
Shaylar's throat loosened, around the terror she'd been fighting,
and a delicious lassitude stole along her nerves. It eased her down
into a comforting darkness, a lovely darkness, one that shut out
the pain and the mortal fear of the beast in her mind.
She barely felt the cushioned pad
as her back touched it.
Gadrial eased the tiny woman
gently down, rearranging the safety straps so that Shaylar could lie
flat beside her. Once she'd secured the straps in their new
configuration, she brushed dark hair back from Shaylar's bruised
face and stared down at her.
Who are you, really? she wondered. How far did you
journey to reach us? And why should a transport dragon hate
you the way this one obviously does?
"Is she all right?" Jasak
demanded, half-shouting above the wind.
"Yes. I've helped her go to
sleep."
"Thank the gods! What in
hell just happened?"
"I don't know! Is the dragon
under control?" she counter-demanded, and he nodded.
"He is now, but it was damned
touch-and-go for a second, there." He'd twisted around to stare at
the unconscious girl beside Gadrial. "She's the source. Whatever's
going on, she's the source." Gadrial could see the intense
frustration in his expression even in the uncertain moonlight and
despite his flight goggles. "Did you see or hear anything? Anything
from her that could have triggered it?"
"No." Gadrial shook her head.
"One minute she was fine. The next she was screaming, and
Windclaw was trying to throw us off his back!" Then she frowned.
"But there was something strange, right before she lost
consciousness. She was saying something, and it felt—I
don't know. It felt like she was begging for help. Not protection, help. Something to do with the dragon and her
mind . . . "
She trailed off, wondering
abruptly how she knew that. Because she did know it;
knew it as certainly as if Shaylar had spoken aloud.
"What is it?" Jasak asked, and
she shook her head to clear it.
"I'm not sure. It's
just . . ." She stumbled, trying to put it into
words. "She was trying to tell me something, and I think I
understood her. Not the words; they made no sense at all. But I understood her, Jasak. It's eerie." She swallowed. "Scary as
hell, in fact. She was asking me to help her."
"Help her with the pain?"
"No." Gadrial shook her head
again, trying to put her bizarre, elusive certainty into words. "No.
She wanted me to help her . . . get the
dragon out of her mind?" It came out as a question, because she
knew it made no logical sense. "I don't have the faintest idea why I
know that, but I know it, Jasak. She was clutching at me,
babbling, and that's what came into my head."
Sir Jasak Olderhan, commander
of one hundred, stared at Gadrial as though she'd suddenly
sprouted wings herself. For a moment or two, she suspected that
he thought she'd gone off the deep end, but then he gave a sudden,
choppy nod.
"That's damned interesting," he
said abruptly. "Has anything like that happened before?"
She shook her head again.
"I don't think so."
"Well, pay close attention to
every impression you receive when you're talking to her, or she's
trying to communicate with you, Gadrial. Something
about her caused Windclaw to react violently, and more than once.
We don't understand anything about these people! Except that they
use weapons and equipment that are the most alien things I've ever
seen. We can't assume they're like us in any respect, which
means the door's wide open for totally inexplicable technologies,
or whatever it is she was using or doing to set off the dragon."
Gadrial nodded, feeling far
colder than the frigid night wind could account for, and wondered
what terrifying discoveries lay ahead. Shaylar looked
so . . . normal lying unconscious
beside her. Normal, lost, and frightened out of her wits.
Gadrial stroked the night-black,
windblown hair back from Shaylar's brow once more, and glanced
at Jathmar, wondering what matching discoveries lay behind his
face.
It was obvious the two of them
came from racial stock as different from each other as Jasak's pale
Andaran skin and round eyes differed from her own sandalwood
complexion and dark, oval eyes. And although she'd had little time
to study Shaylar and Jathmar's dead companions before their
cremation, even that brief examination had told her the entire
survey party had been as racially diverse as anything on Arcana.
These people obviously came from a large, mixed-heritage
society, whether it occupied only one universe or several, and she
wondered abruptly how that society's members might differ from
one another.
Did they have Gifts of their
own? Different, perhaps, from any Gadrial had ever heard of, but
equally powerful? Did different groups of them have different
Gifts? How might their Gifts compare to those of
Arcana? And what about their society's internal structure and
dynamics? Had they evolved some sort of monolithic cultural
template, or were they composed of elements as internally
diverse—even hostile—as her own Ransarans and
most Mythalans?
Jasak glanced back at Gadrial
and noted her thoughtful frown. She was obviously thinking hard,
sorting back through all of her impressions, and he nodded
mentally in satisfaction. The brain inside that lovely head of hers
was frighteningly acute. He had no doubt at all that if there were
any clues buried among those impressions, Gadrial Kelbryan
would pounce upon them as surely as any falcon taking a hare.
Satisfied that the bloodhound
was on the trail, Jasak turned around again in his own saddle. He
gazed straight ahead, but his attention wasn't focused on Salmeer's
back, nor on Windclaw's shimmering wings as they beat
powerfully in the moonlight. Not even on the glorious silver sea
of leaves speeding past below them, with the dragon's moon-
shadow racing from one bright treetop to the next in a flowing
blur.
No. What he saw was
Osmuna lying dead in a creek. A stockade filled with abandoned
tents, foot-weary donkeys, and strange equipment. And a terrifying
montage of battle images that flashed through his memory in
bright bursts, like exploding incendiary spells.
And behind them was the
frightening thought of what would happen if, by some
unimaginable means, these people had successfully gotten
a message back through the portal to their nearest base.
He couldn't imagine how they might have done it. A careful sweep around the battle site
had found no tracks leading away from all that toppled timber, and
there'd been no sign of messenger birds, like the hummers his own
platoons carried. But these people had all manner of strange,
inexplicable abilities and devices. If they had a sufficient
command of magical technology—or, he thought with a
shudder, some other sort of technology—to send
messages across long distances without any physical messenger,
Arcana could be in serious trouble already.
That thought was more than
simply worrisome. It was downright terrifying. So far, he'd found
nothing—nothing at all—in their captured gear
which resembled arcane technology. An Arcanan crew that size
would have been carrying all manner of spell-powered devices,
but he hadn't seen a trace of anything made of sarkolis, hadn't
sensed even a quiver of spellware. He couldn't even begin to
visualize how anyone could possibly build an advanced
civilization without arcane technology, but all he'd seen were
fiendishly intricate, clever, totally non-arcane machines.
Was it really possible that one of
those machines—possibly one he hadn't even found yet, one
they might have destroyed to prevent him from finding it,
as they'd destroyed their maps and charts—might have
allowed them to send a message without a runner or a hummer?
The more he thought about how
little he knew about Shaylar and her people, the more he wanted to
avoid contact with any of them until Arcana had managed to fill in
at least a few corners of the puzzle, punch at least a few holes
through the fog of total ignorance which was all he could offer his
superiors at the moment. And as he considered it, it occurred to
him that if there was, in fact, something odd about Shaylar
Nargra's mind, something which upset dragons, it was equally
clear from her reaction that Shaylar had never seen
anything remotely like Windclaw.
They don't have dragons, he realized. And if they don't
have dragons, is it possible that they don't have
anything that flies?
His frown intensified as that
possibility hovered before him. He might simply be grasping at
straws, but one thing he knew: dragons—unlike donkeys,
soldiers, or civilian surveyors—left no footprints. If
Shaylar and her companions had gotten a message back to
their people, picking up his own route from the swamp base camp
to the site of the battle and backtracking it wouldn't be particularly
difficult for even semi-competent woodsmen. But simply finding
the base camp wouldn't help them very much.
It was over seven hundred
miles from the swamp to Fort Rycharn, with no roads, no
trails, between the fort and the swamp portal. Everything at the
portal base camp had been airlifted in from Fort Rycharn, and even
Fort Rycharn was only a forward base. The actual portal into this
universe was over three thousand miles away—across
equally trackless ocean—on the island which would have
been Chalar back on Arcana.
He nodded, mouth firming with
decision. He couldn't undo what had already happened, but he
could at least buy some time, and he intended to do just that.
Pulling everyone back from the swamp portal to Fort Rycharn
wouldn't be easy with only a single transport dragon available, but
it would be one way to dig a hole and fill it in behind them.
If Shaylar's party had summoned
a rescue party, it would find only the abandoned camp. Let it hunt
through seven hundred miles of virgin, trackless swamp if it
wanted to. By the time it could find Fort Rycharn, even that wouldn't do it any good, if Jasak had his way. Not if he could
convince Five Hundred Klian to pull all the way back to the
Chalar arrival portal and put twenty-six hundred more miles of
water between any search party and the route to Arcana.
Time, he thought. That's what we need—time
. Time to get word back up the transit chain. Time for
someone who knows what the hell he's doing to get back
here and handle the next contact with these people. Time to figure out a way to somehow get a handle on this
situation before it spins totally out of control.
And the way to get that time was
to make sure that anyone from the other side couldn't find a trace
of Arcana.
Not until Arcana was good and
ready to be found.
Chapter Thirteen
Jathmar floated in the darkness
of the still, warm depths, drifting slowly and steadily toward a
sunlit surface far above him. The light grew stronger, reaching
down towards him, and something stirred in sleepy protest. He
reached out to the darkness, wrapping it about himself, like a child
burrowing deep into a goose down comforter. He didn't want to
wake up, didn't want to leave the safe, still quiet. He didn't
remember why he didn't want to wake, but his drowsy
mind knew that something waited for him. Something he didn't
want to face.
His eyes opened, and he reached
out, as automatically as breathing, for Shaylar's familiar touch.
Panic struck like a spiked
hammer.
She wasn't there. Where Shaylar
should have been, he found only a roaring, pain-filled blackness.
The shockwave of loss jolted him into full consciousness with a
sharp gasp of anguished terror, and his eyes snapped open.
Sunlight burned down over him,
hot and humid. There was no trace of the glorious autumn woods
he remembered; all he could see was a vast stretch of muddy water
and rank vegetation, heavy with the smell of rot and mold and
fecundity. The trees growing at the water's edge, some growing in
the water itself, were tropical varieties, heavy with vines, with no
trace of the colors of a northern fall. The voices of birds—
some raucous, some musical, some like those he'd never heard
before—sounded through the hot, dense stillness, huge
butterflies drifted over and among the swamp grasses, like living
jewels, and the whine of insects hung heavy on the thick, steamy
air.
He lay on something
simultaneously firm and yet soft-textured, like a folding canvas
camp cot, and his thoughts fluttered and twisted, trapped between
confusion and the strobing panic radiating from the absence where Shaylar ought to have been. He hung transfixed between
seriously broken thoughts. Then voices registered, and movement,
as well, close by. He sat up and—
He yelled and scrambled wildly
backwards on the seat of his trousers. The "camp cot" under him
never even wiggled, but he shot over its edge, sprawling onto
muddy ground a full two feet lower than whatever had been
supporting him. He panted, groping instinctively for his rifle, for
his revolver, even for his belt knife, and his scrabbling
hands found nothing but more mud.
The . . .
thing . . . turned its horror of
a head to peer down, down, down at him just as his frantically
searching hand closed on a dead branch. The improvised club
would be useless against a thing like that, but it was better than
blunt fingernails, and he came to his knees, swinging the branch
wildly up between himself and it.
The sudden flurry of shouts
behind him barely registered. He ignored them, all of his attention
fixed on the scaled monstrosity, until a uniformed man with a
crossbow stepped in front of him. The soldier shouted and pointed
his impossible weapon, but not at the horror looming over them.
He aimed it at Jathmar. Then another man appeared,
wearing the same uniform and snarling orders—or spitting
curses—in a voice of white-hot fury. The first man lowered
his crossbow and sent the second a hangdog look with something
that sounded like an unhappy apology. The second man—
the officer, Jathmar realized—said something else, his tone
considerably less sharp but still reprimanding, and the
crossbowman came to what had to be a position of attention and
saluted oddly, touching his left shoulder with his right fist.
The officer nodded dismissal,
watched a moment while the crossbowman marched off to
wherever he'd come from, then turned his own attention to
Jathmar.
Jathmar clutched his stupid stick,
panting and sweating in the supercharged swampy air, and the
officer met his gaze squarely. He held it, never taking his eyes
from Jathmar's, and issued what was clearly another order.
Another man appeared and
shouted at the beast, and Jathmar's eyes snapped back to the
towering horror. It looked down at the man who'd shouted, rustled
enormous demon's wings, and hissed, but it also moved away. The
soft ground sucked at its immense, clawed feet as it slunk off, if
anything that size could be said to
slink . . .
"Jathmar."
The sound of his own name
whipped him back around to the officer. Aside from a long knife
or short sword at his left hip, the other man wore no obvious
weapon, but Jathmar had no doubt that he faced the commander of
all the other armed men surrounding him and dared make no move
at all. Then he frowned.
"How do you know my name?"
he demanded.
The other man clearly didn't
understand his question. He held up both hands in a trans-
universal sign for "I don't have the least idea what you just said."
Despite his own panic, despite the terror pulsing through him at
the marriage bond's continued silence, Jathmar's lips quirked in
bitter amusement. But then the officer in front of him said another
word.
"Shaylar."
"Where is she?? Jathmar
snarled, any temptation towards amusement disappearing into the
suddenly refocused vortex of a panic far more terrible than he
could ever have felt for himself. The club came up again, hovered
menacingly between him and his enemy, and his lips drew back
from his teeth in an animal snarl.
And then memory struck with
such brutality he actually staggered, crying out in remembered
agony. He was on fire, caught in the withering heat of an
incandescent fireball, flesh blazing even as he fought to reach
Shaylar, but he couldn't, and—
Someone moved toward him
urgently, and the club came back up. A guttural sound clogged his
throat, hot and hungry with primeval rage and a berserker's fury.
He heard the officer saying something else, something sharp and
urgent, and he didn't care. The club came back, poised to strike,
and then it froze as his eyes focused on its target.
It wasn't another soldier; it was a
girl. A slender, lovely Uromathian girl, taller than his Shaylar, but
still small, delicate. She was saying his name, then Shaylar's name,
pointing urgently to one side.
Its a trick! his mind shrieked, but he looked anyway.
The tents registered first. There
was an entire encampment of them, in orderly rows, and more
incongruously armed soldiers swam into view, their crossbows
pointed carefully at the muddy ground. Then he saw the glassy
tubes, and sweat and terror crawled down his back as he
remembered the fireballs.
Then he saw the wounded. The
brutal carnage of gunshot wounds registered in a kaleidoscope of
torn flesh, shattered limbs, blood splashes on bandages, clothing,
and skin. Someone cried out, the sound knife-sharp and piteous, as
a wound was re-bandaged. The sights and sounds shocked him,
horrified him . . . gratified him. And
while those conflicting emotions hammered each other in his
chest, he saw her.
She was literally so close he'd
overlooked her, caught by the deeply shocking sights further
afield. He fell to his knees beside her, barely aware of his own
anguished moan, completely oblivious for the moment to the way
her strange "cot" hovered unsupported above the ground.
She was alive, breathing slowly,
steadily. But her face . . . His breath
caught. One whole side of her face was a swollen, purple mass of
damage. Bruises had nearly obliterated her left eye, and it looked
as if her nose might well be broken. Cuts and scrapes along her
swollen cheek and brow told their own story, and memory struck
again.
The fireball exploded all around
them once more, as if it had just happened. He could literally
feel himself flying into the tangle of deadwood while his skin
and hair crisped in unbearable agony. He groped for his own face,
the back of his neck, shocked all over again by a complete and
impossible absence of pain. He found no charred skin, no blisters,
no burns at all, and that was impossible. His rational mind
gibbered—he'd been burned, horribly. He knew it,
and his flesh shuddered and flinched from the memory of it. Yet
he wasn't burned now, and that simply couldn't be true.
He knelt in the mud beside his
wife and literally trembled in the face of far too many things he
couldn't comprehend. Then her eyelashes shivered, a soft
sound—half-sigh, half-whimper—ghosted from her
lips, and he dropped everything. Dropped the club he still held, his
vast confusion, even his attention for the enemy, and swept her up
in his arms. He folded her close, held her like fragile glass,
rocking on his knees, and buried his face in her singed and
scorched hair.
"Shaylar," he gasped raggedly. "
Shaylar, gods. You're still with me, love!"
The silence in her mind terrified
him. He could feel her slender weight in his arms, feel the steady
beat of her heart, hear her breathing, but when he reached with his
mind, she simply wasn't there. Fresh horror rolled through him as
the savagery of her bruised and battered face coupled with the
silence of her mind in nightmare dread. What if—
Her eyes opened. They were
hazy, at first. Blank with
confusion . . . until she saw him.
"Jathmar!"
Her arms were suddenly around
him. Jathmar was no giant. Faltharians tended to be tallish, and he
was, yet he was also whipcord thin, built more for speed and
endurance than brawn. Shaylar, on the other hand, was tiny, even
for a Shurkhali. She was a most satisfactory size for hugging, in
his opinion, but she'd always said she felt like a kitten trying to
hug a mastiff when she returned the favor. They'd laughed over it
for years, but today she clutched him so tightly he knew her
fingers were leaving fresh bruises on the miraculously undamaged
skin of his back, and it felt good. So good.
She buried her face against his
chest, weeping with shocking strength, and he brushed back her
hair, smoothed the scorched tresses and tangles which would take
shears to put right. When he could finally bear to let go of her
long enough to sit back and peer into her eyes, she touched his
face, wonderingly.
"Oh, Jath," she whispered, huge
eyes still brimming with tears. "You're a miracle, love."
"I—" He swallowed. "I
was burned. Wasn't I?"
"Yes." The single word was
barely audible, and she nodded. "Their healer came. He—"
It was her turn to swallow hard. "You were dying, Jath. I knew
you were. But he gave you back to me. He touched you, just
touched you, and the burns healed. Like the gods themselves
had reached down to make you whole again."
The swamp and even her face
wavered in his awareness. No Talent could do something like that.
Even the most Talented Healers were limited mostly to healing
minds which had been shattered, or encouraging the body to heal
itself more effectively. They could work wonders enough, but
none that came close to this.
The shiver began in his bones,
and he turned his head almost involuntarily to stare at the man
who stood watching them. Just watching. Not threatening, not
intruding. Their officer looked like an ordinary man, they
looked ordinary, and yet . . .
"I don't understand." He brought
his gaze back to Shaylar. "If they could do this for me, why haven't
they healed you? Or," he added, his voice turning harsh and bitter,
"The men we shot to pieces?"
"I don't know." She shook her
head. "None of it makes sense. But these people, Jath, they're not
like us. Not at all. I think their Healers are
more . . . more energy-limited than
ours are." It was obvious to him that she was searching for words,
trying to explain something which had puzzled her just as much as
it did him. "I don't think they encourage the body to heal; I think
they make it heal. When their Healer was working on you,
you glowed, and there was this tremendous sense of
energy, of power, coming from somewhere. I think they
can do things our Healers could never even imagine, but they can
only do so much of it before they . . .
exhaust themselves. And they only have one real Healer, so I think
they must be rationing the healing he can do, using it for the most
critical cases."
"Or the ones with valuable
information," he said bitterly before he could stop himself.
"That's probably part of it," she
said unflinchingly, "but I don't think that's all of it. They put you
first in line because you were the worst hurt of all."
Doubt flickered in his eyes, and
she shook her head.
"I mean it, Jath. The woman with
them, Gadrial, she's some kind of Healer, too, but not a very
strong one. Or not by these people's standards, anyway.
She wasn't strong enough to heal either of us,
but . . ." Shaylar bit her lip. "Without her,
you would have died before their real Healer ever got to you."
Her voice had dropped to a
terrible whisper, and his blood ran cold. Yes, his memories were
brutal enough to believe that. He didn't need the inexplicably
broken marriage bond to sense her deep anguish, the horror of her
belief that he was already dead still burning in her memory, and his
mind flinched like a frightened animal from the vision of her all
alone among their enemies.
"It's all right," he whispered
raggedly, pulling her close again. "It's all right, I'm still with you."
But even as he cradled his
shaken wife, his gaze sought and found the
girl—Gadrial—who stood a few feet from the
officer. She wasn't Uromathian, no matter what she looked like. It
took a real effort to dismiss his preconceived notions, to remind
himself that she wouldn't think like a Uromathian or hold the
same opinions, attitudes, biases, or customs. And he owed her his
life. For a Faltharian, life-debt was a serious business, entailing
obligations, formal courtesies, reciprocal bonds of protection,
none of which she would understand.
And none of which he
particularly relished.
He would owe the other,
stronger Healer, as well, he realized, wherever he or she might be.
That didn't make him any happier, he admitted. And meanwhile,
Gadrial was watching him, her expression uncertain.
When he met her gaze, she gave him a tentative smile. Very sweet,
very human. Very . . . normal.
Another shiver touched his
impossibly healed back, which, he realized for the first time, was
bare. Startled, he glanced down and discovered that his entire shirt
was missing. Momentary disorientation swept over him as he
found himself kneeling on the ground beside his wife, shirtless,
just beginning to realize that he had absolutely no idea where he
was, or how far he and Shaylar were from the site of that hideous
battle, or how much time had passed. The totality of his ignorance
appalled him, and he looked back into Shaylar's worried eyes and
frowned as something important nibbled at the edges of his
scattered thoughts. Then he had it.
"Shaylar? Where are the others?"
Her composure crumbled. She
began to cry again—helplessly, this time, softly and
hopelessly, shaking her head in mute grief—and horror sent
ice crystals through Jathmar's blood.
"No one?" he whispered.
"Nobody else? Just us?"
She nodded, still unable to
speak. Her struggle to hold herself together, to stop herself from
falling to pieces, broke Jathmar's heart again. He drew her close,
held her while she trembled, and he realized their bond wasn't
gone, so much as wounded. Too badly wounded to function
properly, but not so badly he couldn't feel her grief, her sorrow
and despair.
"I'm sorry," he groaned. "I'm
sorry I dragged you out here, into this—"
"No!" She looked up swiftly and
shook her head with startling violence. "Don't say that! It isn't
true!"
She was right, but at the
moment, that was a frail defense against his own crushing sense of
responsibility and guilt. His awareness of his complete inability to
protect her.
It was painfully evident they
were prisoners, but how did their captors treat prisoners of war?
They must have some sort of procedures to deal with captured
enemy personnel, and a further thought chilled him. Would these
people think he and Shaylar were soldiers? Even he knew
soldiers and civilians received different treatment from the
military during armed conflicts. It had been a long time since any
major Sharonian nation had gone to war, but even on Sharona
there was the occasional border dispute, the "incident" when a
patrol from one side wandered across the other side's frontier, the
"brushfire" conflict between ancient and implacable enemies. And
there'd been more than enough violent conflict in Sharona's pre-
portal history to make such procedures necessary.
But how in the multiverse could
he convince these people he and his wife were only civilians, when
they'd killed so many genuine soldiers and wounded so many
others? If Company-Captain Halifu sent real troops after them,
these people would get a taste of what Sharonian soldiers
could do, but would that help him and Shaylar? If the crossbows
he'd seen were the best individual weapons their soldiers had, if
they'd never before even seen what rifles and pistols could do,
would they believe that ordinary civilians carried such weapons,
even in the wilderness?
The memory of that frantic,
dreadful fight replayed itself once more in jagged, terrifying
flashes, but one thing was clear to him. It was only their
artillery—that terrifying, unexplainable artillery—
which had turned the tide against Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's survey
crew. As severely outnumbered as they'd been, they'd still been
more than holding their own until the fireballs erupted among
them.
No wonder those crossbowmen
were so twitchy.
He'd already seen evidence that
the regular troopers were poised on a hairtrigger where he was
concerned, but how would their commanding officer behave
toward him and Shaylar? If anyone hurt Shaylar,
he'd . . .
Jathmar bit his lip. He couldn't
do that. Couldn't even defend his own wife. If he tried, he'd wind
up dead, and Shaylar would be at the mercy of his killers. His pain
and self-blame doubled—tripled—but wallowing in
misery accomplished nothing, so he dragged his attention back to
the present.
"Where are we? Do you know
how far we've come?"
"No. I was asleep when we came
through that."
Shaylar pointed to something
behind him, and he turned, then blinked. A portal. Gods,
he really was a scattered, distracted mess to have missed seeing or
even sensing a portal literally right behind him. It led into the
forest their survey crew had discovered just days ago, but it clearly
wasn't the one they'd used to enter that forest. This pestilential
swamp was nowhere near the cool, rainy universe on the far side
of their portal, and this portal was tiny compared to theirs.
"They took us out in the middle
of the night," Shaylar murmured. "On
a . . . dragon."
She hesitated over the word, but
Jathmar glanced at the hideous creature and grunted in agreement.
If there was a better word for that monstrous beast, he
couldn't think of it.
"They put all the most critically
wounded on its back," Shaylar continue. "They rigged up a special
platform, like an ambulance, or a hospital car. Only this hospital
car can fly. I tried to contact Darcel, but something's wrong inside
my head. I can't hear anyone—not even you. There's a
roaring blackness where my Voice should be, and I have a terrible
headache. It never stops."
"That's what I sensed when I
tried to touch the bond," he muttered. "When I first woke up, it
was all I could hear. I . . . I thought it
meant you were gone."
He met her gaze, saw the pain
burning behind her brave eyes, saw it in the furrows that never
quite smoothed out between her brows and the tension in her neck
and face, where the bruises and swelling so cruelly disfigured her.
"Why the hell haven't they healed
you?" he demanded again, much more harshly this time.
"I told you," she said, her tone
clearly an explanation, not an excuse for their captors. "Their
Healer has his hands full, Jathmar. And as decent as Gadrial and
their commander have been, I'm glad their hands are full. I
wish they were fuller."
The bitterness in her normally
gentle voice shocked Jathmar. He'd never seen such cold hatred in
his wife. He wouldn't have believed she was capable of it, and the
discovery that she was appalled him.
"I'm sorry." Her voice was sharp
as steel. "But what they did to us . . .
I may never be able to forgive them for that. I'm trying, but I just
can't."
"Who the hell wants you to?"
"I do," she whispered. "My soul
hurts, feeling this way."
His heart twisted, and the look
he turned on the enemy commander who'd ordered their massacre
could have frozen the marrow of a star.
There's not enough blood in your veins to make up for what
you've done to her, his icy eyes told the other man.
The officer looked back, meeting
that hate-filled glare squarely. Whatever else he might be, this
wasn't a weak man, Jathmar realized. His regret for what had
happened appeared to be genuine, but he met Jathmar's steely
hatred unflinchingly. They shared no words, couldn't speak one
another's language, but they didn't need to in that moment. They
looked deep into one another's enemy eyes, and Jathmar could
actually taste the other man's determination to do his duty.
Whatever that duty was;
wherever it led. Whatever the consequences for
Jathmar . . . and Shaylar.
There was no hatred behind that
determination, no viciousness. Jathmar was sure of that. But there
was also no hesitation, and so Jathmar bit down on his own
hatred. He held it in his teeth, knowing he dared not loose it, dared
not let it tempt him into even trying to strike back.
He knew it, but as he stared at
that enemy's face, he realized that the other man recognized the
depth of his own hatred.
Jasak Olderhan looked back at
the kneeling prisoner with the eyes of icy fire. He understood the
causes of that lethal glare only too well, although he doubted
Jathmar would have been prepared to accept how well
Jasak understood . . . and how deeply
he sympathized.
But understanding and sympathy
might not be enough. Unconscious, barely clinging to life,
Shaylar's husband had been an obligation, a responsibility. Jasak's
duty—both as an officer of the Union and as a member of
the Andaran military caste—had been to keep him alive, at
all costs. Everything else had been secondary.
But Shaylar's husband, awake
and conscious, was another kettle of fish entirely. And from the
look of things, a dangerous one.
"Is he a soldier?" Gadrial's
question broke into his own brooding chain of thought, and he
glanced at the slim magister. She, too, was looking at Jathmar, and
her eyes were worried.
"Why do you ask?"
"He doesn't seem to be afraid.
Not the way I'd expect a civilian to be, anyway. That look of
his . . . that's not the kind of look I'd
expect from someone who's frightened."
"No," Jasak said slowly. "It's not.
But that's because he isn't 'frightened.' He's terrified."
"He's what?" Her gaze
jerked away from Jathmar, snapping up to meet his.
"Terrified," Jasak repeated. "And
in his place, that's exactly what I'd be, too. I don't know, at this
stage, whether he's a soldier or not. I'm strongly inclined to think
he isn't, but he knows we are, and he knows we've
slaughtered his friends. That gives him a very clear notion of our
highest priority."
"That being?" she asked
uncertainly.
"Getting them safely back to
Arcana so we can learn everything we possibly can about their
people. I won't abuse them, but he can't know that. He'd probably
face the possibility of his own abuse with courage, even defiance.
But he's not alone. If I'd ever doubted that you were right about
their relationship, I wouldn't now. That's his wife, Gadrial.
You can see it in the way he's holding her, the way he looks at her,
touches her. The idea of someone abusing her, possibly even
torturing her for information, terrifies him. He already hates us for
what we did to the rest of his friends. That's bad enough. But he
also hates us for what we might do next. He knows he
couldn't stop us if we tried to hurt her, but if it comes down to it,
he'll damned well die trying, and that's something we can't
afford to forget. Ever."
Gadrial frowned, then looked
back at Jathmar and Shaylar and realized just how accurately Jasak
had read the other man.
"So how can we convince him
that we won't hurt them?" she asked, and Jasak sighed in
frustration.
"Honestly? We can't. Not until
we've learned their language, or they've learned ours. And not
until enough time's passed for us to demonstrate our good
intentions. Until then—"
His eyes narrowed, and he
glanced at Gadrial again.
"Until then, that's one damned
dangerous man," he said. "I hate to put you in the dragon's mouth,
so to speak, but I really need your help."
"Of course. What can I do?"
"I want you to be our official go-
between. If any of us," a tiny flick of the fingers indicated himself
and the men of his command, "try to talk with them, his defenses
will snap into place so strongly we couldn't possibly actually
communicate. He'll be too busy worrying about an assault on his
wife, and we'll be too busy worrying about an attempt to grab a
weapon, or a hostage, or something else desperate."
"Whereas I wouldn't threaten
him as much?"
"Exactly," he said, and she
looked him straight in the eye.
"He might try to use me
as a hostage," she pointed out, and he nodded slowly.
"It's a possibility, yes. I won't
pretend it isn't. But if he's smart enough to realize how hopelessly
outnumbered he is, and that he has no idea how far he is from their
portal, with a wounded wife and no supplies, he won't try it."
"If," she repeated dryly,
then snorted and gave him a wry smile. "Somehow, I can't imagine
Shaylar marrying anybody that stupid. Not marrying him
voluntarily, anyway," she added, realizing they knew nothing of
the marriage customs among Shaylar's people.
"And I can't imagine that lady
marrying anyone involuntarily," Jasak said even more
dryly. "Besides, it's obvious how devoted to one another they are.
So even if her people are as 'enlightened' as, say, Mythal, these two
seem to have adjusted to each other quite nicely, wouldn't you
say?"
Gadrial's eyes glinted with
amusement at his choice of examples, and her lips quirked in a
brief smile.
"Let's just agree that we
shouldn't make any assumptions about their marriage customs,"
she nodded toward Jathmar and Shaylar, "when our own are so
varied. But if you want my opinion, theirs certainly isn't an
arranged marriage. I can't imagine Shaylar doing this kind of work,
out in the wilderness, if she were simply following her husband in
the pursuit of his career, either. That doesn't make sense,
just from a practical standpoint. Everybody's got to pull their
weight and perform an important function on the team like theirs,
so there's no room for the luxury of someone's spouse tagging
along for the ride."
"I agree." Jasak nodded.
"So. What do you suggest I do
now? We can't just stand here, staring at each other."
"No," he smiled faintly, "we
can't. Do you think you could get through to Shaylar, somehow?
She trusts you, at least a little."
"I'll try. But what, exactly, do I
try to communicate? I don't know your plans, you know," she said,
her tone tart enough to put a slightly sheepish smile into his eyes.
"Sorry about that." His cheeks
actually turned a bit pink, she observed. "I've been so focused on
getting them here alive that it hadn't occurred to me to share my
plans with you. Despite the fact that you're fairly central to them."
Gadrial grinned. Sir Jasak
Olderhan was adorable when he was embarrassed, she decided.
And if she really wanted to complete his demolition, all she had to
do was tell him so.
"So tell me now," she said,
womanfully resisting the temptation. He looked decidedly grateful
and rubbed the back of his neck, clearly gathering his thoughts.
"I intend to abandon this camp,"
he said. "Withdraw completely from this portal and evacuate
everyone to the coast. There's no way anyone can track us if we
evac by air, and that's critical, because the armed confrontation has
to stop here. None of us are trained diplomats, and that's what we
need. If we get a diplomatic mission out here, there's at least a
chance we can keep anyone else from getting killed. At this point,
it doesn't matter whether Osmuna shot their man first, or whether
he shot Osmuna first. What's going to matter to them is
that we slaughtered their entire crew; what's going to matter to us are the casualties we took, and the weapons capability
they revealed inflicting them. We didn't mean for any of this to
happen, but they're going to have trouble buying that, and there's
going to be a lot of pressure on our side for a panic reaction when
people higher up the military and political food chains hear about
what's happened. Especially if the other side send in some sort of
rescue mission that leads to additional shooting."
"Which is why we need a
diplomatic mission to help convince them it was all an accident."
Gadrial nodded. "And civilian diplomats won't be
as . . . incendiary as a camp full of
soldiers. There'd be less chance of another confrontation ending in
shots fired."
"Right on all counts," he said,
and Gadrial gave him an intent look.
"At the risk of airing my own
prejudices, Sir Jasak, I have to admit that that's the last thing I
expected to hear from a professional officer. I also happen to think
it's the best idea I've heard since Garlath got his stupid self killed."
Jasak's eyes flickered, and she
snorted.
"Never mind," she said. "I know
you can't agree. Proper military discipline, stiff Andaran upper lip,
all of that." She smiled sweetly at his expression. "Since, however,
you've elected to proceed with such wisdom, how soon can we
leave? And exactly what do you want me to try to convey to them
about it?"
She nodded toward Shaylar and
her husband once more.
"I intend to put them—
and you—on the first flight I send out of here, along with
the most seriously wounded Sword Morikan hasn't been able to
heal yet."
Gadrial nodded. A Gifted healer,
even a fully trained one like Naf Morikan, could stretch his Gift
only so far before depleting his own energy. Gifts dealing directly
with living things—like healers and the other magistrons
and journeymen involved in things like the dragon breeding and
improvement programs, the hummer breeding program, and even
the agronomists who were constantly seeking to improve food
crops and sources of textiles—were quite different from
Gadrial's own major arcanas. Those Gifted in such areas required
special training, and no one had yet succeeded in figuring out how
to store a major healing spell, although Gadrial was confident that
the coveted vos Lipkin Prize waited for whoever finally did.
Actually getting the spellware
loaded into the sarkolis didn't seem to be the problem. It wasn't
one to which Gadrial had devoted a great deal of her own
attention—her major Gifts lay in other areas—but
she suspected that the difficulty lay in the inherent differences
between each illness or injury. The sort of blanket spells involved
in most pre-loaded spellware were frequently a brute force kind of
approach. That was acceptable for inanimate objects, but even
small glitches could have major—even fatal—
consequences for living things. So each healer was forced to deal
with an unending series of unique problems, each demanding its
own unique solution.
She and Magister Halathyn had
discussed the theoretical ramifications fairly often over the years,
although neither of them had enough of the healing Gift to make it
a profitable avenue of research for them. They'd come to the
conclusion that the difference between a magister, trained in the
"hard sorcery" dealing with inanimate forces and objects, and a magistron, trained in the "life sorcery" someone like Naf
Morikan practiced, was the difference between a symphonic
composer and a brilliant, sight-reading improvisationist. Neither
was really qualified to do the other's job, or even to adequately
explain the inherent differences between their specializations to
each other.
"I've still got a camp full of
wounded men who are going to need Naf's attention," Jasak
continued, "but Five Hundred Klian has his entire battalion
medical staff at Fort Rycharn. I need to get the more critical cases
off of Naf's back, and I'm worried about what you've had to say
about Shaylar. She doesn't seem to be in a life-threatening
situation, so I can't justify pulling Naf off of the men who really
need him, but I want her to get proper attention as soon as
possible."
"All right. I understand—
and, for what it's worth, I agree. I'll try to get your message across
to Shaylar. Wish me luck."
"Oh, I do."
"Thanks."
Gadrial dried damp palms on her
trousers, drew a quick breath, and started across the open ground,
dredging up the best smile she could muster.
Jathmar had never previously
considered what it could mean to be a prisoner, let alone a
prisoner of war. But as he and Shaylar sat together under their
captors' gazes, trying to eat, he was altogether too well aware of
the hostility directed at them. The soldiers who'd so brutally
slaughtered the rest of their crew obviously hated them, regardless
of what their commander felt.
You killed our friends, those hostile looks said, and
you tried to kill us. Give us an excuse to finish what we
started. Please.
He tried to tell himself he was
reading too much hatred into their stares. That he might be
projecting his own emotions onto them, whether they deserved it
or not. That it was probably as much fear of the unknown he and
Shaylar—and their firearms—represented as it was
actual hatred.
Some of that might even have
been true. But he couldn't know that. He didn't have
Shaylar's ability to read the emotions of other people, which left
him unable to trust even Gadrial the way Shaylar seemed able to
do. Nor could he relax under the cold, unwavering stares coming
their way.
He couldn't get away from them,
either. He needed even a short respite, needed to go someplace
private, where he and his wife wouldn't be the focus of such
intense hatred, or fear, or uncertainty, or whatever the hells it was.
And he couldn't. He couldn't even stand up and walk away from
camp to relieve himself! If he tried, someone would put a
crossbow quarrel through him.
It was intolerable. He and
Shaylar had come out here, exploring new universes, because they
treasured freedom. The freedom to move from one uninhabited
place to another, to savor the silence, the exhilaration of no
boundaries, no strict rules governing their every move, no limits
on where they went, or what they did.
Now they'd lost all of that, and
he had no idea when—or if—they would ever regain
it. The long vista of captivity that stretched bleakly ahead of them,
denied everything they valued in life, weighed like a mountain on
his shoulders. And unendurable as it might be for him, watching
Shaylar endure it would be still worse. Every time he
looked at her battered face, the anger tightened down afresh.
Watching her struggle to chew, struggle to put her own terror
aside and try to smile at him—and at their captors—
was a pain he could hardly bear.
The sound of alien voices
washed across him like acid, leaving him on edge. He couldn't
even ask these people what their intentions were, or read their
emotions from their body language, because he had no reference
points. Not everyone used the same gestures to mean the same
things even on Sharona, and these people were from an entirely
different universe. He had no knowledge of their
language, or their customs, or even how they gestured to indicate
nonverbal meaning.
"We have to learn their
language," Shaylar said. "Quickly."
He glanced up. Their eyes met,
and he smiled slightly, despite the snakes of anger and fear coiling
inside him, as he realized how well she truly knew him. Despite
their damaged marriage bond, she'd followed his own train of
thought perfectly.
"They certainly won't bother to
learn ours," he agreed. "Unless it's to interrogate us more
effectively."
She shivered, and he kicked
himself mentally. He couldn't unsay it, though, so he took her
hand carefully and rubbed her fingers.
"Sorry," he said. "And I'm
probably looking on the dark side. You say their commander's a
decent sort, and you've seen a lot more of him than I have.
Besides, I can't imagine they'd want to
risk . . . damaging us with barbaric
questioning methods. We're their only information source, and
they need us, not just alive, but healthy and cooperative."
He knew he was grasping at
straws, trying to reassure her, and the look in her eyes said she was
perfectly aware of it. People capable of murdering an entire
civilian survey crew were capable of anything, and torture
could be undeniably effective. No Sharonian nation had used
it—openly, at least; there were persistent grim rumors
about the current Uromathian Emperor and his secret
police—in centuries. But in Sharona's dim, grim past,
torture had been an approved and often frighteningly effective
method of extracting detailed information from captives.
"If I could just get past this
headache," Shaylar muttered, "I could concentrate on learning
their language. It wouldn't be easy without another telepath to help
with translations, but I could pass anything I learned on to you.
Verbally, if the bond's been permanently damaged."
Her voice went thin and
frightened on the last two words, and Jathmar gave her hand a
reassuring squeeze.
"Let's stay focused on what we
can do, not what we can't, let alone what we might not be
able to do. Agreed?"
"Agreed," she said in a much
firmer voice. Then her gaze sharpened. "Who's this?"
A tall, aged man with the ebony
skin of a Ricathian had emerged from one of the tents and was
approaching them. His face was open and unguarded, almost
childlike in his obvious curiosity about them. Curiosity
and—
Jathmar blinked, startled, when
he registered the other emotion in the older man's face: delight. He
and Shaylar exchanged startled glances, then both of them looked
back at the dark-skinned man again.
He gave them a curiously formal
bow, then folded his long, lean body down to sit beside them. His
voice was strangely gentle as he said something, then indicated
himself and said slowly and carefully, "Halathyn. Halathyn vos
Dulainah."
Shaylar glanced at Jathmar, then
touched her own chest.
"Shaylar," she said, then
indicated her husband. "Jathmar."
Halathyn's face blossomed in a
beatific smile. He moved his hands in an intricate fashion,
murmuring almost under his breath, and the air began to shimmer.
Shaylar gasped, and Jathmar stiffened in shock as a flower of pure
light formed in the air between the silver-haired man's palms. It
was a rose, scintillating with all the dancing colors of the
rainbow.
Halathyn moved his hand, and
the rose of light drifted toward Shaylar. The older man took her
hand, lifted her palm, and the impossible rose drifted down to rest
against her fingertips. It shimmered there, ghostlike and lovely, for
several seconds, then sparkled once and faded away.
Shaylar sat entranced for several
heartbeats, staring at her empty palm, then turned to stare at the
aged man beside them. Halathyn was grinning like a schoolboy,
and she felt herself smiling back, unable to resist. Despite the pain
in her head, she could feel the clean, gentle radiance of the black-
skinned man's soul, and it washed over her like a comforting
caress.
Then Gadrial said something in
gently chiding tones. She'd been speaking with Jasak just moments
previously, and she'd stopped at another campfire to pick up mugs
of steaming liquid and carry them over. Now she stood gazing
down at Halathyn, head cocked to one side, smiling for all the
world like a tutor—or possibly even a nanny—at her
favorite charge.
When she spoke, Halathyn
merely waved one hand in a grandly dismissive gesture that left
her laughing.
"What was that?" Shaylar
breathed in Jathmar's ear while Halathyn and Gadrial were focused
on each other.
"If there's a better word than
magic, I don't know what it is," Jathmar murmured back in
awe.
"Dragons, magical
roses . . . Do you suppose what they
used against us really was . . . magic?
Honest to goodness magic?"
Jathmar raised one palm in a
helpless "who knows" gesture.
"That doesn't make any logical
sense," he said, "but neither does that rose." He shook his head.
"There is no 'logical explanation' for that! Not any
more than there's a logical explanation for what they hit us with in
that clearing, or how they healed my burns. Until we know more,
we'll just have to reserve judgment."
Halathyn, meanwhile, had
produced a large crystal. It was clear as water, one of the most
perfect specimens of quartz Jathmar had ever seen. The old man
was fiddling with it, using a stylus to draw odd squiggles and
shapes across its surface, which struck Jathmar as a fairly
ludicrous thing to do. Ink wouldn't stick to a smooth crystal.
Besides, Halathyn wasn't even using ink, just a dry stylus.
But then Halathyn angled the
crystal so that they could see, and Jathmar leaned forward
abruptly. The crystal was glowing. Or, rather, the strange
symbols he'd drawn were glowing, squiggles and shapes
that burned steadily down in the heart of the crystal. And there was
something else strange about it, too. The crystal, large as it was,
was no bigger than Jathmar's closed fist. Logically, anything
contained inside it had to be quite small, yet those glowing
symbols were clearly visible. He couldn't read them,
because he had no idea at all what they might stand for, but when
he focused his attention on them, they grew to whatever size they
had to be for him to make them out in every detail.
"What is it?" he
wondered aloud.
Shaylar leaned closer and
"casually" rested one hand on the older man's arm as she peered
over his shoulder. A familiar abstracted look appeared on her face,
then she smiled wonderingly.
"It's a tool of some kind.
Something to . . . store things in?"
She sounded hesitant, and
Jathmar frowned.
"Store things in?" he echoed.
"That looks like writing of some kind, but how could anyone store
writing inside a rock?"
"Or light, for that matter," she
said. "And that's what it looks like—light."
"I'm the wrong person to ask."
Jathmar shook his head, baffled. "I can't begin to imagine how
something like that works."
Whatever Halathyn was doing
with the stylus, the squiggles of light shifted rapidly inside the
crystal. It certainly looked like writing of some sort, and it did,
indeed, look as if Halathyn were storing the words inside that
water-clear rock. He glanced up, eyes twinkling, then he whispered
something else, and the light faded.
He handed it to Shaylar, who
took it with a deeply dubious expression. Then he spoke one word
and tapped the crystal with his stylus, and the glowing text sprang
back to life. It glowed deep inside, scrolling past at what would
probably have been a comfortable reading speed, if they could
have read it at all.
Shaylar stared, open-mouthed,
then looked up to meet Jathmar's amazed gaze, and Halathyn
chuckled. He looked inordinately pleased with himself as he
retrieved his crystal, and the look he gave Gadrial was just short of
impish. She responded by rolling her eyes, and handed over the
mugs she carried.
They contained a beverage that
smelled like tea. Jathmar took a hesitant sip and let out a deep
sigh. It was tea, spiced with something wonderful. He
blew across the surface, sipping with pleasure while Gadrial
cradled her own cup in both hands and drank deeply. The
Uromathian-looking woman glanced at Halathyn, then turned to
Shaylar and spoke again. She pointed to Shaylar and Jathmar in
turn, then to herself and to the dragon.
"Looks to me," Jathmar
muttered, "like we're about to be taken out of here."
"Yes," Shaylar agreed. "And look
at Jasak. He's paying awfully close attention to this conversation."
Jathmar glanced up and decided
that Shaylar's comment was a distinct case of understatement.
"I'd say our friend in uniform
sent Gadrial over as his errand-boy," he said. Then he glanced at
Gadrial's figure, whose shapeliness was quite evident, despite her
bulky hiking clothes, and smiled crookedly. "Well, maybe not
errand-boy, exactly," he amended. "I find it mighty
interesting that he sent her over, rather than telling us
himself, though."
Shaylar gave him an unusually
hard look.
"He doesn't want to push you
into starting something that one of his soldiers might decide to
finish," she said sharply, and he nodded.
"You think I don't realize that?
With you in harm's way," he added gruffly, "I won't be starting
anything I'm not likely to win. But I'll admit it. If not for his
trigger-happy soldiers, I might be tempted."
Her breath caught, and terror
exploded behind her eyes. She took one hand from her mug of tea,
reaching out to grip his forearm with painful force.
"Please, Jath," she whispered,
"don't even think of trying that. I couldn't bear to lose you
again."
That shook him, and he looked
deep into her eyes, suddenly seeing that hideous fight from her
perspective. When he remembered that ghastly fireball
engulfing him, he remembered agony and terror, but they were
his agony, his terror. When she remembered it, she
remembered seeing him die.
Deep as that instant of
consummate terror and pain had been as the fire took him, the
memory which had followed his return to consciousness in this
camp, before finding Shaylar alive beside him, had been far worse.
For those few, ghastly moments, when he'd believed she
was dead, the world had been an unbearable place, darker, deeper,
and far bleaker than the far side of the moon. Yet even that,
hideous as it had been, had been far less horrifying than it would
have been to see her wrapped in the furnace heat of a
fireball, burning to death before his very eyes.
"No," he choked out, pulling her
close, burying his face in her hair. "Never. I'll never risk
anything that would leave you here alone."
Her breath shuddered unsteadily
against the side of his neck, but she held herself together, and
when she finally sat up again, her courageous smile sent an ache
of proud pain through his heart. He dried her face with gentle
hands, careful on her bruises, but before he could speak again,
they were distracted by a sudden shout.
Both of them slewed around in
time to see another dragon come winging in from the east.
Translucent leathery wings vaned and twisted, altering its
flightpath and slowing its airspeed. There seemed to be something
indefinably wrong about the way it braked, how quickly it
lost velocity, but Jathmar reminded himself that he was scarcely in
mental condition to make reliable hard and fast judgments about
mythological beasts who couldn't possibly exist anyway.
Jasak Olderhan had turned with
everyone else at the dragon's approach. Now he strode rapidly to
meet it, his face set in grim lines, and Gadrial spoke to the dark-
skinned man sitting beside them. She sounded worried, and
Halathyn shrugged, peering with obvious curiosity of his own as
the dragon backwinged with a thunderclap of its immense wings
and settled with surprising delicacy at the edge of camp.
Jathmar frowned at the
newcomer, and even more at the reactions he saw around him.
"Trouble?" he wondered aloud.
"Could be," Shaylar replied. "It's
obvious that Jasak isn't rolling out the welcome mat for whoever's
on that thing, anyway."
Chapter Fourteen
Jasak Olderhan reminded himself
not to curse out loud as he shaded his eyes with one hand, peering
up at the approaching dragon.
Muthok Salmeer had made the
condition of Cloudsail, Windclaw's assigned wing dragon,
abundantly clear. It would be weeks, at least, before Cloudsail
could return to service, which hadn't exactly filled Jasak with
happiness when he found out. The distance between the base camp
and Fort Rycharn was just long enough to prevent a single dragon
from flying a complete round-trip without pausing for rest. With
only Windclaw, that was going to limit him to at most one and a
half round-trips per day, which was going to put a decided kink
into his plan to pull back to the coastal enclave by air.
Under the circumstances, the
sight of a second operable dragon should have delighted him.
Unfortunately, since it couldn't be the injured Cloudsail, it had to
be one of the additional dragons they'd been promised for months.
Given the water gap between Fort Rycharn and Fort Wyvern, at
the entry portal into this universe, it could only have arrived by
ship. Which meant the next regularly scheduled transport from
Fort Wyvern had also arrived.
Which almost certainly
meant . . .
The dragon landed, and Jasak's
mouth tightened as a stocky man in the uniform of the Second
Andaran Scouts with the same silver-shield collar insignia Jasak
wore climbed down from the second saddle. The newcomer
turned, surveying the camp and the rows of wounded troopers
with a hard, grim frown, and Jasak snarled a mental obscenity.
He had been looking
forward to his replacement's arrival, or, at least, to going home
himself for a well-earned bit of R&R. But that had changed
the moment Shevan Garlath sent the situation crashing out of
control by killing an unarmed man. His men were shattered and
demoralized, and the thought of turning his command over
now was thoroughly unpalatable.
"Hundred Thalmayr." Jasak
saluted the newcomer.
"Hundred Olderhan." Hadrign
Thalmayr returned Jasak's salute with a flip of the hand which
which turned the ostensible courtesy into something one thin inch
short of a derisive insult. Then he reached into his tunic pocket
and extracted an official message crystal. "As per the orders of
Commander of Two Thousand mul Gurthak, I relieve you."
Jasak's jaw muscles knotted as
he saw the contempt in Thalmayr's dark eyes. The man knew
nothing about what had happened out here, but it was obvious he'd
already made up his mind about it. Jasak's temper snarled against
its leash, but he couldn't afford to release it. Not yet.
"Very well, Hundred Thalmayr,"
he said formally, instead, accepting the crystal. "I stand relieved."
"Good," Thalmayr said. "In that
case, pack your prisoners onto your transport, Hundred Olderhan.
There's nothing to delay your immediate departure.
"On the contrary," Jasak said,
more sharply than he'd intended to do. "I have men in the field, on
a reconnaissance mission. They haven't returned yet, and we can't
possibly evacuate until they do."
"Evacuate?" Thalmayr repeated
incredulously. He stared at Jasak for an instant, then curled his lip
contemptuously. "You can't possibly be serious!"
"I'm deadly serious," Jasak
snapped. "These people have devastating weapons we can't even
comprehend, Thalmayr. Less than twenty of them—
apparently civilians—killed or wounded two thirds
of a crack Scout unit. That's over eighty-five percent
casualties to First Platoon's combat element. Until we know more
about them, the last thing we can afford is another armed
confrontation. We need to make that impossible—pull back
to the coast and establish a buffer zone they can't track us across
until we get a team of trained diplomats in here."
"We wouldn't need diplomats,"
Thalmayr said icily, "if you hadn't totally botched the first contact!
I may not have been an Andaran Scout—" a not-so-faint
edge of contempt burred in the last two words "—as long as
you have, but even a straight infantry puke knows standing
orders are clear, Olderhan. In the event of discovery of any non-
Arcanan people, every precaution must be taken to insure
peaceful contact." He swept an angry gesture across the
wounded waiting for medical treatment. "Obviously, your
idea of 'peaceful' isn't exactly the same as mine, is it?"
Muscles jumped along Jasak
Olderhan's jaw. He could hardly tell this pompous oaf that Fifty
Garlath had been ordered to stand down. It would have sounded
like a lame excuse, and the last thing he was prepared to do was
sound as if he were making excuses to Hadrign Thalmayr.
Eventually, there would be a board of inquiry. The odds were at
least even that the board's conclusions would send his career into
the nearest toilet, whatever else happened, but at the
moment—
"That doesn't change the current
tactical situation," he said instead. He made his voice come out
levelly, as non-confrontationally as possible, but Thalmayr's eyes
blazed.
"Yes," he bit out, "it does.
You may want to cut and run, but your actions have made it
imperative—imperative!—that we remain
firmly in control of this portal. First, because the Union Army will
never yield an inch of Arcanan soil. Second, because it's
the smallest bottleneck in three universes, which makes it the best
possible spot to hold our ground if we have to. And third, because
your own initial report to Five Hundred Klian makes it clear that
the universe on the other side of that portal—" he
jabbed an angry gesture at the swamp portal "—is a fucking
cluster. Only the second true cluster ever discovered! We
are not going to give up access to a cluster the size of this
one. Especially not when somebody's already been stupid enough
to start a fucking war with the people we'd be giving it up to!"
Jasak knew his face had gone
white, and Thalmayr sneered at him.
"We'll get your 'diplomats' in
here, all right, Olderhan. They'll shovel the shit and clean up your
mess for you. But in the meantime, if the bastards who did
this—" the same angry hand jabbed at the rows of wounded
"—want to pick a fight, they'll get no further than that slice
of dirt." The finger jabbed again, this time at the portal. "If they
want Arcanan soil, we'll give them just enough of it to bury them
in."
Jasak stared at him, too aghast
even to feel his own white-hot rage.
"Are you out of your mind?
" he demanded. "If you invoke Andaran 'blood and honor'
now, you'll have a first-class disaster on your hands! And you'll
get more of my men killed, you—"
"My men!" Thalmayr
snarled back. "Or have you forgotten the orders in that crystal?"
Jasak started a fiery retort, then
made himself stop. He sucked in an enormous breath, promising
himself the day would come when Hadrign Thalmayr would face
him—briefly—across a field of honor. But not
today. Not here.
"Yours or mine, Hundred
Thalmayr," he said as calmly as he could, "it's unconscionable to
put these men back into the path of combat again when there's no
need, and when another violent confrontation would be the worst
political disaster we could come up with. Sitting here rattling our
sabers and daring the enemy to cross our line in the mud isn't the
way to resolve this situation without further bloodshed."
"Contact's already been
botched." Thalmayr's eyes were volcanic. "Thanks to that—
thanks to you—these people now represent a clear
and present danger to the Union of Arcana. My job is to safeguard
Arcanan territory—"
"Your job is to defend
Arcanan citizens from further danger," Jasak hissed, "not
to haggle over the ownership of a patch of mud!"
"—and I'll rattle as many
sabers as it fucking well takes to defend it!" Thalmayr snarled, as
if Jasak hadn't spoken at all. "Your job—assuming
you can do it—is to transport your passengers back
for interrogation. I suggest you get started. It's a long, long way to
Army HQ on New Arcana."
Before Jasak could open his
mouth again, Thalmayr shoved past him and strode directly toward
the campfire, where Jathmar and Shaylar had risen to their feet and
stood watching the heated exchange tautly. Jasak stalked after the
idiot, shoulders set for another confrontation. He got it when
Thalmayr reached the campfire and turned with another snarl.
"They aren't restrained!"
"No," Jasak said icily. "They
aren't. And they won't be."
"You're out of line, Soldier!
Those criminals—" the finger he was so fond of
jabbing with jerked at Jathmar and his wife "—have
slaughtered Arcanan soldiers—"
"Who butchered their
civilian companions!" Jasak discovered that he suddenly
didn't much care how Thalmayr responded to the flaming
contempt in his own voice. The man might be technically senior to
him, but he was also a complete and total idiot. A part of Jasak
actually hoped he could goad Thalmayr into taking a swing at him.
His own career was already so far into the crapper that the charge
of striking a superior—especially if the superior had struck
the first blow—could hardly do a lot more damage. And the
resultant chaos would probably force Five Hundred Klian to put
someone—anyone—else in command of
Charlie Company while he sorted it out.
"Soldiers who slaughtered their
civilian friends in a battle Shevan Garlath started against
direct orders!" he continued, glaring murderously at the other
officer. "We're in the wrong, Hundred—not them!
All they did was defend themselves with courage and honor. That
girl—" it was his turn to point at Shaylar "—that
civilian girl—is braver than any soldier I've ever
commanded! Her husband was so badly burned by our dragons he
was barely alive, she was badly injured herself, and she was all
alone in the face of the men who'd killed all of her friends, but she
faced us with courage. With courage, damn your eyes! She
even managed to hold herself together during field rites for every
friend she had in that universe. Don't you dare call these
people criminals!"
Hundred Thalmayr paled. Field
rites were enough to give even hardened soldiers nightmares. But
then the color flooded back into his face, which went brick-red
with fury.
"I'll call these bastards whatever
I fucking well want, Hundred," he said in a voice of ice
and fire. "And I am in command here now, not you! You, Sword!"
he barked to Sword Harnak. "I want field manacles on
these . . . people. Now,
Sword!"
"Stand fast, Sword Harnak!"
Jasak snapped. Thalmayr whipped back around to him with an
utterly incredulous expression. Jasak matched him glare for glare,
and the other hundred leaned towards him.
"I don't give a good godsdamn whose son you are, Olderhan," Thalmayr hissed. "You give
another order to one of my men, and I'll send you back to
Fort Rycharn in chains to face charges for mutiny in the face of
the enemy!"
"Try it," Jasak said very, very
quietly. "'These people,' as you put it, are my prisoners,
not yours."
"They—" Thalmayr began.
"Shut your brainless mouth,"
Jasak said coldly. "I was in command of the unit which took them
prisoner. The unit which disobeyed my orders and opened
fire on a civilian survey party whose leader was standing
there without a weapon in his hands trying his best to make
peaceful contact despite the previous death of one of his
people at our hands.
We . . . were . .
. in . . . the . .
. wrong," he spaced the words out with deadly
precision, "and I was in command, and they surrendered
themselves to me honorably." He locked his gaze with Thalmayr's,
his expression harder than steel. "'These people' are shardonai
, Hundred Thalmayr. My
shardonai."
Thalmayr had opened his mouth
once again. Now he closed it, glaring back at Jasak. The term "
shardon" came from Old Andaran. Literally, it meant
"shieldling," and it indicated an individual under the personal
protection of an Andaran warrior and his house. It was a concept
which stemmed from almost two thousand years of Andaran
history. There could be many reasons for the relationship, but one
of the oldest—and most sacred, under the Andaran honor
code—was the acknowledgment of responsibility for
dishonorable or illegal actions by troops under a warrior's
command.
"I don't care what else they may
be," Thalmayr said after a moment. A corner of his mind knew he
ought to drop it, but he was too furious. "They're also enemies of
the Union who have killed Army personnel, and as long as they're
on a post I command, they will be properly manacled and
restrained!"
"Try it," Jasak repeated, and this
time it came out almost in a croon. "Please try it. Violate
my shardon obligation, and you'll be dead on the ground
before you finish the order."
Thalmayr blanched, his face
suddenly bone-white as he saw the absolute sincerity in Jasak's
blazing eyes. Like Jasak, Thalmayr carried his short sword at his
hip, but the restraining strap was firmly buttoned across the
quillons, and he very carefully kept his hand well away from it as
he backed up two involuntary steps.
Silence hovered between them,
colder than ice and just as brittle. Then, finally, Thalmayr
straightened his spine and scowled.
"You may be certain,
Hundred Olderhan, that I'll be filing charges for
insubordination and threatening a superior officer."
"File and be damned," Jasak said,
still in that soft, deadly tone.
"And," Thalmayr continued, trying to ignore Jasak's
response, "I'll also be lodging a formal protest over your handling
of these people. Shardonai or not, enemy prisoners should
be restrained to prevent escape attempts."
Jason looked at him disbelieving
way, then barked a harsh laugh.
"Escape?" he repeated.
"And just where would they go, Hundred? They're in the middle of
a heavily guarded camp seven hundred miles from the nearest
coastline. Unless I miss my guess, Shaylar's suffering from a
concussion, they have no idea how far they are from the portal
they came through, and the gods alone know how many miles
beyond that portal they'd have to go to find help! With
Shaylar too badly injured to travel far, no weapons, and no
supplies, they can't run. Not together—and Jathmar won't
abandon her."
"You sound awfully
godsdamned sure of yourself for someone who's fucked up every
single command decision for the past two days by the numbers!"
Thalmayr snarled.
"Because he's right," another
voice said, and Thalmayr's head snapped around as Gadrial
Kelbryan stepped unexpectedly into the fray. He stared at her for a
moment, and she looked back with an expression which reminded
Jasak of a gryphon defending her chicks. Thalmayr started to glare
back, then turned an even darker shade of red as he suddenly
realized what sort of language he'd been using in her presence.
"Magister Kelbryan," Jasak said
formally, "May I present Commander of One Hundred Hadrign
Thalmayr. Hundred Thalmayr, Magister Gadrial Kelbryan,
Director of Theoretical Research for the Garth Showma Institute,
and special assistant to Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah."
"Hundred." Gadrial nodded, her
voice cool, and Thalmayr actually clicked his boot heels as he
swept her an elaborate bow. As his head dipped low, Gadrial
looked across him at Jasak and rolled her eyes, then wiped the
look away, replacing it with a cool, composed gaze as Thalmayr
came back upright.
"I apologize for my language,
Magister," Thalmayr said almost obsequiously. Obviously, he
knew exactly who Gadrial was . . .
and recognized just how fatal to his career it would be to make a
mortal enemy out of the second ranking member of the Garth
Showma Institute's faculty. Although she wasn't officially in the
military, Gadrial carried the equivalent grade of a commander of
ten thousand in the UTTTA's civil service.
"I've heard soldiers talking to
each other before, Hundred," she said, after a moment, and his
shoulders seemed to relax just a bit. "If seldom quite
so . . . freely," she added in that same
cool voice with perfect timing, and his shoulders tightened back
up instantly.
"Ah, yes," he replied, then stood
there for a moment, as if trying to think of something else to say.
"Ah, you were saying, Magister?" he continued finally.
"I was saying that Sir
Jasak," she said, eyes glittering as she stressed Jasak's title ever so
slightly, "is quite right in his assessment of our unexpected guests.
And of our obligations to then."
Thalmayr's eyebrows climbed,
and Jasak wondered just how much Gadrial actually knew about
the shardon relationship. He was willing to bet she didn't
begin to understand all of the deep-seated obligations of personal
and familial honor bound up in it—she was simply too
Ransaran to grasp the implications of Andara's feudal past.
Obviously Thalmayr was thinking exactly the same thing, but
whatever Jasak's opinion of the other man's basic
intelligence—or lack thereof—he was at least smart
enough not to pursue that particular basilisk.
"How so, Magister?" he asked
courteously, instead.
"I've spent a great deal of time
with Shaylar and Jathmar since their capture," Gadrial replied.
"He's utterly devoted to her, as she is to him. Think for a moment,
Hundred, how you'd feel if you were hundreds of miles
from help and—"
"They may not be that far from
their portal. It's my understanding that the cluster of portals you
and Magister Halathyn have detected are in very close proximity.
That means—"
"How dare you
interrupt a Guild magister?"
Gadrial's voice cracked like a
whip. She bristled so furiously her very hair seemed to crackle and
Thalmayr blanched and backed up—first one step, then
another—as she advanced on him.
"Are you truly the unschooled,
illiterate, brainless, unwashed barbarian you appear to
be?" Her voice was like a sword. "Or does the Andaran military
academy include courses on discourtesy as part of its standard
curriculum? Because if it does, you obviously excelled in at least
one subject!"
"Magister, I—"
"Enough!" The air sizzled
around her—literally sizzled as static charges
cracked and popped like the aura of a Mythalan firebird. "I'm tired
of musclebound idiots insulting my intelligence, my professional
competence, and my rank! Shevan Garlath was a disgrace to the
uniform he died in, and so far, Hundred Thalmayr, I'm not any
more favorably impressed by you!"
Hadrign Thalmayr swallowed
hard. For a moment, Jasak almost felt sorry for the other man,
despite his own blinding rage. The wrath of any full magister was
something few mortals cared to incur; the wrath of this
magister could destroy the career of a man with far better political
and patronage connections than Thalmayr possessed.
"Magister Kelbryan, a thousand
pardons! I beg your forgiveness for my deplorable discourtesy."
She tilted her head back, staring
down her nose at him despite the fact that he stood two full hands
taller than she did. She let him sweat for another long moment,
then gave a minute, frost-rimmed nod.
"Apology accepted," she said
coldly. Then added, "As for your objection, we know how
relatively close we are to their portal; they don't."
Thalmayr started to protest
again, then clamped his lips together and kept whatever it was
carefully behind his teeth.
"Much better, Hundred
Thalmayr." Gadrial's eyes glinted. "They don't know for the simple
reason that they were both unconscious for most of the flight here.
They have no way of knowing how far we brought them by
dragon."
"Oh. Oh, I see." Thalmayr
cleared his throat. "Well, yes. That does change the picture a bit,
doesn't it?"
Jasak carefully refrained from
snorting aloud.
"It certainly does," Gadrial
agreed coldly. "Not only do they have no idea how far they'd have
to go, but Shaylar can't bolt, and Sir Jasak is right—Jathmar
won't, not without her. Look at them, Hundred Thalmayr. I mean
that literally. Look at them."
Thalmayr's head turned like a
marionette's. Jathmar had placed himself squarely between the
hundred and Shaylar. His eyes were slitted, his posture tense. He
stood with his knees slightly bent, his hands half-fisted at his sides,
coiled like a serpent ready to strike.
"He's already close to the
breakpoint," Gadrial said in a quieter, softer voice. "Do you really
want to push him over the edge and set off of violent
confrontation that might well end in another death, Hundred? And
do you think your superiors will thank you for managing to kill
off one of the only two sources of information we currently
possess just to restrain a man who isn't going to run away
anyway?"
Hundred Thalmayr cleared his
throat again.
"You . . .
may just have a point, Magister."
"How magnanimous of
you to agree, Hundred."
He flushed under the ice-cold
irony of her voice. For just an instant Jasak thought he might
actually take up her verbal gage, but apparently even he wasn't
that stupid.
"Very well," he muttered instead,
his voice brittle. "I'll concede the point."
"Thank you. My job is hard
enough as it is, without fighting the Army every step of the way."
"Your job, Magister?"
"Yes, my job. Isn't it obvious?"
she asked, deliberately needling him. But he only blinked, clearly
not seeing where she was headed.
"I'm the only non-soldier in this
camp," she said in a deliberately patient voice. "The only person
they're likely to even halfway trust. I've also seen virtually
everything that happened out here. What I know, what I've already
seen and done, make my inclusion in whatever happens to them
imperative."
"That's the official position of
the Guild?" he asked, knowing full well that the Guild didn't know
anything about this situation as yet. Gadrial knew it, too, but she
looked him squarely in the eye.
"It is," she said flatly, and it
would be, as soon as the news broke. She'd see to that
personally, if she had to. Meanwhile, the closer she stayed to them,
the less likely it was that anyone in the Army—or in the
halls of political power, for that matter—would be able to
spirit them off under a veil of secrecy and do whatever they
deemed "necessary" to extract information. Not even politicians
and commanders of legions wanted to take on the Guild of
Sorcerers, and the Guild would certainly back her. Especially with
Magister Halathyn's guaranteed support.
Gadrial wasn't foolish enough to
think that anyone, even Magister Halathyn himself, could—
or even should—shield them from any prying. But
there were right and wrong ways of obtaining information from
them, and Gadrial was determined that the right way would
prevail.
Hundred Thalmayr obviously
wasn't made of sufficiently stern stuff to stand against her.
"Very well, Magister Kelbryan,"
he said in a conciliatory tone. Then he glanced at Jasak again. "The
prisoners are yours, Hundred. See to it," he added, his voice heavy
with warning as he turned back to Gadrial once more, "that you at
least remember whose side you're on."
Gadrial bristled again, but he'd
already turned on his heel and walked off, spitting orders as he
went. She met Jasak's gaze and found a curious blend of respect,
regret, and dark worry in his eyes.
"You'd best pack your things,"
was all he said. "Salmeer's going to be wanting to leave shortly."
"You think Thalmayr's wrong to
stay?" she asked quietly.
"Think?" He snorted. "No, I
don't think he's wrong. I know it."
"I agree with you about the need
to prevent another violent confrontation, but he's right about the
size of the portal," she pointed out unwillingly, hating to sound as
if she were siding with Thalmayr about anything. "All of
the upstream portals from here are larger. If it does come
to more shooting, isn't this the best place to try and hold them?"
"Hundred Thalmayr doesn't have
a clue what he's up against," Jasak said softly, his tone flat. "He
hasn't seen these people's weapons in action, and he doesn't know
one damned thing more than I do about how many of them
are out there, how close they are, how quickly they can follow us
back to this portal. He won't know, either, until Chief
Sword Threbuch gets back here. But instead of pulling people out,
he's going to be moving more of them in." He shook his
head. "One of my—his—platoons is all the
way back in Erthos, over four thousand miles from here. First
Platoon's been effectively destroyed, and Five Hundred Klian's
battalion's scattered around holding posts across at least three
universes. That leaves Thaylar with only two platoons—
barely a hundred and twenty more men, even with supports, since
they're both understrength. That's not going to be enough to hold
against any sort of attack in strength, but it will be big
enough to make it impossible for him to disengage and pull out
quickly if something too big to handle comes at him."
"And he's not remotely prepared
to listen to you," Gadrial worried.
"He's convinced I screwed up,
probably because I panicked. He thinks I behaved dishonorably,
and that my intention to retreat was an act of cowardice."
"Cowardice! Is he
insane? And you did not act dishonorably! Why, that
pompous, stupid—!"
"Peace, Magister." He held up
one hand, and she subsided, still fuming. "This isn't your fight," he
said gently. "And rest assured that that accusation will be raised
again.
"Any jackass who makes that
accusation will hear the truth from me," she said, eyes slitted,
"even if I have to knock them down and stand on their chests while
I shout at them!"
"My Lady," Jasak said with a
slight smile, "that's a sight I'd relish seeing. But be that as it may, I
still have to get them safely back to New Arcana. Pack for the
journey, please. I have to speak with Magister Halathyn.
Immediately."
"Halathyn," she breathed,
her face suddenly pale. "He has to go with us."
"Yes, he has to," Jasak agreed.
"And he's a cantankerous, dragon-headed, opinionated old
curmudgeon, far too accustomed to getting his own way, who
shouldn't be allowed outside the precincts of the Academy without
an armed keeper and a leash."
He half-expected her to be
insulted, but instead, her lips quirked in a slightly strained smile.
"My goodness, you do
know him rather well, don't you?"
"That I do, and he's not going to
want to get any further away from this damned portal cluster than
he absolutely has to. So, if you'll excuse me?"
He turned away, and it was clear
to Gadrial as he stalked toward Halathyn's tent that he cared for
that cantankerous, dragon-headed, opinionated old curmudgeon
almost as much as she did. And, she thought, biting her lip, he was
absolutely right about how hard it was going to be to convince
Halathyn to "abandon his post" on the cusp of uncovering the
greatest single trans-temporal discovery of all time: not simply a
portal, but another entire trans-universal civilization! Could
Jasak—or she—possibly come up with an argument
potent enough to pull that off?
Fear, cold as a Ransaran winter
wind, blew through her heart. She stood for a moment longer,
watching Jasak bend to duck under the fly of Halathyn's tent. Then
she trudged off toward her own tent, and started to pack.
"There's more trouble brewing,"
Jathmar said tersely, and Shaylar nodded.
Judging by the raised voices
coming from a nearby tent, Jasak and the elderly, dark-skinned
Halathyn who'd done such astonishing things weren't exactly in
perfect agreement about something. Halathyn sounded reasonable
and confident, if a trifle irritated, while Jasak sounded angry and
frustrated. The newcomer—the man Jasak and Gadrial had
called "Thalmayr"—strode toward the tent, and Jathmar
tensed. His maddening inability to understand what anyone said
hadn't prevented him from recognizing the fact that Thalmayr
represented a serious threat to him and
Shaylar . . . or the fury with which
Jasak had confronted the other man over it.
But Thalmayr paused, just
outside the tent flap, obviously eavesdropping. At least he didn't
intrude and make whatever was going on still worse, but Jathmar
would almost have preferred that to the man's nasty grin before he
moved on.
Whatever Jasak and Halathyn
were arguing about, Jathmar decided he'd better worry about it, if
Thalmayr was glad it was taking place. Thalmayr scared him
straight down to his socks, and he didn't mind admitting it. Not, at
any rate, as much as he hated admitting that he and Shaylar
needed Jasak and Gadrial as protection against the other man.
"Gadrial's packing her
belongings, too," Shaylar said abruptly. "Look there."
She nodded toward the tent
beside Halathyn's, where the slim, not-Uromathian woman was
visible through the open flap. She was, indeed, packing, but
nobody else was.
"Whatever's going on, they're not
evacuating the whole camp," Jathmar muttered. "They must intend
to stand their ground at this portal."
"Will Grafin order out a search
party?" Shaylar wondered.
"I don't know. That's a military
question which means it's also a political one. On the other hand,
Darcel won't rest until he locates us—or our bodies. And
Darcel can be mighty persuasive."
He smiled crookedly at Shaylar,
but his smile disappeared as she shook her head.
"He won't find any bodies, Jath,"
she said, her voice hollow, and Jathmar felt something prickle
along his scalp at her expression.
"What do you mean? Surely they
buried the dead!"
"No." She shook her head. "No,
they burned them. Cremation, I guess I should call it. All of them.
Theirs and ours with—" She swallowed convulsively. "I
don't know what it was. It burned fast, and hot. It
consumed . . . everything."
"Those sick, sadistic—"
Jathmar began savagely, but she shook her head again, harder.
"No, it wasn't like that!" Her
distress was obvious, but she felt carefully for the right words.
"They treated our people just like theirs, Jathmar. It
was . . . it was like some kind of
funeral rite. They couldn't carry the bodies out. And there weren't
enough of them left to bury all the dead. So they did the best they
could, and they gave our people just as much respect as their
own."
Jathmar stared at her, and she
managed a tremulous smile. But then her eyes closed once more,
and she leaned her forehead against him.
"I know that's what they were
doing, what they intended. I read it off Jasak. But seeing
it . . ."
She began to weep yet again, and
he held her tight, whispering to her, begging her not to cry.
"No. I need to," she said through
her tears. "Barris told me that, after Falsan died in my arms. He
told me to go ahead and cry. It was the psychic death shock, he
said, and he was right. And then I watched him. Just
watched him burn to ashes . . . "
"Oh, love," he whispered into her
hair, rocking her gently, eyes burning.
He started to say something
more, then stopped himself and closed his eyes. He hadn't been
there when Falsan died, but he knew Barris had given Shaylar the
right advice. Now, hard as it was, Jathmar had to let her do the
same thing when all he really wanted to do was comfort her until
she stopped weeping.
He concentrated on just hugging
her, and deliberately sought something else to distract him from
his desperate worry over her and his fury at the people who had
driven her to this.
He opened his eyes once more
and looked up at Gadrial once again. The other woman was almost
finished packing, it seemed, and he found himself wondering just
who Gadrial was. It was obvious that it was her intervention
which had brought the incandescent confrontation between Jasak
and Thalmayr to a screeching halt. And, ended it in Jasak's favor,
unless Jathmar was very mistaken. The tall, menacing Thalmayr
had backed down from her like a rabbit suddenly confronted by a
cougar. And she and Halathyn appeared to be the only civilians in
the entire camp. So just who were they? And how
important was Gadrial?
The confrontation continued to
rage in Halathyn's tent. Gadrial stood beside a packed duffel bag,
her head cocked to one side, her body language tense and unhappy
as she listened to it. Then she obviously came to a decision.
"Oh, my," Shaylar murmured in
his ear. She'd almost stopped crying, and she managed a damp
smile as she and Jathmar watched Gadrial march toward
Halathyn's tent. The other woman's mouth was set in a thin, hard
line, and her almond-shaped eyes flashed.
"I don't think I'd like that lady
mad at me," Shaylar added, and Jathmar produced a smile
of his own.
"I always knew you were a smart
woman, love," he replied
Gadrial disappeared into the tent.
A moment later her voice joined the fray, pleading at first, then
increasingly sharp with anger. It went on for quite a while until,
finally, she let out an inarticulate howl and stormed back out
again.
A part of Jathmar wanted to be
glad. Surely any discord in the enemy's camp had to be a good
thing from Sharona's perspective! But then he saw Gadrial's face.
Her lovely, honey-toned skin was ashy white, her lips trembled,
and tears sparkled on her eyelashes.
Shaylar saw it, too, and rose
swiftly, taking Jathmar by surprise.
"Gadrial?" Shaylar lifted a hand
toward her, part in question, part in sympathy, and Gadrial's face
crumpled. She looked back at Shaylar for a moment, then shook
her head and turned away, retreating back into her own tent and
letting the flap fall. Shaylar bit her lower lip, then sank back down
beside Jathmar.
"I hate that," she whispered
wretchedly. "I can't stand seeing her that distressed, especially after
the way she's tried to comfort me."
"It's not our affair," Jathmar said
gently. Anger sparked in her eyes, but he laid a fingertip across her
lips and shook his head.
"It isn't," he said again, gently
but firmly. "There's nothing we can do, because there's nothing
they'll let us do."
"You're right." A sigh shuddered
its way loose from her. "That doesn't make it any easier, though."
"Not for you," he acknowledged.
"Me, now, I'm just a bit less forgiving than you are. I think I could
stand quite a bit of distress on these people's part!"
"But not on Gadrial's," Shaylar
replied.
"Well, no," he admitted, not
entirely willingly. "Not on Gadrial's."
She smiled and touched the side
of his face, then both of them looked up as Halathyn's tent flap
opened again and Jasak emerged. Actually, "emerge" was too pale
a way to describe his explosive eruption, or the eloquent gesture
he made at the sky. Then he stalked away, heading toward another
tent on the opposite side of the encampment.
Halathyn's tent flap stirred again,
and the long, frail black man appeared. He called out something,
and lifted one hand in a conciliatory gesture, but Jasak refused to
listen or even glance back, and the storm in his eyes as he raged
past their campfire frightened Jathmar.
Protector or not, Jasak Olderhan
obviously wasn't a man any sane individual wanted pissed off at
him, Jathmar thought. But he'd already concluded that, watching
Jasak and Thalmayr. It wasn't fear of Jasak's temper that tightened
Jathmar's arm around Shaylar; it was the iron discipline which
held that temper in check. Angry men were dangerous—
men who could control and use their anger, instead of
being used by it, were deadly.
Jasak was one of the the latter,
Jathmar decided, and filed that information carefully away. There
were precious few weapons available to them, but knowledge was
one, and nothing he learned about these people was a waste of
effort. So he watched Jasak stalk into his own tent. Watched
Halathyn lower his hand, sigh, and shake his head regretfully.
Watched the old man reenter his tent without trying to heal the
breach again. And Jathmar watched as Jasak, too, began to throw
things into a heavy canvas duffel bag.
So both of
their . . . champions would be going
with them, wherever they were going. That was interesting, and at
least a little reassuring. As for those who stayed
behind . . .
Jathmar's eyes narrowed once
more, filled with bitter emotion. He could only hope that
Company-Captain Halifu and Darcel Kinlafia avenged
them—with interest. That shocked him, in a way, even now,
but it was true.
Jathmar Nargra-Kolmayr had
never expected to be brought face-to-face with the sort of carnage
which had destroyed his survey team. Yet he had, and he'd
discovered that he wanted his dead avenged. He wanted the people
who'd killed them repaid in full and ample measure. Part of him
was shocked by that, but all the shock in the multiverse couldn't
change that fact.
Deep inside, another wounded
part of him—a part which might one day heal, however
impossible that seemed at the moment—mourned the
passing of the man he'd been. The man who would have been
horrified by the prospect of yet more slaughter, whoever it was
visited upon. But for now, hatred was stronger than horror in his
heart, and that was precisely how he wanted it.
Chapter Fifteen
Acting Platoon-Captain Hulmok
Arthag mistrusted the shadows in this thick, towering forest. Then
again, Hulmok Arthag mistrusted most things in life, including
people. Not without reason; Arpathians learned the meaning of
prejudice the instant they set foot outside Arpathia.
The other races of Sharona made
Arpathians the butt of jokes and viewed them—some
tolerantly, some nastily—as barbarians. But no one made
jokes about Hulmok Arthag, and if he was considered an
unlettered barbarian, no one said sowithin his earshot.
He'd also learned, growing up on
the endless Arpathian plains, that no sane man put his faith in the
vagaries of wind, weather, fire, or even grass. Wind could bring
death by tornado, weather by the freezing howl of blizzards that
quick-froze everything caught in them, or the slower death of
dought. Fire could blaze out of control, driven by wind to
consume everything in its path. Grass could wither and fail,
leaving no fodder for the herds, and when the herds failed,
eventually there would be no one left to bury or burn the dead.
What Arthag did trust
were his own strong hands, his own determination, and the hearts
of those under his command. Not their minds, for no
man's—or woman's—mind could be guaranteed, let
alone trusted. But a heart could be measured, if one looked into
its depths with the sort of Talent that laid its innermost secrets
bare, and Hulmok Arthag had that Talent. He didn't misuse it, as
some might have, but when it came to assessing the men under his
command, he used it ruthlessly, indeed, and he'd come up with
many ways to get rid of any man who failed to meet his own
rigorous standards.
"Platoon-Captain."
Arthag looked up. It was Mikal
Grigthir, the trooper he'd sent forward as an advance scout.
Grigthir trotted his horse up to the small campfire where Arthgag
sat, waiting with the rest of the halted column for his report,
reined in, and saluted sharply.
"Good to see you in one piece,"
Arthag growled, returning the salute.
"Thank you, Sir." Grigthir had
been with Arthag for less than six months, only since the
Arpathian had been brevetted to his present acting rank and given
command of Second Platoon, Argent Company, of the Ninety-
Second Independent Cavalry Battalion. But he was an experienced
man, an old hand out here on the frontier, and Arthag had
complete faith in his judgment.
"What did you find?" the petty-
captain continued.
"I found their final camp, Sir. It's
been pillaged. Most of their gear was abandoned, but there's not a
weapon left in the whole stockade. Not even a single cartridge
case."
"They took the donkeys, then?"
Arthag asked with a frown.
"No, Sir. I found them
wandering loose around the camp. But the attack didn't take place
anywhere near the stockade. Voice Kinlafia was right—our
people got out in time and started hiking back toward the portal.
They got further than we'd thought, too. I found plenty of sign to
mark their trail, both their own and their pursuers'. I'd estimate
that they were followed by at least fifty men on foot."
"Fifty." Arthag swore, although
it wasn't really that much of surprise. "You say you found their
back trail," he continued after a moment. "Did you find where they
were attacked, too?"
"Yes, Sir." Grigthir swallowed.
"I did."
"And?" Arthag asked sharply,
noticing the tough, experienced cavalry trooper's expression.
"It's . . .
unnatural, Sir."
Grigthir was pale, visibly shaken,
and Arthag drew a deep breath. He looked around at the thirty-odd
men of his cavalry platoon, then nodded sharply to himself.
"All right, Mikal," he said.
"Show me."
The forest was eerie as the
platoon moved out once more in column, following Grigthir. The
woods were too silent and far too deep for Arthag's liking. He'd
grown accustomed to soldiering in any terrain, but he was a son of
the plains, born to a line of plainsmen that reached back into
dimmest antiquity. His ancient forebears had halted the eastward
Ternathian advance in its tracks. Able to live off the land, fade into
the velvet night, and strike supply trains and columns on the march
at will, the Arpathian Septs had destroyed so many Ternathian
armies that the Emperor had finally stopped sending them.
But the Septs had learned from
the violent conflict, as well, and where Ternathian armies had
failed, merchants and diplomats had succeeded. The Septs had
ceased raiding their unwanted neighbors, learning to trade with
them, instead. That had led to greater prosperity than they had ever
before known, yet no septman or septwoman had ever adopted
Ternathian ways. Sons and daughters of the plains felt smothered
and suffocated by walls and ceilings of wood or stone.
And this son of the
plains felt closed in and vulnerable in a place like this forest,
where he could see no further than a few dozen yards but hidden
enemy eyes could watch his men, waiting to strike from ambush
whenever and wherever they chose. Grigthir had estimated fifty
men in the force which had pursued and attacked the Chalgyn
Consortium survey party, but where there were fifty, there might
be a hundred, or five hundred, or more. Not a comforting thought
for a man with less than forty troopers under his command.
As he rode long, he couldn't help
wondering if Sharona's first contact with other humans would
have ended in violence if both sides had glimpsed one another at a
distance on a windswept plain, rather than stumbling unexpectedly
across one another's paths in this unholy tangle of trees?
He snorted under his breath.
Questions like that were a waste of time. However it had
happened, Sharona had met its first inter-universal neighbors in
blood under these trees, and that was all that mattered. It was his
job to find any possible survivors—and take prisoners of
his own for questioning, if he could—not to ponder the
imponderables of life.
So Arthag guided his horse with
knees and feet alone, leaving his hands free for weapons. He
carried his rifle with the safety off, the barrel laid carefully along
his horse's neck to avoid tangling the muzzle in vegetation, while
he watched his mount's ears carefully.
The Portal Authority had
adopted the Ternathian Model 10 rifle for its cavalry, as well as its
infantry. Arthag wasn't positive he agreed with the idea, but he had
to admit that if they were going to issue a compromise weapon to
cavalry and infantry alike, the Model 10 was about as good as it
was going to get. The Ternathian Bureau of Weapons had
designed the Model 10 for use by infantry, Marines, and cavalry
from the outset. It was a bolt-action, chambered in .40 caliber,
with a twelve-round box magazine. Its semi-bullpup design gave it
a twenty-six-inch barrel, but with an overall length that was short
enough to be convenient in close quarters—like small
boats, or on horseback.
It was a precision instrument in
trained hands, and Arthag's hands were definitely trained.
So was his horse. Bright Wind
was no army nag. His exalted pedigree was as long and as fine as
any Ternathian prince's, and his schooling in the art of war had
begun the day he'd begun nursing at his dam's teats.
Hulmok Arthag's people were
nomads, and Arthag was the son of a Sept chieftain—a
younger son, true, with no hope of inheriting his father's Sept
Staff, but that had never been his dream, anyway. There were
always some men—and women—who felt the call to
wander more strongly than their brothers and sisters, and Arthag
had always been one of them. In times past, men like him had led
the Septs to new lands, new pastures and trade routes. In the
shrunken, modern world, hemmed in by others' borders, those who
felt the ancient call did what Arthag had chosen to do and sought
new pastures beyond the portals. And when Arthag had left the
Sept, he'd asked only one gift of his father: Bright Wind.
Under the Portal Authority's
accords, any trooper had the right to bring his own horse with him,
if he chose and if the horse in question met the Authority's
minimum standards. Less than a third of them took advantage of
that offer, but Arthag had never met an Arpathian who hadn't, and
his own mount was the envy of many a general officer. All of
which explained why Arthag watched the stallion's reactions so
carefully. Bright Wind could be taken by surprise, of course, but
his senses were far keener than Arthag's, and both horse and rider
had learned to trust them implcitly.
They were perhaps an hour or an
hour and a half's ride from the abandoned stockade when Bright
Wind suddenly laid back his ears and halted. Arthag felt the
shudder that caught the stallion's muscles a single heartbeat before
they turned to iron. And then a slight shift in the wind brought the
scent to him, as well. Smoke: a complex, unnatural stink that
mingled foully with the ordinary scent of wood smoke and less
ordinary smell of burnt flesh. Bright Wind's golden flanks had
darkened with sweat, but the stallion wasn't afraid. Nostrils
distended, ears pinned flat, he was ready for battle.
"What in Harmana's holy name is
that stench?" Junior-Armsman Soral Hilovar muttered softly. The
Ricathian Tracer wore an expression of horror, and something
inside Arthag quivered. He didn't share Hilovar's Talent, but he
didn't need to—not with that stench blowing on the wind.
"Let's go find out," he said
quietly. He turned in the saddle, waving hand signals to the
column which had halted instantly behind him. Scouts peeled off
from the flanks, spreading out. The precaution was almost
certainly unnecessary, but Hulmok Arthag didn't care.
Once his skirmishers were in
position, he touched Bright Wind with his heels. The stallion
stepped forward, dainty yet tense, and Petty Captain Arthag rode
out from under the trees into a scene of nightmare.
It was even worse than any of
them had been expecting, particularly for Darcel Kinlafia. The
Voice really should have been left behind, with Company-Captain
Halifu, but he'd flatly refused, and he hadn't been at all shy about
it. He might be legally under Halifu's authority, despite his own
civilian status, but he hadn't really seemed to care about that.
Arthag's platoon had only been
attached to Halifu's command for a couple of months. The
Chalgyn Consortium team's rapid-fire chain of discoveries had the
Portal Authority scrambling for troops to forward to the new
frontier. Arthag's men had been among the units swept up by the
Authority broom and whisked off to an entirely new
universe—and attached to an equally new CO—with
less than a week's warning. A man got used to that in the
Authority's service.
But although Arthag scarcely
knew Halifu well, he didn't think Kinlafia would have been able to
browbeat the company-captain into acquiescence if it hadn't been
for the fact that he was the Voice who'd received Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr's final message. Unlike Arthag or any of his troopers,
Kinlafia had already seen the battlefield through Shaylar's eyes.
That meant he might be able to give Hilovar or Nolis Parcanthi,
the Tracer and Whiffer Halifu had attached to Arthag for the
rescue mission, some critical bits of information or explanation
which would let them figure out what had really happened here.
But whatever Kinlafia had seen
through Shaylar's eyes, it obviously hadn't been enough to prepare
him for what he saw through his own. He let out a low, ghastly
sound as his gaze swept across the killing field where so many of
his friends had died. It was pitifully clear that he saw something
Arthag didn't—and couldn't—and Parcanthi reached
across to grip Kinlafia's shoulder in wordless sympathy and
support.
"Standard perimeter overwatch.
Chief-Armsman chan Hathas," Arthag said briskly, pretending he
hadn't noticed the Voice's distress. "First Squad has the perimeter.
Third has the reserve. Second Squad will dismount and prepare to
assist Parcanthi and Hilovar on request, but keep them out from
underfoot until they're called for."
"Yes, Sir!" Rayl chan Hathas,
Second Platoon's senior noncom, saluted sharply and turned to
deal with Arthag's instructions. For a moment, Arthag envied him
intensely. He would far rather have buried himself in the comfort
of a familiar routine rather than face the sort of discoveries he was
afraid they were going to make.
"Soral, Nolis," he continued,
turning to the two specialists. "Do what you can to tell us what
happened here. The rest of the column will remain outside the
clearing until you're finished."
Hilovar and Parcanthi nodded,
dismounted—awakwardly, in Parcanthi's case—and
tied their reins to fallen branches. Arthag allowed no trace of
amusement to cross his expressionless nomad's face—the
Septs had their reputation to maintain, after all—but neither
the Whiffer nor Tracer were cavalry troopers. They were
technically infantry, and Parcanthi looked like a lumpy bag of
potatoes in the saddle. Hilovar wasn't a lot better, and Arthag
found the two of them about as unmilitary as anyone he'd ever
seen in uniform. Hilovar was a tall, solidly built Ricathian who'd
been a Tracer for a major civilian police department before the
fascination of the frontier drew him into the Authority's service.
Parcanthi, a bit shorter than Hilovar but even broader, was a
Farnalian with flaming red hair and a complexion which Arthag
suspected started peeling about a half-hour before sunrise. On a
rainy day.
Both of them, despite their
relatively junior noncommissioned ranks, were the sort of
critically important specialists the Authority was always eager to
get its hands on. And as critically needed specialists often did, they
had a tendency to write their own tickets—often without
actually realizing they'd even done it. Which, when it came right
down to it, was just fine with Hulmok Arthag. He suspected that
both of them would be just about useless in a firefight, but they
knew that as well as he did. If it came to it, both of them were
smart enough to stay out of the line of fire (if they could), and
that, too, suited Arthag just fine, because they were also far too
valuable to risk in a firefight. As it happened, and despite
their lack of horsemanship or military polish, he liked what he'd
seen of both of them—a lot. And if they could tell him
anything about what had happened here, he would forgive them
any military faux pas they might ever commit.
He waited until he was confident
chan Hathas had the perimeter organized, then dismounted himself
with a murmured command to Bright Wind, whose ears flicked in
acknowledgment. Until and unless he told the golden stallion it
was time to move, Bright Wind would stay exactly where he was.
Arthag patted the horse's shoulder gently, then stepped up to the
edge of the clearing, rifle ready, and settled in to wait.
There'd been no rain and little
wind, which was a gods send for Parcanthi. Even so, the residual
energy had already begun to dissipate. A sense of horror and pain
would doubtless linger for years, but raw emotion wasn't what
Parcanthi—and the rest of Sharona—sought.
The Whiffer stepped out into the
center of the toppled timber, closed his eyes, and reached out with
quivering senses to taste the surviving residual patterns, and
images flashed through him. Whiffs of what had been. Smoke. The
crash and roar of rifle fire. Screams of agony.
He turned, eyes still closed, to
face the trees where the Chalgyn Consortium's crew had sought
cover. He caught a flash of Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl standing up,
hands empty. Caught another flash of a uniformed man spinning
around, raising a crossbow, firing. Yet another flash of chan
Hagrahyl staggering back, throat pierced with steel.
Other flashes cannoned through
him. Barris Kasell dying monstrously inside a massive lightning
bolt. Men in strange uniforms falling to the broken ground, as
bullets hammered through them. Other Sharonians back in the
trees, caught by fireballs and crossbow fire.
He turned toward the standing
trees where the enemy had formed his line, and more flashes came.
Shouts in an alien tongue. Men rustling cautiously through the
trees, circling around to get at the defenders' flanks. Strange,
glassy tubes that belched flame and lightning, just as Kinlafia had
described. And bodies. Everywhere he turned, Whiffing the air,
Parcanthi saw bodies. Caught in tangled tree limbs, sprawled
across toppled tree trunks . . . lying in
neat rows.
He jerked his attention back to
that flash and tried to recapture it, to wring more detail from it. He
saw the dead laid out in careful rows, limbs arranged as if they
were only sleeping. Other men moved among them, placing
something small on each corpse. He could see Sharonian dead, as
well as those of the enemy. They'd grouped the survey crew
together, it looked like, but the images were so tenuous he
couldn't tell for sure how many Sharonians there were. He was
still trying to count when an unholy flash of light blinded him. The
bodies began to burn with unnatural brilliance—
Parcanthi let out a yell and
staggered back, gasping.
"What is it?" someone
demanded, practically in his ear. "What did you Whiff?"
Parcanthi jerked around and
found Hulmok Arthag standing at his shoulder.
"W-what?" he gulped, still more
than a little disoriented.
"What did you Whiff?" Petty
Captain Arthag asked again, and Parcanthi swallowed hard.
"They cremated the dead," he
answered, his voice hoarse. "With
something . . . unnatural."
"I'm starting to dislike that
adjective," the Arpathian officer growled. He glowered at the
clearing for a moment, jaw working as if he wanted to spit. Then
he shook himself and looked back at the Whiffer. "What else did
you get?"
Parcanthi gave himself a shake,
regathering his composure.
"Part of the battle Kinlafia
described, Sir. Just faint glimpses. The details are already fading,
dissipating. They cremated our dead, as well as their own, but the
images are so tenuous, it's hard to tell how many of our people
were burnt."
"Keep trying," Arthag said in
clipped tones. "We need to know if there were survivors."
"Yes, Sir. I know. I'll do my
best."
"Good man." Arthag put a hand
briefly on his shoulder, then nodded. "Carry on, then."
As Parcanthi got back to work,
Arthag turned toward Soral Hilovar, who was searching through
the fallen trees where the Chalgyn crew had taken shelter.
"Anything?" he asked, and the
Tracer looked up with a bitter expression.
"Whoever these bastards are,
they left damned little behind. If I could get my hands on
something of theirs, I could tell you a fair bit, but they were
fiendishly thorough scavengers. I haven't found anything they
left behind, and not a single piece of Sharonian equipment,
either,for that matter. I've found spot after spot where our people
set down packs, or what were probably ammunition boxes, but
they're gone. All I've got so far is this."
He held up a handful of spent
cartridge cases, and Arthag gazed at them through narrow eyes.
"They mean to learn all they can
from our gear," he said flatly, then inhaled and grimaced at the
Tracer. "Nolis says they cremated the dead. I know it won't be
pleasant, but try reading the ash piles."
He nodded toward the most open
portion of the clearing, where Parcanthi stood in the midst of fire
scars the length and shape of human bodies. Hilovar's jaw muscles
bunched, but he nodded with the choppiness of barely suppressed
anger. Not at Arthag, the petty-captain knew, but at what he was
going to find out there.
"Yes, Sir," he bit out. "I'll do
whatever it takes, Sir."
The normally cheerful Ricathian
stalked toward the fire scars. At least he wasn't a novice when it
came to crime scene work. His ten-year stint as a homicide Tracer
in Lubnasi, the city-state of his birth, had inured him to mere
human cruelty and suffering. He understood that people did
violence to one another, even in a world of telepaths. But
this . . .
The ash pits, while macabre,
were less horrifying to a former homicide Tracer than they would
have been to a civilian. Not that they didn't bother Hilovar anyway,
of course. But that was because he could already tell they were
tainted with something not quite right, something profoundly
disturbing. Whatever it was, he'd already encountered it when he
Traced the survey crew's actual death sites.
He put that memory out of his
mind, focusing on the immediate task as he knelt beside the first
human-sized scorch mark. There wasn't much left, not even bone.
A few twisted, melted bits of metal glinted dully in the ashes, but
there wasn't even much of that. Not enough to tell if the bits had
been buttons, or buckles, or something else entirely. Just a few
droplets, where something had melted and dripped away until it
coalesced into ugly, formless flakes and bits too small even to call
pebbles.
Simply touching the ashes and
splashes of metal sent vile prickles up his arms. Everything he
touched gave off the same feeling as the death sites had, only
worse. More concentrated. The vibrations of the energy he would
normally have sensed in a place where humans had been
incinerated—a house fire, say—had been warped by
something uncanny in these ash pits. The residues crawled along
his skin uncomfortably, like being jabbed with thousands of
microscopic pins.
When he doublechecked with
Parcanthi on the location of cremation sites that were almost
certainly Sharonian, then cross-referenced with sites which had
definitely contained the enemy's dead, he found exactly the same
residues on both, which led to an inescapable conclusion.
Whatever they'd used to cremate their own dead had been used to
burn the Sharonian dead, as well, so the odd residue wasn't a
signature given off by the enemy's bodies. And whatever it
was, they'd used something similar to kill the Chalgyn
Consortium's people in the first place, because that weapon had
left behind the same unsettling energy residue, all over the death
sites. It was exactly the same residue as whatever they'd used to
ignite the funeral pyres, and he couldn't make any sense out of it at
all.
"How were they
burned?" he muttered to himself without even realizing he'd
spoken aloud. "Whatever it was, it was damned odd."
It's certainly hadn't been any fuel
Hilovar had ever encountered. There was no wood ash, so it
couldn't have been a traditional, archaic funeral pyre. It hadn't been
kerosene, either, or some kind of flammable vegetable oil, or
anything else he could think of. Besides, each of these fire scars
was exactly the size of a single body. . . and they'd been burned out
of the surrounding leaf mold without touching off a general
conflagration. He saw the proof of that right in front of him, but
the very idea was still ridiculous. He'd never heard of any
fire intense enough to totally consume a human
body . . . not to mention one that
burned a neat hole out of drifts of dry leaves without spreading at
all!
He furrowed his brow, trying to
identify the elusive, disturbing sensation. It was more like the
energy patterns near portals than anything else he could think of,
but it wasn't the same as that, either. It
was . . . different.
He growled in frustration and
stood, looking around until he spotted Acting Platoon-Captain
Arthag and Parcanthi. They were standing together to one side, and
he strode briskly over to them. When he tried to explain his
confusing impressions, the cavalry officer looked baffled, but the
Whiffer blinked. He frowned for a few seconds, then nodded
vigorously.
"I think you're onto something,
Soral," he said. "I kept getting a Whiff of something really odd in
this clearing. It was pretty strong where our people died, but it was
even stronger over there." He pointed into the standing trees
opposite the clearing where the crew had made its fatal last stand.
"I got the strongest sense of it where I caught the flashes of those
weird, shiny tubes Kinlafia described."
"That's interesting." Arthag
rubbed his chin thoughtfully, looking from one spot to the other.
"You sensed it at the point of impact, and at the point of origin.
But not between? Shouldn't there be a parabola of residue
between them, along the trajectory?"
"You'd think so, Sir," Parcanthi
agreed with a frown. "Let me Whiff this again."
He moved slowly and carefully
across the open ground between the two spots, again and again. He
quartered the area meticulously, but when he came back, he shook
his head.
"There's not a damned thing
between them, Platoon-Captain. Nothing."
He looked perplexed, and
Arthag's frown deepened.
"That's impossible!" the officer
protested. Then grimaced. "Isn't it? I mean, how can something shoot without following a trajectory?"
"I don't have the least damned
idea, Sir, but that's what it looks like they did. There was some
kind of powerful energy discharge at the enemy's gun
emplacement." He pointed. "There was another one where the
weapon's discharge struck." He pointed again. "But I'm
telling you, Sir, that there's nothing between those two
spots. Not even the ghost of a signature. And this energy feels so
damned weird it would be impossible to mistake its
signature if it was there in the first place."
The three men exchanged grim
glances.
"Just what in hell are we dealing
with?" Hilovar asked for all of them in an uneasy tone, and Arthag
scowled.
"I intend to find that out." He
glanced at Parcanthi. "Can I send the men in to search the site yet,
or do you need to take more readings first?"
"Keep them away from our
people's death sites, if you don't mind, Sir. I do want to take more
readings there, see if I can pin down more information about who
died and who might not have. And stay clear of that area for now."
He pointed to a spot under the standing trees. "That's where they
tended their wounded before evacuating. I want to take a close
scan of that, as well. You can turn them loose anywhere else,
though."
Arthag nodded and strode across
the clearing to Chief-Armsman chan Hathas.
"Spread them out, Chief-
Armsman. I want every inch of this ground searched, from
there—" he pointed "—to there." He indicated the
two off-limit sites Parcanthi needed to scan again.
"Yes, Sir. Any special
instructions on what we ought to be looking for?" chan Hathas
asked.
"Anything the Tracer can handle,
Chief. We're looking for anything he can get a better reading off
of. As it stands, we don't have enough surviving debris to give
Hilovar a decent set of readings. Find something better for him."
"Yes, Sir." chan Hathas looked
out across the clearing, his jaw clenched, and nodded sharply. "If
it's out there, we'll find it, Sir," he promised grimly.
"Good," Arthag said, and then
turned to face the sole survivor of Chalgyn's slaughtered crew.
"Darcel." His gruff voice gentled
as he called the man's name.
"Sir?" The civilian's question
was hoarse, his expression stricken and distracted.
"Pair up with Nolis, please,"
Arthag said quietly. "Compare what you saw through Shaylar's
eyes with what he's picking up. I know that's going to be hard on
you, but we've got to know precisely how many of our
people were killed."
"Yes, Sir." The words should
have been crisp, but they came out as a shadow of sound, barely
audible, and distress burned in Darcel's eyes. He turned without
another word and headed out across the broken, fire-scorched
ground, stumbling over the rough footing.
It wasn't just the debris that was
responsible for his unsteady gait. Just being in this clearing was
agony, but he also had trouble distinguishing between what his
own eyes saw and what he'd Seen through Shaylar's eyes. The
memories kept superimposing themselves over what he was seeing
here and now. He kept trying to step over branches that weren't
there, and stumbled over ones that didn't exist in the view Shaylar
had transmitted. He blinked furiously, trying to clear his distorted
vision, and cursed himself when he couldn't. He needed to be
clearheaded, not muddled between past and present. He had to be if he was going to help spot something that would provide
clues for Parcanthi and Hilovar.
He stopped, turning in place,
looking for the exact spot where Shaylar had crouched, where the
agonizing memories in his mind had been born of fire and thunder.
There. It was somewhere in that direction, he decided, and started
forward once more, moving with grim determination through the
confusion of reality and remembrance. If he could find the spot, he
and the others might dredge up something they could use. Darcel
had little hope that anyone had survived, but he needed to
know. One way or the other, he had to know, because
anything would be better than this dreadful uncertainty. This
doubt.
He cursed the men who'd done
this, not only for the killing, but for burning the dead and stealing
everything they'd been carrying. They hadn't even marked the ash
piles in any way! What kind of barbarians didn't even mark a
grave? If they'd simply marked the sites, just indicated which piles
of ashes had held Sharonians, and which their own accursed dead,
there wouldn't have been this horrible doubt. The column would
have known how many people needed to be rescued.
And how many needed to be
avenged.
Darcel couldn't even lay
remembrance wreaths at the graves of his dearest friends because
he didn't know whose ashes were whose! It was intolerable, and
there wasn't a damned thing he could do about it, other than help
the Whiffer and Tracer wring every scrap of information they
could from this place and from his own memory, with its perfect
recall.
Shaylar's entire transmission was
still in his memory. He simply had to calm down enough to
retrieve it, and he had to remain detached enough to analyze every
fleeting second of those harrowing minutes. If Shaylar had known
where everyone was, and if she'd been aware of everyone's deaths
as they occurred, then theoretically, he knew that, too. Those were
distressingly large "ifs," but he had to start somewhere.
So did Platoon-Captain Arthag.
The officer had to know if they were on a rescue mission, or a
punitive strike. So Darcel tramped through the fallen trees,
comparing views and angles with what he saw in memory.
It took a long time, but he found
it in the end. When he finally located the spot, he stood peering
down at it for a long silent moment. Had she died here? Or
"merely" been wounded badly enough to knock her unconscious?
Most of the branches and tree
trunks in a four-foot swath around her place of concealment had
been scorched during the battle. Dead leaves had burst into flame
and burnt to white ash, some of which had fallen onto branches
below, and some of which—protected from the
wind—still clung to branches and twigs, paper-thin ghosts,
holding their shape eerily . . . until
the slightest touch of his breath caused them to crumble to
nothing.
He was tempted to crouch down
to match the views precisely, but he stayed carefully to one side.
He didn't want to contaminate the site with his own energy
residues, but even so, his boot brushed a thick clump of char that
wasn't wood.
What the devil? Darcel frowned and bent over it.
Someone from the other side had clearly looked at it after the
fight and dumped it again, leaving it as useless. That was the only
way it could have gotten to where it was, because it wasn't where
Shaylar had been crouching, and the ground directly under it
wasn't scorched. Most of the ground wasn't, actually, he realized
with another frown. It looked like the fireballs had passed
horizontally through the broken trees several inches above the
ground.
But there was one burnt
spot down there, he realized. One directly under where Shaylar's
feet had been.
This is where she burned the maps, he realized.
An icy centipede prickled down
his spine as he recognized it. He'd found the remains of her map
satchel, and the binder which had held her meticulous records.
Both of them had been made of oiled leather, to resist rain, and the
binder had been wrapped in a waterproof rubber case, as well.
None of them had burned completely, despite her frantic efforts.
She'd ripped out individual pages from the binder to burn her
notes, just as she'd burned the maps one by one, to ensure their
destruction. Then she'd tried to burn the satchel and binder, as
well.
He didn't even poke at the
charred lump with a stick. He left it for the Tracer to examine,
instead. Since both Shaylar and one of her killers had handled it,
they might get something valuable from it, so Darcel marked its
exact location and kept looking.
A moment later, his throat
constricted as he discovered why she'd lost consciousness so
abruptly. A thick branch behind the spot where she'd burned her
maps and notes was marked by dried blood and several strands of
long, dark hair. Darcel's fingers went unsteady as he reached
towards the strands, but then he made himself stop. Parcanthi and
Hilovar needed to examine everything here before he
contaminated it.
Darcel looked for the branch
where Jathmar had been flung when the fireball caught him and
spotted a few shreds of scorched cloth on the ground directly
beneath it. The branch itself, thick as Darcel's forearm, had been
seared black . . . except for a spot
exactly the width of Jathmar's body.
The Voice moved cautiously
around, staying outside the actual spot while his eyes searched
carefully. The unburnt bark of the limb into which Jathmar had
been thrown was scraped and cut where gear and buttons had dug
into it, and he peered at the ground to see if anything of Jathmar's
had fallen into the leaf litter.
If anything had, their attackers
had found it first and carried it off. Unwilling to risk stirring
things up with a closer search, Darcel called the Whiffer and
Tracer over to join him and explained what he'd found.
"You'd better go first, Nolis,"
Hilovar said, glancing at Parcanthi. "You need uncontaminated
patterns. I'll touch the evidence once you've gleaned what you
can."
Parcanthi nodded and started
with Jathmar's spot first. He closed his eyes and went very still,
and even though Darcel couldn't sense the energy patterns
Parcanthi was carefully examining, he knew enough theory to
recognize what he was doing.
Every living creature generated
its own energy field, created by that mysterious, poorly understood
force that animated a physical body. Inanimate objects had their
own strange energies, as well, and all objects vibrated at a specific
rhythm. A person sensitive to those rhythms could detect them,
focus on them, separate them from one another and wrest
information from them. Could discern what forces had worked
upon them, could draw visions—the famous "flashes" of
the Whiffer—of past events out of the energy flowing
about them.
Someone like Soral Hilovar, on
the other hand, could touch an object and trace the major events in
its history. If a living creature handled or came into contact with
an object, some of that creature's life energy remained behind. The
residue was like a static charge, except that it never entirely
dissipated. Details would fade eventually, yet for the most part,
the energy patterns left behind endured for a long time. But where
a Whiffer might use those patterns to determine what had
happened, a Tracer, like Hilovar, was sensitive to the connection
between the object and whoever had touched it. Unlike a
Whiffer, a Tracer couldn't see the general vicinity of those events,
couldn't pick up flashes of what else had happened in its
vicinity. But in many ways, what a Tracer did see was
considerably more detailed. He could frequently tell whether or
not the person involved in an event was dead or still alive. And,
somewhat like Darcel's own sensitivity to portals, a Tracer could
determine a directional bearing to the person in question.
The residue Whiffers and Tracers
worked with was even stronger when a complex living
creature—like a person—took a specific action, and
a violent action, or one steeped in powerful emotion—
terror, rage, passion—left the strongest residue of all. If
someone picked up a rock and bashed somebody else with it, a
ghostly imprint remained behind, creating a shadow copy of the
action . . . and its results. The shadow
copy didn't even need to be tied to a specific object, if the original
action had been sufficiently intense. The stronger the emotions,
the stronger the copy. Sometimes, the shadow could last for years,
particularly indoors—
Parcanthi hissed aloud and
flinched. Sweat beaded up on his brow and a cliff, trickled down
his temples.
"Oh, sweet Marnilay," he
whispered, his voice shaking. "They burned him
alive. . . . "
Darcel's mouth tightened into a
thin, harsh line. He knew exactly what the Whiffer was Seeing.
He'd already Seen it himself.
"He collapsed there," Parcanthi
said in a low voice, eyes still closed, pointing to the ground. "He
was still alive when they found him. Their emotions were strong.
Excitement. Relief?"
The last words sounded puzzled,
but a flare of hope shot through Darcel, sharp and painful.
Alive. Jathmar had been alive!
But Parcanthi was still talking,
and Darcel's heart clenched at the Whiffer's next words.
"He was burned something
ghastly. His back was burnt black, the shirt was just
gone—burned away. He was barely breathing.
Someone's crouched over him, trying to help. Gods! I can See
bone down inside the burns!"
Parcanthi shuddered, his face
twisting.
"It's too faint, curse it," he
whispered, "and there were too many people crowded into the
spot. The energy patterns are all jumbled up, imprinted on top of
one another. I can't sort them out."
His intense frustration was
obvious, and he opened his eyes and shook himself.
"That's it," he said grimly. "I'm
not going to get anything much clearer than that from here." His
jaw muscles bunched for a moment, and his nostrils flared as he
inhaled. "Let me try Shaylar. Where?"
"There."
Darcel pointed, and the red-
haired Whiffer nodded. His lean, craggy face was pale, covered
with cold sweat, but he walked across and crouched down, as
Shaylar had, surrounding and centering himself in the residue.
Bleak eyes closed again, and he gave another
shudder . . .
"She's burning everything. Maps,
notes. She's shaking, linked to Darcel. Jathmar's starting to climb
down from there—" he pointed to a spot above them,
without opening his eyes. Then his entire body flinched.
"Fire! There's fire
everywhere!"
He was slapping at his own
clothes, clawing at his hair, shaking. Then the fireball Darcel had
seen through Shaylar's eyes passed, and the Whiffer sagged in
relief. He turned, eyes still closed, toward the branch that had
knocked Shaylar unconscious.
"She crashed into that." He
pointed to the blood-crusted branch. "She's lying still. Her face is
swelling up, turning purple and black. There are cuts and scrapes."
Darcel's breath faltered. This
time, his hope was so terrible it actually hurt his lungs, his entire
body. If her face was swelling and bruising, she was alive.
Corpses didn't bruise—did they? He realized that he wasn't
sure, and the uncertainty was intolerable.
"They found her, too," Parcanthi
said. "They're shocked, horrified, that they attacked a woman."
Darcel's fists clenched at his
sides. He didn't want to think of these bastards as people who
could be shocked and horrified by what they'd done to an innocent,
lovely girl.
"They can't wake her up,"
Parcanthi said abruptly. "There's something wrong, desperately
wrong. Inside her head. They're trying. They're frantic, but
they can't wake her up, and she's badly
injured . . ."
His voice shook, frayed. Then he
groaned.
"It's fading out! The whole
godsdamned thing's wavering and fading away. They carried her
out of here, but I can't See anything beyond that. It just fades into
nothing. Or, rather, it blurs into that same mess Jathmar's did, with
all the imprints jumbled up together. I can't see anything more than
that."
"You have to!" Darcel cried,
unable to stop himself. "We have to know what happened
to her! Is she still alive?"
"I can't tell!" Parcanthi's
eyes opened, filled with anguish. "Too many people died right
here." He waved at the toppled trees around them. "And too
damned many people came through here—trying to rescue
survivors, trying to find every last piece of equipment. It all bleeds
and blurs and fades like ink in the water." He furrowed his brow,
rubbed his eyes. "Maybe if we can figure out where they took her
and Jathmar, I can tell more from there."
Darcel choked down more
frantic demands. Parcanthi couldn't do the impossible, and he
knew it. So he turned to Hilovar instead, and the Tracer glanced at
Parcanthi.
"Go on." The Whiffer nodded.
"I've got everything I'm going to get out of this spot. I'll head over
to the trees, where the enemy's lines were, try to find the spot
where they tended the wounded. Maybe I can tell more there."
Parcanthi extricated himself
from the spot where Shaylar and Jathmar had fallen. As he did so,
Hilovar met Darcel's gaze squarely.
"You have to realize," the ebony-
scanned Ricathian said in a low, cautionary tone, "that I may not
be able to tell, either. I can tell you what happened to an object and
the person or people most closely associated with it, but I may not
be able to Trace anything beyond the event itself."
"But Tracers can find missing
persons from hundreds of miles away!" Darcel protested. "I know
they can. You've done it yourself!"
"Sometimes I can," Hilovar
agreed. "That was useful in police work when I was still working
homicide. But you have to understand, Darcel. The more traces
there are at a crime scene, the harder it is to filter out just one. I
worked a case once where an entire extended family had been
killed by portal pirates. These bastards had a nasty habit of raiding
isolated mining camps, taking off with years worth of profits, and
killing all the witnesses.
"There were so many members
of the gang, so many victims, and so much violence done in such a
small space, that I couldn't get an accurate Trace on anything. It
took us over a year—and three more slaughtered
mining camps—to run the bastards down. If there'd been
only one or two victims, or fewer pirates, I could probably have
nailed them in a matter of weeks. Maybe even days."
Hilovar's eyes were dark with
remembered pain and frustration, and he sighed.
"We've got the same trouble
here. There was so much violence the event residues have
contaminated the objects caught in the middle of them. Everything
I've touched so far has so many echoes clinging to it that I can't get
accurate readings. If we had more objects to Trace from, the odds
would be better. But with so little evidence, and so many strong
residues, it's going to be tough. I'll do my dead level best, I
promise you that. And if we can find the place where they took the
wounded, if we can isolate something there that she and Jathmar
touched, the odds will go up. But even then, it's going to be dicey.
And if there's another portal nearby—"
He spread his hands, indicating
helplessness.
"I don't understand," Darcel said,
with a frown.
"Portals always screw up a
Trace." Hilovar seemed surprised by Darcel's response. "You're a
Voice—and a Portal Hound, too. Can you transmit a
message through a portal?"
"Of course not. No one can
trans—"
Darcel stopped abruptly, and
Hilovar nodded with a compassionate expression.
"The energy around a portal is
always weird stuff, damned weird. That's another reason it took us
so long to trace those damned pirates. You can't Trace anyone
through a portal any more than a Voice can send a message
through one, or a Mapper can Map through one of
them . . . and you can't just follow
someone through and pick him up again on the other side.
Stepping through a portal . . .
scrambles the residue. Those pirates would slip through a portal,
and every trace of them would literally vanish. It was like the gods
had stepped down, erased their very existence. This—" he
waved at the virgin forest surrounding them "—isn't
anyone's home universe, which means the other side came through
a portal, too. If they've taken any survivors back through it with
them, the odds of Tracing them on the other side—Well, I'd
be lying if I told you they even existed, Darcel."
Darcel cursed, then gritted his
teeth and nodded. At least Hilovar was too honest to offer false
comfort, he told himself.
"All right," he said. "I
understand. Do what you can."
The Tracer took a deep breath,
turned away, and grasped the branch Jathmar had struck. His
knuckles locked, and a ghastly sound broke from his throat. His
eyes shot wide, and his pupils dilated in shock, then shrank to
pinpoints. He shuddered, then jerked his hands loose and shook
them violently, as though flinging off drops of acid.
"Sorry," he muttered, scrubbing
sweat from his face with one forearm.
"I'll . . . try again."
He gripped the branch longer,
this time, but his entire body began to shake. The muscles of his
face quivered, veins stood out in his temples, and his voice, when
he finally spoke, was thick with pain and shock.
"Hurlbane's
balls . . . ! Bones
broken . . . bleeding inside, deep
inside . . . burns from scalp to
knees . . ."
Blood vessels popped up in
terrifying relief along the backs of Hilovar's dark hands, hands like
grey marble, carved from stone.
"He
can't . . . he can't possibly have lived.
Not with those injuries. Not more than a few
minutes . . ."
Flashes of memory—that
accursed, perfect memory of a Voice—showed
Darcel Jathmar's easy laughter. His boundless enthusiasm, his
sheer joy in the adventure that was life itself. There were hundreds
of those memories, thousands, and Darcel Kinlafia closed
his eyes as he felt his heart turn to cold steel.
Then he opened them again.
Hilovar had let go of the branch. He stood flapping his hands, as
though they, too, had been burned.
"And Shaylar?" Darcel asked
after a moment. "What about Shaylar?"
The Tracer drew a shallow
breath, as though it hurt to expand his chest more deeply. Then he
cleared his throat.
"Is there something specific here
I can Trace?" he asked, and Darcel pointed to the charred map
satchel. And to the bloody branch with the dark hair caught in its
bark. Hilovar looked at them both, then nodded.
"Only one way to find out," he
muttered, and Darcel literally held his breath as Hilovar's strong
fingers closed gently around the strands of hair and the blood-
crusted branch. Dark eyes closed once more as Hilovar gave
himself to the Traces.
"She was alive when they took
her away," he said after a moment in a strong voice, and Darcel's
hope leapt. But then Hilovar frowned. "Alive, but unconscious."
He bit his lower lip, and his voice faded to a terrible whisper.
"Blood pooling under the skull. Putting pressure on something
critical. Swelling . . ."
His hands began to shake, and he
shook his head hard, then released the branch and opened his eyes.
"I can't see anything beyond that,
Darcel. She was alive, but . . ."
The pain was even worse
because of that brief, thunderous stab of hope. But hemorrhaging
in the brain sounded at least as serious as Jathmar's more overt
injuries, and might well have been worse. Darcel looked away,
blinking burning eyes, as the anguish stabbed through him.
"Could—" He stopped,
cleared his throat. "Could she have survived something like that?"
"I don't know." The Tracer's
voice was hollow, full of bleak uncertainty and exhaustion. "I'm
no surgeon, Darcel. I can't even tell what part of her brain
was injured, only that it felt . . .
critical. If the injury wasn't in a life-threatening area, if they had a
skilled surgeon close enough . . . "
Hilovar didn't have to finish.
There were probably no more than a dozen surgeons in all of
Sharona's far-flung universes who would have been capable of
repairing the sort of damage Hilovar was sensing. What were the
odds that a pack of crossbow-armed barbarians would have a
surgeon with those skills with them out here in the middle of these
godsforsaken woods?
Hope died, messily, and what
grew in its place was colder than the frozen Arpathian hells. It cut
through him, cruel as any razor, and it hungered.
Darcel Kinlafia looked into
Soral Hilovar's eyes and caressed the butt of his revolver almost
gently.
Chapter Sixteen
Jathmar remembered his own
wistful thoughts about the joy of flight on the morning of the
nightmare attack—was it really only two days
ago?—and how he'd envied even a common sparrow's
ability to wheel and dart and soar.
Now, as the peered down at the
distant ground through the glass face shield and cold wind
whipped over him in an icy hurricane, he discovered that anything
he'd ever imagined fell far short of the truth. The sheer
exhilaration of actually streaking through the sky was so great, so
overwhelming, that it actually pushed his dread of the future
awaiting him and Shaylar out of the front of his thoughts. That
wasn't something he would have believed was possible, and a
corner of his brain wondered if he was concentrating on his
delight so hard in part to avoid thinking about that self same
future.
Maybe he was, but that didn't
change anything. The creature beneath the platform upon which he
and Shaylar were seated, carefully strapped in for safety, was
unquestionably the most powerful animal he had ever seen. The
sheer strength in every downstroke of those seemingly fragile
wings beggared every other notion of animal power he'd ever held,
and now that he'd gotten over his initial shock, he could appreciate
the creature's—the dragon's—metallic,
glittering beauty. The flashes of bronze and copper-colored
sunlight, reflected from its scales, were almost blinding, and the
ornate pattern on its wings and hide gleamed. Shaylar had to be
right, he told himself. That marvelous geometric design had
to be artificial, although he couldn't imagine how such
intricate patterns had been applied to a living animal's skin.
In fact, there was a lot
about these people that he couldn't imagine, and whatever else
befell them, he couldn't suppress his delighted grin as they raced
the wind itself. He'd come out here in search of adventure, hadn't
he? Well, when it came to unusual, unlikely experiences, riding
the back of a dragon which dwarfed any elephant and soared as
effortlessly as any eagle had to rank high on the list.
The sheer speed of the flight was
enough to leave him gasping in amazement. Not even a train
barreling down a miles-long straight track could have matched it.
He couldn't begin to fathom how a creature so massive could fly
so fast. It simply wasn't natural.
He snorted at the thought. He
and Shaylar had already seen a dozen other impossible things, and
no doubt they'd see still more. Things nobody on Sharona would
even have believed possible. Beneath the anger, the hatred, the
fear, the portion of Jathmar Nargra-Kolmayr which had drawn him
into the survey crews in the first place struggled to reassert itself.
His genuine love of new sights, odd adventures, and places no
Sharonian had ever set foot pressed tentatively against the deep
traumas of the last ninety-six hours.
He felt it stirring and wondered
what was wrong with him. How could he possibly feel anything
except fear, anxiety, hatred for the people who'd murdered his
friends, crippled his wife's Talent, almost killed him? How could
there be room for anything else?
He didn't know. The fact that he
couldn't banish his silly grin made him feel guilty, as if he were
betraying his dead friends' memories, yet there it was, and he
couldn't convince himself Ghartoun, or Barris, or Falsan would
have begrudged him the feeling. It wasn't enough to set those
darker, harsher emotions aside. Even if it had been, he wasn't
prepared to do that yet, for many complex reasons. It would be a
long time before he was prepared to even consider truly
relinquishing that darkness. Yet there was a deep, almost soothing
comfort in discovering that an important part of him, one he
valued deeply, hadn't died with his friends among the toppled
trees.
He recalled Shaylar's attempt to
comfort Gadrial's distress and wondered if she struggled with
some of the same feelings. Maybe she was simply braver than he
was. Maybe it was just that she'd already recognized the truth in
that ancient, banal cliché about life going on. Certainly
there was an undeniable edge of bad melodrama in refusing to
recognize that they had to make the best of whatever came their
way. If they wanted to do more than merely survive, wanted to
continue to be the people they'd always been before, then they had
to discover things which could still bring them joy, people they
could still care about. Perhaps Shaylar simply understood that
better than he did. Or perhaps she simply had the courage to go
ahead and admit it and reach out, risking fresh hurt because she
refused to surrender to despair.
He reached down to cover
Shaylar's hands with his own, where she'd wrapped them around
his waist, and gave her fingers a gentle squeeze. He couldn't tell
her why, not with the wind snatching sound away, but she
tightened her arms around him in a brief return gesture, then
leaned more of her weight against his back and the sturdy,
borrowed shirt he wore.
It felt strange, that shirt. It was a
uniform shirt, made of heavy cotton twill, comfortable, and
certainly rugged enough for the purpose of exploring virgin
universes, but with a cut unlike anything Jathmar had ever seen.
Sharonian shirts were simply two panels of cloth which met in
front and buttoned down the center, but this shirt had a
complicated bib-like construction, with two rows of buttons
where the left panel and right panel overlapped a third, which lay
beneath the other two.
Jasak Olderhan had shown him
how to fasten it up. It wasn't one of Olderhan's own shirts, since
Jathmar would have been lost in the taller, broader man's
garments. He suspected it had belonged to one of the men killed in
the fighting, which gave him a distinctly odd feeling. Still, he'd
needed a shirt, and clothing wasn't among the things Olderhan's
men had taken away from the survey crew's abandoned camp.
Not that they hadn't taken plenty
of other things. Several heavy cases—obviously purpose-
designed canisters specifically intended to be transported by
dragons—were strapped to the platform behind the
wounded. Those cases contained all the guns and every piece of
equipment they'd been carrying on the battle. From the looks of it,
they also contained a fair percentage of the equipment they'd
abandoned in camp, as well. Olderhan's men had even carried out
the spare ammunition boxes.
At some point, Jathmar knew,
Olderhan was going to "ask" them to demonstrate all of that
equipment's use. Including the guns. He wasn't looking forward to
that, but for the moment, streaking through the sky on a creature
out of mythology, suspended between what had happened and
what was yet to happen, he was able to set those worries aside and
simply enjoy the breathtaking experience of riding the wind.
Below them, as far as he could
see, lay miles and miles of trackless swamp. He'd discovered that
his Mapping Talent worked just fine from up here—or
would have, if not for the fact that he'd never in his life moved this
quickly. Trying to sort out everything his Talent let him See was
all but impossible simply because of the speed with which it came
at him. He was sure he could have learned to compensate with
practice, but for now he couldn't make a great deal of sense out of
what he was Seeing. Which was particularly frustrating, since he
rather doubted that his captors realized they'd given him the
opportunity to chart a perfect escape
route . . . if only he'd been up to the
challenge.
But if he couldn't See all he
would have liked to, there was more than enough he could see.
Brilliant sunlight scattered diamonds across the open patches of
water among the reeds, swampy hillocks, and patches of trees.
Vast clouds of birds rose in alarm as the dragon flashed overhead:
graceful waterbirds with snowy white wings and dove grey wings
and wings of darker hues that were doubtless herons and cranes.
They were too high to see any of
the other animals which inhabited that vast swamp, but Jathmar
had little doubt that there'd be plenty of crocodiles or alligators of
some sort down there, along with fish, water-loving mammals,
and millions upon millions of crustaceans. He wished he could
figure out where they were, though, and he couldn't. The shape of
land masses never varied from one universe to the next, but one
stretch of swamp was very like any other, and he had absolutely no
reference points to try and figure out where this one lay. If
he could look at the stars tonight, he would at least be able to tell
whether they were in the northern hemisphere, or the southern, but
he was unhappily certain that the information wouldn't do him a
great deal of good.
Although I suppose I'll at least draw a certain amount of
mental satisfaction out of putting my astronomy lessons to good
use.
They'd flown several hundred
miles, at least, when the dragon finally began to descend just as
Jathmar spotted a clearing near the beach. A fort had been built
along the edge of a sheltered bay, where a stream emptied from the
swamp into the sea in a startling plume of dark water that stained
the turquoise seawater for a surprising distance. Despite a lifetime
spent Mapping, Jathmar had never consciously thought about dark,
nutrient-rich water creating such a visible stain in much clearer
seawater, let alone how it would look from the air. It was almost
like a painting—swirls of color like the strokes of a brush
across canvas, unexpected and beautiful.
Then they were circling over the
fort itself, and he turned his attention to their destination. It was a
fairly large structure, but scarcely huge, and he nodded inside.
Everything he'd seen so far suggested that their captors were
operating at the end of an extensive line of relatively unimproved
universes, much as the Chalgyn Consortium crew had been doing
when they blundered into one another. He'd seen scores of
Sharonian forts very much like the one below him. Form followed
function, so it was probably a multiversal pattern: an outer
stockade, made of thick logs hewn from the clumps of forest
dotting the vast swamp, wrapped around a fairly large open
courtyard which held several buildings.
A sturdy, if roughly built, pier
ran out into the bay from the seward face of the fort. That, too,
was something he'd seen many times before. What he hadn't ever seen was a ship like the one lying alongside that pier, and
his eyes narrowed behind the protective glass shield as he studied
it.
It wasn't especially
huge—not more than three hundred feet, he estimated,
though it could have been a bit more than that—and its
sleek lines were unlike those of any ship he'd ever seen before. It
was slim, obviously designed for high speed, with sharply flared
clipper bows and a graceful sheer. The superstructure seemed
enormously top-heavy to Jathmar, far bigger and blockier than any
Sharonian ship he'd ever seen, but that might have been partly
because there was so little other top hamper. It had only a single
mast, whose sole function was clearly to support the lookout pod
at its top, and there was no trace of the tall funnels a Sharonian
steamer would have boasted. In fact, that was the strangest thing
of all, he realized. The ship below him had neither sails nor
funnels, so what in the names of all the Uromathian devils made it
go?
He had little time to ponder the
question before the dragon backwinged abruptly and touched
down with almost terrifying suddenness. His mind shrieked that
they were coming in much too quickly for safety, but the wide
wings braked their forward movement at the last possible instant.
Indeed, they slowed far more quickly than should have been
possible with several tons of dragon in motion, then settled in a
swirl of beach sand, flying debris from the tide line, and a solid whump. There was no doubt about the moment they touched
the ground, but the actual landing was far less jarring than he'd
feared from their approach speed. The beast's rear legs touched
first, then it settled onto its forelegs, trotted briskly forward for a
few dozen yards, and simply stopped.
Jathmar glanced back into his
wife's wide, alarmed eyes, and made himself smile.
"We made it!" He chuckled,
although his breath was a little unsteady. "And we got down in one
piece, too! I had my doubts, right there at the end."
"That
was . . . amazing." Shaylar sounded a
bit breathless herself as she uncurled her fingers from their death
grip on his waist. "Really . . . wow!"
she added.
Gadrial appeared from behind
them, smiling at their obvious reaction to the flight and landing.
She showed them how to unbuckle the complex straps, then
signaled for them to wait while the seriously wounded were
offloaded first. The men who'd come out to meet the
dragon—there were substantially fewer of them than a fort
this size should have boasted, Jathmar thought—had sorted
themselves out into two—no, three—types.
The first group guided stretchers
that floated by themselves. Stretchers, Jathmar realized abruptly,
like the "cot" upon which he'd awakened in the swamp base camp.
So that's how they transported so many wounded men out,
he thought as the stretchers floated straight up the dragon's side,
where the wounded were carefully shifted onto them.
The second sort were either an
honor guard or, more likely, a security detail charged with making
sure he and his wife didn't attempt something rash. The third,
Jathmar pegged as command-and-control types, given the
deference the others accorded them. The crossbowmen of the
security detail stood rigidly at attention and snapped out crisp
salutes as the apparent officers strode past them towards the
dragon.
Then it was the unwounded
passengers' turn to descend. The ground abruptly looked much
further away, and Jathmar exchanged a single apprehensive glance
with Shaylar, who still seemed distinctly unsteady on her feet.
"Why don't I climb down first, so
I can brace you if you lose your grip?" he suggested.
She nodded, and he drew a quick
breath, gave her a bright smile, and climbed over the edge,
hooking his feet into the crosswise strands of the web-like ladder.
The beast's hide was surprisingly
warm. He'd expected something so reptilian to be more,
well . . . reptilian. But it was
warmer than he was, even through the tough, spiky armored
scales. One of the spikes caught at the leg of Jathmar's trousers,
and he decided—a little queasily—that he really
didn't want to know what was big enough and nasty enough for a
beast this size to grow spiked armor to avoid being eaten by it.
He made it safely to the ground,
then reached up to assist Shaylar down the last several inches to
the sand. She swayed as her feet touched the ground, forehead
creased with a furrow of pain Jathmar didn't like a bit. The
distracting excitement of flying was wearing off quickly, he
thought, and slipped his arm around her to help support her
drooping weight, then turned uncertainly to look for Jasak
Olderhan, who'd climbed down ahead of them.
Olderhan was waiting with grave
patience, and when Jathmar turned, he gestured both of them
forward with a reassuring smile. They approached him obediently,
and he hesitated a moment, then offered Shaylar an arm. It was a
gallant gesture, as well as a pragmatic one, given her unsteadiness.
And it might just be Jasak's way of sending an important message
to the people waiting across the beach, Jathmar thought. He
looked down at Shaylar, nodded reluctantly, and watched her lean
against the officer's forearm. She looked up at her towering captor
and actually produced a smile, despite the bruises and swelling
that turned it into a pathetic, lopsided expression that clearly
caused her pain.
Jathmar saw a few widened eyes,
and more than one look of sudden uncertainty that bordered
on . . . guilt as Shaylar's tiny size and
brutally battered appearance registered. He blinked in surprise
when he identified that particular emotion. Then his eyes narrowed
as he realized Jasak Olderhan clearly knew what he was
doing . . . and that he appeared to be
swaying at least a few opinions. Moving slowly, every step
attentive to the bruised and battered woman he escorted, Jasak
supported Shaylar across the wide beach while Jathmar walked at
her other elbow, ready to catch her if she lost her footing in the
loose sand.
They came to a halt before a
cluster of three officers. All of them were older than
Jasak—two of them by quite a number of years—and
Jasak stopped before the eldest of them all. The older officer was a
solid, rectangular plug of a man, six inches shorter than Jasak, but
still the most imposing man on the beach. Jathmar recognized
power when he saw it, and this man, with his iron-gray hair, bull-
like neck, and arms that could have snapped Jathmar's spine
almost absentmindedly, literally exuded power. His eyes, as gray
as his hair, weren't cold so much as wary and observant. He swept
his gaze across Jathmar from top to toe, but his granite expression
gave away nothing of his thoughts. His gaze lingered considerably
longer on Shaylar, and a vertical line drove between his brows as
he studied her injured face—and everything else about
her—in minute detail.
Last of all, that cool, appraising
gaze centered itself squarely on Sir Jasak Olderhan. Jasak greeted
his superior with that curious clenched-fist salute, and the older
officer returned it—crisply enough, but with a good deal
less formality. Jasak spoke briefly, and his superior asked a
question. Jasak answered, and the older man nodded. Then,
catching Jathmar by surprise, the man who obviously commanded
this military outpost stepped back and gestured them past him and
his official entourage.
Jasak saluted again, then
solicitously escorted Shaylar—and, by extension,
Jathmar—into the enemy fortress.
Jathmar's first impression from
the air, that this fort wasn't so very different from Sharonian
ones—just as the lives of the men stationed in it couldn't be
so very different from Sharonian soldiers' lives—had been
accurate enough. He readily identified barracks, officers quarters,
and a central block which undoubtedly held the fort's command
center. There was what looked like a mess hall to one side, and a
particularly stoutly constructed building, which was probably the
armory or the brig, or might well be both.
All of that was expected enough,
but other things he saw had no Sharonian equivalents.
For one thing, there were cages
along the far side of the open courtyard. There weren't many of
them, but they were big enough to hold a really massive wolf or a
small pony, and they obviously contained something
which was violently alive. The cages were too far away to
determine what kind of creature was penned inside, but he could
see—and hear—enough to know they were unlike
anything which had ever walked Sharonian soil or flapped through
Sharonian skies.
They gave off metallic glints, for
starters, rather like the dragons did. They also produced a noise
like a steam whistle in a crowded railway station, and the breeze
carried the smell of them across the courtyard to Jathmar. He
wriggled his nose, trying to come up with something—
anything—familiar he could compare it to. Nothing came
to mind, though.
Other cages and pens were
reassuringly normal looking. He could see chickens in coops and a
pigpen with a number of live swine lolling in the mud, and he
could hear the distinctive bleating of goats. What he didn't see was any trace of horses, or any similar draft animals.
Given the dragons' size, they
certainly had to be housed outside the fort, but he hadn't seen any
sign of external corrals for more mundane transport animals as
they overflew the fort, which struck him as a little odd. All
Sharonian portal forts stocked horses and mules. They were
necessary for rapid deployment in the field against border bandits,
portal pirates, or other serious threats to civilian lives in a frontier
settlement. They were equally essential for the pursuit of armed
desperadoes, the transport of supplies and equipment, rescue work
in the face of natural disaster, or hauling supply wagons or the
field artillery held at most of the larger portal forts.
Jathmar supposed it was possible
that Jasak Olderhan's army hadn't brought horses to this particular
fort because of the unsuitable terrain. Swamps and horses didn't
get on well with one another, for multiple good reasons, and the
thought of trying to drag wagons through that muck
would have been enough to send any Sharonian quartermaster into
gibbering fits. Then, too, with dragons to haul supplies, they
probably didn't really need horses as pack animals, although
Jathmar could envision all sorts of terrain where dragons would
be useless. The dense forest in which he and his friends had first
encountered these people came forcibly to mind.
Whatever they used for pack
animals, though, one thing was clear: this fort was as well stocked
and well organized as any Portal Authority fort Jathmar had ever
seen at the end of a long transit chain, and he frowned as an earlier
thought recurred to him. He couldn't tell how many men were
housed here, but he had the distinct impression that the fort had
been designed to hold a much larger garrison.
That was
interesting . . . and worrisome. From
what he could see, Grafin Halifu probably had almost as many
men as these people did, despite the fact that his company was
understrength. But even if that were true, it was clear this fort was
intended as the base for a force much larger than Halifu's. So, was
that larger garrison simply out in the field on exercises? That was
certainly possible, and if true, it meant the enemy had sufficient
reinforcements in close proximity to easily handle anything Halifu
might throw at them.
On the other hand, if Jathmar
was right that this was an end-of-the-line installation, built
primarily to service the swamp portal, then it might very well still
be awaiting the rest of its garrison. Gods knew that was common
enough for the Portal Authority's forts! And if that were the case
here, then that gray-eyed man on the beach might just find
himself very hard pressed to hold off a prompt Sharonian strike.
Unless, of course, Jathmar reminded himself, the
reinforcements he's waiting for
are almost here already. This fort's obviously been
here for at least several months; that probably means the
rest of its assigned personnel are somewhere in the
pipeline on their way here. Grafin's first reinforcement
column certainly wasn't all that far out when we headed through
the portal.
They reached their evident
destination, and Jathmar found himself helping Shaylar into a
roughhewn building whose wooden walls and floorboards had
been roughcut from large logs. The first room was obviously an
office of some kind, where a uniformed young man saluted Jasak
and personally escorted their entire party into another, much larger
room. Jathmar had halfway expected to find jail cells; instead, they
entered an airy, breeze-filled room that was obviously an
infirmary, where rows of cots had been laid out in readiness for
the incoming wounded.
Several of the floating stretchers
were maneuvered past them, with the more seriously hurt taking
precedence over the walking wounded, including Shaylar. Men
who were obviously physicians and orderlies handled the
incoming casualties with brisk efficiency, although most of the
medical personnel seemed to lose a bit of their professional
detachment at their first sight of gunshot trauma.
A man with graying hair, slightly
stooped shoulders, and gentle eyes the color of the North Vandor
Ocean in winter gave Shaylar a kindly smile and gestured her over
to a real bed, not one of the emergency cots.
She held onto Jathmar's hand as
she sat down on the edge of the bed. The gray-haired man spoke at
length with Jasak Olderhan and Gadrial. Jathmar didn't need to
speak the language to recognize a physician at work, and he
watched the—doctor? healer?—nodding slowly and
jotting what were obviously notes into a small crystal the size of
his palm. Like Halathyn's, this man's crystal held squiggles of text
that glowed faintly. But he tucked that crystal away in a capacious
pocket and pulled out a much slimmer one, long and thin, with a
bluntly tapering point at one terminus. The new crystal's other end
was rounded, shaped to fit into his palm, and he held it out and
murmured something.
A beam of light streamed from
the end. Shaylar twitched away in astonishment, but he only smiled
reassuringly and allowed the light to play across the back of his
other hand, demonstrating its harmlessness. She looked at him just
a bit timidly, then smiled back and sat straight and still as he
peeled back her eyelids, peered carefully into her pupils, and
shined the beam of light right into her eyes to see how the pupils
reacted.
He frowned and asked Gadrial a
brief question.
Gadrial' answer was also brief,
and the man shined the light into Shaylar's ears, paying particular
attention to the one on the bruised, swollen side of her face. Then
he murmured something else in an absent tone, extinguishing the
crystal's light, and put the peculiar little device away. He stood for
a moment, then laid very gentle hands on Shaylar's battered face.
He closed his eyes, and his fingers moved slowly across her
injuries, lighter than butterfly wings as he traced the extent of the
damage. They moved around to the side of her head, then to the
back, all while his eyes remained closed.
When they opened again, he
stepped back and gave Shaylar a very reassuring smile. But
Jathmar saw the worry in his eyes, and he spoke with Gadrial
again. The questions were longer and more detailed, this time, and
he listened very carefully to her answers. Jasak asked a question of
his own, and the gray-haired man answered gravely, evidently
trying to explain his findings. Jathmar had seen plenty of
Sharonian Healers conducting examinations by touch and Talent,
but that didn't seem to be what was happening here, although he
couldn't have said precisely why it felt different.
At length, the man urged Shaylar
to lie down. Gadrial touched Jathmar's arm, then pointed from the
healer to Shaylar, folded her hands, and laid her head against them,
pantomiming sleep. Jathmar nodded slowly. He didn't much like
the idea of some strange healer putting his wife to sleep in order
to do unimaginable things to the inside of her head, but she needed
medical care badly, and this man seemed to be the best that was
available.
Dozens of questions he couldn't
possibly get across through pantomime streamed through his head,
but even if he'd been able to ask them, he probably wouldn't have
understood the answers. So he simply nodded and pointed to a
chair, trying to ask if he could sit beside his wife. The healer
hesitated. His expression was easy enough to decipher, Jathmar
thought mordantly. Jathmar was an enemy who'd killed an
unknown number of their people. The healer was afraid that he
would react—badly—if anything went wrong during
his wife's treatment.
Jathmar wished the other man
was wrong, but he wasn't positive he was. The thought of letting
this man go poking around through Shaylar's brain with whatever
strange methods he used terrified Jathmar, and he could feel his
self-control wavering under the pressure of that terror. But as with
so much else, he had no real choice. Something was badly wrong
with Shaylar's Voice. That suggested deep damage from the
concussion, and whatever this man had sensed from his
examination, it had him worried. It had Jathmar worried, too.
Head injuries were the darkest fear of most of the Talented,
whether they were willing to admit it or not. So little was known
about the human brain, even now, and without the services of a
Healer specifically trained in treating those with major Talents, the
odds of Shaylar's ever recovering her Voice were probably much
less than even.
But there was almost certainly
no one in this entire universe with that sort of training. This man
Jathmar couldn't even communicate with was the best available.
"We have to risk it," Shaylar said
softly, correctly interpreting his stricken expression.
"I know," he said, his voice low.
He started to say something else, trying to reassure her. Then he
stopped himself and simply shook his head. "I'll be right here
beside you the entire time."
"I know," she replied, and
smiled. "Whatever happens, Jathmar, I love you."
He started to speak, but his
throat tightened savagely. He had to clear it, hard, before he could
get the husky words out.
"You're my life, Shaylar." He
stroked her hair gently, smiling at her, willing his lips not to
tremble. "I'll be right here when you wake up."
He pulled the chair over, his eyes
silently daring anyone to countermand him.
After a brief moment of locked
gazes, the healer simply sighed and nodded.
Jathmar sat down and held
Shaylar's hand in his. The healer glanced at him once, then placed
his own hands carefully on her temples and began whispering.
Something was happening between his hands—an
indefinable something that shivered around Shaylar's head. It
wasn't quite a glow, so much as an odd thickening of the
light, and as it strengthened, her eyes closed.
There wasn't anything to see,
really. Jathmar was peripherally aware of activity behind him as
more wounded men were brought in, groaning and trying not to
cry out as they were transferred to beds, where other healers got to
work. The man bending over Shaylar worked with his eyes closed
and kept up a constant subvocal whispering the whole time he did
whatever it was he was doing. Shaylar lay pale and still beneath his
hands, looking broken, lost, and childlike in a bed whose frame
was designed to accommodate one of the strapping soldiers
assigned to this fortress.
Then the bruises began to fade.
Jathmar's eyes widened. Dark,
ugly bruises—purple and black and crimson—paled
to the yellows and browns of old
trauma . . . then faded completely
away. The swelling receded, as well, as some fantastic process he
could only gape at sent the pooled liquids under her skin—
blood serum and excess water—seeping back into the
tissues and blood vessels from which they had come. The man
spoke quietly, and Gadrial dampened a cloth and used it to gently
cleanse the crusted cuts and abrasions. As she rinsed away the
dried blood, Jathmar saw that the skin beneath it had completely
healed. All that remained of the ugly cuts and deep abrasions were
the faintest traces of fine white scar along her temple cheekbone
and eyebrow. Her face, so fragile against the white hospital sheet
pillowcase, bore no further traces of the desperate injuries she had
sustained.
At last the healer sat back. His
quiet whisper faded away, and the odd, thickened light around her
face faded with it. The healer spoke to Gadrial again, very
carefully, and she nodded.
He's giving her instructions of some kind, Jathmar
realized. Then the implications of that sank in. He's telling her what to do because they don't expect us to stay here very
long.
The man finished speaking to
Gadrial and rested a hand on Jathmar's shoulder. That surprised
him. The gesture was firm, reassuring, even friendly. None of the
hatred Jathmar had seen in the eyes of Jasak's men shadowed this
man's eyes, and he felt his own tension recede a notch.
"Thank you," he said slowly,
carefully.
The healer gave him a brief
smile, patted his shoulder once, and turned briskly to the wounded
men still awaiting badly needed treatment. Shaylar was still asleep,
and Jathmar wondered how long she would remain unconscious.
Then, as if she'd heard his mental question, her eyelids twitched.
They fluttered slowly open, and even before she was awake, the
marriage bond roared wide open. He felt her confusion and
wondering surprise that the pain in her head was gone. Then her
eyes focused on Jathmar, and the rush of love and relief and
gratitude that overflowed his heart poured into her senses.
She reached up and touched his
face with gentle fingers that trembled ever so slightly.
"It's back," she whispered. "The
bond . . . I can hear you
again. . . . "
"And I can hear you," he
whispered back, cupping the side of her face which was no longer
bruised and swollen, fingertips tracing the faint white lines that
remained. "The bruises are gone, the swelling—everything.
If that wasn't magic, I don't know what else it could have
been."
Her tremulous smile was
radiant. She was so beautiful his throat ached, but when she tried
to sit up, Gadrial reached down swiftly and stopped her, saying a
single word which obviously meant "No."
Shaylar looked surprised. Then
she touched her own brow, which had furrowed.
"My head feels really strange,"
she murmured, terrifying Jathmar for a moment. "Not in a bad
way," she reassured him hastily.
"Just . . . odd. When I tried to sit up,
it started buzzing like a swarm of bees. And there's an odd sort of
tingling, down deep. I hadn't noticed that before I tried to sit up,
either."
"Well, whatever he did, I think
Gadrial's right. Lying still for a while is a very good idea," Jathmar
told her.
"I don't feel like arguing the
point." Her smile was more of a grin. "Besides, it's heaven to be lying in a real bed again."
He laughed softly and smoothed
her hair again. It still needed the attention of a pair of shears and a
good stylist to repair the damage, and he found himself wondering
if these people's beauticians used magic, as well.
Behind him, Jasak Olderhan
spoke briefly to Gadrial. She didn't look especially happy about
whatever he'd said, but she nodded. Then Jasak touched Jathmar's
shoulder and gestured to him. His meaning was plain enough; he
wanted Jathmar to go somewhere with him.
Jathmar's stomach muscles
clenched. So did his teeth, but he made himself give Shaylar's hand
a gentle squeeze.
"Get some rest, love," he told
her. "You need your beauty sleep."
His light tone didn't fool her.
Their marriage bond was working at peak efficiency once more,
and she knew exactly how scared he was. But she gave him a brave
smile and touched her hair herself.
"If I can explain to Gadrial,
maybe she can even find a comb and mirror somewhere so I can
primp a bit before you get back."
He wanted to hold her close
forever, so that nothing could ever harm her again. Instead, he
gave her fingers one last squeeze, then stood up, squared his
shoulders, and faced Jasak Olderhan.
"Lead the way," he said.
Jasak discovered a deep respect
for Jathmar's courage as the other man faced him. Jathmar had
already been hit with a variety of experiences which must have
been utterly bewildering. Clearly, they'd shaken him to the core.
Over the course of the day, his face had clearly revealed that he'd
never seen anything like dragons, personal crystals, or Gifted
healers. Yet he stood quietly, facing Jasak—and whatever
Jasak had in store for him next—and if his eyes were
understandably apprehensive, and if tension sang through his
muscles, he met his captor's gaze unflinchingly.
Jasak wished there were some
way he could tell Jathmar how much he respected him. But there
wasn't, and so he simply bowed slightly and gestured for the other
man to accompany him.
Jathmar followed him quietly,
and their boots clattered hollowly across the rough boards of the
hospital floor. Then they were out in the hot sunshine, with the
breeze wandering in through Fort Rycharn's open gates. The tang
of saltwater stung the nose, and the murky, thick scent of the
swamp clogged the back of the throat, as they crossed the busy
compound. Jasak headed for the commandant's office and wished
he felt as brave as Jathmar looked. He wasn't looking forward to
the coming interview. He'd sat through many a debriefing after
firing shots in some brush with frontier bandits, but he'd never
given a genuine combat debrief.
He discovered that the prospect
became steadily more daunting as the moment approached. What
had seemed the most reasonable course at the time seemed more
and more questionable as he went over each step of the disastrous
mission, trying to organize his thoughts. Doubts plagued him.
Things he should've done, things he shouldn't, things he ought to
have seen . . . but hadn't.
Then there was no further time
to worry about it, because they were at the headquarters building.
"The Five Hundred is waiting for
you, Hundred Olderhan," the adjutant at the outer desk said with a
crisp salute, although he eyed Jathmar with open curiosity.
Commander of Five Hundred Klian looked a bit taken aback, as
well, when Jasak entered his office with Jathmar in tow.
"It's hardly standard procedure to
bring a captured prisoner to an official debriefing, Hundred
Olderhan. I trust you have a good reason?" he said after returning
Jasak's salute.
"As a matter of fact, Sir, I have
several reasons. Jathmar doesn't understand our language, so
there's no risk of a security breach. And there's nothing in this
office, Sir that could be even remotely considered classified. But
my primary concern is for Jathmar's safety."
"His safety?" Klian echoed.
"My men are badly shaken, Five
Hundred. Fifty Garlath's platoon outnumbered Jathmar's survey
crew three-to-one, but we took massive casualties. Their weapons
are devastatingly effective, and their rate of fire is considerably
higher than even a dragoon arbalest's. Quite frankly, some of my
survivors fear and hate him. They wouldn't try anything against his
wife—they were properly horrified when they found out
we'd nearly killed a woman—but I wouldn't care to leave
Jathmar in the same room with any of them. Not without an armed
guard to see that no one tried anything."
"I see. And you don't trust my
men to do their jobs, either?" Klian's tone was biting.
"That's not at all an issue, Sir.
My concern where your men are concerned rests entirely
on Jathmar's state of mind, not theirs. He's been hammered by
multiple shocks in a very short time. The slightest manifestation
of sorcery shakes him to the core, and his wife is also our
prisoner. That terrifies him, and I can't say I blame him for it. If
our roles were reversed, I'd be damned worried about the
interrogation methods my captors might intend to use."
Five Hundred Klian frowned,
but it was a thoughtful frown, not an angry one.
"Go on," he said.
"I won't go so far as to say he
trusts me, but I'm at least a somewhat known quantity, and I stood
between them and Hundred Thalmayr when the Hundred
expressed . . . dissatisfaction over my
decision not to chain them."
Klian's frown deepened, but he
said nothing, and Jasak wondered whether Fort Rycharn's CO's
displeasure was directed at Thalmayr or at Jasak's decision.
"In a fort filled with soldiers,"
Jasak continued, "I'm the only known quantity from his
viewpoint. In my considered opinion, leaving him alone under the
guard of men he has excellent reason to fear, would constitute a
serious risk. He's desperately shaken and afraid. I don't want to
take even the slightest chance of someone inadvertently pushing
him across an edge we don't want him to cross. There's been more
than enough violence already, and we need him—what he
knows, what we can learn from him that we couldn't learn from
his wife. I don't want to see us lose all of that because someone he
doesn't know accidentally pushes too hard."
Klian's expression relaxed a
couple of degrees, and he tipped back slightly in his desk chair.
"Very well, Hundred. Your
solution may be a bit unorthodox, but your reasons seem sound
enough, both militarily and politically. I would have expected no
less of an Olderhan. Now, though, would you be so good as to
explain exactly how this cluster-fuck occurred?"
Jasak drew a deep breath, looked
Sarr Klian straight in the eye, and explained it. All of it.
When he described Fifty Garlath's last action, the five hundred
swore so sharply Jasak paused. Klian clamped his jaws, cutting
himself off in mid-oath, and motioned for him to continue, and he
did, right through the thunderous disagreement between himself
and Hundred Thalmayr over the evacuation of the forward camp at
the portal.
When he'd finally finished, Five
Hundred Klian sat back, steepled his fingers, interlaced his fingers
across his hard-muscled abdomen, and exhaled a long, slow
breath.
"I appreciate your candor,
Hundred. And your thorough analysis. I'll be frank with
you—in my opinion, you were handed one hell of a mess
when we handed you Shevan Garlath. It wasn't my idea to transfer
him into your company. From what I saw of him, you showed
remarkable restraint in dealing with
his . . . inadequacies. I wish I could
say I'm surprised he shot an unarmed man who was clearly calling
for a parley of some sort, but I can't. I'm appalled, not
surprised." He shook his head. "In my crystal, Garlath's clearly at
fault. But . . . "
Yes. Jasak gave a mental sigh.
But . . .
"You realize, Olderhan, that
your career may end over this?" Klian said almost gently, and
Jasak met his eyes steadily.
"I do, Sir."
"Yes, I'm sure you do. Not all
officers would."
Frustration colored Klian's last
words. He hated to see a good officer caught in the jaws of a
dragon this nasty, and he had a sinking feeling that Arcana was
going to need good officers badly in the not-too-distant future. If
he'd been sitting at a fort commandant's desk on the other
side, and news like this had hit his desk, there'd have been hell to
pay, with interest due.
"It isn't fair to you, son," he said
quietly, "but it looks to me like we're staring a potentially ugly
war right in the face, and politicians like to blame
somebody for their wars. Military tribunals are supposed to be
above that, but the men who sit on them are fully aware of
political repercussions. Half the officers sitting on them have their
own political ambitions, too. And Garlath's dead; you're not.
They're going to want somebody they can point at, somebody they
can look in the eye and see 'It's your fault, Mister!' Once
they've got him, they can tell the politicians 'See? We found the
guilty party, and we punished the guilty party.' It's ugly, it's
brutal . . ."
He paused and looked into
Jasak's eyes.
"And you knew all of that before
you ever walked into this office, didn't you?"
"Yes, Sir." Jasak's lips twisted in
what some people might have called a smile. "I did indeed."
"I'm sorry, son." Klian leaned
forward. "I'll send my own sealed report back with you, along with
some other official dispatches. It might do some good."
"Thank you, Sir."
"A lot will depend on the
officers available for the tribunal when it's called. If you get a
good board, it could still come right."
"Yes, Sir," Jasak agreed, but his
voice was dry and not particularly hopeful. Then he sat forward.
"If I might ask, Sir, what are your intentions regarding the portal
camp?"
Klian sighed and sat back again,
pinching the bridge of his nose.
"Could they have gotten a
message out?" he said finally, glancing at Jathmar.
The prisoner said very quietly,
hazel eyes intent as he listened to the conversation he couldn't
understand and tried to glean anything he could from their faces,
their voices, their eyes. Olderhan was right, Klian thought. This
was a deeply frightened man, and a dangerous one. One Sarr Klian
wouldn't have cared to push too far without a truly urgent reason.
The five hundred met Jathmar's
eyes, then turned back to Jasak, very carefully keeping his own
expression impassive. The younger officer was pulling absently at
his lip, frowning ever so slightly.
"I don't know if they got
a message out, Sir," he said finally. "I don't think they could have,
but we know as little about them and about their capabilities as
they know about ours."
"So you're not sure?"
"No, Sir. We searched for any
sign that someone might have headed back independently of the
rest of their party, or the possibility that someone might have
made a break for their portal during the fighting. My people know
their jobs, and I had Chief Sword Threbuch available to help make
sure they did them. I'm fairly confident no one carried a message
physically back, and we didn't find anything remotely like
hummers in their gear, either. Logically, every indication says they
didn't, but there's no possible way to guarantee that."
Klian drummed lightly on his
desktop, which was basically a rough plank supported by two on-
end wooden chests that served as storage bins for data crystals,
maps, and all the miscellany of command at a fort this size.
"One would assume they took
the most direct route from their fortified camp to their portal," the
five hundred said, thinking aloud. "But we can't assume they were
traveling at their top speed. Which means a messenger could have
gone on ahead of them, possibly even bypassed the fallen timber
completely. For that matter, they could have sent someone by a
completely different indirect route. I'm sure your people did
search diligently, but suppose they thought about that possibility
ahead of time? I'm not sure I'd have been smart enough to
think of it in the middle of something like this, but the smart
thing for them to do would have been to send someone
further up the streambed, where he wouldn't have left any trail. Let
him get another four or five miles from camp, then head cross-
country by a completely different route, and you'd have needed a
special miracle to cut his trail."
"It's certainly a possibility, Sir,"
Jasak conceded. "From the look of their camp, I'm inclined to
think it didn't occur to them. I think they were thinking
almost exclusively in terms of clearing out and avoiding
additional contact with us completely. Which," he added a bit
bitterly, "I certainly managed to prevent them from doing."
"Yes, you did. Which was
exactly what you were supposed to do," Klian said. He frowned
some more. "You say their ages varied?"
"Yes, Sir. Considerably. The
youngest was probably in his early twenties; the oldest was in his
fifties, at least."
"Where they soldiers?"
Klian looked at Jasak intently,
and the younger officer paused before he answered.
"I'm almost certain they weren't,
Sir," he said. "A survey crew, obviously, but a civilian one. They
weren't in uniform, didn't even all have the same sorts of boots or
trousers. They had the kind of gear you'd expect portal surveyors
to have, but none of it was stamped or painted or embroidered
with unit insignia, or any sort of military identification marks.
And they had an awfully broad assortment of weapons, too. Most
of them carried the same sort of hand weapon, but their shoulder
arms differed a lot. I don't think any military unit would have
accepted something as unstandardized as that. Spare parts and
ammunition differences would play hell with the Quartermaster
Corps, if nothing else." He shrugged most unhappily. "When you
mix all of that together, I can only come up with one answer, Sir.
Yes, they were civilians."
And we blew them to hell, Klian thought darkly. May
your worthless soul burn in hell forever, Garlath.
"I see," he said aloud. "And I'm
tempted to agree with you. Especially given the presence of that
girl. Granted, you had Magister Kelbryan with you, but
their young lady's situation would appear to be very different from
the magister's, if she's married to one of the crewmen." He gave
Jasak another keen glance. "You're sure they're married?"
"Yes, Sir. Magister Kelbryan
concurs. In fact, she suggested it first, and everything I've seen
only strengthens that assessment."
Klian nodded again, sitting back
with pursed lips as he went over everything Jasak had said.
"It's possible they got a message
out," the five hundred said finally, slowly. "On the whole, though,
I think I agree with you that it's not likely. Magister Kelbryan's
equipment put the portal you went out to find at no more than,
what—thirty miles?"
"About that, Sir. I sent Chief
Sword Threbuch ahead to confirm that," Jasak reminded him.
"Yes. The thing is, I'm trying to
weigh risks. We don't know their protocol for handling portals. A
civilian team in an uncharted universe suggests a radically
different approach from ours, though, which leads me to wonder
whether there's likely to be any military presence of theirs
out this way."
"Is that a risk we can afford to
assume, Sir?" Jasak asked quietly.
Klian met the younger officer's
eyes. There was no challenge, no criticism, in his expression or
tone. Just quiet worry. Deep worry. Gods and thunders,
what had it taken to put that look in Jasak Olderhan's eyes? Jasak's
expression brought home to the five hundred the fact that even
having heard the description of the battle, even adding up the
admittedly shocking number of casualties, he couldn't imagine
what it had been like standing under those trees while some totally
unknown form of weaponry cut down men all around him.
"You tell me, Hundred," he said
abruptly. "You were the one who faced them out there."
Jasak sucked in air, then
straightened in his chair.
"Sir, I've already said that
remaining at that portal is a grave risk, in my opinion. Not only are
my men badly shaken, but there's no military reason to remain, and
a great many political reasons to pull out. Eventually,
someone from their side's going to come looking for that
crew. If they find an empty portal, with seven hundred miles of
swamp between them and Fort Rycharn, they can't possibly
reciprocate with a return assault. And unless something's changed
in the last four days, I'm afraid we're too short of available
manpower to reinforce Thalmayr."
He looked a question at Klian,
who shook his head with a grimace.
"I'm supposed to have a
full battalion out here already," the five hundred said sourly. "Did
you happen to notice a thousand men or so out there on the parade
ground, Hundred? No? Well, I haven't seen them either."
"So, basically, all Hundred
Thalmayr will have is Charlie Company's second and third
platoons, and what's left of First Platoon." Jasak shook his head.
"With all due respect, Sir, that's not very many men to hold a
portal three and a half miles across."
"No, it isn't. But at least the
terrain would favor him. It's mostly flat as my mother-in-law's
bread out there. He'd have the best sightlines we're going to get for
his infantry-dragons, and I've got half a dozen field-dragons I
could send forward to him by air. That's a lot of firepower,
Hundred."
"Yes, Sir, it is." Jasak's tone was
deeply respectful. Which, Klian noted, wasn't exactly the same
thing as agreement.
"There's another point to
consider," the five hundred said, even as a part of him wondered
why he was explaining himself this fully to so junior an officer.
"As you say, your company is really all that's been sent forward to
my command area right now. Oh, I've got the supports for
an entire battalion, but under normal circumstances I'd be
surprised if I saw more than another company or so any time in the
next couple of months. Under these circumstances, I'm
sure my dispatches are going to have sort of the same effect a
well-placed kick has on an ant hill, of course. Give Two Thousand
mul Gurthak a few days to react, and he's going to the reaching for
every warm body he can find and shoving them in here. But that's
going to take time, and until it happens, that swamp portal
is the only place I can hope to hold with the combat power
I've already got. I hate to say it, but Thalmayr's right about that."
"I know he is, Sir," Jasak agreed.
"I guess I'm mostly concerned by two points. First, if their
personal weapons could slaughter eighty percent of First
Platoon, then gods only know what their artillery and heavy weapons are capable of."
Klian's mouth tightened in
acknowledgment of the point, and Jasak continued.
"Second, and maybe even more
important, I'm afraid that if any additional shots are fired,
they'll cinch the certainty of open warfare. I'm talking politics, not
military protocol, Sir. We need a team of trained ambassadors, and
it's going to take time to bring them down the chain. Our next
meeting with these people has to be peaceful, Sir, or we will
be looking at war. A long, potentially disastrous, nasty war."
Five Hundred Klian winced at
the image that conjured. Still . . .
"Everything you've said is true,
Hundred," he said, fingertips drumming once more on the rough
wood planking of his desk. "The question is one of timing. You
say you saw nothing among their effects that might have paralleled
our hummer communications system, which ought to
mean the only way they could get a message back to their nearest
support would be by runner. There's at least a chance they did
exactly that, but even so, it's got to take them at least a few days to
react.
"If we could be sure they had a
military presence at the portal you were looking for, I'd
evacuate our swamp portal in a flash. Or, at least as much of it as I
could with only two dragons to pull everyone out. But even if they
do have the equivalent of Fort Rycharn sitting out there
somewhere, it's probably not all that close to their entry portal.
We're only seven hundred miles from our entry portal to
that universe, and you know as well as I do how short a hop that is
compared to most distances involved. They'd have to have either a
very heavy garrison deployed very far forward, or else a
ridiculously short distance between portals, in order to put a
powerful strike force into the field quickly."
Jasak nodded almost
unwillingly, and Klian shrugged.
"Artillery can't fire through
a portal, Hundred. If Hundred Thalmayr digs in properly, he
can dominate everything on our side of the portal by fire. They'll
need a substantial troop strength to break through that sort
of defense, and presumably they'll know it, which should
discourage adventurism on their side."
"Assuming they see things the
same way we do, Sir."
"Always assuming that," Klian
agreed. "Still, I'm inclined to leave Thalmayr where he is." He saw
the alarm in Jasak's eyes, despite the younger man's best efforts to
conceal it, and shrugged.
"I'll give him direct orders to dig
in on our side of the swamp portal and stay there," he said.
"The only way there could be another serious shooting incident
would be for the other side to try to force a crossing. I don't really
like it, but I think it's the best compromise I can come up with, at
least until mul Gurthak gets more troops in here."
"I hope you're right, Sir," Jasak
said. His voice was harsh, but that didn't bother Five Hundred
Klian. The youngster was grim as hell, unhappy about the
decision, but he recognized that the decision had been made. He might not like it—Klian didn't like it one
damned bit, himself—but this was an officer who
recognized that an order was an order.
"I hope I am, too," he sighed,
then shook himself.
"I know you'll feel better, son, if
you wait to hear Chief Sword Threbuch's report before you head
for home with Magister Kelbryan and the prisoners. I'll arrange
quarters for all four of you, apart from the rest of the men."
"Thank you, Sir. I appreciate
that." Jasak met Klian's eyes levelly once more. "In fact, for the
record, Sir, I'd like to officially inform you that Shaylar and
Jathmar are my shardonai."
Klian stiffened—not in
anger or outrage, but in dismay.
"Are you sure about that,
Hundred?" he asked very quietly.
"Yes, Sir. I am," Jasak replied
firmly, and Klian closed his mouth on what he'd been about to say.
The last thing this boy needed,
duke's son or no, was to throw himself into the sort of catfight
this was going to be. Klian didn't like to think about what was
going to happen to Shaylar and Jathmar once higher authority got
its hands on them. The military was going to be bad enough; the
politicians and the internal security forces were going to be a
nightmare. Given what was already hanging over Jasak's head, not
to mention the inevitable tribunal, throwing himself between his
prisoners and the entire Arcanan military and political
establishment would be suicidal for his career. The five hundred
couldn't conceive of any other possible consequence for his
actions.
But when he looked into Jasak
Olderhan's eyes, he knew the hundred didn't need him to
explain that.
"Very well, Hundred Olderhan,"
he said instead, his tone formal. "I accept your declaration of
shardon, and I will so attest, both in my dispatches and in your
travel orders."
"Thank you, Sir," Jasak said, very
sincerely. Klian wasn't obligated to do that, and by choosing to do
so, anyway, the five hundred was putting himself in a position to
be thoroughly splashed when the shit inevitably hit the fan. But his
attestation, especially as part of Jasak's travel orders, which would
go wherever Jasak went, would constitute a formal tripwire
against . . . overzealous superiors.
"It's the least I can do for a
young fellow who seems intent on pissing everybody off,"
the five hundred replied with a crooked smile. "And in the
meantime, I'll post an armed guard outside your quarters, just to
be sure no one gets any ideas about retaliating against
Jathmar or his wife."
The prisoner's eyes glinted with
sharp interest at hearing his name yet again. Klian looked at the
man, recognizing his intelligence as well as the discipline which
kept his inevitable anxiety in check. Knowing there was a sharp,
active brain behind those eyes made his inability to communicate
with the other man even more frustrating.
"Jathmar?" the five hundred said,
and the prisoner gave him a jerky nod.
"Sarr," Klian said, touching his
uniform blouse. "Sarr Klian." He waved his hand, indicating the
room, the compound beyond the window. "I command this fort."
He pointed to the palisade walls
visible through the window, then pointed at himself again. Jathmar
studied him through narrowed eyes for a moment, then gave a
slow nod. Clearly he'd already guessed as much.
"You," Klian said, pointing to
Jathmar, "will go with Jasak Olderhan."
He pointed to Jasak again and
pantomimed walking. Jasak regarded him suspiciously for a
moment, then nodded again. A fraction of the tension gripping him
relaxed, but his eyes remained deeply wary. Klian would've given
a great deal for the information behind those eyes. As he'd told
Jasak, he wasn't at all happy about the decision he'd made; he just
didn't see any other decision he liked better. But if more fighting
did break out, Sarr Klian was going to be the one in the
hot seat, and he was desperately short of information.
"Very well, Hundred." He
switched his attention back to Jasak. "I'll make arrangements for
those quarters immediately. Take him back to the infirmary for
now. Let him sit with his wife until your accommodations are
ready."
"Yes, Sir."
"And, Hundred Olderhan," Klian
continued, standing and offering the younger officer his hand,
"good luck. You deserve it . . . and
you're going to need it."
"Yes, Sir. Thank you."
Jasak shook the proffered hand
firmly, and Klian watched him leave with his prisoner. Then the
five hundred sat back down behind his roughhewn desk and
discovered he'd developed a raging headache.
Now there's a surprise, he thought with harsh
humor, and then he got grimly to work.
Chapter Seventeen
Darcel Kinlafia stood moodily in
the chill, rapidly falling evening under the mighty trees and tried
not to look sullen.
It wasn't easy, not even when he
knew all the reasons for the delay. Not even when his intellect
approved of most of the reasons. For that matter, not
even—or, perhaps, especially—when the
delay was at least partly his own fault for insisting upon
accompanying Acting Platoon-Captain Arthag's expedition in the
first place.
Patience, he told the hunger coiling within him.
Patience, they're here now.
And it was a damned good thing
they were, too, he reflected, watching the head of the column.
The horsemen and their mounts
looked exhausted, as well they might, given how hard they'd
pushed themselves over the past five days. Kinlafia grimaced and
walked across as Platoon-Captain Arthag looked up from his mess
kit, then stood.
The column halted, and the man
riding at its head beside the standardbearer with the dove-tailed
company guidon, embroidered with the three copper-colored
cavalry sabers which denoted its place within its parent battalion,
looked around. Kinlafia had never actually met him, but he
recognized Company-Captain chan Tesh without any trouble, and
the dark-skinned petty-captain beside him had to be Rokam
Traygan. The fact that Darcel had seen chan Tesh's face through
Traygan's eyes without ever seeing Traygan's was one of those
oddities Voices quickly became accustomed to.
chan Tesh's searching eyes found
Arthag, and the Arpathian officer waited until the company-
captain had dismounted before he saluted.
"Acting Platoon-Captain
Arthag," he said crisply.
"Company-Captain chan Tesh,"
chan Tesh replied. The newly arrived cavalry officer looked almost
Shurkhali, but he was a Ternathian, with an accent which sounded
so much like Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl that Darcel winced. chan
Tesh's voice even had the same timbre.
"I'm glad to see you, Company-
Captain," Arthag said.
chan Tesh studied his face for a
moment in the rapidly failing light. Kinlafia wondered if he was
looking for any indication that Arthag actually resented his arrival.
After all, chan Tesh's superior rank gave him command, which
also meant his name was undoubtedly the one going into
the history books. And his impending arrival had effectively nailed
Arthag's feet to the forest floor, preventing the Arpathian from
acting until chan Tesh got there. But if the Ternathian had
anticipated any resentment from Arthag, what he saw in the other
officer's expression clearly reassured him, because he smiled
wearily.
"We're glad to be here,
Platoon-Captain," he said. "Not least because our arses need the
rest!"
"I think we can provide more
than just a rest, Company-Captain," Hulmok Arthag said. "My
people have a hot meal waiting for you."
"Now that, Platoon-Captain, is
really good news," chan Tesh said. "I think my backbone's about
ready to start gnawing on my belt buckle from the back!"
It was a humorous exaggeration,
but not that much of one, chan Tesh reflected. He and his column
had been just over twenty miles from the entry portal to New
Uromath when the stunning news reached them. chan Tesh was
willing to admit privately that he hadn't been pushing the pace at
that point, since he'd expected to relieve Company-Captain Halifu
on routine garrison duty and hadn't really been looking forward to
taking over Halifu's rainsoaked portal fort. The Uromathian
company-captain's reports had made it abundantly clear just how
soggy chan Tesh's new duty post was likely to be.
But word of the mysterious
strangers who'd slaughtered the Chalgyn Consortium survey crew
had changed all of that. chan Tesh had quickly reorganized the
transport column, leaving the infantry and the majority of the
support troops, including his half-dozen field guns, with his
executive officer while chan Tesh himself took a hard core of
mounted troops ahead as quickly as he could. Over the last five
days, he and his relief force had covered almost three hundred
miles, most of it through dense, rainy forest. If it hadn't been the
worst five-day ride of Balkan chan Tesh's life, it had to come
close.
But we're here now, he thought grimly. And if
Arthag's report's as accurate as his reports've always been in the
past, the bastards on the other side of that swamp portal aren't
going to be a bit happy about that!
He looked over his shoulder as
the rest of the column came in. He was proud of those men. Tired
as they were, weary as their mounts were, there'd been no
straggling. These were mostly veterans, who didn't worry about
parade-ground precision, but the column was well ordered and
well closed up.
chan Tesh's own cavalry
company—Copper Company, First Battalion, Ninth
Regiment, Portal Authority Armed Forces—led the
column. He'd left one of his three platoons with his XO, and
Copper Company had been a bit understrength to begin with, but
he still had eighty-five experienced, hardened troopers. Then there
were the two platoons of Imperial Ternathian Marines.
Most nations' marines were
straight leg-infantry—not surprisingly, since marines were
supposed to spend most of their time in shipboard service.
Ternathian Marines were a rather special case, however. They
prided themselves on their ability to go anywhere and do anything
their orders required, and they'd been a mainstay of the Portal
Authority's multinational forces for over half a century. There
were those in the Ternathian Army who were firmly convinced
that what had really happened was that the Marines had hijacked a
lion's share of the Ternathian commitment to the Portal Authority
purely as a means of preventing the Imperial Marine Corps'
demise, and chan Tesh rather suspected that those critics had at
least a semi-valid point. Certainly there'd been an ongoing struggle
for the military budget between the Imperial Marines and Imperial
Army for as long as anyone could remember. The Navy, of
course, had always stood by and watched the squabble with a sort
of amused tolerance. No one was going to suggest
funding land troops at the expense of the Imperial Navy, after all.
But whatever the Marines'
motives might have been, they'd succeeded in carving out a special
niche in trans-universal operations. They did more of it than
anyone else, and as they were wont to point out, they also, quite
simply, did it better than anyone else. Despite his own
Army career, chan Tesh couldn't argue about that. They still
couldn't match the staying power and sheer, concentrated
offensive punch of the Ternathian Army—they were
light infantry, after all—but they had developed an
almost incredible flexibility and took a deep (and well-deserved)
pride in their adaptability. Which was why chan Tesh had left his
Army infantry behind and brought his Marines along; they were
just as competent in the saddle as they were on foot.
Unlike the cavalry troopers of
chan Tesh's own company, or Arthag's, the Marines wore their
normal Ternathian-issue battle dress. It was a comfortable
uniform, with lots of baggy, conveniently placed cargo pockets. It
was also dyed a low-visibility khaki color. Marines might be
willing to ride to work, but they were still infantry—
dragoons, at least—and they preferred to fight on foot.
Whereas a cavalryman usually found it a bit difficult to conceal
his horse, Marines were adept at using terrain and concealment.
And it's damned comforting to have them along, chan
Tesh thought frankly. Again, they were a bit under establishment.
Their nominal troop strength should have been two hundred and
sixteen men, including officers and supports. Their actual strength
was only a hundred and fifty-seven, but they more than made up
for any lost firepower with the machine-gun squad attached to
each platoon.
"I hope you'll pardon my saying
so, Sir, but it looks like you came loaded for bear."
chan Tesh turned back to Acting
Platoon-Captain Arthag as the other man spoke.
"It seemed like the thing to do,"
the company-captain said, with a mildness which fooled neither of
them.
"Can't argue with that, Sir,"
Arthag said grimly, and chan Tesh studied the man thoughtfully
again for a moment or two.
Hulmok Arthag had a high
reputation among the Portal Authority's military personnel,
despite his relatively junior rank. chan Tesh suspected that the
Arpathian would have been promoted long since if his positive
genius for small-unit operations along the frontier hadn't made
him too valuable where he was to spare. Arpathians as a group
tended to be good at that sort of thing, but Arthag was a special
case, with an absolutely fiendish ability to get inside the thinking
of portal brigands and claim-jumpers. In many ways, the
promotion he so amply merited, and which was coming his way at
last, was almost a pity. The Portal Authority was eventually going
to get a highly competent regiment-captain or brigade captain out
of it, but it was going to give up a truly brilliant platoon-captain
to get him.
"I was relieved when they told
me you were the man at the sharp end of this stick, Platoon-
Captain," chan Tesh said. Arthag's Arpathian expressionlessness
didn't even waver, of course. "I've heard good things about you. In
fact, I've wanted the chance to work with you for a while now. I'm
just sorry it had to come after something like this."
"I am, too, Sir," Arthag replied.
He looked into the falling darkness, and chan Tesh felt a slight
shiver as he followed the Arpathian's eyes and saw the tangled,
seared timber where the survey crew had been massacred.
"To be honest, Sir," Arthag
continued, turning back to his superior, "it's
been . . . lonely out here. I was
relieved when Company-Captain Halifu's dispatch reached me
with the news you were on your way."
"I only wish we'd been able to let
you know sooner," chan Tesh said, and Arthag's eyes narrowed
very slightly.
"Voice Kinlafia's been extremely
helpful to my Whiffer and Tracer, Sir," he said, very carefully not
so much as glancing in Kinlafia's direction. "His special insight
into what happened here's been invaluable in pointing
them—and, for that matter, my scouts—in the right
direction."
"I wasn't criticizing Voice
Kinlafia," chan Tesh said mildly. "If I'd been in Company-Captain
Halifu's position, I'd probably have made exactly the same
decision. It's just unfortunate that Halifu didn't have another
Voice to take up the slack. We had to get within forty miles of his
fort before my Flicker could reach him."
Arthag nodded with what might
have been the slightest possible trace of reassurance, and chan
Tesh hid a grimly amused smile. He didn't doubt for a moment
that at least some of the rear-area wonders were going to criticize
Halifu for allowing his precious Voice to accompany the rescue
force to the wrong side of this universe's entry portal. But, as he'd
just said, chan Tesh felt the Uromathian officer had made exactly
the right decision. And at least Halifu had two good Flickers of
his own. They might not be Voices, but they were capable of
teleporting—or "Flicking"—relatively small objects,
like dispatch cases, for distances of up to thirty or forty miles.
Some Flickers had managed as much as fifty miles, and they were
prized by Sharonian military organizations. They might not have
the reach or the flexibility of Voices, but they were a damned good
substitute over their effective ranges, and there were often decided
advantages to transmitting physical messages.
Junior-Armsman Tairsal chan
Synarch, chan Tesh's senior Flicker, had managed to get word to
Halifu less than twenty-four hours ago, and Petty Armsman
Bantha, Halifu's senior Flicker, had relayed that information to
Arthag, in turn. Since chan Tesh and his column had crossed over
into this universe, Traygan and Kinlafia had been in close
communication, homing chan Tesh unerringly in on Arthag's
position and bringing the company-captain fully up to date on
everything Arthag's scouts had discovered.
"I'm sorry it took us as long to
get here as it did, Platoon-Captain," chan Tesh said after a
moment. "The last twenty-five miles to your entry portal were a
copperplated bitch. Much worse than I'd anticipated, to be honest."
"I know. I've come to the
conclusion that the sun simply isn't allowed to shine in that
universe," Arthag replied, and chan Tesh snorted. Whether the
Arpathian was right about that, or not, there was no getting around
the fact that what appeared to be every creek, stream, rivulet, river,
and puddle in New Uromath was well over its banks, which hadn't
done a thing for his column's progress.
"At least I had plenty of time to
scout the enemy position," Arthag continued. Once again, it could
have been a complaint, since the peremptory order for Arthag to
stand fast until chan Tesh arrived with his reinforcements had
precluded any immediate action on Arthag's part. But it was
apparent to chan Tesh that Arthag was sincerely relieved to see the
column. The Arpathian's comment about the opportunity to scout
the enemy was also well taken, and chan Tesh nodded in forceful
agreement.
"Yes. I'm looking forward to
seeing your sketches myself."
"Of course, Sir."
Arthag made a signal to one of
his troopers, and chan Tesh watched the man in question—a
tallish, but not huge, Farnalian with the two red pips of a petty-
armsman—respond. It was a pity Arthag hadn't had a
Flicker of his own. He'd been able to receive dispatches from
Halifu, but he hadn't been able to send his own notes back. Now
the petty-armsman marched over, saluted, and produced a leather
dispatch case.
"Petty Armsman Loumas, Sir,"
Arthag said. "He's my Plotter."
"Ah." chan Tesh nodded in
understanding. Plotters were highly valued in the military. Unlike
Mappers, they could provide only limited information on terrain,
or what lay under the surface of the ground, but—also
unlike Mappers—they were sensitive to the presence and
location of living creatures. Like Mappers, they were range-
limited, and usually to much shorter ranges than a Mapper. Indeed,
it was the rare Plotter who could reach beyond four or five miles.
But they were still extremely useful as scouts, since it was
impossible for any sentry or picket within their range to conceal
himself from them.
"Loumas took our scouts right
up to the portal," Arthag continued, opening the dispatch case and
removing a carefully executed sketch map. "Chief-Armsman chan
Hathas sketched the actual maps. He's out with the advance picket,
keeping an eye on them, at the moment."
He handed the map across to
chan Tesh, who unfolded it quickly. Darkness had finished falling
while he and Arthag were talking, and there was insufficient light
to make out details. He started to walk across to one of the
campfires, but Loumas produced a bull's-eye lantern and opened
the slide, letting its light fall across the map.
"Thank you, Petty Armsman,"
chan Tesh said courteously, then bent his full attention to the
sketch.
"You didn't pick up any
sentries on our side of the portal, Petty Armsman?" the company-
captain continued as he studied the map.
"No, Sir," Loumas replied.
"Picked up quite a few deer, and even a couple of bears, but
couldn't find hide nor hair of anyone else. Proper idiots they are, if
you don't mind my saying so."
"I don't mind at all, Petty
Armsman," chan Tesh said, glancing up from the sketch map. "As
long as we all remember that these people can obviously do things
we can't. It's possible they have some way of keeping an eye on
things that we've never heard of. Maybe they didn't need
sentries."
"Yes, Sir," Loumas said just a
tiny bit stiffly. Then he grimaced. "Sorry, Company-Captain. It's
just seeing what these bastards did, knowing where they
are—"
He broke off with a shake of his
head, and chan Tesh nodded. Not necessarily in agreement, but in
understanding. He'd already seen exactly the same reaction in the
men of his own column. The news that a civilian survey crew had
been cut down like animals would have been bad enough under
any circumstances. The fact that Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had been
caught in the middle of it, and that Darcel Kinlafia hadn't been
able to pick up even a whisper of her Voice since, made it much,
much worse. His men wanted payback, and, to be completely
honest, so did chan Tesh.
The company-captain returned
his attention to the sketch and shook his head mentally as he
absorbed the details.
Maybe I was just a bit hasty there, he thought as he
studied the drawing. If this sketch is as accurate as I think it is,
then Loumas damned well has a point about what these people
use for brains!
"You say your chief-armsman
made the sketch?" he asked Arthag, never looking up from the
map.
"Yes, Sir." Something about
Arthag's voice made chan Tesh look up. The Arpathian acting
platoon-captain was actually grinning, and chan Tesh raised one
eyebrow.
"Chief-Armsman chan Hathas is
a much better sketcher than I am, Sir. When Loumas and his
scouting party got back and described what they'd seen, I decided I
needed to take a look for myself. I did, but I didn't feel my own
artistic abilities could do justice to it, so I got the Chief-Armsman
to do the job. As nearly as I can tell you from my own observation,
he got the details just about perfect."
"Vothan," chan Tesh muttered.
"Maybe they really are all idiots."
Whoever was in command on
the other side clearly wasn't very well versed in portal tactics. To
be fair, portals—even relatively small ones like the one on
the map in chan Tesh's hands—were always difficult to
defend. The bizarre physics involved made that inevitable. On the
other hand, there were intelligent ways to go about defending one,
and then there was . . . this.
The chief-armsman had sketched
the portal from both aspects, which the combination of the portal's
relatively small size and the other side's failure to picket this side
had made much simpler for him to do. And from the sketch, it
appeared that the opposing commander was either terminally
overconfident or else incredibly stupid.
Unless, chan Tesh conscientiously reminded himself,
he really does have some kind of god weapon over there.
Which, given the fireballs and
lightning bolts he'd already used on the Chalgyn Consortium crew,
certainly wasn't impossible. But
still . . .
The enemy had thrown up
fieldworks—palisades, with what were obviously firing
loopholes, protected with shallow earthen berms—to cover
both aspects of his side of the portal. Because the portal itself
separated them, he'd been forced to dig in two totally separate
forces which were hopelessly out of visual contact and support
range of one another, despite the fact that they were less than a
hundred yards "apart." That much chan Tesh could readily
understand, since every portal defender faced the same problem.
But the earthworks themselves
puzzled him. They looked like something left over from the days
of muzzleloading muskets and smoothbore cannon, he thought,
except that they seemed a bit flimsy even for that. He didn't see a
single bunker, and it was obvious from chan Hathas' sketch that
there were no dugouts, either. In fact, chan Tesh didn't see any
overhead cover.
"These ramparts of theirs don't
look very . . . substantial," he
commented. "You got a good enough look to confirm the berms
are really that shallow?"
"Yes, Sir." Arthag shrugged. "I'm
not sure, but I think Voice Kinlafia may have come up with an
explanation for why everything over there looks so insubstantial."
"Indeed?" chan Tesh looked up
from the sketch once more, turning his attention to the one man in
civilian clothing.
He hadn't ignored Kinlafia up to
this point out of discourtesy, but rather because the Voice looked
so bad. His face was tightly clenched around a mixture of anguish,
fury, and gnawing impatience which chan Tesh needed no Talent
to recognize. Kinlafia's eyes were like burnt holes in his face, and
chan Tesh wondered if the man's jaw muscles had truly relaxed
even once since the rest of his crew was butchered. chan Tesh had
no desire to intrude upon the man's obvious pain, but if Kinlafia
had a theory to help explain what chan Tesh was seeing in this
sketch, he wanted to hear it.
"You have a theory, Voice
Kinlafia?" he asked courteously, and Kinlafia nodded. It was a
jerky, almost convulsive nod, and his expression was taut as he
waved back towards the fallen timber chan Tesh hadn't actually
seen yet.
"I'm not sure what they use for
'artillery,' Company-Captain," he said, "but whatever it is, it isn't
anything like ours. I know Voice Traygan has relayed Whiffer
Parcanthi's and Tracer Hilovar's reports about the odd residues
they've picked up to you. We still don't have any sort of
explanation for what could have created them, but during the time
Voice Nargra-Kolmayr—" his voice went flat and dead for
a moment as he used Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr's formal title, chan
Tesh noted "—and I were linked, I Saw their heavy weapons
in action. They have a lot of blast effect, and
the . . . 'lightning bolts,' for want of a
better word, they throw seem to affect targets in a remarkably deep
zone. But neither of them seems to have very much in the way of
penetrative effect."
"No?" chan Tesh cocked his
head, one eyebrow raised, and Kinlafia shrugged.
"They seem to rely entirely on
the direct effect of the heat or lightning they generate. The
'fireballs,' in particular have a pronounced blast effect, but I think
it's actually secondary. And they seem
to . . . detonate the instant they
encounter any sort of target or resistance, even if it's only a tree
limb or a screen of brush."
"Obviously, none of
us—" Arthag's micrometric nod indicated the
troopers of his platoon "—actually saw the battle,
Company-Captain. But after examining the damage patterns out
there, I'd have to say I think Voice Kinlafia's onto something.
There's no sign anywhere of the sort of punch-through effect you'd
get from our own artillery. And no shell splinters or shrapnel,
either. Their artillery seems to be spectacular as hell, and it's
certainly devastating to anyone actually caught in what Voice
Kinlafia calls its 'zone of effect,' but that zone is smaller than we
originally thought, and I don't believe their 'guns' are going to be
able to punch through very much in the way of serious cover."
"So you and the Voice think the
reason their fortifications seem
so . . . spindly is that their own
weapons wouldn't be able to penetrate them and they've assumed
that since theirs wouldn't, ours can't?"
"Something along those lines,
Sir," Kinlafia said, and surprised chan Tesh with a tight smile.
"I've noticed that people—whether they're military or
civilians—tend to think in terms of the things they 'know'
are true. It's called relying on experience, and in general, it's a
pretty good idea, I suppose. But in this case, no one has
any experience. Not really."
"A very good—and
valid—point, Voice Kinlafia," chan Tesh said, impressed by
the other man's ability to think when he was so obviously on fire
with grief and fury. The company-captain nodded respectfully to
the Voice, then turned back to Arthag.
"These here," he said, tapping the
sketch with his forefinger. "These are those tube things—
the artillery—Voice Kinlafia's just been describing?"
"Yes, Sir," Arthag agreed, and
chan Tesh nodded.
There were, he conceded, a
dismayingly large number of the odd artillery pieces. Some of
them were also clearly larger than others, which to chan Tesh's
mind suggested that they were probably more powerful and longer
ranged. From the way they were positioned, he suspected they'd
been emplaced to sweep the relatively flat ground on the far side
of the portal with fire. Given their demonstrated potency, even
without the secondary fragmentation effect of Sharonian artillery,
that probably made sense. But why in the gods' names had they put
them right on top of the portal that way? And with no better cover
than they had?
"I think they're going to have a
little problem here, Platoon-Captain Arthag," chan Tesh said after
a few seconds. He looked up with a thin smile. "I've brought along
a mortar company."
Arthag's eyes narrowed.
Kinlafia's, on the other hand, began to glitter with fierce
satisfaction, and chan Tesh nodded.
"There's a spot right here, Sir,"
Arthag said, indicating a point on the sketch map. "There's a nice
little ravine on our side of the portal, deep enough to give cover to
a standing man. It doesn't have a direct line of sight to the portal,
but I think it would do just fine for mortars."
"Good." chan Tesh gave the map
another look, then folded up.
"I believe you said something
about supper, Platoon-Captain," he observed. "We're going to
need to rest the horses for at least several hours, and I don't mind
admitting that I could use a little sleep myself. Let's go find that
food, and while I eat, I'd like to talk with your Whiffer and Tracer
and Voice Kinlafia."
"Of course, Sir. Right this way."
* * *
Once the animals had been
picketed for the night, chan Tesh's weary men devoured the supper
Arthag's troopers had held ready for them, then fell into their
sleeping bags, dead to the world within minutes. chan Tesh would
desperately have liked to join them, but he had other duties to
discharge first. So he sat propped against a tree at Arthag's
campfire, finishing his second bowl of stew, and listened quietly
to the reports from Arthag, Kinlafia, Parcanthi, and Hilovar.
It wasn't a pretty story. chan Tesh
had already heard Kinlafia's report of the initial attack, relayed by
Rokam Traygan, but it was different hearing it directly from
Kinlafia himself. As the Chalgyn Consortium Voice made himself
recount every detail of the horrendous attack, chan Tesh could
literally taste the man's anguish and hatred. He wanted to reassure
Kinlafia that they would do everything in their power to track
down any survivors, but the chances of there being any
survivors didn't sound good. None of these men—himself
included, he admitted—really hoped to find anyone alive,
but they were determined to try.
And failing that, Balkar chan Tesh reflected grimly, I
want the opportunity to exact some serious vengeance.
The company-captain was
Ternathian by birth and rearing, but his family hadn't always been.
In fact, his father had immigrated to Ternathia with his own
parents as a youth. Emigrated, in fact, from Shurkhal. chan Tesh
didn't normally think of himself as Shurkhali, but he'd just
discovered, over the last five days, that the blood of his father's
people still ran in his veins. If Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had died in that blood-stained clearing over there, there wasn't a hell
deep enough for the enemy to hide in.
Watch yourself, Balkar! he chastised himself dutifully. You're not really some Shurkhali nomad out stalking another
clan for vengeance. You're also an imperial Army officer
, with a responsibility not just to the Authority,
but to His Imperial Majesty, as well. Neither of them need a
hotheaded, out-of-control junior officer at the other end of the
multiverse committing them to all-out war with another trans-
universal civilization!
All of which was true enough,
but didn't change a thing about the way he felt. Or about his
determination to seek punishment for the individual responsible
for this debacle. He was honest enough to admit that he would
prefer to squeeze the life out of the bastard himself, with his own
bare hands, but he'd settle for having the butcher's own rulers,
whoever the hell they were, hang him for the murderer he was.
And Balkar chan Tesh was grimly certain that punishment exactly
like that would be one of Sharona's demands whenever diplomatic
relations were finally established.
"The one thing that really
worries me," he said at length, having absorbed everything as well
as his weary mind was able to, "is how close they may be to
reinforcements of their own. We have no idea how far this
fortified swamp portal of theirs is from their own next entry
portal. Or of how long a transit chain they may be dangling from."
"You don't think they could be
native to that universe?" Kinlafia asked, twitching his head in the
general direction of the swamp portal.
"I suppose it's remotely
possible," chan Tesh replied. "I think it's extremely unlikely,
though. That's an exploration camp over there, Voice Kinlafia.
They—"
"Please, Company-Captain,"
Kinlafia interrupted with another of those pain-filled but genuine
smiles, "I'm not really all that fond of formal titles, and I'm a
civilian. I don't have any formal standing in your chain of
command, and I fully realize how out of my depth I am when it
comes to any sort of military operations. So it seems a little silly
to be going all formal when you talk to me. My name's Darcel."
"Of
course . . . Darcel," chan Tesh said.
"And mine's Balkar."
He smiled back at the voice for a
moment, then continued.
"As I was saying, Darcel, that's a
small, very crude camp on the other side of that portal. They're
still sleeping in tents, and that indicates they've only recently
arrived at the portal site. If that were their home world on the
other side, surely they'd already have known about the portal and
explored it long since. I realize from Platoon-Captain Arthag's
scouts' reports that this isn't a very old portal, but it didn't
just come into existence last week, either, so—"
He shrugged, and Kinlafia
nodded slowly.
"That's pretty much what I've
been thinking," he admitted.
"Which brings me back to my
original point," chan Tesh said. "How close are they to the next
node in their transit chain? For that matter, how quickly
did they get their report of what happened back to higher
authority? Do they have a relief force on its way already, the same
way we're responding to Voice Nargra-Kolmayr's cry for help?"
"I suppose that depends on
whether or not they had a Voice of their own with them," Kinlafia
said, but chan Tesh shook his head.
"It depends on a more
fundamental question that, Darcel." Kinlafia looked at him, and
the company-captain shrugged. "It depends on whether or not they
have Voices at all."
"Surely they do—they
must!" Kinlafia said, but chan Tesh only shook his head again.
"You're the one who just pointed
out to me—quite rightly—that people tend to
operate on the basis of what experience tells them is true," he said.
"Well, our experience tells us that there have to be Voices
on the other side. But do there?"
"I—" Kinlafia paused,
then grimaced. "All right, I see your point. I can't conceive of how
they couldn't have Talents, but I suppose it's possible. On the other
hand, can we risk assuming they don't?"
"Oh, no." chan Tesh shook his
head vigorously. "I intend to assume they do—I'll
be a hell of a lot happier to find out I was wrong about that than I
would be to find out I was wrong about assuming they didn't!
But how quickly they can respond is the question that worries
me the most. Well, that and the fact that they don't know any more
about us than we know about them."
Kinlafia looked puzzled, and
chan Tesh snorted. It was too harsh to be called a laugh.
"The only thing we know about
these people is that they've encountered another party scouting an
obviously virgin universe and killed or captured them all."
Kinlafia winced, but chan Tesh continued calmly. "And that's all
they know about us, too. I'll bet you my last pair of boots that
they're wondering whether or not our people got a
message out, and for a lot of the same reasons. But we're both
only groping in the dark out here, and that makes me nervous as
hell. People who don't know what's going on have a
tendency to make worst-case
assumptions . . . and then act on
them."
"I agree, Sir." Hulmok Arthag
nodded. "They're going to be nervous, too, if not downright
spooked. Our people hit these bastards hard. It's obvious from
their trail that they had a lot of wounded to transport. You
should see all the bandages at the bivouac site we found earlier
today! They've got to be wondering what's going to come after
them next—and how much worse it's going to be. The fact
that they've dug in shows they're at least taking precautions.
They're probably ready to shoot first and ask questions later. Just
like they did last time," he added bitterly.
"Exactly," chan Tesh agreed.
"And let's be honest here—so are we." He looked around
the faces in the firelight. "None of us is going to be inclined to
take any chances. And, frankly, I'm not going to be exactly
brokenhearted if these bastards give us an excuse to blow them
straight to hell. Not after what they did to our people. And
that worries me, too."
Kinlafia didn't say anything, but
the sudden tightening of his face made his reaction to chan Tesh's
last few sentences abundantly clear. The company-captain looked
at him for a moment, then leaned forward.
"I know you want revenge,
Darcel," he said quietly. "Well, so do I. And, as I say, I'm not going
to be taking any chances. But if we just charge in there shooting,
we're going to make any possibility of establishing real contact
with these people even more difficult. And—" he raised his
voice slightly as rebellion flickered in Kinlafia's eyes "—if
there are any of our people still alive over there, charging in
shooting is probably the best way to get them killed after all."
Kinlafia sat back abruptly, and
chan Tesh looked at Arthag.
"Our first responsibility is to get
any survivors back alive and unharmed. Or, at least, without their
suffering any additional harm. If there aren't any
survivors," he continued unflinchingly, "then our primary
responsibility becomes establishing contact—hopefully
without still more violence—and demanding that whoever
ordered the attack on our people be held accountable and punished
for it. I'm not going to risk any of our people if I can help it, but
I'd far rather see the son-of-a-bitch responsible for this arrested
and hanged than see this turn into some sort of general war."
Kinlafia looked at him for a
long, silent moment, then shook his head.
"I understand what you're saying.
Intellectually, I even agree with you. But my heart?" He shook his
head again. "Whatever my head says, my heart hopes to hell that
these bastards do something—anything—
else to give us the excuse to shoot every godsdamned one of
them."
He rose, and stood looking down
at chan Tesh and Arthag. His expression wasn't really challenging,
but it was definitely unyielding, and chan Tesh couldn't blame him
a bit for that.
"I'm going to try to get some
sleep," the civilian said after a moment. "Goodnight."
It was said courteously, even
pleasantly, but behind the courtesy, Balkar chan Tesh sensed the
iron portcullis of the Voice's hatred. The company-captain
watched Kinlafia walk away, and wished he didn't understand the
Voice's feelings quite as well as he did.
"Sir!"
chan Tesh reined up as one of
Arthag's troopers came cantering back towards the column. The
cavalryman reported to his own platoon commander, not chan
Tesh, exactly as he should have.
"Yes, Wirtha?" Arthag said as
the trooper saluted.
"Sir, we've found another bit
they dropped," Wirtha said, and Arthag's eyes narrowed. Then he
looked at Parcanthi and Hilovar.
"You two had better go check it
out," he said, without checking with chan Tesh. Which, chan Tesh
reflected as the Whiffer and Tracer trotted off in Wirtha's wake,
was precisely what a good subordinate was supposed to do.
The two officers, accompanied
by Darcel Kinlafia, followed the Talents at a bit more leisurely
pace. chan Tesh rather wished that Kinlafia hadn't been present.
He'd done his dead level best, tactfully, to suggest that Kinlafia
should return to Company-Captain Halifu's fort, since it was
essential that they have a Voice available to relay further up the
transit chain if something unfortunate—something else
unfortunate—happened out here.
Kinlafia, unhappily, hadn't been
interested. And, unlike Rokam Traygan, the civilian Voice wasn't
under chan Tesh's direct authority. It was obvious that the only
way the company-captain could have sent Kinlafia to the rear
would have been under armed guard, and he hadn't been able to
bring himself to do that in the face of the civilian's obvious pain.
So Traygan had been sent back, instead, and Kinlafia was still here.
Here waiting for the next, crushing blow if they confirmed Shaylar
Nargra-Kolmayr's death, and here where his brooding grief and the
white-hot smolder of his thinly-banked fury hung like a storm
cloud in the back of every mind.
But there wasn't much chan Tesh
could do about that. Even if he'd been inclined to change his own
mind about ordering Kinlafia to the rear, it was too late. Traygan
was already more than halfway back to Halifu's fort, which left
Kinlafia as the only Voice available at the sharp end.
Since there wasn't anything he
could do about that, the company-captain put it out of his
disciplined mind and concentrated on Wirtha's discovery. He
wasn't very surprised that the scouts had found another bit of
debris jettisoned by the people whose trail they were following
back to the portal. If these people did have Talents, they appeared
to be remarkably unconcerned about anything a good Whiffer or
Tracer might be able to discern from their castoffs. Although, to
be fair, given the number of wounded the other side was carrying
with them, at least some bits and pieces were bound to get away
from them.
It was a sign of how good
Arthag's people were, though, that they were searching just as
diligently this time around as they'd searched the first time they
scouted the enemy's trail back to his entry portal.
The three of them caught up just
as Hilovar and Parcanthi dismounted and walked across to the
object the scout had found. As usual, Hilovar stopped short,
allowing Parcanthi first crack at the energy residues, and the
Whiffer crouched over whatever it was.
"A soldier dropped this," he said
at length. "Not an officer, I don't think, but that's harder to be sure
of. He's wounded, staggering. I can See more wounded all around
him. Limping—cursing, it sounds like. They're carrying a
fair number of men on those strange stretchers of theirs." He
grimaced. "I still can't See how they get the damned things to
float that way," he complained almost petulantly, then opened
his eyes.
"Same as usual, Sir," he said,
standing and turning to look up at Arthag. "They were moving
slowly, but steadily. It was nearly dark when whoever dropped this
dropped it." He indicated the item with his foot, without actually
touching it, and glanced at his partner.
"Your turn, Soral."
Hilovar nodded and crouched
down in Parcanthi's place. He stared down at what had been
dropped, and his brow furrowed.
"What the hell is that?"
he muttered under his breath.
It was a small, square object,
made of something that looked almost like glass which had been
deliberately opaqued. There were markings on it, but what the
alien symbols signified was anyone's guess. Hilovar considered it
for a moment, then shrugged and picked it up—
—only to let out a startled
yelp and drop it back into the leaves on the forest floor.
"What's wrong?" chan Tesh
asked sharply, watching the Tracer shake his hand as if he'd just
burned it.
"Sorry, Sir." Hilovar looked a bit
embarrassed. "It just took me by surprise.
It's . . . unnatural."
"That fucking word
again," Arthag growled.
"Sorry, Sir," Hilovar said again,
glancing back at the scowling Arpathian. "But this thing—
it's got the same feel as those accursed ash piles, only stronger.
Much stronger. Concentrated as acid, in fact. It prickled my hand
so hard it was like being swatted by wasps."
chan Tesh winced at the image,
then sighed.
"Do what you can, Junior-
Armsman. We need anything you can dredge out of that
thing—whatever it is."
Hilovar nodded, gritted his teeth,
and picked it up again. It was obvious that just holding the thing
caused him considerable pain, but he endured grimly.
"He's shot through the shoulder,"
the Tracer said, after a heartbeat or two, in a grating, savagely
satisfied tone. "Bleeding into his bandages and hurting like a son-
of-a-bitch. Stumbling a good bit. Wishing he could ride on one of
the stretchers, it feels like. He keeps looking at them, up ahead."
Then, suddenly, Hilovar shot
upright.
"Great gods! There's a
woman with 'em!"
"Shaylar?" The name
tore from Darcel Kinlafia like a cry of pain, jerking Hilovar out of
his concentration, and the Tracer turned to meet his tortured gaze.
"No," the junior-armsman said
gently, watching the Voice's face crumple again. "I'm sorry,
Darcel. She looked Uromathian—a little thing, pretty as a
peach. She was walking beside one of the stretchers. I caught just a
tiny glimpse of her. I think the man who dropped this," he held up
the surprisingly dense object on his palm, "wanted her to help
him."
"A Healer, then?" Arthag mused.
"Sounds like it," chan Tesh
agreed, and cocked an eyebrow at Hilovar. "Can you get anything
else off of it?"
"No, Sir. Not really," the Tracer
said, obviously unhappily. "It's just more of the same. He's just
moving slowly—very slowly. And hurting like hell."
"Good!" Kinlafia
snarled, and Arthag leaned over in the saddle and gripped his
shoulder wordlessly.
"Is there anything else on the
ground here?" chan Tesh asked, and Wirtha shook his head.
"No, Sir. We looked around
pretty carefully before I reported it to the Platoon-Captain."
"In that case, may I see it,
Soral?"
Hilovar stepped over between
chan Tesh's mount and Arthag's magnificent stallion. He held his
hand up, allowing the officers to study the object on his palm.
Neither of them offered to touch it lest they contaminate it for
further Whiffing or Tracing.
"Doesn't look like much, does
it?" Arthag murmured, and chan Tesh frowned.
"It looks like glass. But it isn't, is
it?"
"It's made from the same thing as
those godsdamned 'artillery pieces' of theirs," Darcel said harshly
even as Hilovar shook his head.
"Now that's interesting," chan
Tesh mused. He glanced at Kinlafia, then back at the Tracer. "It's
heavy, isn't it?"
"Yes, Sir. Very dense," Hilovar
added. "Surprisingly so, for its size."
"Are those buttons along the
side?"
"That's what they look like, Sir,"
Hilovar agreed.
"Well, I'm damned if I'll try
pushing one of them!" chan Tesh snorted.
"If you don't mind, Sir, I'd like to
put it into an evidence bag. This thing hurts to hold. I don't
know what it's made of, or what's inside it, but it's got that same
foul, nasty—unnatural—" he added, meeting
Arthag's gaze grimly "—feel. I'm not real anxious to push
those buttons, either, Sir, and that's no lie. This thing is damned weird."
"Very well." chan Tesh nodded.
"Put it away. Carefully."
Hilovar pulled a small canvas
evidence bag out of his saddlebags and slid the dense little cube
into it, then slid both of them into a larger canvas bag slung from
his saddle horn, where he'd stored the other bits and pieces they'd
found scattered along the trail.
"All right," chan Tesh said then.
"We're getting close to that overnight bivouac of theirs, aren't
we?"
"Yes, Sir," Wirtha agreed.
"About another ten, fifteen minutes. There's quite a bit of stuff
scattered around where their fires were. Most of it's little bits and
pieces of personal gear, torn uniforms, that kind of thing. And lots
of soiled bandages," he added with grim satisfaction.
"Let's move along, then," chan
Tesh said.
"Here it is, Sir," Wirtha told chan
Tesh shortly afterward, and the company-captain drew rein one
more. The area before him, a clearer space along the bank of the
same stream which had flowed beside the slaughtered survey
crew's day-fort, showed the rings of half a dozen big bonfires and
a handful of smaller ones. Even from here, he could see that there
was a lot of debris strewn around, including a stained snowdrift of
gore-crusted bandages.
"Has anyone been out there yet?"
he asked.
"No, Sir," Wirtha replied. "We
bypassed it on the way through."
chan Tesh glanced at Arthag, and
the acting platoon-captain shrugged very slightly.
"Nolis and Soral had their hands
full with the debris we'd already found at the fallen timbers and at
the Chalgyn crew's day-fort, Sir. I'd left them behind to deal with
that while I went ahead. By the time we actually found the
campsite, we also knew we were hot on their trail, so I took the
point and pressed on in hopes we might overtake them. But they
got to their own entry portal at least several hours before we did.
By the time Nolis and Soral were ready to follow us up, we'd
received the order to hold in position and wait for your arrival. It
took a while to get a runner forward to my position to recall me to
meet you, and Nolis and Soral stayed put in the meantime, as per
their orders from Company-Captain Halifu. By the time I got back
to camp and could have ordered them forward to the bivouac area
here, you were only a couple of hours out."
"I see." chan Tesh smiled thinly.
"So that old saying about order, counter-order, disorder
came into play."
"More or less, I'm afraid,"
Arthag agreed.
"Well, it's no one's fault," chan
Tesh sighed, and looked at Parcanthi and Hilovar. "Go ahead," he
said.
The two noncoms saluted,
dismounted, and headed forward. Hilovar, as usual, waited while
Parcanthi moved into the bivouac area, sweeping from one cold
ash pit to another, following the energy residues. It took him the
better part of twenty minutes, but when he returned to the waiting
officers, his eyes glowed.
"I got some good, solid Whiffs,
Company-Captain!" he told chan Tesh. "There's a place a bit
further down the creek over there," he pointed, "where
something came in during the night."
"Something?" chan Tesh
repeated. "What sort of 'something'?"
"Gods alone know," Parcanthi
said frankly. "It was big. Dark. I could see firelight on what looked
like . . . hide, maybe. If it was hide, the creature under it was big, Sir. Really big, like
nothing I've ever seen. But it was too damned dark to get a good
look at it. They were loading stretchers onto it, whatever it was."
"Some kind of transport," Arthag
muttered. "So, that's what they did." chan Tesh glanced at him, and
the acting platoon-captain grimaced. "We knew they were
traveling a little faster when they moved on from here. Didn't
notice any particular decrease in the number of their walking
wounded, but they were definitely moving more quickly."
"Did they load all the stretchers
onto it, whatever it was, Parcanthi?" chan Tesh asked the Whiffer.
"No, Sir. It looked to me like
they might've been loading up a dozen or so, like they were taking
the most critically wounded out. Whatever it was, and however
big it was, I don't think it had enough carrying capacity to take all
of them. All I could see was something big and dark that moved
off down the creek bed. Then I lost the Whiff."
"Down the creek," Arthag
murmured with a frown which drew chan Tesh's attention back to
him.
"Something's bothering you," the
company commander observed. "What is it?"
"Just that something the size
Nolis is describing damned well ought to have left a trail. Once
you get to the other side of the creek, the terrain's just like it is on
this side. And the underbrush along the stream banks is awfully
dense. Anything much bigger than a house cat should've left
some sign of its passage when it pushed through it, and we
didn't see a thing. Or, rather, we didn't see the tracks of anything
but the men on foot we'd been following all along."
"Could it have headed along the
streambed to avoid leaving a trail?" chan Tesh asked.
"I suppose it's possible, Sir. I just
don't see any reason why it should have. If the party on foot is still
headed steadily south, then their destination must lie in that
direction. Why should their transport have headed in some
other direction?"
"I agree it doesn't make a lot of
sense," chan Tesh said. "By the same token, it has to've gone
somewhere. Parcanthi Saw it, so we know it was here. Unless
you want to suggest that it just flew away, it had to leave tracks
somewhere, too, and I know your men's reputation. They wouldn't
have missed the sign something that size had to leave behind."
"I don't—" Arthag began,
but Parcanthi interrupted, his voice a bit edged.
"I'm sorry, Sir. And I apologize
for interrupting, but I hadn't finished my report."
Arthag and chan Tesh both
turned back to him, and he waved back in the direction he'd
already pointed.
"It was dark, like I said, but I
might—I just might—have Seen one of our
people among them." Both officers—and Kinlafia—
jerked upright in the saddle, eyes narrowing, as he continued. "I
could see someone's back, climbing up onto whatever it was. I
couldn't see the face, or even get a good look at the hair, because
whoever it was, they were wearing some kind of leather hat, or
helmet. And they were out beyond the range of the firelight. But
I'm positive that they weren't in uniform."
Darcel Kinlafia sucked down air
in the sudden silence.
"Could it have been the woman
you Saw, Soral?" Arthag asked quietly. "The one you said looked
Uromathian. Was she in uniform when you Saw her?"
"She wasn't," Parcanthi said,
before Hilovar could speak. "In uniform, I mean. But this wasn't
her. I could See her clearly, standing on the bank. She couldn't
have been anyone else, not from Soral's description earlier. It
looked like she was waiting her own turn to climb up onto
whatever it was."
"How . . .
how big a person did you See?" Kinlafia whispered harshly.
"Small. Very small. Maybe this
high," Parcanthi said, measuring with his hand.
"Oh, gods!" Kinlafia's
voice was barely audible, and his throat worked convulsively. The
others stared at him as he bowed his head over his saddle bow,
eyes tight shut.
"Darcel?" Arthag said, very
quietly, after a moment, and the Arpathian's eyes widened as he
saw the Voice's face.
"It's her—
Shaylar!" Kinlafia said hoarsely. "It's got to be her!
Nobody else in the crew was remotely close to that small!"
"I didn't get a very good look at
whoever it was," Parcanthi cautioned. "It was dark as sin out there
in the brush, and they were climbing up whatever that thing was,
which means I couldn't get a good contrast reading. All I could
really see were dark shapes against the dark, black wall of hide, or
whatever it was. It was a small person, slightly built, in civilian
clothing. That much I could See. But I don't know that it was
Sharonian clothing. And," he added in the tone of someone
desperately trying not to step on the flaming hope in Kinlafia's
eyes, "we already know they had at least one other
woman—in civilian clothing—with them. If they had
one, they might have had two."
All eyes turned to Hilovar, and
the Tracer cleared his throat.
"If we can find anything Shaylar
was holding, I'll know," he said. "But that's a big if, Darcel. A
damned big if."
"I know," Kinlafia's voice was
full of grit and gravel. "But I've got reason to hope, now.
That's more than I've had ever since I lost contact with her."
"I agree," chan Tesh said, but his
own voice was heavy. "If it was Shaylar, though, and she was
conscious, up and moving, why didn't she contact you, Darcel?
She had to know you'd be waiting, that you were well within her
range. For that matter, I happen to know you've been
trying to contact her every hour on the hour since you
crossed to this side of our own portal."
Kinlafia looked at him, then
cleared his own throat.
"She struck her head on
something, remember? Hit hard enough to knock her unconscious,
at least. And Soral's already said there was damage inside her head,
serious damage. She could have been injured badly enough to be
rendered Voiceless."
"But if she's hurt that badly,
would she have been on her feet and climbing up whatever it was
Parcanthi glimpsed out there?" chan Tesh asked.
"I don't know." It came out
practically in a groan, and Kinlafia ground his teeth. "Mother
Marthea, these monsters are capable of anything! If they're willing
to force an injured girl to walk, to climb up this thing, when we know she's suffered a critical head injury, then what in the
gods' names else are they willing to do?! They
could—"
"Stop it!" chan Tesh's voice
rapped out harshly, jerking Kinlafia back around to face him.
"There's no point to this," the
company-captain growled, albeit more gently. "You're torturing
yourself with visions we have no way to prove or disprove. The
people who did this may be a complete unknown, Voice Kinlafia,
but one thing we do know; if they have got surviving
Sharonians, they're going to want them as healthy as possible."
"You're right," Kinlafia
whispered. He sounded unsteady, but he drew another deep breath
and slowly nodded. "You're right," he repeated. "I'm sorry. I'm just
about out of my mind, worrying and wondering and feeling so
gods-cursed helpless. . . . "
"I understand," chan Tesh told
him. "But none of us can afford to let anger swamp our thinking."
"Yes, Sir," Kinlafia said quietly.
"I'll bear that in mind. The last thing in this universe—or
any other—I want to do is something rash that jeopardizes
any Sharonian lives. Ours—" he nodded to the
column of mounted men "—or that of anyone they've taken
with them."
"That's good," chan Tesh said
quietly, and smacked him lightly on the shoulder before turning
back to his two Talented specialists. "Soral, I think it's your turn in
the barrel. See what you can find out."
A half-hour later, the Whiffer
and Tracer had completed their reports. They'd managed to pick up
quite a lot of additional detail about the individuals who had
bivouacked here; very little of it did much good, unfortunately.
"So what do we really know?"
chan Tesh asked, looking around the circle of faces around him.
He and Arthag had been joined by the Marine officers in command
of the two platoons he'd brought along. Hilovar and Parcanthi
were both there, too, despite their noncommissioned ranks,
available for consultation at need. And, of course, there was also
Darcel Kinlafia.
"We know their wounded were
hurt even more badly than we thought, Sir," Arthag said. "We
know they sent at least ten or twelve of their people out aboard
whatever the hells it was Nolis Saw down by the creek, and we
know it was godsdamned big."
He grimaced. Guided by the
Whiffer, some of his scouts had finally found a few footprints, in
among the rocks, gravel, and water-washed sand. Whatever the
enemy's transport animal had been, it had been huge. And
its feet had been unlike anything Hulmok Arthag had ever
seen—or imagined—in his life. It must have been
actually standing in the stream itself, which explained the dearth of
footprints, but the partial ones they'd found in the end had been
frightening to behold. Long-toed, with huge claws, and damned
near as long as Arthag was tall. Most maddening of all, they
couldn't find a single track heading toward the
bivouac . . . or heading away
from it, for that matter! It was as if the creature had simply
materialized where it was, stood around for a while, and then
dematerialized!
"I think Nolis is right that they
were getting their most seriously wounded out of here," chan Tesh
observed. "Makes sense. But they also sent out the one woman we
know was with them, and at least one more civilian, at the same
time, and both of them were at least mobile enough to climb up by
themselves. So I'd say they were pulling out the people they
thought were most valuable, as well as those who were worst
hurt. That obviously would have included any of our people who
were still alive."
"So what we've really got is just
more puzzles," Kinlafia said a bit harshly.
"Any information is always
valuable, Voice Kinlafia." An edge of formality frosted chan
Tesh's measured reply. Kinlafia looked at him, and the company-
captain looked back levelly.
"We know where their
encampment is, Darcel," he continued, "and we have it under
observation until we can get there and deal with it. In the
meantime, any evidence we can get, any information we can cull,
may be the one critical piece we need to tell us what to do
when we do get there."
Kinlafia looked rebellious for a
moment. Then his nostrils flared, and he nodded in unhappy
agreement. But it was agreement, chan Tesh noted.
"All right," he said decisively.
"I'm going to assume they do have at least one Sharonian prisoner.
I may be wrong about that, but they were obviously pulling out someone besides their own wounded. We also know where
their entry portal is, and we've got a good notion of how they've
dug in on their side of it. I think it's time we took this the rest of
the way to them."
Hunger sparkled in Kinlafia's
eyes, and chan Tesh felt more than a small flicker of it deep within
himself, as well. But he continued in that same, decisive voice.
"Given the size of the only other
civilian Parcanthi Saw, I'm also going to operate on the
assumption that Voice Nargra-Kolmayr may still be alive.
If that's true, then getting her back is our number one priority. Our
number two priority, however, is to try to put some sort of lid on
this situation before it gets even worse. Much as I'd prefer
otherwise, this isn't a punitive expedition. These aren't portal
pirates, they aren't claim-jumpers—they aren't anything
we've ever encountered before. But they are, clearly,
representatives of another trans-universal civilization. So unless
they start it, or unless we have convincing evidence that they're
holding our people and won't give them up without a fight, I don't
want any shooting."
The company-captain could
literally taste Kinlafia's disappointment. Arthag and both of the
Marine officers seemed just as unhappy, although they were too
disciplined to let it show, and chan Tesh allowed himself a small,
thin smile.
"I don't want any shooting from
our side," he reiterated. "But if it should happen that
they start the shooting—for a second time—I
intend to be very certain that we end it. Is all of that clearly
understood?"
Heads nodded all around, and he
nodded back.
"In that case, gentlemen, let's get
moving again. I want to be in position
to . . . speak to these people before
sundown."
Chapter Eighteen
Chief Sword Otwal Threbuch
hated the taste of defeat.
He couldn't begin to count of the
number of missions he'd carried out successfully over the course
of his career. He'd cheated death ten ways from hell, dragged back
commanding officers held together by little more than bandages
and stitches, and somehow—some way—always
gotten the job done.
But as he lay stretched out flat
on his belly along the tree limb, staring at the tantalizingly close
disk of the swamp portal, he tasted the most bitter failure of his
life. His worst nightmare was right under his nose, and there was
literally no way for him to warn Hundred Olderhan it was coming.
He'd done exactly what the
hundred had instructed him to do. Neither he nor Emiyet Borkaz,
the First Platoon trooper with him, had found any sign of a
messenger as they left the site of the fight at the toppled timber
behind and headed for what they hoped was the other side's entry
portal.
That entry portal had turned out
to be a monster when they finally found it. Threbuch had never
seen—never imagined—one that size. It had to be at
least thirty miles across, and as he'd gazed through it at the
rainsoaked forest on the far side, he'd mentally apologized to
Magister Halathyn and Magister Kelbryan for every doubt he'd
cherished about their newfangled portal-finding gadget. If this
wasn't a class eight portal, it could only be because it was a class
nine.
Its size had been part of the
problem. Threbuch had never before been assigned to scout
anything that size with only two men. Finding the fort from which
the survey party must have come had taken far longer than he'd
liked, but the fall of night had prevented them from following the
back trail all the way that first day. They'd been forced to bivouac
overnight, and a cold and cheerless night it had been without so
much as a palm-sized campfire.
The next day, they'd come within
a hair's breadth of being snapped up themselves by a party of what
were obviously mounted scouts. Threbuch and Borkaz had been
crossing an open space left by some long-ago fire, and they'd been
damned lucky to realize what was happening in time to
disappear into a handy thicket of brambles. Threbuch had taken the
opportunity to study the horsemen carefully, and he hadn't liked
what he'd seen one bit.
Their horses weren't much to
talk about, at least. They didn't look as if they'd been enhanced at
all, although they appeared well cared for and were clearly well-
trained. The men on their backs had been another matter entirely.
These men were obviously soldiers. They wore distinctive
uniforms, with dark gray tunics and green breeches tucked into
high cavalry boots, which blended into the forest surprisingly
well . . . and made it totally clear that
the people the Andaran Scouts had fought and defeated—slaughtered, he'd thought, forcing himself to face the
truth—had, indeed, been civilians.
He'd made himself put that
thought aside, concentrating on the job in hand, and his jaw had
set hard. There were three men, clearly the point of a larger
column, moving with an alert, competent professionalism
Threbuch had never seen bettered. He hadn't been able to see their
faces, but the set of their shoulders and their overall body
language had shouted both their focus and their fury, which had
pretty much answered the question about whether or not they
knew something had happened to the survey party. He still didn't
have a clue how they'd found out, but if that wasn't a rescue party
with blood in its eye, he'd never seen one.
They'd carried shoulder weapons
like those of the civilians the Scouts had already encountered,
although these were sheathed in saddle scabbards. They also
carried more of the smaller, belt-sized version, and the first
swords Threbuch had seen from the other side. Cavalry sabers, of
course, but the swords—like the shoulder
weapons—were saddle-carried. And unlike the shoulder
weapons, it didn't look as if they were intended to be gotten at
quickly. Small wonder. If he'd had ranged weapons as
good as theirs, he'd have sold his own sword for beer money!
The chief sword had lain beside
Borkaz, watching as the sweep men rode past. The horsemen rode
with alert eyes, obviously taking little for granted, but it was
apparent that they were far more focused on where they were
going than upon where they were. They moved steadily on,
without ever approaching the thicket in which Threbuch and
Borkaz hid.
Threbuch had stayed exactly
where he was, despite the impatience he had sensed from Borkaz,
after the trio had disappeared along the same trail he'd been
following in the other direction. Borkaz was too disciplined to
actually complain, but he'd obviously hovered on the point of
doing so when, several minutes later, the rest of the
column had come into view.
Forty men, Threbuch had
estimated, all of them with those same deadly shoulder
weapons. They'd outnumbered Hundred Olderhan's remaining
combat effectives by four-to-one, and they'd been accompanied by
pack mules. Threbuch had no idea what had been on those mules.
Rations, undoubtedly, some of it, but was that all? Or did they
have yet more of their demonic weapons—weapons a mere
civilian survey crew couldn't have matched—hidden away
in those innocent looking packs?
There'd been no way to know,
just as there'd been no possible way Threbuch and Borkaz could
have beaten those mounted men back to Hundred Olderhan. The
thought had been gall-bitter, but Sir Jasak was as
coolheaded—and smart—as any junior officer
Threbuch had ever served. He'd already be pushing to get back to
their base camp at the swamp portal as quickly as possible. The
only thing Threbuch could do was hope he made it before the
pursuing cavalry force came right up his backside.
Well, that and continue with the
mission the hundred had given him in the first place.
Once the patrol had passed, he
and Borkaz had eased back from the immediate trail and continued
far more cautiously to the north. They'd become aware of the huge
portal shortly after dawn on the second day, although it had been
mid-morning by the time they'd finally spotted the fort on the
portal's far side.
That had been an unpleasant
discovery, too.
The fort was little more than a
rough, three-quarters-finished wooden palisade around a central
courtyard. Threbuch must have seen hundreds of similar forts in
his career. But this fort was a hornet's nest of activity,
despite the rain falling steadily across it. There weren't as many
men as he might have expected in the uniformed fatigue parties
laboring on its construction, but peering through the unfinished,
open gate from the dry side of the portal, Threbuch had seen
additional buildings—barracks, obviously—going
up. No doubt the prospect of getting watertight roofs over their
own heads could have explained the workers' industry, but there'd
been far too few troops in sight for the amount of bunk space
Otwal saw going up.
"Graholis, Chief Sword!" Borkaz
had muttered beside him. "Are they expecting a godsdamned
regiment?"
"It's not that bad,"
Threbuch had replied. "It looks bigger to us because we're both
scared shitless at the moment. Actually, it's probably not much
bigger than one of our battalion forts."
"Whatever you say, Chief,"
Borkaz had said doubtfully.
They'd spent a while studying the
fort. The bad news was all that barracks space; the good news was
that, at the moment, they didn't seem to have the troops to put
into those barracks. The more they'd looked at it, the more
Threbuch had come to the conclusion that the column which had
almost snapped up him and Borkaz must have represented
virtually all the combat strength immediately available to the other
side. If that were true, and if the hundred did beat that cavalry
column through the portal, he should be in pretty good shape.
"All right," he'd said finally to
Borkaz, turning his back—not without difficulty—
on the fort and its work parties. "We've found their fort, and we
already know their cavalry is past us. Not much we can do about
that. So the next priority is figuring out just how godsdamned big
this thing—" he'd waved an arm at the rainy half-disk of
another universe looming over them "—really is. And if it
comes to it, we're going to need a better idea of the terrain on both
sides."
Borkaz had nodded, although he
hadn't looked particularly happy. Threbuch hadn't blamed him,
either. Neither of them had really anticipated a portal this size.
Doing even a cursory tactical sweep was going to take the two of
them at least a couple of days, and probably longer.
"I don't like it," Threbuch had
continued, "but I think we're going to have to split up. We'll each
take half the rations, then you'll sweep that way—" he'd
pointed southeast; this portal's axis was aligned in a generally
southeast-northwest direction "—and I'll go the other.
How's the charge on your RC?"
Borkaz had reached into his pack
and pulled out his reconnaissance crystal, which looked pretty
much like any other PC, except for the bracket designed to allow
him to affix it to the front of his helmet. He'd pressed a button on
the side of the glassy cube and studied the readout for a moment.
"I've got ninety-six hours,
Chief," he'd reported.
"Good. It looks like this fort's
about right square in the center, so even if this thing's as big as it
looks from the sky arc, it can't be much more than fifteen miles
from here to the far edge in either direction. It shouldn't take more
than a day or so for one man to travel that far, so you'll be able to
leave it on record the whole way."
"I could do it in less
than—" Borkaz had begun, but Threbuch had cut him off.
"Maybe you could, but you're
going to be operating solo, with nobody to watch your back, and
we have to get this one right. We don't fuck up this time,
understood? So you take your time, and you hole up somewhere
at night, and you don't cross over to the other side until you're at
least five miles from their fort. Is that understood?"
"Yes, Chief Sword," Borkaz had
said, rather more formally than usual.
"Good. Then get moving. I'll
meet you here tomorrow afternoon. If you don't turn up in three
days—or if I don't—then we both head back
to camp on our own. And for gods' sake, be careful!"
That had been three days ago,
and Otwal Threbuch had cursed himself long, soundly,
inventively, and viciously for that delay when he and Borkaz had
discovered what else had come through that portal while they'd
been elsewhere.
The sweep of the portal itself
had gone well. Once they'd been away from the immediate vicinity
of the other side's fort, they'd both crossed over into the
rainsoaked forest on the far side. Neither of them had enjoyed
their drenching, although they'd at least been able to withdraw
back to the dry side for occasional rests, but the recon crystals
attached to their helmets had faithfully recorded everything either
of them had seen after they'd been activated. In fact, the crystals
had undoubtedly seen things neither Threbuch nor Borkaz had
realized they were looking at. The Intelligence pukes would be
able to generate detailed topological maps of the area in the
portal's immediate vicinity and for as much as a mile or two on
either side of it, once they got their hands on those RCs.
Threbuch had very carefully
backed up each crystal into the unused memory of the other. If
something happened to him, Borkaz would have the complete
record, and vice-versa. Personally, the chief sword intended to see
to it that no one needed his backup, but a man never knew.
That thought had come back to
haunt him as he realized that the people for whom the fort's
barracks had been intended had obviously been closer than he'd
allowed himself to hope. The trail he and Borkaz had followed to
reach the portal was beginning to look like a godsdamned highway
from all the traffic passing over it. He hadn't been able to make
any sort of hard estimate from the hoof-churned leaves and mud,
but it had looked to him as if at least another couple of hundred
horsemen must have followed the original column. They couldn't
have been more than a few hours—a day, at the
outside—ahead of the chief sword and his companion, but
that had still put them between Threbuch and Hundred Olderhan.
And left Threbuch no possible
way to warn the hundred what was coming.
So he and Borkaz had done the
only thing they could do. They'd headed back through the
forest in the ground-covering lope of the Andaran Scouts, despite
their fatigue and the fact that neither of them had eaten very well
over the past several days. Threbuch was no spring chicken these
days, and that fact had been mercilessly ground home by the pain
in his legs and the fire in his lungs. Yet he'd actually managed to
set the pace for the much younger Borkaz, and—thanks to
their personal navigation crystals—they'd been able to cut
directly across country through the woods, avoiding the
considerably longer trail everyone else was following.
It had been a nightmare run, but
they'd almost won the race.
Almost, unfortunately, wasn't good enough, Threbuch
thought.
He growled yet another mental
curse, and only a lifetime of discipline prevented him from
slamming his fist into the branch on which he lay with bone-
breaking force. There had, indeed, been close to two hundred
men—maybe more—in that second
column . . . and every damned one of
them was between him and Borkaz and the portal.
What the fuck is the Hundred thinking about? he
demanded of himself. Where are the godsdamned sentries
? Where are the pickets?
It didn't make any sense at all.
The bastards out there in the woods between Threbuch and the
portal were good, no question. The chief sword had almost walked
right into one of them without even seeing him. Only the gods'
own luck had saved him, when the fellow—whose uniform
was as different from that of the cavalry troopers Threbuch had
seen as the chief sword's own—turned his head and
whistled a birdcall as good as any Threbuch might have produced
himself. Any temptation the chief sword might have felt about
picking the sentry off and slipping through the gap it would create
had vanished when replies had come back from three different
positions, all within easy sight range of the first.
But good as they might have
been, they should never have been able to get this close to the
portal, with their infantry deployed in what was obviously a well
laid out skirmish line, without being spotted. They certainly
weren't any better in the woods than the Andaran Scouts,
and Threbuch couldn't imagine what sort of idiocy could have
prevented Hundred Olderhan from posting pickets to prevent them
from doing exactly that.
Yet something obviously had
kept the hundred from taking that elementary precaution, and
getting himself or Borkaz captured or killed wouldn't do any good
at all. The sound of one of the enemy's weapons might
alert the troopers on the other side of the portal. It might not, too,
and there was no guarantee these people would be stupid enough
to use their thunder weapons. If there were enough of
them—and gods knew there were—they could take
him and Borkaz without firing a shot.
Besides, in the cold, hard
calculus of military reality, the information he and Borkaz were
bringing back was worth more than Hundred Olderhan's entire
company. That monster portal had to be reported, and the detailed
terrain scans he and Borkaz had carried out would be literally
priceless if it came to operations against the portal's defenders.
And so there was nothing he
could do but lie here, less than a thousand yards from the portal,
and pray that the earthworks he could see on the other side might
actually give the Andaran Scouts enough of an edge to survive.
Hulmok Arthag stood with
Balkar chan Tesh in the ravine he'd told the company-captain
about while two sections of the mortar company set up their heavy
weapons behind them.
There were four of the ugly,
deadly weapons in the ravine, and Platoon-Captain Morek chan
Talmarha, the company's commanding officer, was personally
overseeing their emplacement. He'd sent the two tubes of the
company's third section to set up further to the east, under Senior
Armsman Quelovak chan Sairath, his senior noncom. The terrain
was less suitable there, but the weapons had a range of over six
thousand yards, and chan Talmarha had managed to find a suitable
spot to emplace chan Sairath's weapons out of sight of anyone on
the other side. chan Tesh would have preferred not to split them
up, but he couldn't cover both aspects of the portal from a single
firing position.
Arthag had been surprised when
he saw the mortars attached to chan Tesh's column. The acting
platoon-captain had expected the three-inch weapons which were
the norm for mobile units of the PAAF; what chan Tesh had
actually brought along was the heavy four-and-a-half-inch version.
The three-inch weighed only a tad over eighty pounds in firing
position; the four-and-a-half-inch weighed almost three hundred,
and it was a pain to pack into position on mule back. Pack animals
couldn't carry as many of the far heavier rounds, either, so the
bigger weapon was more likely to be used from a fortified
position, or when it was possible to move using wheeled
transport. In fact, that was the role intended for them when they'd
been sent along with chan Tesh in the first place.
There was no question which
was the more effective weapon in action, though. Mortar rounds
were thinner-walled than conventional artillery shells, which
meant a higher percentage of their total weight could be given up
to explosive filler. The three-inch mortar's round weighed less
than seven pounds, with an explosive filler of only one and a half
pounds; the four-and-a-half-inch round weighed twenty-seven
pounds, with five and a half pounds of filler. Both were designed
to fly apart along pre-fragmented lines when they exploded, but
whereas the three-inch had a lethal radius of about twenty-five
feet, the four-and-a-half-inch's lethal radius was forty feet.
Under the circumstances, and
given the horrific effect of the other side's inexplicable weapons,
Arthag didn't blame chan Tesh a bit for his choice of support
weapons.
The mortar crews were busy
leveling the base plates, using the spirit levels built into the
weapons' bipods, while the Marines chan Tesh had detailed to
support them unloaded the mule-packed, finned, base-fused
rounds and stacked them neatly in place. Arthag watched them,
then looked up as Petty Armsman Loumas slithered down the side
of the ravine and saluted.
"You wanted me, Sir?" he said
to chan Tesh.
"Yes." chan Tesh nodded. "What
can you tell me?"
"Not much, I'm afraid, Sir,"
Loumas replied. "This close, the portal energies are playing hell
with my Talent." He grimaced. "I could probably actually give you
a better Plot from a half-mile back or so. I don't think
there's anyone out there, but what I'm Seeing is way too 'foggy' for
me to guarantee it. And," he admitted, "I may be feeling that way
because there wasn't anyone the last time I Looked."
"I'm inclined to think you're
probably right," chan Tesh said, making a mental note of the
Plotter's awareness of the danger preconception posed. It wasn't
every man, Talented or not, who could keep that in mind. And in
chan Tesh's experience, it was even less common for a man to
admit that it might be happening to him.
"If they'd been going to put
sentries out at all, they'd have already done it," chan Tesh
continued, thinking aloud.
"They did send those work
parties across this morning, Sir," Arthag pointed out, and chan
Tesh nodded in acknowledgment.
"There's not exactly very much
firewood on their side," he pointed out. "I'd be sending out wood-
cutting parties, too, in their place. But Chief-Armsman chan
Hathas kept a close eye on them, and according to his count, all of
them are back in camp. They didn't leave any of them behind on
our side."
"True enough, Sir," Arthag
conceded. "All the same, I wish they hadn't done it. I'd give half a
month's pay if chan Hathas had been able to get a better look at
whatever the hells that thing was!"
"Me, too," chan Tesh admitted.
The timing on the enemy's
wood-cutting expedition couldn't have been worse. With only a
handful of men to keep an eye on things, Chief-Armsman chan
Hathas had been forced to spread them out if he wanted to keep
both sets of fortifications under observation. The virtually
simultaneous emergence of work parties from each aspect of the
portal had forced him to pull back in obedience to his orders to
avoid contact until chan Tesh could bring up the main body. chan
Hathas had managed the maneuver flawlessly, as was only to be
expected out of a noncom of his experience, but he'd had to give
up his initial, carefully chosen vantage points. Which meant he'd
had only the most frustrating glimpses of some huge, metallic-
colored creature which had apparently both arrived and departed in
the course of no more than an hour or two. His angle of vision
through the portal had been too acute for him to see more, but it
was fairly obvious from his report that it must have been whatever
they'd already used to evacuate their more critically wounded.
There'd been no sign of it at all
since shortly after midday, and that had been enough to tighten
Darcel Kinlafia's mouth into a hard, grim line. chan Tesh
understood that, but the truth was that if the other side had decided
to send any prisoners somewhere else, they would probably have
done it long before this.
Of course, they may not have decided to move them elsewhere
at all, the company-captain mused.
Platoon-Captain Parai chan
Dersal, the senior of his two Marine platoon commanders, came
trotting down the ravine and saluted.
"We're in position on both sides,
Sir," he said.
"Good." chan Tesh smiled
slightly. "May I take it from the lack of gunfire, shouts, and
screams that you managed your deployment without anyone on the
other side noticing?"
"I believe you can take that, Sir,
yes," chan Dersal replied, absolutely deadpan, and chan Tesh heard
Arthag chuckle slightly, despite the tension hovering in the ravine.
"There is one thing, though, Sir,"
chan Dersal said. "I was talking to Chief-Armsman chan Hathas. I
wanted his advice on the best positions for my sharpshooters. In
the course of the conversation, he mentioned that one of his men
had reported seeing a civilian in the camp."
Darcel Kinlafia stirred slightly
behind chan Tesh, but the Marine officer went on before the Voice
could say anything.
"He said it was a man, definitely
not a woman, and that he seemed to be moving about freely, which
a prisoner wouldn't have been."
"That's right," Arthag said. "He
didn't get a very good look at the fellow, but whoever he was, he
definitely wasn't in uniform."
"Well, I think I got a better look
at him when I was moving my people into position," chan Dersal
said, touching the field glasses cased at his side. "He's a civilian,
all right. Looks like a Ricathian. Unlike anyone else I saw in there,
he's not armed, either, and he's old, Sir. Quite old, I'd say."
The Marine gazed at chan Tesh
expressionlessly, but the company-captain knew what the man was
really saying. They were both Imperial Ternathian officers, trained
in the same tradition, after all.
"I take your point, Platoon-
Captain," chan Tesh said, speaking a bit more formally. "And if
you saw one obvious civilian in there, there may be more we
haven't seen. I take that point, as well." He turned so that he could
look at both Arthag and chan Dersal. "Pass the word to all of our
people that there are probable civilians in that camp. No one is to
take any unnecessary chances, but we're also not out here to
butcher noncombatants."
"They did," Kinlafia
muttered in a barely audible voice, and chan Tesh looked at him
sternly.
"Perhaps they did. But we aren't them, and neither the PAAF nor the Ternathian Empire
massacres civilians." Kinlafia still looked rebellious, and chan
Tesh frowned. "I understand your point, Darcel," he said firmly,
"but I also have to point out that your people most definitely were
not unarmed. Civilians, yes, but not unarmed, and all the
evidence is that they gave at least as good as they got until the
artillery opened up. We're not going to do anyone any good if we
kill people who are neither armed nor shooting back just for the
sake of vengeance. More than that, I'm not going to let my people
turn into the very thing I'm out here hunting down. Is that clear?"
Kinlafia glowered, and chan
Tesh cocked his head to one side.
"I asked if that was clear, Darcel.
I want your word on it. If you can't give it, I'll have you disarmed
and held at the horse lines."
"It's clear," Kinlafia said, after a
moment. "And you have my word." He grimaced. "Probably a
good thing you do, really. I'd like to still like myself a few months
from now."
"I'd like for you to, too," chan
Tesh said with a little smile, but then his smile faded and he turned
his attention back to Arthag.
"You're sure you want to be the
one who does this, Hulmok?" he asked quietly.
"Sir, you're the one who said we
have to give them a chance to deal fairly with us." The Arpathian
shrugged. "I happen to agree with you, for several reasons. But if
we're going to try for a peaceful contact, it ought to be an officer,
and Bright Wind and I are the best team for it, anyway. With all
due modesty, I'm the best rider you've got, and Bright Wind is the
best horse you've got."
"All right," chan Tesh sighed. He
wasn't happy about picking anyone to take on this
particular duty, but as he'd told Arthag, it had to be done. What
had happened to the Chalgyn Consortium team could have been an
accident. That sort of thing wasn't supposed to happen with
properly trained and disciplined troops, but chan Tesh had seen
enough monumental fuck-ups in Ternathian and PAAF service to
know it could happen anyway, even to the best outfit in the
multiverse. So it was time to see what happened under more
controlled conditions, when panic couldn't be blamed for the other
side's reactions. Which, unfortunately, meant sending someone in
harm's way, and Arthag was right about the logical choice.
The company-captain looked at
Arthag and chan Dersal, then up at the sky. The sun was settling
steadily towards the western horizon, but there were at least a
couple of hours of daylight left. There was time enough, he
judged, and he couldn't count on these people to stay fat, happy,
and stupid forever.
He gave his mortar sections one
last glance. chan Talmarha gave him a pumped fist sign, indicating
readiness, and he nodded to himself.
"All right, Parai," he said. "Get
back to your platoon. Hulmok, you come with me. I think we'll
send you in from the west. At least that way they'll have the sun in
their eyes if they decide to do something outstandingly stupid."
Chapter Nineteen
"You be careful out there,
Hulmok," Darcel Kinlafia said quietly as Acting Platoon-Captain
Arthag swung gracefully back into the saddle.
"Oh, I will be," Arthag
said with a smile. Then he clicked gently, and Bright Wind stepped
daintily forward.
"Look at him!" Kinlafia
muttered to chan Tesh, watching the Arpathian officer's ramrod-
straight spine. "I'd be scared to death; he looks like he
doesn't have a care in the world!"
"He doesn't," chan Tesh said
simply. The Voice turned to stare at him, but chan Tesh, too, was
looking after the single horseman riding straight towards their
dug-in enemies.
"Hulmok Arthag," the Ternathian
officer continued softly. "Fifth son of Sept Chieftain Krithvon
Arthag." He glanced at Kinlafia finally. "I've never served with
him before, but I know his reputation. And after ten months under
Regiment-Captain Velvelig, I've learned a bit about Arpathians,
too. They've got so many hells full of demons to worry about, if
they've been stupid enough to live the way they shouldn't have,
that there's not a thing any mere mortal can do to scare them. And
if they have lived the way they ought to, why, there's
nothing here that can tempt them to stay on earth, given the
rewards waiting for the courageous in the afterworld. Hulmok's
less fatalistic about it than a lot of septmen, but it's still in there.
Which doesn't mean it takes an ounce less of guts to do what he's
about to do.
Hulmok Arthag asked Bright
Wind for an easy trot as he moved forward through the trees. The
breeze of their passage was just enough to spread the traditional
green banner of parley he carried, and he glanced up at it with a
wry snort. He didn't expect the enemy to know what a Sharonian
parley banner looked like, but it seemed likely that a lone
horseman showing up with any banner in his hand was less
likely to draw instant fire than a lone horseman without one.
Besides, as Company-Captain
chan Tesh had pointed out, if he went out under a parley banner
and they shot at him, anyway, there would be absolutely no
question about the legal justification for unlimbering everything
chan Tesh was prepared to throw at the people on the other side of
that portal. When it came to starting a war—or trying to
avoid one—such details mattered, and Arthag admired the
way chan Tesh's mind operated.
He thought about the careful
preparations the company-captain had made, and his lips twitched
in an evil grin. He didn't really want a war any more than anyone
else did, but that didn't mean he'd be particularly upset if the
bastards gave chan Tesh's people an excuse.
He approached the portal and
brought Bright Wind down to a dancing walk as he rode through
the positions of the carefully hidden Marines. The stallion worried
at the bit. The horse was aware of Arthag's battle-ready tension
and ready for a fight himself, fretting against the restrained pace to
which Arthag held him and so primed for instant combat that
sweat darkened his neck.
Arthag saw two sentries on the
far side of the portal. They should have seen him already,
he thought, but they weren't looking in his direction at the
moment. He walked Bright Wind steadily forward, waiting for
them to notice him, and grimaced in exasperation as he got within
eighty yards of the portal. Admittedly, the thick forest stretched
right up to the portal, and chan Tesh's decision to send him in
from the west meant the sentries had the blinding light of the
afternoon sun shining straight into their eyes, but
still . . . !
Close enough, he thought as the range fell to barely fifty
yards, and let out a shrill whistle.
Their heads jerked up as if he'd
poked them with a heated poker, and both of them whipped around
towards him. They saw him, sitting his horse, just outside the
treeline on his side of the portal, and one of them gave a startled
shout and started to bring up his crossbow.
"Halt!" Arthag called out
sharply, even as Bright wind screamed in warning and lifted his
front hooves off the ground. But the second sentry shouted
something urgent at his companion, and the man with the weapon
aborted the movement and stood frozen in place.
Then others began stirring
behind the sentries. Arthag couldn't make out details, since the
earthworks which had been thrown up blocked his view, but he
had the distinct impression of purposeful movement. Well, that
was to be expected, although the thought that the other side was
busy manning its inexplicable—unnatural, he
thought, smiling to himself as he used Soral Hilovar's favorite
word—artillery didn't exactly fill him with joy.
After several tense moments,
someone else turned up. A tall man, whose uniform was subtly
different from that of the sentries. The newcomer was an officer,
Arthag decided. The uniforms these people wore were too
unfamiliar for him to explain why he was sure of that, but he was.
And as he watched the other man, he suspected he was looking at
the portal camp's commanding officer.
Even from fifty yards away,
Arthag could clearly see the surprise—amounting to
shock—on the officer's face. The man looked as if he
couldn't believe his own eyes, although Arthag couldn't imagine
what he found so difficult to accept.
Commander of One Hundred
Hadrign Thalmayr stared in disbelief at the single horseman.
He was positive Commander of
Two Thousand mul Gurthak would be funneling forward every
reinforcement he could find, and every day Thalmayr remained in
possession of the portal was one more day for those
reinforcements to reach him. And after almost six days, Thalmayr
had concluded that the enemy's total inactivity indicated that the
murderous scum who'd massacred so many good Arcanan soldiers
hadn't gotten a message out before that blunderer Olderhan
managed to kill or capture all of them after all.
He'd never had much use for
those over imaginative sorts who fretted themselves into panics
over events no one could control. Indeed, he'd always prided
himself on his own levelheadedness. Yet he suddenly realized that
he'd been allowing himself to become if not complacent, at
least . . . increasingly optimistic. If
the other side didn't know what had happened, it might be
weeks—even months—before they got around to
coming looking, and he'd been settling more and more into the
belief that that was what was happening.
The appearance of the man on
that golden horse was like taking a bucket of cold water in the
face. Not only had "someone" turned up, but one look at the
someone in question told Thalmayr it wasn't another civilian.
The hundred swept the trees
behind the mounted man through narrow eyes, shading them with
his raised hand and cursing the blinding sunlight. The stranger was
more than a bit difficult to make out, in his dark tunic and
breeches, and Thalmayr was uneasily aware that he couldn't see
very much through the light glare. Still, if there'd been more of
these people around, surely his people would have seen them! The
wood-cutting parties he'd sent out that morning hadn't seen any
sign of them, so they couldn't have been here very
long . . . however many of them there
might be.
In fact, he thought slowly, it was
possible this fellow was all alone. Thalmayr had already decided
Olderhan was right about at least one thing; the people he'd
encountered had been just as surprised as Olderhan had been.
They hadn't expected to run into another trans-universal
civilization, either, so there was no reason for their superiors to
think that was what had happened to them. But they hadn't been far
from their entry portal, either, so even if they hadn't gotten a
message back—and there's no fucking way they could
have, he told himself—it was possible whoever had
sent them out had finally missed them and sent out search
parties. And in a virgin universe, those search parties would have
been thinking in terms of some sort of accident or natural disaster,
not hostile action, so it would have made sense for them to split
up their available manpower to cover as much area as possible.
A corner of Thalmayr's mind
warned him against grasping at straws, but standing here on top of
his parapet dithering wasn't going to accomplish anything, and he
started forward.
Arthag watched the enemy
officer, wondering what was running through the other man's
brain. Whatever else the fellow might be, he didn't seem to be an
extraordinarily quick thinker, the Arpathian decided with biting
amusement.
But then, finally, the other man
started forward, as if he intended to climb down from his
earthwork. Arthag didn't want that. He wanted all of these bastards
right where he could see them until he was confident they hadn't
planned some sort of ambush his own scouts simply hadn't been
able to spot.
"Stop!" he called out in a voice
trained to carry above the din of battle, lifting his hand in a
universal "halt" sign. "Stand right there!"
Thalmayr stopped as the
horseman raised his hand. The other man's voice was
authoritative, the words harsh and alien-sounding, and the hundred
felt his face darken with anger. He didn't much care for the notion
of having a single stranger giving him orders in front of
his men! Besides, who the devil did this godsdamned fellow think
he was, giving orders to an Arcanan officer!
"What do you want?" he barked
back, hands on hips. "This portal is Arcanan territory!"
Arthag watched the enemy
officer stop where he was. Then the other man shouted something
that sounded belligerent. That might simply have been the
difference in languages, he reminded himself conscientiously, but
there was still something about the other man's body language that
rubbed Arthag the wrong way.
"You've attacked my people!"
Arthag shouted back, sweeping one arm around to point toward
the distant battlefield. "And you've taken prisoners." That was still
a shot in the dark, of course, but the other man wouldn't
understand a word he was saying anyway. "I want to see Shaylar!
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr!"
Thalmayr twitched. Most of the
words the horseman had spouted were only so much more
arrogant-sounding gibberish, but not all of them. He shouldn't
really have been surprised—if this was a member of a
search party, presumably he would have known who he was
searching for, after all—but it still took him offguard.
Perhaps the name had taken him by surprise simply because it was
the only part of the other man's unintelligible speech he'd been
able to recognize.
His mind flashed back to the
confrontation with Olderhan, the tiny, beautiful woman with the
brutally bruised face standing behind the other hundred, and
remembered fury whipped through him. It stiffened his shoulders,
and his eyes flashed angrily as his head came up.
Arthag's breath hissed as the
name struck the other man with visible force.
That bastard knows Shaylar's name!
He recognized it!
There was only one possible way
for the enemy officer to have recognized Shaylar's name. She'd
survived. Survived at least long enough to tell her captors who she
was. Whether or not she still lived,
though . . .
Despite the remembered flare of
anger, Thalmayr made himself think. The
woman—Shaylar—had been the only woman
in the other party. No doubt the search parties would be especially
concerned about her, so it made sense for this fellow to mention
her name. But the fact that he was sitting out here talking strongly
suggested he had no notion there'd already been shooting. He
seemed far too calm, too unconcerned over his own safety. So if
he didn't know—or even strongly suspect—that this
Shaylar had been captured, the thing to do was to bluff, play for
time. Besides, Thalmayr couldn't have produced the woman even
if that was what the other man had demanded.
The hundred composed his
expression into one of confusion, then shook his head and raised
his hands, shoulder-high and palms uppermost in a pantomime of
helpless incomprehension.
"I'm afraid I don't understand a
single word you're saying, you stupid bastard!" he called back.
"Wrong answer," Arthag
growled under his breath as the other officer shouted back
something unintelligible. Then he raised his own voice, louder
than before.
"Shaylar! Bring me Shaylar right
now!"
Thalmayr's jaw clenched. He still
couldn't understand what the other man was saying, but the
repeated use of Shaylar's name in what certainly sounded like an
increasingly angry tone, worried him. The mounted man wasn't
asking general questions, wasn't following the sort of "take me to
your leader" approach one might have expected from a first-
contact situation. Whatever he was saying, he was being
specific—very specific. And he kept using the
woman's name.
"I can't understand you!"
Thalmayr shouted back. "I don't have any idea what you're talking
about!"
Arthag listened not to the
words—which wouldn't have meant anything to him,
anyway—but to the tone, and his eyes were narrower than
ever as he studied the other man's body language.
Whatever this bastard's saying, he's lying out his ass, the
Arpathian decided. He was fully aware that he knew nothing at all
about the other's cultural template, the gestures his people
routinely used among themselves. But Arthag's Talent was at
work. Like any Talent, it couldn't penetrate the interface of a
portal, but after so many years, so much experience of
knowing what was behind a gesture, a shift in expression, a
change in tone, he was prepared to back his own ability to read the
hearts of others across any imaginable cultural divide.
"You're lying!" he shouted. "You
know perfectly well who I'm asking for! You bring me
Shaylar—Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr—now! I
want to see her here—right here!" His left hand pointed at
the ground in front of Bright Wind. "Shaylar, now! Or we
come in there, kick your cowardly, murdering ass, and pull her out
ourselves!"
He knows, Hadrign Thalmayr realized abruptly. He knows what happened!
The other man's anger was
painfully obvious, and the jabbing of that accusatory index finger
could not be mistaken. He wasn't asking if they'd seen the
little bitch; he was demanding that they produce her.
The hundred still couldn't
imagine how anyone could have gotten word back, but they
obviously had. Yet whatever they'd gotten back must've been
garbled, or partial, he thought, his mind whizzing along at
dizzying speed.
They know something happened, he told himself,
fighting to stay calm, but if they really knew what,
they'd've come loaded for dragon, and they wouldn't have
started out asking questions. And this bastard's here all by
himself . . . probably.
Thalmayr's brain hurt as all the
possibilities and ramifications spun through it. He didn't know
that this single cavalryman really was here on his own. It
seemed possible, although it was obviously far from certain. But
even if he'd brought friends along, they were all still on the far
side of the portal. Those shoulder weapons of theirs might be able
to punch through the interface, just as arbalest bolts from
Thalmayr's own men could, but artillery would be useless, and not
even artillery could knock down his fortifications. So unless there
were hundreds of the bastards out there in the woods,
Thalmayr's positional advantage was still overwhelming.
I need more information, he told himself. And I need
to keep the other side guessing as long as possible. And
these people's weapons are supposed to be noisy as hell,
whereas our arbalests aren't, and he's well within my people's
range. So if they have split up their search parties to cover
more ground . . .
The decision made itself.
Perhaps, if he hadn't been trying to juggle so many unknowns, so
many imponderables, simultaneously, he would have thought it
through a bit more clearly, realized just how many optimistic
assumptions he was still allowing himself.
But perhaps not, either.
Arthag watched angrily as the
other man shook his head again, forcefully. Then the lying bastard
made a mistake.
He snarled something
low . . . and the sentries both
whipped up their crossbows.
* * *
"All right!" Thalmayr shouted at
the other man. "That's enough of this silly shit! You're my
prisoner, godsdamn it!"
It was his turn to point at the
ground with one hand while the other made a peremptory "get
your ass over here!" gesture.
"Get over here now! Or,
by all the gods, I'll nail you do that fucking saddle!"
"You must be as crazy as you are
stupid," Hulmok Arthag said conversationally, although there was
no way in any of the hells the other man could have heard him.
Then he raised his voice.
"I don't think so!" he shouted
back, his voice firm but calm, and shook his head.
"Fine!" Thalmayr snarled.
The horseman had obviously
understood the surrender demand, but he didn't even seem to care.
He only sat calmly in the saddle, exactly the way he had been,
ignoring the arbalests aimed at him, and Hundred Thalmayr's
simmering anger—and uncertainty—turned into
pure, distilled fury at his failure to impose his will on the
situation. And at that single, arrogant prick sitting out there as if
he didn't have a care in the world. As if Hadrign Thalmayr were a
threat too insignificant for him even to deign to notice.
"Have it your own way!" he
shouted at the other man.
"They've fired on Platoon-
Captain Arthag!" Balkar chan Tesh snapped.
He'd been peering through his
field glasses from his own position on a tree branch fifteen feet
off the ground. Now he raised his head and turned to look at the
wiry noncom sitting on the branch above his and hugging the trunk
for dear life.
"Instruct Platoon-Captain chan
Talmarha and Senior Armsman chan Sairath to open fire!"
"Yes, Sir!" Junior-Armsman
chan Synarch replied, grateful for anything to distract him from his
fear of heights. He closed his eyes for a brief instant, and one of
the small metal dispatch cases he wore at his waist, on what
looked for all the world like an outsized cartridge belt,
disappeared from its loop. An instant later, a second dispatch case
vanished as he Flicked it to Senior Armsman Quelovak chan
Sairath on the far side of the portal.
The dispatch cases reappeared
almost instantly. chan Talmarha and chan Sairath snatched them
up, opened them, and found the written orders chan Tesh had
prepared for this very contingency before ever sending Arthag out.
chan Talmarha glanced at the order, then turned to his gunners.
"Time to open the ball, boys!" he
barked.
Hadrign Thalmayr cursed as the
golden horse twisted on its tail and lunged sideways. He'd
never imagined an unenhanced animal could move that quickly.
Had he been wrong in his original assessment of it?
The question flickered behind his
eyes even as both arbalest bolts hissed past its flashing hind
quarters. They missed by scant inches as the rider dropped like a
stone and vanished behind the horse's side. He simply
vanished . . . but he hadn't hit
the ground. He was hanging off the side of his saddle, completely
hidden by his mount, as the horse took off like a fiend. It whipped
back into the trees, and Thalmayr swore again, viciously, as he saw
the rider twist himself back up into the saddle.
Godsdamn it! That's torn it wide open!
When that son-of-a-bitch gets home he'll—
The hundred looked up suddenly
as he heard a brief, abbreviated fluttering sound.
Balkar chan Tesh had his field
glasses back to his eyes. He'd breathed a huge sigh of relief as
Arthag thundered safely back into cover, but his attention was on
the murderous bastard who'd just tried to have the Arpathian
murdered.
That pretty well answers the question of whether or not the first massacre was an accident, doesn't it? chan Tesh
thought viciously.
The idiot was still standing there,
fully exposed, staring after Arthag, and chan Tesh bared his teeth
in contempt.
You're not up against civilians this time you
miserable bastard!
The fluttering sound ended in an
abrupt, thunderous explosion behind Thalmayr, and the furious
hundred's heart seemed to stop.
He'd never heard an explosion
quite like it. It wasn't the sizzling, hissing crack of an infantry-
dragon's lightning bolt, or even the thunderclap of a fireball. This
explosion was . . . different,
somehow. Deeper-throated, more hollow and yet louder. He heard
screams of pain, shock, and terror as it erupted well behind the
earthworks, and terror smoked through him.
They can shoot through a portal!
Disbelief warred with his terror
as he whipped around, staring at the fountain of fire and dirt and
the sudden crater at its foot. Even that was wrong! It was
as if the explosion had erupted underground, and that was
flatly impossible for any artillery spell!
That was his first thought. But
then he realized something else, something almost as terrifying as
the fact that these people's artillery spell's did
work across a portal interface.
That explosion had been
behind his parapet. Somehow, they'd projected it through
the parapet before it exploded!
"A little long, Sir!" a noncom
reported to Platoon-Captain chan Talmarha as he opened the
dispatch case which had suddenly appeared and pulled out the
hastily scrawled note. "Not much—about thirty yards."
"Down thirty!" chan Talmarha
barked, pointing at his number two mortar crew. An instant later,
the big weapon gave its distinctive throaty cough and the second
ranging shot went whistling off.
Hundred Thalmayr cringed as a
second explosion roared. The first had erupted well behind his
fortifications, among the neatly arrayed lines of tents. The second
exploded right in the heart of his artillery positions, and this time
the shrieks were shrill and sharp with agony. Something whined
past him, and one of the sentries, still standing beside him, as
stunned as he was, went down with a bubbling scream.
Thalmayr turned towards him
and realized yet another horror. The impossible artillery
explosions clearly weren't as powerful as a field-dragon could
have produced, although they were far more powerful than the
ones his infantry-dragons could generate. But unlike any infantry
or field-dragon Thalmayr had ever heard of, this artillery
hurled out some sort of secondary weapon, something that slashed
outward from the heart of the explosion to claw down men as
much as fifteen or twenty yards away!
"That's got it, Sir!" the noncom
reading the incoming dispatches announced jubilantly, and chan
Talmarha showed his gunners his teeth.
"Pour it on, boys!" he shouted.
"Ten rounds rapid, fire for effect!"
"Take that bastard down!"
Platoon-Captain chan Dersal barked as the mortar bombs began to
land. He and his men were within less than two hundred yards of
the portal. Woodland like this gave all the concealment a skirmish
line of Imperial Marines needed, and his people had crept
carefully, patiently, into position, waiting for the order.
Now it came, and two hundred
yards was no challenge at all to men trained by the Imperial
Marines' Pairhys Island firearms instructors.
Something smashed into Hadrign
Thalmayr's hips. It slammed him savagely to the ground, with a
scream of agony, an instant before the remaining sentry went down
without a sound. Even through his anguish, the hundred heard
sharp, vicious whip cracks of sound coming from the woods,
heard the spiteful hiss of something tiny and invisible sizzling
through the air.
He managed to heave himself up
onto his elbows, but his body was totally nonresponsive from the
hips down, and any movement was agony. He started to shout an
order. Even he had no idea what it was going to be, but it didn't
matter. Before he had his mouth fully open, the overture of the
first two explosions were replaced by a horrendous crescendo.
Balkar chan Tesh's lips skinned
back from his teeth as the heavy mortar bombs exploded. There
was nothing to protect the men behind those earthworks from the
full fury of chan Talmarha's fire. No bunkers, no overhead cover,
not even any slit trenches! The splinter-spewing explosions
marched across the enemy position in hobnailed boots of flame
and turned the fortifications which had been supposed to protect
their occupants into an abattoir.
Thalmayr eyes bulged with
horror as he watched the massacre of Charlie Company, Second
Andaran Scouts. The "protected" area behind the parapet had
become a killing ground, and his men couldn't even see
the artillery slaughtering them. It couldn't simply shoot through a
portal, or project its effect through solid objects, it was
invisible, as well!
But, unfortunately for Charlie
Company, its men refused to go down without a fight.
chan Tesh's eyes widened in
astonishment as the enemy's infantry swarmed up and over the
parapet. They'd already taken hideous casualties—he
knew they had—but they came on anyway. Armed only
with crossbows, most of them, they charged straight into the face
of concealed riflemen. Here and there he saw one of them carrying
one of those strange, glittering weapons which spat fireballs, but
his Marines had been briefed on those, and deadly accurate rifle
fire brought them down.
Then the machine-guns opened
up.
The Faraika I was a crank-
operated, twin-barreled weapon, firing the same basic .40-caliber
round as the Model 10 rifle. The barrels were mounted side-by-
side, each with its own breach mechanism. Effectively they were
two complete individual rifles, and rotating the crank chambered
and fired each of them in rapid alternation.
Firing belted ammunition, the
Faraika I had a sustained rate of fire of almost two hundred
rounds per minute. It couldn't keep it up indefinitely, of course,
without overheating, but there were five of them covering each
aspect of the portal.
"No!" Hadrign Thalmayr
screamed as an inconceivable avalanche of fire swept over the
Scouts. Blood flew in grisly sprays, and his charging men went
down as heads and chests exploded under the impossible
sledgehammer blows of the enemy's thunder weapons.
It was too terrible to call a
massacre.
"Cease-fire! Cease fire!"
chan Tesh shouted. "Tairsal, order the mortars to stand
down—now!"
The Flicker sent the order as
quickly as he could, but the big four-and-a-half-inch projectiles
continued to smash down for another several seconds.
The moment they stopped
falling, Hulmok Arthag's cavalry, as previously planned, led chan
Tesh's own company in a thundering charge through the portal to
secure the objective before the enemy could recover.
Hundred Thalmayr watched
sickly as at least a hundred mounted men erupted from the forest.
They rode straight over his own men, but even in his agony and
despair, the hundred realized they were more intent on getting
through the portal and into his camp then they were in massacring
his troopers. They completely ignored his wounded, and they
seemed almost equally willing to ignore the unwounded,
as long as no one offered resistance to their passage.
Here and there, one of the
Andaran Scouts, carried away by battle rage, or hatred—or
duty—did offer resistance. But every one of those
charging cavalrymen had one of their deadly hand thunder
weapons in his fist, and Thalmayr groaned as still more of his men
went down.
The golden stallion which had
first ridden out of the woods led all the rest. Its rider put it across
the parapet in an effortless, soaring leap, and the rest of the
horsemen followed on his heels.
There were still a few dragon
gunners on their feet, standing amid the mangled bodies of their
fellows. Thalmayr saw one of them swinging his weapon around,
saw him actually get a shot off. The fireball enveloped three of the
charging cavalry troopers, and he heard someone screaming. But
then a crackle of hand-weapon thunder cut down the gunner and
his assistant, alike.
Half the cavalry spread out,
sweeping along the parapet's inner face. The rest thundered
straight ahead, heading for the tents.
Many of the riders flung
themselves off their horses, storming into the tents, hand weapons
ready, and Thalmayr felt horror grip him by the throat. He still had
wounded men in those tents, less-critically injured and yet to be
evacuated to the coast. Men unable to defend themselves. What
if—?
Then a fresh blur of motion
caught his eye. Magister Halathyn crashed backwards through the
opening of his tent. He staggered, clutching at one visibly
wounded arm, then went heavily to his knees on the muddy
ground. An enemy trooper exploded out of the tent on his heels,
shouting at him, holding one of those ghastly hand weapons and
pointing it directly at the aged magister.
Magister Halathyn was gasping
out something, pointing frantically towards the east, then jabbing
the same hand at the tents full of wounded. The dismounted
cavalryman glared at him for an endless instant, still pointing his
weapon at the magister's head. Then he lowered it, holding it by
his side, and reached out his free hand to help the wounded
Halathyn to his feet.
Thalmayr gasped in
relief—only to scream in useless denial a heartbeat later as
a lightning bolt lashed out from his own parapet. It caught two
more of the enemy horsemen . . . and
slammed through them to catch Magister Halathyn and the man
helping him to his feet, as well.
They went down, writhing in the
actinic glare. Lightning lifted and twisted their bodies, then
slammed them down into the mud. They lay hideously still.
"Magister Halathyn! Oh,
gods . . . "
It took Hadrign Thalmayr a
moment to realize the voice was his own. And then, finally, the
merciful darkness pulled him under.
Chapter Twenty
Jasak Olderhan was torn between
impatience to get underway, frustration, fury, and fear.
Otwal Threbuch was overdue. A
soldier of his ability and experience should've made the hike to the
class seven portal and back to the base camp by now. But his
walking wounded had reported back two days ago, according to
Hundred Thalmayr's hummer report to Five Hundred Klian, and
still there was no sign of Threbuch or Emiyet Borkaz.
That was worrisome. Had
Threbuch run into more of Shaylar's people? Even if he had, that
didn't necessarily mean anything dire had happened. For one thing,
it simply took longer to move without being seen or heard by an
enemy than it did to hike through unoccupied territory. And, Jasak
reminded himself, he really had no idea how big the portal he'd
sent the chief sword to recon might be. If Gadrial and Magister
Halathyn were right about it, its sheer size might well have
delayed Threbuch—especially given the chief sword's idea
of what constituted an adequate reconnaissance. For that matter,
Gadrial herself had said her new portal-sniffer was experimental.
It could have given a false reading on the portal's size, or on the
distance to it.
In short, there were any number
of non-disastrous reasons the chief sword might have been
delayed. Unfortunately, given what had already happened, Jasak
found it difficult to feel optimistic.
The fact that Therman Ulthar and
his Third Platoon had been ferried forward by dragon to support
Thalmayr's asinine forward defense of Arcana's "sacred soil" only
added to Jasak's worry . . . and anger.
The more Jasak considered Thalmayr's stance, the less sense it
made even from a tactical perspective. He suspected he wasn't
completely alone on that opinion, either. Five Hundred Klian
might have decided to support Thalmayr's decision, but unless
Jasak was badly mistaken, the five hundred nursed more
reservations about it than he was prepared to admit.
At least Klian had sent a request
back to Fort Wyvern for reconnaissance gryphons. In a more
perfect world, they would already have been moved forward to
Fort Rycharn, given the fact that Rycharn was the staging point for
the exploration of this universe's only known portal. But, like
everything else this far out along the frontier, recon gryphons were
in short supply, and Commander of Five Hundred Waysal Grantyl,
Fort Wyvern's CO, had only four of them. He'd decided—
for reasons best known to himself—that it was more
important to retain them under his own direct control, and he was
senior to Klian. It was true enough that the heavy forest on the far
side of the swamp portal was exactly the worst sort of terrain for
gryphon reconnaissance, which undoubtedly figured in Grantyl's
decision, but Jasak prayed nightly that he would relent in the face
of Klian's request. Suitable terrain or not, Jasak had men in harm's
way.
Of course, he reminded himself
bitterly, even if Grantyl did to change his mind, it would take over
a week for Klian's request to reach Fort Wyvern and the gryphons
to reach Fort Rycharn. And, he reminded himself even more
bitterly, they weren't "his" men anymore. Not officially, anyway.
That pompous, stiffnecked idiot Thalmayr had made that clear
enough. But that didn't mean it was true; it simply meant there was
no longer anything Jasak could do to protect them.
He'd had a brief conversation
with Fifty Ulthar before the transport dragons moved Third
Platoon back to the swamp portal. Military protocol had made it
impossible for Jasak to discuss his reservations about Ulthar's
new company commander frankly, but he and the fifty had known
one another a long time. He was confident Ulthar had read
between the lines of what propriety did allow him to say, and the
fifty was the late, unlimited Shevan Garlath's antithesis. Jasak was
confident Ulthar would do the best anyone in his position could.
The problem, of course, was that there wasn't really all that much
a platoon commander could do when his company
commander had decided to insert his head into his anal orifice.
Jasak stood glowering eastward
out the window of his assigned quarters across the beautiful
tropical sea as the sun slid toward the western horizon. It should
have been a soothing panorama, but at the moment, the softening
shadows and the water's turquoise serenity only irritated him
further. He hauled out his PC and checked the time, then snorted
in mingled amusement and frustration. It would be dinnertime in
another half-hour, which would kill at least another hour and a
half or so. After which he could probably put his head back into
Fort Rycharn's communications center, before he turned in, to see
whether or not there'd been any word from Threbuch without
seeming too anxiety ridden.
Not that he was fooling anyone,
he knew.
He turned from the window, left
his quarters, and headed across to the ones which had been
assigned to Gadrial and their prisoners. The shortcut he followed
took him past a rear corner of the armory, and his brisk stride
paused suddenly—in surprise, more than anything
else—as he heard a low, harsh voice hissing something
vicious in Mythalan.
As the Duke of Garth Showma's
son and heir, Jasak had been tutored in at least the basics of every
major Arcanan language . . .
including Mythalan. He'd made considerably less use of Mythalan
than most of the others, over the years, but he'd enjoyed the
opportunity to practice his language skills with Magister Halathyn.
The magister had been gently amused at Jasak's atrocious accent,
but at least their conversations had scoured much of the rust of
disuse from Jasak's comprehension of Mythalan.
Now the hundred's eyes
narrowed and his face darkened at what he was hearing.
"—fucking garthan! Are you really stupid enough to think that just because
you've escaped your proper station in Mythal, you can put on
grand airs out here and act like my equal?"
It took Jasak a second or two to
recognize the voice. Then he placed it. It belonged to Lance Bok
vos Hoven, a Gifted combat engineer who'd transferred into First
Platoon along with Shevan Garlath when Garlath had arrived as
Fifty Thaylar's temporary replacement. vos Hoven's job had been
to recharge the storage units for the platoon's infantry-dragons,
and Jasak had been a bit surprised to see his obviously Mythalan
name on First Platoon's roster. Shakira were rare—
very rare—among the Arcanan army's noncommissioned
ranks, aside from a relatively small number who were also
multhari, and who were then properly known as "vos and
mul," not simply "vos." The fact that vos Hoven wasn't
multhari had piqued Jasak's curiosity mildly, but the man had
kept largely to himself, and Garlath, his platoon commander, had
seemed satisfied with him. Indeed, Garlath had specifically
requested vos Hoven's transfer from his original platoon when he
himself was assigned to take over First Platoon.
Which, Jasak thought grimly now, should have been
warning enough, right there!
vos Hoven had been wounded in
the fighting, despite his position at the rear (which he'd shown
absolutely no inclination to leave). He'd been hit through one
shoulder by an obviously wild shot from one of those horrendous
thunder weapons, which had done massive damage to his shoulder
joint and explained his emergency evacuation. But from the
strength of his voice, it was obvious the fort's medical staff had
healed him quite nicely.
Unfortunately.
"Please, vos Hoven," another
voice said, and Jasak's already simmering rage boiled up
volcanically as he recognized Jugthar Sendahli's terrified, pleading
tone. Sendahli had also been badly wounded—in his case,
after crawling forward into the teeth of the enemy's fire to man
one of the infantry-dragon's whose original crew had lain in
slaughtered heaps about him while he fired. "I meant no
disrespect, Mighty Lord! I just—"
"You just what?" vos
Hoven snarled. "You just thought you'd keep the money for
yourself, did you?"
"It's my pay, Mighty Lord!" the
garthan trooper who'd distinguished himself so thoroughly
cried in a low, anguished voice. "It's all my wife and son have to
live on, and—"
Sendahli's voice broke off in the
sound of a fist striking flesh, and Sir Jasak Olderhan erupted
around the armory corner like a charging rhino.
"What the hells d'you
think you're doing, vos Hoven?"
The shakira whirled with
a guilty start, eyes wide, right fist still cocked for another blow.
Then he jumped back, releasing his left-handed grip on the front of
Sendahli's uniform. The garthan staggered, and Jasak's
fury redoubled as he saw the blood flowing from Sendahli's nose
and mouth, the bruises, and the split eyebrow. The blow Jasak had
heard land obviously hadn't been the first one, and fear flickered
across vos Hoven's face as he saw Jasak's expression. But then
something else flashed through his eyes, and a sneer replaced the
instant of fear.
"Administering discipline to the
troops, Sir," he said.
The combination of his sneer and
the scathing emphasis on the "Sir" told Jasak exactly what was
going through vos Hoven's arrogant Mythalan mind. He obviously
expected Jasak to be cashiered, and in the society from which vos
Hoven sprang, that sort of disgrace would automatically discredit
any accusations Jasak might make—especially against
someone legally entitled to put that accursed "vos" into his name.
But they weren't in Mythal. The shakira might well be
right about Jasak's career prospects, but until and unless he
was cashiered, Jasak was an officer of the Union of Arcana.
And whatever might happen to his career, he was also the son of
Thankhar and Sathmin Olderhan.
"Bullshit!" he snapped. "You
just landed your lying ass in the brig, soldier! Report
yourself under arrest to the fort master-at-arms right damned
now!"
"What?" vos Hoven's
jaw dropped. Then rage exploded behind his eyes. "How dare
you? Do you have any idea who my family is?"
"What makes you think I give a
flying fuck who your godsdamned family is?!" Jasak didn't
think he'd ever been so furious in his entire life—not even
with Shevan Garlath, and that took some doing. "You just go right
on running your mouth, soldier! There's plenty of room on the
charge sheet!"
"What charge sheet?"
vos Hoven barked a contemptuous laugh. "Are you actually stupid
enough to think my family would—"
Jasak took one long, furious
stride that brought him chest-to-chest with the shorter, more
slightly built shakira. vos Hoven's eyes widened. He
stepped hastily back for several feet, until the armory wall stopped
him, and a flare of fear stabbed abruptly through the contempt and
fury of his expression.
"I don't care who your
family is, you arrogant Mythalan prick," Jasak told him in a voice
which had gone quiet, almost calm, as his white-lipped fury
moved from the realm of fire into one of ice. "Not even a caste
lord can protect you from the Articles of War."
"Articles of War?" vos Hoven
repeated, as if they were words from a language he'd never heard.
Then he shook himself. "On what charges?" he demanded.
"We'll start with physical assault
of a fellow soldier," Jasak said coldly. "Then we'll add extortion
and coercion for financial gain, and conduct prejudicial to good
discipline. And we'll finish up—unless you want to go right
on running your mouth and dig it still deeper—with
insubordination and the defiance of an order from a commissioned
officer. And under the circumstances, the court will probably tack
'in time of war' onto the list."
vos Hoven inhaled hard.
Potentially, that last charge could put him in the dragon's
mouth—that ancient euphemism for the execution of a
soldier. At the very least, conviction would result in stockade
time, dishonorable discharge . . . and
the sort of disgrace no shakira caste lord would tolerate in
a member of his clan. He stared at Jasak for a heartbeat or two,
then straightened and shook himself.
"Sir, you misunderstand the
situation completely," he said in a suddenly reasonable voice, all
trace of defiance vanishing from his expression. "I realize how this
situation could be misinterpreted, but with all due respect, I must
protest the severity of your accusations. This trooper began by
assaulting me. I may have overreacted in defending myself,
but I never attempted to extort money from him!"
Jasak's lip curled with contempt,
and he wondered if vos Hoven actually believed he could deceive
the lie-detection spells which were part of any court-martial
proceeding. The shakira looked at him for a moment, then
shrugged and stepped away from the armory wall, moving to his
left.
"I apologize for my initial tone,"
he continued, "but once I've explained, I'm sure—"
The combat knife seemed to
materialize in his right hand even as he lunged forward.
Jasak's eyes snapped wide in
disbelief, but his left arm swept out, striking the inside of vos
Hoven's forearm to sweep the blade to one side. He twisted his
torso simultaneously out of the original line of the thrust, and his
right hand reached for the shakira. But vos Hoven fell
away from him, evading his grip and circled quickly to his own
right. Jasak's hand swept down to his own right hip, but it found
nothing. He'd left his short sword in his quarters, since he was
only headed for the dining hall, and he swore with silent, bitter
venom at the memory. The shakira recognized his
expression, and his lips drew back in a snarl, baring his teeth as he
balanced himself for a second attack. He started forward again, but
before he could move, the garthan he'd beaten lashed out.
It was the last thing vos Hoven
had expected. His attention was totally focused on Jasak when
Sendahli's right hand closed on his knife hand's wrist. The
garthan stepped into him, his hand rising and circling to the
left, pulling the shakira's wrist up and around the fulcrum
of his own forearm. vos Hoven cried out in pain as the knife was
forced up so sharply it almost punctured his own cheek, and then
his fingers opened, and he dropped the weapon with another,
harsher cry of pain, as Sendahli twisted harder, driving him to his
knees. He crouched there, leaning to the left, left hand flat on the
ground, as he tried desperately to relieve the white-hot pain in his
right arm and shoulder.
Jasak straightened, glaring down
at the immobilized shakira.
"I said there was still room on
the charge sheet," he said flatly, "so we'll just add attempted
murder of a superior officer."
The sound vos Hoven made was
trapped between a snarl of fury and a whimper of anguish, and
Jasak turned his attention to the garthan with the bleeding,
bruised face.
"Thanks, Sendahli."
The trooper nodded silently, and
his battered face was tight. Tight with fear, Jasak realized, and a
fresh spasm of fury shot through him as he took in the other man's
bruises, the eye that was already swelling shut. What he'd just
done to vos Hoven was graphic proof that he'd allowed
himself to be beaten.
"Stand him up," Jasak said, and
reached into one of his cargo pockets as Sendahli hauled vos
Hoven back to his feet. Jasak pulled out a small spell
accumulator, then stepped close behind the shakira and
yanked both the other man's hands behind him. He pressed vos
Hoven's wrists together, then put the small block of sarkolis
against them and pressed one of the several color-coded buttons
on it.
vos Hoven grunted, shoulders
twitching in fresh discomfort, which didn't bother Jasak a bit. The
spells stored in the standard army-issue utility crystal were
designed to cover a broad spectrum of possible needs, from fire-
starting to signaling a reconnaissance flight as it passed overhead.
The spell he'd selected to secure vos Hoven was intended as a
general binding spell for things like bundles of gear or firewood,
without any particular concern for how tightly it might bite. It
wouldn't do vos Hoven any permanent damage—not for the
brief time it would be needed—but it probably hurt like
hell, Jasak reflected with grim satisfaction.
He spun vos Hoven back around
to face him, then shoved the shakira's back against the
armory wall once more.
"You just stand there," he said in
a voice of ice. "You so much as move before I tell you to,
and I'll see you buried under this fort."
vos Hoven stared back at him,
mouth working, expression stunned. Jasak glared at him for a
moment, then turned his attention back to Sendahli. The
garthan winced as Jasak tilted his head gently back with a
finger under his chin to examine his injuries, and the hundred
shook his own head.
"I'm going to need your
testimony in a minute, Sendahli," he said quietly. "The moment
you've given it, though, I want you to report back to the infirmary.
And before the healers fix you up again, tell them I want record-
crystal images and a detailed written—and
witnessed—report on the damages."
"Yes, Sir." Sendahli's reply came
out in a near-whisper, and Jasak's mouth tightened as he tasted the
garthan's shame. He knew, Jasak realized. Knew his
company commander knew he'd let vos Hoven beat him.
"Jugthar." Jasak let the hand
under Sendahli's chin move to grip the trooper's shoulder. "After
we've taken your deposition and you've seen the healer, Five
Hundred Klian will be presenting you with a commendation."
"Sir?" the Scout's dark eyes were
confused and a little dazed.
"It's for bravery under fire,"
Jasak said. "What? You thought I hadn't noticed how you handled
yourself out there? I'd already recommended you for promotion
before we stumbled into combat. The way you performed after it
all hit the fan only confirms my judgment, so you keep your head
up, soldier. Despite what assholes like this may
think—" he jerked his head sideways at vos Hoven
"—you have nothing to be ashamed of, and a lot to
be proud of. Do you hear me?"
The trooper who had escaped
literal bondage in Mythal, blinked rapidly and swallowed hard.
Then he nodded and met Jasak's eyes levelly.
"Yes, Sir," he said. "Thank you,
Sir." Then he inhaled deeply. "It's been an honor serving under
you, Sir. I'll never forget it."
Jasak squeezed his shoulder
again, touched by the garthan's sincerity, then turned his
icy stare back to vos Hoven.
"And now, Lance vos Hoven,
let's go to discuss your conduct with Five Hundred Klian."
Murder flared in the shakira's
eyes, but he turned and marched towards the commandant's
office without offering further resistance. Jasak retrieved his knife
from the dirt and followed him in icy silence, with Sendahli a pace
behind him.
Jasak was bitterly certain that
this, too, was his own fault. He'd known Garlath had brought vos
Hoven with him. That should have been enough to make him look
very carefully at the shakira—closely enough, at
any rate, to recognize what the man was doing to Sendahli. On the
other hand, he thought after a moment, it was entirely possible,
even probable, that vos Hoven had waited to put the garthan "back in his place" until Jasak's departure on the furlough which
had been cut short by Magister Halathyn's detection of the class
seven portal.
Mythalans! Jasak snarled silently, his eyes hot on vos
Hoven's back. The shakira caste was enough to give all
the rest of Arcana's Gifted a bad name, but this one, at least,
would never terrorize another garthan. No wonder
Halathyn vos Dulainah had left Mythal in disgust!
Jasak had often wondered how
Magister Halathyn had escaped the shakira's ingrained and
cherished belief in their own superiority. He doubted anyone
would ever know, and it didn't really matter, in the long run.
However it had happened, the rest of Arcana had benefitted hugely
from it, he reflected as he shoved vos Hoven through the office
block' door. And, he admitted more grudgingly, as his mother had
insisted for years, it served as graphic proof that not everyone
born into the shakira caste deserved his contempt.
Not that the Duchess of Garth Showma's own contempt for the
shakira as a whole was one whit less blistering than her son's.
Five Hundred Klian's clerk's
eyes widened when he saw the bound shakira and battered
garthan . . . and the combat
knife in Jasak's hand. The astonishment in his expression blanked
abruptly at Jasak's terse explanation and request to see the
commandant.
"Of course, Hundred," he said.
"Just a moment, please."
He rose, knocked on the five
hundred's office door, and disappeared through it for a few
moments. Then he reemerged, holding the door open.
"The Five Hundred will see you
right now, Sir," he said.
Jasak thanked him, then marched
his prisoner into Klian's office.
"What's this all about, Hundred
Olderhan?" the five hundred asked in a cold a voice. Then he
glanced at the battered trooper whose commendation he'd just
signed, and his eyes went bleak.
"I'm sorry to disturb you, Sir,"
Jasak said as he laid vos Hoven's ten-inch combat knife on the
commandant's desk, "but I believe we have a small problem here."
"What sort of problem?" Klian
asked, and Jasak explained precisely what the nephew of a caste
lord—one of the hundred or so most powerful men in
Mythal—had just attempted to do with that knife. And what
he'd been doing when Jasak interrupted him.
Five Hundred Klian's expression
went from bleak to thunderous as the story came out. When Jasak
reached the end of his own account, Klian directed half a dozen
questions to Sendahli. The garthan's responses were
subdued, obviously more than a little frightened, but clear, and by
rights Klian's glare should have incinerated vos Hoven where he
stood by the time Sendahli finished.
"I see," he said coldly, and
looked back at Jasak. "I presume you wish to formally charge your
prisoner, Hundred Olderhan?"
"I do, Sir." Jasak repeated the
charges he'd already listed for vos Hoven.
"I'll certainly endorse them,"
Klian said grimly, and Jasak watched from the corner of one eye as
the shakira finally began to wilt. It was incredible, he
thought. vos Hoven had obviously thought, right up to the last
moment, that Klian would quash the charges against him simply
because of who he was.
"Since attempted murder is a
capital charge, however," the five hundred continued coldly, "it
must be heard before a formal court. I have neither the authority to
convene such a court, nor sufficient qualified officers to form
one. What I can—and will—do is endorse your
charges, have this man brigged here at Fort Rycharn, and see to it
that he is returned with you, under confinement, to Arcana to
stand trial there."
Jasak was a bit surprised by
Klian's last statement, and the commandant smiled bleakly.
"Nothing would give me greater
pleasure than to hang him right here and now, Hundred," he said
coldly. "And given what you and Trooper Sendahli have just told
me, I have no doubt the charges against him will ultimately be
sustained. However, the situation is complicated by what
happened to First Platoon while this man was attached to it.
Intelligence is going to want to talk to all of the survivors, I'm
afraid."
A slight flicker of warning
touched his icy eyes as they met Jasak's, and Jasak abruptly
understood. vos Hoven had been present at the botched contact
and massacre. Jasak was confident that Klian believed his own
account of what had happened, but both he and the five hundred
knew there was going to be a court of inquiry. There had to be
one. And if it looked as if Jasak had used a court-martial to silence
a potentially damaging witness . . .
Jasak's jaw clenched. That
thought had never occurred to him, and it ought to have. He'd
realized all along that vos Hoven would never recognize that he
merited punishment. Nor would the shakira's powerful
family—their minds simply didn't work that way. He didn't
doubt for a moment that they would use every bit of influence
they possessed, every trick, every distortion, that occurred to them
to avert the disgrace vos Hoven's conviction would spill across
them. And Sir Jasak Olderhan, as the agent of vos Hoven's
destruction, would find himself with implacably bitter—
and extraordinarily powerful—enemies. Exactly the sort of
enemies an officer already facing a court of inquiry didn't need.
"I understand, Sir," he replied
steadily, and Klian nodded with a tight, approving smile.
"Yes, I believe you do,
Hundred," he said. Then he looked past Jasak to his clerk.
"Summon the Master-at-Arms, Verayk," he said.
"Yes, Sir." The clerk
disappeared, and Jasak glanced at Jugthar Sendahli. The
garthan's eyes told him that Sendahli, too, knew what sort of
enemies this affair was going to make Jasak, and that he was
desperately sorry for adding to Jasak's troubles.
Can't be helped, Jasak thought, as philosophically as he
could. It went with the territory, if a man was going to be worthy
of the uniform he wore. Besides, Jasak's own connections were
nothing to sneeze at. He'd deal with shakira caste lords
when the time came; at the moment, he had another job to do.
He watched with grim
satisfaction as Bok vos Hoven was marched out of Klian's office
to the brig, and then personally escorted Sendahli to the infirmary.
By the time they got there, the garthan trooper's shoulders
had straightened and he was once again carrying himself like what
he was, not what vos Hoven had tried to make him.
Jasak handed him over to the
healers with a profound sense of satisfaction. If he'd accomplished
nothing else in uniform, at least he'd salvaged the career of one
damned fine soldier. Perhaps it wouldn't be the most noted epitaph
a career could have, but given the circumstances, he was afraid
they were going to need good soldiers badly.
He watched the healer examining
Sendahli for a moment, then turned away, praying he was wrong as
he headed back toward Gadrial's quarters to escort her to dinner,
wondering—again—why Otwal Threbuch was late.
Chapter Twenty-One
Anticipation crackled through
the Board room as Orem Limana, First Director of Sharona's
Portal Authority, let his gaze run across the assembled directors.
They obviously knew Something Was up, and well they should.
Whispers and speculation had been flying for weeks as coded
Voice messages came flowing in to the Authority
communications center from the frontier. Messages in code
generally meant one thing: a new portal.
Each exploration company used
its own internal, private codes, known only to its Voices and the
Authority, to register its claim to any new portal. The Authority
kept copies of each company's master codes, and any Authority
code-clerk who broke the rigid rules governing access to them
found himself—or herself—in jail faster than
thought could fly. The Portal Authority was serious about
protecting the rights of the companies and people who invested
money, sweat, and blood in the hazardous work of exploration.
Limana had spent twenty years in
the Portal Authority Director's chair, making sure everyone lived
by those rules, because he believed in them. He was both respected
and feared, and because he believed in the rules, he kept track of
which players were dirty, and which played fair. Which ones took
care of their people, and which ones found ways to cheat, denying
benefits or manufacturing excuses to fire an employee unlucky
enough to be disabled on company time. Orem Limana had shut
down two exploration companies during his tenure—shut
them down lock, stock, and barrel—for shady dealings and
egregious violations of employee protection compacts filed with
the Authority.
Knowing what he did about each
and every company in the business, Orem was utterly delighted by
the incredible good fortune which had come to the Chalgyn
Consortium over these last few months. Everyone in the Authority
knew, of course, that portal discoveries must be on the rise in the
Hayth Sector. The amounts of coded traffic coming in from the
Voices along the Hayth Chain made that painfully obvious, as did
the redeployment of the PAAF to send additional troops down the
chain. But very few people had an accurate grasp of the situation,
and Orem could hardly wait to tell them.
He caught the eye of Halidar
Kinshe, one of the few people on Sharona who already knew,
since quite a few of those coded messages had been directed to his
personal attention. The twinkle in Kinshe's eyes told Limana his
longtime friend and frequent co-conspirator was enjoying the
moment as much as he was, and the First Director conscientiously
suppressed his own smile as he picked up his mallet of office. He
tapped the silver bell beside his chair, sending a ripple of notes
shimmering across the room, and the buzz of conversation died
instantly as thirty heads swiveled toward him.
"Ladies and gentlemen, it was
good of you to come on such short notice. I know several of you
have been traveling close to three weeks by steamship and rail."
He nodded a welcome in particular to Lady Jagtha of New Farnal's
Kingdom of Limathia, since she'd made the longest journey of any
of the board members. "I asked you to come specifically to discuss
the situation that's been developing in the Hayth Transit Chain."
He'd had their attention before.
The mention of Hayth had turned it into rapt attention, and
he smiled as he pulled down a rollup map at the front of the room,
showing the beads-on-strings tracery of the forty-odd universes
Sharona had explored. Most of those beads were threaded onto
only a single string, indicating only a single entry and exit portal.
Others, like Hayth, had three portals, although only one—
Reyshar—had four. Wherever a triplet occurred, it gave its
name to the new transit chain splitting off from its second exit
portal, and Hayth—four portals, and almost fifteen
thousand miles, from Sharona—was shown as the head of
an eight-universe chain. The Hayth Chain split again at Traisum,
with the primary chain continuing through Kelsayr and Lashai
while a new secondary chain split off to Karys.
"As I'm sure you're all aware,
with the exception of the Sharona Chain itself, this is the longest
single transit chain we've explored so far. What none of you are
aware of, since the newest developments have occurred since our
last Board meeting, is just how much longer it's about to
become."
He turned from the map to watch
their faces.
"Over the past several months,
survey teams fielded by the Chalgyn Consortium have discovered
and claimed five new portals at the end of what we are now
designating the Karys Chain."
Mouths dropped open, and Irthan
Palben knocked over a water glass. He swore in sudden dismay as
it soaked his notes and suit, and Orem grinned.
"Chathee, could you find a towel
to mop up that spill?"
Chathee Haimas, his perpetually
efficient assistant, was already halfway across the room, having
apparently conjured a towel out of thin air. Sympathetic chuckles
broke the silence as she handed it solemnly to Palben.
"That's a suit you owe me,
Orem," Director Palben muttered, smiling despite the irritation in
his voice. The massive blond Farnalian ordered his suits custom-
dyed as well as custom-tailored, and silk wasn't known as a
forgiving fabric when doused with water.
"Put it on your expense account,
Irthan. I'm sure we can persuade someone to glance the other way
just this once, since I did drop that on you with a certain, ah,
relish, shall we say?"
That produced more laughter,
and Limana allowed himself a smile of his own. But he wasn't
quite done, and the laughter gradually ebbed as the men and
women assembled in that Board room realized he wasn't.
"I probably will put it on my
account," Palben said. "But before I do, suppose you drop the
other half of your little bombshell, whatever it is. Just in case the
damage gets worse."
"I doubt it could get much
worse," Limana replied, examining his colleague's sodden
state. "However, you're right. There is one other small
discovery involved."
Every eye was fixed upon him,
and the temporary relaxation of their laughter was a thing of the
past.
"In addition to the five portals
Chalgyn has fully explored, proven, and claimed," he said quietly,
"their crews have also discovered what appears to be the first true
cluster in the history of our exploration efforts. At present, it
would appear that the cluster in question consists of a minimum
of seven portals, including their entry portal, all within a
very, very short distance of one another."
Stunned silence greeted the
announcement, and Orem Limana hid a huge mental smile behind
his own solemn expression. Chalgyn Consortium was going to
make perfectly obscene amounts of money in the very near
future, and that delighted him more than he could say.
It was his job to see that
everyone had a fair and equal right to use the portals which had
already been discovered, but it was also his job to protect the
financial interests of any group which discovered a new
portal. That was true for every exploration company, but it gave
him considerably more pleasure and personal satisfaction in some
cases than in others, and this was definitely one of the former.
Chalgyn worked hard, on a shoestring budget, and it said
something important that the best and brightest field crews had
been flocking to Chalgyn's banner over the past several years
anyway.
Including, he thought smugly,
the brightest rising stars of all: Jathmar Nargra and his lovely wife.
Limana had had his doubts, at first, but Halidar Kinshe's belief in
Shaylar had been more than justified, and the risk of putting her
into the field had paid off. Not only were she and her husband
performing top-notch work, but she'd become a multiverse-wide
celebrity. And it didn't hurt a thing that she was one of the
loveliest young women he'd ever met, the First Director thought
even more smugly.
No institution as powerful as the
Portal Authority could be uniformly beloved, however rigidly
honest and scrupulously fair its management might be. And while
the Authority was supposedly above politics, no one with the
intelligence of a rock believed that. Given the realities of human
ambition, greed, and the hunger for power, it had no choice but to
pick its course through waters frequently troubled by political
tempests, and that required a constant—if subtle—
battle for public opinion and support. Its First Director had to
have the honesty of a saint, the fortitude of an Arpathian warrior-
priest, the showmanship of a patent-medicine salesman, and the
political instincts of a rattlesnake. Orem Limana had all four of
those, and he and his public relations people had jumped on the
chance Shaylar offered with both feet.
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had
become, in many ways, the human face of the Authority, and not
just for the Kingdom of Shurkhal, either. Hers was one of the
half-dozen or so most widely recognized faces in the entire
multiverse (thanks in no small part to the efforts of one Orem
Limana's PR flacks), and even Sharona's colony worlds adored
her. Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr was the best thing which had
happened to the Portal Authority since the very first portal had
popped into existence eighty years ago. She was shaking things up,
in exactly the way they needed to be shaken, and he was delighted
with her.
Then Director Ordras Breasal
surged to his feet. Breasal was a thin, hatchet-faced man,
habitually found near the back of any room in which he sat. His
chin was shaped like the sharpened point of a bearded ax and
jutted outwards, perpetually daring the world to break its fist
against that thick, pointed bone. Now he thrust that chin right at
Limana and pitched his voice in a tone designed to etch steel.
"First Director! I demand an
explanation!"
"Breasal's arse would demand an
explanation for having to let out the contents of his bowels,"
someone muttered behind Limana.
Orem Limana's cold stare had
been known to make even Arpathian septmen break into a cold
sweat. Now he turned it on the whisperer, Djoser Anzeti,
who—as it happened—was an Arpathian
septman. Anzeti didn't break into a sweat, but he did have the
grace to flush red, although it was a pity to censure him, since
Limana was in complete agreement with his sentiment. Director
Breasal was the largest pain in Orem Limana's professional
life . . . and that took some doing.
He gazed at Anzeti for a
heartbeat or two, then turned his attention back to Breasal, who
represented Isseth, one of the independent kingdoms sandwiched
between the jagged mountains northwest of Harkala and south of
Arpathia's wide and arid western plains.
"What, precisely, did you wish
explained, Director Breasal?" he asked through teeth which were
carefully not clenched, and Breasal drew himself up, basking in
the attention he so seldom received—and even less
frequently deserved—from his fellow board members.
"How is it that this Portal
Authority has spent eighty years exploring new universes, finding
new ones at the steady rate of one every two years or so, yet this
upstart, brash little fly-by-night Chalgyn Consortium is about to
lay claim to twelve—twelve, curse them!—
in less than six months? Chalgyn's gotten away with its dirty work
long enough, slipping teams into universes claimed by other
companies and cheating honest organizations, like Isseth-Liada,
out of their hard-earned profits! I demand an explanation! I
demand an audit of their corporate records! I demand an
investigation for collusion and conspiracy and fraud, and—
"
Director Anzeti slammed to his
feet and brought both hands down so hard the heavy conference
table jumped.
"How dare you? If
anyone deserves to be audited for collusion, conspiracy, and
fraud, it's Isseth-Liada! The Septentrion's exploration
teams have filed complaint after complaint about terror tactics,
intimidation, wrecked equipment, threats—"
"Enough!" Limana roared.
Silence fell like broken shards of
ice against a stone flagging. Breasal curled his lip, his eyes cold
and contemptuous, while Anzeti glared murderously.
"Director Breasal," Limana bit
out, "if you wish to make formal charges, you're free to do so. But
I will not tolerate vindictive slander from any director on the
Portal Authority's governing board. Lay your proof on the table,
Director, if you intend to make charges that serious. Prove it, or I
swear by all the gods of heaven and hell, you will never
serve as a director of this Portal Authority again. Do I make
myself clear?"
Breasal's expression changed
abruptly, and his eyes flared wide in shock. He opened his mouth,
but nothing came out—not even a squeak—and
Limana leaned forward, his own hands braced on the table.
"Do I make myself clear
, sir?"
Breasal nodded, suddenly pale.
"Good. I expect a memo on my
desk, before the close of business today, Breasal, either laying out
enough proof to warrant an investigation, or formally apologizing
to this Board and to the Chalgyn Consortium for slander. The
choice of which memo you write is entirely up to you, but you will write it. And you will also sign it, before
witnesses, and it will remain on permanent file in my office as a
legally binding document. Is that clear, as well?"
Breasal managed another jerky
nod, and Limana switched his attention back to Anzeti.
"I expect to see a written
summary of all complaints from the Septentrion's field crews on
my desk no later than eight o'clock tomorrow morning. Or an
apology to this Board and Isseth-Liada Corporation, whichever
you prefer. Is that understood?"
"Oh, yes. Thoroughly
understood, sir."
Anzeti's eyes blazed, and Limana
had little doubt that the Arpathian's memo would be extremely
enlightening. He'd heard enough grapevine rumbles to have him
itching to open a formal investigation of Isseth-Liada's practices,
but no one to date had found the courage to make a formal
complaint. He also knew why the Septentrion had remained silent.
Of all Sharona's cultures, the Septs were—by
choice—the least technologically sophisticated, which
made them the brunt of unpleasant jokes, on one hand, and victims
of outright prejudice, on the other.
Unfortunately, all too many
septmen had learned that justice sometimes went to the party with
the most money and political clout. Limana found that situation
intolerable, which was why he'd
insisted—forcefully—that a new directorship be
established to represent the Septentrion. He wished a bit bitterly
that Anzeti had trusted him enough to come forward before this,
but at least the man had spoken up at last, which meant Limana
could finally act.
Isseth-Liada's corporate officials
weren't going to thank Breasal for the outburst of spleen which
had provoked Anzeti, and that was another source of considerable
pleasure for Orem Limana. Of course, he knew very well that
those same corporate officials did nothing without the express
permission of Isseth's rulers. That made the whole ball of nails political, as well, and he expected the looming conflict to be
a nasty one. But he had, by all the gods, had enough. He was more
than ready to tackle Isseth-Liada and its political masters.
"Very well," he said in a more
normal tone. "If we're quite finished with that subject, I'll be happy
to explain precisely how the Chalgyn Consortium has located so
many portals in such a short span of time."
Across the room, Halidar Kinshe
sat back with a smile. He, too, had been itching to take Breasal
down a peg, if not three or four, and now he watched with great
satisfaction as Limana produced charts and maps showing transit
routes to the portals Chalgyn had stumbled across. The First
Director also produced projected schedules to move the enormous
amounts of materials and manpower necessary to build portal
forts to properly cover that many portals. Fortunately, the Trans-
Temporal Express's rail lines and shipping lanes had already been
fully established as far as Salym. In fact, the railhead was most of
the way to Fort Salby, in Traisum, by now. That was going to be a
huge help with the logistics, but the sheer scale of the project was
still daunting. It was going to be the biggest single surge of
expansion in the Authority's entire history, and the scramble to pay
for it was going to be . . .
challenging.
Chalgyn's stockholders didn't
know it yet, he thought cheerfully, but they were poised to become
fabulously wealthy over the next few years from portal transit fees
alone. Everybody was going to want a piece of that
cluster. After so many years of picking up other teams' scattered
crumbs, Chalgyn had hit the most spectacular paydirt anyone had
struck since the very first portal.
Kinshe wasn't financially
involved in the consortium, but Chalgyn was a Shurkhali
company, which left a warm glow in his heart as he contemplated
its achievements. It was like watching the child of his heart and
spirit finally prove his worth. Chalgyn had just shot to the very
pinnacle of a business dominated by Ternathians and Uromathians
from the outset, and the consortium had outmaneuvered
companies with far more capital and experience to do it. After
centuries in Ternathia's shadow, Shurkhal was finally shining in
her own light again, and it was a glorious feeling.
Limana was just getting to the
estimated support costs to finance this unexpected surge in
construction and staffing needs—expenses that would be
repaid through portal use fees until the loans were retired in
full—when the boardroom's door opened and Limana's
junior assistant beckoned urgently to Chathee Haimas. The junior
assistant's face was ashen as she whispered a message, and Haimas
turned white. She asked a single question, and the younger woman
shook her head, clearly hanging on the ragged edge of bursting
into tears.
Haimas closed her eyes for just
an instant. Then she turned and crossed directly to Orem Limana.
"First Director, I beg your
pardon," she said calmly. "There's an urgent message for you. It's
come in from the Voice network." She glanced directly at Kinshe
and added, "I believe Director Kinshe should be present when you
take the message, sir."
Kinshe's worry turned to ice;
Limana merely nodded.
"I'll ask the Board to be patient
for a few minutes," he said smoothly. "Perhaps the directors could
begin drawing up preliminary plans to meet our projected staffing
needs for the new forts. Director Kinshe, if you'll join me in my
office?"
"Certainly."
They had no sooner reached the
corridor and seen the boardroom door closed behind them than
Limana's junior assistant did burst into tears.
"I'm sorry, sir," she choked out.
"I wouldn't let the Head Voice interrupt the Board meeting until
he told me why, and it's—it's just dreadful. Hurry, please.
He's waiting."
Limana's office wasn't very far
from the boardroom, so Kinshe didn't have to worry in ignorance
for long. The Head Voice was waiting for them, and Kinshe went
cold to the bone after one glance at Yaf Umani's face. Umani had
been the Portal Authority's senior Voice for just short of forty
years, and he was a tough, no-nonsense executive, with one of the
strongest telepathic Talents on Sharona. His range had been
phenomenal when he was still in the field, and his personnel
decisions were legendary, displaying a second Talent, for he
invariably chose exactly the right person to fill each job, from the
Portal Authority public relations office to field Voices. He
tolerated no excuses, he backed down from no one, and he'd been
known to terrify sovereign heads of state whose opinions differed
from his regarding the proper operation of the inter-universal
Voice network.
Which made the fact that Yaf
Umani was trembling one of the most frightening things Halidar
Kinshe had ever seen.
"What in Kefkin's unholy name
has happened?" Limana asked, dashing a liberal amount of
whiskey into a tumbler and thrusting it into Umani's unsteady
hands.
The Head Voice gulped the
liquor in two swallows. His eyes were shocked, haunted by
something so dreadful Kinshe knew he didn't want to hear
it.
"I'm sorry, sir," Umani said in a
voice that was thready and hoarse. "It's—oh,
gods . . ." Tears hovered just behind his eyes,
and his lips quivered. "I can't—I don't even know how
to—"
He stopped, closed his eyes, took
several deep breaths. Then he met Limana's gaze almost steadily.
"First Director, I beg leave to
report that we're at war, sir."
For just an instant, the office
was totally silent. Then—
"What?" Limana actually
seized Umani by the shoulders, while Kinshe sucked down a
hissing breath. The First Director stared at the Head Voice, shock
warring with disbelief, until he abruptly realized he was gripping
the older man tightly enough to bruise. He closed his own eyes for
a moment, then let go, stepped back, and drew a deep breath as he
visibly struggled for control.
"One of our survey crews has
been attacked." Umani's words wavered about the edges. "By
foreigners. People, I mean, but not like us. Soldiers. Not
Sharonian. What they did to our crew—"
His voice choked off, and
Kinshe, focused on that last incomplete phrase, found himself
speaking through clenched teeth.
"Which crew?"
The Head Voice flinched, and it
was Kinshe's turn to seize his shoulder.
"Which crew?"
"Hers." The one-word answer
was a whisper.
"How—" Kinshe's voice
stumbled on the word, full of rust. Then he forced out the rest of
the question. "How badly were they hit? Is Shaylar still alive?"
Umani, already ashen, went so
deathly grey that Limana steered him hastily into the nearest chair.
When the Head Voice could speak again, he did so flat-voiced,
with his eyes closed, as though trying to shut out something too
terrible to look at again even as he relayed what he had Seen
through Shaylar's eyes.
"They ran for the portal. They
didn't make it—not even close. The soldiers—" He
stumbled over the word, drew a ragged breath. "The attackers were
back in the trees. Hard to see. Our people took shelter. Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl tried . . ." Umani swallowed.
"He tried to talk to them. Stood up without a weapon in his
hands—and they shot him. Murdered him in cold
blood."
Umani's flattened voice was
brittle as glass.
"Our team shot back in self-
defense, and they—" He shuddered. "They opened fire with
artillery, or something like it. Flame throwers. Huge balls of
flame, three or four yards wide and hotter than any Arpathian hell.
Crisped—incinerated—everything they touched.
Mother Marthea, everything. And something else—
something that hurled lightning. Jathmar Nargra—"
Umani's voice broke again. "He was burned, horribly burned, right
in front of her eyes. He can't have survived. Then something hit Shaylar. I don't know what. I don't know if it just knocked
her unconscious, or if it killed her, but we can't get through. We
can't. Darcel's tried and
tried. . . . "
Tears trickled unheeded down
gullies in the man's cheeks which hadn't been there when Kinshe
had seen him in the corridor this morning, less than half an hour
ago. Kinshe had never seen any Voice so shaken, not even in the
midst of the most violent natural disasters.
"She stayed linked," Umani was
whispering. "Right to the end. I can't even imagine how
she did it. How she stayed linked with Darcel Kinlafia when her
entire crew—her own husband—was being
blown apart, burned alive, around her. She even burned all her
maps, the portal charts leading back to Sharona. That poor, brave
child, determined to get the warning out, to protect us at
all costs . . .
"I'll have to tell her parents."
Kinshe heard his own voice, distantly shocked that it seemed to be
speaking without his conscious control, and Limana and Umani
turned to stare at him.
"Don't you understand?" he
groaned. "We can't let a total stranger tell them. It's my fault she
was out there. I'm the one who pushed for it, and—"
"I approved it, Hal," Limana
said, cutting him off brusquely. "Don't take the blame for this on
yourself. I'm the one who had the final say-so, and it's on my head,
if it's on anyone's."
The First Director shook his
head, then inhaled sharply.
"We'll come back to Shaylar's
parents in a moment, Hal—I promise," he said. "But painful
as it is to set that aside, there's far more urgent business in front of
us."
Kinshe looked up into Limana's
worried gaze, feeling dazed and shaken, and the First Director
gripped his shoulder.
"I don't know how bad this is
going to turn out to be, Hal. First reports are always the most
terrifying ones, but this—" Limana shook his head. "I don't
see how this one is going to get any better, especially if—
forgive me—especially if it turns out Shaylar is
dead."
Kinshe jerked as if he'd been
struck, but Limana continued unflinchingly.
"We have to hope it was all
some hideous mistake. Gods know there've been enough
catastrophic border incidents no one wanted in Sharona's
history! If this was a mistake, then maybe—just
maybe—we can keep it from spinning completely out of
control. But it's happening almost a full week's Voice
range from here. We don't have any idea what's happened in the
meantime, what local military commanders—on both
sides—may have done by now. For all we know, it's
already spun out of control, and that means we have to take a
worst-case approach."
He held Kinshe's shoulder a
moment longer, gazing into his old friend's eyes until the
Shurkhali director nodded. Then Limana gave one last, gentle
squeeze, folded his hands behind him, and began to pace.
"If Yaf is right—if we
are at war—it's a job the Authority isn't designed to
handle. We've got portal forts out there, thank all the gods, but
they're designed for peacekeeping, not to resist attackers with
heavy weapons. Not even attackers with Sharonian heavy
weapons, much less whatever these people may have! And
the only thing we know about the other side right this minute is
that they apparently showed no mercy to our survey crew. Our
civilian survey crew."
He looked up from his pacing
long enough to see Kinshe nod again, then turned back to the Head
Voice.
"I assume the Voices in the
transmission chain have put a security lock on this, Yaf?" Umani
nodded in confirmation, and Limana grunted. "Good! We can't
afford to go public with it, not yet. Not until the families have
been told, at least. We . . . might have
to make a general announcement, because something this big will
get leaked if we don't act fast. We could do the 'Names will be
withheld until next of kin have been notified,' standard disaster
spiel, but we can't do even that until we've notified the
heads of state."
He stopped pacing to lean on his
desk, hands splayed flat, spine rigid. Then he nodded in sharp, crisp
decision.
"We have to call a Conclave.
Now. This afternoon."
"Conclave?" Kinshe's head spun.
"The Conclave? No one's called for a Conclave since the
Authority was formed!"
"Do you have a better idea?"
Limana demanded, raking a hand through his hair, and Kinshe
thought about it. He thought hard, then swore under his breath.
"Now that you mention it, no."
"I thought you wouldn't."
Limana actually managed a taut parody of a smile. Then his
nostrils flared. "We won't have time to assemble the heads of state
from every sovereign nation for a face-to-face meeting. It'll have
to be over the Emergency Voice Network."
"That's going to leak, First
Director," Haimas warned him. "You can't activate the EVN
without popping warning flags all over the news media."
"Can't be helped," Limana said,
and turned his attention back to Umani. "Head Voice, I'm formally
invoking a Conclave. Please activate the EVN to inform all heads
of state. Use government-bonded Voices only. First meeting to
take place via the Voicenet in—"
He thought rapidly, making
mental calculations about time zones, reactions to the message,
and the slow grinding of bureaucratic wheels. Then he gave a
mental shrug.
"The First meeting will take
place in four hours," he said crisply. The other people in the office
looked at him, and he snorted. "Yes, I said four hours—
three-thirty, our time. Let 'em piss and scream all they want; it'll
get their attention, and that's what I want. Their full, undivided
attention."
Yaf Umani drew a deep breath.
"Very well. I'll see to it
immediately, sir."
Limana watched him go, then
looked up and met Kinshe's gaze.
"That's begun, at least," he said
softly. "In the meantime, we need to take some immediate steps of
our own. We'll have to put all our portal forts on maximum alert
and move PAAF troops toward the contact zone, and we have to
get it done as quickly as possible. I can order all of that on my
authority as First Director, then let the Conclave worry about
what to do next."
Kinshe nodded, and Limana
inhaled deeply.
"We won't be able to sit on this
for long, Halidar. It's going to go public—quickly. But you
can reach Shaylar's family by nightfall if you use the ETS. I'll
authorize the transfer."
"Yes." Kinshe nodded, still
fighting the feeling of stunned disbelief, compounded now by the
shock of being given access to the ETS. "Yes, of course that's the
fastest solution. I should have thought of it." He managed a wan
smile. "It never even occurred to me. Probably because I've never
been high enough on anyone's priority list to get clearance to use
it."
The Emergency Transportation
System was normally reserved for the use of heads of state and
diplomats on time-critical missions. The ETS consisted of an
interlocked matrix of teleportation platforms, located in the
capitals of most of Sharona's nation states. The platforms
themselves were restricted to a size of not more than eight square
feet, and a maximum load no more than six or seven hundred
pounds, and the telekinetic Talent required to power the system
was rare. It could also lead to potentially fatal health
consequences for those who possessed it, if it was overstrained, so
the system was used only very sparingly.
And I was never important enough to use
it . . . until now, Kinshe
thought grimly, wishing with all his heart that the opportunity to
experience it had never come his way. He dragged both hands
through his hair, just trying to face it. Mother Marthea, how did a
man tell loving parents something like this about their
child?
"I'll red-flag your priority,"
Limana continued, and glanced at Haimas. "Chathee, I need you to
take charge of this. As soon as Yaf's alerted the EVN, have him
contact King Fyysel's personal Voice directly. Tell him Halidar's
going to need a special locomotive and car. And tell him
why—Fyysel may want to send someone with him."
Knowing his king, Kinshe could
guarantee that there would be someone accompanying him.
Several someones. King Fyysel was given to flamboyance, even
when the occasion was trivial, which this one certainly wasn't. At
least the railway lines ran all the way from the capital to the
Cetacean Institute. They wouldn't have to drive overland by
carriage—or worse, by dune-treader.
"Also tell King Fyysel's voice I
strongly recommend that he order the lines cleared the whole
damned way from the capital to the Institute," Limana continued
to his assistant. "I can keep a lid on this only so long, and the
clock's already ticking. And ask Yaf to choose a senior Voice to
go with Halidar, so he can join the Conclave en route."
"Yes, sir." Haimas stepped out
of the private office and began giving crisp, clear instructions to
Limana's staff. While she did that, the First Director turned back
to Kinshe.
"However this plays out, I'm
counting on your support. Yours is very nearly the only moderate
voice Fyysel will listen to, my friend. Given Shaylar's nationality,
Shurkhal's going to be overrun with reporters asking questions
about Shurkhali honor and blood vendetta. The last thing we can
afford is to have the King of Shurkhal throw that burning black oil
of yours on the kind of fire this will ignite."
Kinshe grimaced, able to picture
his monarch doing that only too clearly.
"I'll do my best, Orem, within the
confines of my own honor. But it may not be enough. It's worse
than just our normal sense of honor, you realize? The Shurkhali
people, from King Fyysel down to the lowest stable boy, have
invested tremendous national pride in Shaylar. Even those who
don't approve of her doing a man's job have taken pride in the fact
that a Shurkhali woman was first. The King isn't the only
Shurkhali male we'll have swearing vendetta. Trust me on that."
"You give me such cause for
hope," Orem muttered.
"It won't be pretty." Kinshe' eyes
narrowed as another thought occurred to him. "Not anywhere.
You realize Uromath will cause trouble? And what happens when
the Arpathian Septenates get word—" He shook his head.
"It'll take some fast talking to keep them from sending
every warrior above the age of fourteen through the portals for the
chance to ride in the battle against the godsless heathen."
"You think I don't know that?"
Limana growled. "Gods and demons, this is going to be an unholy
mess!" He blew out a deep breath and added, "From where I'm
standing, Ternathia looks to be our best bet. And you know how
that will play in certain quarters."
"Only too well," Kinshe said
with a wince. "I'm not even sure you'll be able to convince
Ternathia," he added, but Limana snorted harshly.
"Zindel chan Calirath's no fool,"
he said grimly. "He won't want it, but he's Ternathian. That'll tell,
if nothing else will, and I think he's smart enough to know what
our other options will be."
"You've got our whole future
mapped out," Kinshe observed with a tight smile, "and the
Conclave hasn't even been called yet."
"Care to place a friendly wager
on the ultimate outcome?" Limana responded.
"Not on your life. You're too
seldom wrong to throw my money away," Kinshe growled, and the
corner of Limana's lips twitched.
"Hah! At last you admit it!" The
flash of humor faded quickly, though. "We'll just have to do the
best we can. If you think up any bright ideas on how to contain the
rage—or at least channel it into something that won't
worsen the situation—I'm all ears."
"If I do, you'll be the first to
know."
"Good." Limana drew a deep
breath. "Don't bother going back to the Board meeting. Go home
and pack. I'll send a carriage to pick you up an hour from now,
drive you to the ETS station. A senior Voice will meet you there.
If that train isn't ready by the time you hit Sethdona, I'll have some
railway official's guts for zither strings."
"I have every confidence,"
Kinshe said, his voice as dry as the sands of his homeland. "I'll
take my leave, then." He gripped Limana's hand. "Don't let them
do anything stupid while I'm gone."
"If it looks bad, I'll have my
Voice flash yours to take your proxy vote. May the gods speed
your journey, my friend."
Kinshe strode through the Portal
Authority' imposing stone headquarters, his heels clicking against
the marble, his attention tightly focused on what would have to be
done to meet the crisis each step of the way between here and a
distant Shurkhal. One thing he already knew, though, without any
doubt whatever. It would take an act of the gods themselves to
persuade King Fyysel not to send several thousand riflemen and an
artillery division out to commit blood-vengeance genocide.
Chapter Twenty-Two
"Dear, you've hardly touched
your breakfast."
Andrin Calirath looked up at the
sound of her mother's gentle voice. Empress Varena wasn't the
sort of parent who nagged, and she wasn't nagging now, really.
That didn't keep Andrin from feeling as if she were, but the look in
her mother's eyes stopped any protest well short of her vocal
cords.
"I'm sorry, Mother," she said
instead, and managed a wan smile. "I'm afraid I'm just not very
hungry."
The Empress started to say
something else, then stopped, pressed her lips together, and gave
her head a tiny shake. Her brain had already told her there was no
point trying to get Andrin to eat. That the attempt would only
make things worse, by pointing out that she'd noticed something
her daughter was desperately trying to pretend wasn't happening.
But what her mind recognized and her heart could accept were
two different things.
She looked at her husband,
sitting at the head of the table, and he looked back with a sad smile
and eyes full of the same shadows which haunted Andrin. The
smile belonged to her husband, her daughter's father; the shadows
belonged to the Emperor of Ternathia, and not for the first time in
her life, Varena Calirath cursed the crushing load the Calirath
Dynasty had borne for so many weary centuries.
Andrin peeked up through her
eyelashes, acutely aware of her parents' exchanged looks. She
wished desperately that she could comfort her mother, but how
could she, when she couldn't even explain her terrifying Glimpses
to herself? Her father would have understood, but she
didn't need to explain to him. It was painfully evident that he was
experiencing the same Glimpses, and she refused to lay the
additional weight of her own fears, the terror curdling her bone
marrow, on top of the other weights he must already bear.
Unlike her, he had to deal with
all the crushing day-to-day burden of governing Sharona's largest,
oldest, wealthiest, and most prestigious empire despite his own
Glimpses. He didn't need a whining daughter on top of that!
She used her fork to push food
around on her plate, trying to convince herself to try at least one
more bite. There was nothing wrong with the food itself.
Breakfast had been as delicious as it always was; it was simply
that a stomach clenched into a permanent knot of tension couldn't
appreciate it.
Almost a week, she thought. A
week with the bumblebees crawling through her bones, the
nightmares which woke her and skipped away into the shadows
before she could quite grasp them. A week with visions of chaos
and destruction, the outriders of heartrending grief to come, of
loss and anguish. No wonder she couldn't eat! She knew she was
losing weight, and she'd seen the shadows under her eyes in her
morning mirror, and that didn't surprise her one bit, either.
She'd had other Glimpses in her
life, some of them terrible beyond belief. The Talent of the
Caliraths was . . . different. Unique.
Precognition wasn't actually that uncommon. It wasn't one of the
more common Talents, but it wasn't as rare as, say, the full
telempathic Healing Talent.
But precognition was limited
primarily to physical events and processes. A weather Precog
could predict sunshine and rain for a given locale with virtually
one hundred percent accuracy for a period of perhaps two weeks.
Longer-range forecasts of up to two months could also be
extremely accurate, although reliability tended to begin falling off
after the first month or so, and the level of accuracy degraded
rapidly thereafter. Other Precogs worked for forestry services,
predicting fires. And along the so-called "crown of fire" around
the Great Western Ocean, they watched for volcanic eruptions and
tsunamis. They'd saved countless lives over the centuries with
their warnings, like the one they'd issued before the island of
Juhali in the Hinorean Empire—and its analog in every
explored universe, for that matter—had blown up so
devastatingly thirty-seven years ago.
Yet those events were all the
results of physical processes. Of the movement of
unthinking masses of air and water, the random strike of lightning
bolts, the seething movement of magma and the bones of the earth.
The Glimpses of the House of Calirath dealt with people.
Quite often, they also dealt with
natural disaster, because people were trapped in them. But those
disasters would have happened whether there'd been anyone there
to witness them, or not. What Andrin and her father and their
endless ancestors before them had seen in those cases was the
human cost of the disaster. The impact on the lives of those
trapped in its path.
There had been times when a
Calirath Glimpse had been enough to divert or at least ameliorate
the consequences of cataclysm. Andrin was grateful for that. She
herself had saved possibly thousands of lives with her Glimpse of
the Kilrayen National Forest fire in Reyshar before high winds had
sent it sweeping over the town of Halthoma like a tidal bore of
flame. She'd Seen the flames leaping the firebreaks,
cutting the roads, consuming the town, burning women and
children to death. It had been that human element—the
terror and pain and despair of the people
involved—which had generated her
Glimpse . . . and her father's frantic
EVN message had warned the Reyshar government in time to
evacuate and thwart that very Glimpse. She treasured that memory,
despite the nightmares of the disaster only she had Seen, which
still came back to her some nights. And she was only too well
aware from her history lessons of how often in Ternathia's past it
had been a Glimpse, the Talent of the imperial house, which had
plucked victory from defeat, or turned mere survival into triumph.
But there were times—
like today—when all those accomplishments seemed less
than a pittance against the cost of her Talent.
If only she could make it come
clear! If only she could take it by the throat, choke it into
submission. But it didn't work that way. Glimpses could be of
events from next week, or next month, or next year. Some had
actually been of events which had not occurred until the person
who had Glimpsed them was long dead. Sometimes, they never
came to pass at all, but usually they turned out to have been
terrifyingly accurate . . . once they
were actually upon you. And one thing the Caliraths had learned
over the millennia was that the closer the event came, the stronger
the Glimpse grew.
Which was the reason her
stomach was a clenched fist and there were shadows under her
eyes. This was already the strongest Glimpse she had ever endured,
far stronger than the Halthoma Glimpse, and it was still
growing stronger. The images themselves were growing sharper,
even though she still lacked the context to place them, and she felt
as if she were a violin string, tuned far too tightly and ready to
snap.
"Andrin," her father said calmly,
"I've been thinking that this afternoon, perhaps you and I might
drop by the stables, and—"
He stopped speaking abruptly,
and his and Andrin's heads turned as one, their eyes snapping to the
breakfast parlor's door an instant before the latch turned. Andrin
felt herself go white to her lips, and her father's hand tightened
into a fist around his napkin, as the door opened and Shamir Taje
stepped through it.
"Your Imperial Majesties," the
First Councilor of the Ternathian Empire said, bowing first to
Zindel and then to Varena and the rest of the imperial family, "I
apologize for intruding on you."
Varena Calirath held her breath
as she saw Zindel's face. His entire body had gone deathly still, and
she bit her lip as she realized that whatever he—and
Andrin—had awaited appeared to be upon them.
"I'm sure you had an excellent
reason, Shamir." Her father's voice was amazingly calm, Andrin
thought, when he had to feel the same jagged lightning bolts
dancing along his nerves.
"It's an urgent message, Your
Majesty," Taje said formally, and Zindel nodded.
"Very well." He glanced down
into Varena's eyes. "I beg your pardon, my dear. Children," he
added with an apologetic smile, then glanced at Taje again. "Will I
be back shortly, Shamir?"
"I . . .
doubt it, Your Majesty."
"I see." Zindel kissed each of his
daughters in turn, beginning with little Anbessa and leaving
Andrin until last. He gripped her hands for a moment, meeting the
worry in her eyes with a steady gaze as she stood to kiss him back,
and she actually managed to summon a smile for him.
"I'll let you know what I can," he
said quietly, and she nodded.
"If you can't, I'll understand."
"Yes." He brushed a lock of hair
from his tall, straight daughter's brow. "I know."
He gave her another smile, then
turned briskly and stepped back through the door with Shamir
Taje, and she discovered her knees were trembling. She all but fell
back into her chair, not even bothering with proper deportment,
but her mother didn't scold. She just bit her lip and tried to smile
in a brave effort that didn't fool Andrin.
A moment later, the door opened
again, and Andrin's head whipped back around. Her father stood
there, pale as death, staring straight at her.
"Zindel?" the Empress' voice
sounded breathless, frightened.
"I'm sorry, dear. I didn't mean to
alarm you." His eyes met hers, held for an instant, then moved
back to his eldest daughter. "Andrin, I'm afraid you have to come
with me. It's essential that you join the Privy Council's
deliberations.
Andrin heard someone gasp and
wasn't sure if the sound had come from her mother, or from her.
She tried to rise, then paused to take a deeper breath, and made it
to her feet on the second attempt.
"What is it, Father? What's
happened?"
"It's just a precaution, Andrin,
but it's necessary. I'll brief you with the rest of the Council."
Andrin saw the flicker in his
eyes, the tiniest of speaking glances at her baby sisters, and
swallowed down a throat gone dry.
"Of course, Father." She bent to
press a kiss on her mother's suddenly cold cheek. "I'm sorry,
Mama. Will you convey my apologies to Aunt Reza for missing
my lesson this morning?"
"Of course, dearest."
Andrin followed her father into
the passage, suddenly wishing her fears could remain nameless,
vague, however terrifying. This morning, all she'd wanted was
their resolution; now she harbored a terrible suspicion that the
truth would be far worse than anything she'd yet imagined.
The walk to the Council
Chamber seemed endless, yet it was also far too short, and Andrin
drew a deep breath and straightened her spine as the doors finally
opened before them. She'd never actually been inside the Privy
Council Chamber, which wasn't as surprising as someone else
might have thought, since Hawkwing Palace, the imperial
Ternathian residence in Estafel, was the largest structure on the
entire island of Ternath. The ancient palace in Tajvana had been
substantially larger, and more opulent, just as the ancient empire
had been larger and, for its day, even richer. But Andrin had
difficulty imagining a building more immense than her birthplace,
since the palace was a small city in its own right.
Nearly five thousand people
lived and worked in Hawkwing Palace, which ambled across
twenty acres of land, including the stables, kennels, and formal
gardens. If one added the vegetable gardens and greenhouses, the
palace and its grounds ate up nearly thirty acres in the heart of
Ternathia's capital city, which boasted the most expensive real
estate on the island. Or, for that matter, in the entire sprawling
Empire as a whole. She'd never seen all of it, and probably never
would. Those who governed—or were related to those who
did—had no need to visit the vast kitchens, or the
hothouses where vegetables were grown in winter and fruit trees
were coaxed to produce fruit year round.
She'd been to the Throne Room,
of course, but the chambers where her father consulted, planned,
worried, and governed were alien territory, and she discovered that
the Privy Council Chamber made a distinct contrast to the vast and
ornate Throne Room. The Throne Room's function was to remind
visitors of the power, magnificence, and ancient lineage of the
Empire; this chamber, by comparison, was an almost cozy room,
more than large enough to hold the entire Privy Council, yet small
enough to feel almost intimate. Walls of the same grey stone used
to build the entire palace had been left bare, rather than faced with
marble, but ancient, beautifully polished woodwork lent the stone
a softening accent, and colorful banners decorated two walls,
representing the various nations and peoples who comprised the
Empire.
A third wall was devoted almost
entirely to a hearth, where a cheerful coal fire drove away the
autumn chill when she stood close to. The mantle was simple,
compared with other fireplaces in the palace, and served mostly as
a place to put clocks. At first, she thought it was an echo of her
mother's love for bric-a-brac. But then she tipped her head to
examine them more closely, and discovered one clock for each of
the time zones within the Empire.
Andrin forgot the tension of the
moment as she stared in delight at the simple but effective way to
determine at a glance what time it was in any given city of the
Empire. Each clock was labeled with the names of the major cities
within its zone, and she even found clocks at the far end of the
mantle that showed time zones in the rest of Sharona.
That discovery led her eyes to the
map hanging across the far end of the room, where she could trace
the familiar coastlines and pair them up with the mantle clocks.
The island of Ternath, itself,
shown by the mapmakers as a vibrant green jewel, was the
westernmost land bordering the rolling expanse of the North
Vandor Ocean. Just to the east of Ternath lay Bernith Island,
which stretched farther north and south than Ternath and was
wider, as well. Beyond Bernith, with its landmark white-chalk
cliffs, past the chilly waters of the Bernith Channel, lay the great
continent of Chairifon, where most of Ternathia's empire sprawled
across Sharona's northern hemisphere, two thousand and more
miles from east to west, and fifteen hundred from north to south.
Her gaze traveled from the
Bernith Channel south, to the Narhathan Penninsula, the
enormous fist of land that bordered the Strait of Bolakin from the
north. The strait itself was dominated by the Fist of Bolakin,
jutting down from Narhath, and the Hook of Ricathia, reaching up
from the south. The Fist took its name from the huge, steep-sided
rock which was its most prominent feature, and from the
Ricathian city-state of Bolakin, which had controlled the
strait—and the Fist—for centuries. Ternathia had
struck a deal with the Bolakini for possession of the Fist in a
lucrative treaty, sealed with intermarriages and trade agreements,
which included levies on all non-Ternathian shipping that pased
the Fist.
From Bolakin, she traced the
coastline that skirted the tideless Mbisi Sea, known to traders as
the Sea of Commerce or Sea of Money, depending on how one
translated the original Bolakini. Either translation was apt,
considering the money made from the commerce crossing the
Mbisi on any given day, especially since the emergence of the
Larakesh Gate and the completion of the Grand Ternathian Canal.
The long, fairly straight southern shore of the Mbisi was
controlled by various wealthy Ricathian city-states, while the
Ternathian coastline sprawled along the Mbisi's far longer and
more winding northern shore.
The only land north of the Mbisi
Sea that Ternathia didn't govern was the far northern strip
that bordered the icy Polar Ocean, surrounding the north pole. The
fjord-riddled coastline of the huge, vaguely spoon-shaped
promontory of Farnalia formed the western boundary of the
Farnalian Empire. That empire stretched from the North Vandor
Ocean, lapping and slapping its way into those deep fjords, right
across the top of the vast Chairifonian supra-continent that
stretched clear to the Scurlis Sea, five thousand miles to the east.
The Farnalian Empire was very narrow, viewed north to south, but
so long it wrapped a quarter of the way around the world. And
though it was sparsely inhabited, thanks for the most part to its
climate, the people who lived there were as impressive as their
land.
Farnalians were even taller than
Ternathians, tending towards big, robust men with blond and red
hair, and statuesque women who were as comfortable in the
saddle or behind the plow as their menfolk—and just as
capable of wielding a sword (or, these days, a rifle) in defense of
their own homes. Once upon a time, the sea rovers of Farnalia had
been noted for their fondness for axes, other people's possessions,
and their own boisterous, brawling independence. That, Andrin
supposed, might have been one reason her ancestors had
established treaties with Farnalia, rather than attempting a
more . . . energetic approach.
At one time, Ternathia had
controlled almost all of Chairifon south of Farnalia and west of
Uromath, but that had been long ago. Sometimes the sheer depth
of history behind something as simple as that map took Andrin's
breath away. It was difficult to comprehend the vast gulf of time
which had passed since Ternathia had signed its first treaties of
alliance with Farnalia, more than four thousand years previously.
Trade between the two empires had been brisk and lucrative
throughout that immense stretch of time, and the Farnalians
themselves joked about how Ternathian influence had finally
civilized their ancestors. Of course, that was partly because so
many of those ancestors had been Ternathians themselves. Along
the borders of the western half of Farnalia, intermarriage with
Ternathians was so common that it had long ago become
impossible to distinguish a person's nationality on the basis of
physical appearance.
There were those—
particularly in Uromathia—who muttered occasionally
about "mongrels," but absorption had been the true key to
Ternathia's successful expansion of its borders. Those borders had
been extended primarily because of the Empire's need to protect
its trade routes from the brigandage and unrest which always
seemed to be simmering away just on the other side. Yet as each
troubled region was acquired and pacified, the traders—and
their rulers—found themselves facing yet another new area
of unrest, where ship-based pirates and land-based brigands
harassed Ternathian merchants from the other side of the new
border. Which, inevitably, provided fresh impetus to expand
still further.
And so, the Empire had grown
ever larger. There had never really been a conscious plan to forge
an empire in the first place. At every stage, it had been primarily a
pragmatic matter of seeking border security, not fresh lands to
rule, yet the result had been the same. Ternathia had become a
spreading, irresistable tide, bringing Ternathian arts and
technology to the cultures it had engulfed, learning from those
cultures, in turn, and—always—intermarrying with
them. The Calirath Dynasty had been wise enough to bind its
subject peoples to it by making them full members in the Empire
which had overrun them, and marriage had been one of the
promises and guarantors of that equality. So had respect for local
religions. The process of absorption had worked both ways,
gradually and almost always successfully, over centuries, and one
reason it had was the fact that the Ternathian traders had brought
with them something far more valuable than gold or spices or
precious stones.
Ternathians had been the first to
harness the Talents of the mind. Legend had it that Erthain the
Great, the semi-mythical founder of the House of Calirath, had
been the very first Talent. Andrin took that with a hefty lump of
skeptical salt, but there was no question that Ternath was, indeed,
the birthplace of the Talents. The telepathy of the Voices,
Precognition, Mapping, the prescient Glimpses which were the
heritage and curse of Ternathian royalty, Telekinesis, Distance
Viewing—all of them had been developed and nurtured in
Ternath, and then bequeathed to the children of Ternathia.
Intermarriage had carried those
Talents throughout the sprawling Empire. Eventually, they had
spread far beyond Ternathia's borders, through other
intermarriages, and today their possession wove throughout all
Sharona, like a gleaming net of precious gold.
Yet the world had turned and
changed, until, eventually, the vast territory under direct
Ternathian rule could no longer be administered at an affordable
cost. Ultimately, a Ternathian emperor had made the decision to
set free those provinces the Empire could no longer afford to
govern. Andrin had always been glad Ternathia's borders had
shrunk not from the fire of rebellion, or the crumbling of internal
decay, but because her ancestors had been wise enough to return
control of its far-flung provinces to the people who lived there.
That was the reason the wealthy
Kingdom of Shurkhal and the many smaller kingdoms which
shared its cultural heritage were once again Shurkhal and her sister
states, just as the Harkalian states were once again sovereign, with
legal bonds to no one but themselves. It was better that way.
Andrin knew that. Not only because her tutors—including
her father and mother—had taught her so, but because she
could see it for herself.
It was worse than folly to grip
something one could no longer afford to keep, simply for the
perverse joy of possession. It was cruel to do so, and cruel to hold
people in bondage. Had they wanted to remain Ternathian, she
thought, they would doubtless have found a way to make it
profitable for Ternathia to keep them. But only a few kingdoms or
republics or principalities had refused their freedom when it was
offered.
Ternathia's empire had shrunk
steadily, and for the most part gracefully, and those who ruled the
Ternathian Empire had retained their humanity in the process.
Andrin Calirath was proud to be part of that lineage, proud to be
the daughter of Ternathia's current Emperor, who still ruled five
hundred and seventeen million souls, give or take a few hundred
thousand. And she was proud that even as they had taken back
their freedom, Ternathia's one-time provinces had retained much
of what Ternath had brought them. Proud of their independence
and individuality, yes, but also mindful of thousands of years of
shared history and the common heritage which continued to bind
them together, as well.
After Ternathia and Farnalia, the
next largest "empires," if the term could be used, were the
Arpathians of the Septentrion, famous for furs, amber, vast herds
of horses, and nomadic warriors, and Uromathia.
In reality, there was no such
thing as an "Arpathian Empire"—the Septs were far too
fiercely independent for anything that centralized—but the
Septentrion formed a recognizable union of cultures, religion, and
political interests. It gave all the Septs representation, enforced the
peace between them, and dominated the immense sweep of land
from the Ibral Sea to the Scurlis Sea, four thousand miles to the
east.
South of Arpathia lay the tangled
kingdoms of the Uromathian culture. Those kingdoms included
Eniath, whose fierce deserts had given rise to a people with a love
of horses and hawks that rivaled Andrin's own, as well as to
genuine empires and several smaller independent states. The larger
of the two empires was the Uromathian Empire itself, which had
given the entire culture its name and rivaled modern Ternathia in
size.
The smaller Hinorean Empire
was no welterweight, but it couldn't match its larger neighbor,
Uromathia, in size or wealth. Uromathians tended to produce
enormous population densities, far greater than Ternathia's or,
indeed, than the rest of Sharona in general. There were so many
Uromathians, in fact, that large numbers of them had migrated to
the new universes discovered beyond the portals.
Andrin had never met any
Uromathians in person, although she'd seen a handful of envoys
who'd come to Hawkwing Palace on official business. They were
an exotic people, but far smaller than most Ternathians. Andrin
had been taller than any of the male Uromathians she'd seen, which
doubtless would have made them uncomfortable had they actually
met her face-to-face.
Sweeping her gaze back toward
the west, she skipped over the triangular jut of land that was
Harkala and its sister states, once part of Ternathia but longe since
independent once more. The long Ricathian coastline led her eyes
up past Shurkhal—another former Ternathian province,
famous for its vast stretches of uninhabitable desert—and
the Grand Ternathian Canal, linking the Mbisi and the Finger Sea.
Then her gaze reached the
portion of the map north of Shurkhal, along the Mbisi's eastern
shore, where the nation of Othmaliz lay between the peoples of the
west and the peoples of the east. Like Shurkhal and Harkala,
Othmaliz had once been part of Ternathia's empire. Also like
Shurkhal and Harkala, Othmaliz had returned to native rule when
Ternathia withdrew from the eastern half of its empire.
Andrin's gaze stopped there, for
in Othmaliz, lay Tajvana.
Her skin tingled with the strange
fire of her still-undefined Glimpse as she moved her eyes past the
long, narrow, knife-like promontory known as Ibral's Blade, which
ran parallel to the incredibly long and narrow Ibral Straits. That
narrow passage of water opened up into the Sea of Ibral, which
lapped against the city's ancient shoreline, and her heart burned
with a strange passion she stared at the name on the map.
Tajvana.
The very name was magical,
imbued with a history so deep it could hardly be grasped. Capital
city of Ternathia for twenty-three centuries. Beauty beyond
imagining. Ancient power, unrivaled in the history of mankind.
Wealth almost beyond calculation, because it had been wealthy for
so many millennia. Tajvana, which could be reached from the west
only through the Ibral Straits, straddled the even narrower Ylani
Straits, beyond which lay the dark and chilly waters of the Ylani
Sea.
The Ylani was totally
landlocked, save for that one tiny outlet, through Tajvana.
Historically, whoever controlled the Ylani Straits had controlled
the rich trade routes between Ricathia and Ternathia in the west,
and Arpathia and Uromathia in the east. The importance of that
trade had begun to fade as colonization had spread from Chairifon
across the globe of Sharona, opening new markets, new sources of
raw materials and goods, but only until the Larakesh Portal had
suddenly appeared in the mountains just west of the sleepy little
Ylani Sea seaport of the same name some eighty years ago. The
only way for shipping to reach Larakesh from the rest of the world
was through the Ibral and Ylani Straits, which meant—once
again—through Tajvana. The ancient city had become, if
possible, even wealthier than before, and the Portal Authority's
decision to locate its headquarters there had restored it to the very
first rank of important cities. Yet it was still the sheer history of
the city which resonated so deeply with Andrin's very blood and
sinew. Tajvana was unique, the one city on the face of Sharona
which had known both financial and political power, virtually
without interruption, for at least five thousand years. The city was
as old as Ternathia itself, a jewel the Ternathian emperors had
voluntarily given up.
Despite Andrin's understanding
of the economic and political reasons behind Ternathia's
abandonment of Tajvana, she'd always felt that the city's loss had
diminished not merely the borders of the Empire, but its prestige
and culture, as well. To Andrin's way of thinking, at least, it was a
matter of national pride—or, more precisely, national
shame—that her ancestors had abandoned the richest and
most culturally diverse city in the world. She'd often wondered if
the people of Tajvana missed the Ternathians and the power and
prestige the Empire had brought to their city, or if they'd been glad
to see the people who'd conquered them so long ago finally return
home.
Andrin had wanted to see
Tajvana for as long as she could remember, which was unusual
for her. She didn't normally chase after ghosts, or yearn for lost
glory. But Tajvana was different. It
felt . . . wrong, somehow, to live in
this chill stone palace in cool, rainy Ternath, when whispers of
memory ran through her blood, echoes of warm wind in her hair,
the warmth of sun-heated marble beneath her hands as she leaned
against a carved balustrade, drinking down the glorious light that
washed across the city like a tide, along with the scent of exotic
flowers, or the rattle of palm fronds against a star-brushed night
sky—
Andrin blinked and focused on
the Privy Council Chamber once more. Such clear memories of a
place she'd never seen would have been disturbing, had she not
been Calirath. But the blood in her veins was the same blood
which had flowed through the veins of Tajvana's rulers for
centuries, and her family's Talent often manifested odd little
secondary Talents no one could quite explain. She had visited
Tajvana in her dreams, walked its narrow streets through the
memories carried in her blood and, quite possibly, her Talent, and
she longed to actually go to Tajvana, just to see how accurate
those whispers of memory really were.
She sighed, aware that it was
highly unlikely she would ever travel there, and yet burningly
conscious of the need. Somehow, despite the unlikeliness, she'd
always secretly believed that one day she would see
Tajvana. Yet she was an emperor's daughter. Her safety and her
duties took precedence over any urge she might have had to make
the long journey. And once she married—in what would
doubtlessly be a politically advantageous marriage, whether the
suitor was a Ternathian noble or a prince of some other
land—her duty would be to remain at home and raise
somebody's heirs. She regretted that more than any other part of
her life, yet duty came first when one was born Calirath. And at
least she could be intensely glad that Janaki would be the one to
rule Ternathia after their father.
She felt a familiar stir of relief at
that thought, but the relief was matched by a stronger prickle of
her discomfiting Talent, which brought her back to the worrisome
question of why her father had insisted on her presence at the
Privy Council meeting.
Most of the Councilors had
arrived, but there were still a few holes in the ranks. First
Councilor Taje was deep in conversation with her father, their
voices too low for her to hear, when Alazon Yanamar, Zindel's
Privy Voice, entered the chamber and made her way straight to the
Emperor. Yanamar was not a standing member of the Privy
Council, although she frequently attended its meetings, for
obvious reasons. But today, she carried a strange, disquieting aura
with her, and as Andrin watched them—her father, Taje, and
Yanamar—she tried not to shiver.
It got harder as Zindel and the
Privy Voice stepped into the farthest corner of the room, standing
alone while Yanamar delivered whatever message had pulled them
away from breakfast.
The Emperor's face drained of
color, and Andrin's palms went cold and damp against her velvet
skirt. Yanamar's trained face gave no indication of what the
message had contained, but Zindel's eyes had gone dark and
frighteningly shuttered, with a look Andrin had never seen in them.
The Privy Voice glanced once
toward Andrin, not unkindly, but without a hint of the thoughts
behind her shuttered grey eyes. Not sure what else to do,
Andrin nodded politely back to Yanamar from where she'd seated
herself in one of the chairs along the wall, rather than one of those
at the council table. Her father glanced up, as if the movement of
her head had drawn his attention, and gave a slight frown. But he
didn't speak, so she remained where she was, on the sidelines,
where she belonged. She was here to observe and learn, not
participate. At least, she didn't think she was expected to
participate. She was usually adept at reading her father's nonverbal
signals, but today she was unsure of anything except the fear that
buzzed beneath her skin, sharper now than ever.
So she watched and listened as
the remaining privy councilors hurried into the room, summoned
from whatever tasks had been interrupted by the command to
assemble. The First Councilor was by far the most composed of
the lot; Andrin couldn't remember ever having seen Shamir Taje
lose his composure. He was like a five-masted barque, she
mused—ponderous and steady, solid and dependable,
whatever the weather between him and his destination. As a child,
she'd thought him duller than the endless Ternathian rain; as a
nearly grown woman, with a better appreciation for the
requirements of statesmanship, she recognized him for what he
truly was: an utterly indispensable advisor, whose solid judgment
and unflappable resolve were precisely what the Ternathian
Empire required.
She wondered if he even
suspected how well she understood that, and decided the
likelihood was vanishingly small. That thought caused her to
smile to herself, which arrested the attention of several Privy
Councilors, who paused in the middle of speculative
conversations to wonder what their Emperor's daughter knew that
they didn't. They also wondered why she was in the chamber at all.
Most decided they would really
rather not know, since the only reasons they could drum up to
explain her presence were uniformly bad ones. Some bordered on
catastrophic, so the Councilors eyed one another and kept
conversation light in an attempt to steady jangled nerves until
everyone had arrived.
It took what seemed to Andrin to
be an agonizingly long time before the last Councilor hurried into
the room, out of breath from having run most of the way, and her
father stepped to his place at the head of the long table. The table's
ornate inlay gleamed in the lamplight, which was necessary,
because the Privy Council Chamber had no windows. The thick
oak tabletop's warm honey-gold was inlaid with darker wood,
ivory, silver, and even mother of pearl in beautiful patterns. The
ancient eight-rayed sunburst imperial crest of Ternathia took up
the entire center of the vast table, glittering with precious metals
and gemstones, and faithful representations of trees, flowers, and
fruits from all across the vast sweep of Ancient Ternathia swept
around its periphery.
The Councilors moved quickly
to claim their own assigned chairs, but remained standing while
the tall, reed-thin chaplain intoned the brief benediction which
preceded all official Imperial functions. His voice was
surprisingly deep, coming from such a frail-looking chest, as he
requested guidance from the double Triad which had watched over
the Empire for five millennia. The Emperor stood quietly,
respectfully attentive, as he prayed, but the moment the ritual was
completed, Zindel seated himself in the chair that had stood at the
head of this table for three centuries, which allowed the
councilors to sit down, as well.
Zindel XXIV's massive oak chair
was as intricately decorated as the table, with matching inlays,
including the glittering imperial crest which shone above and
behind his head and the carved image of the famous Winged
Crown of Ternathia which formed the top of its solid back. One
thing Zindel chan Calirath's ancestors had understood very well
was the power of symbolism. He was no less aware of it himself,
and knew he would have to call on all of that power to shepherd
his people through the coming crisis. He settled into the cushioned
comfort of the chair, lingering briefly on the realization that this
chair was a good deal more comfortable than many of his duties,
then spoke in a brisk tone.
"Ladies, gentlemen, thank you
for arriving so promptly. We've received an urgent message from
the Portal Authority. First Director Orem Limana has invoked a
worldwide Conclave, scheduled for this afternoon at one-thirty,
Ternathian time."
"Conclave, Your
Majesty?" Ekthar Shilvass, Treasury Councilor, repeated sharply.
"That's right, Ekthar. I've called
this session to discuss the reason for it. We don't have much time
to prepare, and I need advice, my friends—advice and
information. Unless I'm very seriously mistaken, Sharona is at
war."
A shocked babble exploded
around the table. Zindel had expected it, and he used the
momentary confusion to glance at his daughter. Andrin had jerked
bolt upright in her chair, her face white, as the import of his words
hit home . . . along with the reason
for her own presence. Then Shamir Taje rapped his knuckles
sharply against the table in a brusque signal for silence.
"Your Imperial Majesty," he
said, using the deliberate formality to remind the other Councilors
of proper protocol during an imperial crisis, "the Privy Voice gave
me only part of the message from Director Limana when she asked
me to bring you here. Perhaps you would clarify my most urgent
question."
Zindel inclined his head, positive
he already knew what the question would be.
"With whom are we at war,
Your Majesty?" Taje asked, and the Emperor met his old friend's
gaze levelly.
"That, unfortunately, is the
question of the hour. No one knows."
"But—" Captain of the
Army Thalyar chan Gristhane, the Ternathian Army's uniformed
commander, blurted out, "how can that be? If we don't know
who we're fighting, how do we know we're at war with them?"
"We don't know who
yet," Zindel said grimly, "but unless the gods themselves
intervene, we are most definitely at war, ladies and gentlemen. At
war with someone who's slaughtered one of our survey crews,
apparently to the last man." He paused, then added harshly, "And
woman."
Stunned silence held the room
for three full heartbeats. A swift glance at his daughter caught the
sudden knife-sharp grief in her eyes as his last two words
registered, and she began to weep, silently, biting her lip to keep
the sound from distracting the Council. He was fiercely proud of
her—and more frightened for her than she would
ever know.
Then he turned his attention back
to his Councilors and explained—briefly but fully—
what had happened. The Privy Voice answered question after
question, as best she could, but there was a limit to what she could
tell them. There were no answers to most of the questions, and
Zindel finally interrupted the fruitless queries.
"Rather than use precious time
speculating in the dark about people about whom we know
nothing, I would suggest turning our attention to Ternathia's role
in this afternoon's Conclave. The leaders of every nation on
Sharona and those of our largest colony worlds will meet via the
EVN, and, at that meeting, we'll have to forge some kind of plan
to meet this emergency. We've been attacked, and we must assume
we'll be attacked again, given the savagery these people have
already demonstrated."
"I agree we must prepare for the
worst, Your Majesty," Shamir Taje said. "At the same time,
however, surely the possibility that this attack was a mistake, or
that it was carried out by some rogue junior officer, must also
exist. If we assume war is inevitable, may we not make it so?"
Most people would not have
recognized the true question in the First Councilor's voice. But
that was because most people hadn't known him as long as Zindel
chan Calirath had. He recognized exactly how surprised Taje was
to hear his Emperor, of all people, sounding so ready to embrace
war and so dismissive of the chance for peace.
"Old friend," Zindel said quietly,
"I pray from the bottom of my heart that war is not
inevitable. I would give literally anything, for reasons of which
you cannot even dream at this moment, for that to be true. But,"
his expression was grim, his eyes dark, "for the last week—
since, in fact, shortly before this message was sent upon its way to
us—both Princess Andrin and I have been experiencing a
major Glimpse."
The Council Chamber was
deathly silent, for these were Ternathian Councilors.
"Nothing I've Glimpsed at this
time says war is absolutely inescapable," Zindel continued in that
same, quiet tone. "But everything I've Glimpsed shows
fighting, bloodshed, death on a scale Sharona hasn't seen in
centuries."
Andrin's face was carved from
ivory as she heard her father's deep, resonant voice putting the
nightmare imagery of her own Glimpses into words that tasted of
blood and iron.
"I've Glimpsed men with
weapons I cannot even describe to you," the Emperor told his
silent Council. "I've Glimpsed creatures out of the depths of
nightmare, and cities in flames. Not all Glimpses come to pass.
No one knows that better than someone born of my house. But it
is my duty as Emperor of Ternathia to prepare for the possibility
that this one will come to pass."
"I . . .
understand, Your Majesty," Taje said softly into the ringing
silence when he paused. "Tell us how we may serve the House of
Calirath."
"We must understand from the
beginning that the other heads of state won't have shared my
Glimpse," Zindel said. "Most of them will recognize the potential
catastrophe looming before us, but none of them will have Seen
what I've Seen, recognize just how serious a threat this has the
potential to become. Some of them will want to procrastinate and
try to dodge their responsibilities, and others will bicker about
protocol, precedence, and political advantage. Some may urge that
we do nothing to 'exacerbate' the situation, while others will
demand action, especially when the details of what happened
to our survey crew become known to them. Still others may
hope—as I do, however unlikely I feel it to be—to
find a means to defuse the crisis through diplomacy and restraint.
But whatever our views, however much we may agree or disagree
with one another, we'll still have to come to agreement on some
unified response, and Ternathia is the oldest, largest, and
wealthiest empire on Sharona. As such, we must plan to play a
leadership role in shaping that response.
"I need recommendations for
Ternathia's most effective role. I know my own thoughts on the
subject, but I want to hear yours, as well. All of them, no matter
how seemingly foolish. You may come up with something
important that I haven't considered. And I need facts, my
friends—data on Ternathia's preparedness for war. The
Empire hasn't actually fought a war in centuries. Skirmishes with
claim jumpers or pirates in new universes hardly qualify—
that sort of fighting doesn't come close to what I fear we may find
ourselves facing. We may need to mobilize every fighting man in
the Imperial forces. Indeed, we may even need to expand the size
of our military. Drastically."
"But, Your Majesty," Nanthee
Silbeth, Councilor for Education, protested, "we have the largest
Army and Navy on Sharona!"
Zindel opened his mouth, but the
First Councilor responded before the Emperor could speak.
"Yes, Nanthee, we do. But look
at the population distribution. Most of the universes we've
discovered are still virtually empty, and we've been exploring for
eighty years. If we put every fighting man from every
military organization on Sharona into the field tomorrow, shipped
them all out by rail and troop ship, we still wouldn't have the
manpower to guard all those universes, let alone mass the strength
needed to hold them in a sustained, pitched battle."
"That's true enough, Shamir,"
chan Gristhane said, "and I certainly agree that we're probably
going to need far more military manpower than anyone on
Sharona currently has. At the same time, there's not going to be
any point trying to cover all of the universes we've
explored.
"First, because unless new
portals form in critical places at exactly the wrong time, there's
not going to be any way for the other side to magically bypass the
portals we already hold. Believe me, offensive action on fronts as
restricted as those portals permit is going to be very, very
expensive, unless one side or the other holds an absolutely
crushing advantage in terms of the effectiveness of its weapons.
"Second, even if that weren't
true, if we put every single man of military age into uniform, we
still wouldn't have even a fraction of the men we would need to
garrison every universe against attack."
"You're right, Thalyar," the
Emperor said. "And it's also true that the sheer distances involved
in getting from here to the frontier, or the other way round, mean
there's not much realistic possibility of either side scoring some
sort of lightning-fast breakthrough. Not unless, as you say, it turns
out that one of us has a decisive advantage over the other when it
comes to our soldiers' weapons.
"At the same time, we don't
know yet who these people are. Worse, we don't know how
many of them there are, how many universes they hold, how
much population density to expect in their colonized
worlds. We could be facing a civilization two or three or even ten
times the size of our own." Zindel shook his head. "Shamir is
absolutely right in at least one respect. If this does turn into a real
war, it's going to be a potentially long and nasty one, and I doubt
very much that our existing military is going to be large enough
for the job."
Dead silence greeted that
assessment, until, finally, Brithum Dulan, Councilor for Internal
Affairs, cleared his throat.
"Your Majesty, may the Council
inquire as to your reasons for including Grand Princess Andrin in
this meeting?"
Andrin abruptly found herself
the focus of every worried eye. She couldn't breathe, waiting for
her father's answer, for the words she feared would seal her doom.
Even though she couldn't imagine what that doom might be, she
was terrified of it. And then, to her surprise—and the
obvious surprise of the Council, as well—her father rose
from his throne-like chair and crossed the room to take her chilled
hands in his own.
"I'm sorry, child," he said gently,
"but you are heir-secondary, and Janaki's Marines are stationed
only two universes from where our people were slaughtered.
That's why I have no choice but to include you in our policy
debates. If anything happens to
Janaki . . . "
He watched her closely as his
words sank in. Her cheeks were ice-pale, and her fingers flinched
in his grip, but she didn't indulge in histrionics. Not that he'd
expected her to. She was only a barely grown girl, not yet eighteen,
who might well have been forgiven tears or impassioned denials
that she might need to step into her brother's shoes as heir. But she
was also a Calirath. She simply gripped his hands, swallowed hard,
and nodded.
"Yes, Father." Her voice came
out low but creditably steady. "I understand. I'll do my best to be
prepared if—"
She faltered and swallowed
again.
"I'll do my best, sir." She met his
gaze levelly. "If I might suggest it, I could organize a military
widows and orphans committee. I'm afraid it may be needed." He
looked into her eyes and saw the dark shadows of his own
Glimpse. "And I could help Mama oversee the travel
arrangements," she added.
"Travel arrangements?" he
quirked one eyebrow.
"To Tajvana." She frowned at his
expression of surprise. "We are going to Tajvana, aren't we? For
the face-to-face Conclave after this preliminary one? It's
necessary, and it just feels . . . right,
holding it there. It's where the Portal Authority is headquartered,
and we can't do a proper job of meeting this emergency just
through the Voices."
She was stumbling over her
words now, as if they were as much of a surprise to her as to
anyone else. Yet there was no doubt in her tone, no question. It
was obvious to Zindel that she was trying to logically frame what
must have been a strong Glimpse. One that not only matched his,
but dovetailed with the latest message he'd received from his Privy
Voice, as well.
"No," he agreed, "we can't do
this entirely through our Voices. But before we consider sailing to
Tajvana or anywhere else, we must prepare for this
Conclave. So, you'll join the Conclave with the rest of the privy
Council. And I want you to do more than listen as we prepare for
it. Your suggestion about assisting widows and orphans is a good
one. There are undoubtedly going to be more of them than any of
us would wish, and they'll need more assistance than ordinary
pensions, before this thing is over. So if you have any
questions, or other ideas, I want to hear them. Is that clear?"
She nodded, eyes stunned.
"Good."
He led her to the table and seated
her firmly, making it clear to everyone—including
her—that she was now a formal member of the Privy
Council of the Ternathian Empire. She took her seat gingerly, as
though poised for flight, but she held herself straight and kept her
chin up. He was so proud of her it hurt.
"Now then," he said, resuming
his ornate seat, "shall we discuss our readiness to fight a multi-
universal war for survival?"
Chapter Twenty-Three
"I'm sorry, but Mr. Kavilkan is in
a meeting and can't be disturbed."
Jali Kavilkan's private secretary
spoke with more than a hint of frost, and when frost appeared in
Linar Wiltash's voice, most men cringed. Davir Perthis didn't. He
was SUNN's Chief Voice, and he was too busy resisting the
compulsion to tear out his hair with both hands to waste time
cringing. Instead, he leaned forward, planted both hands on her
desk, and thrust his jaw out.
"If you don't disturb him for
this, you'll be looking for another job by supper. Move, damn it!"
Wiltash's eyes widened. Then she
stood, spine stiff with outrage, crossed her palatial office with
obviously irritated strides, and tapped at the door of the
sanctum sanctorum of the Sharonian Universal News
Network.
"What?" The predictable
bellow rattled the door on its hinges, and Wiltash eased it open
just a crack.
"Voice Perthis says it's urgent."
"It had fucking well better be!
Get in here, Perthis!"
The Voice scooted, and he felt a
sudden spike of satisfaction as he stepped through the door. The
meeting he'd interrupted was providential, because Tarlin Bolsh,
SUNN's division chief for international news, sat across the ship-
sized desk from the executive manager of the largest news
organization on Sharona. Or, in the entire multiverse, for that
matter.
Jali Kavilkan didn't seem to feel
there was anything providential about the moment, however.
Kavilkan lacked any kind of physical grace. Short and broad, with
the square, heavy-child face, he moved as ponderously as a
Ternathian battleship, overflowed any chair Perthis had ever seen
him sit in, and somehow contrived to loom larger than men a foot
taller than him. And, at the moment, he had his patented bellicose,
take-no-prisoners glare focused directly upon one Davir Perthis.
"Well? What the hell's so
godsdamned important?" he demanded.
Perthis closed the door behind
him, pulling until the latch clicked with reassuring solidity.
Wiltash had ears in every pore of her anatomy, which she used to
keep Kavilkan informed of everything that happened in SUNN in's
headquarters. For once, though, Perthis was privy to information
she didn't have yet, and he wanted to keep it that way.
Once he was certain the door
was closed, he met Kavilkan's angry stare with a level gaze of his
own.
"Sharona's at war, sir," he said
flatly.
"What?" Kavilkan's
bellow actually lifted him to his feet, jerked up like some
immense marionette. It came out half-strangled, the oddest sound
Perthis had ever heard from him, and he half-crouched across his
desk.
"Just what the hell do you mean
by that?" he demanded an instant later.
"Exactly what I said, sir. We're at
war. One of our survey crews has been slaughtered by soldiers
from an unknown human civilization. The Portal Authority hasn't
released the official word yet, and it won't release details
until families are notified, but Darl Elivath's got confirmation
from three of his best sources."
He paused briefly, and Kavilkan
jerked a brusque nod for him to continue. Elivath was SUNN's
senior Portal Authority correspondent. His strength as a Voice
was much too limited for service in the long-range Voice
network, but his sensitivity and ability to capture nuances
was enormous. And his talent for cultivating inside sources was
legendary. No one could remember the last time Darl Elivath had
been willing to go on the record with one of his sources and been
wrong.
"According to Darl, there were
no survivors from our crew." Perthis heard the harshness, perhaps
even the denial, in his own voice as he continued. "Orem Limana
has blood in his eye, and he's already redeploying the PAAF. And
that's not all. He's ordered a full Voice Conclave on his own
authority. Every head of state on Sharona—and all of our
inner-ring colony universes—got the word maybe twenty
minutes ago. The Conclave's set for three-thirty, Tajvana time,
over the EVN."
For three solid heartbeats,
Kavilkan stood rooted in place, as if Perthis had just turned him
into stone, and Tarlin Bolsh's jaw eddied towards the floor. Then
the executive manager shook himself like a rhino heaving up out
of a dust bath somewhere on the Ricathian plains.
"Darl is sure of this?" he
demanded.
"I wouldn't be here if he
weren't," Perthis replied. "And you know Darl."
"What about confidentiality?"
Bolsh asked. Perthis looked at him, and the international news
chief grimaced. "You know what the Authority will do to us if
they think we've breached Voice confidentiality on something like
this, Davir."
"This is Darl we're
talking about, Tarlin," Perthis more than half-snapped.
"I know that," Bolsh replied. His
tone wasn't exactly placating, but there was definitely
a . . . soothing edge to it. Perthis'
defense of his Voices was proverbial. "I'm not saying he has
breached confidentiality; I'm just asking if we're in a position
to prove he hasn't if the wheels come off."
"I'm sure he'll be able to
demonstrate it for any Voice Tribunal he might have to face,"
Perthis replied, and Kavilkan nodded sharply.
"That's good enough for me," he
pronounced. Then he frowned, finally straightening his spine while
the acute brain behind his eyes spun up to full speed.
"Three-thirty, you said?"
"Yes, sir." Perthis nodded. "And
they're going to play hell getting a conclave set up that quickly,
too."
"You're telling me?" Kavilkan
snorted. "But the question's how soon we break the story."
"I think we have to be a little
cautious with this one, Jali," Bolsh said. The executive manager
looked at him, and the division chief shrugged. "If it's big enough
for Limana to call a conclave, then it's really, really big. It's not
just a question of pissing people off if we break the story sooner
than they want; it's a question of knowing what the hell we're
talking about before we a splash a report like this over the entire
planet. At the moment, all we've really got is Darl's heads-up, and
with all due respect for his normal reliability, I think the
possibility that the entire planet might find itself at war with an
entirely new trans-temporal civilization needs to be thoroughly
checked out before we go public."
Kavilkan scowled, but he didn't
jump down Bolsh's throat, either. Instead, he squinted his eyes in
deep and obvious thought for several seconds. Then he nodded to
himself and refocused his attention on Perthis.
"Tarlin's right. We've got to
doublecheck everything on this. Is there any sign anyone else's
picked up on the same story?"
"Not yet," Perthis said a bit
unwillingly. This was the biggest scoop of any newsman's career,
and the thought of sitting on it for one second longer than he had
to was almost more than he could stand. "It won't be long, if they
haven't already, though," he pointed out. "Limana's used the EVN
to set up a conclave. The fact that he activated the EVN at all is
going to become public knowledge pretty damned quickly. Once
that happens, other people are going to be digging, too."
"Granted," Kavilkan agreed.
"And I'm not saying we don't start setting up for it right this
minute."
He yanked open a file drawer and
hauled out a folder Perthis recognized as SUNN's crisis-
communications tree—the list of names of every SUNN
office on Sharona, the men and women who represented the first
tier of people they would need to contact. Each of those people, in
turn, had his or her own list of people to contact, comprising the
second tier in the system that would send a priority message
worldwide within minutes, via SUNN's own Voicenet.
"Pass the preliminary alert now,"
he instructed the Chief Voice, handing across the file. "And start
roughing voicecast copy, too. Go with two versions. Number one
assumes we have a clear scoop; number two assumes we're neck-
and-neck with at least one of the minors."
Perthis grimaced but nodded. It
wasn't like Kavilkan to play it this cautious, but by the same
token, this was the biggest news story in at least eighty years. It
wasn't too surprising that the executive manager was being a bit
careful. And, when Perthis came right down to it, none of the
other news services could compare with SUNN's coverage and
penetration. Over seventy percent of the home universe's
population—and closer to eighty-five percent of the home
universe's Talented population—were SUNN subscribers,
directly or through one of SUNN's many affiliates. Even if one of
the minor services managed to break the story first, SUNN's
massive, well-oiled organization would overwhelm the
competition in short order with the sheer depth of its own
coverage.
"Go ahead and work up both
copy sets using everything Darl has," Kavilkan continued. "If there
hasn't been any official release by three o'clock, Tajvana, then we
break the story with whatever we been able to confirm."
"Yes, sir," Perthis said, with
considerably more enthusiasm, and handed over a hastily scribbled
sheet of paper. "I've actually made a start on that already. I thought
we'd use this for the first announcement, then do a Voice patch to
the Authority HQ. Darl's standing by there now, with a reporter, in
case we want to use visuals. And I think we want a talking head
standing by, too. Maybe a retired survey crewman looking give us
an expert opinion on what's going on out there. It'll give us a good
human interest angle, too."
"Who?" Kavilkan demanded,
then answered his own question. "Gortho Sandrick," he said,
naming the man Perthis had already chosen, and switched his
forceful gaze back to Bolsh. "He's in your division, isn't he,
Tarlin? Wasn't Gortho a survey crew chief before he joined
SUNN?"
"For twelve years," Bolsh agreed
with a nod. "Before he broke both legs so badly in that landslide
and had to retire."
Kavilkan grunted in
acknowledgment, his eyes scanning Perthis' copy.
"Yes," he muttered under his
breath. "Good job, Davir." He handed back the sheet. "Put
Grandma Sholli on to conduct the interview with Gortho. This
story needs a woman's touch, and Sholli brings out the best in
human interest elements. She's everyone's favorite grandmother.
And use Nithan Dursh to anchor the main voicecast. He's got the
physical presence it takes to keep people calm."
"As calm as we can keep
people, with news like that to report," Bolsh growled, and
Kavilkan swore.
"The last thing Sharona needs is
a bunch of damned fools running around in a state of total terror.
We've got to minimize panic as best we can, and Nithan's our best
bet." He ran a hand through iron-gray hair. "Gods and thunders,
who the fuck did we run into out there? Well, don't stand
there trying to answer a question nobody can answer yet. Move it!
And Davir—"
"Sir?"
"Damned good work.
Tarlin, I'll want banner headlines on every newspaper SUNN
prints. Go ahead and start setting that up now—we're not
going to be able to get a special edition out before three, anyway,
so we might as well get to it now. But tell everyone, down to the
typesetters, that if anyone leaks a single word of this
before I personally say to, he—or she—will never
work in this business again."
"Understood," Bolsh said. And,
like everyone else, he knew Jali Kavilkan wasn't given to
hyperbole when it came to things like this.
"Drag as much information as
we can out of the Authority. Use smart speculation on what they
don't have—or won't give us—but make damned
sure we distinguish clearly between official information and
speculation. And, while you're doing that—"
Perthis didn't stay to hear the rest
of Kavilkan's instructions to Bolsh. His job was the Voicenet
well, not newsprint, and he had one hell of a job on his hands.
He rushed across the
dumbfounded secretary's office without so much as glancing at
her. He'd spent forty-three years in the news business. In that time,
nothing—not even the Juhali eruption—had
even approached this one in sheer magnitude. He was already
spinning out follow-up voicecast ideas as he ran through SUNN's
hallowed corridors, planning which SUNN Voices to put at the
disposal of reporters in imperial and national capitals to cover the
political repercussions this was bound to have.
Under other circumstances,
Perthis would have felt euphoric over the scoop they were about
to grab. Instead, his mind ran in frantic circles,
wondering—as Kavilkan had—just what it was
they'd run into "out there." Not to mention how nasty the other
side intended to get. Perthis wasn't accustomed to the hollow
feeling in his stomach, a disquieting sensation that he finally
identified as fear. Stark, raw, ugly fear. Fear of the
unknown, of a human civilization that shouldn't even exist. He
wasn't used to feeling fear, and he didn't like it. In fact, he
hated it.
He vastly preferred the outrage
simmering around the edges of that fear. Outrage that anyone
would dare to attack Sharonians. Fury that marauding soldiers had
slaughtered Sharonian civilians without a shred of pity or
human decency. Such monstrously uncivilized behavior deserved
nothing but the most hardfisted military response. Sharona needed
to throw their violence right back into their teeth. He bared his
own teeth, and his eyes were hard. Rage was an ugly emotion, but
it was far better than fear or terror. People needed to demand
justice and reprisals, not to cower in stunned panic like a pack of
quaking rabbits.
He grimaced at the thought. He
knew politicians. Knew them well enough to predict political
disaster. He couldn't believe the governments of the world would
voluntarily set aside their squabbles and do what had to be done.
The Portal Authority's First Director was determined enough, but
the Authority couldn't handle a crisis of this magnitude. It didn't
have the authority it would need to commandeer men and supplies
from every corner of the globe, every universe they currently
possessed.
Sharona needed a world
government—a strong world government. One
headed by someone with the experience to run a massive group of
diverse people. Someone with a tradition of strong military
leadership, yet with an equally strong and unshakable tradition of
justice. There was only one name on Davir Perthis' short mental
list of people qualified for that job. But there were two names
topping his list of people who would want that
job—and one of them couldn't be trusted with a child's
milk money, let alone the reins of world power.
They'll be coming to Tajvana, he told himself. They'll
hash it out amongst themselves, what to do with the
crisis, what to do about who makes the decisions when decisions
have to be made fast.
Tajvana was the logical location
for such a meeting. Almost all the international—and
interdimensional—organizations were headquartered there,
not to mention the Portal Authority itself, and Tajvana had the
infrastructure to handle a gathering of that size. And it carried the
enormous weight of precedence, as well. What other city had ever
been the capital of an empire that had covered or colonized two-
thirds of the world?
And when they came to Tajvana,
they would give Davir Perthis his golden opportunity.
It was time to rouse the public to
action, to hit the world's leaders with a deluge of demands for
prompt, forceful action and strong, unimpeachably honest
world leadership, and a cold smile touched his mouth,
displacing the grim set of his lips. As a SUNN division chief, he
had the power to make the public issue those demands,
without people even realizing he'd done it. Savvy SUNN
executives had used that power time and again over the decades.
Perthis fully intended to use it, as well—and for a far
greater and far better cause than it had ever been used before.
Then he turned the final corner
and he was back in his own domain, bellowing for his staff.
People scurried like ants, and he flung himself into the
comfortable chair behind his own desk and started jotting down
hasty, time-critical notes while other people came running toward
his office.
His pen moved with furious
speed as he focused his mind totally on the project in
hand . . . and very carefully didn't
think about his sister's only son, who was on a survey crew
somewhere "out there."
Traveling by ETS was unnerving.
One moment, Halidar Kinshe
was looking at the console where the ETS Porter sat, eyes closed
in fierce concentration as she prepared to teleport them from
Tajvana to the ETS station in Sethdona, fourteen hundred-odd
miles away. And then there was a moment of overwhelming
dizziness, wrenching nausea, and an indescribable
sensation—as if he'd slipped between the empty spaces
between one thought and the next.
And then he was swaying, dizzy
and shaken, on another platform, blinking into the eyes of a totally
different person.
"No, don't try to take a step just
yet," the young man said as he balanced Kinshe carefully on his
unsteady feet. "Wait until your equilibrium returns. Your inner ear
still thinks it's in Tajvana."
Kinshe didn't feel quite so bad
when he saw Samari Wilkon. The big, strapping Faltharian Voice
was almost a foot taller than Kinshe, and he looked decidedly
grey-faced as he leaned heavily on another attendant's shoulder.
"That was, ah, very odd," Kinshe
managed as he finally began to regain his balance and his breath,
and the attendant propping him up smiled.
"That's what most of them say,
sir," the young man assured him.
"And the ones who don't?"
"Are usually on their knees, too
busy throwing up and cursing to say anything." The
attendant's smile turned into a grin, and Kinshe surprised himself
with a genuine chuckle.
"Ready to try a few steps now?"
the younger man asked, and he nodded. The attendant guided him
carefully off the platform and down to the floor. His knees felt
rubbery, but they still worked. By the time they'd reached the other
side of the room, he felt almost normal again, and Wilkon was
right behind him, looking sheepish.
"Your wife is waiting in the
lobby, Mr. Kinshe, and there's a carriage waiting for you, as well,
just outside," the young man said, finally letting go of him to see
if he really could take a few steps on his own. He could. In fact, by
the time he reached the door, he was actually convinced he could
walk out of the ETS station unaided.
"Thank you very much," he said,
gripping the attendant's hand in thanks. "I wish I could tell you
why it was so urgent."
"These teleports usually are, sir,"
the young man said with a smile.
Kinshe nodded, but his
answering smile was more than a little forced. This pleasant
youngster would be finding out soon enough, he thought grimly,
and when he did, he would no longer be smiling, either.
"Ready, Samari?" he asked,
turning to see if the Voice had recovered.
"Yes, sir," the towering
Faltharian nodded. "Let's get this over with, sir. We may have time
to get there first, yet."
Kinshe nodded, opened the door,
and strode briskly through it into the station lobby. His wife,
Alimar, was waiting for him there, her expression anxious. Alimar
had decided not to accompany him to Tajvana this trip because her
caseload was always so heavy this time of year. With the schools
in session, Healers—even relatively minor Talents like his
wife—were in high demand.
Alimar wasn't as skilled or
powerful, in a purely physical sense, as some of the truly
outstanding telepathic Healers. But she had an adept way with the
normal bumps and scrapes that school children managed to
acquire a playground, and her sensitivity to emotional nuances
made her exceptionally valuable working with children, who were
seldom able to fully articulate their feelings. He'd sent word ahead
by Voice, asking her to accompany him today, and warning her
that her particular ability to soothe and comfort would be needed
before this day was over.
She just didn't know how
desperately it would be
needed . . . or why.
He pulled her close and held her
for a long moment, and his embrace tightened as images of
destruction and devastation flickered through his mind. The
thought of some rapacious horde of barbarians rushing through
the portal in Tathawir and the spreading out across the face the
world in a ravening mass, killing and maiming everyone within
reach, filled him with a sudden, icy fear that was all too
real—and personal—as he felt his wife in his arms.
"What is it, Hal?" she asked in a
frightened voice as she tasted his emotions, if not their cause,
through her Talent.
"Not here, love," he murmured.
"Only when we're alone."
She bit her lip, but nodded. She'd
long since been forced to accept that his work in both the Portal
Authority and the Shurkhali Parliament meant there would be
things to which he was privy that he literally could not share with
her. Not without violating his responsibilities to Shurkhal's
independence.
But that, too, was about to
change, Kinshe thought grimly. Unless he very much missed his
guess, Shurkhal would no longer be an independent nation, once
the dust settled and their world got down to the serious business
of meeting this threat. But he couldn't say that, either, so he
guided his wife across the lobby—and faltered to a halt.
Crown Prince Danith Fyysel was
standing beside the door.
"Your Highness?" Kinshe said in
surprise.
"My father felt it appropriate that
I go with you, sir," Danith said, and Kinshe drew a deep breath,
then nodded.
"Thank you, Your Highness." He
managed to smile. "I was afraid your father would insist on
sending a whole retinue us."
The Crown Prince's smile was
fleeting—not surprisingly, given the grim business which
had brought them both here—but it warmed his eyes for a
moment.
"I talked him out of it," he said.
"The Ambassador will be distressed enough, as it is, without
having to cope with a whole roomful of royal retainers fluttering
uselessly about."
"Thank you," Kinshe repeated
with another nod, then inhaled deeply. "I'm told there's a carriage
waiting?"
"Indeed. And an express train, as
well, at Fyysel Station."
Alimar Kinshe's eyes had
widened in deep surprise at sight of the Crown Prince, and they'd
grown still wider while Danith and her husband spoke.
"What is—?" she began,
then closed her lips again, blushing painfully. "Sorry. I won't ask
again."
"Let's get into that carriage,"
Kinshe said. "Once we're on the train, I'll fill you in. Both of you."
The Crown Prince inclined his
head gravely and led the way outside. There was, indeed a
carriage—one of the royal coaches, no less, with a section
of ten Household Cavalry waiting as escort.
"I've arranged to bring it with us
on a special car," he told Kinshe as they approached it, then paused
as a footman opened the door. "No, Mrs. Kinshe. After you," he
said as Alimar hesitated, waiting for the prince to enter first, as
custom decreed. "I insist."
"Thank you," she murmured, and
Kinshe handed her up.
The prince entered the coach
next, then Kinshe climbed in, and Wilkon followed last. The
moment the footman had closed the door, the coachman clucked
to the horses. The beautifully matched team of four grays
responded instantly, and the footman scrambled up onto the boot
as they sprang into motion, accompanied by the cavalry escort.
The Sethdona ETS station was
logically located, in the heart of the capital city between the Royal
Palace and the Parliament building. That placed it relatively close
to the train station, as well, and traffic was thankfully light at this
time of day. The journey was a short one, and when they reached
the station, the carriage turned down a special drive reserved for
conveyances that were to be shipped overland.
The commander of the mounted
escort had obviously been briefed ahead of time, and they
proceeded directly to the correct track, where the carriage paused
alongside a private passenger car which bore the royal coat of
arms on both sides. Three more cars were coupled behind it. One
was the special car for the carriage Danith had referred to, while
the other two were standard-looking passenger cars. The first of
them was obviously for the use of the Crown Prince's security
escort, and Kinshe suspected that the other contained a hastily
assembled support staff.
The footman opened the carriage
door, and Kinshe led the way out at the prince's gesture. He
assisted Alimar down the steps, then stood waiting until Danith
had joined them. As the Crown Prince led the way towards the
royal passenger car, Kinshe found himself gazing at the quietly
panting locomotive in something very like awe.
"It's one of the TTE's new
Paladins," Crown Prince Danith said quietly. Kinshe glanced back
at him, and the young man gave him a true aficionado's smile.
"I'm afraid I'm not as well
informed about locomotives as you, Your Highness," Kinshe
admitted. "First Director Limana is a huge fan, but I've been more
involved with personnel administration than the Authority's
freight divisions."
"Actually, the Paladin's a bit too
much engine for our purposes, but it was the best compromise
available in a short time frame."
"Too much engine, Your
Highness?"
"For four cars?" Danith
chuckled, and waved one graceful hand at the maroon-and-black
painted, steam-breathing behemoth. "This is a 4-10-4, Halidar.
Eighty-inch drivers and something like six thousand horsepower.
On reasonably flat ground—which describes a lot of
Shurkhal, when you think about it—a Paladin is capable of
sustained speeds well above a hundred miles an hour with
complete passenger trains! Assuming, of course, that the rails
are up to it."
Kinshe blinked. That did sound a
tad excessive for a mere four cars.
"Father told the line supervisors
speed was of the utmost importance," the Crown Prince continued
more soberly. "There's not a locomotive on Sharona that will get
us there more rapidly than this one."
Kinshe's jaw muscles knotted at
the reminder of why they were here, and he nodded. Then they
were climbing up into the plushest train car he'd ever seen.
Attentive rail stewards showed them to their seats and offered
refreshment while the carriage and team, along with the escort's
horses, were rapidly loaded. Within ten minutes, the mighty
Paladin gave a deep-throated "chuff" of steam, and the
special train began to move.
They maintained a decorous
speed through the city, but they began to speed up as soon as they
reached the open desert. The acceleration was smooth, yet as he
watched the eastbound rails and ties of the double-track blur
beside them, Kinshe realized that the Crown Prince's speed
estimate had been completely serious.
It was an astonishing and
exhilarating sensation to move at such speed, and he was reluctant
to pull his attention back to the business at hand. Partly, he knew,
that was a form of cowardice. He didn't want to think
about it, but Alimar needed to know why they were racing through
the desert at such enormous speed.
So he told her.
"They did what?" His
wife, normally a gentle and loving soul, stared at him with eyes of
naked fury. "They butchered an innocent girl? What kind
of monsters are these people? They must be punished!
Tracked down like jackals and punished!"
"Yes." Kinshe nodded, his
expression grim. "They must be—and they will. In fact, they
may very well already have been. Don't forget, our information is
a week old. A column has already been dispatched to confirm what
happened and rescue any of our people who may have survived,
and I imagine they've made contact with the other side by
now . . . one way or another. But you
have my word, Alimar; the people who could perpetrate this kind
of atrocity won't escape justice."
As he spoke, he met Crown
Prince Danith's eyes. The heir to the throne had not yet married,
but he had sisters. The look that passed between them was a vow
made in Shurkhal the blood-debt honor: not another Shurkhali
woman would die. Not one.
Kinshe couldn't help wondering
what King Fyysel's ultimate vote in Conclave was going to be.
The parliamentary representative knew the Crown Prince shared
many of his own political convictions, but if Sharona ended up
voting in a world government, Danith Fyysel would lose his
opportunity to wear a crown.
"My father and I have already
spoken about the most important aspect of Shurkhal's
participation in this Conclave, Representative Kinshe," the Crown
Prince said, as if he'd read Kinshe's mind, and his tone was as
formal as his choice of titles. "He specifically instructed me to
share our thoughts with you, since you are both a senior member
of Parliament and a Portal Authority director. Both of us know
Sharona must have a world government. At the same time, Father
has already sworn on blood-honor that we will never tolerate a
government run by Uromathia. His exact words were, ah, "death
before Uromathia,' I believe."
"That certainly sounds like your
father, Your Highness. Rather mild for him, actually," Kinshe
observed with a grimace, and the Crown prince's lips twitched.
"You know him well. What I
want to say, however, before this matter even comes to vote, is
that I support Father's position absolutely. I hold the survival of
Sharona far higher than any petty desire to sit on a fancy chair in
Sethdona. We can't afford that kind of nonsense."
"Your Highness," Alimar Kinshe
said softly, before her husband could speak, "you've just proven
how worthy you would have been to sit in that chair."
Danith Fyysel blinked in
surprise. Then the Crown Prince of Shurkhal actually turned red
for a second or two before he finally managed a chagrined smile.
"Thank you, Mrs. Kinshe," he
said. "That may be the greatest compliment I've ever received."
Chapter Twenty-Four
Andrin's head was throbbing by
the time her father called a much-needed break. She sat, rubbing
her temples, and watched servants carry an early luncheon into the
Privy Council Chamber. Despite her father's forceful personality
and Shamir Taje's skill as an organizer, they'd managed to
accomplish only a fraction of what they really needed to do in the
time they had. Hopefully, it was the most important
fraction, and her father was undoubtedly correct about the need
for all of them to eat before launching into a Conclave which
would undoubtedly run for many hours.
And so they ate, sitting at the
inlaid table, covered protectively with a crisp white linen cloth,
while they continued to cover critical bits and pieces of business
in side conversations. When they'd finished, the servants whisked
away the remnants, then refilled wine cups and served hot tea,
New Farnalian coffee, and steaming mugs of the New Farnalian
cocoa Andrin and several other Councilors enjoyed. They also re-
stoked the coal fire on the hearth, which Andrin appreciated. The
heat at her back was as delicious as the rich cocoa in her mug.
She listened to the side
conversations and realized how little she truly understood about
what the Councilors were saying. It quickly became clear to her
that she simply lacked the critical building blocks of known facts
to tie the other conversations together in any comprehensible
fashion. Unfortunately, she couldn't exactly break into the
discussions and request explanations and definitions—
certainly not under this sort of emergency time pressure. Yet if she
didn't ask now, how would she be able to remember the proper
questions later?
She pondered the problem for a
moment, then asked one of the servants—a girl perhaps
three years older than she was—to find her a notebook and
a pen. She also asked for a filled inkwell, in case the pen's internal
reservoir ran dry. The servant hurried back with the requested
items, and Andrin thanked her sincerely.
"That be my pleasure, Your
Grand Highness," the girl murmured, almost too low to hear as
she swept a deep curtsy that took her nearly to the floor. She
glanced up, needing Andrin's eyes for just a fleeting instant, then
looked down again, almost fearfully.
"You see," she said, speaking in
a rush as if it took all her courage for one hurried burst of words,
"it's just forever I've been wanting a chance to serve you.
If you be needing anything else, I'll be waiting just outside. Just
you open that door a crack and ask. I'll go and fetch anything you'd
be wanting."
She rose with a surprising grace
and retreated from the room. Andrin watched her go in mild
astonishment, then pulled her attention back to the ongoing
discussion, sipping cocoa, listening, and jotting down occasional
questions or ideas. At length, the mantle clock chimed the half-
hour, and her father signaled for silence and turned to Alazon
Yanamar.
The Privy Voice sat in a waiting
attitude, eyes closed, clearly Listening for the incoming message
from First Director Limana. Or, rather, from the chain of Voices
between Tajvana and the Privy Council Chamber. The
arrangements and coordination required for Voices to relay over
truly lengthy distances could be unbelievably complicated,
especially at a time like this, when individual, totally secure links
had to be maintained between the Portal Authority in Tajvana and
every national capital on Sharona. Not even the EVN
could maintain a real-time link to the various colonial
governments, since no Voice could communicate with another
through a portal. But Andrin knew that there were other chains of
Voices, stretching down the transit chains between universes, to
provide the fastest message turnaround humanly possible.
Then Yanamar's eyes opened so
suddenly Andrin actually twitched in shock.
"Your Imperial Majesty," the
Privy Voice said, in a deep, rich voice filled with subtle tones, one
so beautiful Andrin would have given all the silly baubles in her
jewel box to possess its equal. "First Director Limana has begun
the Conclave. The Portal Authority's Head Voice, Yaf Umani, is
transmitting what he sees and hears."
Her voice shifted suddenly. It
took on not simply a different timbre, but a different rhythm and
accent as she repeated the words of a man a quarter of the world
away. That was remarkable enough, but what stunned Andrin was
the projection that abruptly appeared at the far end of the room. It
was a three-dimensional image of a man standing at a podium in a
room she'd never seen. There were others present, seated between
themselves and the speaker, and a map of the newly discovered
portals hung behind him. The man at the podium was looking right
at them, even though he couldn't possibly have actually seen them.
Andrin had always known
Voices could receive and transmit detailed images of actual
events, but less than one Voice in ten thousand could actually
project those images for non-telepaths to see. Despite her birth,
she herself had seen that particular Talent used exactly once, when
the universe-famed Projective Falgayn Harwal had visited the
Imperial House of Music here in Estafel. She still shivered inside
when she remembered how Harwal and his dozen highly-trained,
powerful assistant Voices, had filled the entire Opera House with
a projection of the New Tajvana Chior's eight thousand singers
and voices.
But Harwal was unique, the sort
of Talent who arose perhaps once every two hundred years.
Although Andrin had always known there were others with the
same ability, if only on a far smaller scale, she'd never actually
seen it done. Not this closely and intimately. No wonder Alazon
Yanamar was her father's Privy Voice! Her Talent must be
indispensable to a man who governed an Empire that covered
several major islands and most of a continent.
She wondered if the Portal
Authority's Head Voice could do this, as well. Probably, she
decided. Then Yanamar's voice dragged her attention back to the
meeting underway.
"Honored heads of state of the
sovereign nations and colonies of Sharona and the various
advisory councils and board members with you. For those of you
who have never personally met me, I am Orem Limana, first
Director of the Sharonian Trans-Temporal Portal Authority. In
that capacity, I thank you for joining this Conclave. May we have a
roll call of official members of the Conclave, please?"
Yanamar' recitation didn't quite
match the movement of Limana's lips, but it was incredibly close.
It was almost uncanny watching the eerie projection and listening
to Yanamar's voice repeating the words of the man speaking in a
room three thousand miles away.
The Privy Voice repeated a
seemingly endless list of names as First Director Limana
proceeded alphabetically down the official roster of nations and
colonies. Andrin watched the map of Sharona as he spoke, trying
to fix the names of various heads of state in her mind, but she had
to give up within moments. She uncapped her pen once more and
made her first note of the Conclave: Memorize the names of
every head of state on Sharona and our colonies. She looked
down at it, and, after a moment's consideration, added, And
their heirs, if they're monarchies, and their seconds in command,
regardless of what form of government they have.
She managed not to groan as she
contemplated the size of that task, but it wasn't easy.
Once the First Director had
completed the daunting task of merely determining that everyone
was listening, he turned to the reason he'd summoned the
Conclave in the first place.
"I'll begin by reminding every
person participating in this Conclave that the news of this attack is
to be considered a level-one secret under the Portal Authority
Founding Charter, at least until such time as the family members
of those killed, wounded, or captured in it have been notified
about what's happened to their loved ones. Official Portal
Authority representatives are en route even now, taking word to
each of the survey crew's members' immediate families.
"I would further ask that this
news not be made public until such time as this Conclave has
formulated a plan to ensure Sharonian security in the Karys Chain
and its approaches. The more we can do to reassure the public at
the same time we finally break the news, the less panic is likely to
ensue. Are we agreed on that point?"
Andrin's father nodded, and the
Privy Voice transmitted his response. Again, a lengthy delay
ensued before the Portal Authority's director spoke again.
"Thank you. I deeply appreciate
your promised discretion in this matter."
He cleared his throat. It was the
first sign of nervousness—if that was what was—
he'd displayed, and Andrin was deeply impressed by his apparent sang froid.
"Very well," he said, "the
purpose of this Conclave is to meet the current emergency. The
Portal Authority will be intimately involved in that process, but
the Authority is primarily an organizational tool, one which was
never designed to handle this kind of emergency. Bearing
that in mind, I'll begin the Conclave by bringing you up to speed
on my responses and decisions to date. Once I've done that, I'll
request specific guidance from the members of the Conclave on
the best course of action until we can convene a face-to-face
Conclave.
"And before anyone protests,
please let me assure you that we will need a second
Conclave. We must devise a permanent, long-range structure of
governance to effectively mobilize, organize, and deploy Sharona's
military and civilian resources. That's going to require lengthy,
direct, pragmatic, and flexible decision-making, and we
can't do that in a meeting format like this one. I would suggest
Tajvana as the place to hold that face-to-face meeting. The Portal
Authority is headquartered here, and Tajvana has been a world
capital in the past. As such, the city is well equipped with the
infrastructure to handle large diplomatic and security delegations.
"If there are no objections to
Tajvana as the site of the second Conclave, I'll have my staff
contact each of you to arrange a date on which as many of you as
possible can attend. We'll work out the details, schedule the
meeting, and arrange appropriate meeting space—perhaps
in the old Calirath Palace—as rapidly as we can. I'll inform
you of our final arrangements, work out travel schedules, and
make Voice arrangements to give any of you who simply cannot
personally attend the best access possible. Are there any
objections?"
There were none, to Andrin's
considerable surprise, and her father glanced at her and quirked
one eyebrow.
"Well, it seems you were right,
'Drin," he said very quietly. "We will be traveling to Tajvana."
She nodded, rubbing her arms in
an effort to smooth down the prickling sensation under her gown's
sleeves, where the downy hair was trying to stand on end. She
wasn't surprised, so much as unnerved by the swiftness with which
her Glimpse had proven itself accurate.
"Once I've listed the specific
areas in which I need interim guidance," Director Limana
continued, "I will call for discussion by the members, asking that
each of you bear in mind possible answers to those specific points.
Both during my initial assessment of the current situation, and
during the open discussion, we will observe strict parliamentary
rules of order, simply to keep the discussion from becoming too
unwieldy for the Voices to transmit.
"If you want to ask questions or
share comments, ideas, or solutions—and I hope you will
have solutions for various aspects of this crisis—
please send your request through the Portal Authority's Head
Voice, Yaf Umani. He will relay it to me in the order in which it
was transmitted, so that you may speak in your turn. I realize this
may be inconvenient, given the awkwardness of holding a meeting
of this size through the Voice network. Indeed, that awkwardness
underlines the necessity of direct, face-to-face meetings. For the
moment, however, I can't think of a fairer way to handle the
discussion. Is that clear to everyone?"
Andrin's father nodded once
more, and the Privy Voice's eyes lost their focus for a moment as
she sent out the response.
"Very well," Limana said again.
"I'll begin with a review of the tactical situation and my decisions
and actions to date.
"The situation, as it now stands,
is both unclear and alarming. We've received two follow-on
messages since the initial one arrived approximately four hours
ago. Please bear in mind the extensive water gaps which have to be
covered in several of these universes. Frankly, I'm astonished that
we've received even these two messages so quickly.
"The first message was an
expansion of Company-Captain Halifu's original report. As the
commander of the nearest portal fort, here in New Uromath,"
Limana indicated the newly named universe on the map, "he
dispatched a rescue party to do what it could. Due to the large
number of portals recently discovered in this area, he—like
all of the fort commanders in the vicinity—is badly
understrength, and he was able to field only a single cavalry
platoon.
"The second message, which was
relayed to us simultaneously, was from Company-Captain chan
Tesh, in command of the reinforcing column which was already en
route to Company-Captain Halifu. He was also accompanied by a
Petty Captain Traygan, the Authority Voice assigned to Halifu,
who received a relay of the original contact report while he was
here, in Thermyn." Again, the First Director indicated the universe
in question. "chan Tesh reported that he was moving immediately
by forced march to reinforce Halifu with several platoons of
cavalry and infantry and at least some of his artillery.
"That's all the additional news
we have at this time, and it will probably be at least several days
before we hear anything else."
Limana paused again, looking up
from his notes at the faces of those physically present, then
continued.
"What we know right this
moment is simply that our survey crew was attacked and that most
or all of its members were killed. Company-Captain Halifu and
Company-Captain chan Tesh are clearly acting as quickly and
decisively as possible, given their resources, the distances
involved, and the lack of improved communications. They have
reported that they consider their immediate primary responsibility
to be the location and rescue of any survivors. Although their
messages and reports carry an undeniable undertone of great
anger, they do not appear eager to provoke a general war.
However—" Limana paused very briefly, sweeping his
visible audience with his eyes "—it's quite evident from
their dispatches that they intend to use deadly force not simply in
self-defense but to compel the other side to release any
prisoners they may have taken. By this time, they have almost
certainly already made contact, which means it would be far too
late to issue orders not to use deadly force under those
circumstances, even if we desired to do so. Which, speaking for
myself, I do not."
His voice went grim and harsh
on the final sentence. Alazon Yanamar's beautifully trained and
expressive voice transmitted his tone perfectly, and Andrin saw
cold approval on the faces of at least half of her father's Privy
Councilors.
"We're fortunate that Company-
Captain Halifu has both a qualified Whiffer and a qualified Tracer,
which will give us the best possible forensic analysis of the site of
the attack," Limana resumed after a moment. "Nonetheless, it may
be weeks or even months before we have any definite information
on the fate of our civilians.
"In the meantime, we have to be
aware of the enormous challenges Halifu and chan Tesh face. All
indications are that the Chalgyn Consortium crew's latest
discovery is an entire cluster of portals in close geographic
proximity. There's no way of knowing at this time which
portal—or portals—of that cluster have
already been explored by our opponents. In addition, the entry
portal here—" he tapped the bland circle of a still-
unnamed universe from which no less than six additional,
question-mark-tipped transit lines extended "—is
enormous. According to Chalgyn's measurements, it is thirty-
seven miles in diameter."
Andrin inhaled sharply in
surprise. That wasn't simply "enormous"—it was
stupendous!
"It would take many times the
troop strength Halifu and chan Tesh have to defend a portal that
size," Limana continued grimly. "I've sent instructions, on my own
authority as First Director, to reinforce them as quickly as
possible with all of the troops available to the PAAF in that
vicinity, but current indications are that everything available
amounts to little more than a few battalions. We certainly don't
have sufficient troop strength to hold what would amount to a
seventy-four-mile front against heavy attack.
"Moreover, the lack of rail
communications means troop movement will be slow as our
personnel approach the contact universe, so I've also contacted
Gahlreen Taymish at the TTE. He's been brought fully up to speed,
and I've activated the emergency clauses of the Trans-Temporal
Express' right-of-way agreement. As of this moment, the TTE is
under the direct control of the Portal Authority, and will remain
so until released. Director Taymish has already sent out
instructions to redeploy all available TTE construction crews to
the Hayth Chain, but it will take some weeks for him to get
additional equipment and workers into place."
Limana paused again, as if for
punctuation, then shook his head slowly.
"I'm sure most of you hope, with
me, that this tragic and, yes, brutal attack will not lead to all-out
war with another trans-universal civilization of unknown size,
power, and capabilities. Unfortunately, we dare not assume that
will be the case. Regiment-Captain Namir Velvelig commands
Fort Raylthar, covering the outbound portal from Failcham."
Limana indicated the universe in question. "Fort Raylthar is the
closest properly-manned portal fort, although even its garrison is
more than a little understrength thanks to the sudden expansion
along this chain. As you can see, Fort Raylthar is within two
universes, and about eighteen hundred miles, of the point at which
our crew was attacked. The Regiment-Captain has already sent
some reinforcements forward, and—"
The first Director's voice
disappeared into roaring chaos as sudden, wrenching terror
swamped Andrin. She jerked upright in her chair, the breath frozen
in her throat. Regiment-Captain Velvelig was Janaki's
commanding officer, and something dreadful—formless
and black and horrifying—was going to happen out there
under Velvelig's command. There was fire everywhere, men were
screaming, guns thundering, lightning stabbing and strobing
impossibly, and something ghastly was in the air, rushing down
upon them and—
Andrin bared her teeth, snarling
in defiance and fury and terror. Something had seized her, was
shaking her whole body, and she gasped and struck out with both
fists, trying to fend off the attack. Then someone truly did
seize her. Hands closed on her flailing forearms, capturing them
with huge yet gentle strength. They immobilized her, pushed her
arms down by her side, held her, and her eyes snapped abruptly
back into focus.
She stared wildly into her
father's face. The Emperor gripped her arms, holding her, and his
face was white as death, except for the large dark spot on one
cheekbone which was already beginning to bruise. She stared at
the mark, feeling the memory of the blow which had created it in
the knuckles of her own right hand, and realized she was on her
feet with no memory of when or why she'd stood up.
"Papa?" she whispered, shaken
to the bone. Then she realized she'd disrupted the entire Conclave,
distracting her father from the First Director's critical report, and
her own cheeks blazed. She wanted to crawl under the table and
die of sjame.
"Andrin," her father's voice was
low but iron command echoed in its depths, "tell me exactly what
you Saw. Everything you Saw."
"I-I don't know." She began to
tremble. "There was fire—fire everywhere. Fire in the sky.
Raining down on us. And lightning. And something huge and
black, diving down. I couldn't see what it was, where it was
coming from. Men were shooting, people were screaming,
burning . . . "
"Where?"
"I don't know! Director Limana
was talking about Regiment-Captain Velvelig sending
reinforcements, and it hit me like a runaway train." She was
shaking violently, now, no longer trembling. "I'm sorry," she
whispered, unable to dredge up anything more from the Glimpse.
"All I know is Janaki is out there, but I don't know when, or
where, or even if he'll be there, and—"
"Hush," her father said gently.
Her teeth were chattering, and he drew her close, enfolding her in
his powerful, infinitely comforting arms. He eased her back down
into her chair and dragged it closer to the fire, then knelt beside
her, chafing her icy hands.
"Send someone for brandy!" he
snapped over one shoulder.
"It's already on the way," Taje
said, just as the door crashed open. The serving girl who'd brought
Andrin the pen and notebook skidded through the doorway and
rushed forward, brandy decanter in one hand, cut-crystal tumbler
in the other. Her eyes were huge with fear.
"Here it be, Your Majesty!" she
gasped breathlessly. "I ran as fast as ever I did in my life!"
"Bless you, child," the Emperor
said, and took the decanter. He splashed brandy into the tumbler
and held the rim to Andrin's lips.
"Sip it, 'Drin. Yes, that's good.
No, don't push it away—sip it again. That's right. All of it,
dear heart. You need it."
Andrin gulped again, choking on
the liquid fire, as the dreadful shudders began to ease.
"Better?" he asked gently, and
she nodded, surprised to discover it was true.
"Yes," she managed. "Much
better."
"Thank Marnilay," he said
reverently. Then he wrapped his own coat around her shoulders
and told the hovering servant girl to fetch a blanket. As the girl ran
from the room, the Emperor turned back to his Privy Voice.
"Alazon, please send an urgent
message to Director Limana. Ask him to warn Regiment-Captain
Velvelig to expect trouble in the near future. I can't say when or
where with any precision, but Grand Princess Andrin has just
experienced a major Glimpse. Ask the First Director to relay all
the details of what she's just told us to the Regiment-Captain."
One or two Councilors looked a
bit skeptical, and Andrin's cheeks heated again. Her father noticed,
and his swift response stunned her—and his councilors.
"Let me make something
perfectly clear," he said, in a far colder voice than Andrin had ever
heard from him. "This was not a case of a girl's overactive nerves.
If any of you doubt the validity of my daughter's Talent, I advise
you to remember the Kilrayen forest fire. Moreover, I will remind
you—all of you—that Andrin is heir-
secondary. Given her youth, we have not, perhaps, made that status
sufficiently clear in the past. But should anything happen
to my son, Andrin will replace him in the line of succession. You
will accord her the respect due her rank and station. And
should any of you continue—unwisely—to cherish
any doubts about the validity of her Glimpse, let me add one
clarifying fact. I just experienced exactly the same Glimpse, but
hers was clearer and more detailed. My daughter is strongly
Talented, and a valuable asset to our war effort and this Empire.
Does anyone on this Council wish
to . . . debate that point?"
No one spoke. Those whose
glances had been skeptical now looked at her with contrition and
apology, and, quite unexpectedly, Andrin felt sorry for them. It
must be difficult for someone as highly placed as a Privy Council
to take any schoolgirl of seventeen seriously, however imperial
her blood. The thought gave her an unanticipated insight into
them, and she found herself smiling back at them. Several gave her
sheepish return smiles, which defused the tension so thoroughly
that even her father was left blinking for a moment.
Then the Privy Voice cleared her
throat.
"Your message has been sent and
acknowledged, Your Majesty. Word will be passed to Regiment-
Captain Velvelig."
"Thank you, Alazon," the
Emperor said quietly. He drew Andrin's chair back to the table,
gave her shoulder a reassuring squeeze, and resumed his own seat.
"Very well, I suggest we return
our attention to the Conclave.
Andrin was astonished to
discover that Director Limana had halted the entire Conclave to
await Ternathia's return. She was mortified by the thought that her
outburst had kept every other head of state on Sharona waiting, yet
at the same time, it gave her a major insight into the importance
the First Director placed on Ternathia's participation. Which
meant on her father's participation, which gave her
something else to mull over as Limana resumed his system report.
"As I was saying, Regiment-
Captain Velvelig is two universes away. In my opinion, sending
forward any greater numbers of reinforcements would weaken his
own command unacceptably. I believe it would be wiser to draw
the additional troops we'll need from universes further up the line.
The entire chain, from Hayth to New Uromath, is overland, with
the exception of an eleven-hundred-mile water gap here in Salym.
The rail line is well-established as far forward as Traisum, so
troop movements from universes further from the scene can be
executed fairly rapidly."
Behind Limana, a dark-haired
young woman had appeared beside the transit chain map. As
Limana began discussing specific PAAF garrisons, where they
were stationed, and how rapidly they could be moved further
forward, his assistant marked their positions on the master map.
As she did, it became painfully
evident to Andrin that the authority's multi-national military
forces were even thinner on the ground than she'd feared.
Well, of course they are, she told herself scoldingly.
The PAAF is primarily a peacekeeping force! If you hadn't known
it before, you certainly should have picked up on that from
Janaki's letters!
The thought of her brother sent a
fresh, cold serpent of fear slithering through her, but she thrust it
firmly aside. It didn't go easily, but it went, and when she looked
back up, she saw Privy Voice Yanamar cock her head in a
listening posture.
"A question from Emperor
Chava Busar of Uromathia," she said. "He says, 'We have a large
force of cavalry in the field for defense of our colony in Camryn,
which is only four universes from Traisum. We could divert a
thousand men—possibly as many as fifteen
hundred—for duty at some of the new portal forts without
leaving our colony unacceptably vulnerable. I would be honored
to make those men available in this emergency, and my General
Staff would be prepared to work with the Portal Authority in an
advisory capacity to make most effective use of them."
Shamir Taje swore aloud. Andrin
didn't believe she'd ever heard the First Councilor use profanity
before, and the sizzling intensity of the one short, pungent phrase
he permitted himself was an eye-opener. Then he glanced quickly
at her, blushed, and shook his head in mute apology before he
looked back at his older colleagues.
"I'll just bet Chava would be
willing!" he said sourly. "Give that man a foot through the door,
and he'll put an army in your bedroom!"
"Patience, Shamir," her father
said gently. "Fifteen hundred extra men that close to the danger
zone is nothing to sneeze at, whatever the source. And Orem
Limana knows how to deal with heads of state who overstep their
authority. Especially those who try to tread on his.
Besides," he gave the First Councilor a cheerful grin, "under the
provisions of the Founding Charter, no head of state may assume
direct command of the Portal Authority's military forces without
an authorizing majority vote by the rest of the Conclave's
members. Do you really think Uromathia is popular
enough to win that particular contest?"
Rather than the chuckles or
smiles Andrin had expected, the Privy Council greeted their
Emperor's droll assessment with grim scowls and mutters of
"Thank Marnilay." That was interesting. There had always been a
certain traditional wariness on Ternathia's part where Uromathia
was concerned, but the Council's reaction appeared far more
pointed than she would have expected, and she made another entry
in her growing list: Find out why Uromathia isn't trusted.
"Your offer is greatly
appreciated, Emperor Chava," First Director Limana said. "I'll put
Division-Captain Raynor in touch with your General Staff. And
that brings up precisely the point I wished to discuss next. I'm a
civilian administrator, not a military officer. Division-Captain
Raynor is currently Commandant of the PAAF, and he has plenty
of field experience, as well as a thorough familiarity with our
current troop dispositions, forts, and supplies. His appointment,
unfortunately, is due to expire in two months, at which time he
will return to the Republic of Tadewi in New Farnalia. Division-
Captain Inar Alvaru of Arpathia is scheduled to hold the
Commandant's post for the next two years. I mean no offense to
Division-Captain Alvaru, or to the Septentrion, but it seems to me
that replacing a man who is thoroughly familiar with our current
military strengths—and weaknesses—with someone
new, right in the middle of a major military crisis, would
be . . . unwise. I believe Division-
Captain Alvaru would add valuable voice to our planning, but I
strongly recommend keeping Division-Captain Raynor in place as
Commandant, at least until Division-Captain Alvaru can
familiarize himself with our current troop dispositions."
"An extremely wise suggestion,"
Andrin's father murmured. "Orem Limana's no soldier, but he
obviously understands the realities."
Captain of the Army chan
Gristhane nodded his agreement from his place, table, and
Yanamar cleared her throat once more and continued Limana's
transmission.
"And that brings up another
important point," the First Director said. "I'm not at all
comfortable making military or political decisions that may affect
the very survival of Sharonian civilization. I don't have the
training to deal with this kind of emergency. I'm an administrator.
I run portals. That's a demanding enough job as it is, and it's going
to get immeasurably tougher, trying to move enough men and war
materiel to guard our frontier across thousands upon thousands of
miles, through portals that will bottleneck our efforts, and through
universe after universe of total wilderness.
"I hate to see the Portal
Authority militarized, but there are some decisions I'm simply not
qualified to make. I need your guidance, so that we don't fumble
and open ourselves to the enemy's guns, or whatever it was they
were using to blow our people to hell. Tubes that threw fireballs
and hurled honest-to-gods lightning balls. We must decide
which portal forts to strengthen first, which universes may be
safely left unguarded, what kind of equipment to move first, what
our construction priorities should be—building railroads to
transport weapons and men, building troop transports to cross the
water gaps . . . or freighters to haul
raw materials and freight across them. Felling timber or building
cement factories to construct emergency forts. The list is endless,
and, frankly, I have no idea what we should concentrate on as our
immediate and long-range priorities.
"We need the sort of military
expertise which can identify and assign those priorities. But that's
only a portion of what we need, and this
Conclave—or the next one—must decide how to
operate the Portal Authority on a full wartime footing. Who will
have the military—and political—authority to make
the necessary decisions? Who will direct me—or whoever
ends up running the Authority—in prioritizing the
Authority's tasks? Who will give militarily and politically
appropriate orders for the defense of our people in the field?
Nothing in the Authority's existing charter or any of the enabling
treaties which created and authorized that charter gives me or any
of the Authority Board the power to exercise that sort of
authority. Yet someone is going to have to do it, so I'm
asking you to implement an emergency chain of command, as well
as to suggest long-term solutions to the problems of
command and control."
"My gods," Shamir touched
muttered, running both hands through his silvered hair, and
Andrin's father whistled softly.
"Now there's a can of
worms, if ever I saw one," the Emperor said.
"You're not just kidding," Taje
growled. He's talking about a fuc—"
The First Councilor caught
himself—this time, at least—glanced at Andrin,
turned even redder than before, and cleared his throat loudly.
Someone chuckled softly further down the conference table, but
Taje carefully didn't notice that as he returned his gaze to Zindel.
"He's calling for an honest-to-
gods world government," he said. "And who the devil is
going to head that?"
"Not Uromathia," Captain of the
Army chan Gristhane growled. "I will be dipped in sheep
sh—"
It was his turn to break off mid-
sentence and glance sheepishly at Andrin, who tried very hard not
to giggle at the harassed expression on the grizzled old warrior's
face.
"I'll go to my grave before I take
orders from the likes of Chava Busar," he said after a moment.
"And I'm not exaggerating, Your Majesty. I won't tolerate that man
giving orders to put our soldiers under his
command."
The Emperor's lips quirked.
"I rather imagine this exact same
conversation is being repeated in every throne room and
president's office in Sharona. 'Nobody but us, by the gods!'
That," he added in a voice as dry as winter static, glancing at
Andrin, "is why it's such a can of worms. As to the, ah, reluctance
to swear in front of my daughter, a lady who stands in line for
Ternathia's throne will certainly hear a good deal worse than a few
off-color remarks. We do her no favors trying to shelter her, or by
treating her as though she were delicate. It won't be easy for her,
but she's a very strong young woman. I have every confidence in
her ability to survive the
occasional . . . burst of colorful self-
expression, shall we say."
Several of the Privy Councilors chuckled of this time, and
that gave Andrin the courage to ask her first question since the
Conclave had begun.
"Thank you, Papa. But may I ask
why everyone distrusts Uromathia so intensely?"
chan Gristhane barked a
humorless laugh.
"Give me about twenty years,
Your Grand Highness, and I ought to be able to give you a fair
basis for it."
"Now, now, Thaylar," her father
said mildly, "just because Chava VII has violated every treaty he's
ever signed, attempted to confiscate Ternathian shipping while
trying to enforce illegal import duties and outrageously inflated
harbor fees, been caught red-handed trying to bribe Portal
Authority officials, and been linked repeatedly to shady business
practices by Uromathian survey crews in half the universes so far
discovered, is no reason to threaten suicide. You have my
word that Ternathia will decline to sign any treaty on
world governance if the nations of Sharona are temporarily insane
enough to elect Emperor Chava as Sharona's military or political
commander during this—or any other—crisis."
Someone snickered further down
the table. Captain of the Army chan Gristhane glowered for a
moment, then relented and gave his Emperor a sour grin.
"Oh, very well, since you put it
that way, Your Majesty." He met Andrin's wide-eyed gaze.
"Young lady, if Chava Busar ever offers you a gift, do
whatever it takes to politely decline it. His gifts have a way of
attempting to destroy their recipients."
"I see," she said faintly. "Thank
you for the warning, Captain."
chan Gristhane gave her a tight
smile, and her father leaned forward.
"I want to add one further,
important point, Andrin. For the most part, Uromathia's subjects
are honest, hard-working people who simply want to make a
decent living and give their children a good legacy. Uromathia's
banking industry has been utterly critical to the development of
new universes, and on the whole, Uromathian banks are
aboveboard and scrupulously honest. They use fair business
practices, they don't discriminate against non-Uromathians, and
they don't favor Uromathians over other clients. It's almost always
a mistake to blame a whole society for the bad decisions of its
rulers."
Andrin thought about that for a
moment. Then—
"Even the society that
slaughtered our survey crew?" she asked quietly, and her father
frowned.
"That remains to be seen.
Sharona's own past includes societies that were guilty of rabid
xenophobia, which led them to commit what we would consider
atrocities by today's standards. I regret to say that some of the
worst examples of that xenophobia occurred long after the
emergence of the Talents, too.
"We won't know what we're
dealing with out there until we learn more. I've always tried to
keep an open mind, but I have to admit things look pretty damning
at the moment. Whether they remain so is a question only time and
additional contact with them can answer."
His face tightened for just an
instant with what she knew was an echo of the Glimpses of war
and slaughter both of them had Seen. Then he inhaled deeply,
harshly.
"My personal gut reaction is to
wade into them, guns blazing in retribution." His voice was iron,
yet he shook his head at the same time. "But that's precisely why I
distrust that reaction. A ruler responsible for hundreds of millions
of lives who indulges a personal desire for revenge is a disaster.
That sort of response is a surefire recipe for killing a lot of our
own people, and squandering the lives of courageous
men—and women—selfishly, often for no good or
justifiable reason, makes you a mass murderer."
Someone down the table hissed
through his teeth.
"If, on the other hand, I believed,
really believed, Andrin, and had the hard evidence to prove
to my total satisfaction that the only way to ensure the
survival of Ternathia—or Sharona—was to wage genocide, I would do exactly that. It would rip my soul to
shreds, but I would, by all the gods, do it. Just as I would
fight to the death to stop others from committing
genocide, if I believed them to be wrong morally and politically.
That is what it means to rule. Don't ever forget it, Andrin."
His gaze was so intense she felt
as if she were on fire. She met it through sheer willpower, scared
to the bottoms of her stockings. Scared of the man inside her
father's clothes—a man she'd never met before. A man
capable of ordering the deaths of
millions . . . and implacable enough
to stand up to anything and anyone under the gods' heavens who
opposed any decision he made.
I can't fill those shoes! her mind gibbered in terror. I
don't even understand the man wearing them!
Then the blazing intensity in his
eyes gentled, and he gave her a sad smile.
"I hate frightening you, 'Drin.
But it's better for you to know the truth, however brutal, now
, not months or years down the road, when a misstep on your
part could bring catastrophe to the Empire. Janaki has already
faced the weight of the crown I wear—that one of you
will wear in the future. Would to all the gods that I could
have let you remain a child just a little longer."
The terror in her breast turned
into an ache that made breathing impossible and clogged her
throat. The tears she couldn't hold back broke free, filling her with
shame for letting them show, for her lack of
control . . . for making her father's
pain even worse. She wanted to say "I'm sorry," but her throat was
too tight, too raw. So she only nodded, hoping he would
understand, or at least stop looking at her through eyes filled with
remorse she couldn't bear. It cut like a blade, that remorse, yet it
came without a hint of apology for the necessity of what he'd said.
He couldn't have not said it and continued to be worthy of his
crown. She understood that, too . . .
and couldn't find the words to tell him that, either.
She had never felt like such a
wretched failure in her entire life.
Without a word, he pulled a
handkerchief from a coat pocket and passed it down the table. She
clutched the square of white linen as though it were a lifeline,
drying her eyes and ordering the faucet behind them to stop
leaking. Fighting her whole body, which ached with the need to
put her head down and bawl like a lost child. Instead, she stiffened
her spine, gulped several times, and got herself under control. She
very carefully did not look at the distress and sympathy in the faces
of the Privy Councilors, for her emotions were too precarious to
risk seeing it. Instead, she met her father's gaze head-on once
more, and as she did, she felt a new and special kinship with him.
He had experienced exactly this
same moment, she realized suddenly, seeing the Emperor inside
the father . . . and the boy who had
become the man so long ago. He knew exactly what he was doing
to her, what she was enduring—must
endure—because his father had done the same thing
to him, and that understanding made it infinitely worse for the
father who loved her. And as she looked into his eyes, saw that
memory and that pain merged in their depths, she loved him more
deeply than she ever had before.
"I'm sorry for disrupting the
Conclave yet again, Father," she managed to croak. "It won't
happen again."
He didn't embarrass her further
by assuring her that it was quite all right, because she knew it
wasn't. She desperately wanted her
mother . . . and knew, without hope
of regaining what she had lost, but she would never again be able
to hide her face in her mother's shoulder and pretend the world
wasn't waiting to hurt her again. In a roomful of people, she felt
more alone than she had ever felt in her life as her father nodded
and asked the Privy Voice to continue transmitting Director
Limana's address.
Chapter Twenty-Five
The train finally cleared the
congested city of Gulf Point, situated at the base of the Finger
Sea, where the Gulf of Shurkhal connected that sea with the
Harkalan Ocean. Even with the Crown Prince's prized locomotive,
the journey had required almost ten hours, and the Voice conclave
had been over for over an hour by the time they reached the city.
Halidar Kinshe felt drained and exhausted, although he'd actually
said very little during the conclave itself. Wilkon had kept him and
the Crown Prince fully informed, and, if he was going to be
honest, Kinshe had to admit that it had gone far better than he'd
feared. But the generally ugly mood of the attending heads of state
had not filled him with optimism. Worse, they'd resonated with his
own grinding sense of responsibility and blazing need for
retribution, and his mood was heavy as they approached their
destination at last.
The Gulf's busy shipping lanes
carried freighters laden with goods from around the globe, making
Gulf Point one of the busiest ports in the world. It took time to
thread their way through the jammed city, swinging around the
southwestern-most point of land to head east toward the little
town where Shaylar had gone to school. It lay only thirty miles
farther down the coast, but the sun had settled well into the west
as the special train pulled into the small local station at last and
the prince's carriage was unloaded.
It took a little longer to get the
cavalry escort's mounts off-loaded, as well, before they could set
out to be Institute, and they drew curious stares from the
townfolk, who recognized the royal crest on the carriage. Kinshe
could see excited conversations springing up in their wake as
people speculated about this unannounced royal visit, but they
rode in absolute silence as they followed the road through town
and out beyond it. The Cetacean Institute was visible now, another
three miles ahead.
Kinshe hadn't visited this part of
Shurkhal in years—decades, to be more exact. He'd stood
on this shoreline as a very junior member of Shurkhal's
Parliament, celebrating the opening of Shurkhal's own Cetacean
Institute—the Kingdom's sole cetacean translation facility.
Part embassy, but mostly research station, the Institute had been
founded by Dr. Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal. Although Shalassar
was not a native-born daughter of Shurkhal, she had built a legacy
in which the entire Kingdom could take pride.
Thanks to her work, the dolphins
had led Shurkhali divers to rich pearl beds which might have lain
undiscovered for centuries, otherwise. Shurkhali pearls fetched
excellent prices on the world market, famous for their size and
luster, and Shurkhali explorers had laid claim to those to those
same pearl beds in other universes, as well, increasing the
Kingdom's prestige while providing income to establish Shurkhali
colonies.
All of Shurkhal knew who they
truly had to thank for that, and Shurkhalis had long since come to
recognize Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal as one of their own, even
though she had been born on one of the tiny island chains scattered
across the Scurlis Ocean. The Scurlis was Sharona's largest body
of water, more than nine thousand miles long, north to south, and
nearly ten thousand miles wide along the equator. Most of its
islands were governed by the Lissian Republic, whose main
landmass was the continent-sized island that was home to some of
the strangest creatures on Sharona.
Shalassar had grown up on one
of those Lissian-governed islands. She was a tremendously
Talented telepath, whose childhood friends had been dolphins and
the great whales that roamed the Scurlis Ocean. She had come to
Shurkhal to establish the Institute as one of a worldwide chain of
embassies serving the sentient whales and dolphins.
They were close enough now to
see the large dock and the enormous area which had been roped
off around it to serve as the official embassy. A large bell hung
from a pole on the dock, with a stout cable that trailed into the
water. That bell was a necessary signaling device. Kinshe had
heard that she'd had to replace it—and the dock—
occasionally when an emissary from a new pod of whales
approached to ask for assistance and gave the cable too hard a tug
the first try. Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal simply took it all in stride,
as she had everything else in her life.
Until now, at least, he thought,
biting his lip.
No one was at home in the
house. A note on the door said: "We're at the Embassy. Come on
down, the water's fine!"
Kinshe's heart twisted as he read
the cheerful words, and he looked at his wife. She was biting
her lip now, and he took her hand as they climbed back into
the carriage and followed the road around to the cluster of
buildings at the water's edge, half a mile from the house. Outside
the carriage, the silence was glorious, broken only by the wind and
the heartbeat-rushing of the sea against the shore. Inside the
carriage, the silence was oppressive, as heavy as a storm brewing
on the horizon, broken only by the knife-sharp rattle of horses'
hooves on the graveled drive.
"Hal," Alimar murmured,
squeezing his hand. She started to say something more, then
simply closed her lips and fell silent again. She'd tried to convince
him on the train that this wasn't his fault. She'd tried
hard . . . and she would still be trying
when he lay on his deathbed.
The carriage clattered to a halt in
front of the Institute's main administration building. The footman
scrambled to open the door, and this time the Crown Prince
climbed down first and handed Alimar to the ground. Kinshe
followed, and Wilkon climbed out last.
The Institute's front door opened
and Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal herself hurried out into the
sunlight, eyes wide with surprise as her glance flicked across the
royal crest on the carriage door.
"Your Highness!" she said,
clearly astonished to see the Crown Prince. "And Representative
Kinshe," she added, as she dropped into the deep curtsy she had
learned in the years since arriving on the shores. Shaylar was very
much a miniature of this woman, whose Lissian island heritage
showed in her honey-toned skin and the sleek black hair falling
straight as a waterfall down her back. It was tinted here and there
with strands of pure silver, but those were the only signs of age
Kinshe could detect. It was obvious that their arrival had taken her
completely by surprise, but she was trying not to show it, and her
immense natural dignity helped.
"Forgive me for not sending
word ahead to expect our visit," Danith Fyysel said gently. The
final decision had been his, although Kinshe had been in total
agreement. They could have asked Wilkon to alert her and her
husband, but they'd chosen to remain silent rather than alarm and
worry them hours in advance. Now the Crown Prince took her
hand, lifting her from the deep curtsy, and made introductions.
"You know Representative
Kinshe, I know," he said. "Allow me to present his wife, Alimar
Kinshe-Dulan, and Samari Wilkon, a senior Voice of the Portal
Authority." He finished the formalities, then inhaled deeply. "My
father asked me to accompany Representative Kinshe and Voice
Wilkon today. I must ask, is your husband home, Doctor?"
Shalassar's eyebrows rose, and
she looked back and forth between Kinshe and the Crown Prince.
"Yes, he—" she began,
then broke off abruptly. She stared into Crown Prince Danith's
eyes, and the color seemed to drain out of her face.
"Something's wrong, isn't it?"
she said tautly. "Something's happened."
Danith squared his shoulders,
but Halidar Kinshe took a small step forward before the Crown
Prince could speak. He wished profoundly that someone else
could have brought this news, but it was his job, and no one else's.
"We've brought a message,
Doctor. A very urgent and important message. We need to deliver
it to both you and your husband."
Shalassar had pressed her hands
against her cheeks. The long, slender fingers were unsteady.
"It's Shayl, isn't it? Something's
happened to my little Shayl. . . . "
Her lips trembled, and her huge,
expressive eyes were dark with shadows. It was a mark of just how
distressed she was that she'd used the pre-marriage form of her
daughter's name. She stared at Kinshe for several more seconds,
then turned away, started for the Institute, stopped, and turned
back to them.
"Come in, please," she said in a
faint voice. "Come in out of the sun. You must be frightfully hot
and thirsty from your journey. I'll have my assistant bring some
cool water, some fruit . . . "
Alimar bit her lip again and
tightened her fingers around Kinshe's as Shalassar tried
desperately to cling to the proper conventions. They followed her
into the Institute's main lobby, such as it was. The administration
building was mostly office space, with a small antechamber where
infrequent guests could wait for the two or three minutes
necessary to track down the Director.
Wide open windows caught the
sea breeze, carrying the unmistakable scent of deep ocean water
into the thick-walled room. It was pleasantly cool, despite the
fierce heat outside. Just offshore lay the floating dock and the bell.
The colorfully painted floats holding up the rope around the
dock's reserved approaches hurt his eyes as the afternoon sunlight
slanted fiercely across them. They hurt his heart, as well, as he
contemplated his reason for being here. It was monstrous to bring
such news to this beautiful place.
The promised assistant arrived
with the refreshments while Shalassar went out to fetch her
husband. She could have simply spoken to him with her mind,
since both of them were strong telepaths who shared the even
closer communication possible through their marriage bond, but
she went to find him in person. No doubt, Kinshe thought, in
hopes of regaining her shattered composure before she had to face
them once again.
He sipped water gratefully, but
he couldn't even nibble at the succulent orange slices or sweet
palm dates on the platter. His stomach rebelled at the mere
thought of food, and Wilkon didn't touch the fruit, either. The
Voice's eyes showed his own inner agitation, which was far worse
even than Kinshe's. Kinshe knew what message they were here to
deliver, but he was no telepath. Wilkon was, and the Farnalian had
actually experienced it himself already.
Then Shalassar returned with her
husband in tow. Thaminar Kolmayr-Brintal, like most full-
blooded Shurkhali, was a slender man, neither tall nor short, but
lean and tough as old leather. Despite his strong telepathic Talent,
he had chosen to remain on his family's land as a farmer and
livestock breeder, rather than seek a position as a registered Voice.
His skin was the weathered, furrowed brown of those who spent
lifetimes laboring in the fierce desert sun, and he was possessed of
all his people's personal dignity and presence. He greeted his
Crown Prince with a deep, formal bow; then met Kinshe's gaze
head-on. Muscles bunched in his jaw under his dark, close-
trimmed beard.
"Come into the office," he said,
his voice rough. "We'll talk there."
They stepped into a room which
reflected its owner's life hands much as the work done here. Island
artwork hung on the walls, reminders of Shalassar's girlhood
home, but file cabinets took up most of the wall space, their
wooden cases carefully oiled against the dry desert air. A desk in
one corner looked almost like an afterthought, a concession to the
need for orderly workspace to record the conversations with
various cetaceans, the dissertations written by various transient
students over the years, research data, published articles and
books, even—and perhaps most important—treaties
that governed Sharona's relationship with their sentient, aquatic
neighbors.
Even as that thought crossed his
mind, Kinshe saw several sleek, wet hides break the surface,
visible through the office window, punctuated by the hiss of
cetaceans surfacing to breathe. Given their size, he surmised that a
pod of dolphins had come calling, although one or two might have
been larger. It was hard for him to tell.
Then Shaylar's father closed the
door, and Kinshe turned his attention to repeating the
introductions. Thaminar Kolmayr-Brintal and his wife stood
together, arms wrapped around one another, even their free hands
gripping one another's. Two strong telepaths, fused for the
moment into one terrified personality staring at him with parents'
eyes.
"What is it?" Thaminar asked,
his voice even rougher than before. "What's gone so wrong that
the King sends his Heir and a Royal Representative to deliver the
bad news?"
"There's been an
incident—" Kinshe began, then paused, cursing his own
cowardice, and amended his phrasing. "An act of war has been
committed against Sharonian citizens. I'm desperately sorry to
bring such news. The Portal Authority Director has asked Voice
Wilkon to deliver the last message your daughter transmitted."
Shalassar's knees buckled at the
dreadful word "last." She clutched at her husband, nostrils flared,
eyes clenched shut, and he eased her into a chair. He crouched
beside her, wrapping his arm around her while she shuddered, and
lifted angry wounded eyes to meet Kinshe's.
"What you mean by that,
Kinshe? An act of war?"
"Exactly that, sir," Kinshe made
himself reply as levelly as possible. "We don't have very many
details yet, but Shaylar's team ran into an unknown human
civilization—a violently hostile one, apparently. Her first
message reported that one of their crew had been shot by an
unknown assailant. They ran for the nearest portal. They didn't
make it."
Shalassar began to weep, her
breath ragged, her wet face twisted with grief, and Kinshe steeled
himself to tell them the rest.
"Her second and final message
was sent less than two hours after the first. Because of a
transmission delay, it overtook the first, and both of them arrived
at the Authority simultaneously this morning."
He cleared his throat.
"There might be survivors. It's
not much of a hope," he added quickly, hating to crush the sudden
wild hope in her parents's eyes, "but the nearest fort has sent out a
rescue party. On the chance that somebody survived the second
attack. It's—"
He had to pause, had to swallow
hard. He wasn't a telepath himself, but even the secondhand
description had been brutal.
"It's very unlikely that anyone
lived," he said softly, levelly. "But we're going to find the people
who did this, and we're going to find out whether or not they took
prisoners. And there will be payment for it," he added in a
voice which sounded like a stranger's. "We—the Portal
Authority Director, King Fyysel and Crown Prince Danith, Alimar
and myself—we wanted you to receive your daughter's last
message before we go public with this.
"Sharona's world leaders have
already met in a Voice Conclave today, to decide how Sharona
will respond to the crisis. That will be reported on, even if we
tried to keep it quiet, and know that reporters know there's been a
Conclave, they're going to start asking why. We wanted to be
certain that you were told before that happened."
Shaylar's mother lifted her face,
and her voice was brittle.
"And how will Sharona's leaders
respond?"
Halidar Kinshe drew a deep
breath and told her. When he mentioned the high probability that
Sharona's military would be drastically expanded, Shaylar's parents
went pale again. He wasn't surprised. He knew very well that
Shaylar's military-age brothers would shortly discover a burning
reason to volunteer for combat.
"I'm sorry," he said gently. "I
could introduce legislation barring enlistment of every single son
from one family. It might well
pass . . . but even that might not deter
them from enlisting under false names."
Shaylar's father held his gaze for
long moments, then shook his head.
"No, it wouldn't," he said
gruffly. "My sons are too much like me to expect anything
different of them. But thank you for considering our fear, for
offering to help. It was a great kindness. What it would cost us if
they—"
He halted, unable to go on, and a
ghastly silence hovered until Crown Prince Danith broke it.
"My father begged me to bring
you a personal message from His Majesty. With your permission,
I'll deliver it now, not . . . after the
Voice has given you the message he carries."
Dr. Kolmayr-Brintal's throat
worked. She tightened her fingers around her husband's already
firm grip and seemed to settle even deeper into the straight backed
chair.
"Go on," she said in a voice of
gravel.
"His Majesty wants you to know
that he will never stop the search for your daughter, will never rest
until answers, at least, are found. Shurkhal is raising troops, as
agreed upon in today's Conclave. Those troops will have one
order, above and beyond all else: find Shaylar
Nargra-Kolmayr . . . or the people
who killed her."
Shaylar's mother flinched, and
his face tightened.
"I'm sorry," he said in a voice
raw with his own pain, "but we must face the likelihood that she's
gone and act accordingly."
He drew a deep breath and
continued.
"The people of our Kingdom
will feel this loss deeply, as a wound not just to our national
pride, but to our national heart. His Majesty begs you to remember
that your daughter was loved by millions—and so you shall
be, when this news is released. His Majesty knows how
desperately private your grief will be, so he has made
arrangements to send a small full-time staff to you, to handle the
response when people are told. If there's some small office,
perhaps here at the Institute, where they could work out of your
way, they'll take charge of all that, giving you the privacy you need
and dealing with the chaos for you. Is that acceptable to you?"
Shaylar's parents only stared at
him, too shellshocked to respond. Perhaps, Kinshe thought,
neither of them had fully understood until that moment how
deeply proud of their daughter all of Shurkhal had felt—and
how keenly the Kingdom would feel her loss. Even those who
hadn't approved of her taking on a "man's job" in the first
place . . . or perhaps, in their way, especially those who hadn't approved.
Her father unfroze first.
"That isn't—that
is—Do you really think this is necessary?"
"Yes, sir," Crown Prince Danith
said quietly, putting the concern he felt into every word. "I do
believe it will be necessary. So does His Majesty."
"I agree," Kinshe added quietly.
"Your family will become the focus of all Sharona's shock and
outrage. We—the King, Parliament, the entire
Kingdom—cannot leave you to face this alone, unprepared
to deal with what will come when word of this is released. What
we're offering to do, to handle the uproar for you, isn't
much—not nearly enough, compared with the magnitude of
your loss. But you will need someone who can deal with all of.
Please let us help, even in so small a way."
Shalassar nodded, her head
moving like a broken marionette's. Thaminar simply looked lost, a
strong man whose grief and anger had been punctured by
something he couldn't understand. Something he feared. His
gaze—which had gone to a place very far from this small
room with its wooden file cases, its thick walls and open window,
the scent and sight and sound of the sea—gradually pulled
itself back and focused on the King's heir.
"Very well," he said, his voice
low and hollow. "If more trouble must fall across our shoulders,
it will be restful to have someone help us carry the weight."
Kinshe sensed a gathering of strength within him, or perhaps
merely a gathering of the shreds of courage. Then he turned to the
Voice.
"You have a message from our
child?"
"I do." Wilkon's voice was thick
with pain. "I beg your forgiveness, both of you, for what I am
about to show you."
Shaylar's parents' hands gripped
tighter even than before, tight enough for knuckles to whiten and
tremble.
"Show us," Thaminar said
hoarsely.
They closed their eyes, and for an
instant—perhaps two heartbeats, certainly no
longer—nothing happened.
Then, as one person, they
flinched violently back. Kinshe couldn't even begin to describe the
sound that broke from Shaylar's mother. It was like cloth ripping,
or a whimper . . . or something soft
dying under the wheels of the train. He couldn't bear to look at
them, yet couldn't wrench his gaze away from the sweat, the
muscle-knotting agony, the—
A sudden scream ripped into his
awareness, and not from Shaylar's parents. It came from
outside—from beyond the window. From the
sea . . .
Kinshe whipped around to stare
out the window. The sea inside the floating ropes that marked the
cetacean's embassy had gone mad. The dolphins surged from the
water, fifty or sixty of them rising on their tail flukes, and the
sound that broke from them turned his blood to ice. Then a deeper
bellow broke across the chittering snarls, and a whale broached.
Larger than the Crown prince's train car, it roared out of the water,
standing for just an instant on its own tail fluke, a mountain of
glistening flesh spearing straight toward the desert sky. Sound
exploded into the air, a shockwave of sound that struck Kinshe's
bones through the open window like a fist. Water crashed outward
from its massive weight as it came down again, and the dock and
bell splintered under the impact.
A humpback, he realized through numb shock. One of
the singing whales. Only that was no whalesong bursting
from it. That was rage. Pure, distilled, and terrible rage.
Gods, Kinshe realized. Shaylar's mother was broadcasting
what she saw. She probably didn't even realize it, but the
cetaceans did, and he jerked his gaze back to her. She was
shuddering, eyes clenched tightly shut, her sounds like those of
some small, trapped animal. Then she stiffened, and her eyes flew
wide.
"Shaylar!" she screamed,
and her husband flinched so violently he nearly went to the floor.
Then Shalassar collapsed. She sagged in her chair, her head falling
forward in merciful unconsciousness.
Kinshe stared at her, his eyes
burning, and took a single step forward.
"Stay away from her!"
Thaminar snarled.
His eyes were burnt wounds in
his face, and he bent over his wife, stroking hair back from her wet
face and murmuring her name over and over. Fragile eyelids
fluttered. Opened. For long moments, there was no sense in
Shalassar's eyes at all. Then remembrance struck like a crack of
thunder, and she began to weep. She sobbed, the sound deep and
jagged, while her husband cradled her close looking utterly bereft.
Kinshe could only stand there,
feeling a tear trickle down his own cheek, wondering what to do.
What anyone could do. And then—
"You men, out," Alimar Kinshe
said firmly to her husband, her Crown Prince, and Samari Wilkon,
and it was an order, not a request. "Go. Find something to
do—I don't care what. Just go."
She didn't even look at them. She
simply marched across the tiny office, gathered Shaylar's mother
into her arms, and turned to Shaylar's father.
"Go and get some brandy, if you
have any," she commanded. "Wine, if you don't. She needs it."
To Kinshe's infinite surprise,
Thaminar rose without a sound of protest and left the office, like a
ghost walking through terrain it can no longer see or touch.
Kinshe watched him go, and then he understood.
He needed to feel useful. Needed to do something
for his wife. He just didn't know how.
Halidar Kinshe's respect for his
wife, already high, soared to dizzying heights, and he tiptoed very
softly from the room, beckoning the others to follow.
Alimar clearly understood what
needed to be done far better than he did, so he left her to do it.
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chief Sword Otwal Threbuch
moved through the darkness like a ghost.
He felt like a ghost must
feel—cold, empty inside, and incredibly ancient. He
shouldn't have been alive, and after what he'd seen, there was a
part of him which wished he wasn't. He told himself that was
exactly the kind of thinking he'd spent decades hammering out of
raw recruits who'd heard too many stupid heroic ballads, but that
did nothing to soften the pain. Or his sense of guilt.
He'd lain on that limb, watching,
helpless to intervene as the portal defenders were cut to pieces.
He'd been as surprised as anyone when the enemy artillery opened
fire through the portal, and he had no doubt that the shock
of that totally unanticipated bombardment explained how quickly
Charlie Company—his company—had been
slaughtered. But it wasn't the full explanation, and deep in his
heart of hearts, Otwal Threbuch cursed Hadrign Thalmayr even
more bitterly than he had Shevan Garlath.
He'd known what was coming
the instant that idiotic, incompetent, stupid excuse for a
hundred opened fire on someone obviously seeking a parley. He'd
recognized Thalmayr, of course, and the moment he'd seen the
other hundred, he'd also recognized the answer to his questions
about Hundred Olderhan's apparent lapse into idiocy. Not that his
relief over the fact that Sir Jasak's brain hadn't stopped working
after all had made what had happened to Threbuch's company any
less agonizing.
Every ounce of the chief sword's
body and soul had cried out for him to do something as
the debacle unfolded. But the steel-hard professionalism of his
years of service had held him precisely where he was, because
there'd been nothing he could do. Nothing that
would have made any difference at all to the men cursing,
screaming, and dying in front of him. It might have made him feel
a bit better to try, might have spared him from this crushing load
of guilt at having survived—so far, at least. But that was all
it could have accomplished, whereas the information he already
possessed might yet accomplish a great deal, if he could only
report it. Besides, as far as he knew, he was the only uncaptured
survivor from the entire company, which meant he was also the
only chance to report what had happened to Five Hundred Klian.
He clenched his jaw, eyes
burning, as he reflected on everything he had to report, including
the death of Emiyet Borkaz.
Borkaz had been unable to force
himself to sit out the fight. When the desperate survivors had
launched their hopeless charge in a despairing bid to get their own
support weapons to this side of the portal, Borkaz had left his
cover and run madly towards them, screaming and cursing. He'd
managed to get most of the way through the trees before he was
spotted, and Threbuch thought he'd managed to kill at least one of
the enemy on the way through (which was more than Threbuch
had managed), as well. And then at least three of those
hideous thunder weapons had struck him almost simultaneously.
He must have been dead before he hit the ground, Threbuch
thought grimly.
But at least the enemy could
make mistakes, too. The fact that Borkaz had obviously come
from behind them ought to have set off a search for whoever
else might be behind them, as well. On the other hand, perhaps
he was being too hard on them. Given the nature of the terrain,
they might not realize where Borkaz had come from at all. They
might think he'd come from the swamp side of the portal and
simply gotten further than any of the rest.
The chief sword froze abruptly.
Something had moved, and he stood motionless, straining his eyes
and ears. There!
The enemy sentry hadn't moved
very much at all. Probably nothing more than easing a cramped
limb. But it had been enough, and Threbuch slid silently, silently
to his right, giving the other man a wider berth.
Part of him was intensely
tempted to do something else. His arbalest would have been all
but inaudible under cover of the night wind sighing in the trees.
For that matter, he probably could have gotten close enough to slit
the other man's throat. It was something he'd done before, and the
thought of managing at least that much vengeance for Charlie
Company burned within him like a coal. But his job wasn't to kill
one, or two, or even a dozen enemies, however personally
satisfying it might have been. His job was to get home with the
most deadly weapon in any universe—information—
and if he left any dead bodies in his wake, the enemy would
know at least one Arcanan had gotten away. They'd also know
how important his report might be, and a dead sentry would set off
a relentless search he might well fail to evade.
He felt the moment of transition
as he belly-crawled across the portal threshold, moving instantly
from autumnal chill into steamy tropical heat, and he fought down
a sudden sense of release, of safety. Any soldier with an ounce of
competence—which, unfortunately, these bastards certainly
appeared to have—would have sentries on both
sides of the portal.
He kept going, easing forward,
working his way cautiously through the dense swamp grass and
mud at one edge of the portal and praying that he didn't startle
some nesting swamp bird into sudden, raucous flight.
Somehow, he managed to avoid
that, and to creep silently behind the one additional sentry he did
spot on the swamp side of the portal, silhouetted against the
moon. It took him almost three hours to cover a total distance of
little more than another eight hundred yards, but he made it. And
once the wrecked base camp was a quarter-mile behind him, he
rose to his feet at last, got out his PC, activated the search and
navigation spellware, took a careful bearing on Fort Rycharn, and
started walking. The thought of hiking seven hundred-plus miles
across snake and croc-infested swamp, without any rations at all,
was scarcely appealing, but he couldn't think of anything better to
do.
Just over an hour later, Threbuch
stiffened in astonishment. He froze instantly, listening to the night,
and looked down at his PC. The crystal's glassy heart glowed
dimly, its illumination level deliberately set low enough to keep
anyone from seeing it at a distance of more than a very few feet,
and the chief sword's eyes widened as he saw the small, sharp-
edged carat strobing at one side of the circular navigation display.
He stood very still for several
more moments, watching, but the carat was equally motionless.
After a moment, the noncom turned towards his right, rotating
until the strobing carat and the green arrowhead indicating his own
course lined up with one another. Then he moved slowly,
cautiously, forward through the currently knee-deep swamp.
The carat strobed more and more
rapidly, and then, abruptly, it stopped blinking and burned a steady,
unwinking green.
Threbuch stopped, as well,
standing in a dense, dark patch of shadow in the lee of a cluster of
scrub trees growing out of the swamp. The combination of
moonlight, shadow, and swamp grass rippling in the wind created
a wavering sea of eye-bewildering movement, and he cleared his
throat.
"Who's there?" he asked sharply.
"Chief Sword?" a hoarse
voice gasped. "Gods above, where've you been?"
"Great thundering
bollocks—Iggy?"
"Yes, Chief."
Threbuch watched in disbelief as
Iggar Shulthan crawled cautiously out of the scrub trees. The other
Scout's silhouette looked misshapen, and Threbuch's eyes went
even wider as he realized what Shulthan had strapped to his back.
"Gods!" the chief sword half-
whispered in the reverent voice of the man who'd suddenly
discovered there truly were miracles. "You've got the
hummers!"
The company's hummer handler
reached out. Threbuch extended his hand, and Shulthan gripped it
so hard the bones ached. The younger noncom's face was muddy,
and even in the uncertain moonlight, Threbuch could see the
memories of the horror Shulthan had witnessed in his eyes. Or
perhaps he couldn't, the chief sword reflected. Perhaps he simply
knew they had to be there because he knew they were in his own
eyes.
"I-I ran, Chief." Shame hovered
in the javelin's voice. "I grabbed the hummers, like Regs said, and
ran with 'em. I ran, Chief!"
Tears hovered in Shulthan's
voice, and Threbuch released his hand to grip both of the younger
man's shoulders hard.
"Son, you did exactly the
right thing," he said. "Don't you ever doubt that! Those
regulations were written for damned good reasons. You're the
Company's link with the rest of the Army. When the shit hits the
fan, and the bottom falls out, somebody's got to get word
back. The hummer handler's the only man who can do it."
"But the Hundred never gave me
the order," Shulthan whispered, blinking hard. "He went down so
fast, and they were dropping us like flies, and—"
"I know, Iggy," Threbuch said
more gently. "I was trapped on their side of the portal. I had to sit
there and watch it all, because my recon report for Five Hundred
Klian is every bit as critical as yours." Threbuch found it abruptly
necessary to swallow hard a few times. "That was the hardest thing
I've ever had to do—ever. So don't think for a
minute I don't understand exactly what you're feeling right now,
Iggy."
The younger man nodded
wordlessly, and the chief sword gave his shoulders another
squeeze before he released them, stood back, and cleared his throat
roughly.
"So, do you think anyone else
got out?"
"No, Chief." Shulthan shook his
head. "I haven't seen anyone. Not even them."
"I haven't seen any signs of
pursuit, either," Threbuch said with a nod, although that wasn't
exactly what he'd asked. He'd already known Shulthan was alone.
Unlike the hummer handler's PC, the chief sword's carried
specialized spellware which could give him the bearing to any of
his company's personnel within five hundred yards. Bringing up
the S&N spellware had automatically activated the locator
function, thank the gods! But because of that, he'd known none of
their other people were within a quarter mile of his current
location. He'd simply hoped—prayed—that Shulthan
might have seen someone else get out. Someone else who might
be hiding out here, beyond the spellware's reach, trying to make
his own way back to the coast.
"Where's Borkaz, Chief?"
Shulthan asked after moment, and Threbuch's jaw tightened.
"Didn't make it." He shook his
head and started to explain, then stopped himself. Shulthan's
anguish at having cut and run while his friends died behind him
was only too obvious. He didn't need to be told how Borkaz had
died running in the "right" direction. Not, at least, until he had
enough separation from his own actions to realize just how stupid
Borkaz's had been.
"All right," the chief sword
continued after moment. "Have you already sent back a hummer?"
"No, Chief." Shulthan shook his
head. "I've just been running and hiding," he admitted in a
shamefaced tone.
"Don't think I've been doing
anything else since it happened," Threbuch said, shaking his head.
The chief sword looked at the sky. The night was at least half over,
he reflected.
"We need to send one back now,
though," he continued. "It's going to take the rest of the night just
to reach the coast, and we need to let Five Hundred Klian know
what's happened. Come to that, we need to set up an LZ for them
to pull us out of here, too."
"Yes, Chief."
Threbuch looked down at his PC
again, trying to decide on the best spot. He didn't want a dragon
within miles of the base camp. Gods alone only knew how far
those bastards could throw whatever they'd used for artillery!
His empty stomach rumbled
painfully while he was thinking, and he glanced at Shulthan again.
"You wouldn't happen to have
anything to eat on you, would you, Iggy?" he asked, and
blinked as Shulthan actually chuckled.
"Matter of fact, Chief, I managed
to grab my whole pack. I've got a couple of blocks of emergency
rats."
"Iggy, it's too bad you're not a
woman," Threbuch said with the fervor of a man who hasn't eaten
in well over twenty-four hours. "Or maybe it isn't. If you were, I'd
have to marry you, and you're ugly as sin." The chief sword looked
back down at his PC, picked the coordinates he needed, and then
glanced back up at Shulthan. "Let's get that hummer on its way.
Then lead me to those rations and stand back."
"Is
a . . . unicorn," Shaylar said in slow,
carefully enunciated Andaran.
"Yes, exactly!" Gadrial replied in
the same language with a broad smile. She leaned closer to the
breathtakingly life-like image displayed above the gleaming crystal
on her tiny desk and indicated the booted and spurred man
standing beside the beast in an anachronistic-looking steel
breastplate. "And this?"
"Is a war-rider," Shaylar said
firmly. Gadrial nodded once more, and Shaylar smiled back at her.
Then she glanced at Jathmar, sitting beside her on the unused bed
in the quarters which had been assigned to Gadrial, and felt her
smile fade around the edges as she tasted his reaction to the
imagery Gadrial was showing them through the marriage bond.
The coal-black creature Gadrial
had just informed her was called a "unicorn" was unlike anything
either of them had ever seen before, yet it was close enough to
familiar to make it even more disturbing than something as totally
alien as a dragon. The beast was roughly horse-sized and shaped,
except for the legs, which were proportionately too long, and the
improbably powerful looking hindquarters. But no horse had ever
had those long, furry, bobcat-like ears, or that short, powerful
neck, or the long, deadly-looking tasks—like something
from some huge, wild boar—and obviously carnivorous
teeth. Or the long, ivory horn which must have been close to a
yard in length. And then there were the eyes. Huge green eyes with
purple irises and catlike slitted pupils.
Jathmar, she decided, had a
point. Compared to that bizarre, opium-dream improbability, the
half-armored cavalry trooper standing beside it with his lance and
saber looked downright homely.
"Your words?" Gadrial asked,
and Shaylar looked back at the images and shrugged.
"No word," she said, pointing at
the 'unicorn' and grimacing. Then she pointed at the man standing
beside it. "Cavalryman," she said, and watched the squiggles of
Gadrial's alphabet appear briefly under the image.
"Good. Thank you," Gadrial
said, and touched the small wand-like stylus in her hand to the
crystal-clear sphere of her "PC." The image changed obediently,
and this time it showed something Shaylar and Jathmar recognized
immediately.
"This," Gadrial said "is called an
'elephant.'"
Gadrial watched her "students"
studying the floating picture of the elephant and tried to keep her
bemusement at their rate of progress from showing.
She'd almost forgotten that she
had the language spellware package with her. It wasn't something
she'd ever used before, but it had come as a standard component of
the "academic" package an enterprising vendor had managed to
sell the Garth Showma Institute a year or so before. Gadrial had
been perfectly happy with the previous package's general
capabilities—most of the spellware she used in her own
work was the product of her own department at the Academy, or at
least so highly customized that it bore very little relationship to its
original form—but the Academy had insisted on providing
the new and improved spellware to all its faculty members. She'd
been more than mildly irritated at the time, since she probably
would never use more than twenty percent of the total applications
and the changeover had required her to become familiar with the
new package's idiosyncrasies (which were, as always, many). But
she'd long since learned not to waste energy fighting over the little
things, and it wasn't exactly as if the bundled spells providing all
the useless bells and whistles she'd never need were going to use
up a critical amount of her PC's memory.
Over the last four days, though,
she'd actually found herself deeply and profoundly grateful for the
white elephant with which the Academy's administration had
lumbered her. She'd thought she remembered something in the
manual about language and translation spellware. After their
arrival at Fort Rycharn, she'd hauled out the documentation and,
sure enough, she had a comprehensive translation spell package,
capable of both literal and figurative translations between any
Arcanan languages. More importantly, under the circumstances, it
also included what she thought of as a "Learn Ransaran in Your
Spare Time" spell platform for people who preferred to master
those other languages for themselves, rather than relying upon
magical translations. Of course, it couldn't simply magically stick
another language inside someone else's head, but it was well
designed to introduce that language to a new student in a carefully
structured format. The people who'd put it together had
assumed—not unreasonably—that their students
would speak at least one of Arcana's languages, which created
quite a few problems of its own, but it had still provided her with
an invaluable basis from which to begin teaching Shaylar and
Jathmar Andaran.
She hadn't even considered
teaching them Ransaran, for several reasons. First, even though it
sometimes irked her to admit it, Ransaran wasn't an easy language
to learn. There were those, especially in Mythal, who were wont to
refer to Ransaran as a "bastardized mongrelization," and she
couldn't really dispute the characterization. Ransaran was riddled
with irregular verb forms, homonyms, synonyms, irregular
spellings, nonstandard pronunciations, and appropriations from
every other major language. One of her friends at the Academy had
a T-shirt which proclaimed that "Ransaran doesn't borrow
from other languages. It follows other languages down dark
alleys, knocks them on the head, and goes through their pockets
for loose grammar." Over the centuries, Gadrial cheerfully
admitted, Ransaran had done precisely
that . . . which was why it was
unparalleled for concision, flexibility, and adaptiveness. Indeed,
she'd heard it argued that the notorious Ransaran flexibility and
innovativeness stemmed directly from the semantic and syntactic
responsiveness of the Ransaran language.
But it was a difficult
language to learn, even for another Arcanan.
Andaran, on the other hand, was
a very easy language to learn, although she'd always found
its tendency to create new words by compounding existing ones
rather cumbersome compared to the Ransaran practice of simply
coining new words . . . or stealing
someone else's and giving them purely Ransaran meanings. It had
virtually no irregular verbs and very few homonyms, and a
completely consistent phonetic spelling. If you could pronounce
an Andaran word, you could spell it correctly.
And it was the official language of the Arcanan Army.
Not surprisingly, she supposed, given that seventy to eighty
percent of the Arcanan military was also Andaran.
Gadrial had actually become
quite fond of Andaran during her years in Garth Showma with
Magister Halathyn. It might not be the most flexible language
imaginable it was far more flexible than the various Mythalan
dialects. Actually, Mythalan was probably the most precise of any
of the Arcanan language groups, which lent itself well to the exact
expression of nuance and meaning required by high-level arcan
research. But its very precision made it inflexible. It didn't lend
itself at all well to improvisation or adaptiveness, which Gadrial
had often thought had a lot to do with the preservation of Mythal's
reactionary, xenophobic society and its caste structure.
Andaran was much
less . . . frozen than that, and
she had to admit that it had a rolling majesty all its own, well
suited to oratory and poetry. In fact, it was quite beautiful, and
she'd become a devotee of ancient Andaran literature. There were
still plenty of things about Andara that she found the next best
thing to totally incomprehensible. The entire society was, after all,
a military aristocracy—or perhaps it would actually be
more accurate to say military autocracy—with
strict codes of honor and lines of responsibility, obligation, and
duty, while she was one of those deplorably individualistic
Ransarans. Most of the Andaran honor code continued to baffle
her, but the ancient heroic sagas often brought her to the edge of
feeling as if she ought to understand Andara.
In this instance, however, the
fact that it was the Union of Arcana's official military language
carried more weight than any other single factor. Eventually, as
she was certain Shaylar and Jathmar were well aware, the military
was going to insist on talking to them.
Despite the unanticipated
advantage the language spellware provided, Gadrial had expected
the teaching process to be clumsy and time-consuming, at least at
first. Shaylar, however, had an almost uncanny gift for languages.
Her accent was odd, lending the sonorous Arcanan words and
phrases a musical overtone that was as pleasant to the ear as it was
unusual, but her ability to pick up the language was astounding.
She was clearly much better at it than Jathmar, and although it was
still going to be some time before she started building complex
sentences and using compound verb forms, her basic ability to
communicate was growing by leaps and bounds.
In fact, Gadrial had come to the
conclusion that there was more than a mere natural ear for
language involved in the process. It had become abundantly clear
to her that Magister Halathyn had been correct in his initial
assessment that Shaylar and Jathmar's people had never even heard
of anything remotely like magic. And yet there was something
about Shaylar . . .
Gadrial hadn't forgotten that
bizarre moment on Windclaw's back, when she'd understood
beyond any possibility of doubt that Shaylar was begging her to
get the dragon "out of her head." When Gadrial added that to the
tiny woman's obvious and exquisite sensitivity to the moods and
emotions of those about her, plus Shaylar's breathtaking language
skills, the only explanation she could come up with was that
Shaylar truly did have some strange talent—almost the
equivalent of a Gift, perhaps. Gadrial wasn't prepared even to
speculate on how that "Gift" might work, and she'd kept her
suspicions about it to herself, but she'd become more and more
firmly convinced that whatever it was, it existed.
And she was taking advantage of
it for more than one purpose. Not only was she teaching Shaylar
and Jathmar Andaran, but she was simultaneously building up a
vocabulary of their language, as well. They understood
exactly what she was doing, and they clearly weren't exactly
delighted by the thought, but they equally obviously
understood—and accepted—that it was inevitable.
Somewhat to her own surprise,
Gadrial had found the language lessons a soothing distraction
while she and Jasak awaited Chief Sword Threbuch's return. What
didn't surprise her a bit was that she needed that
distraction, and not just because of Threbuch. She still couldn't
stop fretting about Magister Halathyn and his obstinate refusal to
show enough common sense to accept that he had no business at
all that close to the swamp portal under the present circumstances.
She'd told herself repeatedly that she was probably being too
alarmist, but she'd also recognized the self-convincing tone of her
own mental voice whenever she did.
"All right," she told her students,
shaking herself free of her gloomy thoughts and bringing up the
image of a slider chain and indicating the third car in it. "This is
called a 'slider car,' and it's—"
She broke off as someone tapped
on the frame of her open door. She turned towards the sound, and
her eyebrows rose as she realized it was Jasak Olderhan who had
knocked. Then she stiffened as his appearance registered. He was
standing in the doorway like a man awaiting an arbalest bolt, and
his face was bone-white, his shoulders rigid.
"Magister Kelbryan," he said in a
desperately formal voice, "Five Hundred Klian begs a few minutes
of your time."
"What's wrong?" She came to
her feet, nearly dizzy with fear, her eyes on his face as his body
language and expression sent spikes of apprehension hammering
through her, but he shook his head.
"Not here," he said, and that was
when she noticed the other men with him. The Gifted healer who'd
healed Shaylar stood behind him, and behind him was an
armed guard.
"What is it?" she
repeated, and heard her own voice go thin, almost shrill. Jasak
obviously heard it, too. She saw it in his face and eyes, and he
swallowed.
"News from the portal," he said
hoarsely. "Please, come with me," he added, making it a plea a
rather than a command. "These gentlemen will stay with Jathmar
and Shaylar."
She realized she was wiping
damp palms against her trousers. She looked at him for a moment
longer, then turned to Shaylar, who was proving the faster of the
two at absorbing her language lessons.
"I go, Shaylar," Gadrial said,
speaking carefully and slowly. "With Jasak. I'll be back soon.
Understand?"
The other woman nodded, and
her eyes were dark with concern.
"Gadrial?" She held out one
hand, touched Gadrial's arm gently in that concerned, almost
tender way that seemed habitual with her. "Is
there . . . trouble?" she asked. She
clearly had to search for a moment to come up with the second
word, and Gadrial gave a helpless shrug.
"I don't know," she admitted.
Shaylar bit her lower lip, then nodded. Jathmar was staring at the
armed guard, eyes hooded and lips thin, and Gadrial turned to the
healer . . . and the guard.
"If you don't mind, please leave
the door open. It distresses them less, to leave the door open."
Something moved in the guard's
eyes—something dark and dangerous, almost lethal. What
in Rahil's name had happened at the portal? She felt a chill chase
its way down her back as she asked herself the
question . . . and remembered who
had stayed behind.
"Please," she added, catching and
holding the guard's eye. "They're civilians." She stressed
the word deliberately. "Frightened, bewildered civilians whose
lives we—" she indicated herself and Jasak "—
smashed to pieces. Whatever's happened, none of this was their
fault."
The guard's jaw muscles
clenched, but he gave a stiff nod.
"As you wish, Magister. I'll leave
the door open." And I'll watch them like a gryphon looking for
a meal, his eyes and body language virtually shouted.
Gadrial held those hard,
dangerous eyes for a moment, then nodded and followed Jasak
into the corridor. A moment later, they were outside, where the
stiff sea breeze ruffled her hair and carried her the clean scent of
salt water while afternoon sunlight poured golden across the open
parade ground. Then she noticed the gates; they were closed. The
massive wooden locking beam had been dropped into its brackets,
and sharp-eyed sentries manned the parapet, weapons in hand,
while field-dragon gunners stood ready behind the relatively small
number of artillery pieces Five Hundred Klian had retained when
he sent the rest forward to Hundred Thalmayr.
What in hell had happened?
Jasak walked beside her in total
silence, nearly as ramrod-straight as the sword at his hip. She
studied his profile, trying to understand the complex emotions
seething just below the surface of the rigidly formal mask his face
and voice had become. There wasn't time to decipher it, though,
before they had crossed the parade ground and entered the fort's
central administrative block.
Sarr Klian's clerk practically
leapt from his chair, coming to attention with a sharply snapped
salute.
"Sir! The Five Hundred is
waiting for you, Sir!"
The one, quick look the clerk
shot at Gadrial left her insides quaking, and then Jasak rapped
sharply on the five hundred's door.
"Enter!" Klian's voice called
almost instantly, and Jasak opened the door, holding it for her as
he gestured her into the room ahead of him. She started forward,
then caught sight of Chief Sword Threbuch and the company's
hummer handler, waiting for them.
"Chief Sword!" she cried,
smiling and hurrying forward to grasp his hands in sudden delight.
"We were so worried about you! I'm so glad you made it back
safely."
The tall, powerfully built North
Shalomarian was visibly taken aback by her greeting. His normally
immaculate uniform was filthy, she realized, and his face was
heavily stubbled. It was also gaunter and thinner than she
remembered, and much older looking. The obvious signs of
weariness and privation sent a pang of sympathy through her, but
then his expression truly registered. He wore that same desperately
formal mask which had transformed Jasak's features into marble.
That was bad enough, but something flickered behind it as he
looked back at her. Something that turned Gadrial's joy at seeing
him into abruptly renewed fear.
"What's wrong?" Her voice was
sharp, urgent. "Something dreadful's happened, hasn't it?"
Pain flared deep in Threbuch's
eyes. His jaw tightened, but he didn't speak. He just turned back
toward the five hundred and waited for Fort Rycharn's
commandant to answer her terrified question.
"Magister Kelbryan," Klian said
in a heavy, almost exhausted voice. "Please sit down. Please," he
repeated.
He's afraid I'm going to collapse when he finally tells me
what's going on, she realized with a pang of icy dread.
"It's Magister Halathyn, isn't it?"
she whispered as she sank into the chair opposite the five
hundred's desk. "Something's happened to Magister Halathyn."
The officer's eyes actually
flinched. Then he drew a deep breath.
"Hundred Olderhan," he began,
"urged me to recall our forces from the swamp portal to minimize
the risk of another violent confrontation between our forces and
Shaylar and Jathmar's people." He cleared his throat. "I should
have listened, but I thought the risk was far less than it actually
was. I also hoped—assumed—that any powerful
military response on their part would take much longer to mount.
But the Chief Sword has confirmed Magister Halathyn vos
Dulainah's belief—and yours—that the portal our
prisoners came through was at least a class at seven. In fact, it's
almost certainly a class eight, judging from the Chief Sword's
reconnaissance . . . and there's an
enemy fort smack in the middle of it."
Gadrial's breath caught savagely.
"It appears to be understrength,
still under construction," Klian continued. "But the Chief Sword
watched the arrival of a relief column which had evidently moved
ahead by forced march. They had more of those weapons you and
the Hundred here, encountered. And other weapons, as well, with
tubes that were—"
He glanced at Threbuch.
"How large again, Chief?"
"They were about six feet long,
Sir," Threbuch replied. "Looked like they were probably four and a
half or five inches across, with fairly thin walls. They had four of
the damned things covering my aspect of portal, but according to
Javelin Shulthan here, there were at least two or three more
covering the other aspect. And they had something else, too. I
don't know what to call it. It was another tube, shorter and
not as big across, mounted on a tripod, almost like an infantry-
dragon. But it wasn't a dragon. It had
a . . . crank on the side, and a long
belt of those cylinder things we found at their camp went into it.
When they turned the crank—" He swallowed, his lips tight.
"It was like those shoulder weapons of theirs, Sir," he said, turning
to look directly at Jasak. "But instead of firing just one shot at a
time, it fired again and again, so fast together that it sounded like
one, long, single shot. It must've fired hundreds of times a
minute, Sir."
He stopped speaking abruptly,
and a line of sweat trickled down his brow.
He saw it used, Gadrial realized, going even colder.
"They attacked the portal." Her
voice was a thread. "Our portal—didn't they?"
"They did." Five Hundred Klian
gave her a jerky nod. Harsh, full of pain and anger. "After
asking—asking by name, mind—for
Shaylar."
Gadrial's breath hissed and she
paled as she instantly recognized what he was implying. If they'd
asked specifically for Shaylar, did that mean they somehow knew
she'd survived the initial battle? It must! But if they
did . . .
She turned to stare at Jasak.
"How? My God, how
could they have gotten a message out? Your men searched for any
sign of a runner, both at their camp and at the clearing."
"Yes," Jasak said through
clenched teeth. "We searched—damned thoroughly. No
messenger went out, unless he went up the river before he headed
for their portal. But however it happened, they got a message
through . . . somehow. And somehow
damned quick, too. According to the Chief, here, the head of their
initial scouting column passed him long before anyone could have
gotten back to their portal on foot to summon them even if they
did manage to get a runner out."
Gadrial touched her own cheek
with fingers which had gone icy chill.
"But that's—" She broke
off. Clearly, it wasn't impossible, since they'd obviously done it.
"They must have something like hummers," she said instead,
aware her intellect was grasping at straws, seeking any excuse, any
distraction, to avoid hearing the rest of the doom they were about
to pronounce.
"Something," Klian agreed. "And
we're hoping you can find out what. Shaylar, at least, seems to
trust you, to a certain degree. If you can find out how they warned
their people, you'll give us information that will save lives.
Possibly a lot of lives. We need every advantage we can possibly
get to deal with their people, Magister, because they've just
demonstrated a frankly devastating military superiority.
"Granted," he added in a harsh
voice, "we made mistakes which made it even worse. I did, for
example, when I failed to listen to Hundred Olderhan's warning,
and Hundred Thalmayr made several serious mistakes of his own
that proved costly. At least one of those was probably my fault,
too, because I'm the one who ordered him to position himself on
our side of portal. I intended that to apply only to his fortifications
and main position, not to his sentries. It's standard procedure to
picket both sides of any contested portal in a threat situation, and I
expected him to follow SOP in applying my orders. Apparently,
however, he interpreted my instructions to mean he was to do
otherwise."
Fort Rycharn's commander
paused again, his face tight and grim.
"I'm afraid, though, that however
much Thalmayr's mistakes—and mine—may have
contributed to the disaster, there was an even more terrifying
factor involved." He looked directly into her eyes, his own
appealing, almost desperate. "Somehow, these people can fire
artillery through a portal, Magister."
He stopped, and Gadrial stared at
him. No wonder he was staring at her that way, pleading with her
to explain how it might have happened. But she couldn't. No
spell could be projected through a portal interface! That had
been established two centuries ago. It was an absolute
fundamental of portal exploration, and—
Her yammering thoughts stopped
abruptly, as a truly terrifying possibility occurred to her. No, a
spell couldn't be projected through a
portal . . . but from Shaylar's reaction
to Magister Halathyn, these people didn't even know what sorcery
was! Their weapons obviously relied on totally non-arcane
principles; she and Jasak had already figured that much out. But if
that was true for their shoulder weapons, why shouldn't it be
equally true for their artillery weapons? And if their artillery fired
physical projectiles, like the ones their shoulder weapons fired,
then—
"I don't have any idea what
makes their weapons work, Five Hundred," she said frankly. "Not
yet, at least. But one thing I do know is that they don't rely on any
magical principles with which I'm familiar. Which means the
limitations we're familiar with probably don't apply, either."
She saw fresh, even worse fear in
his eyes, and shook her head quickly.
"Whatever they are, however
they work, I'm certain they have limitations of their own," she
said. "Any form of technology does. We simply have to figure out
what limitations apply to theirs. For the moment, though, I think
we're going to have to assume that instead of projecting a
spell the way our weapons do, they launch a physical projectile
which actually carries the spellware, or whatever it is they
use. If that's the case, then they can fire them anywhere any
physical object could pass. Like through a portal interface."
Klian and Jasak looked at one
another, their faces tight, and then the five hundred looked back at
her.
"However they did it, Magister,
it was devastating. I'm sure Hundred Thalmayr never expected it,
any more than I would have, and it turns our entire portal defense
doctrine on its head. We're going to have to come up with some
answer, whether it's a way to stop them from doing it, or a way of
figuring out how to do the same thing ourselves."
Gadrial nodded, and a part of her
brain truly was even then reaching out, looking for some sort of
solution. But it was only a tiny part, for most of her mind refused
to let her hide any longer from what she most dreaded.
"How badly—" She had to
stop and clear her throat. "How badly did they hit us?"
For a moment, no one spoke,
and she cringed away from their silence. Then Fort Rycharn's
commander inhaled deeply.
"The only men left from the
swamp portal detachment are in this fort, Magister." His voice was
harsh with emotion that not even years of Andaran military
discipline could disguise. "Of the men actually stationed at the
portal at the time of their attack, including the wounded we hadn't
yet evacuated, only Chief Sword Threbuch and Javelin Shulthan
made it back. All the rest are either dead or prisoners."
Gadrial felt her hands clench into
white-knuckled fists on the arms of her chair. Despite all they'd
already said, all her own efforts to prepare herself because of what
she'd seen in their eyes, the sheer scope of the disaster hit her like a
hammer. And behind that was the regret, the pity, burning
in Sarr Klian's eyes as he faced her squarely.
She couldn't speak, literally
couldn't force the words past her lips to ask the question that
would confirm what her heart and mind already knew. She tried,
but nothing happened, and then it was no longer necessary.
Chief Sword Otwal Threbuch
went to one knee in front of her chair. The man who was so
strong, so professional, in such command of his own emotions
that she'd privately concluded that he'd been chiseled from granite.
That man knelt in front of her chair and took her icy
fingers in his, and even through her pain she felt a distant sense of
surprise as his own fingers actually trembled.
"My lady," he said in a choked
voice, "I'm sorry. There wasn't anything I could do. Nothing at all.
I was trapped on the wrong side of the portal, couldn't even get to
our camp, let alone get to Magister Halathyn."
She started to cry, silently,
because she was unable to draw a deep enough breath to sob
aloud.
"How?" she whispered, the
sound thin as skeletal fingers scratching on glass, and his eyes
flinched.
"I wish to every god in heaven I
could tell you the enemy killed him, Magister. One of their
soldiers had pulled him out of his tent, was questioning him.
About Shaylar, I think, because Magister Halathyn was pointing
toward the coast, toward this fort. Then one of our field-dragon
crews—"
"No!" The word was
ripped from her. Jathmar's ghastly burns swam before her eyes,
and the picture her mind's eye painted of Halathyn, caught in a
dragon's fireball, was too horrifying to face.
"No, Magister!" Threbuch said
urgently. The chief sword reached out, caught her chin in one
hand, forced her to look into his eyes and see the truth in
their depths. "I know what you're thinking, but it wasn't a fireball!
The gods were at least that merciful. He didn't suffer, I
swear that, My Lady! The lightning caught them both, killed them
instantly—"
The sobs which had been frozen
inside her broke loose. She sensed people moving, heard their
voices, but couldn't make sense of the words. Threbuch's hands let
go of hers, then someone else crouched in front of her, tried to
hold and comfort her. But she jerked back in her chair, wanting to
hate these men for not forcing Halathyn to leave the
swamp portal with her.
"Gadrial, please." Jasak's voice
reached her at last, hoarse and filled with pain. "Let me at least
help you."
She opened her eyes, staring at
him through the blur of her tears, and even from the depths of her
own dreadful pain she saw the anguish in his ravaged face. And as
she saw it, she realized that Sir Jasak Olderhan had just lost nearly
every man of his command. Men he'd cared about, felt responsible
for, had grown to know—even love—in that
mysterious male way of soldiers: formal and distant, at times, yet
as close as brothers. But he was also Jasak Olderhan, with
all that name implied, captive to all those Andaran honor concepts
she couldn't understand. Unlike her, he couldn't weep for his loss,
for his dead. Shame stung her cheeks, punching through the wild
rush of grief, and she shook her head.
"I'm sorry," she whispered. "You
cared about him, too. About all of
them. . . . "
He merely nodded. The
movement was jerky and stiff, but that was because there were
witnesses, both men he had commanded and the man who
commanded him.
"I'm sorry," she said again,
louder, looking this time at Otwal Threbuch. "You must think I'll
hate you," she continued, trying desperately to steady her voice.
"I'm trying not to."
His eyes flinched once more, and
she bit her lip.
"I'm trying not to blame any of
you. Trying not to blame myself. He was so stubborn
—"
She broke off, gulping hard to
maintain control, and looked Threbuch squarely in the eye.
"You were on their side
of the portal, Chief Sword. I know that, and I've seen what
their weapons can do. You couldn't possibly have reached him."
Her voice was hoarse, cracking, but she forced it onward.
"Nobody could have, I know that. Not through that kind of
fighting. It's just such a terrible—"
She did break down again, then,
but this time she let Jasak put an arm around her shoulders. There
was great comfort in leaning against the strength of his broad
shoulder, in the warmth soaking into her, helping her rigid
muscles relax. She was mortified, at one level, to have broken
down so completely and deeply, having wept in front of these men
like any other helpless female. But losing Magister Halathyn for
any reason, let alone this
way . . .
"Would you like to go back to
your quarters?" Jasak asked gently.
She nodded, and he helped her
stand up, steadied her, let her lean on his forearm. She tried to say
something to Five Hundred Klian, but her throat was locked. She
turned a helpless look on Otwal Threbuch, but her throat remained
frozen, so she reached out one hand, instead, and gripped his
fingers in silence. Then Jasak was guiding her across the room. He
opened the door for her, slipped an arm around her shoulders
when they stepped outside, and steadied her carefully as her knees
went rubbery on the low wooden steps down to the parade ground.
They were almost to her quarters
when she remembered and went stiff and stumbled to a halt.
"What is it?" Jasak asked
urgently.
"Shaylar. And Jathmar. They're in
my room."
She didn't think she could face
them yet. They hadn't done anything themselves to kill
Halathyn—or the others—but her mentor, the man
who'd been her second father, was dead because soldiers from
their universe had come looking for them. Gadrial
couldn't—just couldn't—face them yet. Not while
the shock was so raw.
Jasak swore under his breath,
then changed direction and led her to his own quarters, in the
building reserved for officers, not civilian technicians. His room
was neat, tidy, and very nearly empty. The gear he'd brought back
from the field was stored in orderly fashion, and his personal
crystal sat on his desk, glowing lines of text visible where he'd
obviously been interrupted in the middle of something when Chief
Sword Threbuch had arrived with the news.
He guided her to the bed, rather
than the chair.
"Lie down and rest for a while,"
he murmured, easing her down.
The bed, like all military bunks
in frontier forts, was a simple cotton bag stuffed with whatever
the regional commissary had been stocked with: feathers, cotton
wadding, even hay. This one, like her own, had feathers inside, soft
and comforting as she curled up on her side atop the neatly
tucked-in blanket. He opened the window, letting in a cooling
breeze, then looked back down at her.
"Just stay here for a while,
Gadrial. I'll come back for you later, all right?"
His kindness in not mentioning
the names of the people he was about to remove from her room
left her blinking on salty water once more. She heard his feet cross
the bare plank floor, then the door clicked softly shut behind him
and Gadrial lay still, listening to the wind rustle through the room,
the distant sound of men's voices, the occasional cry of seabirds
high above the fort, and remembered.
She remembered a thousand
little details. Her first day at the Mythal Falls Academy, an
awestruck young girl from the windy empty plains of North
Ransar, still short of her fourteenth birthday. How she'd gaped at
the ancient stone buildings, stared in amazement at the thunderous
roar of Mythal Falls, one of the two largest waterfalls in any
universe, plunging into its deep chasm. The very air, and the
ground under her feet, had been so pregnant with latent magic that
her skin had tingled and her bones had buzzed, and yet even that
had been almost secondary beside an even greater sense of wonder.
She—Gadrial
Kelbryan—had scored so highly on the standard placement
tests that Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah himself had offered her
a place at the Academy.
It wasn't possible. She hadn't
even known her Ransaran teachers had sent her exam results to the
Academy, hadn't guessed how truly outstanding those scores had
been. Not until the message crystal had arrived with Halathyn's
personal invitation recorded in it. And then, impossibility piled on
top of impossibility, he'd personally met her that first day, taken
the unknown, timid teenaged girl from Ransar—the only
non-Mythalan student in the renowned academy's entire student
body, and one of the three youngest students ever admitted to
it—under his wing. And he'd taken her out to the Falls
themselves, shown them to her, and spoken quietly about the
reason her body had buzzed so strangely there.
"Magic," he'd said in that almost
childlike way of his, filled with wonder at the unending delights
the universes—all of them—had to offer. "Magic
gathers in places like these." He'd waved a dark-skinned, elegant
hand at the roaring cataract below their feet. "Or, rather, magic
bursts free at such places. There are other locations where the
forces we call 'magic' well up in great concentrations: all great
waterfalls, certain mountains, some deep caverns, places where
lines of force cross. But this place, where the Mythal River
plunges into this great chasm, where the entire continent is slowly
pulling apart along the Rift—this is the most potent
place in all Arcana."
Gadrial had stared at the tall,
lean, imposing man she was actually going to be permitted to
study with, if only she could overcome her own awe of him, and
blinked.
"Mythal is pulling apart?" she'd
asked. She'd felt incredibly stupid the instant the words were out
of her mouth, but he'd only chuckled gently.
"Oh, yes. That's not common
knowledge, mind you. Most people would be terrified to learn that
the ground under their feet is actually moving. It's incredibly slow,
of course—something on the order of a fraction of an inch
a year. But it's definitely moving. Have you never wondered why
the great continents, particularly Mythal and Hilmar, look like
pieces in a child's puzzle? Pieces which obviously ought to fit
together?"
"Yes, sir." She'd nodded. "I had
noticed it."
"Of course you had. You're
bright, not just Gifted, or you wouldn't be here." He'd waved at the
ancient stone buildings. "But it never occurred to you that those
continents might look like that because they'd once been one solid
piece of land?"
This time she'd simply shaken
her head, and he'd smiled.
"Well, that's hardly surprising,
either. Generally speaking, logic doesn't suggest that the ground
under you is actually moving across the face of the planet, does it?
But it is. We've confirmed it here." He'd cleared his throat. "Ahem.
That is to say, my research unit confirmed it."
Gadrial had found herself
grinning at his tone and his expression. Then she'd clamped both
hands over her mouth, horrified at her slip in manners, but he'd
just chuckled.
"Before your course of study is
complete," he'd promised, "I'll teach you to sense it yourself."
And he had. He'd opened up her
world to such wonders that she'd felt giddy most of the time,
hungry in her very soul for new knowledge, new understanding of
the world around her and the forces that only she and others with
Gifts could sense and touch and use to accomplish the things that
made Arcana's civilization possible.
Over the next three years, he'd
given her the wondrous gift of teaching her how to really use
her Gift. And then he'd stood like a fortress at her side when
the other magisters—aided and abetted by her fellow
students—had torn that precious gift of education from her
shocked hands. Had expelled her on grounds so flimsy a sharp
glance would have torn them to shreds. On the day when she'd
stood wounded and broken, like a child whose entire universe had
just been willfully, cruelly shattered.
On the day when Halathyn vos
Dulainah had laid into his most senior, most renowned colleagues
with barracks-room language in a white-hot furnace of fury which
had shocked them as deeply as it had shocked her.
"—and shove your
precious godsdamned, all-holy Academy—and your
fucking, jewel-encrusted pedigrees—up your
sanctimonious, lying, racist, hemorrhoid-ridden asses sideways!"
he'd finished his savage tirade at length, and his personal shields
had crackled and hissed about him like thinly-leashed lightning.
Sparks had quite literally danced above his head, and the
Academy's chancellor and senior department heads—
indeed, the entire Faculty Senate—had sat in stunned
disbelief, staring at him in shock.
"We're leaving, Journeywoman
Kelbryan," he'd said to her then, turning to face her squarely in the
ringing, crackling silence singing tautly in his incandescent attack's
wake.
"We?" she'd asked dully, her
throat clogged with unshed tears. "I don't understand, Magister."
For just an instant, he'd glared at
her, as if furious with her for her incomprehension. But
then the anger seething in his brown eyes had gentled, and he'd
taken both her hands in his.
"My dear child," he'd said,
ignoring the Academy's still stupefied leadership, "the day this
Academy expels the most brilliant theoretical magic adept it has
ever been my privilege to train for 'insufficient academic progress'
and 'attempts to violate the honor code by cheating' is the last day I
will ever teach here."
Someone else had made a sound,
then. The beginning of protest, she'd thought, but Magister
Halathyn had simply turned his head. The fury in his eyes had
roared up afresh, and the Chancellor had shrunk back in his chair,
silent before its heat.
"I resign from his
faculty—immediately," he'd said.
"But you can't!" she'd
cried, aghast. "You can't throw away your career over me!
I'm just one more journeywoman, Magister, and
you're . . . you're—"
He'd laid a gentle fingertip
across her lips, ignoring the men and women who had been his
colleagues and peers for so many years.
"You are anything but 'just one
more journeywoman,'" he'd told her, "and
this . . . this farce is only the
final straw. I should have done this years ago, for many reasons.
You're not to blame, except in as much as what these
sanctimonious, closed-minded, willfully ignorant, arrogant,
bigoted, power-worshiping, stupid prigs have just done to
you has finally gotten me to do what I ought to have done
so long ago. If they choose to wallow in the muck of their
precious supposed shakira superiority to all around them,
then so be it. I have better things to do than squat here
clutching handfuls of my own shit and calling it diamonds!
Besides," his sudden, delighted grin had shocked her speechless,
"I've been offered a new position."
One of the other department
heads had straightened in his chair at that, leaning forward with an
expression of mingled suspicion, chagrin, shock, and anger.
Magister Halathyn had caught the movement from the corner of
his eye, and he'd turned to face the other man and his grin's delight
had acquired a scalpel's edge.
"As a matter of fact, my dear,"
he'd continued, speaking to her but watching the other magisters'
faces like a duelist administering the coup de grace, "I've
been offered the chance of a lifetime. I'm going to set up a new
academy of theoretical magic on New Arcana, under the auspices
of the military high command. And you, Journeywoman Kelbryan,
have just become its first student."
The protest had begun then. The
shouts of outrage, the curses—the threats. But Magister
Halathyn had ignored them all, and so had Gadrial, as she'd stared
up into his eyes. Eyes so kind and so alive to the wonders of life,
so passionate to see justice done. She'd met those eyes and burst
into fresh tears, but not of despair. Not this time. Not ever again.
Until now, almost twenty years
and God along knew how many universes away from that moment.
Halathyn was gone forever.
Stupidly. Cruelly. For nothing. A reckless, crazy shot by a
dragon gunner too blinded by fear and the need to hurt the other
side to notice that the greatest magister Arcana had ever produced
was in his line of fire. Or—even worse, and just as
likely—by a gunner who hadn't cared as long as his
weapon's blast took down one of the men killing his company, as
well.
Gadrial Kelbryan turned her face
into Sir Jasak Olderhan's pillow and cried like a lost child.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
They left the fort at dawn.
Shaylar knew something terrible
had happened, but no one would tell them what. No one even
tried. Jasak had escorted her and Jathmar from Gadrial's quarters
to their own the afternoon before, but he'd barely spoken, and
Shaylar hadn't been able to touch him, so she had no idea what had
happened. Whatever it had been, it had obviously been bad,
because they'd spent the night locked in their quarters, with one
armed guard at the door, another at the window, and for all they
could tell, another on the roof.
Now they crossed the open
parade ground in total silence and found Gadrial waiting for them
at the fortress' barred water gate. Her haggard appearance shocked
Shaylar. The circles under her eyes were so dark they looked
bruised, her eyes themselves were swollen and red from prolonged
weeping, and an exhausted, defeated look clung to her. It was one
Shaylar recognized from her own recent, bitter experience.
"Who—" she started to
ask, then realized she didn't know the word for "died." Not that it
really mattered. Gadrial didn't answer her partial question, didn't
even look at her. In fact, nobody was looking at them—not
directly. People's glances sort of sidled past them, without ever
coming to rest on them, and she and Jathmar exchanged
baffled, worried looks.
The fort was built so that the
wharf extending out into the harbor was a virtual extension of its
walls. The only way onto or off of the long, narrow dock was
through the fort itself, and other people were waiting at the water
gate, as well. One of them was a tall man, with iron-gray hair. He
stood ramrod straight, staring at absolutely nothing, and Shaylar
vaguely remembered him from that first ghastly day, after the
battle at the clearing of toppled timber. She hadn't seen him since,
though, and that made her frown.
If he'd been with Jasak Olderhan
the day Jasak's men had slaughtered her crew, where had he been
in the meantime?
The likeliest answer terrified her,
because he had the tough, no-nonsense look of a professional
soldier. A good one. The sort of experienced noncom a good
officer might detach for some important independent
duty . . . like a reconnaissance
mission. Had he been to their portal? Shaylar knew
nothing about Jasak's and Gadrial's people, nothing about the
extent of their knowledge of this region. If they'd already known
about the portal cluster, then the logical thing for Jasak to have
done would have been to send someone to check the ones they
already knew about the moment his men stumbled across Shaylar's
crew, just to see if anything and changed. And if he had, that grey-
haired man would have found plenty.
Like Company-Captain Halifu's
fort. And if Company-Captain Halifu had sent someone to look
for them . . .
She glanced at Jathmar, who'd
picked up some of what she was thinking, or more precisely,
feeling, through the marriage bond.
"I think they know about our
entry portal," she said in a low voice.
"You may be right. Something
big's happened, at any rate. If I had to guess, I'd say they've tangled
with our military out there. And I don't think they'd
enjoyed the experience."
"Then Company-Captain Halifu
did send someone to look for us."
"Or to find out if anyone had
survived what you transmitted." Jathmar nodded grimly. "You said
they left most of their lightly wounded to walk the whole way
back to their swamp base camp when they flew us out. That would
have left a trail a child could follow, leading straight back to
their portal."
Shaylar nodded, but fresh worry
tightened her mouth. She had no doubt that Darcel Kinlafia would
have accompanied any rescue force Halifu might have sent out.
And if the other Voice had managed to make it to this side of the
swamp portal, he would undoubtedly have done his best to contact
her. But he hadn't succeeded, and neither had she managed to
contact him, despite making the attempt again and again,
especially at their normally scheduled contact times, since they'd
Healed her head injury. Not that she'd ever had much hope that
she'd be able to. She still didn't know exactly how fast a dragon
could fly, but she was virtually positive that the long dragon flight
from the swamp portal to their present location had taken her well
outside her own contact range from the portal, and hers was much
longer than his.
Without knowing about these
people's flying creatures, and given the way the swampy terrain
would hamper any sort of ground-based movement, Darcel
wouldn't have any reason to believe that she could have been
transported out of his range from the portal in no more than a
week. Which meant that when he'd tried to contact her and gotten
only silence—and hadn't heard anything from her,
either—he'd undoubtedly assumed that it confirmed his
worst fears.
But there was nothing she could
do about that, and so she did her best to put the thought behind
her. Instead, she considered what Jathmar had said from another
perspective.
"Gadrial's in a state of shock,"
she said very quietly into Jathmar's ear. "She's lost
someone—someone precious to her."
Jathmar glanced at her sharply,
then his nostrils flared.
"That man at the camp," he said
softly. "The one who looked Ricathian."
"The one with the words in the
crystal, and the fire rose." Shaylar nodded. "Gadrial was close to
him, emotionally. I could see it in her eyes, hear it in her voice.
They'd known each other long enough for that easy bantering
between good friends, and then she had that fight with him just
before they left. Her and Jasak both, now that I think about it. You
don't suppose . . . ?"
"I don't know," Jathmar said, still
softly. "But I'd hate to think anything happened to that fellow."
Shaylar blinked, unable to
conceal her surprise. The marriage bond made it impossible for
her to be unaware of Jathmar's feelings where all of their
captors were concerned. But that same bond made it impossible
for him to misunderstand her surprise, and he shrugged.
"It's obvious he wasn't a soldier,
any more than she is." He nodded slightly in Gadrial's direction.
"Neither of them wore uniforms. And, well, I don't know how to
say it. There was something about him . . ."
He shook his head, unable to find exactly the right words. "I hope
Grafin blew the rest of them into an Arpathian hell, but I'd be sorry
to learn that that particular man had been killed. What was his
name?" He frowned. "It started with an 'H,' didn't it?"
Shaylar glanced at the others,
then leaned even closer to her husband.
"Halathyn," she said in a half-
whisper, and he nodded.
"Yes. That was it." A regretful
sigh escaped him. "I suppose they'll tell us, eventually. Or maybe
we can ask. But not yet. I really don't think now's a good time at
all."
Shaylar glanced from Gadrial's
tear-swollen eyes to Jasak's thin-lipped, pale silence, and then at
the big, grey-haired soldier's clenched jaw and strangely disturbed
eyes.
"Right," she agreed firmly. "We
ask later. Much later."
Then the massive wooden bar at
the gate rattled and clanked as the sentries unfastened it and it
creaked ponderously open. They didn't open it all the way—
just far enough to let Jasak, Gadrial, and the soldier whose name
she didn't know pass through the opening more or less abreast. She
and Jathmar went next, followed by several other soldiers,
including one in chains.
The sight of one of Jasak's
soldiers in manacles and leg irons startled her into staring. She
hadn't noticed him while standing at the gate, but she recognized
him. Not by name, of course—she had no idea who he was,
or what his duty might have been—but she'd seen him that
first ghastly day, as well. He was dark-skinned, like Halathyn, and
to Shaylar's eyes he looked like a Ricathian. But only physically.
All resemblance to any Ricathian Shaylar had ever known ended
with the color of his skin and the look of his hair.
Despite his chains, he walked
with his spine ramrod straight, and he wore an expression of
unmistakable aristocratic disdain. His lip curled in the way she'd
seen occasional aristocrats sneer back home, particularly those
from Othmaliz, who felt they were superior to pretty much
everyone else on Sharona simply because their ancestors had
retained possession of Tajvana. She'd had to deal with one or two
of that sort, and she'd never enjoyed the experience, although not
even the most haughty Othmalizi noble had wanted to cross
swords with a fully accredited Voice of her stature.
But there was more than simple
arrogance to this man. The look the chained prisoner sent
Jasak Olderhan as Gadrial and the officer stepped past him
contained such malice, such lethal hatred, that Shaylar's breath
caught for just a moment. Then another soldier spoke sharply to
him, and he stalked through the gate in turn, as though he were
some great lord making his way through a gaggle of filthy beggars
despite the jingle of his chains.
"I wonder who he thinks
he is?" Jathmar murmured.
"Good question," Shaylar agreed.
"I'm not sure I like the idea of
sailing on the same ship he does," her husband growled under his
breath, gripping her hand tightly.
Since they didn't have most
choice in the matter, Shaylar found herself hoping that these
people had good locks on their doors. Then she shivered at the
thought, since she and Jathmar would be held behind locked
doors, as well. Gods' mercy, surely they wouldn't put her and
Jathmar in the same cell as that fellow? She shivered
again, wondering what he'd done.
The roughly built wharf looked
almost rickety, but it was reassuringly solid underfoot, and
Shaylar turned her attention to the ship tied up alongside it. Partly,
she admitted, she was interested in anything which might distract
her from the thought of being confined in the other prisoner's
company. But the ship itself was more than enough to claim her
attention in its own right, for it was, without reservation, the
oddest vessel Shaylar had ever seen, and Jathmar was staring at it
in just as much perplexity as she was.
"What on earth makes it go?
" he wondered aloud.
Shaylar could only shake her
head in bafflement. It wasn't a huge ship, although it was clearly
large enough to tackle the open ocean. It was actually a bit bigger
than she'd thought it was on the day of their arrival. Of course, she
hadn't been in very good shape for making detailed observations at
the time, not before their healers had gone to work on her.
This ship was somewhat smaller
than the standard Voyager-class ships the Trans-Temporal
Express had developed to cross the water gaps in its inter-
universal transportation system, but not by very much of. The
Voyagers were about four hundred feet long and had a beam
of about fifty-five feet, and Shaylar, like everyone who'd ever
served in a portal survey crew, was thoroughly familiar with them.
They were certainly serviceable craft, if not especially speedy, but
they'd been designed primarily as cargo vessels, and their
passenger accommodations left much to be desired. On the other
hand, in the Voyager, the TTE had produced a design
which lent itself to modular construction and mass production.
The freighters were literally shipped across intervening stretches
of dry land in pieces, carried on huge, special freight cars, and
assembled once they reached their destinations.
But if this ship was of roughly
the same dimensions, that was about all it had in common with the
TTE design.
First, it appeared to be built of
wood. That wasn't really all that surprising, in a lot of ways.
Wooden hulls were more common than steel hulls for locally
produced Sharonian shipping, after all. The TTE's modular designs
were one thing, but for most people, it was far simpler to import a
gang of shipwrights and the men needed to fell timber to build
ships than it was to import enough infrastructure to build steel-
hulled vessels in barely explored universes.
But the fact that this one was
built of wood did seem odd considering the second obvious
difference between it and the Sharonian ships with which she was
familiar, because it was a far sleeker design. Whereas a
Voyager had a straight, almost vertical stem, this ship's bow
was sharply raked, and the hull flared gracefully as it approached
deck level. Shaylar was no sailor, but she'd had the
opportunity—or misfortune, depending upon one's
viewpoint—to experience heavy weather aboard more than
one of the TTE ships, and she suspected that this vessel would
have provided much more comfortable transport under the same
circumstances. It looked far
more . . . modern, for want of a better
word, which made its wooden construction one more of the
endless anachronisms she'd observed since her capture.
The third thing she noticed was
the size of the superstructure, and the fourth was the absence of
anything remotely resembling a Sharonian ship's smokestacks. It
had only a single mast, which carried no sails, so it had to have
some sort of propulsive system, but she couldn't imagine
what it might be.
But the fifth thing she
noticed was a row of three-foot-wide ports which ran down the
entire length of the superstructure right at deck level. At the
moment, those ports were closed by hatches, but she didn't think
they were access ways for ventilation or trash chutes. There were
eight of them on the side of the ship closest to the wharf, and she
assumed there was a matching row on the ship's outboard side.
She and Jathmar followed Jasak
and Gadrial down the wharf towards the waiting ship, and she
found herself wondering uneasily how far from Jasak's home
universe they were . . . and what it
might say about these people if this universe wasn't close
to their home base. This vessel was obviously a warship, or at
least armed for self protection, and no TTE design she'd ever seen
had carried actrual weapons. It was also far too large for
any sort of coastal patrol craft. No, this was a ship designed for
blue-water combat—at need, at least—which argued
that it had been constructed by a fiercely militaristic society. Who
else would send actual warships to a raw frontier?
That thought carried her clear to
the boarding gangway, which proved to be much flimsier than
she'd expected. Jasak said something to Gadrial, speaking much
too quickly for Shaylar's very limited Andaran to follow. The
other woman looked at him, managed a wan smile, and shook her
head. Then she stepped onto the steeply inclined gangway, gripping
its rope rail firmly, and started up it to the deck towering above
them in the cool morning light. Jasak watched her for a moment,
then turned to Shaylar and surprised her by producing a wry smile,
despite the visible weight on his shoulders.
"Women go first," he said in
careful, slow Andaran, holding out his hand, and Shaylar actually
flushed, embarrassed that his courtesy had, as a surprise. Despite
all of the obvious care he'd taken to protect her and Jathmar, she'd
still allowed herself to expect a lack of consideration from him.
She hesitated for a moment,
looking at him. Part of it was surprise at the offered courtesy, but
there was more to it. She wanted—needed—to touch
him, to use her Talent to acquire any information she could. But at
the same time, she was almost afraid to. Despite his disciplined
exterior, there was too much pain behind his eyes, too much pain
waiting for her if she dared to sample it.
Gadrial had halted a few feet up
the gangway, looking back with those bruised, swollen eyes, and
Shaylar felt of fresh stab of confused shame. Despite Gadrial's
own obvious anguish, she was still capable of worrying about the
prisoners placed in her charge, capable of looking back because
she sensed Shaylar's hesitation, even if she didn't begin to
understand all the reasons for it.
That realization was enough to
galvanize Shaylar, and she opened her Talent wide and reached for
Jasak's waiting hand.
It was a mistake.
Shaylar knew that the instant she
touched Jasak. She bit down on a hiss of shock and stumbled
heavily, as if someone had just hit her in the back of the head with
a hammer. Jasak's self-control was so rigid that she'd seriously
misjudged the actual depth of his anguish, and she'd pushed her
Talent hard, prepared to strain for any detail she might have been
able to pick up.
What she got was death. Massive
amounts of violent death, coupled with a sense of desertion, a
tidal wave of helpless guilt. The fact that Jasak had been relieved
by the other officer, the one who'd wanted to hurt her and Jathmar,
had already been obvious to both of them, but that wasn't enough
to absolve Jasak of that terrible, crushing sense of guilt. Or,
perhaps, of responsibility. It didn't matter what she called it; what
mattered was the raw, bitter poison of its strength.
She felt herself falling—
falling physically, as she stumbled, and falling psychically, as she
toppled into the dreadful abyss of Jasak Olderhan's pain—
and she gasped as Jasak's powerful arms caught her before she
could tumble to the dock's splintery planking. It was all she could
do to keep from crying out as he lifted her, as if she were child,
and his genuine concern for her cut through the churning vortex of
his darker emotions.
Shaylar fought her way up and
out of the darkness, frantically shutting down her own
receptiveness, backing away from the contact she'd sought as a
means to gather information. It took her two or three heartbeats to
pull far enough back to regain her own sense of self, and even as
she did, she sensed Jasak's consternation and worry over her
reaction.
She managed to shake her head,
smile up at him with a mixture of apology for her "clumsiness"
and thanks for his quickness in catching her. And then Gadrial
reached out, as well.
The other woman's gesture was
oddly hesitant, almost halfhearted, unlike anything Shaylar had
seen from her before. It was almost as if she were fighting a war
with herself, making herself offer that token of assistance.
Warned by her experience with
Jasak, and again by Gadrial's uncharacteristic hesitation, Shaylar
braced herself for the contact shock before she reached out for the
offered hand. Instead of opening herself wide, she buttressed
herself, and even so, her nostrils flared and her face went white as
her fingers closed on Gadrial's.
Jasak's pain had been terrible
enough; Gadrial's was worse, and Halathyn's name burned so hotly
through her chaotic, grief-torn emotions that Shaylar actually
heard it. She'd never done that with a non-telepath before, and
she had to bite down hard on an impulse to fling both arms around
the other woman. Gadrial had done so much to comfort her, had
somehow kept Jathmar alive long enough to reach this fort. Now
her agony cried out to Shaylar, and the Sharonian woman felt a
desperate need to repay some of that comfort. Yet she couldn't,
not without risking the revelation of her Talent, and for now, that
must remain secret. And so she managed not to, managed to
simply take Gadrial's hand as the two of them made their way up
the steep, swaying gangway together.
They reached the ship's deck, and
Shaylar released Gadrial's hand. She stood beside the other,
grieving woman, looking back across the wharf at the land they
were leaving, and wrapped both arms around herself to hold in the
shivers while she tried to make sense of what she'd just sensed.
Halathyn was dead.
She was utterly certain of that
individual death, but there were others, too. So many others. That
was clear from Jasak's churning emotions, not to mention the way
she and Jathmar were being treated. Company-Captain Halifu
must have attacked their base camp at the swamp portal, and it was
obvious he'd blown it straight to hell when he did.
Which Shaylar found a terrifying
thought. She and Jathmar were helpless, prisoners of war in a
society that would undoubtedly see Sharonians as far more
warlike than they really were after this second violent contact.
She didn't believe Jasak would
retaliate against her and Jathmar, despite the fact that it was his
men who had just become the latest casualties. She couldn't
believe he would, not after the other things she'd already sensed
out of him. But Jasak Olderhan was only one officer, and a
relatively low ranking one, at that, unless she was seriously
mistaken. Shaylar had been around enough military units since
joining the field teams to develop a fairly good sense of the
military pecking order, and Jasak clearly wasn't at the top of his. In
fact, she suspected she was actually older than he was, given his
apparent rank and assuming that his military worked at all like the
PAAF and other Sharonian armies.
If events were escalating even
remotely as quickly as she feared they were, it was unlikely that an
officer of his junior rank would be able to protect them. Even if
he was inclined to make the effort after his own men had suffered
such brutal casualties.
The commandant of the
fort—which looked strangely small from here, silhouetted
against the endless miles of virgin swamp that stretched to the
horizon—was obviously of much higher rank than Jasak,
and considerably older, as well. He'd visited her and Jathmar in
their quarters in his fort only once, and he hadn't spoken to them at
all when he had. He'd simply looked at them for long, silent
moments—studying first Jathmar, then Shaylar. Whatever
he'd been looking for, it hadn't shown in his face. And whatever
conclusions he'd drawn would remain a mystery, because he'd
merely nodded to them once, then departed.
Shaylar would not—dared
not—assume that other officers would show equal
leniency. Especially not now. So she stood, holding in the shivers
until Jathmar joined her on the deck. He wrapped a protective arm
around her shoulders, and she turned toward him, wrapping both
her own arms around him and holding on tight while the rest of
the passengers passed them.
A half-dozen men who were
obviously members of the ship's crew sorted out the new arrivals
as they reached the deck. Like Jasak and the other soldiers, the
sailors were uniformed, although their uniforms—
composed of red jerseys for most of them, although one wore a
red tunic with gold braid, over white trousers—were quite
different from Jasak's. The one in the tunic was obviously a junior
officer or petty officer of some sort. He and Jasak exchanged
salutes, and the naval officer said something to one of his own
men, then nodded towards Shaylar and Jathmar. The sailor started
towards them, but Jasak said something, and the sailor stopped,
looking back at his own officer. Again, the conversation was too
quick for Shaylar's embryonic Andaran to follow, but it wasn't
hard to guess what was being said.
Once again, Jasak was
intervening on their behalf, asking the ship's officer to let them
remain on deck at least a little longer before they were sent below
to whatever quarters or confinement awaited them. After a
moment, the other officer nodded in agreement and turned his
attention back to more immediate duties.
The last few passengers trooped
up the gangway, and the officer gave an order to one of the sailors.
An instant later, the gangway began to rise. The sailors didn't haul
it up. They didn't use a winch or a crane to lift it. It simply rose
, detaching itself smoothly from both the side of the ship and
the wharf below, turning until it was parallel with the centerline of
the ship, and then rising still higher. It lifted until it was a good ten
feet higher than even Jasak's head, and then nestled itself neatly
into what were obviously waiting mounting brackets on the side
of the ship's superstructure, one deck level above them.
Shaylar stared at it in disbelief as
it drifted across above them, and she heard Jathmar's gasp of
surprise when its shadow fell over them.
"How in all the Uromathian hells
did they do that?" he demanded as a pair of sailors made
the gangway fast in its new position. Shaylar was as startled as he
was, but her memory flashed to that ghastly moment in the toppled
timber when they'd first lifted Jathmar's stretcher.
"It's more of that levitation of
theirs," she said wonderingly. "Remember your stretcher, or the
ones they used for their own wounded?"
"Those little glassy cubes you
were talking about?" Jathmar looked at her for a moment, then
twitched his shoulders in a half-shrug. "I suppose if you can
levitate stretchers, there's no reason you couldn't levitate
gangplanks, as well, at that," he admitted. Then he snorted with a
grimace. "Probably explains why they don't have any cargo
derricks on this ship of theirs, for that matter. Why bother with
cranes when you can just stick a little glass bead on your cargo
pallets and fly them to where you want them?"
He shook his head wonderingly,
then turned away as Jasak called his name quietly.
"Go to quarters now," Jasak said.
The quarters to which they were
led were a pleasant surprise . . . and a
far cry from the damp, dark, undoubtedly rat-infested cell Shaylar's
imagination had pictured.
The cabin to which she and
Jathmar were assigned lay one deck up in the superstructure,
above the ship's weapons ports, on the outboard side and directly
between Jasak's assigned quarters and Gadrial's. The older man
with the iron-gray hair, was given quarters on the other side of
Jasak's, and the man in chains disappeared somewhere
below—probably to the cell she and Jathmar weren't in
after all.
It was a small cabin, but that was
true of every shipboard cabin Shaylar had ever used. It might be
even a bit smaller than what they might have received aboard one
of TTE's Voyagers, but if she was right, and this was
a warship, that was probably inevitable. At any rate, she'd
always assumed accommodations would be more cramped aboard
a man-of-war than aboard a civilian-crewed vessel.
It was also heartlessly utilitarian,
but that didn't matter. It was clean, reasonably comfortable, with
white-painted bulkheads and neat built-in storage compartments
under its pair of bunks, and it had a porthole. It wasn't large
enough to wiggle through, even for Shaylar, but it allowed them a
view of the sea and—more important—it let in
daylight, which was even more welcome for its contrast with
the windowless cell she'd feared.
At night, they would even be
able to see the moon.
She held back a sigh as she
settled herself on the nearer bunk. It wasn't the softest bed she'd
ever sat on, but it was softer than a sleeping bag on the ground.
Then she looked up again at the sound of a cleared throat.
"Stay," Jasak said from the open
doorway. "I come soon."
Shaylar nodded, knowing what
came next. Then their door closed, but not before she'd caught a
glimpse of the armed guard who'd taken up his station outside. A
lock clicked, and Jathmar crossed his arms over his chest and
glared at the door.
"We're in a room on a ship that
will shortly be in the middle of the ocean," he growled. "That's a
remarkably solid looking door, and it's locked tight. And that
window isn't big enough for you to crawl through, let
alone me! Why the hells do they bother with a guard?"
Shaylar felt the worry, fear, and
frustration beating like a ragged headache under his sour mood.
She went to him, brushed her lips against his, circled his chest
with her arms, and rested her head against his heart.
"We must have hurt them badly,"
she murmured.
"I hope so!" he snarled.
"Shhh." She leaned far enough
back to gaze up into his wounded eyes. "What's done is done. We
have to live with the consequences. That means we'd better figure
out what we're going to say when they ask how we got a message
out. I'm learning their language, Jathmar, and even though it's
maddeningly slow without another telepath to help, it won't be
long before I know enough for them to ask that question—
and expect an answer."
Muscles bunched along his jaw,
but he didn't speak.
"Jathmar," she said gently, "you
have to let go of at least some of the hatred and put your energy
into figuring out ways to keep them guessing without making
them suspicious enough to treat us worse than they have so far."
She thought for a moment that
he would flare up at her, but he didn't. Instead, he bit back the
surge of anger beating through him.
"They have treated
us . . . decently," he muttered
grudgingly, reluctantly. "All things considered."
"Yes," she murmured, "they
have."
"But I can't stop hating, Shaylar.
They've smashed everything we had, everything we ever wanted.
Killed our friends, nearly killed us . . ."
He sucked down a deep breath,
fighting to bring himself under control, but it was hard. Hard.
"I don't even dare try to love
you," he whispered finally, miserably. "We don't even control the
lock on our own door, can't know when someone's going to open
it, drag us out of here! And what if you got pregnant?" He
shook his head, teeth gritted. "Before, it would've meant dropping
out of the survey crews, and that would have been bad enough.
But now, what would they do with—or to—our
child if they thought it would make us tell them things they want
to know?"
He squeezed his eyes shut,
tightened his grip on her, and buried his face in her hair. His
aching need for her burned hot as lava through the bond, shot
through with ripples and tremors of anger, fear, and despair, and
she had absolutely no answer for him. She could only hold him,
blinded by tears. They stood in the center of their comfortable
little prison, and just held on while the awareness of their total
helplessness and vulnerability burned through them.
Shaylar never knew exactly how
long they stood there. Without their confiscated watches, it was
difficult to gauge the passage of time, and so she didn't even try.
She simply leaned against Jathmar, her cheek nestled against his
chest and the strong steady beat of his heart, while she listened to
the dim sounds beyond the locked door and the even more distant
sounds drifting through the opened porthole.
Then the ship began to move,
and once again she was reminded of the yawning gap between any
previous experience and their present reality. There was no deep
rumble of machinery, no throbbing vibration from engines. There
wasn't even the flap of canvas, or the creak of masts and cordage.
In fact, there was nothing at all except steady movement as the
ship backed silently away from the wharf.
It halted once more, and she
looked out the porthole as it rotated smoothly in place, swinging
its bow away from the land. The motion swung the fort back into
the porthole's field of view, giving her a last glimpse of the land,
and tears stung Shaylar's eyes again. She gave Jathmar another
squeeze, then wiped her eyes impatiently and moved to the
window to look back at the vast sweep of marsh that ran along the
coastline.
The ship began to move again,
forward this time, still silently. Its speed built steadily, quickly,
and there was sound at last—the ripple and wash of water
and the creaking sound of wooden timbers flexing as they moved,
but still not so much as a whisper to betray whatever power sent it
slicing through the waves.
The fort where they had stayed
for such a short time grew smaller by the minute as the ship
accelerated quickly and smoothly. They were already moving
faster than any of Trans-Temporal Express' freighters. It was hard
for Shaylar to estimate, but they had to be moving at least as
quickly as any of the great high-speed passenger ships, maybe even
as fast as the new turbine-engined warships she'd heard about. Yet
still there was that eerie lack of vibration, that silence. No funnel
smoke, no noise, just this smooth, effortless sense of speed.
She pressed a hand to her lips,
staring back through the porthole. That vast marsh and that tiny
log fort looked inexpressibly lonely, kissed by the rising sun and
populated only by great clouds of water birds and a tiny handful of
people. Or perhaps it was only she who felt such unbearable
loneliness.
Then Jathmar's arms tightened
about her from behind.
"I'm here, love," he murmured.
"Whatever else, I'm here."
She pulled his arms more tightly
around herself and held onto them silently, her throat too
constricted to speak. At the moment it was hard—so very
hard—to remember that they'd come out here to see new
sights, new places. Things no other Sharonian had ever seen, or
even imagined. Tomorrow, perhaps, she would be able to
remember that, but not just yet.
For the moment, she could only
grieve . . . and hold tight to those
loving arms which were all she had left in any universe.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Balkar chan Tesh looked up as
someone tapped lightly on the small gong hanging from the peak
of his tent. He recognized the towering, youthful Marine officer
instantly, although they'd never met. The youngster looked
exhausted, as well he might after what had to have been an even
longer forced march than chan Tesh's own, but he was also the
spitting image of his father. Even if he hadn't been, the blue-gray
peregrine falcon on the far-from-regulation leather pad covering
the left shoulder of his uniform tunic would have been a powerful
clue. The bird was huge even for a peregrine—easily over
twenty inches long, with a wingspan which must have been well
over four feet—and it was neither hooded nor jessed, which
was . . . unusual, to say the very least.
Its powerful talons gripped the shoulder pad securely, but it was
obvious they were also delicately aware of—and
restraining—their own strength. Its dark eyes were bright
and alert, and they focused on the company-captain with unnerving
intensity.
It was, chan Tesh thought, quite
possibly the most magnificent predator he'd ever seen, and well it
should be, given the millennia-long breeding program which had
produced it.
"Yes, Platoon-Captain?" he said,
giving absolutely no indication that he'd recognized the
newcomer.
"Platoon-Captain chan Calirath,"
the Marine introduced himself. "Company-Captain Halifu told me
to report to you as soon as I arrived."
"I see." chan Tesh laid down his
pen and leaned back in his folding canvas chair. "In that case, I
suppose you'd better come in . . .
assuming you'll fit," he added with a small, wry smile.
"Thank you, Sir," the Marine said
politely, and chan Tesh gave a small mental nod of approval.
Platoon-Captain His Highness
Crown Prince Janaki chan Calirath, heir to the Winged Crown,
stood at least eight inches over six feet, with his dynasty's
powerful shoulders, but imposing size wasn't enough to explain
the sense of presence he projected. chan Tesh had been curious
about how the Crown Prince would introduce himself, and he was
pleased by the way Janaki had actually done it. Of course, in an
odd sort of way, that simple "Platoon-Captain chan Calirath" had
only emphasized that the young man introducing himself was
actually the future ruler of the oldest, most powerful empire in
human history.
Well, in our branch of humanity's history,
anyway, chan Tesh reminded himself.
"Wait for me, dear heart," Janaki
murmured to the falcon, and shooed her gently off his shoulder.
She launched with a soft cry, and chan Tesh watched her disappear
into the overhead foliage. The Crown Prince watched her go with
a smile, then maneuvered himself into the tent cautiously but
smoothly. It was apparent that he'd had plenty of experience
moving his substantial bulk in and out of the tents the PAAF
provided for field use. He seated himself rather gingerly in the
folding chair chan Tesh indicated, and the chair creaked alarmingly
under his weight. Fortunately, it held.
"I hope you won't take this
wrongly, Platoon-Captain," chan Tesh said, "but I could wish you
hadn't turned up for duty here at this precise moment."
"Sir—" Janaki began, but
chan Tesh's raised hand stopped him.
"Platoon-Captain," he said, "I'm
Ternathian. I know the tradition of your family, and I honor it. But
there's no point in our pretending you're just one more platoon-
captain. I don't wish to belabor the point, but you must be aware
that who you are—and, even more importantly, who you
someday will be—is going to play a part in the
thinking of any of your commanding officers."
"Yes, Sir, I know." Janaki didn't
quite sigh, but he came so close that chan Tesh was hard put not to
smile.
"And you wish it didn't," the
company-captain said, instead, as sympathetically as possible. "As
it happens, however, in this particular instance I think I'm in a
position to kill two birds with one stone. To be devastatingly
blunt, Your Highness," he used the imperial title deliberately, "any
sane CO would order you to the rear the instant he saw your face.
Especially when the situation is as riddled with uncertainties and
complete unknowns as this one is. In this case, though, the duty I
have in mind for you could have been tailormade for someone
with your experience."
"Sir?"
"We've got prisoners, Platoon-
Captain," chan Tesh said much more grimly. "Several of them
were pretty badly wounded in the fighting. Our Healers have done
what they can for them, of course, and they're all at least stabilized
now, but we need to get them transferred to the rear and better
medical facilities. Even if that weren't the case, we'd need to get
all of them—wounded and unwounded like—moved
to the rear for proper interrogation as quickly as possible. The
only officer we took alive appears to have been their
commander—he's one of the wounded I mentioned, and it
doesn't look like he'll ever walk again—but we've captured
several men who seem to have been senior noncoms. They're our
best, and only, source of information, and we need to get them
into the hands of someone who can at least start figuring out how
to talk to them. Not to mention the fact that we need to
move them further back as a security measure against escapes or
rescue attempts."
He paused, and Janaki nodded
very slightly.
"I can't spare very many men as
prisoner escort," chan Tesh continued. "I'm thinking that using
your platoon for the job would make the smallest hole by avoiding
pulling somebody out of my established units for the job. In
addition, you're not exactly a typical platoon-captain. You've
grown up in the Palace. I'm quite sure you have a better ear than
most junior officers for possibly significant political and military
details.
"What I'd like to do is to send at
least some of them all the way back to Sharona, and I'd prefer to
keep the same officer in command of the escort detail the entire
way. Some of these people appear badly shocked and demoralized
by what's happened to them; most of them, though, are obviously
prepared to resist divulging any important information. I suspect
that spending two or three months with them could help engender
a sense of familiarity which might get inside that defensive
mindset of theirs. It certainly couldn't hurt. And if that does
happen, I want the best attuned ears available to pick up anything
they might drop.
"And, to be frank, I'd like the
officer in command of the escort detail to have a certain
stature—official or unofficial—to help discourage
any of the intervening COs from poaching prisoners on the
grounds that they ought to be interrogated closer to the front. In
short, I think you'd make an excellent first filter for the
analysts . . . and that you may have
enough clout, despite your relatively junior rank, to actually get
them all the way back to those analysts."
"With all due respect, Sir,
mightn't there be some point to keeping them closer to the front,
where whatever we learn can be gotten to the sharp end quickly?"
"Of course there is," chan Tesh
agreed. "And I expect the bulk of the prisoners will be. At the
moment, I'm assuming Regiment-Captain Velvelig will hold the
majority of them—and probably all the more seriously
wounded—at Fort Raylthar. That's far enough towards the
rear to satisfy most security concerns, and big enough to have a
capable Healer Corps detachment. But it's going to be equally
important to get at least some of these people clear back to
Sharona where the government and the staff's intelligence experts
can gain a firsthand impression of them. Your job is going to be to
expedite their delivery to Tajvana."
"Yes, Sir."
"In addition," chan Tesh said
quietly, "there's the political situation back home to consider, as
well. I have no idea how that's going to sort itself out, but I do
know that some sort of unified military and political policy is
going to be necessary. I don't think the Authority can handle that
job as it's presently constituted, which means the politicians are
going to have to come up with some new mechanism. I can't
imagine that your family isn't going to be deeply involved in that
process, and having you there couldn't hurt. Especially if you've
just returned from the front, escorting the first prisoners we've
taken."
The Marine looked back at chan
Tesh without any expression at all for several seconds. The
company-captain simply sat there, waiting. He very much doubted
that anything he'd just said hadn't already occurred to the Crown
Prince. As far as chan Tesh knew, there weren't any stupid
Caliraths, and only an idiot could fail to recognize the sort of
political catfight this situation was going to make inevitable back
home. Nor could Janaki possibly be unaware of the role his
family—and he himself—was going to have to play
in that fight.
"Very well, Sir. I understand,"
the Crown Prince said, after a moment. He did not say that
he approved, chan Tesh observed, but the company-captain
was prepared to settle for that.
"In addition to all the rest of
those considerations," he said, "there's one other job I'd like you to
undertake for me."
"Sir?"
"Darcel Kinlafia—Voice
Kinlafia—is the only survivor of the Chalgyn Consortium
team." chan Tesh's expression was grim. "Frankly,
I'm . . . worried about him."
"May I ask why, Sir?"
"He was there, Platoon-
Captain. He was linked with Shaylar throughout the entire battle.
He Saw his friends being butchered all around him, and he
couldn't do a single godsdamned thing about it. He blames himself
for that. I think he may actually hate himself for it.
It's . . . poisoning him, and he's a
Voice. I'm sure it's inadvertent, but anyone with a hint of telepathy
is picking up his leakage, and it's affecting our people. I don't need
anything which might push our men towards atrocities in the name
of vengeance if it comes to more fighting. Almost equally
important, I think we need to get him away from here for his own
good, as well. He needs a little space, a little time, if he's going to
heal, and he's too close to where it all happened here."
"I see, Sir." Janaki nodded again.
His sea-colored eyes held a small but unmistakable flicker of
approval, but he also cocked his head to one side. "At the same
time, Sir, can you afford to send him back? I understand that he's a
Portal Hound, as well as a Voice."
"Yes, he is," chan Tesh agreed,
impressed by how quickly the crown prince had picked up that
particular bit of information. "But he's already been able to give
us the bearing of the nearest portal—apparently the only
other portal—in this universe. We know it's somewhere to
the northeast, probably in Esferia or New Ternath. Of course, we
don't know how far away it is, or whether or not they've got bases
closer than that. And we sure as hell don't have any idea how they
managed to get their people in and out of this godsforsaken
swamp! But we know where to start looking for their portal if it
comes to that, and that's about the best we could hope for from
any Portal Hound. Frankly, we don't need any of the
services he could still offer us, and we do need to get him out of
here."
"And away from all of the
memories," Janaki said slowly. "Somewhere he can start healing
inside."
"Exactlly," chan tesh replied.
"I'm not thinking just about Darcel, though. He was linked
with Shaylar. I'm pretty certain there are more details still locked
up in his memory than he's aware of, but
he's . . . not very supportive of efforts
to dig them out. I don't blame him for that. It must be pure hell to
go back in there and relive it over and over again, especially for
someone with a Voice's perfect recall. But I need someone who
can convince him to do just that—someone who can wring
every detail out of his experience.
"The information itself might be
of enormous military value, but, to be perfectly honest, it may not
be particularly significant, either. Not from the perspective of
future operations, that is. But I've discussed it with Petty Captain
Yar, my senior Healer. He thinks it's important for Darcel
to get it out, deal with it. Frankly, I suspect that he's a lot more
likely to open up if someone like you presses him on it than he is
if I do. And if you can convince him of the importance of his
reporting his impressions firsthand back in Tajvana, we may
actually manage to get him away from the front before I have to
place him under arrest to protect any additional prisoners from
him."
"It's that bad, Sir?" Janaki asked,
eyes widened slightly, and chan Tesh shrugged.
"I may be worrying too much.
He's a good, decent man. In fact, I think that's part of the problem.
He's not used to carrying this kind of hate around with him, and he
doesn't know what to do with it. But I'd like to keep him a
good, decent man, if we can, Your Highness."
"Point taken, Sir," Janaki said
respectfully, and chan Tesh nodded.
"In that case, Your Highness,
why don't I take you around to the POW cage?" The company-
captain smiled without any humor at all. "We'll probably find
Darcel somewhere in the vicinity."
"I think this is going to be the
most ticklish case, Sir," Petty Captain Delokahn Yar said. He
stood at Janaki's elbow at the foot of one of the cots under the
canvas tarp arranged to shade a clean, breezy open-air hospital
ward. The tall, powerfully built man on the cot lay still—
not simply motionless, but rigidly, harshly still—
staring up at the sun-patterned canvas above him.
"This was their commanding
officer?" Janaki's voice was cold.
"We believe so, Sir."
"I see."
Janaki gazed at the man in
question with cold, contemptuous eyes. Company-Captain chan
Tesh had briefed him fully on the portal
battle . . . and how it had begun.
Platoon-Captain Arthag seemed rather more philosophical about it
than chan Tesh, and Janaki supposed the septman was probably
right. It was very unlikely that these people used the same sort of
banner to indicate the desire to parley, after all. Still, the idiot had
to have recognized that Arthag wanted to talk, not fight,
and no officer worth his salt could overlook the way the sheer
incompetence of his tactics—and his own peerless
stupidity—had gotten the vast majority of his command
slaughtered.
"What appears to be the
problem?" the Crown Prince of Ternathia asked after a moment.
"The physical damage is bad
enough, Sir. He took a hit—from one of the Model 10s, I
suspect—right through the body just above and behind the
hips. It was a clean in-and-out that somehow missed the major
internal organs, but it clipped the spine on the way through. He's
paralyzed from the waist down, and there's nothing we can do
about it. On top of that, though, he's clearly suicidal."
Janaki nodded, although he
couldn't avoid the thought that perhaps, in this case, not
intervening to prevent a suicide might be the better course. Even
aside from the man's stupidity, and all the deaths it had already
caused, there was something else about him. Something Janaki
couldn't quite put a finger on . . . but
which resonated uncomfortably with the Glimpse he'd experienced
in the mountains east of Fort Brithik.
"As nearly as I can tell, Sir," Yar
went on, "none of these men even understand what Talent is.
That's fair enough, I suppose, since we don't have a clue
how in all the Arpathian hells they do some of the things we
already know they do. But because of that, none of them
understands what my corpsmen and I are trying to accomplish.
They don't know how to help us, and at least some of them are so
busy being frightened of us that they're actively blocking us,
making it a lot harder for us to do them any good. And this man
here is the worst of a lot. I think part of the problem may be that
he actually has at least a trace of Talent. He's more aware of what
I'm doing than most of the others, but he doesn't understand it any
better than they do, and his own Talent, even untrained, is
producing a lot of . . . interference
that makes even pain management really difficult."
"I see," Janaki said again. "Which
means, of course, that he's going to suffer a lot more discomfort
when we transport him."
"Which is going to tie into the
entire depression/suicidal cycle," Yar agreed. "In fact, to be
brutally honest, Sir, I doubt he'll survive trip unless we take some
fairly drastic action."
"Such as?"
"I'm afraid the only thing I can
think of to do at this point is to shut him down completely, Sir,"
the Healer said. He clearly didn't like the suggestion very much,
but he made it unflinchingly, and Jasak forced himself to step back
and consider it before he reacted.
"You really think that's
necessary?" he asked after a moment.
"Sir, my Talent's strength lies
more in repairing physical damage than emotional or
psychological damage," Yar said frankly. "That's one reason I'm
forward deployed, where physical trauma is more likely, and
usually more immediately life-threatening when it turns up. But
it's going to take someone with a lot more strength on the non
physical side to get through to this man and keep him from
simply withdrawing deeper and deeper into himself until he finally
just goes out like a light. I don't think you're going to get him to
that kind of care in time if we don't shut him down for the trip."
Janaki nodded yet again, his
expression somber. The techniques for disengaging a patient's
consciousness from his body and surroundings were fairly
straightforward, but it was a major breach of medical ethics to
apply them without the patient's informed consent. Unfortunately,
there was no way this man could even have understood the
question, far less made an informed decision. Yar's Healer's oath
required him to seek the patient's agreement, and forbade him to
apply the techniques without that agreement from a conscious
patient. Yet the same oath required him to keep his patient alive.
And there's another factor, here, Janaki thought grimly. Of all the prisoners chan Tesh took, this one
undoubtedly has the most useful information of all. We
need to keep him alive . . .
whether he makes my skin crawl or not.
"If you 'shut him down,' will we
be able to feed him and care for him properly all the way back to
Fort Raylthar?" he asked.
"That shouldn't be a problem,
Sir. Or, at least, not any more of a problem than dealing with any
other patient with his spinal injury would present."
"In that case, write up your
recommendation. I'll endorse it and ask Company-Captain chan
Tesh to approve it."
"Thank you, Sir." Yar shook his
head. "I hate to do it, but I just don't see a way to avoid it. Gods, I
wish at least one of their Healers had made it!"
"None of them did?" Janaki
frowned. "How did that happen?"
"It was just one of those
godsdamned things, Sir," Yar said heavily. "It looks like they'd set
up an emergency aid station in that pathetic redoubt of theirs, and
one of the four-point-fives landed right on top of them." The
Healer shook his head, his eyes dark. "One or two of them
survived for a while, but they were too badly wounded for us to
pull them through. I hate to lose any Healer, but I have to wonder
what would have happened if they made it. Or if even just one of
them had made it!"
"Why?" Janaki was surprised by
the Healer's obviously genuine frustration. It showed, and Yar
gave him a very crooked smile.
"Let's just say their Healers
obviously know at least a few tricks we don't, Sir."
"Such as?" Janaki quirked an
eyebrow, and Yar chuckled harshly.
"Once we'd taken their
encampment, we discovered that most of their wounded from the
previous fighting seemed to have been evacuated before this
round. Or that's what we thought at first, at least. We captured less
than half a dozen people who were still undergoing treatment, and
all of them seemed to have only minor wounds. But then Junior-
Armsman Hilovar and Petty Armsman Parcanthi went to work.
They'd managed to Trace quite a few of the enemy's most badly
wounded from Fallen Timbers, and it turned out a lot of them
were still here. The very worst hurt obviously really were
evacuated—somehow; we still haven't figured that part out.
But the next most badly hurt were still right here, and they'd
already been returned to duty. The ones still undergoing treatment
were the ones who were least badly hurt in the earlier
fighting."
"Excuse me?" Both of Janaki's
eyebrows went up this time, and Yar chuckled again.
"Believe me, Sir, you aren't any
more surprised—or confused—by that than I was
when they told me! But as nearly as we can tell, these people's
Healers can literally force healing. Some of our strongest
Healers can work what seem like miraculous cures, don't get me
wrong about that. But as nearly as I can determine from what
Hilovar and Parcanthi have been able to pick up, these people
must have some technique which promotes extraordinarily rapid
healing of physical traumas. I'm guessing that it's either very
expensive or somehow debilitating to the Healer, because it looks
to me as if they applied it first to the most badly injured—
the ones who might not have made it at all without
intervention—and then worked their way down the list
through the men with the next worst wounds. The ones who
weren't in danger, or who were injured lightly enough to recover
fairly rapidly with less drastic treatment, were the ones still in
their sick tents when we took the camp."
"You think one of
these . . . magical Healers of theirs
might have been able to repair this man's injuries?" Janaki couldn't
quite keep a hint of incredulity out of his voice, and Yar snorted.
"I doubt that, Sir. Neither
Hilovar nor Parcanthi is a Healer, of course, so they can't give me
the kind of information another Healer could, however good their
Traces or Whiffs are. From what they've told me, though, it
sounds as if what they these people were doing was forcing the
accelerated healing of wounds which would have healed anyway,
in time. I'm not saying they weren't serious, life-threatening
injuries. Don't get me wrong about that, either. But we're talking
about tissues healing and bones knitting—things that would
have happened with the passage of time, assuming the patient
survived at all. Actually . . .
regenerating something like destroyed nerve tissue, or treating
a serious brain injury—" for a moment, Yar's voice
darkened and his eyes met Janaki's grimly, dark with the memory
of who had apparently suffered a serious head injury at Fallen
Timbers "—would require an entirely different order of
ability. I'm not prepared to say it's flatly impossible, but I'd say it's
very unlikely. Unfortunately."
He was silent for a few seconds,
brooding on what might have been if the other side's Healers
had been capable of that sort of true miracle, then shook
himself and continued.
"At the same time, though, if we
had one of their Healers, we could probably get this man
as recovered from his physical injuries as he's ever going to get
before we started trying to transport him. In that case—if all we had to worry about was his mental and emotional
state—I wouldn't be anywhere near as concerned as I am
about his prognosis."
"I understand. And, like you, I
hate to lose any Healer, whoever's uniform he's wearing." Janaki
shook his head. "For that matter, to be honest, if they really do
have that sort of a healing technique, we need to figure out what it
is and learn to duplicate it as quickly as we can—for a lot
of reasons."
"Agreed, Sir," Yar sighed.
"Agreed."
The Healer stood a moment
longer, gazing down at the stone-faced, totally nonresponsive man
in the cot, then shook himself.
"Most of the rest of their
wounded are in far better shape for transport," he said more
briskly. "If you'll follow me, I'll show you what I mean, and then
we can discuss—"
He led the Crown Prince
towards the other side of the hospital tent, and Janaki followed
after one more glance at the rigid, dead-eyed man responsible for
so much suffering and death.
"Darcel Kinlafia?"
Kinlafia jerked as the unfamiliar
voice spoke from directly behind him. He whipped around, and
found himself staring at a man who was decidedly on the tall side,
even for a Ternathian, in the uniform of an Imperial Marine
platoon-captain.
Jumpy as a flea on a hot griddle, Janaki thought, reaching
up one hand to reassure Taleena as the falcon bridled on his
shoulder. Then he realized why the other man was that way. Post
combat stress burned in the haunted eyes of the sun-browned man
with shaggy hair that needed a barber's shears. Kinlafia was
probably no more than ten years or so older than Janaki himself,
but he looked far older than that at the moment.
"Yes." Kinlafia cleared his
throat, easing his elbow back from its desperate clamp on the butt
of his holstered pistol. "I'm Kinlafia. And
you're . . . ?"
"Platoon-Captain chan Calirath,"
Janaki said, and the Voice's eyes widened.
"Good gods." He swallowed.
"How can I help you, Sir? Your Highness? Your Grand
Highness?"
His face had gone red as he
stumbled over the correct form of address for a Ternathian
imperial crown prince, and Janaki grinned.
"Platoon-Captain chan Calirath
is fine. In fact, in light of how closely the two of us will be
working together on this project, you might even opt for Janaki."
Kinlafia gaped at him, and Janaki shrugged. "I don't stand on a lot
of formality out here. In fact, I hate it. And, let's face it—
I'm a pretty damned junior officer when all's said and done, after
all."
Kinlafia's jaw was still scraping
the ground, and Janaki sighed. It was always the same, although at
least the military seemed to have figured out how to take
it more or less in stride. No doubt because the military had its own
chain of command and rules of seniority, which gave it a
convenient pigeonhole marked "officer, junior, one" rather than
"ruler after the gods, future, one." Still, he'd had more than enough
experience even with fellow Marines, much less civilians, to
understand how it worked. Occasionally, though, he wished his
conversations with people he hadn't met before could be as
ordinary as everyone else's conversations seemed to be.
"Look, just think of me as the
officer assigned to escort our prisoners to the rear while
simultaneously cleverly extracting politically and militarily
critical information from them. Try to forget about the rest of it,
would you? It's a damned nuisance, frankly, having people trip
over their feet and stumble over their tongues every time I show
up somewhere or run into someone new. And bad as it is here
, it's even worse back home. I've just about made up my mind
to stay in the Corps as long as they'll let me hide out here."
Kinlafia blinked at him. Then, all
at once, he relaxed and actually managed a grin. It wasn't much of
a smile, not on that grief and anger-grooved face, but it was
genuine. And, as he saw it, Janaki also had a Glimpse of the
warmhearted, humorous man who'd once lived behind that face . .
and how important that man might prove to be. And not just to
Sharona, the prince realized as his sister's features wavered
through the same Glimpse. What in the names of all the gods,
he wondered, did this man have to do with Andrin?
But the Glimpse had vanished almost as quickly as it had come. Its
echoes hummed and quivered down inside him, with a deep,
burning sense of true urgency and buzzing about in his bones with
a familiar sense of frustration. He couldn't pin it down, couldn't
take it by the throat and make it make sense, yet he knew it
had been a true Glimpse. Something that would come to
pass, not merely something which might.
"Really?" Kinlafia said,
obviously oblivious to Janaki's Glimpse. "I guess I hadn't thought
of it that way. All right, I'll do my best to forget who you
are—and who you're related to."
"Thanks," Janaki said dryly,
suppressing any outward sign of his Glimpse with the
thoroughness of long practice. "Actually, if the Corps would let
me, I'd probably go ahead and trade on a bit of that familial fame
after all, if it would let me spend an extra day or so right here
instead of heading straight back. Trust me, even a Calirath's
imperal arse gets damned tired of a saddle after a week or
two! Unfortunately, they want these people—and
you—back up the chain as quickly as we can get you there."
"Me?" Something almost like
suspicion flared at the backs of Kinlafia's eyes.
"Of course you." Janaki snorted.
"I'm almost positive that a direct order for you to report to First
Director Limana ASAP is headed back down the Voice chain to
you right this minute. You're the closest thing we've got to an
actual eyewitness of the original attack, and you accompanied
Platoon-Captain Arthag's column all the way back here. And
you were part of the fight here at the portal; you were one of
the first men into their encampment; and you're the only
Voice—and the only observer of any sort who also
happens to have perfect recall—who was here for all of
that. You think, perhaps, the Powers That Be might be just a
little interested in your offhand impressions of those events?"
Kinlafia blinked again, and his
expression changed from one of suspicion to one of
comprehension . . . and fear.
"I don't—"
"Stop," Janaki interrupted.
"Don't say it."
"Don't say it?" Kinlafia repeated,
and Janaki shook his head.
"You were about to say that you
didn't see how your impressions could be all that important," he
said almost gently. "You were about to point out that you're not a
trained military man, that Company-Captain chan Tesh and
Platoon-Captain Arthag are much better information sources on
the actual fighting here, and on the enemy's tactics. And you're
about to say that Petty Captain Yar's had much more contact with
the prisoners, especially the wounded ones, than you have. Right?"
"Something along those lines,"
Kinlafia said slowly, and Janaki shrugged.
"All of which is beside the
point," he said. "As, I'm afraid, is how much I know it's going to
hurt to answer all the questions people have for you."
This time there was no mistaking
the gentleness in his voice. Yet it was a stern, inflexible
gentleness. One that admitted that the owner of that voice
understood how much pain even the most gentle interrogation
would inflict, yet never backed away from the necessity of
that interrogation. And one which somehow managed both to
acknowledge the pain and Kinlafia's fear without in any way
diminishing them. To sympathize with them in a way that offered
the strength to overcome them rather than simple commiseration.
Kinlafia stared at the young
officer who'd asked him to call him by his first name and realized
that whether Janaki chan Calirath recognized it or not, that endless
line of imperial ancestors stood behind him. There was, Kinlafia
realized, not an ounce of arrogance in the young man who would
one day wear the Winged Crown in the imperial throne room in
Estafel. But the blood of Erthain the Great still flowed in his
veins, and the mysterious magnetism which had led men and
women to follow the Caliraths straight into the fire—and
into the pages of legend—for over five thousand years
glowed inside him.
Balkar chan Tesh and Delokahn
Yar had been trying to get Kinlafia to face the inevitable for
almost a week now, ever since the portal attack, and they'd failed.
Now, in two short sentences, Crown Prince Janaki had succeeded.
And he's not even my Crown Prince, the Voice
thought with a strange mix of despair, amusement, and surrender.
"All right, Your Highness," he
said finally. "You're right. I know you are. But it's not going to be
easy. Not at all."
"I realize that," Janaki
acknowledged, then glanced up at the afternoon sun. "Look," he
said, "it must be about time for supper. Why don't we let this rest
until after we've eaten? If you're agreeable, we'll drop by my tent
after we eat, drag out a bottle of Bernithian whiskey, and get down
to it."
"Of course," Kinlafia said. And
to his credit, Janaki thought, he actually managed to sound as if he
thought it was a good idea.
Chapter Twenty-Nine
"I need to know everything,"
Janaki chan Calirath said.
He sat crosslegged on his
bedroll, having surrendered his single camp stool to his guest,
despite the visitor's obvious discomfort at accepting it. But that
discomfort over seating arrangements disappeared abruptly,
devoured by something far worse, as the civilian's eyes met his,
dark with memory.
"Everything?" Kinlafia asked
hoarsely, and Janaki nodded.
"Believe me, I'm not asking this
lightly. I've read Company-Captain chan Tesh's reports. I've
spoken to Company-Captain Halifu, and Voice Traygan. I know what happened out here, but I can't begin to imagine what it
must have been like to live through it, and—"
"No," Kinlafia agreed harshly.
"You can't."
"I know that. But if we're going
to protect others," Janaki said very gently, "we have to understand
these people."
"What's to understand?" The
demand was bitter, full of gritty rage, the pain feeding the white
furnace of his hate. "They blew my crew to hell without a shred of
mercy. They shot down Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl while he stood
there with his hands empty, in plain sight. They attacked an
unarmed man under a parley banner! They're butchers. You want
to protect our people? Then send in a division or six and wipe '
these people' off the face of the earth. Off every frigging earth
we find them on!"
Janaki sipped air slowly. This
man was even more bitter than he'd feared, and the prince
wondered if he'd been wise after all to wait until after supper.
Perhaps if he'd charged straight ahead earlier, before Kinlafia had
had time to anticipate this moment—to finger through his
dreadful memories and cut himself on their sharpnesses all over
again—it might not have been so painful.
But Janaki had wanted time to
chew on the strange little flash of Glimpse he'd had earlier, and so
he'd waited. He hadn't been able to refine what he'd Seen, but he
was even more convinced that it had been a true Glimpse. That
narrowed his own options considerably, and while the Voice had
every right to be bitter, he had to be made to see the larger picture,
as well. And not just because of the information he might provide.
"Voice Kinlafia," he began
again, "I understand—"
"No, you don't!"
"If you would be so good as to
let me finish speaking before assuming you know what I'm about
to say," Janaki said levelly, "we'd get through this agonizing
conversation faster."
The man seated on his camp
stool glared at him, breathing hard for a long, dangerous moment.
Then Kinlafia's shoulders slumped suddenly. He sat back with a
weary sigh and pinched the bridge of his nose.
"I'm sorry, Your Highness. That
was . . . out of line."
"Yes, it was," Janaki agreed
calmly. "What I was going to say is that I understand that you've
been through a very personal hell which no one else—
certainly no one who isn't himself a Voice and can't experience it
directly himself—will ever be able to fully comprehend. I
recognize that, and I regret the necessity of dragging you back
through it all over again. But you have to understand that
you're going to have to go back over it again and again.
Not just for me, but for all of the analysts waiting to debrief you,
to try to get some feeling about, some handle on, just what in all
the Arpathian hells we're really up against out here.
"And what that means for you, is
that somehow you've got to move forward. Not 'put it behind
you.' Not 'let go of it.' I'm neither coldhearted nor arrogant enough
to tell a grieving man something like that."
Suspicious brilliance touched
Kinlafia's eyes. Eyes which blinked rapidly while their owner
looked briefly away.
"But you do need to move
forward," Janaki continued with that same gentle implacability,
drawing Kinlafia's gaze back to him. "You have to decide what
you're going to do about it. Not what the Army or the Corps is
going to do. What you're going to do."
"What can I do?"
Kinlafia lifted his hands in a helpless, frustrated gesture. "Other
than join the Army and shoot as many of the bastards as I can line
up in my sights, that is?"
Even to himself, that carried an
edge of something that was
almost . . . childish. Petulant,
perhaps. Somehow, he felt vaguely ashamed to be sitting here in
front of the heir to the throne of Sharona's most powerful and
ancient nation whining about his own sense of helplessness. As if
the entire multiverse revolved around or depended upon his
personal exaction of vengeance for his dead.
But even as that thought crossed
his own mind, Janaki surprised him by smiling.
"You'd be wasted in the Army,
Kinlafia!"
"I beg your pardon?" Kinlafia
blinked, and Janaki shrugged.
"Think about it. What would you
accomplish, in the Army? You'd be just another soldier, and
you're a Voice. That means you'd be stuck using your Talent, not
your rifle. One more messenger, passing other people's orders
through the Voice chain. Going where you were told to go.
Shooting when you were told to
shoot . . . and not shooting
when you were ordered to hold your fire. Vothan! Voices are way
too valuable for the military to risk in combat if it can possibly be
avoided—you know that. So if you were to enlist,
your chances of actually shooting anyone would go down, not
up!"
That drew a scowl, and the
Crown Prince chuckled a bit grimly.
"I didn't think you'd thought
about that aspect of it," he said.
"No," Kinlafia muttered. "I
hadn't."
"Then there's probably another
thing you haven't thought about, either. Frankly, the last
thing we can afford to do is to repeat what Company-Captain chan
Tesh and Platoon-Captain Arthag managed to accomplish here."
"Why?" This time, the question
wasn't belligerent, just baffled.
"Because we don't know how
many of them there are, for one thing. How many universes do
they occupy? How big is their army? Their navy? What the
hells do they use for technology? Most of what we've seen
doesn't make any sense at all yet—you know that even
better than I do, because you've actually seen it. And Seen it, for
that matter."
Janaki paused, holding Kinlafia's
eyes levelly with his own, and wondered if the Voice saw the
ghosts hovering within them. A part of him hungered to tell the
Voice—tell anyone—what he'd Glimpsed that night
in the mountains. But he couldn't. The visions of death and
destruction, of flame exploding across the night, of bizarre
weapons spitting devastation . . .
those were his alone, for now at least. He was desperately afraid
that they were going to become the property of other Sharonians,
but they hadn't yet.
The thought flickered through
his mind once again that he really ought to consider sending word
to his father by Voice of what he had Glimpsed. Yet, what could
he truly tell the Emperor? That he'd Seen images of war and
slaughter? That he'd felt the foretaste of his own terror? That he
was afraid? His father's Talent was much stronger than
Janaki's—almost as strong, Janaki suspected, as his sister
Andrin's. He'd probably already Glimpsed everything Janaki had,
and even if he hadn't, the Calirath Glimpses weren't something to
be discussed through any intermediary, even that of a Voice. They
had to be discussed face-to-face, where Talent could speak directly
to Talent.
I wish my Glimpse had been clearer, just this once, at
least, he thought for a far from the first time, with familiar
frustration. But it hadn't been
clear . . . only vast, powerful, and
terrifying.
Well, at least if chan Tesh is sending me all the way home
with these people, I'll be seeing Father in person for that little chat
a lot sooner than I'd expected. That's something.
"We punched right through them
here," he continued, still holding Kinlafia's gaze captive with his
own. "Punched through so quickly and easily it wasn't even a
contest. But this time we had the advantage of surprise, since they
presumably don't understand our technology any better
than we understand theirs. And armies, unfortunately, tend to learn
more from failure than they do from success. Do we really want to
assume we're looking at an endless succession of walkovers? They
obviously didn't expect anything like Platoon-Captain chan
Talmarha's four-point-fives. What if it turns out that they've got
weapons we haven't even seen yet? Weapons that make
mortars look like damp firecrackers by comparison? Do we want
to send in 'a division or six' to wipe out every post they have in
this region, then discover they've got six hundred
divisions, with heavy weapons support, poised to wipe out every
man, woman, and child from here to Sharona?"
"No." Kinlafia bit his lip, and his
voice was low and reluctant. "No, we don't."
He sat slumped on the camp
stool, gazing at nothing and seeing something that made his eyes
go bleak, and for two long, endless minutes, he said absolutely
nothing more. But then, finally, his eyes refocused on Janaki,
deep, dark . . . and lost.
"What I never told anyone," he
said in a terrible whisper, "was how much I loved her."
Janaki didn't speak. He couldn't.
"You're not a Voice," Kinlafia
said softly. "You don't understand what it's like to communicate
with another Voice. When you're linked, deeply linked, the way we
were during that ghastly attack . . . "
His voice trailed off for another
long moment, and his hands twisted themselves together in his lap.
"You become the other
person, for a few minutes. For however long you're linked. Voices
try to avoid going that deep. No matter how voluntary the link is,
it's almost a . . . violation. It doesn't
happen with normal message relays, but when the psychic impact
is this deep, hits this hard, you fuse. Everything she felt,
everything she saw, and heard, and smelled happened to me."
A shudder rippled visibly
through him.
"For those few minutes, I
was Shaylar. I could Hear and See more than just the thoughts
and sights she was transmitting. I could taste her terror. Her love
for Jathmar. The realization that she would never see her parents
again, never have children, never leave that tangle of broken trees
alive. Yet she stayed linked with me, deeper than I've ever linked
with another Voice. And she kept shooting at them, when anyone
else would have been cowering on the ground with both arms over
his head. Hell, some of the others were doing just that! But not
her. No, not her. She heard the fire dying, knew our
friends—our family—were being killed all around
her, and she never stopped. Never quit once. She burned
all her maps, all her notes, everything, and then she
reached for her gun again, because there was no one else still up
and shooting, No one but Jathmar, and the bastards killed him
right in front of her! Gods! She was so beautiful, so
brave . . . and I couldn't get to her,
couldn't reach her, couldn't be with her, and then I felt
her go. . . . "
His voice shattered.
Janaki's own eyes burned, and
his vision blurred, but his hands were steady as he drew the cork
from a bottle of highland single malt whiskey. He'd suspected
from the beginning that it was going to be required, but even his
darkest estimate had fallen short of how badly it would be needed.
Now he poured some into a glass and thrust it into the shaken
Voice's hands.
Kinlafia wrapped himself around
the liquor and gulped at it, his hands unsteady as he struggled to
regain control. Janaki was wise enough to say nothing. He simply
refilled the glass when it emptied, then sat down on his bedroll
again and waited until Kinlafia finally mastered himself
sufficiently to meet his gaze one more.
"Thanks," the Voice said then,
hoarsely, gesturing with the empty glass in his hand. Then he
wiped wetness from his face with a brusque sleeve and cleared his
throat, roughly.
"I still hoped, you know," he
said. Janaki raised an eyebrow, and the Voice grimaced. "I still
hoped she was alive. Parcanthi and Hilovar Saw her still alive
after the fighting. Saw her being taken back to that camp of theirs.
I hoped so hard that after we hit those bastards, we'd find her. But
we didn't."
"But there were those glimpses
of some sort of transport animal," Janaki said gently. "And we
didn't find her body, either."
"Do you think I didn't think
about that?" Kinlafia demanded harshly, half-glaring at Janaki.
"But you've seen that swamp. My maximum range for reaching her
was over six hundred miles. Sur, I had to trance to do it,
but even if her own Voice had been completely shut down by
some head injury, like Hilovar described, I'd have been able to
sense her at up to four hundred, maybe even five, after linking that
closely during the fight. I'd be able to feel her presence the
same way I can feel the direction to the closest portal, and there
was nothing. What kind of 'transport animal' could have
taken her across four hundred miles of this kind of swamp in less
than thirty-six hours?"
"I don't know," Janaki admitted.
"I can't think of one."
"Neither can I. But we already
know she was critically wounded, probably dying, just from what
Hilovar and Parcanthi could tell us. So they put a dying woman on
what ever 'transport animal' they had and dragged her off
to die somewhere out there in the middle of all that mud and
water."
The Voice's jaws clenched again,
and his hands tightened around the whiskey glass.
"They were probably trying
desperately to keep her alive, you know," Janaki pointed out
quietly. Kinlafia glared at him again, and the crown prince
shrugged. "I didn't say they were doing it out of the goodness of
their hearts, Voice Kinlafia."
"No, they weren't," Kinlafia
grated. Then he drew a deep, shaky breath. "And whyever they
were doing it, they were the ones responsible for what happened to
her and all of the rest of my friends in the first place. They were
the ones who chased them down like animals, then slaughtered
them around her. The ones who did all of that to
her before she died."
He shook his head, his eyes
harder than obsidian.
"I will never, ever
forgive them for that," he said quietly. "Maybe Shaylar could have
done that. I can't. But you're right about what would happen if I
enlisted. So what can I do, really?"
"You can start by telling me
everything," Janaki replied. "Every detail you can recall, no matter
how trivial. I won't lie and tell you this won't be painful, because
it will. I intend to take you through every moment of contact
you've had with these people, both directly and through Shaylar,
over and over again."
"Why?" Dark emotion flared in
Kinlafia's shadowed eyes.
"Because you need to get back to
Sharona as quickly as possible, where what you know will do the
most of good for the people responsible for deciding how we
respond. But before you go, the people at this end of the
multiverse need the same information. I'm going to get that for
them before we pull out, and the more times you go through it,
step-by-step, the more you'll remember."
"Voices have perfect recall,"
Kinlafia objected harshly. "You said that yourself."
"Yes, they do. And at the
moment, yours is shrouded with severe emotional shock. That's
why it's imperative that we take you through it repeatedly—
now, while it's still as fresh as possible. To be honest, this should
have been done right after the initial attack, not after this long a
delay's had time to cloud details."
Kinlafia winced, and Janaki
shook his head.
"I'm sorry, but that's the way it
should have been done, and it wasn't. We can't afford to let those
experiences get any more distant. It's going to be hell going back
through them, but there's no way of knowing what tiny bit or piece
may prove to be vitally important before this is all over. Even her
emotions could give us important information, and it's all there.
Everything you Saw, Heard. Everything she touched or smelled.
Everything she did, even everything you thought while you
were linked. All the ideas, the impressions, the unconscious
judgments—they're all in there, simmering away in the back
of your mind. What we have to do is extract them, pull them out
past the barriers of emotional reaction. And, for what it's worth, I have perfect recall, too, which is one reason I get to be the
coldhearted bastard who drags you back through it all."
"Yes." Kinlafia was biting his lip
again, but he nodded slowly, manifestly unhappily. "I see your
point—all too clearly. I don't want to relive any of that, but
I don't have a choice, do I?"
"No. Not if you really want to
help us understand these people. And I don't have a choice, either,
I'm afraid. I imagine you hate my guts before we're done."
"Probably." A humorless smile
touched Kinlafia's mouth. "At the time, at least. But not
permanently. I hated my third-level teacher while she was drilling
multiplication tables into my head, when all I wanted to do was
spend the day outside with a fishing pole or a hiking trail. But I
didn't hate her for long. Not once I figured out how useful math
is."
Jasak smiled back at him.
"That's hopeful sounding. I was
rather looking forward to the chance to get better acquainted. I
don't have much opportunity to talk with civilians, let alone
Talented ones. Not just out here, either. Generally, people seem
sufficiently in awe of my title to produce conversations that are a
bit . . . stilted. If not downright
impossible."
"I can't imagine." Kinlafia gave
him a wan smile. "Be fair, Your Highness. It is a little
unnerving talking to the Crown Prince of Ternathia."
"Who occasionally puts his
socks on inside out in the dark, the same as any other man jolted
awake in the middle of the night."
Kinlafia actually grinned. Then
he sat back with a sigh.
"All right. I'll go through it all as
many times it takes, but what then? It sounded like you had
something specific in mind for me to do, beyond helping you learn
what I know."
"I have." Janaki nodded. "Tell
me, Voice Kinlafia. What are the best ways a man—or
woman—can have a really big impact on civilization?"
"Civilization?" Kinlafia echoed,
and Janaki nodded.
Rather than answer off the cuff,
the Voice took time to think about it. Janaki was glad. That was a
good sign, considering what he wanted this man to do. Finally,
Kinlafia pursed his lips.
"You can invent something
really important," he said slowly. "Like a new form of
transportation, or a new weapon or a new medicine."
Janaki nodded again.
"You can write something that
influences the way people think," Kinlafia continued. "Or you
could report the news in a way that changes how people think and
act."
"That's true, all of it," Janaki
agreed. "But tell me—who tells an army what to attack?"
"The generals."
"But who tells the generals?"
Janaki pressed. "Who sends the generals?"
"The politicians, of
cour—"
Kinlafia broke off, and his eyes
widened.
"You can't be serious! I'm not a
politician. I'm just a survey crew Voice!"
"You are not 'just a
survey crew Voice.' Not any longer," Janaki told him. "You're the
sole survivor of the crew that was wiped out by the greatest threat
our civilization has ever faced. You were there. As close
to there as any Sharonian anywhere. People will want to hear your
story, and how you tell that story will have enormous impact on
what people think about this crisis and how government leaders
respond to it."
"But—"
Janaki's raised hand halted the
automatic protest.
"If I were in your shoes," the
Crown Prince said, "I'd run for the very next seat in the House of
Talents of whatever government you call home. For that matter,
by the time you get home, there may be just one
government. The gods only know how all of this is going to play
out in the end, but if we're not alone out here in the multiverse
after all, then Sharona needs a world government, and that
government will have a House of Talents. Make no mistake about
that. And if I were you, I'd move heaven and earth and half the
Arpathian hells, if necessary, to get myself into it."
"Gods, you're serious." A fire
had kindled in Kinlafia's stunned eyes. "Do you really think I'd
have a chance to get elected to something like that?"
"I can't name anyone with a
better shot at it," Janaki said frankly. "You'd have instant name
recognition. By the time you get back to Sharona, you'll be so
famous the news media will flock to you, turn you into a major
celebrity. If you tell them you're running for office on a platform
of protecting other innocents, they'll give you so much free
coverage you won't have to buy ad space in anything—
newsprint or Voice network.
"And speaking of the Voice
network, you're one of their own. They'll adore you, Kinlafia, and
they'll champion your cause. You couldn't ask for better advocates
than the Voice Guild and the Voice News Association. Play your
cards right, and they might even bankroll your campaign. Yes, yes.
I know they can't do that directly. That's illegal in most nations."
He snorted. "The only one I know of where it isn't is
Uromathia, which is hardly the sort of example we want to be
following, I suppose. But the point is that they'll bend over
backwards to publicize your need for funds. The money
will come. Never doubt that. You may even find schoolchildren
taking up donations for you."
Darcel Kinlafia stared at him.
Then he drew in a deep breath, released it again with a sound of
perplexed astonishment, and finally found his voice once more.
"Why are you doing this, Your
Highness? Why would you tell me these things? Especially after
telling me why what I want to do to eradicate these bastards from
the face of the multiverse is a bad idea?"
"For several reasons, really,"
Janaki said.
He considered telling Kinlafia
all of them, but decided—once again—against it.
People tended to get . . . nervous
when they found out a member of the Imperial family had
experienced a Glimpse which convinced him it was absolutely
vital for them to do something. Especially when the Calirath in
question couldn't explain why it was vital, since he didn't
know yet himself. No, better to stick with all of the other perfectly
valid reasons Janaki had been able to come up with.
"First," he said, "public outrage
over this is going to be incredibly high. Sharona needs a focal
point for that outrage. Something or someone people can support
to feel like they're doing something to help.
"At the moment, you're a very
angry man. That's inevitable, given what you've experienced, and I
accept that you'll never be able to forgive what happened. But
you're also an honest, conscientious man. And, if you'll forgive
me for saying so, a compassionate one. In fact, it's that very
compassion which makes you so angry right now. I don't
know how all of that anger will work out in the end, but I do
know there are all too many unscrupulous men who are going to
try to take advantage of everyone else's anger and fear without
giving one single, solitary damn about compassion or conscience.
They're going to use it to put themselves into positions of power
for their own selfish ends. I'd far rather see public support behind
someone like you. Behind someone who genuinely
cares—who's driven by a need for justice, not a desire to
put public office into the service of personal gain.
"Don't misunderstand me. The
snakes are going to come out of the shadows whatever else
happens, whether you run for office or not. It's simply part of
human nature. But if you declare your candidacy, you'll rivet a
huge chunk of the public's attention to your campaign.
Hopefully, that will eclipse some of the other, more manipulative
campaign messages, and that would be a very good thing for
Sharona."
"I suppose that makes some
sense. But the fact that it's a good thing for Sharona won't keep it
from making some mighty powerful men hate me," Kinlafia
pointed out.
"Probably. That's all part of the
game of politics, too. But don't underestimate the power of a man
who's been wronged, appealing to the world for justice. Some of
the men—and women—whose plans you spike might
just fall under the spell themselves, and support you. Others will
try to hitch themselves to you for gain, try to find a way to use
you, and you'll want to watch out for that, too.
"Because that's really the most
important part, when you come right down to it. Exercising a
moderating effect on the rhetoric and fury of the campaign in the
first place would be worthwhile all by itself, but the real object of
the exercise is to put you into a position where you can actually
accomplish something. A position which lets you kick the arses of
the carrion eaters out to twist this entire crisis around to their own
personal advantage."
"I see."
"Actually," Janaki smiled, "I
doubt you do. Not the same way I do, anyway—not yet. But
I've had politics bred into me for five thousand years. Coming out
here," he waved one hand at the entrance to the tent, where the
chill stars of a northern autumn were beginning to prick the sky,
"was part vacation from my political education, and part necessary
political foundation for the job I'll have to do some day."
Kinlafia blinked in surprise, and
Janaki shrugged.
"A man who commands armies
and navies tends to do a better job of it if he's spent time in the army or navy in question. Not always, I'm sorry to say, but on
average. And people have greater confidence in a man who's been
at the pointy end himself, as it were. Maybe even more to the
point, someone who's had personal experience of what 'sending in
the troops' can cost the troops has a tendency to stop and think
really hard before he sends them into harm's way . . and has more
moral authority when he decides he has to do it anyway. Those are
just a few of the reasons why emperors of Ternathia are almost
always chan Calirath. We're military veterans, nearly all of
us.
"But that's beside the point I'm
trying to make. I truly believe Sharona needs the job you'll do,
Voice Kinlafia. And," he added softly, "you'll need that job, too,
won't you? Badly, I think. Not just for something to do, either.
You've got to decide exactly how you want to confront Shaylar
Nargra-Kolmayr's life . . . and death.
Is it vengeance you want, or justice, and what price are
you—and all our people—prepared to pay for
whichever they choose to purchase in the end?"
Kinlafia's tightened-down
fingers locked together. He couldn't speak at all, just gave Janaki a
jerky nod, and Janaki nodded back.
"That's all I'll say for now, then.
We'll talk about this again, if you're half as interested as I think
you are. Or will be soon. We'll be traveling together at least as far
as Fort Brithik, and I can probably teach you a fair bit—or
give you some pointers, at least—along the way. And I can
send letters of introduction ahead with you, as well. Hook you up
with people who can help you in all kinds of useful ways."
Kinlafia gazed at him very
thoughtfully for several seconds, then produced an off-center,
lopsided smile.
"If Ternathia were a democracy,
and if I were a Ternathian, I'd vote for you, Your Highness, in
every election you ran in," he said, and Janaki blinked.
"Why?"
"Because you care about the
people you'll rule one day. And you don't just care about
Ternathians. You care about Sharonians—all of us.
Hells, Your Highness, if you'll pardon my language, you even care
about me, and I'm not even one of your subjects! From
where I sit, that's pretty damned rare."
Janaki frowned in surprise. First,
because Kinlafia was surprised. And, second, because he realized
Kinlafia might just be right. Perhaps the Caliraths really were a
rarer breed than he'd actually realized and he'd simply been too
close to see it.
"Maybe you're right," he told the
Voice with a smile even more lopsided than Kinlafia's had been.
"I'll have to remember to thank my father, the next time I see him,
for pounding that into me. Trust me, it wasn't always a particularly
easy job!"
He chuckled, and Kinlafia
chuckled back. But then the Crown Prince's expression sobered
once more.
"Either way, that's probably
enough said on that subject, for now, at least," he said. "Which,
unfortunately, brings us to the more immediate reason for this
conversation. Do you want another whiskey before we begin?"
Chapter Thirty
Andrin's fashionable coiffure
streamed out behind her in a mass of flying, golden-shot black
silk, shredded and ruined by the wind, as she stood at the forward
edge of the thirty thousand-ton steamer IMS Windtreader's
promenade deck. She paid her hair's careful arrangement's
destruction no heed; she had far too much on her mind to worry
about that, although her lips twisted wryly in anticipation of her
lady-in-waiting—and protocol instructor's—
reaction. Lady Merissa was nearly three times Andrin's age and
profoundly conscious of her charge's social standing. She would
undoubtedly be properly
horrified . . . if she could bring
herself out of her seasick misery long enough to notice. Andrin
felt genuinely sorry for Merissa, even if she did find it
unfathomable how anyone could be seasick aboard such a
large vessel. Personally, she would vastly have preferred her
father's racing yacht, Peregrine, where the motion would
have been truly lively, but Lady Merissa's misery was too obvious
for anyone to doubt.
Yet sympathy or no, this
morning was far too glorious for Andrin to spend cooped up in
the cabin, holding lady Merissa's hand solicitously. And so she had
climbed out of bed the moment the rising sun sent its golden light
streaming into her cabin's scuttles. She'd thrown on an appropriate
gown and a warm woolen coat, lifted her hawk Finena from her
perch to her gauntleted arm, and headed for the cabin door with
indecorous haste. Lady Merissa was far too well-bred to protest
sharing her cabin with both a grand princess and her favorite
falcon, but Andrin knew her seasick mentor would rest easier with
Finena out of the room. So she'd carried her companion up into
the sunshine with her, which had delighted the hawk as much as it
had her.
And they'd needed that delight.
Needed it badly.
The news of the slaughter of the
Chalgyn Consortium survey crew had broken, as everyone had
known it must. And the impact on public opinion had been even
worse than anyone had feared.
The print coverage, and the
editorials were bad enough. The non-Talented majority of
Sharonians might not be able to share the Voicenet reports,
experience the events directly, but they understood what had
happened. They might not understand why it had
happened—in which, Andrin admitted, they were not so
very different from their emperors and kings and
presidents—but they knew in excruciating detail what had
happened to that survey crew. They knew because one courageous
woman had held onto her Voice link through hell itself to be
certain that they would . . . and they
knew that, too.
But for those who could See the
Voicenet reportage, it was even worse.
Andrin had forced herself to See
the SUNN Voicenet report. She had only an extremely limited
telepathic Talent, but it was more than enough to follow Voicenet
transmissions. After witnessing that report, however, she found
herself wishing passionately that she'd had no telepathic Talent at
all. Not even the nightmares she'd experienced in her own
Glimpses had been enough to prepare her for the sheer horror of
what Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had endured before her own death.
The events themselves had been
horrible enough, but the sheer power and clarity of Shaylar's
Voice had stunned a universe. Everyone had known that she'd been
one of Sharona's top Voices, but the intensity of her link with
Darcel Kinlafia had been staggering. Every nuance of her
emotions, her suspicions, her observations—every spike of
terror, every gut-wrenching spasm of grief, every glorious, white-
fire instant of courage—had hit every telepath on Sharona
squarely between the eyes. The horror of those fiendish fireballs
and lightning bolts. The massacre of her team leader, standing
there without even a weapon in his hands when they shot him
down. The dauntless determination of one young woman, burning
her priceless records, her deadly charts, while their friends
screamed and died and burned around her.
It was all there. It had happened
to them, to their sisters, and their brothers.
They knew precisely what she had experienced, because they had
experienced it with her. And because even as they Saw it through
her eyes, they had Seen it through the Darcel Kinlafia's, as well.
He had relayed Shaylar's thoughts and emotions with agonizing
fidelity, but they'd been too deeply linked for him to separate his
own from the message when he passed it up the Voice chain. And
so, in addition to their own reactions to Shaylar's raw experiences,
they saw them through the eyes of a man who had obviously loved
her. And that added still more poignancy—and
horror—to the nightmare which had devoured her.
No single event in the entire
history of Sharona had ever hit home like this one. Andrin
knew that it worried her father deeply. Zindel chan Calirath was no
more immune to outrage and fury than anyone else, but he was
Emperor of Ternathia. He had to think beyond the outrage,
beyond the madness of the moment, and the blast furnace anger
and hatred—and fear—sweeping through his home
universe threatened to severely limit his own options and choices.
As he'd told Shamir Taje he feared before the Voice Conclave, and
as Andrin had seen in her own horrible Glimpses, the chance of
somehow evading the cataclysmic possibility of open warfare with
these people, whoever they were, was growing less and less likely
by the day.
And that was the true
reason—little though Andrin was prepared to admit it to
anyone, especially her father—that she'd felt such a need to
race up to the promenade deck and submerge herself in life and the
input of her physical senses. To at least temporarily escape the
conviction that some huge inescapable boulder was grinding down
the mountainside of history towards her, crushing everything in its
path.
And for the moment, at least, it
was working, she thought gratefully in the corner of her mind still
focused on analysis. It was a very small corner, because she was
nearly drunk on the sensations of sunlight on seawater, of wind
hammering past her face, the deep-seated vibration of
Windtreader's powerful engines underfoot, and the rhythmic
wash and rumble of water, piling away from the ship's stem in a
great, white furrow as the liner cut through the whitecaps.
Windtreader was slower than Peregrine, the imperial
yacht, but she'd been built for the trans-Vandor run between
Ternathia and New Farnal, with emphasis on speed and comfort.
She was easily capable of a sustained twenty knots, and her
furnishings rivaled those of the finest hotel ashore. Designed to
transport better than five hundred first-class passengers, four
hundred and fifty second-class, and up to six hundred third-class,
she had more than enough internal space for the huge staff which
had to go everywhere the Emperor of Ternathia went. Which was
fortunate, since this time there were several hundred important
politicians and their staffs, as well.
And while Windtreader
might be slower than oceanic greyhounds like Peregrine, it
was unlikely she'd be called upon to outrun anyone on this voyage.
Andrin looked to starboard, were
one of Windtreader's guardians plowed steadily through
the swell. IMS Prince of Ternathia was an armored
cruiser—twelve thousand tons of sickle-prowed armor
plate, with four twin nine-inch turrets, two each fore and aft, and a
broadside of fourteen six-inch guns. Her sister ship, IMS Duke
Ihtrial cruised watchfully to port of the liner, interposed
between her and any threat, and Andrin wondered just how
anxious Master-Captain Farsal chan Morthain, the escort
commander, was feeling this fine morning as she stood
here, enjoying the exuberant wind. It wasn't often, after all, that the
Emperor, the heir-secondary, the entire Privy Council, the
speakers of all three of the Ternathian Houses of Parliament, a
sizable chunk of the most senior members of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, the most senior lords justicar of the Emperor's
Bench, over seventy members of Parliament, and the
Imperial chiefs of staff were all packed aboard a single ship.
Officially, chan Morthain and his
cruisers were out there to guard Windtreader against
"pirates," but there hadn't been a single pirate operating in the
waters between Ternath Island and Tajvana in centuries. The
possibility of some lunatic in a fast boat loaded with explosives
probably figured far more prominently in chan Morthain's
thinking. Personally, Andrin felt quite certain that the cruisers
were intended much more as a precaution—and possibly a
somewhat pointed hint—designed to get the attention of
some of Ternathia's less scrupulous "allies" than as a defense
against any sort of criminals.
Finena, perched delicately on
Andrin's forearm, cocked her sleek head. She eyed the cloud of
seabirds overhead with hungry interest, and Andrin laughed as the
movement pulled her out of her own thoughts.
"Perhaps you should breakfast
up here, love," she told the falcon. "Poor Merissa would lose the
contents of her tummy—again—if you broke your
fast in the cabin."
Finena tipped her head to gaze
across at Andrin. Like Janaki's Taleena, Finena was an imperial
Ternathian peregrine, but she looked like no other hawk which had
ever broken shell in the imperial hatchery. She wasn't quite a true
albino, for her eyes were as dark as any other Ternathian falcon's,
but she showed none of the bold bluish-grey plumage of male
peregrines, nor even the browner tones of the females of the
species. Her plumage was a dazzling white, and she
showed mere shadows of gray where other peregrines' underparts
would have been marked with sharply visible black bars. And
while she wasn't a true sentient, like the dolphins and whales or
the great apes, she was an extremely smart bird—
one Andrin had hand-raised from a chick.
Now Andrin ran a feather-gentle
fingertip down Finena's strongly hooked beak. That dangerously
sharp weapon pressed back equally gently, and Andrin's lip curled
disdainfully at the thought of the Uromathian kings and princes
who would—without the slightest doubt—bring
their own falcons to the conclave. Finena wore no jesses, no hood,
and was never tethered, whether to her perch or to Andrin's
gauntleted hand. Finena stayed with—and returned
to—Andrin from love of her chosen human companion.
Andrin respected the bird's freedom, and Finena was fiercely
devoted to her. Uromathian kings and princes carried falcons as
status symbols; that much of the traditional Ternathian practice
they'd adopted. But unlike the Ternathian imperial house, they left
their birds' routine daily care to hawk handlers and were always
careful to fasten the birds securely to their wrists when they
carried them—and to hood them, whenever they weren't
actively hunting. Andrin considered that a barbaric and cruel
practice, and her lip-curl of disdain turned into a sinful smile as
she anticipated the expressions of the Uromathians when they
caught their first glimpse of a Ternathian grand princess with a white Ternathian imperial peregrine.
Finena preened on Andrin's arm
as she caught her companion's emotions. They didn't share true
telepathy, the way a cetacean or a chimpanzee shared with a
translator, but their bond was very real, nonetheless, and Andrin
felt it glowing between them as she turned and started for the
external stair—which the sailors insisted on calling a
"ladder"—from the promenade deck to the boat deck,
above.
"You're going to be the envy of
every Uromathian male in Tajvana, love," Andrin half-crooned.
"For now, though, why don't you go ahead and bring down a bird
for your breakfast? Just be a dear and eat it up there somewhere."
She pointed to the lookout's fat pod on Windtreader's
foremast. "After all, it wouldn't do to irritate Captain Ula or the
crew by scattering blood and feathers all over the deck."
The glowing white bird, whose
name meant "White Fire," let out a scolding "rehk," and
Andrin laughed.
"No, that's not an insult to your
table manners, dearest. But that deck is clean enough for a baby to
eat on, and I'd hate to make extra work for the crew. They're
nervous enough as it is, with royalty aboard."
Someone snorted at her
shoulder, and she glanced mildly back at her personal guardsman,
who followed the regulation two paces behind her.
"Laugh if you will, Lazima chan
Zindico," she said severely. "But it's true, and you know it."
"Oh, aye, that it is," chan Zindico
agreed solemnly, but a devilish glint lurked in his eyes. "I'm just
thinking how surprised they'd be to hear a grand princess of the
blood worrying about the condition of their decks."
"You could be right," she
acknowledged, then grinned. "You generally are, after all."
"Why, thank you, Your
Highness. It's nice to be appreciated."
chan Zindico's return smile was
easy, but even here, on a Ternathian ship with a loyal and
thoroughly vetted Ternathian crew, his constantly sweeping eyes
remained sharp as flaked obsidian. He was pledged to guard her
against all dangers . . . and at
any cost. It was a pledge he'd taken voluntarily on the day
of her birth, and that sometimes appalled Andrin. She might have
turned out to be a raging, spoiled brat, and still chan Zindico
would have honored that oath, thrown himself between her and
any weapon that threatened her. She couldn't keep him from doing
that, much though the thought secretly terrified her, and so she'd
worked hard, almost from the day she could walk, in an effort to
be worthy of that kind of commitment.
She was unaware that chan
Zindico and her other personal guards, who traded off the twenty-
four-hour-a-day job of keeping her alive, took a fierce pride in
their young mistress. Or that they looked with pity on the guards
who'd pledged their lives to young Anbessa. The Emperor's
youngest daughter had developed quite an imperial little
temper—one Empress Varena was grimly determined to
correct or die trying. Anbessa's guardsmen vehemently hoped their
Empress succeeded. Soon.
"Still and all," chan Zindico
continued, smiling at Andrin as they stepped off the ladder onto Windtreader's uppermost deck, "if Lady Finena wants to
scatter feathers, I'm sure the crew won't begrudge her."
The grand princess laughed and
flung her gauntleted arm aloft, launching the glowing white
falcon. Finena rocketed upward, slashing high against the
crystalline blue skies like a white flame. She circled the ship one,
twice . . . then wheeled and streaked
down through the flock of gulls like a gleaming thunderbolt.
Feathers flew as the fisted talons struck, then snatched their prey
out of the air, and chan Zindico knew his wasn't the only eye on
deck drawn to that stunning flight.
"It's the Grand Princess' falcon!"
one of the pair of lookouts on the starboard bridge wing said,
nudging his fellow, as Finena perched on the yard spreading the
foremast stays and began devouring her breakfast with typical
messiness.
"Isn't she a fine sight, now?" his
companion replied.
"The finest I ever did see, and
that's no lie. Did you see her fly, man? From a ship's deck, no less!
Triad's mercy, that's what an imperial Ternathian falcon
can do!"
"Very nicely done, indeed, Your
Highness," another voice said, and Andrin turned in surprise as a
burly man in a captain's uniform stepped out of the wheelhouse.
Captain Ula looked at her just a bit quizzically, and she found
herself blushing.
"I beg your pardon for
interrupting the routine of your crew, Captain," she apologized. "I
hadn't realized Finena would prove to be such a distraction."
"No harm done, Your Highness."
He swept her a low bow, then turned a scowl on the suddenly very
intent-looking lookouts and raised his voice into a booming roar
fit to carry through any gale. "But if I catch another man gawking
at Her Highness' bird instead of attending to his duties, I'll feed his
liver to the falcon, myself! Do I make myself clear?"
"Aye, Captain!"
The lookouts whipped back
around to their assigned sectors, and Ula scowled at their backs
for just a moment, but his eyes still twinkled. He waited another
few seconds, then turned back to Andrin.
"I'll leave you to enjoy the air
and sunshine, Your Highness," he said with another bow.
"Thank you, Captain. I know our
voyage will be a great pleasure. You have a lovely ship."
A flush of pleasure touched his
cheeks as he recognized the sincerity of her compliment. Then he
touched the brim of his hat and left her to enjoy the morning.
Andrin pulled her coat collar up
around her neck, leaned against the boat deck rail, and smiled to
herself. The view was even more spectacular from up here, and
she abandoned herself to sheer, sensual pleasure while Finena
finished eating, then launched herself once more to drift
effortlessly on the wind above the ship, staying well clear of the
smoke trailing from the liner's tall funnels.
It was too good to last
indefinitely, of course. She'd been there for perhaps a
half-hour—certainly not much longer—when a
movement on chan Zindico's part drew her attention. It wasn't
much of a movement; most people probably wouldn't even have
noticed it. But Andrin knew her guardsman well, and she
recognized the signs. Someone was about to enter potential threat
range of her.
She turned to see who it was,
and her eyes widened in astonishment so great that she had to
forcibly order her jaw not to drop.
"Marnilay preserve us," chan
Zindico murmured, just loud enough for her to hear through the
sound of wind and wave. "It's Earl Ilforth coming to pay his
respects."
Andrin had never had the
pleasure of meeting the Earl of Ilforth, Speaker of the House of
Lords, in person. Her mother tended to avoid his company, which
meant Andrin and her sisters had also avoided it, simply because
they'd always accompanied the Empress in her headlong flight
from whatever wing of the palace his presence happened to
threaten at the moment. Everyone had heard of him,
though, and she knew he was considered the epitome of the term
"court dandy."
Now she watched him coming
towards her, and her mind busily sorted out first impressions even
as she continued to dredge up everything she'd ever been told
about him.
He might have possessed a
certain wiry grace if he hadn't moved with such studied languor,
she decided, and he was also short for a Ternathian. A good head
shorter than Andrin herself, and built on narrow-shouldered,
slender lines. And he was said to be quite sensitive about his
relatively diminutive stature, among other things, she
remembered. Rumor suggested that he compensated for it with a
viperish tongue, and his biting setdowns of social inferiors
(which, in his opinion, included virtually every other Ternathian
ever born) and anyone who roused his ire were proverbial.
He was also wealthy enough to
indulge his every wardrobe whim, and reputed to be inordinately
fond of such indulgences. That much, at least, Andrin now knew
was entirely accurate, for Mancy Fornath, fifty-first Baron Fornath
and forty-fifth Earl of Ilforth, was resplendent in morning attire.
Or he would have been, if this
had been Hawkwing Palace, rather than the deck of a passenger
liner under full power.
His coif had been as elaborate as
Andrin's own when he started out, and it was in just as many
shreds as hers before he'd come halfway across the deck. The
ornate quetzal feather in his hat would never be worth its weight
in silver again, either, she judged, and his coat had so many layers
and flutters and silken tassels that it looked alive in the stiff wind.
In fact, it looked as if it were trying to devour him.
"Dear Marnilay, does he dress
that way all the time?" she demanded under her breath, and
chan Zindico snorted.
"That, Your Highness, is
conservative for Earl Ilforth."
Whatever she might have replied
to that went unspoken, for the distinctive—she couldn't
possibly call such a spectacle distinguished—personage had
reached his quarry and bowed sweepingly.
"My dear Grand Princess! How
you've grown!"
Andrin could never decide later
whether it was his patronizing tone or the ironic, languidly
malicious look he swept up her tall, admittedly sturdy figure as he
straightened his spine which did the most to leave her white-faced
with fury. Not that it really matter, she eventually concluded.
Either one would have been more than enough, and if they hadn't done it, the lazy, mocking glitter in his light-colored
eyes—the self-congratulating amusement of an adult
making clever remarks which would sail right over a mere child's
head—would have accomplished the same thing anyway.
Unlike Uromathia, Ternathia had
outlawed the custom of dueling generations ago—which,
she found herself reflecting, was a pity. Or perhaps not. chan
Zindico, who hewed to the millennia-old tradition of Calirath
guardsmen, had begun her tutoring in self-defense when she was
twelve, and seven words from the Earl of Ilforth left her with a
sudden, passionate longing to see him on the firing range with his
pasty face centered—briefly—in the sights of her
favorite Halanch and Welnahr revolver.
Which might not be precisely the best way to stay on the
House of Lords' good side, however satisfying it might be,
she admitted regretfully. On the other
hand . . .
"My dear Earl," she said, in tones
fit to freeze lava, looking down her nose at him from her towering
inches, "how nice to see someone of
your . . . imposing stature this
morning."
He blinked, and his face went
blank. She wondered whether his confusion stemmed more from
the evidence that she hadn't missed his mockery after all, or from
the sheer disbelief that any snip of a schoolgirl would dare
to cut him off at the knees.
"Ah, ahem, well—"
She turned her back on him in
mid-stammer and whistled sharply. Finena wheeled high above
her, then came hurtling down with the speed of a striking snake.
Peregrines could attain velocities of over two hundred miles per
hour in a stoop, and the smack of talon against leather as the hawk
flared her wings at the last moment sounded shockingly loud
above the wind. The white falcon turned a baleful eye on Earl
Ilforth and hissed. Andrin had never heard such a sound from
any hawk, let alone Finena, and Ilforth actually stumbled
backward a step as she turned back to survey him through icy eyes.
"You were saying, My Lord?"
"Er . . .
I . . ." He stared, apparently mesmerized, at
the hawk for several seconds before he managed to tear his eyes
away with a supreme effort. "A thousand pardons, Your Grand
Highness. I hadn't realized how large your bird is."
"Really?" Andrin narrowed her
eyes. "As a matter of fact, Finena's not particularly large for an
imperial falcon, My Lord. Was there some urgent business you
wished to discuss?"
He cleared his throat.
"I just wanted to say what an
honor it is, to share a voyage of such importance with His
Imperial Majesty and Your Grand Highness."
"I see. I was rather
looking forward to the voyage myself."
She didn't actually emphasize the
verb all that strongly, but it was enough to bring an angry scarlet
stain to his cheeks. Clearly, he was more accustomed to setting
down others then to receiving the same treatment himself, and his
eyes flashed. He started to open his mouth, but then something
else happened behind those angry eyes, and the red of his cheeks
faded abruptly into something far paler.
"Your Grand Highness, I humbly
beg your pardon." His voice was suddenly different as well.
Lower, more hurried, without the polished confidence which had
sneered through his tone before.
"I . . . seem to have made hash of this
conversation, and it was never my intention to be offensive. If I
have caused you grief in some fashion, I sincerely beg your
forgiveness."
Andrin managed to keep her own
eyes from widening, but it was hard, as she saw sweat start along
his upper lip. She'd never actually seen anyone do that before.
She'd certainly never had that effect on anyone, and she found
herself wondering a little frantically what a mere seventeen-year-
old girl could have done to so thoroughly unnerve him. Simple
surprise kept her silent, and that only made it worse.
And then, as she watched his face
lose even more color, she realized with an insight like a
thunderclap that it wasn't so much because of what she'd done or
said, as because of who she was. Who she might yet become. He
truly had expected his nasty little barbed comment to go right past
a "mere girl." He'd never anticipated that it wouldn't, and it was
the sudden realization of the truly colossal blunder he'd made
which had rattled him so thoroughly. Ridiculing the physical size
of a person who might one day occupy the imperial throne wasn't
the very wisest political move a man could make.
Part of her was childishly
delighted by his terror. She'd never before experienced anything
like this sudden, visceral understanding that she could reduce
grown men to quivering protoplasm merely by displaying her
displeasure, and it was a heady sensation. But if part of her was
delighted, the rest was quite abruptly shaken to the core. She had a
sudden vision of just what sort of disaster she could unleash if she
succumbed to the habit of using that power to gratify her own
petty emotions, and it terrified her.
One corner of her lips tried to
quirk as she contemplated this oaf's probable reaction if she
thanked him for his unwitting assistance in her imperial
education. She was sorely tempted to do just that, but decided to
settle for a slight nod, instead.
"Very well, My Lord. I accept
your apology," she said coolly, and he swept off his hat to give her
the most elaborate bow she'd ever witnessed.
"I am eternally grateful for your
mercy, Your Grand Highness."
Just when she was about to
suggest that he'd kept his forehead on the ship's deck long enough,
he rose with an elegance that was somewhat spoiled by the ship's
motion. He overbalanced and nearly landed flat on his face, but
recovered admirably, and gave her a rueful smile that was more
genuine than anything else she'd seen from him.
"I fear I haven't yet found my sea
legs, Your Highness."
"At least you're on yours, My
Lord. I fear lady Merissa is entirely too ill from seasickness to rise
from bed at all."
"I'm sorry to hear that," he said
softly. "Lady Merissa is a true jewel of the Court, and much
beloved by all. I hope she recovers quickly."
Andrin wondered why such a
simple statement left her wondering what the earl's marital status
might be, and if he had any intention of altering it. She thought she
remembered that he'd been married for several years, but she
wasn't certain. And if he was married, was he ambitious
enough to set aside his wife in favor of the mistress of protocol to
his Emperor's daughter? Such back-stair avenues to political
influence and power had been used often enough in the Empire's
past. Was Ilforth inclined in that direction? Or—her eyes
narrowed suddenly—did he have his sights set somewhat
higher?
In that moment, Andrin wished
fiercely that her mother had come on this voyage, rather than
choosing to remain for the present in Estafel with the younger
girls. That was not the kind of question she could ask her
father.
"I'll relay your well wishes to
lady Merissa when I see her again," she said after a moment.
"You're too kind, Your Grand
Highness."
Yes, I am, she thought uncharitably. Especially since
I'd rather dump you overboard and let you swim to
Tajvana. Or perhaps hand you an anchor first.
"Did you have something else to
discuss, My Lord?" she asked, determined to be polite, even as she
found herself wondering a little frantically how to extract herself
from a conversation she didn't want to continue. "Something to do
with the Conclave, perhaps?"
"Ah, yes, the Conclave."
He was fiddling with his hat
brim, gazing forlornly at the wreckage of the expensive New
Farnalian feather he'd foolishly brought out onto a wind-swept
deck where the biting wind off the North Vander Ocean came
whipping around the southern tip of Ternath Island.
"You're probably wondering
what instructions I carry from the House of Lords," he said with a
last heavy sigh for his damaged headgear.
Andrin blinked mentally. She
hadn't wondered anything of the sort, actually, but she
suddenly—and belatedly—realized that she probably
should have.
"Are you at liberty to share
them?" she asked after a moment, and he looked up from his hat at
last, his glance sly.
"Ordinarily, no, Your Grand
Highness." He gestured elaborately with one hand, apparently
attempting to convey the intricacies with which a man in his
position must deal on a daily basis. Unfortunately, he ended up
looking merely ludicrous. "However, as your position has, ah,
shifted, shall we say, due to the current crisis, I feel it would
be remiss of the Lords to endeavor to keep such an important
member of the imperial family in the dark."
She only looked at him, waiting
for something besides empty flattery, and he cleared his throat.
"Yes. Well. The Lords have
made it quite clear that under no circumstances shall we yield so
much as a fingertip's worth of Ternathian sovereignty over this
business!"
"I see." Andrin pursed her lips
thoughtfully. "I should imagine most of the other governments on
Sharona share exactly the same sentiments, shouldn't you, My
Lord? That wouldn't appear to leave a great deal of room for
progress toward a practical governing system to deal with the
crisis, would it?"
He blinked.
"I beg your pardon, Your Grand
Highness?"
"Clearly, something must be
done, administratively, to meet the crisis, or all Sharona could be
at risk of attack, My Lord. Possibly even destruction. It seems to
me that refusing to yield a fingertip's worth of anything at this
particular moment is an exceedingly poor way to handle the worst
international crisis in Sharonian history."
An odd, choking sound behind
her left shoulder distracted Andrin for a moment. She actually
turned to see if her bodyguard had been stricken ill, but though
chan Zindico's face was slightly red, he seemed unharmed.
Reassured, she returned her attention to the forty-fifth Earl of
Ilforth.
"Well, My Lord?"
"Ah, well, ahem. There may be a
great deal of merit in your argument, Your Grand Highness.
Which I must say is remarkably cogent for a girl barely out of the
schoolroom, if you'll pardon me for speaking bluntly."
She wanted to shout her
irritation to the sky, or else—preferably—hit him
over the head with something large and heavy. Instead, she favored
him with a frosty gaze.
"My schoolroom is hardly noted
for its incompetent schoolmasters," she observed, and Ilforth
reddened.
"No, of course not. I hardly
meant to imply—"
"Then perhaps you will be so
good as to consider my argument's merit, regardless of the
chronological age of its source."
She left him standing, hat in
hand, gaping after her as she stalked clear across the broad,
windswept deck to the opposite rail. She paused fractionally there,
not sure she knew where she meant to go. But a moment later, she
knew exactly what to do as the first Lord of the Privy Council
appeared on deck, sensibly attired in a practical morning suit with
nary a feather nor a geegaw in sight.
"My Lord! How delightful to see
you! Would you join me for a stroll?"
Shamir Taje stared at her for a
moment. Then he caught sight of Ilforth, still standing frozen on
the far side of the deck, and a sudden, impish grin burst forth like
sunlight.
"Your Grand Highness, I would
be delighted to accompany you."
He held out one arm gallantly,
and she laid her hand on his dark, sober sleeve and gave him a
brilliant smile.
"I can honestly say I've never
been so relieved to see you in my life," she said earnestly, and he
chuckled.
"His Lordship has been his usual
ingratiating self, I see. What diplomatic crisis has he engendered
now?"
Finena, perched on Andrin's
other forearm, let out an improbable squawk that lifted Taje's
eyebrows and left Andrin laughing.
"I think she wants to eat his
tongue for lunch," the princess said. "And, I must say, she'd make
better use of it than he does if she did!"
"Marnilay preserve us, how
badly did he offend you?" Taje asked, only half-humorously, and
her eyes flashed.
"Have you a brace of pistols
about you, My Lord?" she asked in reply, and he winced.
"That bad?"
"How in heaven's name did
he ever get to be Speaker of the House of Lords?"
To her surprise, Taje met her
gaze squarely, and his voice was completely serious.
"He's the Speaker because he's
the most senior earl in the House of Lords, and because he has
sufficient money, and therefore political influence, to sway an
unfortunate—one might almost say unholy—alliance
of extreme conservatives, status-conscious popinjays, and
ambitious men who know better but find his money exceedingly
useful. Never, ever underestimate the damage Ilforth can
do in—or from—the House of Lords. Thank
Marnilay Herself that the power of the imperial purse rests in the
Commons, Your Highness, or that blue-blooded, damnfool-
tongued disaster would be able to sit back on his undeserved
laurels and dictate to the Throne whenever he felt like it. Which
would be every minute of the day."
Andrin stared at the man who
held, on a daily basis, more power than anyone in the Empire
except her father. She'd never heard such venom from the eternally
unflappable First Councilor in her life. Nor, she realized a
moment later, had anyone—including her father—
ever given her such a crystal-clear glimpse into the machinations
of governance.
"My father has tremendous faith
in your judgment, First Councilor," she said quietly after a
moment. "I would be honored if you would teach me what you
can in the limited time you have available."
The glow in his eyes warmed her
to the soles of her feet.
"Young lady, I do believe that
may be one of the highest compliments I've ever been paid." He
cleared his throat, then continued gruffly. "I should be honored to
act as your tutor. And I pray to all the gods who watch over our
Empire that my tutelage will never be needed."
She slid her hand down his
forearm to cover his.
"Amen, My Lord," she said
softly, squeezing his fingers briefly. "No one could hope that more
than I do. But," she continued with a grim fatalism new to her own
experience, "I would far rather be prepared for something I never
face than to be caught wanting when it comes, no matter how
unpleasant the preparations may prove. Should Janaki die and
anything happened to my father—"
She couldn't even finish. The
vision was too unrelentingly horrifying for that. She'd never
forgotten the earthquake which had rocked her family when her
grandfather had been killed in a completely avoidable accident in
the middle of an utterly ordinary afternoon in the center of his
own capital city. She'd been just five years old, but that memory
would be with her until the day she died.
Shamir Taje, First Lord of the
Privy Council, didn't move at all for several long moments. He
just stared into her eyes. Then he made a tiny move with his free
hand, hesitated, and finally finished the motion anyway. He
brushed a wild strand of raven-black hair from her brow and
tucked it behind her ear.
"You are your father's daughter
in so many ways it takes the breath away," he said quietly. Then he
drew a deep breath. "Very well, Your Grand Highness. Shall we
begin with an analysis of the political situation in the House of
Lords?"
"I would be most grateful for
anything you could say to clarify that for me."
"In that case," he said, his voice
dry as desert sand, "perhaps it's fortunate I hadn't made any
specific plans for the balance of the morning."
She gulped, then gave him a
brave smile. He nodded almost absently, tucked her hand back into
his elbow, and began strolling aft in the shadow of
Windtreader's funnels as he started to the morning's lesson.
Chapter Thirty-One
It was almost sunset of the third
day of their voyage when Andrin spotted the sight she'd been
waiting for all day and discovered that her breathless anticipation
had been more than worth the wait. With Finena on her arm, her
father beside her on the left, and Shamir Taje standing on her right,
Andrin stared out at her first sight of the massive rock that
guarded the narrow Bolakini Strait.
The Fist of Bolakin was the
largest natural fortress on Sharona. It was also the longest
continuously occupied fortress, and under the provisions of an
ancient treaty, it was garrisoned jointly by Ternathia and Bolakin.
That treaty, and the others between Ternathia and Bolakin which
had been signed at the same time, were the second oldest in the
Empire's history. Only its treaties with Farnalia predated them, and
those were five thousand years old, cemented by intermarriage and
the continued mutual interest of close neighbors.
The Bolakini treaties were the
result of the shrewdest political move any of Ternathia's more
distant ancient neighbors had ever made. The Queens of Bolakin,
watching the Empire's expansion across the continent north of the
Fist had accurately predicted Ternathia's intention—its
need—to expand its naval presence into the Mbisi Sea to
secure the southern shores of its new acquisitions. Aware that
Ternathia would want control of the Fist, and that the Empire
would tolerate no piracy, the Queens of Bolakin had approached
the Emperor of Ternathia with a proposition: a joint garrison and
shared sovereignty for the Fist, duty-free passage for both
Ternathian and Bolakini vessels past the Fist, and the equal
division of all duties collected on non-allied shipping through the
Straits and bound for Ternathian or Farnalian ports of call,
coupled with an ironclad guarantee that no Bolakini shore-runner
would harass Ternathian shipping. In exchange, Bolakin offered to
open her ports to Ternathian ships, giving Ternathia access to the
vast wealth being carried north from the Ricathian interior, both
by overland caravan across the vast Sarthan Desert and by Bolakini
merchant ships plying the long western shore of Ricathia.
The Emperor had been
impressed. Certainly, the proposal had represented an excellent
deal for Bolakin, but it was also pragmatic and eminently fair to
Ternathia, as well. Not only that, but his own naval commanders
and merchants had been suggesting for some time that the Fist had
to be either neutralized or taken under imperial control. He'd
vastly preferred the treaty approach, which had the enormous
advantage of avoiding the need to maintain armed garrisons to
defend against Bolakini efforts to retake conquered
territory . . . or rebel against an
imperial oppressor.
So the treaties had been signed,
the marriages of alliance had been arranged, and four and a half
prosperous millennia later, Andrin carried a trickle of Bolakini
blood and both sides were well content with a long-standing pact.
The Fist was an immense,
crouching lion of stone, a sharply sloped mountain planted solidly
to protect the sheltered waters of Bolakin Bay, carved out of the
southeastern edge of the Narhathan Peninsula. The Fist was three
miles long and three quarters of a mile wide, connected to Narhath
by a low, sandy isthmus which had been steadily expanded over the
years behind its advancing seawalls as land was reclaimed from
the sea and used for wharves, warehouses, taverns, and—in
recent years—luxury hotels. The ancient passage duties on
shipping through the Strait were long gone these days, but Bolakin
Bay remained a vitally important service port for the traffic
sweeping in and out of the Mbisi every day, and it had also been
one of the Empire's most critical naval bases for thousands of
years. The original bronze-age forts had long since disappeared,
although archaeologists had recently exhumed one of them, and
the curtain walls and catapults and ballistae of a later age, and the
muzzle-loading smoothbore cannon which had followed them,
had disappeared in turn. Now armored gun turrets, their barbettes
and magazines blasted deep into the Fist's stony heart, boasted
rifled artillery capable of reaching entirely across the Straits to the
shore of Ricathia.
Beside that huge, ancient crag, Windtreader was a child's toy tossed into the sea. The
immovable mass of stone caught the westering sunlight with a
deep golden glow. Stark black shadows marked the locations of
the powerful batteries, their turrets protected by tons of armor
plate and reinforced concrete, capable of sending any battleship
ever built to the bottom at a distance of over twelve miles.
Two flags snapped and cracked
in the wind above that mighty fortress, representing the two
nations who shared sovereignty over it to this day. One was the
black field and golden lion of Bolakin, rippling and wavering as it
streamed out from its staff. The other was the eight-rayed golden
sunburst of Ternathia on its deep green field, and as Andrin
watched, both of them started down their staffs in perfect unison.
She couldn't have explained to
anyone why sudden tears filled her eyes. It wasn't just pride in her
people, wasn't just the honor that salute accorded to her father, her
family, and all they represented to their people. There was
something else. Through some strange alchemy, born of the eerie
light of the dying sun and the black shadows that marked those
immense guns, of the threat which pulled this ship and its
passengers towards a fateful meeting in Tajvana, that simple
salute—the dipping of two flags as the Emperor passed
by—became something more. Became a reminder of all the
ancient Empire had endured . . . and
an ominous portent of what was yet to come.
Men in Ternathian uniform were
already on their way to fight. To rescue any survivors, and to
prevent the deaths of more innocents. But Sharonians had already
died, and that simple salute brought home with painful clarity the
fact that still more would die tomorrow—for an unknown
stretch of tomorrows. She felt the weight of those deaths pressing
down on her soul, crushing her until it was a struggle simply to
breathe. The enemy had no face, beyond the indistinct images
transmitted by a woman unable to clearly see the men killing her,
yet Andrin was suffocating under the weight of the more and more
deaths to come. Her throat was locked. She wanted to promise the
memory of Shaylar Nargra Kolmayr that she would be avenged.
She wanted so badly to make that promise, to give in to
the need to strike back in an outraged demand for justice, but the
terrible weight on her chest wouldn't let her.
She could see the men on the
fortress walls, waving and cheering, and however hard she tried,
she couldn't lift her arm to respond. They would literally go to
their deaths, if ordered to do so by her
father . . . or by Andrin, if she ever
came to the throne. The terrible prescience, if that was what
gripped her, left her chilled and frightened, alone despite her father
at her side, despite Lazima chan Zindico at her back. She had never
felt smaller, less heroic or less capable, in her life than she did as
she contemplated the kinds of decisions an empress would have to
make in time of war.
She swallowed once. Twice. And
then she made a silent vow—not to Shaylar's shadow, but
to the men in that fortress, and to all the other men in uniform
scattered across the known universes.
She would do her best—
the very utmost best she could—to prepare herself to lead
them. And if the time ever came that she must, she would not risk
them lightly. She was the daughter and granddaughter and great-
great-granddaughter of emperors and empresses. Throughout the
millennia of the Empire, its rulers had sent Ternathian fighting
men out to die again and again, sometimes for good reasons, and
sometimes for bad. She knew that, just as she knew emperors and
empresses would send them out to die in the future, as well. She
knew that, too. But if those men in that fortress must die under her orders, she would spend them well. Not on a whim, not
capriciously, not to satisfy her own anger or out of her own fear.
She would spend them as if their blood were more precious than
gold, more precious than her
own . . . because it was.
The thought burned through her,
and then, without warning, Finena launched unexpectedly from
her wrist. The silver falcon arrowed skyward, drawing the eye as
white wings flashed red in the glowing sunset. She wheeled once,
high above the fortress flags, then folded her wings and dove,
streaking earthward like a meteor plunging down the sky.
She snapped her wings wide
again, fanned her tail, and whipped across the deck at more than a
hundred miles an hour. Sailors ducked out of sheer instinct, and
Andrin lifted her wrist as Finena's piercing call shrilled against the
wind. The falcon banked into a wide, sweeping turn, then floated
back down the crystal depths of air like a dream of beauty until her
talons slapped against Andrin's gauntleted wrist.
The magnificent bird perched
there for an endless, breathless moment—a living sculpture,
carved from silver and ash-pale ivory, wings spread wide, ready to
fly again and strike at a moment's notice. Fierce, proud, defiant,
protective . . . The adjectives and
emotions tumbled through Andrin, too many and too rapidly to
name them all.
Then the wings folded, the head
tilted inquiringly up to meet Andrin's shaken gaze, and Finena was
just a bird again. Only a falcon, sitting peaceably on Andrin's arm,
and no longer an avatar of fate itself.
Andrin drew a single, shallow
breath and turned her gaze from her falcon to her father. Her eyes
met his, and she recognized the look in them. It was the same look
she'd just given the soldiers in the fortress—the look of a
man who knew his word would send other men to their deaths on
a world so far away the message would travel for days, even at the
speed of thought, just to reach it. Men who would go willingly,
trusting him to send them for good reason, for a cause that was
worthy of their sacrifice. The look of the man who knew the
terrible weight of that
responsibility . . . and feared that one
day it would be transferred from his shoulders to hers.
Andrin wanted to weep. Then her
father looked into her
eyes . . . and did.
"I'm tired, Papa," Andrin
murmured, trying to hide how desperately shaken she was. "I'll say
goodnight now."
"Of course, 'Drin," he replied.
He kissed her brow, squeezed
her hand for a moment, then let her go, and she fled to her cabin,
where Lady Merissa was lying in her bunk, pale and asleep, thank
all the gods. Andrin settled Finena on her perch, pulled off her
own heavy coat and embroidered gown, and wrapped herself in the
comforting softness of a silk night dress and a thick robe woven
from Ternathian wool and exotic cashmere.
Her head ached fiercely, and she
curled up in her own bed. She started to light the lamp as the sun
sank toward the sea, but then she changed her mind. Instead, she
simply gazed out the scuttle for a long, long time while the sea
turned golden and the sun balanced on the rim of the world.
She couldn't actually see the sun
slip beneath the waves. The sunset lay astern as Windtreader forged steadily onward, deeper and deeper into the Mbisi. But
she watched the light on the water, watched the clouds overhead
turn orange and crimson and deep wine-red, then fade into soft
shades of purple. The cabin was chilly as the light finally
disappeared and the heavens came to life, glittering with thousands
upon thousands of autumn stars beyond the drifting banners of
cloud. She pulled the thick woolen blankets up around her
shoulders and leaned her aching brow against the cool glass. She
didn't want to think about what would happen in Tajvana. She
didn't want to think at all.
It was comforting to simply sit
in the darkness, watching the stars and thinking of nothing while
the ship moved beneath her and the throb of the powerful engines
enveloped her. It was past time for supper, she realized distantly,
but her stomach rebelled at the mere thought of food, and she
swallowed queasily. Her head ached, and she closed her eyes,
thinking longingly about an icepack, not food.
A quiet tap sounded at the door.
"Go away," she called, softly
enough to avoid disturbing Lady Merissa.
Silence fell once more, but then,
five minutes later, the tap sounded again. And again, five minutes
after that.
Andrin wanted to scream at
whoever was out there, interrupting her solitude. She sprang from
the bed and crossed the cabin with long, angry strides, then
snatched the door open—and closed her mouth over the
furious words on the tip of her tongue. The servant girl who'd
brought her the pen and paper in the Privy Council Chamber was
standing in the passageway, literally wringing her hands, her eyes
enormous with fright.
Andrin hadn't even realized the
girl had come aboard the ship, far less expected to find her outside
her cabin door with a covered tray of food on a serving cart. But
she was obviously supposed to be there, since Brahndys chan
Gordahl, Andrin's regular night bodyguard, was simply standing
there watching her.
"Your Grand Highness," the girl
got out in a rush, "I was ever so terrified. Are you all right, please?
Your supper's getting cold, and I was afraid you'd took ill, which
would be my fault, as it's my place to look after you on this
voyage, and—"
"I beg your pardon?" Andrin
interrupted the spate of words, staring at her in astonishment. The
girl paled, and Andrin shook her head. "I only meant I don't
understand," she said more gently. "Why is it your place to
look after me?"
The girl swallowed sharply.
"Well, it's just that Your
Highness' maid, Miss Balithar, she slipped and fell climbing up the
staircase from the kitchen with your dinner. She broke her leg,
pretty badly they say. She's with the ship's Healer now, having it
looked after. Between Miss Balithar's broken leg and Lady
Merissa ill with the seasickness, you've got no one to look after
you. To make sure you're warm and comfortable and well fed."
"Oh, poor Sathee! She must be in
agony!" Andrin's eyes widened in distress. Sathee Balithar had
been her lady's maid since her fifth birthday—she was
literally one of the family.
"When they came to fetch me,
they said the Healer had already stilled the pain, before doing
anything else. She's being looked after well, I promise you that,
Your Grand Highness."
But the girl was still wringing
her hands, and Andrin still had no idea why she was
standing in the corridor with Andrin's dinner and a serious case of
nervous distress. The princess forced herself to collect her rattled
wits, feeling stupid and slow from the headache pounding at her
temples from the inside.
"I'm glad to hear she's being
taken care of. But why are you here? Who sent you?"
She glanced at chan Gordahl, and
his eyes flicked to meet hers.
"She was thoroughly vetted,
Your Highness, before setting foot aboard ship. Ulthar brought
her up fifteen minutes ago, when she came with your dinner."
Andrin felt better immediately.
Ulthar chan Habikon was another of her sworn bodyguards. There
was no way anyone who wasn't completely above suspicion would
have gotten past both him and chan Gordahl. She drew a deep
breath, gave her guardsman a nod of thanks for the information,
then met the girl's worried gaze again.
"Who are you?" she asked
curiously. "And how—why—were you asked to take
Sathee's place?"
"When the choosing of the staff
was done, I got the chance of my whole lifetime, to help with the
fetching and the carrying between the cabins and the cooks," the
girl said. "They assigned me to you, Your Grand Highness, on
account of my already being trusted to help with the Privy
Council, which is a job not just every servant is allowed, you see.
My father, he's been a footman of the Privy Council his whole life,
and my mother, she's been maidservant to your grandmother,
which is where I learned my trade, fetching and carrying for her.
Please, Your Grand Highness, will you have some supper now?"
"I—" Andrin closed her
lips and put a hand to her brow. "I'm afraid I have a frightful
headache," she admitted. "I couldn't possibly eat a single bite."
To Andrin's astonishment, the
girl's eyes lit with obvious pleasure.
"I can help you with that, Your
Grand Highness. Honestly, I can! It's a Talent from my mother.
Just sit you down, there, and let me help."
Andrin glanced at chan Gordahl
again. The guardsman evidently knew a great deal more about this
girl than Andrin did, because he simply nodded permission. Given
her guardsmen's fierce suspicion of any possible threat to her
safety, that said a great deal. Even so, she wasn't entirely certain
about all this. Still, her head throbbed relentlessly, so fiercely even
the light in the passageway hurt. And so she gave a mental shrug,
willing to try whatever the girl had in mind, and sat down in the
chair beside her writing desk.
"What's your name?" she asked
as the girl entered the cabin timidly. She gazed at the gown Andrin
had discarded with something like awe, and stared at Finena in
open amazement.
"Relatha, Your Grand
Highness," she all but whispered, mesmerized by the white falcon.
"Relatha Kindare."
Andrin's thoughts were slower
than usual because of her headache, but she blinked as she
suddenly realized that Finena was completely at ease with the girl.
That surprised her. The falcon didn't like very many servants, and
was particular about the nobility, as well. The bird detested a fair
number of courtiers on sight—the Earl of Ilforth came to
mind—but she liked Relatha. Liked the girl enough to preen
and angle her head for a caress.
"Would you like to pet her?"
Andrin asked.
"Oooh, I wouldn't dare!" Relatha
protested, and Andrin stood and moved closer to the perch.
"She likes you. Here, give me
your hand."
Relatha's fingers trembled in
Andrin's grasp as she held the girl's hand gently in front of the bird
for a moment, then guided her to stroke Finena's silver back. The
bird arched against the touch, all but crooning with pleasure, and
Relatha gasped. Then a smile of utter enchantment lit her face.
She petted the falcon for several
delighted moments, then turned back to Andrin.
"She's just the most beautiful
thing I've ever seen, Your Grand Highness! But here, now. Your
head's still aching, and I'm standing here petting a bird, selfish as
can be! Sit you down again, now, and let me take care of that
headache."
The instant Relatha touched
Andrin's head, the princess knew she was in the hands of a master
Healer. An untrained one, perhaps, but powerfully Talented. The
headache simply drained away to nothing under the gentle
ministration of Relatha's fingertips, and Andrin leaned back, eyes
closed, and let the magic in the girl's fingers soothe her frayed
nerves. Her breathing steadied, slowed, and when Relatha finally
let her hands drop away, Andrin breathed a deep sigh and opened
her eyes.
She turned in her chair and
peered curiously up at the girl.
"Why have you never taken
formal training, Relatha? Your Talent for Healing is profound."
"Me? A Healer?"
Relatha goggled. "I'm a servant girl!"
"And what's that got to do with
anything?" Andrin frowned. "There are plenty of women Healers
from all classes of society. Talent isn't confined by social bounds.
Have you ever even been tested?"
Relatha shook her head, struck
literally dumb.
"Well, would you like to
be tested? To be trained as a Healer?"
The very notion appeared to
overwhelm Relatha.
"I—I don't
know. . . I never even thought such a thing
would be possible—"
"Well, there's no need to decide
this instant," Andrin told her. "But think about it. If you want to be
tested at the Healers' Academy, I'll arrange it."
"But—why?" Relatha
asked, obviously still shaken, and Andrin smiled.
"Why not?" she challenged in
return.
"But I'm just—"
"Don't you dare say 'just a
servant' again!" Andrin ordered tartly. "You just cured a savage
headache with a simple touch. If you can do that, when you've
never even been tested, far less trained, then you're wasted
fetching and carrying anyone's dinner, even mine. Was your
mother ever tested?"
Relatha shook her head.
"No, Your Grand Highness. She
said servants are servants, and there's an end of it. Her task is to
care for your grandmother, which is quite enough for anyone, she
says."
"Hmph!" Andrin folded her arms.
"Maybe in my grandmother's day that was so, but I'm not my
grandmother, and I positively hate the idea of seeing
someone with this kind of Talent wasted running errands between
the kitchen and anyone's cabin. Or even fetching and
carrying for the Privy Council. Think about it, Relatha. Do you
want to spend your life fetching my dishes? Or would you rather
try to earn a position as an Imperial Healer?"
The girl's mouth fell open.
"Me?" she squeaked.
"Imperial Healer? Me?" But her eyes had begun to glow.
"Do you really think—?"
She broke off, staring at Andrin
with those glowing eyes, and the princess shrugged ever so
slightly.
"We'll never know if you're
never tested," she pointed out reasonably, and Relatha swallowed
hard.
"I'll . . .
think on it, then," she whispered.
"Good! Now, about that supper
you mentioned . . ."
Relatha grinned.
"It's in the passage, Your Grand
Highness. I'll just fetch it in for you. Sit you down at the table."
Andrin wasn't sure why, but her
own Talent hummed strangely in her ears as Relatha wheeled her
supper into the room. She couldn't imagine why, but Caliraths
learned early to pay attention to "feelings" when other people
crossed the tracks of their lives.
She hoped Relatha would decide
to be tested. It was more unusual than it ought to be for a girl
from the serving classes to make that big a transition, into the
upper reaches of the Talented professions, but it was scarcely
unheard of, either. In fact, the whole reason the House of Talents
existed in the Ternathian Parliament in the first place was to make
sure girls like Relatha could improve their lives by making
full use of their gods-given abilities. The fact that no one had even
noticed the startling power of Relatha's Talent bothered Andrin,
and she decided to find a quiet moment to speak with the Speaker
of the House of Talents before they reached Tajvana.
That thought seemed to close
some switch deep in Andrin's brain. She could almost physically
feel it, and she was abruptly glad Relatha was aboard
Windtreader.
Of course, it remained to be seen
why her presence seemed so suddenly important.
Chapter Thirty-Two
Shaylar sat crosslegged in
Gadrial's cabin while the two of them—the only women
aboard the warship—enjoyed what she thought of as a quiet
"girls' day" together. She was bent over a project very dear to her.
Using a borrowed needle and thread, some shears the ship's doctor
had provided, and some cloth the captain had asked the purser to
locate in storage, she was making a dress for herself.
It wouldn't be a fancy dress, not
given the cloth she had to work with—military-issue gray
cotton twill—but it would be a dress, and it would
be hers. The only other clothing she had was what Gadrial
had given her and some navy-issue pajamas she'd contrived to
make into slacks and shirts which almost fitted her.
Gadrial was no seamstress, but
she'd admitted to some skill in fancy needlework, so she was using
the voyage time to decorate some of her own shirts and slacks.
The style and patterns were lovely, unlike anything Shaylar had
ever seen. While they worked, they talked. Not about anything
important—just easy conversation that allowed Shaylar to
practice her steadily growing command of Andaran.
Shaylar had come to realize that
the speed with which she was mastering Andaran had aroused
Gadrial and Jasak's suspicions. No Sharonian, accustomed to
telepaths' "ear" for languages, would have been surprised, but she
wasn't in Sharona any more. Unfortunately, by the time
she realized Gadrial had never seen anyone from Arcana (which
was what she and Jasak called their home universe) learn a
completely foreign language so quickly, she'd already
demonstrated her abilities. The best she'd been able to do was to
appear to slow down, to stop and obviously fumble for a word
more frequently and emphasize her 'foreign accent.' She had no
idea whether or not it had done any good. For that matter, she
wasn't even certain that trying to hide her language-learning ability
was a good thing in the first place! It was so frustrating
trying to envision what a civilization which apparently had never
heard of the Talents would
expect . . . or find frightening or
threatening.
On the other hand, the speed
with which she'd been able to acquire at least a usable command
of Andaran worked both ways, she reflected, setting small neat
stitches in the sunlight streaming through the bulkhead scuttles. It
would allow Jasak's superiors to ask pointed questions much
sooner, but by the same token, it had permitted Shaylar to probe
for additional information about Arcana before she and Jathmar
had to face those pointed questions.
Much of what she'd learned had
been frightening. Other bits and pieces, however, had seemed to
offer at least some grounds for cautious hope.
For example, she'd learned that
Jasak came from one of several Andaran kingdoms which
dominated the landmass she and Jathmar had known as New
Farnalia. Andara, it appeared, provided the bulk of the Arcanan
army, and it was a culture with a long, deep, highly developed
military tradition. However poorly Arcana might appear to have
performed in its initial encounters with Sharona, what Shaylar had
learned so far discouraged her from hoping things would stay that
way.
On the other hand, what she'd
learned about Ransar was more encouraging. As nearly as she
could tell, Gadrial's home region of Arcana corresponded to the
region of Sharona encompassed by the Kingdom of Eniath, the
Kingdom of Dusith, and the northern portions of the Empire of
Uromathia. Unlike the monarchies of the various Uromathian
states, however, Ransar was a democracy. Shaylar wasn't
particularly interested in politics, but she was trying to learn what
she could, and it was quite obvious to her already that Ransaran
notions were much less militaristic—more "humanistic,"
she was tempted to say—than those of Andara.
And then, of course, there were
the people called "Mythalans," but for some reason, neither
Gadrial nor Jasak seemed to want to talk about them.
Despite the situation in which
she and Jathmar found themselves, Shaylar was fascinated by the
bits and pieces about Arcana she'd so far been able to fit together.
It was frustrating to have so incomplete a picture, however, and
not just where politics was concerned. In fact, there was
something else which continued to puzzle her even more, and she
looked up from her sewing.
"Gadrial?"
"Hmm?"
"What moves this ship?"
Gadrial glanced up in obvious
surprise. She gazed at Shaylar for a moment, then used a word
with which Shaylar wasn't yet familiar.
"What does that word mean?"
she asked, and Gadrial laid her needlework in her lap and folded
her hands, her expression thoughtful as she clearly considered how
best to answer.
"It's what powers our whole
civilization." She spoke slowly, choosing her words. "Not
everyone can use it," she added. "You must be born with a Gift for
it."
A small thrill of astonishment
ran through Shaylar. Whatever it was, it sounded a little like
Talents, except that no Talent had ever powered a ship.
Then Gadrial stood up and retrieved a small leather case from her
luggage. She opened it and extracted a familiar crystal.
"This is my PC," Gadrial said.
"My personal crystal. You've seen me use it in our language
lessons, but I also use it to store my other work—my notes,
my calculations. Anything I need to record. It's—" she used
the unfamiliar word again "—that makes it possible."
"Gadrial, it's just a stone."
Even as Shaylar said it, she knew
she sounded foolish. Certainly Gadrial had already given more
than sufficient proof that that "just a stone" was capable of
remarkable things. It was just that the very notion continued to
offend Shaylar's concept of how the physical laws of the
multiverse worked. In fact, she realized, the real reason she'd said
it was that a part of her desperately wanted for it not to
work after all.
"Don't be silly, Shaylar," Gadrial
chided, as if she were the telepath and she'd read Shaylar's mind.
"You've seen it work before. But it won't work for just anyone. It
takes someone born with a Gift to build a PC or compile the
spellware to make its applications work. But each crystal can hold
immense amounts of data, if you know how to encode and retrieve
it, and someone with a Gift can even program it so that non-Gifted
people can use it. Here."
She began to murmur. Whatever
she was saying, it wasn't in Andaran, and despite the number of
times she'd already seen it, Shaylar's scalp prickled as the crystal
began to glow. Squiggles of light appeared within it, recognizable
as writing, although the words weren't in the same script as the
signs aboard this ship.
"Here," Gadrial repeated,
extending the crystal towards Shaylar. "This time I've powered it
up for you."
Shaylar accepted it very gingerly.
It was heavier than she'd expected. It still looked like nothing so
much as absolutely clear quartz, yet it was clearly denser than
quartz from the way it weighed in her hand. The squiggles glowing
in its depth shifted slightly as the crystal settled into her palm. The
unintelligible words moved, as if to present themselves to her for
easier reading.
"What do you mean, powered it
up for me?" she asked.
"I mean
I've . . . turned it on for you.
Activated its spellware in non-Gifted mode and released my
password so that you can enter and retrieve data if you want to."
"But how?" Shaylar
demanded in frustration. "This isn't a machine—it's just a
lump of rock!"
"Of course it's a machine,"
Gadrial replied.
"No, it isn't. It's not—"
Shaylar shook her head, searching for the Andaran word for
"mechanical." Unfortunately, that wasn't one she'd learned yet.
"There are no switches," she said instead. "Nothing to provide
power."
It was Gadrial's turn to blink in
apparent surprise. Then she shrugged.
"I provided the power,"
she said.
"But how?"
"By saying the proper words.
Here, try this." Gadrial handed Shaylar a stylus or wand which
appeared to be made out of the same transparent not-quartz as the
crystal itself. "Write something on it," she encouraged.
Shaylar looked at her for a
moment, then pressed the tip of the stylus hesitantly against the
"PC." A spark of light—a bluish-green light, quite different
from the color of the words already floating in the crystal—
glowed to life at the point where stylus and crystal made contact.
As she moved the stylus, the spark became a line, following the
stylus tip as she slowly and carefully wrote her own name. She
finished and lifted the stylus away, and her name floated instantly
to the glassy center of the crystal, displacing the words which had
been there before.
Shaylar stared at it, half-
delighted and half-terrified by the implications, then shook her
head.
"I don't understand!"
"That's because you don't have a
Gift," Gadrial explained. "A non-Gifted person can use most of
our machines if the spellware is set up that way and someone who
is Gifted charges them first. But if you don't have a Gift
yourself, you're completely dependent on someone else to write
the spellware and power the system."
They were speaking the same
language, but no communication was taking place, and Shaylar
drew a deep breath.
"You can't run a machine by just
talking to it," she said slowly and patiently, and Gadrial's brows
drew together.
"Of course I can! I told
you—I'm Gifted."
"But—" Shaylar wanted
to tug at her hair. "You keep saying that, but what does
Gifted mean? What is it you can do—that someone
without a Gift can't—that makes hunks of rock light up this
way?"
"I can tap the field," Gadrial said,
exactly as if that actually explained something.
"What field?"
Gadrial used the same word that
had started this conversation, and Shaylar let out an exasperated
howl.
"Why are you upset, Shaylar?"
Gadrial asked, starting to frown.
"Because your words make no
sense!" Shaylar pointed to the ominously glowing rock in her own
hand. "This piece of stone makes no sense. This ship
makes no sense! Nothing about you people makes any
sense!"
She realized she was breathing
hard, teetering on the edge of a genuine panic attack. She was
afraid—terribly afraid—and she didn't quite know
why. She felt as if she were standing on the edge of a cliff, and if
Gadrial kept talking, she would tip right over the edge and fall.
Gadrial reclaimed her "personal
crystal" and set it carefully on the blanket to one side. She let her
left hand rest lightly on it while she regarded Shaylar steadily, and
then she shook her head slowly.
"Your people truly don't have
anything like this, do they?" she finally said, her voice filled with
wonder and what sounded like pity.
"No," Shaylar admitted, and
Gadrial inhaled deeply.
"Magister Halathyn told me
that," she said. A flicker of pain went through her eyes as she
mentioned Magister Halathyn's name, but those eyes never left
Shaylar's face, and she continued steadily.
"I didn't really want to believe
him," she admitted. "It suggested a universe so different from ours
that I can't really wrap my mind around it. Not yet, anyway. But
everything I've seen from you since has only confirmed it, and now
this."
She shook her head again.
"No wonder you're so lost. Let
me try to explain."
She sat back, once again
obviously thinking, looking for the best way to explain something
complicated using the still limited vocabulary they had in
common.
"There is a force in the
universe," she began finally. "People with a Gift can sense it, can
touch it—use it to do certain things. Some Gifts are very
weak. People born with them can do only little things, because
they can touch only a little of that force. It's
like . . . like a field of energy. Of
sunlight. A sea of energy that lies between things."
Gadrial's frown of concentration
was deeper, more intense. Shaylar had the feeling that the other
woman was attempting to explain color to a blind person, and she
didn't like it. She was a telepath, a Voice; communication was her
speciality, what she'd been born to do, and she'd never felt blind
before. Not until now.
"Other people," Gadrial
continued, "have very strong Gifts. My Gift is a strong one, for
instance. The only person I ever knew with a stronger one was
Magister Halathyn. He taught—"
Her voice caught suddenly,
raggedly, and her eyes filled with tears.
"I'm sorry," Shaylar said softly,
touching Gadrial's hand. The other woman's emotions were a
chaotic whirl of love, grief, and empty, aching loss.
"I know you are," Gadrial said,
and her voice was a small sound in the silence of the cabin.
Shaylar could sense, as well, that
Gadrial was struggling not to blame her and Jathmar for
Halathyn's death. She wished she knew a way to comfort the other
woman's grief, but she couldn't—not given the
circumstances. And so she could only wait until Gadrial dashed
the tears from her eyes and straightened once more.
"I know you are," she said again,
her voice firmer, then cleared her throat. "Anyway, Halathyn's Gift
was profound. No one, I think, understood the field better than he
did. He taught me everything I know about it. What I've learned on
my own is built entirely on the platform he gave me."
Once more the agony in her eyes
and voice tore at Shaylar, but this time she refused to yield to
them.
"He taught me," she said more
steadily, "and he wouldn't want me to fall to pieces like this now.
So . . . This field can be tapped,
manipulated—harnessed. It's power is immense. That's
what moves the ship." She gestured. "Someone with a Gift speaks
the proper formula to tap the field, which allows them to channel
that power into the ship's storage cells. When that energy is
released, it drives the ship forward through the water. It also
powers other machines, all kinds of machines."
She dug through her luggage
again, and pulled out another case.
"This is a machine Halathyn and
I developed together. It helps us find portals. That's what we were
looking for when we stumbled across you. Looking for a portal
nearby."
She murmured to the gadget,
which began to glow. Several colored indicators came to life in
what looked like a rectangular window on the front of the device.
"Here. See these displays?" Her
index finger indicated its several small glowing arrows and
columns of light. "We'll be docking sometime tomorrow morning
at the island we call Chalar back home. That's where our next
portal is. See how the arrow points to it?"
Shaylar nodded slowly, but deep
inside she was stunned. This single small device in Gadrial's hand
was more effective—and efficient—than any Portal
Hound she'd ever heard of! If they could do this, what else
could they do? Then she realized that Gadrial was still talking.
"—still experimental, of
course. That's what we were doing that day in the forest, when
your people killed Osmuna—"
"Osmuna?" Shaylar asked. "Who
is Osmuna?"
"The soldier your people killed,"
Gadrial replied in a surprised tone.
"Our people killed?"
Shaylar demanded. "Your people killed Falsan! Gods,
Gadrial—he died right in my arms! He'd staggered for
miles with that arrow in his chest, trying to reach our
camp—"
"I didn't know he'd died in your
arms," Gadrial said quietly. "I'm sorry about that. As sorry as I can
possibly be."
"But that didn't keep your people
from killing the rest of us, did it?" Shaylar replied, more
harshly even than she'd intended to. Gadrial winced, but she
refused to look away.
"That wasn't what we wanted,"
she said. "Jasak realized what must have happened sooner than
anyone else. Two men met in the forest. Just the two of them, and
no one will ever know which one of them shot first. We
certainly didn't. We couldn't even figure out how Osmuna
had died. All we knew was that someone had killed him, and we
trailed that person back to your camp. But you'd already headed
toward the portal we'd come to find, and—"
"And then you ran us to ground
like dogs!" Shaylar jerked up off the bed, her face twisted
as the words she'd acquired—the words that finally freed
the pain so deep inside—poured out of her. "We were
terrified! Someone had murdered Falsan—that was all
we knew. And they were chasing us. We couldn't run fast
enough!"
"Of course we were." Gadrial
stared at her. "What would one of your army officers have
done if one of his men was dead? If he'd been responsible for
controlling the situation?"
"Controlling the situation?
" Shaylar barked a harsh, ugly laugh. "Is that what you call it?
You were only 'controlling the situation' when Ghartoun tried to
talk to you, without even a weapon in his hands, and you shot
him?!"
"Garlath shot him,"
Gadrial snarled, and even without touching her Shaylar realized
that the other woman was genuinely angry. No, not angry—
she was furious. And not, Shaylar realized in shock, at her.
"That stupid, cowardly, arrogant,
incompetent son-of-a—" Gadrial was abruptly using words
Shaylar hadn't heard before, but they hardly needed translating.
Whoever this Garlath was, Gadrial had despised him. Still
despised him.
"I wasn't close enough to see it
happen," Gadrial said finally. "Jasak wouldn't let me get that close.
But I heard him shouting at Garlath. Only that idiot shot
anyway, and then unholy hell broke loose. I'd never heard
anything like that."
Shaylar was trembling. Her
perfect Voice's memory replayed the shouted command she'd
heard when Ghartoun stood up. The words which had meant
nothing at the time, which she'd assumed all this time had been the
order to attack. But now she'd learned at least some Andaran, and
in her memory, she heard the voice once more. The voice she
recognized now as Jasak Olderhan's.
"Hold fire, Fifty Garlath!
"
The words rang through her
mind like a jagged lightning bolt, and she stared at Gadrial.
"Jasak ordered him not to
shoot," she said slowly, softly. "He ordered him not to
shoot."
"Yes, he did!" Gadrial's
expression was tight with remembered anguish. "I heard him say it.
Heard that crossbow's slap and twang after he'd shouted
that order. Then that horrible, thunderous roar—"
Shaylar felt nothing but truth in
Gadrial Kelbryan, and she began to weep. Silently at first. Then
she covered her face with both hands and began to sob.
They'd died for nothing. For
nothing! And Company-Captain Halifu had come looking for
them, with no way to know Jasak had never meant for anyone to
die, and more blood had been spilled. Halathyn had died,
and so had a lot of others. And all anyone in Sharona would know
was what she'd transmitted to Darcel. The images of fire
and blood. Of intentional murder and deliberate slaughter, because
that was what she'd thought—known—was
happening!
There would be a war, she
realized. She could see it as clearly as she had ever seen anything
in her life. As if she'd been a Calirath experiencing a Glimpse.
There would be a terrible, monstrous war, and more people would
die, stupidly, on both sides, because no one back home knew the
first massacre had been a mistake.
Gadrial had put both arms
around her, was making helpless sounds, trying to comfort her.
And then, suddenly, the door between the sleeping cabin and the
tiny sitting room of Gadrial's quarters crashed open and Jathmar
was there, white to the lips.
"Shaylar!"
She turned blindly toward him.
Then she was in his arms, clinging to him, weeping helplessly.
"What happened?" he demanded
raggedly. "What did she do to you?"
"Nothing." Shaylar hiccuped.
"Nothing, Jathmar. Oh, Jath—the whole thing was a terrible
mistake!"
She'd tried to tell him, although
her explanation wasn't nearly as coherent as Gadrial's had been,
and he listened to her words, to the emotions churning through the
marriage bond. When she finally got the ghastly truth Gadrial had
just revealed through to him, he sat in silence for long moments,
jaw muscles clenched tightly. Then a deep sigh shuddered out of
him.
"All right. I believe it. Because
you believe her. Gods, what a stupid, monstrous
waste!"
Shaylar just nodded, and he
tipped her chin up, smiled into her eyes, and wiped tears from her
cheek with his index finger.
"You need a handkerchief,
sweetheart, only I haven't got one."
She sniffed, then flashed a
grateful look at Gadrial when the other woman pressed a scrap of
cloth from her sewing into her hand. Shaylar dried her eyes, blew
her nose, and gave Gadrial a watery smile.
"Thank you," she said, then
realized Gadrial was watching both of them closely, her brow
furrowed in puzzlement.
"Shaylar?" she said slowly,
almost uncertainly.
"Yes?"
"How did Jathmar know you
were upset?"
Shaylar and Jathmar exchanged
mortified glances.
"Oh, hells," Shaylar said, but
Jathmar shook his head.
"My fault," he muttered in
Shurkhali (which was not the Ternathian they'd been
teaching Gadrial), rubbing the bridge of his nose. "You just scared
the daylights out of me, honey. I caught your fear, then your
emotions went so crazy I just—"
"Hush." It was Shaylar's turn to
shake her head, and then she shrugged with a crooked smile. "It
had to happen sometime. And it's no more your fault you
responded than it's my fault for having felt that way in the first
place!"
"But why did you? You
were already headed that way before she dropped that little
bombshell about what's-his-name, Garlath. That's what set off the
explosion, but you were already under a lot of pressure,
Shaylar. What in all the Arpathian hells has been going on
in here?"
"Gadrial's been explaining
something important to me, Jathmar. Something about the way
their technology works. We joked about Halathyn using magic,
but, Jathmar, I think that's exactly what it was. Magic. I
don't know what else to call it."
She drew a deep breath and tried
to explain. On the one hand, she was handicapped by the fact that
she simply didn't understand it all herself by any stretch of the
imagination. On the other hand, she had the advantage that she and
Jathmar shared a far more complete command of their
language—not to mention the marriage bond—plus
a common base of reference. It took a while to get the
fundamental concept across, and longer for Jathmar to accept it.
But then he nodded abruptly, choppily.
"You're right," he said.
"Manipulating energy with special words? Spells and
incantations? Magic rings—well, those little cube
things—to store the spells inside? It's utterly fantastic,
impossible, but how else could they be doing it?" He sighed.
"And now I've blown our cover. We've got to tell her
something."
"Yes, we do," Shaylar agreed.
"Let me think."
Her thoughts raced as she tried
to figure out how to word it without giving too much
away. Finally, she faced Gadrial, who sat watching them through
narrowed, suspicious eyes.
"I'm sorry," Shaylar sighed.
"Jathmar was very confused. He wanted to know why I was upset,
so I had to explain. Everything. He, too, is very distressed by the
mistake that was made."
"But how did he know?"
Gadrial, and Shaylar gave her a crooked little smile.
"You said you have a Gift.
Something you were born with. On Sharona, our home world, we
have . . . not the same thing. We don't
have your . . . magic." She wasn't
sure she was using Gadrial's word properly, but it was as close as
she could come at the moment. "Not anything like it. But some
people are born with something other people don't have. We call
it . . . "
She hunted for the word, only to
discover she didn't have exactly the right one in her still limited
vocabulary.
"What do you call it when a
great artist, or a great singer, has something other people don't?
The thing that lets him do what he does so much better than
anyone else can?"
"A talent?" Gadrial suggested,
and Shaylar nodded vigorously.
"Yes. A talent. Some people in
my world have special Talents. They're—" she wrinkled her
brow trying to find the way to say it. "They're in the mind." She
tapped her temple. "Jathmar and I are married. We both have a
small Talent, nothing very special, really," she said as smoothly as
she could, grateful that Gadrial was no telepath to sense her
departure from the truth. "But when two people with Talents
marry, a bond forms. A bond of the mind. The emotions. Jathmar
always knows when I'm afraid or upset. And I always know when
he's worried or angry. It's stronger when we're closer together, but
we don't have to be in the same room to feel it. Don't your people
have anything like this? A mother who just knows when
her child's been injured, for example?"
"No." Gadrial shook her head,
eyes wide, and Jathmar and Shaylar exchanged startled glances.
"Nothing like it?"
Jathmar's astonishment showed even through his slower, more
labored Andaran.
"No."
The three of them stared at one
another, thunderstruck for entirely different reasons.
"Well," Gadrial finally said, "it's
clear we come from very different people. Very different."
"Yes," Shaylar gulped. "Even
more different than we'd realized."
"Which brings up another
question." Gadrial held Shaylar's gaze. "What are
your . . . Talents?"
Shaylar had known it was
coming. It was, after all, the next logical question. She just wished
she'd thought to come up with an explanation for it before this.
Lying, even by withholding information, did not come naturally to
a Voice. For that matter, she wasn't certain exactly which
lies she should tell! Should she understate what Talents could do
in an effort to lull these people into a false sense of security?
Hope they would take Sharona and the Talented too lightly? Or
should she exaggerate the Talents? Hope she and Jathmar
could make the Arcanans nervous enough that they'd move slowly,
cautiously? Possibly create enough nervousness to buy time for
their own people to mobilize in response to the threat?
"Jathmar is a Mapper," she said
finally. "He . . . Sees the land around
him. Not very far," she added. "For a few miles in any one
direction, at most."
Gadrial's mouth had fallen open.
She stared at Jathmar for a moment, then back and Shaylar.
"And you?"
"Oh, my Talent isn't very much,"
Shaylar prevaricated. "Mostly, I sense Jathmar through the
marriage bond. It helps me know if he's in trouble, when he's out
Mapping. And I help draw the charts, too."
"We didn't find any maps,"
Gadrial said, studying them with hooded, wary eyes. Shaylar met
those eyes forthrightly and shook her head.
"No, of course you didn't. I
burned them."
"You burned them?"
"What would you have
done?" Shaylar challenged. "Would you have just handed them
over? To people you didn't know? People who'd murdered one of
your friends, who'd chased you down like animals, who were
shooting and killing the rest of your friends all around you?
Trying to kill you? Would you have let people like that get
hold of maps that showed the way to your home?"
"No," Gadrial said softly, after a
moment. "I don't suppose I would."
"Neither would I. Neither did
I."
Gadrial nodded slowly, but
another deep suspicion showed plainly in her expression. She
started to ask a question, paused, then closed her lips. Shaylar
waited, meeting her gaze levelly. It was one of the hardest things
she'd ever done, but she held that gaze steadily, as though she had
nothing further to hide.
"Shaylar," Gadrial said at last,
sounding unhappy, "we think—Jasak thinks—your
people got a message out. One that warned your people about
what had happened. Did someone on your crew get a
warning out? Using this Talent of the mind?"
Continuing to meet Gadrial's
gaze was agony, but Shaylar did it anyway.
"I don't know, Gadrial."
"Don't know? Or won't tell me?"
"What do you want of me,
Gadrial?" Shaylar's eyes filled. "We're your prisoners."
"Not my prisoners."
Gadrial shook her head, biting her lip. "You're Sir Jasak
Olderhan's prisoners."
"Don't you mean the army's?"
Jathmar asked harshly in his accented Andaran.
"No, I don't. I don't understand
all of it, because I'm not in the Army, either. And I'm not Andaran.
The Andarans are a military society, and they have a lot of
complicated rules I don't understand. But one of those rules is
about prisoners, and about responsibilities toward them. You'll
have to ask Jasak about it, if you want to know."
"I do want to know," Jathmar
said in a voice full of iron. "And I think we have a right to know.
Don't you?"
Gadrial bit her lip again, more
gently this time, looking at him levelly. Then she drew a slightly
unsteady breath.
"Yes, I do. If you'll wait here, I'll
go find him and ask him to explain. Explain to all of us,
actually. I'm caught in the middle of this thing, too, and I don't
understand it as well as I should."
"Thank you," Shaylar said softly,
and Gadrial nodded. Then she left the cabin, and Shaylar began to
tremble.
"They're going to figure it out,
Jathmar," she said, once again in Shurkhali.
"Eventually," he agreed heavily.
"Probably sooner than we'd like. And it's my fault. I should have
realized you weren't really in danger—not with Gadrial."
"Don't blame yourself." She laid
a hand against his cheek, and his lips quirked.
"There's no one else to
blame, sweetheart. It certainly isn't your fault." He captured her
hand, kissed her fingers, and tucked them against his heart. "I
know how hard that was, lying to Gadrial just now. I don't think I
could have done half as well as you did. She's half convinced you
don't know for sure if a message went out."
"Only half," Shaylar muttered,
"and Jasak Olderhan won't be so easy to fool."
"No, he won't. Still, you're right.
What else should they expect from us? If they were in our shoes,
to you think they'd have volunteered that information about magic
powering their whole civilization?"
"Probably not," Shaylar agreed
dryly. "It would be interesting to know how much information our
side's managed to gather from their prisoners." She
shivered. "I'm not sure I want to know how we're treating their
soldiers, though. We've been so
fortunate . . . "
His arm tightened around her.
He didn't need to speak; she could taste his fear for her, his fear
about what lay ahead. When Jasak came into the room to explain,
Shaylar would know he was telling the truth, if only she could
arrange to touch him. But having said as much as she had already,
he would undoubtedly be doubly suspicious if she tried anything
so obvious. Up until now, their captors had viewed her penchant
for touching people as a simple personal habit. She'd been careful
to be just as "touchy-feely" with Jathmar as she was with them,
but now—
She might never be given another
opportunity to touch them again. She faced that probability
squarely. And as she did, she also realized that lying to them now
and being caught in that lie later would not do them a great deal of
good down the road. It might well damage their circumstances,
worsen their treatment, incur all sorts of unpleasantness.
The thoughts flowed through
her, but before she could discuss them with Jathmar, it was too
late. The door opened again, and Jasak Olderhan filled the frame,
his eyes hooded as he stared down at them.
Chapter Thirty-Three
He knows, Shaylar realized with a jolt of pure terror.
He already knows. . . .
The cold anger in Jasak's eyes
was bad enough, but what lay under that anger had
Jathmar moving abruptly, thrusting her behind him, facing Jasak
with nothing in his hands but courage.
"If you hurt her," Jathmar said
softly, each word enunciated precisely, carefully, "I will do my
best to kill you."
Something lethal stirred in Jasak
Olderhan's eyes. Then he drew a long, slow breath through his
nostrils and let it out again, just as slowly. The glittering threat
left his eyes. He was still angry—deeply angry, with a cold,
controlled fury—but homicide no longer stared them in the
face. Jathmar stayed where he was, anyway.
"Gadrial," Jasak said heavily,
"please stay in the passage. I don't want you walking into this
cabin."
Shaylar wanted to tell him
Gadrial wasn't at risk, but what she felt from Jathmar held her
silent. If anything threatened her, Jathmar would use whatever was
at hand to keep Jasak away from her. Even Gadrial, the closest
thing either of them had to a friend in this entire universe. Her
breath sobbed in her throat. This was
madness. . . .
Jasak stepped fully into the cabin
and closed the door carefully behind him. He didn't lock
it—not that there was much reason to on a ship in the
middle of the ocean—but he stood with his back still
against it, staring at them for several more seconds. Then he drew
another deep breath.
"Gadrial tells me you want to
know your status as my prisoners?"
"That's right."
"Well, I'd like to know
how you sent a message to your soldiers."
Icy silence lay between them. It
lingered, chilling despite the sunlight through the scuttle.
"Do you have any idea," Jasak
asked softly, "what your people did to my men?"
"From what I've gathered, about
the same thing they did to my crew," Jathmar said in a flat
voice.
Jasak's eyes flashed. That
murderous look glittered in them again for a moment, but then his
nostrils flared.
"All right. I suppose there's a
certain justice in that view." He very carefully unknotted his
hands, then scrubbed his eyes in a gesture that combined
weariness, frustration, and almost unbearable tension in one.
"Do you remember Hadrign
Thalmayr?" he asked finally, abruptly.
"The man who replaced you?
The one who hated Shaylar and me?"
"Yes." Jasak's voice was as dry
as a Shurkhali summer wind. "He was a
very . . ." He paused, clearly searching for
words Jathmar's limited Andaran would allow him to understand.
"He thought in narrow terms. I tried to convince him to pull out,
to abandon that portal at least for a time. We'd already made one
mistake, and I didn't want anyone making another one that led to
more shooting. But he wouldn't listen. Neither would Five
Hundred Klian at Fort Rycharn. They thought it was unlikely there
was a body of your soldiers anywhere near our portal. And they
thought it was unlikely you'd gotten a message out. But they were
wrong on both counts, weren't they?"
"Where they?" Jathmar
countered.
"You tell me," Jasak said softly.
"And before you do, think about this. I've been adding things up.
Puzzling things. We've been holding you for barely two weeks, yet
you speak Andaran astonishingly well. How? Nobody
learns languages that fast—not in Arcana.
"Then there's your wife's ability
to know things about people. She's a very sensitive creature, your
wife. Always touching someone. Always concerned. Always so
understanding. She understands too much, Jathmar. It's almost like
she knows what you're thinking."
He looked past Jathmar, staring
directly into Shaylar's eyes, and her insides flinched. But she
forced herself to meet his gaze, the way she'd met Gadrial's. It was
harder—much, much harder—to simply
meet Jasak Olderhan's gaze, let alone lie to those cold-steel eyes.
When those eyes tracked back to Jathmar, she nearly sagged in
relief. It felt as if someone had turned off the blowtorch they'd
been holding on her.
"Then there's the dragon," Jasak
added softly.
"The dragon?" Jathmar echoed,
genuinely baffled this time.
"Oh, yes. The dragon. You were
still unconscious, but Shaylar remembers. Don't you?" The glance
he flicked into her eyes felt like a lance driven through her. Then
he clicked that glance back onto Jathmar. "We had to airlift you
out to save your life. When the transport dragon arrived, we
loaded you on with no trouble. But when we tried to load
Shaylar, the dragon went berserk. He hated her on sight, and I want
to know why. What did the dragon sense about her that we couldn't?
"Stranger still, the dragon's rage
seemed to hurt her. Not just terrify her; hurt her. She
clutched at her head, and she screamed. Not just once, either. Not
just the first time we tried to put her on the dragon's back. It
happened again, right after we got airborne. The dragon actually
tried to buck us off in midair, tried to reach her with his teeth. But
your wife didn't even see that, because she was clutching her head
again, screaming in pain. Gadrial had to put her to sleep, knock her
unconscious with her healing Gift, just to stop the pain she was in.
And to—how did Shaylar put it? To 'get the dragon out of
her mind.'"
This time, Shaylar flinched. She
couldn't help it. Her memory of that dreadful night was too
chaotic, to confused, for detailed recollection, even for a Voice.
But she remembered that moment. Remembered her desperate plea
to Gadrial. Yet she'd never suspected Gadrial might actually have
understood her. The deadly implications of that revelation
stabbed through her and she felt the same awareness resonating
through the marriage bond with Jathmar.
"Would you care to explain all
of that, Jathmar?" Jasak said. "If I hadn't known such things were
impossible, I'd have said she was doing something with her
mind—something that enraged our dragon, and that the
dragon's rage was somehow spilling over into her mind. But that
was impossible. Absurd. Except that it isn't impossible, after all, is
it? You people have these Talents." He spat the word out
like poison. "You do things with your minds. Just what kind of
game are the two of you playing with our minds?"
He's scared, Shaylar realized abruptly. He's scared to
death of something he doesn't understand. She knew exactly
what that felt like; she'd just gone through the same experience
herself, with Gadrial's explanation. But his fright ran much deeper
than hers had, much deeper than simple fear of something he
didn't understand.
He's terrified that we'll put thoughts into their minds, control
them somehow. What else could he think, if they don't
have anything like telepathy? And he feels responsible.
He's not just afraid for himself. It's not that simple for him. He's a
military officer, responsible for others, for making certain we
don't do something to them.
"It doesn't work that way, Jasak,"
she heard herself say.
"Shaylar!" Jathmar
twisted around to stare at her, his eyes dark with protest, but she
shook her head.
"No, Jathmar. I need to say this.
Trust me, please." She'd deliberately spoken in Andaran, and her
husband searched her eyes even as he searched her feelings
through their bond. He bit his lower lip, taut with fear for her, and
yet in the end he nodded and turned to Jasak once more.
"I'll say it again, Jasak Olderhan.
Hurt her, and I will do my best to kill you."
Their gazes locked for a long,
dangerous moment. Then Jasak let out an exasperated sigh.
"For people with 'Talents,' you
can be amazingly unobservant, Jathmar! I don't kill women. Not if
I know they're in the line of fire. And I don't hurt women,
either. When I discovered Shaylar in those
trees . . . "
The agony reflected beside the
anger in his eyes was plainly visible, and not just to Shaylar, and
she felt a little of the tension drain from her husband. Just a little,
but it was enough to take them all one step back from the killing
edge of danger. Jathmar still wouldn't let her move closer to Jasak,
not even to stand at his own side, which was where she desperately
wanted to be—held in his arms, not cowering behind his
shoulder. But there was no point in making the tension worse.
She did reach forward, needing
contact with him, even if that contact was as slight as interlacing
her fingers through his, and he reached back to squeeze her hand.
"Please open the door, Jasak,"
she said then. "I know you're afraid. You're worried Jathmar might
try to use Gadrial as a hostage, out of fear. But she needs to hear
what I have to say."
Jasak stared into her eyes for
long moments, trying to see past them into her mind. She could
feel the attempt battering at her, and wondered abruptly if perhaps
he did have at least a trace of Talent himself. But even if he did, he
didn't have the slightest idea how to use it, and so he ended up
with nothing but intense frustration and no real answers. In the
end, he finally turned and opened the door.
Gadrial's eyes were wide and
worried. She started to step forward, but Jasak lifted a hand.
"Don't come in," he cautioned.
"Not yet. But Shaylar wants you to hear this, too. It ought to
be . . . interesting."
He turned that cold-steel gaze
back onto her and waited.
"I am Talented," Shaylar said,
speaking very quietly, very steadily. "A Talent is a little bit like a
Gift. You're born with it. But we don't use Talents to control
some energy field outside ourselves. We use our minds to do
different kinds of work. We call someone with my Talent a
'Voice." I can use my mind to talk directly to another Talented
Voice. I can't do that with anyone else, not even Jathmar."
Jasak stood rigidly in the open
doorway, clearly not believing it, but Shaylar kept going, because
she didn't have any other choice. She released Jathmar's hand just
long enough to reach up and brush fingertips across her husband's
temple. Then she moved her hand from his temple to her own.
"Jathmar and I share a special
bond. When Talented people marry, there's such closeness, such
sharing, that a deep and permanent bond forms. But it isn't the
same as a full Voice. He can feel my emotions; I can feel his. And
I can feel Jathmar's mind. Not hear it, exactly, but feel
it—like I'm touching something solid. And he can feel
mine, even across a distance of several miles. We can often
guess what the other is thinking, because we know each other
so well, but I can't read his mind.
"And I can't read yours or
Gadrial's, either. I can't hear your thoughts. I can't put thoughts
into your mind. You noticed how often I touch people." Her
rueful smile startled him. "I knew one of you would, eventually,
but I didn't know who would see it first. Gadrial spends more time
with me, but you're more suspicious." She shrugged. "You're a
soldier. It's your job."
He glowered at her, but then, to
her vast relief, he seemed to unbend the tiniest bit.
"Yes. It is my job," he
said gruffly, then drew another deep breath and forced the steel
burr out of his voice.
"All right. I'll try to listen with a
little less suspicion. I need to understand this, for a lot of
important reasons. And while I'm listening," he met her gaze, "I'll
remind myself that despite what your soldiers did to my men,
despite the threat to my people they represent, neither you nor
Jathmar tried to kill my men until we fired on
you."
"No," Jathmar said stiffly. "We
didn't. We weren't stupid. We were good enough
woodsmen to notice panicked wildlife rushing ahead of a wide
line of men driving through a forest to surround us. We guessed
right then that we were outnumbered. That's why we found a
hiding place. And when we finally saw your people, it was
obvious we faced soldiers. Less than twenty civilians against
enough men to cut off our escape from every direction? We'd
have been crazy to shoot first! But that didn't help us in the end,
did it—because you had to come in shooting anyway!
Maybe Gadrial is right and you didn't order your people to shoot,
but you were in command. You were the one who pushed
it—chased us—until it was inevitable!"
His accent was more pronounced
even than usual, and he had to pause several times to find the
words he wanted. But his anger came through with perfect clarity,
and Jasak studied him for long silent moments.
"Let me tell you what I
see about that day," he said finally. "You had personal weapons
more terrifying than anything we'd ever seen—certainly
more terrifying than anything we 'soldiers' had. Something
that killed with horrifying violence, something we couldn't even
identify. And when we tracked the man who'd killed one of my
men to your camp, we discovered that you hadn't made the
sort of open encampment we 'soldiers' made when we bivouacked.
Oh, no, you'd built a palisade, well placed on commanding
ground, with good fields of fire. An obviously military
palisade. One of my men was already dead, I had no idea who you
were, where you'd come from, who'd shot first, what other
weapons you might have, how close other military forces
might have been, what your intentions were, what sort of people
you were. And when we finally did catch up with you, you were
holed up in the best military position we'd seen anywhere
on that side of our portal! Yes, you turned out to be
civilians, but how was I supposed to know that then? I
knew nothing about you—except that you'd already
killed one of my people—and every member of the Arcanan
military forces has standing orders where contact with another
human civilization is concerned. We're to make it a peaceful
contact if we possibly can. But, if there's already been
blood shed, especially by what appears to be an organized military
force, then those same standing orders required me to
control the contact. Given all of that, Jathmar, how would
you have reacted differently up until the instant fire was opened?"
It was his turn to hold Jathmar's
gaze challengingly, and he did. Yet even Jathmar could see it was a
challenge, not simple anger, and he felt his own anger
waver.
He didn't want to feel
that. The sudden realization that he
wanted—needed—to cling to his anger
shook him badly, but it was true. He didn't want to take a single
step toward understanding what Jasak had known, what Jasak's
options had been, because understanding might undermine his
hatred.
Yet he couldn't afford to clutch
that hatred to him, either. And so, finally, he shrugged.
"I don't know," he said shortly.
"I'm not a soldier. I'd like to think I wouldn't have run down a
civilian survey crew, but if I'd thought they were
soldiers?" He shrugged again. "I don't know."
"I appreciate your honesty in
coming that far," Jasak said. "But there was another side to it, as
well. Something I'd already recognized even before the shooting
started. You were trying to keep the situation under
control, too. You didn't want a bloodbath any more than I did, and
I knew it."
"How?" Shaylar asked, totally
astonished.
"You could have opened fire
without warning. I was sure you'd gone into those fallen timbers.
If you'd wanted a fight, you could have dug in in your palisade,
tried to set up an ambush when we followed your man back to
your camp. You hadn't done that; you'd run for your portal,
instead, tried to break contact. There could have been a lot of
reasons—military reasons—for that, but you
didn't open fire when we started closing in on your position out in
those fallen trees, either. You had concealment and cover—
you could have killed a lot of my men before we even knew where
to shoot back—and you didn't. Not until someone
on our side killed someone else on your side who was trying to
talk, not shoot."
He shook his head again, slowly,
heavily.
"I'm not prepared to second-
guess all my decisions that day, and we'll never know what
happened when your man—Falsan—met Osmuna.
But the bottom line is that my people shot first, whether I wanted
them to or not, in the second encounter with you.
However it happened, that was the outcome. And that means you
deserve for me to at least listen with as open a mind as I possibly
can."
Shaylar started to speak, but he
raised one hand. The gesture stopped her, and he smiled without
any humor at all.
"Don't misunderstand me. I'm
still a soldier, and my duty is still to protect my people. After what
happened at our portal—after what your soldiers did to us,
when they came looking for you—I'm very much afraid that
an ugly, brutal war is waiting for all of us." He spoke with dark
and bitter honesty. "Even if we, the four of us, could figure out a
way to stop it, it may be too late already. Military people on both
sides are obviously already beginning to react to what's happened
as the reports go up the chain of command, and the gods only
know where that's likely to go. And once the politicians
get their hooks into this, it may be impossible to stop.
"All we can do is this; try to
convince me, Shaylar. Convince me your mental Talents aren't
super weapons. That you can't use your minds to destroy Arcana at
any time you choose. Whether you believe it or not at this
moment, I am absolutely the closest thing to a friendly judge
you're going to find. If you can't convince me, you'll never
convince the Andaran High Commandery, let alone the politicians
who govern the Union of Arcana."
"I know that," she whispered.
"And that terrifies me."
"It should."
The dark thing riding his
shoulders left Shaylar trembling. She was more than afraid for
herself; she was afraid for Sharona. For every Talent alive. But
then Jasak went on.
"Whatever else you say or don't
say, before I come to a final decision about whether or not I
believe what you're telling me, answer me this. Why do
you touch people, if it isn't to read minds?"
He still sounded suspicious,
although less unbelieving, and she met his gaze unflinchingly.
"Most people, even those
without Talents, can tell a great deal about a person's emotions.
When you look at a person, Jasak, you can see emotion in him,
can't you? In his expression, his eyes, the way he stands or walks.
You learn a great deal about a person that way, don't you?"
He nodded, clearly unsure where
she was going.
"Well, I can see all that, too,
visually. But when I touch a person, I can sense their
emotions directly. Not their thoughts, just their feelings. If they're
terrified, I feel waves of terror, as though I'm terrified of
something, too. If they're angry, it's like being hit with a fist. If
they're grieving, it's like drowning in the need to weep."
She turned to look at Gadrial,
who still stood in the passage beyond Jasak.
"The day we came onto the ship,
Jathmar and I knew something terrible had happened. That was
obvious, because Gadrial had been crying. Her deep emotional
shock showed in her eyes, in her face, in her posture—
anyone could see that. But," her gaze moved back to Jathmar's
face, "when you took my hand to help steady me on the
gangway . . . "
Shaylar shut her eyes, shivering
involuntarily.
"I almost fell down, your grief
was so terrible. I know now it was for what had happened to your
men, but I didn't know that then. And I didn't even have time to
block it out. It just smashed into me like a club. It literally
knocked me off my feet. I would have fallen, if you hadn't caught
me, and then Gadrial took my hand, and that was almost
worse. It felt—"
She cast through every nuance of
that memory, trying to be as accurate as possible.
"There was terrible loss.
Personal loss, even worse than yours for your men, Jasak. Like
when a family member dies. It
felt . . . as if you'd lost a father?" she
finished uncertainly, reopening her eyes to meet Gadrial's.
"Yes." Gadrial's breath caught on
a ragged half-sob. "That's exactly what it feels like. Halathyn
was a father to me."
"I'm sorry he was killed," Shaylar
said softly. "I touched him that first day." She had to blink to clear
her eyes. "I trusted him instantly. He was very gentle inside. It felt
like he loved everything."
"Yes." Gadrial wiped away tears.
"He did. I still can't believe he's gone. That he died so
horribly . . . so stupidly."
"They all died horribly,"
Shaylar said, her voice suddenly harsh. "They all died stupidly.
There was no need for any of it! I bleed for you and
Halathyn, Gadrial—but who bleeds for us? Who
bleeds for Ghartoun, who stood up to talk to you with empty
hands? For poor, maddening Braiheri, who studied plants and
animals? For Barris Kasell, who kept me sane when Falsan died in
my arms? Who died trying to keep me alive? We had
boys with us, too. Young men, barely out of school, who took
care of our pack animals, the supplies. Boys with dreams and their
whole lives to live. And they all died horribly. Stupidly.
For nothing."
Gadrial bit her lip, and Shaylar
looked directly into Jasak Olderhan's eyes.
"That first day, that horrible first
day . . ." She didn't even try to fight the tears.
"You can't ever know how terrified I was. How deep the shock
was, even before you cremated the dead. I was badly
injured—your own Healers have confirmed that. My
husband's life hung by a thread, with burns so terrible I couldn't
even bear to look at them. And then you burned the dead."
She shuddered. Her mind wanted
desperately to shy away from that particular memory, but there
was a point she needed to make, and she couldn't do that without
facing the memory herself.
"When you burned them, I
started to fall. You caught me—just like you did on the
gangway. Do you remember that, Jasak?"
He nodded slowly.
"When you touched me—
" She paused, swallowed sharply, wrapped both arms around
herself. "My Talent was badly damaged because of my injury, but I
could still feel your regret. Your horror. It shocked me. I
didn't expect it, and I was too dizzy, too sick, to understand fully.
But I felt more than enough to realize you'd actually intended to
honor my dead."
His own memories of that
dreadful day floated like ghosts in his eyes as she stared into them.
"And under the regret there was a
sense of desperate sorrow—one I finally understood when
Gadrial told me today, in this cabin, that you'd ordered your man
not to shoot Ghartoun. I didn't want to believe it when she did, but
a Voice has perfect recall, Jasak. I can shut my eyes anytime I want
and hear you shouting not to shoot. And when I learned
that, it hurt me, terribly, to finally know for certain that my friends
had died for absolutely no reason except one scared man's
stupid mistake. But it also confirmed what I'd felt inside you
that day."
He looked down at her, his eyes
still hooded, still suspicious, and her temper snapped.
"Gods' mercy, Jasak! Why else
do you think I was able to trust you that day? To let you
touch me? To not jerk back in horror every time you even
looked at me? You've talked about how frightening our
weapons were to you—what about your weapons
to us? You'd just butchered my dearest friends—
burned them alive, curse you! My gods, I'd never seen
anything so barbaric in my life! You claim to be civilized people,
but you build weapons designed to roast an enemy alive!
"You can't possibly know what
you did to me that day! What you're still doing to me, every single
day I spend trapped in a room with guards staring at me if I even
try to look out a window. I can't go for walks in the moonlight
anymore. I can't go for walks anywhere! I can't even take a bath
by myself, without having to ask Gadrial to order some
musclebound guard not to shoot before I step outside that cabin
door without permission!"
She stood glaring at him, bosom
heaving with emotion she could barely contain. She wanted to
scream, wanted to hit him with her fists to make him see what he'd
done to them, what he was still doing to them. And buried in her
anger, making it burn even fiercer, was the knowledge that he
did know. That he understood, and deeply regretted it. That he
would have done anything to undo
it . . . and that he was still
unflinchingly determined to do whatever his "duty" required of
him. That unless she could convince him their Talents did not
present some deadly danger to his nation and the men in his army,
he would take whatever steps seemed necessary to eliminate that
danger.
"It was my Talent—the Talent you're so worried about right now—that let me
understand what you were feeling. I wanted to hate you. Gods, I
wanted to kill you! I was in deep shock, and the shocks
just kept coming and coming, and it was all your fault. I
didn't want you to touch me, not then, not ever, but you did.
"And because you did, and
because I'm Talented, I knew you hadn't wanted it to
happen. I knew how terribly you regretted it, and how determined
you were to protect me from still more harm. And when
that happened, I couldn't keep hating you. I couldn't. I'm a
Voice—I was born to understand people. I can't help understanding people. Even," she sobbed in rage, "when I don't
want to!
"I wanted to hate you, and my
Talent wouldn't let me. I'm not a weapon—I'm a Voice
. A bridge between people. A living tool to help people
communicate and understand one another. It's in my blood, my
bones, my very skin. It you would just stop holding onto
your suspicion with both fists and all your teeth, you'd see the
truth, Jasak Olderhan."
She drew a deep breath, scrubbed
the angry tears from her face, then shook her head.
"I can't prove to you that
my Talent is no danger to you," she said quietly, almost softly.
"But if it were, don't you think I'd already be using it? All I've
done is use it to learn your language. If there were
something I could do to strike back at you after all of the agony,
fear, humiliation, and helplessness your people have inflicted on
us, you can be certain that I would." She met his eyes levelly,
challengingly. "You'd deserve that, and I'm sure you'd expect it.
But there isn't, and I can't, and you're not a Voice, don't have a
scrap of telepathy. So words are all I have to convince you I'm
telling you the truth."
He continued to gaze down at
her, then turned to look at Jathmar again, and she wanted—
more than she'd ever wanted anything in her life before—to
touch him. To see what emotions were streaming through him
behind that expressionless mask of a face. But that was the last
thing she could do, and so she simply stood, waiting.
Jasak looked at the tiny woman
standing in front of him. Looked at the face of that woman's
husband and read Jathmar's desperate fear for Shaylar, and the
horrible, debilitating knowledge that there was no way he could
protect her from whatever Jasak decided to do.
And that was the crux of the
problem, wasn't it? Jasak had to decide what to do, and Shaylar
was right. He had no 'Talent" of the mind, no yardstick to measure
the truth of what she'd said, or to sense what her true
emotions might be. He had to choose whether or not to take her
unsupported word for it.
Despite all she'd just said, it was
entirely possible that she could be—and had been—
subtly influencing his judgments, his decisions, his very thoughts.
The very passion with which she'd presented her argument had
only driven home the fact that he had no way of knowing what
other hidden abilities lurked within her. Not only had she admitted
that she could sense the emotions of others, but the way she'd
described herself—as a 'Voice'—had told him
exactly how they'd gotten a message back to their own side.
And she'd forgotten to try to disguise her fluency in Andaran.
Jathmar's progress in learning Jasak's language had been
phenomenal enough, but the command of it which Shaylar had just
demonstrated was little short of terrifying.
Yet that was the entire point,
wasn't it? Should it be terrifying, or did it simply feel that
way because he didn't understand? Because it was a simple,
everyday ability of her people which simply lay so far outside his
own experience that he couldn't recognize it as such?
"Sit down, Shaylar. Please," he
said finally.
She stared at him for a few more
seconds, then stepped back behind Jathmar and settled gingerly on
the foot of Gadrial's bed. Jasak waited until she'd seated herself,
then pulled the straight-back chair back away from the small desk
in the cabin's corner and placed it for Gadrial. He waited until the
magister was seated, as well, then drew a deep breath.
"First," he said quietly, "I
acknowledge that I was in command of the troops who killed your
companions and wounded the two of you. That's a significant
point, which I'll return to in a moment."
Jathmar was watching his face
even more intently than Shaylar. Now he reached out and took his
wife's hand once more, and Jasak realized he was also clinging to
that 'marriage bond' Shaylar had mentioned. That he was using it
to help himself follow what Jasak was saying with his own, more
limited Andaran.
"Second," he continued,
"whatever concerns I might have over the threat your 'Talents'
might or might not pose to the other people on this ship, or to the
Union of Arcana as a whole, I wouldn't blame you for using them
any way you could. Indeed, I'd expect no less out of you, just as I
would expect no less out of Gadrial and her Gift under similar
circumstances.
"And, third, I believe you." He
saw both of his prisoners' taut spines relax ever so slightly, and
shook his head. "I believe what you've told me is the truth. That
doesn't mean I believe you've told me the entire truth."
They stiffened again, but he
continued calmly.
"In your places, I
certainly wouldn't tell my captors anything which would help them
against my people unless I absolutely had to. I've seen enough of
both of you by now to realize you won't, either. But you're also
both highly intelligent. That means you know that sooner or later
you're going to be very thoroughly questioned. Questioned by
professional interrogators who know how to put bits and pieces
together and learn things you never even realized you were telling
them. For the moment, however, and speaking for myself, I'm
going to operate on two assumptions. First, that what you've told
me up to this point is true. Secondly, that I have your parole."
Not even Shaylar recognized the
last word, and he smiled crookedly.
"Your 'parole' is your
word—your promise—that you won't attempt to
escape, that you won't hurt anyone else except in direct self-
defense, and that you will refrain from hostile actions so long as
you're treated humanely and with respect. And—" he
continued, looking directly into Jathmar's eyes as the Sharonian
stiffened with an expression of borning outrage "—I believe
that if you're honest with yourselves, you have no choice but to
acknowledge that you have been treated both humanely—
and with respect—by both Gadrial and myself. I can't undo
what happened that day in the forest, but I've done the very best I
could to see to it that you were treated well afterward."
Jathmar inhaled, but before he
could speak, Shaylar squeezed his hand hard. He turned and
looked into her eyes for several heartbeats, then turned back to
Jasak.
"You want us to promise to
be . . . obedient prisoners," he said in
his slower, more halting Andaran. "What about our duty to
escape?"
"Escape to where, Jathmar?"
Gadrial put in gently from her chair. He looked at her, and she
smiled sadly. "Even if you could escape custody, where could you
go? How could you ever possibly hope to get home on your
own?"
"Gadrial is right," Jasak said as
Jathmar looked at her mulishly. "Trust me, however much any of
us may regret it, you aren't going to be able to escape, no matter
what you do. Unless, of course," his smile turned even more
crooked, "your 'Talents' are quite a bit
more . . . useful than I've just agreed
to assume they are."
"If escape is so impossible, why
should we promise not to?" Jathmar challenged.
"Because it will affect the
precautions I have to take as the officer responsible for you,"
Jasak replied unflinchingly.
"But how much longer will
you be the officer 'responsible' for us?" Shaylar asked. "I said
I trust you, Jasak, and I do. As much as I'll ever be able to trust any
Arcanan, at least. But what about that other man—that
Hundred Thalmayr? What about all of the other soldiers and
officers I've seen glaring at us? Sooner or later, someone senior to
you is going to be the one 'responsible' for us. How do we trust
him? And why should any promise we make to you affect how
he treats us?"
"Because of that point I told you
I'd come back to," Jasak said. "Because I was in command when
your people were killed. That makes me responsible for
what happened to them, and for everything that's happened to you
since."
"But I know you ordered that
other officer not to shoot!" Shaylar protested.
"Yes, I did. And I doubt very
much that even with your Talent you can understand how much it
means to me that you realize that. But the officer who opened fire
was one of my subordinates. I ought to have ignored the letter of
the regulations and relieved him before we ever caught up with
your people. I didn't, and after he was killed, after the shooting had
become general and I had men down all over that clearing—
wounded, dying, dead—I assumed tactical command of the
battle. I fought that battle, not Shevan Garlath. And I'd do
it again, exactly the way I did it then, under the same
circumstances and given what I knew at the time."
He met the Sharonians' eyes
levelly.
"I had no choice at that point, but
that doesn't change the fact that it was my command which
attacked you, or that you were civilians who were simply
defending yourselves. My men destroyed your lives as surely as
they killed your companions, and that leaves me with an honor
obligation towards you."
"Honor obligation?" Jathmar
repeated carefully, and Jasak nodded.
"Among my people—
Andarans, not Arcanans as a whole—there's something
called shardon. It's the term we use to describe the act of
taking someone under your own and your family's shield. You and
Shaylar are my shardonai. As the commander of the troops
who wronged you and yours, I'm obligated to protect you as I
would a member of my own family. In fact, under Andaran law
and custom, a shardon is legally a member of the family of
his baranal."
"Which means what?" Jathmar
asked.
"Which means I'm honorbound
to refuse to surrender you into any other officer's custody,
regardless of our relative ranks. It means my family and I are
obligated to see to it that you're treated well, that no one abuses
you, and that you're assured of all the personal safeguards any
other member of our family would receive. It means that even
though you and Shaylar are Sharonian, not Arcanan, any children
born to you on Arcanan soil will be Arcanan citizens and entitled
to all of the rights and protections of citizenship. No one can take
them from you, no one can use them against you, and no one can
violate their civil rights. The sole difference between you, as my shardonai, and my sisters or my parents is that the
protections which we can extend to you continue to apply only so
long as you voluntarily remain under my protection."
"In your custody, you mean."
Jathmar's tone was more cutting than it had been as he made the
correction, and Jasak nodded.
"For all practical purposes, yes,"
he said unwaveringly. "I'm sorry, but no one can change that. Not
now."
"And how long is your
government going to be willing to leave us in your custody?"
Shaylar asked tautly.
"For as long as I, any member of
my family, or either one of you is alive," Jasak said flatly.
The two Sharonians looked at
him in obvious disbelief. Then Gadrial cleared her throat.
"I've lived among Andarans for
years," she told them. "There are a lot of things about them and
about their honor code that I still don't pretend to understand, but I
do know this much. If Jasak tells you his family will protect you,
they will protect you."
"From the entire army? Your
entire government?" Jathmar couldn't keep the incredulity out of
his voice . . . assuming that he'd tried
to.
"I think you may not fully realize
just who Jasak's family is," Gadrial said with a slightly crooked
smile. They looked at her, and she shrugged. "Jasak is Sir
Jasak Olderhan. His father is Thankhar Olderhan, who happens,
among other things, to be the Duke of Garth
Showma . . . and the planetary
governor of New Arcana. There may be one other Andaran
nobleman with as much personal political and military power as
His Grace. There couldn't possibly be two of them,
though. And under the Andaran honor code, the entire Olderhan
family and every one of its dependents and liegemen will die
before they allow anyone to harm an Olderhan shardon
."
"And the rest of your
government, of your politicians, would allow them to do that?"
Shaylar demanded as she and Jathmar looked at Jasak with
completely new expressions.
"Some of them won't like it,"
Jasak admitted. "Some of them will try to get around it, probably
especially among the Mythalans. And there may well be
some—especially among the Mythalans—who
attempt to step outside the law and justify it on the basis of
'national security.' But," he added in that same flat, inflexible,
rock-ribbed voice, "they won't succeed."
Shaylar and Jathmar looked at
one another, then back at him, and as he looked into their eyes, he
realized that at last they believed him.
"All right," Jathmar said finally.
He tried to keep his voice level,
his tone normal, but it was hard. Partly, that was because of the
enormous relief flowing through him. He'd had no idea Jasak
might come from such a prominent, powerful family, nor had it
even crossed his mind that the protection of that family might be
extended to him and Shaylar. But relieved as he was, grateful as he
might be, he couldn't forget that the price tag of that protection
amounted to a lifetime as prisoners. He told himself that they'd
have been prisoners under any circumstances, that this shardon
relationship offered them the chance to live as human beings,
anyway. He even knew it was true. But that didn't change the fact
that its protection had been extended to them by the very man who
acknowledged he was responsible for the massacre of their friends
and their own capture in the first place.
He could feel Shaylar's reaction
through the marriage bond, and knew her emotions were far
less . . . conflicted than his own. But
Shaylar was Shurkhali. She'd been brought up in that culture, that
society, and its acceptance of an honor code which had obvious
resonances with the one Jasak and Gadrial were describing. Jasak
had finally found something Shaylar understood. A rock
she could grasp, use as an anchor, and Jathmar was grateful for
that, as well. Yet he couldn't quite suppress his resentment of
that, either. Of the fact that it was Jasak, her captor—
and not her husband—who had provided her with that
almost painful sense of an understood security at last.
"All right," he said again. "We
accept that we're . . . shardonai, and that you—and your family—will protect us to
the very best of your ability. On that basis, we're willing to give you our 'parole,' but only as long as we to remain with you
and under your protection."
"Thank you," Jasak said softly.
He sat without saying anything
more for the better part of a minute, then he gave himself a shake
and looked at Shaylar intently.
"As a part of your parole,
Shaylar," he said, "I need to know how close you have to be to
another Voice for him to hear you."
Shaylar froze. Then she darted an
agonized glance at Jathmar. Her husband looked just as startled as
she felt, and she kicked herself mentally. They'd already known
Jasak was keenly intelligent. Obviously, he'd put two and two
together and come up with exactly the answer she'd hoped he
wouldn't reach, and she should have realized he would.
She started to say something. She
didn't know what, and it didn't matter, because Jasak's raised hand
cut her off before she began.
"I know you're tempted to lie,"
he said. "I don't blame you for that. And I won't try to compel you
to tell me if you refuse to. But honor obligations cut both ways, at
least in Andara. Refusing to answer is one thing; lying to your
baranal is another."
"And if she doesn't answer?"
Jathmar asked, bristling with fresh suspicion.
"If she doesn't answer, then I'll
be forced to assume the worst. In that case, my responsibility as an
officer in the Army of the Union of Arcana will be to ensure that
she isn't in communication with anyone from Sharona. Or, at least,
that she has no access to information useful to Sharona. In
accordance with the first possibility, I'll ask Gadrial and her
colleagues at the Institute to attempt to devise spellware which
will permanently shut down Shaylar's 'Voice.' Frankly, I don't
know if that would be even remotely possible, however, or how
we could test to be sure it was actually working if they did. In the
absence of that sort of guarantee, my responsibility then would
become preventing her from learning anything useful about
Arcana. I'd do so as gently as I possibly could, but the consequence
would be effectively close confinement. You would be almost
totally isolated. I would vastly prefer to avoid doing that, but the
obligations of my officer's oath would leave me no alternative."
Jathmar began a hot answer, but
Shaylar touched his shoulder.
"Wait, Jath," she said softly in
Shurkhali. He looked at her, and she grimaced. "I'm the one who
let the cat out of the bag," she said. "I didn't mean to, but he's
obviously even sharper than we were afraid he was. And, be
honest—is what he's saying really all that unreasonable? If
you had a prisoner who had the potential ability to
communicate—tracelessly, silently—with an enemy,
would you give her access to potentially useful information?"
"Well . . ." he began, and she
shook her head.
"These people don't have Voices
at all, Jath. That means they can't have anything like our Voice
Protocols to cover a situation like this. Even if I wanted to tell
them how to temporarily disable my Voice, they wouldn't have
anyone who could do it!"
"So you want to tell them the
truth? All of it?"
"They've obviously already
figured out I was the one who got word back to Darcel. That's
going to give them a minimum range figure, no matter what. But
should we try to exaggerate my range or to minimize it?"
Jathmar thought furiously, trying
to keep his expression from showing the depth of his
concentration. He wished passionately that they had longer to
think about this—or that he'd been smart enough to insist
that they think about it in advance. But they hadn't, nor did they
dare to hesitate too long before they came up with some sort of
answer now. Given what Jasak had said about the difference
between lying and simply refusing to divulge information at all,
the security offered by the shardon relationship might well
disappear if Jasak decided they were lying.
And, he thought unwillingly, Jasak's right about honor
obligations cutting both ways. If we're prepared to accept
the protection this relationship offers, then we should
damned well accept that we're duty-bound to meet our
obligations under it. Besides, if we don't, it might just go away
completely, and then what happens?
"Tell them the truth," he said
after a long moment, this time in Andaran.
"All right," Shaylar said in soft
Shurkhali, and kissed him lightly on the cheek. Then she looked at
Jasak.
"We're well outside my
maximum Voice range," she said unflinchingly, admitting that she
was the one whose warning to Darcel Kinlafia had brought the
savage counterattack down on Jasak's men. She saw his
recognition of that fact flicker in his eyes, but he only nodded, and
his voice remained calm, almost gentle.
"How great is your range?" he
asked. "And what sorts of messages can you send?"
"Range varies with the Voice,"
she replied. "My range is a bit over eight hundred miles,
but even if it were greater than that, no Voice can transmit through
a portal. As for messages—" She shrugged. "I can
send—could send, if another Voice were in
range—any message you could give me. Or, I could link
deeply enough with another Voice that he or she could literally see
through my eyes, hear through my ears. In that sort of link, the two
Voices—"
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr sat back
on the bed in Gadrial Kelbryan's cabin, holding her husband's
hand, looking into the eyes of the man whose honor was all that
stood between her and a hostile universe's enmity, and willed for
him to recognize her honesty as the ship about her carried her
towards a lifetime of captivity.
Chapter Thirty-Four
"So, have you considered my
suggestion?"
Darcel Kinlafia turned his head
and cocked one eyebrow at the towering young man riding beside
him. He had to admit that Prince Janaki had become steadily more
impressive, not less, in the days they'd spent together. It wasn't just
the young man's magnetic personality and obvious intelligence,
either. He looked like a crown prince—improbably
tall (even for a Calirath), athletic, broad shouldered, and
handsome—and the magnificent horse under his saddle and
the hawk riding on the frame attached to it only added to that
perfection of imagery. With that new sense of awareness, that self-
image of himself as a possible political animal, Janaki's
suggestions had awakened within him, Kinlafia had come to
realize that Janaki chain Calirath was an imperial publicist's dream
come true.
Of course, the prince's horse had
never come from a standard PAAF string of mounts, the Voice
thought. No doubt the crown prince's sheer size would have made
him difficult to mount under any circumstances, but the House of
Calirath had been dealing with that particular problem for
centuries. Janaki's blue roan—one of a matched pair whose
full sibling was trotting along with the column's
remounts—was a Ternathian Shikowr, a breed that had been
carefully, lovingly developed in the lush, green paddocks and
meadows of Ternathia in a breeding program whose stud book had
been opened well over two thousand years ago.
Named after its founding
stallion—who, in turn, had been named for the ancient
Shurkhali cavalry saber the Empire had adopted for its own
mounted troops following their resounding initial defeats at the
hands of Shurkhali horsemen—and with careful infusions
of Shurkhali bloodlines, as well, the Shikowr was a large,
powerful breed. It had a characteristic stance, with the front end
thrust forward and the hindlegs straight out behind, and a
remarkably smooth gait for a horse which could reach seventeen
hands in height. In fact, the Shikowr was unique in that it had no
trotting gait at all. Instead, it had two four-beat gaits which
allowed it to cover a huge amount of ground in a short time, and
instead of trotting, it simply moved directly from its fast marching
gait into a smooth canter. The Shikowr was as tall as most heavy
draft horses, though it was less heavy, and it was renowned for its
combination of speed, intelligence, and sheer endurance.
It was even up to the formidable
task of carrying male members of the Ternathian imperial family.
All of that had made it the
Empire's first choice as a cavalry mount for centuries, although
Janaki's roan, a truly superb example of the breed, hugely
outclassed the horses which might be found in the typical cavalry
or dragoon regiment.
It was said that when the Empire
ran into the Arpathians, the most prized booty any septman raider
had been able to claim had been Shikowr stock to be incorporated
into their own world-famous breeding programs. Having seen
Platoon-Captain Arthag's Palomino alongside Prince Janaki's
Shikowr, Kinlafia believed it.
"Which suggestion was that,
Your Highness?" the Voice replied finally, gazing up at Janaki.
"The one about seeking a career
change."
"Oh." Kinlafia smiled. "That
suggestion."
"I see you're already practicing
the fine art of evading direct answers," Janaki observed. "Is that a
good sign, or a bad one?"
"That depends on a lot of things,
I imagine, Your Highness," Kinlafia said in a much more serious
tone, turning his attention back to the muddy trail before them as
it began to climb once more.
"Janaki," the crown prince
corrected yet again, but Kinlafia shook his head.
"Your Highness, I deeply
appreciate your invitation to use your first name. And perhaps one
of these days, if I do go into politics, and if my career prospers the
way you seem to feel it might, I may even take you up on the
offer—in private, at least. But I don't feel comfortable
doing it yet. For that matter, it probably wouldn't be a very good
habit for me to get into. I imagine there are quite a few sticklers,
not all of them in Ternathia, who'd hold that sort of lesse
majesty against me at the polls."
"There might be, at that," Janaki
agreed after a moment. "And the fact that you're thinking that way
suggests to me that you are indeed considering seeking a seat in
whatever new parliament comes out of this situation."
"Yes, Your Highness," Kinlafia
sighed. "I am." He shook his head, his expression rueful. "I can't
believe I am, but I am. And it's your fault."
"Guilty as charged," Janaki
conceded cheerfully. Then his smile faded. "There's a reason I've
been pressing you about it, though."
"A reason, Your Highness?"
"Yes. It's going to take us quite a
while to reach Fort Brithik with these ambulances. The going's
better after that, but we're still not going to set any speed records
through the mountains, especially if they decide to send the
wounded clear to Fort Raylthar instead of holding them at Brithik.
If you're seriously contemplating taking my advice, then I think
you should also consider going on ahead of the column. You'd
make a lot better time on your own. In fact, if you think your
backside is up to it, I have the authority to authorize you to use
remounts from the PAAF liveries along the way."
"Why?" Kinlafia looked back
across at the prince. "I mean, why is it important for me to rush
ahead that way?"
Janaki didn't reply immediately.
Instead, he turned in his saddle and looked back down the trail
behind them. For a wonder, it wasn't raining for once here in New
Uromath, not that anyone expected that to last. Fortunately,
Sharonians in general and the PAAF in particular had amassed an
enormous amount of experience in how to move people and
material through even highly unprepossessing terrain.
Each party which had passed
through on its way to Company-Captain Halifu's fort and the
portal which had acquired the so-far informal name of Hell's Gate
had done at least a little to improve the going for whoever might
come after. Company-Captain chan Tesh's main column had done
the lion's share of the work, in no small part because it had been
accompanied by freight wagons (which had to get through
somehow). No one in his right mind would call the trail a "road,"
but at least the worst of the ravines and gullies had been crudely
bridged, the worst of the unavoidable swampy bits had been
corduroyed with felled trees, and a right-of-way of sorts had been
hacked out, just wide enough for two of the standard Authority
freight wagons—or one of its ambulances—to pass
abreast.
Unlike the freight wagons, the
ambulances had broad, fat pneumatic tires, made out of the
relatively newly developed heat-treated rubber, and the best shock
absorbers and springs Sharona could design. Given the nature of
the terrain, even the best sprung vehicle was going to jolt a
wounded man agonizingly from time to time, but overall, the ride
was remarkably smooth. The ambulances were also far lighter than
the freight wagons, which, coupled with their wide tires, gave
them a much lower ground pressure and made them far easier for
their mule teams to haul.
Despite all of that, the four
ambulances attached to Janaki's POW column were undeniably
slowing it down. Kinlafia understood that perfectly. What he
didn't understand was why Janaki was worried about it.
Personally, the Voice would be just as happy if it did take him a
little longer to get back to Tajvana. He dreaded the inevitable
encounters with reporters, once he got there, almost as much as he
dreaded the visit he already knew he was going to have to pay to
Shaylar's parents.
"I don't know exactly what's
happening back home any more than you do," Janaki said finally,
turning back to him. "I do know things are going to have to move
quickly, though, and the railhead was most of the way to Fort
Salby before all of this began. Even going ahead without us, it's
going to take you at least the better part of two months to reach
Salby, which means that by the time you get there, the line will
certainly be completed. So from there, you can get all the way
home in another two or three weeks. But that's still close to three
months, Darcel. Three months for the political situation to change
and elections to be scheduled. I want you home before that
happens, if we can possibly manage it."
Kinlafia frowned ever so
slightly. He'd come to accept that Janaki truly believed that Darcel
Kinlafia actually had something to offer to his home universe's
political leadership at a time like this. And he'd also come to
realize that, despite a certain inevitable trepidation, he wanted the
job. Yet he couldn't quite shake the suspicion that there was more
than simple political calculation behind the crown prince's ardent
desire to get him elected to office. Like any Voice, Kinlafia was
acutely sensitive to the emotions of those about him, though he
would never dream of violating Janaki's privacy by deliberately
probing the prince's. But because he was sensitive to them, he
knew the other man's focus on his own possible political future
carried with it an almost physical (and highly personal) sense of
urgency.
He considered asking what lay
behind that urgency, but decided—once again—that
it would be presumptuous. So instead of worrying about the
question he couldn't answer and wouldn't ask, he focused on the
rest of Janaki's argument. And the more he thought about it, the
more he realized that Janaki, as usual, had a point.
Janaki chan Calirath watched the
thoughts moving behind Kinlafia's eyes. He was pretty certain
Kinlafia was aware that he hadn't shared all of his reasons
for urging the Voice to seek office, and he was grateful to the
other man for not pressing him on the point. If Kinlafia had asked,
Janaki would have answered, as best he could; the problem was
that he still couldn't come up with anything he would consider
even remotely satisfactory as an explanation. The Glimpse he'd
experienced several times now simply refused to clarify. That was
frustrating enough for Janaki, who'd had no choice but to grow
accustomed to the fragmentary nature of the visions his Talent
presented. It would have been far more frustrating, and probably
more than a little frightening, for Kinlafia. Especially since even
though it had refused to clarify, it had become even more urgent
feeling. And especially given the fact that while having Kinlafia
there would be good for Andrin, that didn't necessarily mean it
would also be good for Kinlafia.
Whatever it was that the Voice
was going to do for Andrin, though, it was important, and
Janaki loved his sister. Which meant Parliamentary Representative
Kinlafia was as good as elected, as far as Crown Prince Janaki was
concerned.
"All right, Your Highness,"
Kinlafia agreed finally. "I'll take you up on your offer. Both
your offers." He looked at his watch, then glanced up at the
sun sliding steadily westward overhead. "I'll stick with the column
for the rest of the day and bivouac with you tonight. Then I'll
move on ahead tomorrow."
"Good." Janaki managed to keep
his relief out of his voice as he smiled at the other man. "That'll
give me time to dash off a couple of more notes of introduction
for you before you disappear. One of them—" he smiled
wickedly at the Voice "—will be addressed to my father. He
has a little political influence of his own, you know."
Shaylar and Jathmar stood on the
Arcanan ship's foredeck as the vessel moved steadily towards
another wooden pier. This one extended out from a considerably
larger fort, built on the southeastern curve of a bay which,
according to Jathmar's Mapping Talent, was over thirty miles wide
from north to south and over sixty from east to west. Shaylar was
almost positive that it was on the southern coast of the big island
of Esferia—the same island Jasak and Gadrial called
Chalar—which dominated the New Farnal Sea and the Gulf
of New Ternathia. On Sharona, Esferia was a prosperous
transshipment point for commerce between Chairifon and New
Ternathia and New Farnal, but on Arcana Chalar was the home of
the greatest maritime empire in the planet's history.
They could see the broad arc of a
portal well inland, beyond the river that meandered down out of
the hills to the raw-looking town clustered against the fort's
eastern face. It was hard even for Jathmar to judge distances, but it
looked as if the portal was perhaps fifteen miles inland, in which
case it must have measured about ten miles across. It was easy
enough to see the portal's boundaries, though. The sky on this side
was a cloudless, scorchingly hot tropical blue; on the other side, it
was night . . . with a violent
thunderstorm raging. Even as she watched, she could see the
crackling flare of lightning lashing the stormy bellies of the clouds
on the far side, and an outrider of thunderheads thrust through the
portal to this side. Where she stood, the sun was hot and
warm, the breeze gentle; along the fringe of the portal, powerful
gusts of wind swept treetops into dancing fury on a tempest's
breath, and rain born in an entirely different universe came down
in sheets.
Shaylar shivered at the sight, but
it was one of the bizarre juxtapositionings one got used to
traveling between universes. Which didn't make the thought of
venturing into it any more pleasant.
Actually, she was much more
interested in what she could see closer to hand as their vessel slid
alongside the pilings.
This fort—Fort Wyvern,
Jasak had called it—was considerably larger than the one
they'd left behind. That didn't make it huge, by any stretch of the
imagination, but it was clearly a more substantial, longer
established structure. It had to have been here for a while, judging
by the size of the town nestled up against its inland perimeter, but
there was much less of the sense of bustle and frontier energy
which would have clung to most Sharonian settlements.
At first glance, the entire town
looked like some primitive farming village, with no sign of the
steam- or water-powered local industry which would have sprung
up in any Sharonian-explored universe. But as she and Jathmar
continued to study it, they quickly realized just how deceiving first
appearances could be.
They were close enough to get a
decent look at what was obviously the local shipyard, for example.
It wasn't very large, and there were only three vessels under
construction, but Shaylar felt her eyes opening wide as she studied
it. She'd seen enough Sharonian boatyards located in equivalent
settlements to know what to look for, but there was no sign here
of the steam or water-powered sawmills and forges she would
have found in one of them, nor did she hear or see any axes or
adzes.
Instead, she saw big timbers
levitating themselves effortlessly into the air, hovering there while
some unseen force slabbed them into neatly trimmed planks which
stacked themselves to one side. Tearing her eyes away from that
fascinating sight, she saw workmen engaged on an entire series of
equally improbable activities.
Two men were shaping what
were obviously framing timbers for the largest of the vessels
under construction, but they were doing it without any tools
Shaylar could recognize. Instead, each of them held what looked
like simple hand grips at either end of a shaft of shining crystal.
The grips were mounted at right angles to the shaft, which was
about eight feet long and an inch in diameter. It swelled into a
thicker cylinder—perhaps a foot long and seven or eight
inches across—at its central point, and the workmen were
moving that thicker cylinder carefully across the timber they were
shaping while chips and sawdust flew away from it in bizarrely
silent clouds.
Other pairs and small groups of
workmen were dealing with other jobs—jobs which would
have been accomplished with snorting steam or raw muscle in
Sharona. Here, though, they were done with more of that eerie
"magic" of Gadrial's, and the implications were frightening. There
couldn't have been more than thirty men working in that shipyard,
but the biggest of the three vessels they were constructing was
probably three hundred feet long. That was smaller than the ship
on which she and Jathmar presently stood, but it was still a
substantial hull, and unlike the smaller ships being built beside it,
it was not sail powered. Back in Sharona, the construction
crews working on a project that size would have been far bigger. If
Arcana's "magic" allowed that much greater productivity out of its
workforce . . .
"We'll be going ashore shortly,"
Jasak announced, walking up behind them. "I'll have to report to
Five Hundred Grantyl, the base commandant. I'm sure he'll want
to . . . meet both of you. I don't
imagine we'll stay long, though."
"That doesn't look very
pleasant," Shaylar offered, waving one hand at the violent storm
raging across the portal threhhold.
"No, it doesn't," he agreed. "The
other side of the portal is in what I believe you call Uromathia in
your home world. The temperature's not too bad there, but we'll
have some mountains to cross to reach the next portal. We'll have
to wait for the weather to clear before we can leave, and we'll have
to bundle up for the flight."
"Flight?" Jathmar repeated, and
Jasak nodded.
"We're going to be spending a lot
of time on dragonback," he told them. "That's one reason I hope
Windclaw's reaction to you had something to do with your head
injury, Shaylar."
"So do I," she replied, just a bit
tremulously, although she'd come to the conclusion that
Windclaw had probably reacted less to her head injury than to her
efforts to use her damaged Voice Talent to communicate with
Darcel. Those efforts had coincided with both of the transport
dragon's determined efforts to eat her, and she was just as grateful,
in a guilty sort of way, that there couldn't be anyone within her
range now.
"In case it didn't have anything to
do with the concussion, though," she offered with a wan smile,
"I'd personally vote for traveling on horseback!"
"Oh, no, you wouldn't," Gadrial
told her. Shaylar looked at the other woman, standing beside her
with the hot breeze stirring her hair, and Gadrial made a face.
"Believe me, I've already made this trip, and it's going to be a pain.
They haven't extended the slider rail beyond Green Haven, and
that's something like twenty thousand of your miles from here.
And it's sixty thousand more miles from Green Haven to
New Arcana, so even with dragons to get us as far as the sliders,
it's going to take something like four months to get to Garth
Showma. You don't even want to think about making that
trip on horseback!"
"No, I don't imagine I would,"
Shaylar replied, trying to hide her shock at what Gadrial had just
said. It was less than forty thousand miles from New
Uromath to Sharona. She and Jathmar had already realized that the
Arcanans had clearly been exploring the multiverse longer than
Sharona had, but still . . .
"Well," Jasak said as the
boarding gangway once again lifted itself out of its brackets and
settled into place between the ship's deck and the pier, "I suppose
we might as well tell the captain goodbye and get ourselves
ashore."
Division-Captain Arlos chan
Geraith broke off his conversation with Division-Captain chan
Manthau as the conference room door opened. They turned away
from the snowcapped mountains, visible along the northern
horizon outside the window, and stood respectfully silent as
Corps-Captain Fairlain chan Rowlan, commanding officer of the
Fifth Corps of the Imperial Ternathian Army came through the
open door, followed by his chief of staff and his senior logistics
officer.
chan Rowlan headed directly for
his chair at the head of the conference table. The corps-captain was
of little more than moderate height for a nativeborn Ternathian,
and he normally moved with a certain deliberation, as if to
compensate for his lack of height. There was no sign of that today,
however. His movements were quick, almost urgent, and his
expression was grim.
Which doesn't exactly come as a tremendous surprise, now
does it, Arlos? chan Geraith told himself sardonically. There
was real, if trenchant, humor in the question, but he was entirely
too well aware of his own grim worry—and anger—
simmering away beneath it.
"Good morning," chan Rowlan
said to chan Geraith and his companions. "I'm glad you were all on
the base this afternoon, but time's short. So let's get seated and get
to it."
chan Geraith crossed to the table
and took his own seat. Fifth Corps' other two
division-captains—Yarkowan chan Manthau of the Ninth
Infantry and Ustace chan Jassian of the Twenty-First—
seated themselves to his left and right respectively, and he
reflected (not for the first time) on how different the Ternathian
military was from that of its only true rival, Uromathia.
Uromathians were much more addicted to flashy uniforms, rank
insignia, and salutes—not to mention bowing and scraping
properly to one's superiors. Ternathians, by and large, preferred to
get on with the job in hand. They'd been doing it for a very long
time, after all. There weren't very many current-service units in
any army which could trace their battle honors in unbroken line of
succession for over four thousand years.
The Third Dragoons was one of
them . . . which made chan Geraith's
division substantially older than the entire Uromathian Empire.
Or, for that matter, the Uromathian language.
With that sort of history behind
them, Ternathian officers felt no particular need to emphasize
their own importance and prestige. Even division commanders
like chan Geraith, with the next best thing to nine thousand men
under his command, normally eschewed dress uniform in favor of
the comfortable, practical field uniform he wore at the moment.
And while there was no question about chains of authority and
military discipline, the Ternathian tradition was for senior officers
to discuss military problems and strategy like reasonable adults.
Unlike certain other empires whose relative youth caused
them—and their senior officers—to act like touchy
adolescents whose insecurity had them playing the bully on a
playground somewhere.
chan Geraith knew he was being
at least a little unfair to the Uromathians, but he didn't really care.
The fact was that he didn't like Uromathians. He was
always scrupulously polite in his dealings with them and in his
public comments about them, but he saw no reason to waste
fairness on them in the privacy of his own mind.
"I'm sure you're all as well aware
as I am of events in the Karys Chain," chan Rowlan said.
For just a moment, the corps-
captain's face twisted with a spasm of intense pain mingled with
something far darker and uglier. Unlike chan Geraith, who wasn't
Talented at all, chan Rowlan's wife was a Voice, and the corps-
captain had a fairly powerful telepathic Talent of his own. chan
Geraith hadn't often seen raw hatred on his corps commander's
face, but he was seeing it now, and he didn't blame chan Rowlan
one bit.
"What you don't know yet," the
corps-captain went on a moment later, with a certain forced
briskness, "is that I've just received orders from Captain-of-the-
Army chan Gristhane, placing Fifth Corps on immediate notice to
deploy forward."
chan Geraith felt his fellow
division commanders coming upright in their chairs with him as if
they'd rehearsed the choreography ahead of time.
"There are several reasons we
were selected," chan Rowlan continued. "One of them is purely
political, and not to be discussed outside this room. Specifically,
Chava Busar has already placed the better part of two cavalry
regiments at the Authority's disposal. They're being given absolute
priority for transport forward on the basis that they're the closest
non-PAAF force available. We don't want to see Chava get his
military toe any further into that door than we can avoid, hence the
offer of our own troops.
"Among the purely military
reasons, we're the closest Ternathian corps HQ to Larakesh. For
that matter, Fort Erthain is closer to Larakesh than any major
non-Ternathian—" he very carefully did not say
"Uromathian," chan Geraith noted "—military base, as well.
We can entrain and get to the portal more rapidly than anyone else,
and with a lot more combat power when we go. In addition, at the
moment the railhead hasn't quite reached Fort Salby in Traisum.
That leaves us almost four thousand miles—four thousand
unimproved miles, all of them overland—from
Hell's Gate."
He used the new, unofficial
name for the contact portal without hesitation, chan Geraith
noticed, and the division-captain raised two fingers in a request
for attention.
"Yes, Arlos?"
"Should I assume that, for my
sins, the Third gets to take point?"
"Yes, you should," chan Rowlan
replied, and chan Geraith nodded.
Fort Emperor Erthain, on the
mountain-ringed plains of Karmalia, was one of the Imperial
Ternathian Army's largest military bases. In fact, it was by most
measures the largest military base in the entire multiverse.
Well, in our part of it, anyway, he reminded himself. It
was also home to the Empire's major military proving grounds,
and the place where the Imperial Army played with its newest toys
to see what they could do.
For the last two years, Fifth
Corps in general—and the Third Dragoon Division, in
particular—had been experimenting with a radically new
approach to military logistics. The basic concept had suggested
itself following the improvements in heavy construction
equipment produced by the Trans-Temporal Express's insatiably
expanding rail net. There were those who believed the newfangled
"internal combustion engine" was going to be the powerplant of
the future because it was so much lighter and more efficient than
steam, and chan Geraith wasn't prepared to tell them they were
wrong. But those noisy, oil- and gasoline-burning contraptions
were still taking the first, hesitant steps of infancy, and out in the
field, where the TTE did most of its heavy construction work (and
where the army might be called upon to maneuver), refined oil
products might not be available. So TTE had specialized in
developing ever more efficient steam-powered excavators,
bulldozers, and tractors. Designed to burn just about any fuel
which could be shoveled into their fire boxes, they'd grown
steadily more powerful, lighter, and more reliable for over fifty
years now.
In fact, they'd grown reliable
enough for the Imperial Army to take a very close look at them.
chan Geraith was one of the general officers who continued to
nurse serious reservations about their maintainability in the field,
but he'd seen enough over the past twenty-odd months to become
convinced they were, indeed, the future of military transport.
Plans had called for the entire
Fifth Corps to be provided with the new personnel carriers and
freight haulers, but as was always the case (especially with
peacetime budgets) procurement rates had run far behind schedule.
Third Dragoons, tasked as Fifth Corps's quick-response division,
was the smallest of the three divisions (horsed units always had
lower manpower totals than infantry units), as well as the most
mobile. It was also the only one which had received anything like
its full allotted transport, even it was still a good twenty percent
below the intended establishment. On the other hand, chan
Geraith's mounted troopers wouldn't require anywhere near the
personnel lift one of the infantry divisions would have demanded.
"In order to make Arlos up to
strength," chan Rowlan went on, looking at chan Manthau and
chan Jassian, "we're going to raid you two pretty heavily. In fact,
we're going to focus on putting him as far over establishment as
possible. All of us know we're going to have maintenance
problems and breakdowns once we've got the steamers out there
under real field conditions, so we're going to have to try to
make up for lack of reliability with redundancy."
The two infantry commanders
nodded. It was obvious neither of them was happy about the
prospect, but, equally obviously, both of them understood it.
"Captain-of-the-Army chan
Gristhane has also informed me that the procurement and
development of additional steamers—and the alternate
program, looking at the gasoline-powered versions—is
about to get a brand new priority. In fact," the corps-captain
produced his first genuine smile since Seeing the Voicenet reports
from Hell's Gate, "the Navy's already been informed that it won't
be getting two of those new battleships it wanted. It seems the
Army's finally going to get first call on the Exchequer."
The smile vanished as abruptly
as it had appeared as all four commanders remembered why that
was. Then chan Rowlan cleared his throat.
"Arlos, your division is going to
move out ASAP. Dust off your mobilization plans."
chan Geraith nodded without
mentioning that he'd done that over thirty-six hours ago. Third
Dragoons had been checking equipment, shoeing horses, drawing
ammunition and supplies, and combat-loading its steamers since
dawn yesterday.
"Can you move out within
twenty-four hours?" chan Rowlan asked, which made it clear he
was well aware chan Geraith had begun his preparations long
since. "It's going to take almost that long for the railroad people to
assemble the cars you're going to require."
"I can have my lead brigade ready
to entrain in another twelve hours," chan Geraith promised. "It's
short about fifteen percent of its assigned steamers, but if we're
going to make up the shortfall from Yarkowan and Ustace, I can
strip what First Brigade needs out of Second and Third. It'll
probably slow Third down, since I'm guessing we'll get a ripple
effect into its transport when I send Second out in the next
echelon, but I suspect we can still have everybody ready to go by
the time the quartermasters can put together the trains to get all of
us on the rails, anyway."
"Good!" chan Rowlan said. Then
he straightened his shoulders and inhaled visibly.
"At this time, we don't know
what we're going to be called upon to do when we finally get to
New Uromath," he said. "Arlos, we'll do our best to keep you
informed of policy changes and strategic intentions via the Voice
chain, but the time delay is going to mean you'll have to use your
own discretion—a lot. I'll come forward to join you as
soon as we've got at least one of the infantry divisions en route
, but until then, you're going to be the man on the spot, in
more ways than one."
"Understood," chan Geraith said.
"Then understand this, too. Our
primary responsibility is the protection of Sharonian civilians and
the recovery of any of our people who may be still in enemy
hands. I know we all hope we're talking about Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr, but there are other civilians—and quite a few
military dependents—in proximity to this point of contact,
as well. Their safety is our first concern.
"Having said that, however,
Captain-of-the-Army chan Gristhane has pointed out that there's a
very important secondary consideration here. Specifically, Hell's
Gate is a cluster, and according to the Authority's best guess,
several of the portals in the Karys Chain are of relatively recent
formation. That suggests this is an unusually active chain, which
may be expanding even as we sit here talking. We cannot afford to
leave a hostile—and these bastards have certainly
demonstrated their hostility, I believe," chan Rowlan showed his
teeth in grim amusement "—in possession of that cluster.
Particularly not if it is expanding rapidly and might double
back into one of our own chains at some point."
"So my orders are to secure
control of that universe, as well?" chan Geraith wanted to be very
certain he was clear on that point, and chan Rowlan nodded.
"It may be that eventually some
sort of diplomatic solution can be arrived at. For that to happen, it
will have to include severe punishment for the people responsible
for this . . . assuming Company-
Captain chan Tesh hasn't already taken care of that in full. But at
this time, the very least we would find acceptable would be some
form of shared control of this cluster. If it takes a mailed fist to
accomplish that, then so be it. It's always possible that whatever
comes out of this new Conclave in Tajvana may change those
instructions, but I consider that highly unlikely. You'll have
formal written orders to cover as many contingencies as we can
envision, but the bottom line is that you will secure
control of that cluster and hold it."
It was chan Geraith's turn to nod
again. The thought of taking a single division of dragoons off to
face the massed fighting power of a totally unknown trans-
universal empire was daunting, to say the least. Especially in light
of the uncanny weapons the other side had already displayed since,
unlike some of his fellows, chan Geraith strongly suspected that
so far they'd seen only the surface of the other side's technological
iceberg. There were more, and nastier, surprises waiting for them,
although it seemed quite obvious that Sharona had had a few
surprises for the other side, as well. The confidence, almost
exuberance, he'd seen out of some of his junior officers as news
of chan Tesh's successful attack on the other side's portal forces
reached home worried him, and the fact that they had no idea of
what sort of logistical constraints the enemy faced—or
didn't face—was another concern.
But despite any of those worries,
chan Geraith felt confident of his ability to secure and hold the
portal cluster if he could only beat the enemy there in the first
place. At the moment, chain Tesh controlled the enemy's access
portal, and it was only a few miles across. Third Dragoons could
hold that much frontage even against an army of Arpathian
demons.
"I understand, Sir," he said.
"When you get there, that cluster will be waiting for you."
"You wanted to see me,
Gahlreen?" Olvyr Banchu said politely as the secretary opened the
office door and bowed him through it.
Gahlreen Taymish, First Director
of the Trans-Temporal Express looked up from the paperwork on
his desk and nodded sharply.
"Damned right I did," he said
briskly. He shoved his chair back and walked around his immense
desk to shake Banchu's hand, then jerked his head at the huge
window overlooking the Larakesh Portal.
Banchu took the hint. Taymish
was renowned for his wealth, his capability, his tough mindedness,
his temper, and his arrogance, yet deep inside him was the little
boy who'd grown up on a hardscrabble farm right outside
Larakesh, dreaming about the huge portal which dominated the
city and its entire universe . . . and his
own future. That little boy had never tired of the marvelous view
connecting him to the mountains over four thousand
miles—and a universe away—near the southern tip
of Ricathia. Taymish did his best thinking standing in front of that
window, looking at that view and pondering the promise of all the
other universes which lay beyond it.
"I imagine you know why you're
here," the First Director said after a moment, darting a sharp
sideways look at Banchu.
"I can think of two possible
reasons," Banchu replied. "First, I'm here so you can tell me I'm
fired for not meeting that insane schedule you gave me. Or,
second, I'm here so you can tell me that you never believed I'd
meet it anyway, and that you want to congratulate me on how well
I've actually done."
"Close, anyway," Taymish said
with a tight grin. "Yes, I never believed you'd meet the schedule.
I've discovered over the years that demanding the impossible from
someone quite often gets him to do more than he thought
was possible before he started trying to satisfy the idiot screaming
at him. And, yes, I'm more than pleased that you've done as well as
you have. However, I've got a new little task for you."
"Oh?"
Banchu regarded his superior
warily. In the fifteen years since Taymish, then the executive head
of TTE's Directorate of Construction, had lured him away from
his position in the Uromathian Ministry of Transportation, Olvyr
Banchu had learned that Taymish's idea of the proper reward for
accomplishing the impossible was almost always a demand to
accomplish something even more preposterous.
"Exactly." Taymish smiled
broadly at the Trans-Temporal Express's chief construction
engineer. It was only a brief smile, however, and it vanished
quickly. "I want you to go out to Traisum and take personal
charge."
"I see."
Banchu could hardly pretend it
was a surprise. The rail line creeping steadily down the Hayth
Chain towards Karys had been progressing satisfactorily enough
before the murderous attack on the Chalgyn Consortium survey
crew. Enormous as the task was, it had also been essentially
routine for TTE. And the fact that every planet the Authority had
opened through the portal network was a duplicate of Sharona
itself helped enormously, of course. By and large, the routes for
rail lines could be surveyed here on Sharona—or even
simply taken directly from already existing topographical maps.
Getting the men, material, and machinery forward to do the actual
construction work was more of a straightforward logistics
concern, than anything else, and the TTE building teams were the
most experienced, efficient heavy construction engineers in human
history. They'd laid well over two million miles of track across
forty universes, and along the way they'd developed the
techniques—and machinery—to take crossing an
entire planet in stride.
But what had been a more than
acceptable rate of progress in an essentially peaceful and benign
multiverse was something else entirely when there was a vicious,
murderous enemy at the far end of the transit chain.
"You want me to ginger them
up, is that it?" he asked after a moment.
"That's part of it," Taymish
agreed. "You're invaluable here in the office, but let's face it, you
were born to be a field man yourself. If anyone can get a few more
miles a day of trackage out of our people, it's you. But, frankly,
the main reason I want you out there is because of your seniority."
"Ah?" Banchu raised one
eyebrow, and Taymish chuckled. It was not an extraordinarily
pleasant sound.
"We've got heavy equipment,
rails, and work crews pouring down the Hayth Chain right this
minute. We've pulled in entire crews, from other projects all over
the net. For that matter, we've shut down operations completely in
the Salth Chain to divert everything we have into pushing the
Hayth railhead to Karys and New Uromath. That means we've got
some very senior field engineers all headed for the same spot, and
we don't have time for any stupid headbutting over who's got the
seniority on this project. With you out there on the spot,
that sort of frigging stupidity can be nipped in the bud.
"Possibly even more to the point,
we're going to have some really senior military personnel moving
into the region, as well. I want someone with equivalent seniority
from our side of the shop there to coordinate with them. Someone
who can speak authoritatively about the realities of what we can
and can't do and explain exactly what sort of priorities we need
from them."
"And the fact that I'm
Uromathian and I'll be in charge of the most critical single
infrastructure project in Sharona's history won't hurt anything,
either, will it?" Banchu said shrewdly.
"Never has yet," Taymish
admitted cheerfully. "Hells, Olvyr! I never could decide whether I
recruited you in the first place more to poke Chava in the eye by
luring you away from him or to make you my token Uromathian
to satisfy the Ternathian liberals! The fact that you turned out to
be at least marginally capable was just icing on the cake."
Banchu shook his head with a
laugh. Given Gahlreen Taymish's penchant for killing as many
birds as possible with every stone, there probably really was at
least a grain of truth in that. Not that Taymish would have hired anyone, regardless of his origins, if he hadn't been convinced
that that person was the very best available.
Still, the First Director often
showed a degree of sensitivity to human interactions and dynamics
which would have startled most of his (many) detractors. Having a
Uromathian of Banchu's seniority out there in charge of the
critical rail-building project really might gratify Emperor
Chava—or, at least, placate his pride and hunger for
prestige. And it was unfortunately true that many other
Uromathians shared their Emperor's resentment of the way
Ternathia's towering reputation as Sharona's only true
"superpower' continued to linger, despite Uromathia's population
and power. Having "one of their own" out there at the sharp end
would play well with them, as well, and the Uromathian press
would love it. And if some of the PAAF military officers in the
area happened to be Uromathian themselves, Banchu's presence
could turn out to the extremely valuable in terms of reduced
friction and amicable relations.
"All right," he said. "I've got two
more construction trains moving out tomorrow. I can assign
myself to one of them. For that matter, I may even have time to
kiss my wife goodbye!"
Chapter Thirty-Five
Tajvana stunned the senses.
Andrin was accustomed to vistas
on an imperial scale, but even the approach to the city was nothing
sort of amazing. She knew the map, of course, and she'd seen
pictures—both paintings and the new photographs, as well.
But it was a far different matter to sail down the Ibral Strait's long,
finger thin-strip of water, with the long peninsula known as the
Knife of Ibral on the left and the northwest shoulder of the ancient
kingdom of Shurkhal on the right. The thirty-eight-mile long
stretch of water was barely four miles across at its widest, and less
than one at its narrowest, yet the volume of shipping streaming
through it at any given hour, night or day, boggled the
imagination.
Buoys, lighthouses, pilot
vessels, and units of the Royal Othmaliz Customs Patrol managed
to keep things more or less under control in the rigidly policed
traffic lanes, and the fines for any violation of the Ibral Maritime
Regulations were enough to ruin most shipping lines. Andrin
knew all about that, just as she knew about the multi-tracked
railroads which had been built paralleling the Strait to relieve
some of the congestion. Yet for the last two days, they'd
seen—and passed—a steady throng of merchant
ships of every size and description making steadily for or sailing
out of the Strait. Seeing that mass of merchant shipping with her
own eyes had brought home just how vital Sharona's exploitation
of the multiverse on the far side of the Larakesh Gate truly was.
Both coastlines were visible
along the entire sword-straight length of the Strait as
Windtreader started down the narrow passage. They were
lined on either side with fortresses, many of them almost as old as
the Fist of Bolakin. They had been built and rebuilt, modernized,
or merely replaced, as weapons technology and methods of
warfare changed, and their harsh faces underscored yet again how
vitally important this stretch of water had been throughout
Sharona's history. The Ibral Straits had not been taken by force
since before the advent of gunpowder, and before the Empire's
voluntary withdrawal, no one had ever even dared to challenge
Ternathia's hold on the iron gauntlet leading to its one-time
Imperial capital.
Most of the fortresses were little
more than tourist attractions these days, but not all of them were
entirely empty, even now. The Kingdom of Othmaliz, which had
reclaimed Tajvana after Ternathia's withdrawal, kept the
approaches manned. The garrisons were small, of course, since
war hadn't broken out in earnest anywhere on Sharona for so long.
But they were manned, and Windtreader had to obtain
official clearance from the Othmalizi government before passing
them. The actual procedure had taken only seconds to accomplish
via Voice transmission to and from Alazon Yanamar, but the
seriousness behind the formality hadn't been lost on Andrin.
Nor had the consequences of
Windtreader's arrival. As the liner approached the Strait's
western terminus, the massive flow of commercial shipping had
slowed to a trickle, and then ceased completely. Andrin hadn't
understood why that was, at first—not until
Windtreader started up the long, suddenly lonely strip of
water, preceded by Prince of Ternathia and followed by Duke of Ihtrial.
The entire Strait had been cleared
of all commercial shipping.
The only vessels in sight were
Customs Patrol cutters or light warships of the Othmaliz Navy,
and as she watched, Windtreader's escorting cruisers
dipped their flags in formal salute. The two powerful Ternathian
ships undoubtedly outgunned every Othmalizi vessel she could
see, but they were the ones who rendered first honors, and she
looked up at her father.
"Wondering why we're
saluting them, 'Drin?" he asked with a slight, teasing
smile.
"Well . . .
yes," she admitted.
"Othmaliz is a small nation,
true," he said. "On a per-capita basis, it may well be the wealthiest
kingdom in the entire multiverse, but it's tiny compared to the
Empire. For that matter, it doesn't even really have a king, even if
it is technically a 'kingdom.' But this—" he pointed up at
the dipped flag flying from Windtreader's foremast, then at
the Othmalizi flags descending in a return salute "—is
important. Not because Othmaliz wants to flaunt its power, but
because it's our duty as foreign nationals to extend the same
courtesy to them that we'd expect from someone entering our
sovereign territory. And don't overlook the fact that they've
cleared the entire Strait for our passage. We're moving well above
the normal speed limit, but even so, it's going to take over three
hours for us to complete the passage. Three hours in which they've
completely shut down what's undoubtedly the busiest waterway in
the world in order to ensure our security."
Andrin nodded soberly. The
same thought had already occurred to her.
"No one believes for a moment
that Othmaliz, despite all the importance of Tajvana and the
Kingdom's control of the Straits, is the equal in wealth or power
of Ternathia," Zindel said. "But the Kingdom is just as entitled to
be treated with respect in its own territory as we are. One country
may go to war with another, but in time of peace, a wise
nation—or ruler—treats all other nations with
respect.
"Courtesy seldom costs
anything, and the willingness to extend it can be its own subtle
declaration of strength. There are times it may be taken as a sign of
weakness by some more belligerent nation or head of state, and
one has to be aware of that, as well, but the Empire's tradition has
always been to remember and recognize the acceptable protocols
and international courtesies, even to our enemies. To fail to show
courtesy is to demonstrate arrogance and contempt. In some cases
it also demonstrates envy, fear, or belligerence, but whatever it
stems from, such diplomatic slights are serious business, 'Drin.
They form the basis for anger, distrust, and dispute, and they're
seldom quickly forgotten. It's our duty as representatives of our
nation to be open, aboveboard, and courteous to our neighbors.
Violating that duty opens the door to the sort of international
discord which could lead very quickly to misunderstandings,
rancor, short tempers, or even violence."
She thought about the prevailing
opinions of Uromathia's emperor, and understood exactly what he
meant. But she had a further question.
"Don't our Voices help us avoid
that kind of misunderstanding in most cases?"
"In theory—and generally
in practice—yes. But once hostility begins to grow, simple
clarity of communication isn't enough to make it magically
disappear. If two nations have a tradition of dislike, if they treat
one another to public displays of discourtesy or petulance, if they
get into the habit of denigrating one another in efforts to sway
international diplomatic opinion to favor their side in some
dispute, misunderstandings and flares of temper can occur quickly,
particularly during times of increased stress. If they're lucky, the
diplomats and the Voices can step in to control the situation
before it spirals out of control, but that isn't always possible, and
when it isn't, the consequences can be terrible for all concerned."
"You're thinking about what
happened at Hells Gate," she said quietly, and he nodded heavily.
"Yes, I am. It's not the same
thing, of course, since in this case there were no proper
diplomatic channels or protocols available to either side, but it's
highly probable the entire incident stemmed from nothing more
sinister than surprise, fear, and lack of familiarity. I could be
wrong about that, and we may never know exactly what sparked it,
or how it happened, but we're all going to be dealing with the
consequences for a long, long time. Which, I suppose, drives
home just how important it is for us to avoid misunderstandings
here, in Sharona. Especially at a time like this."
"Yes, I can see that, Papa. Thank
you."
"It was a good question, 'Drin.
See that you go on asking more like it. That's your current
duty."
"I will, Papa."
Silence had fallen—a
quiet, thoughtful silence—and they'd stood together,
watching the coast slip by on either side, for the entire three hours
it had taken to transit the Ibral Strait and reach the sea of the same
name.
It took much longer to cross the
Ibral Sea, which stretched a hundred and seventy five miles from
northeast to southwest and was nearly fifty miles across at its
widest. Despite its small area, Andrin knew it was over four
thousand feet deep in the center, and the long lines of merchant
vessels waiting to enter the Strait Windtreader had finally
cleared stretched as far as she could see.
Andrin left the deck only long
enough to eat and endure an exhausting hour or so undergoing
Lady Merissa's ministrations. Then she returned, trailing Lazima
chan Zindico—and Lady Merissa—to resume her
place at the promenade deck rail and watch the dark waters of the
Ibral Sea flow past. The merchant shipping gave Windtreader
and her cruiser escorts ample elbow room, but there was still
plenty to see, and she didn't really care if people thought she was
gawking like a teenager. After all, she was a teenager, she
thought with a grin.
It was well into afternoon when
the city finally began to rise from the waves. A gray smudge
appeared on the horizon and thickened, grew steadily higher and
wider, until details began to emerge.
Tajvana straddled the southern
end of the nineteen mile-long Ylani Strait, and it was indisputably
the wealthiest, most culturally diverse crossroads on the face of
Sharona. History lay thick as fog on those dark waters, and so
many cities had existed along those banks that they'd piled up in
layers of silt and ancient foundations, each of them laid over even
older foundations. Walls built and rebuilt until the layers were
more than a hundred feet thick in places.
Andrin longed to explore not
only the living city, but also the ancient ruins historians had
excavated here. There were structures in Tajvana older than the
Ternathian Empire itself, which counted five full millennia. She'd
read about the ancient ruins beneath Tajvana, had seen the old
engravings of the early excavations, and the modern photographs
as more of the ancient city was progressively uncovered for study.
But not even the marvel of photography could equal the impact of
walking through the actual ruins. Andrin had already told her
father how much she longed to go, and he'd promised to arrange a
tour.
"We won't be the only sightseers
wanting to gawk at the city, after all," he'd said. "Most members of
the Conclave will want to explore at least a little. I rather doubt
that many of the Conclave's delegates have ever had the
opportunity."
"Thus proving that even an inter-
universal crisis can have some benefit," Andrin had
smiled, and her father had laughed aloud.
"Fair enough. And don't worry,
I'll be gawking right alongside you, 'Drin. Unlike you, I may have
been here before, but you're not the only Calirath intrigued by
ancient ruins and monuments."
Now her father appeared beside
her at the rail as she saw high spires rising from the temples of
two dozen or more faiths. Gilded domes caught the sunlight with
mirror brilliance, scattering diamond points of light into the sky.
And then, ahead of them, a faerie arch rose like a golden thread. It
joined a second delicate arch, then another and another, as span
after span marched across the wide Ylani Strait, and Andrin's
breath caught at the sight of that eldritch bridge, spanning an
impossibly wide gap.
"How?" she breathed softly.
"Who could build such a bridge?"
"I wish we Ternathians could
take the credit, but we can't," her father said with smile. "That
honor goes to His Crowned Eminence, the Seneschal of Othmaliz.
It's been finished for seven months, I believe."
Andrin glanced from the bridge
to her father.
"But how, Papa? Surely
a bridge that long ought to collapse under its own weight! Or as
soon as a heavy wind hits it!"
"Well," Zindel's eyes twinkled,
"some say he made a pact with the devils of the Arpathian
Hells—all eleven of them. Hells, that is," he amended. "I
don't think anyone could possibly count the number of devils
Arpathians fear. Not even the Arpathians. I gave up trying
several years ago, since they seem to invent new ones each time
the moon changes phase or the wind shifts. Others say the
Seneschal pledged his immortal soul to obtain the plans and that
he'll have to spend the rest of his life building temples, trying to
earn it back." He chuckled. "It's less colorful, perhaps, but the
simple truth is that he put out a call to the greatest engineering
geniuses on Sharona and promised a dukedom and half the
lifetime earnings from the bridge traffic to the engineer who could
design and build it."
"It's . . .
astonishing," she said, inadequately.
So it was, and the closer they
came, the more astonishing it grew. The pilings were massive
towers of concrete and stone. The spans were made of steel, but
not the solid steel she'd expected. Instead, they were made of steel
cables, which gave the bridge its gossamer appearance, like a
bridge made of thread. She frowned, trying to reason it out, as the
wind whipped past in crosswise gusts.
Then she understood.
"It really is sheer
genius!" she cried aloud in pure delight. "Using cables, not rigid
beams, means the entire structure can flex just enough to keep
from cracking!"
Her father grinned from ear to
ear.
"Bravo, 'Drin! That's precisely
why it worked. And don't forget, this part of the world is subject
to relatively frequent earthquakes. I'm sure that was another factor
in the final design." He laughed. "If you ever grow bored enough
to entertain thoughts of an ordinary career, you might consider
engineering."
Lady Merissa, who'd finally
recovered from her seasickness, gasped behind Andrin's shoulder.
"Your Majesty! What a ghastly
suggestion! Her Highness is a Calirath! Not
a . . . a tradesman!"
The guardian of Andrin's
reputation was glaring at her father, her expression scandalized,
but the Emperor turned to meet that outraged stare calmly.
"My dear Lady Merissa, I didn't
mean to shock you. But as a Calirath, if Andrin wants to build
bridges between her comportment lessons, her sessions with the
dancing master, and her studies with Shamir Taje—among
other distinguished tutors—" he said, his eyes twinkling,
"then by all means, she may build as many bridges as Ternathia has
need of, with my blessing. We Caliraths have taken up any number
of interesting occupations, just for the challenges involved.
Besides," he added smugly, "engineering isn't a trade. It's a
profession."
The distinction, alas, was lost
upon Lady Merissa, and Andrin had to clap both hands over her
lips to keep from laughing out loud at her protocolist's apoplectic
look. Lady Merissa, clearly horrified by the Emperor's answer,
turned a savagely repressive glare on
Andrin . . . whose father did
have the temerity to laugh.
"Lady Merissa," he said with a
chuckle, "you're a hopeless aristocrat."
Lady Merissa was clearly torn
between squawking in indignation and the deference due the most
powerful single human being on Sharona. While she tried to make
up her mind which to do, the human being in question turned back
to his contemplation of the Ylani Strait Bridge, and gave Andrin a
solemn wink. Zindel chan Calirath thought the whole notion of
Andrin shocking the bluebloods by taking up engineering was
wickedly funny. Yet there was a bittersweet edge to his
amusement, for Andrin's future was crushed under far too many
restrictions, and he feared that even more were coming.
She was a vibrant, intelligent
young woman whose natural enthusiasms were all too frequently
curbed by the political realities of her birth rank. For other girls,
the choice to study engineering might have surprised people,
including the engineers who taught their discipline to new
generations, but at least it would have been possible. For
Andrin, that door was almost certainly closed, and her father
deeply regretted that. He looked back down at her and brushed hair
back from her brow.
"You do understand, Andrin,
don't you?" he asked softly.
Her eyes were as gray as the
wind-chopped water of the Ibral Sea. No guile lived in those
forthright eyes, but there was a depth of reserve, a sense that they
looked steadily at a thing, measured it carefully against a host of
complex factors, and sought to understand it within its many
shifting contexts. They were eyes too old for a girl of seventeen,
yet strangely vulnerable and young.
"Yes, Papa," she said equally
softly, and the smile that touched her lips was sad. "I understand. I
have to be too many other things to think about indulging a
passing fancy."
Or even a serious one, he added silently.
"I wish it weren't so," he said
aloud. "But we can change neither the world, nor our place in it.
And that's enough said on the subject. Look," he pointed to the
left-hand bank, "isn't that the most beautiful Temple of Shalana
you've ever seen?"
Andrin looked, then let out a
long "Ohhhh!" of appreciation. A tall needle-shaped tower rose
from the top of a soaring dome. The needle was gold—
genuine gold filigree—and the dome was a patchwork of
gold and blue in a swirling, striped pattern that boiled intricately
down its curved surface. The gold portion, like the needle tower,
really was genuine gold, applied as a thin foil in layer upon
successive layer by thousands upon thousands of pilgrims, and the
blue swirls were brilliant lapis, a mosaic of thousands upon
thousands of tiles cut from the semi-precious blue stone that was
sacred to Shalana. The strips of lapis were, in turn, inlaid with
other stones—blue stones that caught the sunlight with a
fiery dazzle of light. Faceted sapphires by the thousands encrusted
the dome in a breathtaking display of the wealth controlled by
Shalana's ruling order of priestesses, and the Grand Temple's walls
were white marble, inlaid with still more lapis in an intricate
geometric pattern of sunbursts and stylized waves. The Order of
Shalana was reputed to be the most powerful religious order in the
world, with temples—and banks—in nearly every
country in Sharona, and Andrin could believe it as she gazed at
that gloriously beautiful structure.
"I've never seen anything so
lovely in my life!" Andrin breathed softly. "It's more beautiful than
any of the temples in Ternathia. Anywhere in
Ternathia."
Then she gasped and pointed to
the right hand bank.
"What's that?" she
demanded, but understanding dawned almost instantly as she
recognized the vast structure dominating the right hand bank,
rising high on a hill overlooking the Ylani Strait.
"It's the Palace!" she
squealed, and for just that moment, she sounded exactly like the
young girl she really was beneath the layers of poise, caution, and
politically necessary reserve.
It was, indeed, the Great Palace
of the ancient Ternathian Empire. And it was also still a residence,
occupied by the Seneschal of Othmaliz and his vast staff, but
not his family.
The Kingdom of Othmaliz was
not ruled by a dynastic kingship, but it was far from a democratic
republic. The title of Seneschal had originally been held by the
official who had governed the day-to-day affairs of Tajvana in the
name of the emperors of Ternathia. After the Empire had
withdrawn, the title had become a theocratic one, for Othmaliz
was ruled by a priest—an unmarried priest, as the holy laws
of Othmaliz decreed. He wasn't celibate, far from it, but he didn't
marry, and his many offspring could not inherit his title or the
wealth which went with it. Nor did they live in the Palace with
him. When a Seneschal died, the new Seneschal was chosen from
the highest ranking priests in the Order of Bergahl. More than one
Seneschal had been succeeded by a son or a grandson, but
only when the successful candidate had attained sufficient
seniority within the order to stand for election in his own right.
It had always struck Zindel as a
ridiculous waste of space to use the entire vast Great Palace to
house one man and his staff. The Palace covered fifty acres of
ground, and that was only the roofed portion; the grounds were
even larger. Now he stood beside his daughter, savoring her
delight as she beheld the ancient home of her ancestors at last.
The Great Palace's walls were a
glittering sight, inlaid with sheets of mineral mica that sent
sparkles of light cascading and shimmering across its surface. The
roof was an astonishing fairyland of glittering domes and steep-
sided slopes that were covered not with the ubiquitous tiles
prevalent throughout the region, but with imported slabs of slate.
The slate glittered golden in the brilliant sunshine, like the scales
of some fantastic fish sent as a gift by the god of the sea, for every
slab had been edged in gold leaf, so that the entire vast structure
shone with an unearthly brilliance.
The effect was stunning against
the backdrop of bone dry stone walls and sundrenched rooftops
whose homely red clay tiles had faded into a dusty, washed out
shade of pink. The light shimmering around the sparkling, mica-
flecked walls and the incandescent rooftop made the entire, fifty-
acre edifice appear to be floating above the city. The optical
illusion was so strong that Andrin kept blinking, trying to clear her
dazzled vision to see what was really there, the solid stone that
anchored the building to the hot and thirsty soil of Tajvana. It
didn't seem possible mere human hands could have built it.
She felt numb as she tried to take
in the fact that her own family, her direct ancestors, had walked its
rooms, run through its corridors, lived in it, laughed and played
and hated and loved within its walls and beneath its glittering roof.
They'd ruled half the world from that floating palace. But the
world they'd ruled was gone. It had vanished quietly down the
corridors of time, a world not so much lost as relinquished with
passing regret, and gazing at what her family had given up, Andrin
was devastated.
Yet even as those thoughts
tumbled through her mind, another thought blew through her like
a chill wind. The world Andrin lived in had changed just
as completely as the world of her ancient ancestors, and far more
abruptly. Hers was a new and frightening place, and
everything—and everyone—in it was threatened with
destruction by a faceless enemy. For one ghastly moment, she saw
the Great Palace spouting flames against a night sky, with smoke
pouring from it, and people rushing towards the inferno—
or perhaps running headlong away, trying to reach safety. She
gasped and clutched the ship's rail, unsure whether the vision had
been a true Glimpse or merely the product of an over-active
imagination giving shape and form to her fear for the only world
she knew.
She drew down a gulp of air,
trying to steady her badly shaken nerves, and glanced up at her
father. She was surprised by the thoughtful frown which had
driven a vertical slash between his brows. Whatever his thoughts
were, they were as brooding and disturbed as her own, so she
turned uneasily away and studied the harbor, instead. Or, rather,
Tajvana's harbors. There were several, split between both
banks, but the massive docks on the left-hand bank were clearly
for utilitarian commercial purposes, whereas the docks on the
right bank appeared to be equipped for the passenger trade,
handling small personal yachts and the larger passenger liners and
ferries plying the routes to some of the world's most popular
resorts and business destinations.
Captain Ula steered
Windtreader clear of the cargo wharves, thick with gantries
where cranes unloaded huge crates and pallets from the holds of
scores of ships. As they entered the Ylani Strait proper, Andrin
saw that the commercial docks swept around the perimeter of the
vast bay that led inland, curved like a golden horn that ran through
the heart of Tajvana's business district. Further up the slopes were
the villas and palaces of the wealthy, both rich merchants and the
nobility of Othmaliz, some of whose lineages were almost as long
as Andrin's own. She could see carriages and wagons in the streets,
and hundreds of sweating stevedores hauling cargo to waiting
wagons which would carry it out to dockside warehouses.
But Windtreader was
bound for the right bank as Captain Ula reduced speed and conned
his ship through clearly marked channels towards the passenger
docks under the attentive watchfulness of hovering tugboats.
Andrin could see beyond the Ylani Strait now, to the vast Ylani
Sea, whose chilly, dark waters met the placid waters of the Ibral
Sea in a turbulent, silt-laden chop. There was always a powerful
current flowing out of the Strait, and flurries of foam rose as
Windtreader's graceful stem cut through it.
Finena, riding the jeweled, white
leather gauntlet on Andrin's arm, shifted her wings a bit uneasily,
as if the sudden proximity of Tajvana after so many days alone on
the empty sea made her nervous. Andrin soothed the falcon,
stroking those glossy silver wings, and found herself reflecting
that Finena's splendid coloring was far better suited to the Great
Palace than hers was. She knew only too well that her own
appearance was rescued from hopeless, oversized coltishness only
by Lady Merissa's skill with cosmetics, hairdressing, and
wardrobe. Indeed, at the moment, she wore a close-fitting bonnet
designed to keep the wind from totally destroying the gemmed
coiffure Lady Merissa had spent more than an hour coiling around
her head after lunch, preparing her for their landing at Tajvana.
Andrin would have been lost
without such guidance, and she knew it, which helped her to
overlook Lady Merissa's sometimes tedious mannerisms and
cloying attention to social etiquette. Especially now. The one
thing Andrin wanted desperately to accomplish on this trip was to
bring credit to her father and her Empire. She would die of shame
if she brought embarrassment to her father's name, instead.
Fortunately, Lady Merissa had
taken great pains with her appearance this morning, with a great
deal of giggling help from Relatha, who had become Merissa's
indispensable right hand and Andrin's indispensable companion. Windtreader's galley had, perforce, lost one of its assistants,
but Andrin didn't feel at all guilty for the appropriation of
Relatha's talents. Among other considerations, it was a genuine
comfort just to have another girl her age aboard.
"Oh, Your Grand Highness,"
Relatha had sighed when Lady Merissa had finished buttoning her
into a gown of ivory and silver brocade, trimmed with ermine and
pearls. "You look a picture, so you do, just like your beautiful
falcon. You ought to have a portrait done, just like that!"
Lady Merissa had paused and
tipped her head to one side, considering.
"You know, Your Highness,
she's right. You should have a portrait done with that
gown and Finena on your arm. Ternathia's imperial grand princess
and her imperial peregrine, symbol of the Empire for five
millennia. Yes, I do believe we'll have to arrange that, when we
return to Hawkwing Palace."
"If you insist," Andrin had
muttered, thinking privately that her bird would outshine her.
A light cloak covered the
brocade gown at the moment, protecting it from the brisk wind,
although it was scarcely needed for warmth. It might be autumn,
but it was warmer here than back home in Estafel, and the
temperature had to be in the sixties. Palm trees grew along the
hillsides, and the wind was merely brisk and cool, not chill. The
cloak was enough to shield her elaborate gown from the
capricious breeze, and it hid her nervous movement as her free
hand smoothed the brocade unnecessarily under its cover.
She knew there was to be a
formal reception and dinner once all the Conclave's delegates had
arrived, and she had every intention of making one of Lady
Merissa's carefully crafted political statements for the occasion.
She simply didn't know yet what that statement would be. That
would be determined largely by the mood and tenor of the
preliminary—yet scarcely less formal—social
occasions which must be endured before all of the official
delegations arrived. She shivered under her cloak, not from cold,
and leaned against her father, who wrapped an arm around her and
gave her a gentle smile.
"We're nearly there, poppet," he
said softly.
"Yes," she said simply. He hadn't
called her that since her fifth birthday, and she smiled up at him,
then lapsed back into silence and watched their final approach to
Tajvana's passenger docks.
The captain rang down "Finished
with Engines," an the chuffing paddlewheel tugboats moved in,
pushing with bluff bows to ease Windtreader alongside an
ornate, marble-faced quay aflutter with official flags of every
nation on Sharona. A mob of carriages and people dressed in
elaborate finery cluttered the long pier, well back from the
longshoremen waiting for the ship's lines.
Paddlewheels churned white
froth, Windtreader quivered as her thirty thousand-ton
bulk nuzzled against the massive fenders, and steam-driven
windlasses clattered as mooring cables went over the waiting
bollards and drew snug. Crisp orders and acknowledgments went
back and forth, and more steam hissed as it vented through the
funnels.
And then, for the first time in
almost a week, the deck under Andrin's feet was motionless once
more.
Chapter Thirty-Six
Music drifted across the pier
from a surprisingly large band, as the Ternathian imperial anthem
floated to their ears in an appropriate salute to the arriving
delegation. The imperial sunburst crackled from every mast as the
longshoremen ran out the boarding gangway which would allow
them to disembark, and Andrin's father lifted his arm from her
shoulder, then offered her the crook of his elbow, instead.
"My dear, shall we greet
Tajvana?"
She gave him a brave smile and
nodded, placing her gloved hand on his coat sleeve with careful
precision. Lady Merissa removed Andrin's bonnet, so that her dark
hair, with its strands of gold, shone in the elaborate hairstyle she'd
worked so hard to perfect. Jewel-headed pins and clasps flashed in
the afternoon sunlight, like a crown of living fire, and Andrin
thanked her softly. Then the grand princess lifted her other arm,
crooking her arm and raising her glittering white gauntlet so that
Finena rode at the level of her breast as she walked at the
Emperor's side.
When they reached the gangway,
Andrin released her father's arm to manage her skirts,
concentrating carefully on the placement of her feet. The last thing
she wanted to do was to trip and fall flat on her face in front of
Tajvana's waiting dignitaries. She made it safely to the quay,
shook out her heavy skirts, and placed her hand back on her
father's waiting arm with a serene smile that belied the tremors in
her knees.
The band was swirling and
skirling its way through the fourth verse of the imperial anthem as
she and her father stepped onto a long, purple carpet that ran from
the side of their ship to the center of the quay, where an immense
crowd waited. A veritable sea of faces peered toward them,
leaving Andrin's fingers damp inside her formal gloves. When
they'd crossed the carpet, they came to a halt before a semicircle of
elegantly attired dignitaries. One of them, a short broad man in the
elaborate robes of the Order of Bergahl, was obviously the
Seneschal of Othmaliz himself.
Andrin gazed at him thoughtfully
as Finena shifted on her gauntleted wrist. The falcon opened her
beak but didn't—quite—hiss, which surprised
Andrin, given what she could could sense of her companion's
emotions. It was obvious Finena didn't much like him, but Andrin
hoped the bird's agitation would be put down to the crowd about
them, and not to her reaction to the Seneschal. It would never do
to begin their visit here by insulting Othmaliz's ruler, yet, Finena's
reaction left Andrin wondering just what it was about the man the
falcon disliked.
She knew the history of the
Order of Bergahl, although not in the sort of detail she suddenly
wished she could command. Bergahl had been the patron deity of
Tajvana before Ternathia had arrived. He was a war god, and a god
of judgment, whose followers had been pledged to the militant
pursuit of justice. The Empire, with its long history of religious
toleration, had accepted the religious beliefs of its new capital's
people, although the emperors had insisted that civil law was now
the business of the imperial justicars, and not Bergahl's
priesthood. The Empire had made no objection to the Order
retaining its position as the administrator of religious law,
however, and with Ternathia's withdrawal from Tajvana, it had
gradually reemerged as the dominant force in secular matters, as
well. That was really all she could recall, although she also
seemed to remember reading somewhere that the Order had been
none too scrupulous about how it went about regaining its
previous power in the wake of the Empire's withdrawal.
A functionary standing in front
of the Seneschal bowed low and greeted them in fluent Ternathian.
"His Crowned Eminence, the
Seneschal of Othmaliz, bids greeting to the Emperor of Ternathia
and the Grand Princess Andrin. Be graciously welcome in this
city. It has been many fine centuries since Ternathia last stood
upon its shores."
Her father's arm turned to stone
under Andrin's hand, and she heard someone gasp behind them.
She didn't know why that phrase had drawn such a violent
reaction, but it was quite obvious her father had just been
profoundly insulted, and it had to have something to do with that
last sentence. After all, this wasn't the first time the
Emperor had visited Tajvana, and everyone knew it. For that
matter, Ternathia had withdrawn from Othmaliz less than three
hundred years ago, which scarcely qualified as "many fine
centuries." So why include the phrase in a formal greeting? What
sort of point or message could the man be trying to deliver?
She didn't have any idea, but she
didn't have to understand the insult to realize one had just been
offered. Rather than go hot, her cheeks drained white, and her eyes
went cold as gray ice as she stared through the Seneschal as
though he didn't exist. Neither she nor her father spoke, and an
uneasy stir ran through the crowd behind the Seneschal. Even the
functionary, who was doubtless repeating verbatim a speech he'd
been carefully instructed to deliver, seemed to realize his
Seneschal had blundered gravely, and his face did
darken . . . with embarrassment, not
anger.
Shamir Taje stepped in front of
Andrin and her father and cast a scathing glance at the stammering
official. The functionary's face blazed red as he tried to hold the
First Councilor's gaze. He wasn't very successful.
"You're greeting is received in
the spirit in which it was given. Please tell your Seneschal," Taje's
words could have been shards of ice, and the title came out as very
nearly an insult, "that His Imperial Majesty, Zindel chan Calirath,
Emperor of Ternathia and Warlord of the West, requires
immediate conveyance to quarters appropriate to his rank and
station.
Taje's icy tone made it clear that
he seriously doubted the Seneschal was capable of producing
either. Even the Seneschal flushed. But then he lumbered forward,
a ponderous man in jeweled robes that made him look like a
decorated egg.
"A thousand pardons for my
herald's clumsy greeting! You are warmly welcome, of course, to
the city of your ancestors. Please, my own carriage is waiting to
take you and your lovely daughter to the Great Palace. Suitable
chambers have been made ready for you there."
Andrin bristled silently. She was
no more a "lovely" daughter than the Seneschal was a polite host;
but she gave him a chilly smile and a gracious nod, answering his
offer as her mother would have, had Empress Varena been there.
"Your hospitality will, I'm sure,
be admirably suited to our needs," she said in flawless Shurkhali,
the official language of Othmaliz.
The Seneschal's eyes widened.
Then his gaze was drawn almost hypnotically to Finena, and those
same eyes nearly popped. His Adam's apple bobbed with alarm
under his ornate, jeweled collar, and Andrin's smile widened as
she realized he was afraid of her bird! She found that
thought quite comforting and hoped the Seneschal's carriage was a
deliciously cozy affair that would allow him an up-close look at
the falcon during the whole drive from quayside to palace.
"May I present Finena," she said
sweetly, still speaking in fluent Shurkhali. "She's a Ternathian
imperial peregrine falcon and my devoted and constant
companion."
The Seneschal gave her a weak
smile.
"Such a handsome and unusual
creature, my dear Grand Princess." It was obvious the man would
avoid Andrin's company with all the religious fervor of his holy
office. "Ahem. My carriage is this way."
He gestured elaborately, and
Andrin inclined her head graciously. As she did, she caught her
father's eye and realized it was twinkling wickedly, which made it
a bit difficult for her to maintain her own decorous solemnity as
they set out side by side. They had to run a gauntlet of Othmalizi
dignitaries, and Andrin did her best to memorize as many as
possible of the names and faces. Any she forgot, Lady Merissa
would be sure to remember. One of Merissa's most useful
talents—it very nearly qualified as a Talent—was an
eidetic memory. Lady Merissa never forgot anything. It
made her utterly priceless as a protocol instructor for a grand
princess of the blood. Tiresome at times, but priceless.
Beyond the dignitaries waited a
sea of common folk, including a double line of reporters—
dispatched to Tajvana from every nation on Sharona, judging by
their attire. Andrin's eyes were dazzled by flash powder long
before they reached the Seneschal's ornate carriage, which proved
to be an antique closed coach, literally dripping with gold.
"Still using the Ternathian
Imperial coach, I see," someone muttered behind Andrin's
shoulder. "You'd think he could have ponied up the money for his
own carriage, at least. He's wearing enough cash to buy
several carriages."
Andrin's lips twitched as she
recognized the voice of the Earl of Ilforth. In that moment, she
very nearly adored the pompous ass. Only Mancy Fornath would
have been so crass as to comment on the Seneschal's carriage, but
his observation gave her another insight into their
host . . . and not a flattering one.
The Seneschal started to offer
Andrin his hand to assist her into the carriage, but this time Finena
did hiss. He jerked his hand back with unceremonious speed, and
Andrin bit her tongue, composing her expression as she allowed
her father to hand her up the step into the ornate carriage, instead.
The conveyance certainly
smelled as if it were several centuries old, she thought tartly.
The leather seats, while ornately tooled, should have been replaced
at least a century ago with something
less . . . musty. She was intensely
grateful for her cloak, and she was very careful to make sure it lay
between her brocaded skirts and the odiferous, ancient leather.
Another calculated insult? she wondered. Or simply a
host unwilling to spend his own money on fancy coaches when
the imperial "leavings" were still serviceable? The coach certainly
looked grand from the outside, and given the outrageous expense
of the garments he wore, he clearly believed he deserved the
grandeur he aped, regardless of whose grandeur it had
originally been. Or how musty it had grown since they'd
abandoned it.
Her father sat beside her, and the
Seneschal took the seat opposite theirs. Other carriages conveyed
the rest of their delegation, falling into line behind the one-time
Ternathian imperial carriage as they set out with a jolt through the
streets of Tajvana. Her father began to chat easily with the
Seneschal, discussing the sights they passed. Andrin listened with
half an ear, but it was the sights themselves which absorbed the
lion's share of her interest.
Tajvana, unlike its Seneschal,
was more than worthy of that absorbed interest. The main avenues
were broad, paved with stone and lined with palm trees. Narrow
gardens ran down the center of each avenue, dividing the lanes of
traffic, which had apparently been rerouted to make way for the
official procession, and spectators lined the streets. They were
probably there to gawk at the arriving Emperor of Ternathia,
Andrin thought . . . and that was
when she received the biggest shock of the day.
Roars of welcome greeted them along every city block for
miles. Children waved ribbons in the green and gold of the
Ternathian imperial flag. Women threw armfuls of flowers. The
city's wildly enthusiastic greeting overwhelmed Andrin, who
hadn't expected anything like this outpouring of visible joy. The
Seneschal remained silent, apparently unaware of the tumult, but
his eyes were hooded and dark as he watched his own people greet
a foreigner, an Emperor whose family had ruled the Seneschal's
homeland for thousands of years.
Andrin could almost feel sorry
for him.
So many people were waving in
such wild delight that she found herself waving back. It was a
purely spontaneous response, and she was astounded when her
simple gesture caused grown women to burst into tears and toss
still more flowers her way. Uniformed police, many of them
mounted, were very much in evidence, apparently to keep the
crowd's enthusiasm from spilling over into a headlong rush
toward the carriage. As she watched, however, she noticed that not
quite everyone along the route was openly delighted. Here and
there she saw young men of military age whose glances were
hostile and suspicious. She saw older men whose eyes were cold,
without the fire of youth, but equally suspicious. She even saw a
few people carrying signs whose words she couldn't read, since
other people in the crowd invariably snatched them out of the air
almost before their owners could unfurl them.
She glanced at her father, whose
keen gaze had also noticed those scattered signs of protest, and
decided her best course would be to emulate him. He, too, was
waving graciously to the crowd through the other window of the
ancient carriage. She followed his example, continuing her own
greetings, although the first thrill of the moment had faded into a
more sober consideration of the deep currents running through
Tajvana's society. She wanted very much to find someplace private
to discuss the situation with her father and Shamir Taje. Andrin
hoped the anti-Ternathian sentiments were a distinct minority, but
her eerie vision of the Great Palace in flames drew a shiver down
her back.
Surely no one would be insane
enough to burn down a palace full of innocent people?
The child in her hoped not; the
budding imperial heiress, who was beginning to understand that anything was possible when politics came into play, wasn't
so sure. She was abruptly glad that her personal
guardsmen—and her father's—rode in the carriage
directly behind theirs, less than twenty feet away, and that the
entire security retinue would be housed in the same Palace wing
they were. She wasn't accustomed to thinking that way, but she
had a sudden depressing vision of spending the rest of her life
taking such dark factors as the very real necessity for full-time
security into consideration.
Davir Perthis stood at the
window on the seventeenth floor of the Mahkris Shipping
Corporation Building and watched the procession winding its way
through the streets of Tajvana. He'd been in this building, at this
window, for the arrival of every delegation to the impending
Conclave. He'd watched all of them rolling down the city's
avenues towards the Grand Palace. Some had been greeted by
curious crowds. One or two—like Emperor Chava's
Uromathian delegation—had been greeted with near-silent,
cold-eyed suspicion. None of them had been greeted by anything
like the roaring sea of people who had turned out to welcome
Emperor Zindel back to his family's ancient capital.
Perthis smiled, just a bit smugly,
at the thought. He never doubted that thousands would have
crowded the sidewalks no matter what he or SUNN had done. But
he did doubt very much that as many thousands would
have been there, or that the welcome would have been quite so
frenzied.
His smile faded. Whether or not
he achieved his goal remained to be
seen . . . as did the interesting
question of whether or not he'd still have a job when it was all
over. No matter how Perthis looked at it, his last few weeks of
effort were a clear violation of both SUNN's internal code of
conduct and its official editorial policy against taking sides on
political issues. Jali Kavilkan had never specifically said so, yet
Perthis strongly suspected that the executive manager knew
exactly what he was up to. That probably made Kavilkan's silence
either a good thing or a very, very bad thing, but whatever
happened to his career, Perthis had no regrets.
His smile was a distant memory
now, as he allowed the horrific images of Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr's final Voice transmission to play through a corner of his
mind. He'd convinced Kavilkan to transmit those images raw,
without the normal process of editing out the emotions and
surface thoughts of the originating Voice. Kavilkan had wavered
back and forth for an hour or two, well aware of just how horrible
that transmission would be. In the end, he'd shown the moral
courage to authorize it anyway. Not because of its titillation
value—although SUNN was no more immune to the need
to maintain high viewership than anyone else—but because
it was important for Sharona's people to know what had really
happened out there. Not to be fed some sanitized version, but to experience the terror and the anguish—and the raw,
blazing courage—of Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr.
And so, every SUNN Voicenet
subscriber, which meant effectively every Sharonian with even a
scrap of telepathic Talent, didn't just know what had happened.
They'd been there. They knew, with absolute fidelity,
exactly what Sharona faced. And they knew exactly who had fired
first. Who had shot down an unarmed man, holding out his empty
hands in an effort to open some sort of dialogue.
The print accounts had pulled no
punches, either, and Perthis was privately prepared to admit that
the print journalists as a group had actually done a better job of
analysis. But the sheer, raw, punch-in-the-gut impact of the
Voicecast transmissions were what had truly awakened the white-
hot fury sweeping across the entire explored multiverse.
And it was also the Voicecasts
which had first emphasized the need for a planet-wide government
to meet the emergency. Not some temporary lash-up designed to
deal with the immediate crisis. Not even some international
military alliance to coordinate the forces of existing nation states.
No. What Sharona needed—required—was a
functioning government. One which could give orders to
anyone's military in its own name. One with no need to debate
strategies and accept limitations because it was forced to cajole its
"allies" into cooperating with it. One with the force of law behind
its decisions. One which could speak for all
Sharonians . . . and which could wage
deadly war in their name.
Whether or not Kavilkan had
recognized what Perthis was up to, Tarlin Bolsh certainly had. The
international news division chief had chosen his "talking heads"
well, and he'd shaped his entire division's editorial policy to point
subtly in the direction Perthis wanted to go. For example, the
guest lists for all of the various Voicenet discussion shows his
division produced had seemed to somehow feature distinguished
statesmen and foreign-policy experts who all just happened to
have very favorable views of the Ternathian Empire and its current
Emperor.
Bolsh's people had also
produced both a series of print articles and a Voice documentary
on Tajvana's millennia-long history. They'd made the direct link
between the scope of the present crisis and the innumerable crises
which had already been met, coped with, and—for the most
part—hammered into submission here in Tajvana. And in
the process—quite accidentally, of course—they had
pointed out exactly which dynasty had done the hammering.
The documentary had been a
superlative historical survey. It had also been scrupulously
accurate, which had only made it even more effective for Perthis'
purposes. By now, everyone in Tajvana had either viewed the
Voicecast version, or read the print version, and been reminded of
their city's glory days under the Caliraths.
Inevitably, there'd been some
backlash. Much of it, Perthis admitted, was completely justifiable.
Tajvana—and Othmaliz—were independent once
more. They had better than two hundred years of independence and
achievements in their own names of which to be proud. The
thought of being once more submerged into someone else's
massive embrace, losing that regained individuality as part of
some vast, corporate whole, wasn't going to find a ringing
welcome in every heart.
But against that stood the
Calirath reputation for honor and responsibility. For the
administration of impartial justice, and for fairness. And Perthis
had been quietly astonished by how many Tajvanis—and
how many people of other nations—had turned in their
moment of greatest fear and uncertainty not to their own
governments, but to the Calirath legend. The life of Emperor
Halian had been recalled from the dusty archives, and with it the
memory of of his death, personally leading his army in the defense
not of his own people, or his own Empire, but of their Bolakini
allies. He and his army had been hideously outnumbered, but they
had been all that stood between a Bolakini city and the barbarian
horde which had slaughtered its way across half of Ricathia.
The Ternathian Navy had been
waiting, just offshore, prepared to whisk Halian and his troops
safely out of the path of destruction. And Halian had refused.
Refused not simply to withdraw
his army, but to have himself taken to safety. And so three quarters
of his army had died, and him with
it . . . but the walls of that Bolakini
city still stood today, and the statue of the dead Emperor lay
before the Halian Gate, exactly where his hideously hacked and
hewn body had been found on the field of battle, surrounded by
every member of his Imperial Guard.
Halian was not the only Calirath
who'd made a similar decision. Oh, there'd been the occasional
Calirath coward, even the occasional Calirath treacher or tyrant.
At least one Emperor had clearly been insane, and there were
persistent (unproven) rumors that he'd eventually been
assassinated by his own bodyguards. But there'd been remarkably
few of those over the endless, dusty centuries of the dynasty, and
people had remembered that, too. Two hundred and thirty years of
freely granted independence had not been long enough to erase the
memory of millennia of just government and protection,
and the groundswell not just here in Tajvana, but all across
Sharona, was building steadily, exactly as Perthis had hoped.
No doubt that explained why the
Seneschal had made such an unmitigated ass out of himself,
Perthis thought with a wry grin. He'd never thought much of the
Seneschal at the best of times, and the man's current conduct had
knocked any respect Perthis might have had for him right on the
head. Obviously, he was terrified by the notion that the Caliraths
might, indeed, return to Tajvana—and not, Perthis
suspected, simply because of the power and authority he would
lose if they did. There'd been rumors for quite some time of
serious abuses of office on the current Seneschal's part. Most
probably, those rumors represented only the tip of the reality's
iceberg, and the Seneschal must be sweating bullets at the thought
of what an impartial investigation of his conduct as the Othmalizi
head of state might reveal.
It was hard to think of anything
the Seneschal could have done to improve his case, but the course
he'd adopted had done exactly the reverse. Perthis had heard about
the odd greeting the Seneschal's herald had
produced . . . and Taje's response to
it. He had no idea what that had all been about, but he fully
intended to find out.
What mattered at the moment,
however, was that everyone knew that whether they'd
understood the subtext or not, the Seneschal had offered some
deep and personal insult to the Emperor of Ternathia upon his
arrival. Zindel's response to that insult (or, perhaps, his lack of response) had only underscored the pettiness and stupidity of
the man who'd offered it. And, Perthis grin turned into a broad
smile, Grand Princess Andrin's response—like her
falcon's—had been magnificent.
Perthis had never seen the grand
princess with his own eyes before. In fact, he'd discovered that
there was remarkably little press coverage of Andrin or either of
her younger sisters. All he'd really known about her was that she
was about seventeen years old, tall, reputed to be both quiet and
intelligent, and that she had already demonstrated that she
possessed the Calirath Talent.
He hadn't been prepared for the
perfectly poised, elegantly groomed, ice-eyed young woman who
had inspected the rotund, squat, undeniably oily Seneschal
as if he were some particularly loathsome slug she'd discovered on
the sole of her sandal. She'd been
perfect—perfect—standing there like a tall,
slender statue of ivory flame, crowned in the fiery sun-glitter of
her jeweled hair, and the Seneschal's obvious terror of her falcon
had only made it better. Her father had made the Seneschal look
petty; she'd made him look ridiculous, and that was far, far
more deadly.
Perthis raised one hand in salute
to the raven-haired young woman waving from the window of the
hideously overdone, antique carriage rolling past below him. He
hadn't counted on her, but he'd already set his research staff to
work on her. She might just prove almost as effective for his
purposes as her father.
Not, Perthis' smile vanished, that
she was likely to thank him for it once she realized what he'd
actually done to her and her family.
The approach to the Great Palace
was lined with cheering crowds all the way to the ornate palace
gates, which were guarded by men in Othmalizi uniform. They
carried the same Model 10 as the Ternathian Army, something
Andrin was proud of herself for recognizing. Her father had not
allowed her to skip that portion of her education, just because she
wouldn't be serving in Ternathia's armed forces.
The officers in charge of the
guard details saluted sharply as the Seneschal's carriage passed
through the gates, and their men presented arms crisply, but there
was a taut professionalism under that military theater. Their eyes
were sharp and intense, obviously screening the passengers in each
of the carriages behind them in the long procession, as well.
Andrin found that rather reassuring as she thought of the
protesters she'd seen along the way.
The palace's drive ran down a
short avenue of palm trees, then ended in a circular space before
the glittering building's ornate main doors. Those doors, Andrin
knew, were panels of solid, burnished silver, more than twice her
father's impressive height. Her study of the Grand Palace's history
had already told her that, but nothing could have prepared her for
the reality of their mirror-bright magnificence, and she swallowed
a silent gasp of amazed delight as she finally beheld them with her
own eyes.
If the Emperor was particularly
impressed by the sight, he gave no sign of it. He simply exited the
carriage first and handed her down. Then he stepped courteously
aside for the Seneschal, and waited for their host to precede them
across the stone-paved drive to the main steps. Those steps were
of polished white marble, lined by liveried servants who bowed or
curtsied nearly to the ground as they passed.
The enormous doors swung
open as they approached. Each panel was a bas relief
masterwork, illustrating key scenes of Ternathian history that
Andrin recognized at a glance. She lifted the hem of her skirts as
she stepped across the raised threshold—a curious
architectural feature she'd never seen before—then paused
as a servant bowed low and slipped her cloak from her shoulders.
Other servants were taking the coats and cloaks of other members
of their delegation, which followed discreetly behind, and Andrin
stepped forward once again. Her footsteps clicked on the marble
floors, and she managed to keep her lips closed against a powerful
urge to gape.
It wasn't easy. The Great Palace
put Hawkwing to shame.
Andrin had never witnessed such
opulence in her life. The huge entry hall alone was stunning, a
glittering marble room filled with the finest art treasures of
Sharona. She'd seen illustrations of at least half the marble and
bronze statues they passed along the way in textbooks on art
history and the masterworks of antiquity, but she didn't have time
to admire them the way she wanted to. There was too much to do,
and too many people to see, and she forced her attention back to
the task at hand.
Othmalizi courtiers bowed low
as they passed. Great ladies in gowns as elaborate as Andrin's
curtsied, graceful as flowers and jeweled more splendidly than
most reigning kings and queens. It was a daunting experience for
any seventeen-year-old, but Andrin refuse to let anyone see that.
And it helped enormously, she discovered, that—due
entirely to Lady Merissa's efforts—she could rest secure in
the knowledge that her own attire at least matched that of the
court ladies, while Finena's silver feathers shone as brightly as any
jewels in the sunlight streaming through tall windows and
skylights.
And my great-grandmothers lived in these rooms,
she found herself thinking again and again as they passed from
one stunning chamber to another. She quickly lost track of the
rooms they'd crossed, a seemingly endless maze of corridors and
vast, echoing chambers. It seemed to go on forever, but they
finally ended their journey at last in what was clearly an audience
hall. One which was filled at the moment with a glittering array of
people whose widely varying skin and hair color—not to
mention their garments—proclaimed them to be official
delegates to the pending Conclave.
Andrin stiffened internally at the
sight and scalding anger flared through her. Their host had brought
them straight from the docks to an official function, without even
offering them the chance to rest or wash the salt from their skin,
or even the slightest warning that this reception awaited them.
Another calculated insult? Or
just gross insensitivity?
Then another thought flickered
through her anger. Had these people already been assembled here
for some other event? Or had everybody come to this room
specifically to greet her father's arrival? She didn't know of any
discreet way to find out, and there was little time to think about it
as a waiting functionary called out their names in a piercing voice.
"His Crowned Eminence, the
Seneschal of Othmaliz! His Imperial Majesty, Zindel chan
Calirath, Emperor of Ternathia! Her Imperial Highness, Grand
Princess Andrin of Ternathia!"
Polite applause greeted them,
and Andrin gave the assembled crowd a brief, decorous courtesy,
carefully balancing Finena on her arm. Her father gave an equally
brief bow, and a ripple of conversation ran through the room,
much of it focused on the falcon riding her arm. And then the
inevitable round of introductions and greetings began.
The first face Andrin saw
belonged to a Uromathian prince, several years her senior. The
young man's almond eyes had gone wide with stunned envy and
shock when he saw that Finena wore neither hood nor jesses.
Another Uromathian prince standing beside him was gasping
something to his older companion, but she wasn't close
enough—or sufficiently fluent and Uromathian,
yet—to catch what he was saying.
Unlike Finena, the falcons both
princes carried wore jeweled and tasseled hoods. Strong leather
jesses bound each bird's taloned feet to its owner's gloved wrist,
and Andrin flicked a cool glance across the bound birds and
inclined her head to the princes as she swept past on her father's
arm. Another Uromathian prince farther down the line caught her
glance and startled her by grinning and sweeping an ornate bow to
her, balancing his own falcon carefully on one wrist. He was not a
handsome young man, but his eyes sparkled with open delight as
he took in the stunned gazes of his fellow Uromathians.
Andrin committed his face to
memory, determined to find out who he was, where he came from,
and why he was so pleased by his peers' dismay. If she asked Lady
Merissa—and she fully intended to do so—her
protocol instructor would doubtless have his name, rank, family
pedigree, and net worth to the last decimal place by the time they
sat down to supper tonight.
But first they had to endure an
endless receiving line. It was rapidly apparent that at least two
thirds of the delegations had already arrived, and each member of
every single delegation was waiting with bated breath to meet the
Emperor of Ternathia and his overly tall daughter. And she
was overly tall, she thought glumly. In fact, she towered over
most of the men and all the ladies, until the Farnalian
delegation reached them, at which point she wanted to throw her
arms around the Dowager Empress of Farnalia with a gasp of pure
thanks for standing taller than she did. The elegant, silver-haired
Dowager Empress flashed a conspiratorial smile as Andrin greeted
her formally, then dropped a wink that cheered the girl immensely.
"You probably don't remember
me, my dear," the Empress said, her voice quiet but surprisingly
deep with emotion. "You were only a baby the last time I was in
Estafel, but your grandmother and I were dear friends as girls. I
stood beside her at her wedding, and she stood with me at mine.
You must come and see me at dinner this evening."
"Grandmama has spoken often
of you," Andrin replied, smiling in genuine delight. "I should
adore a chance to visit with you, at dinner or any time at all."
"You're kind to humor an old
lady. I'll see you this evening." The Empress pressed a socially
correct kiss to her cheek, but her hand was warm and strong when
she gripped Andrin's fingers.
The only other good thing to
come out of that interminable receiving line was the chance to
discover the name of the Uromathian prince with the infectious
grin. When he reached Andrin and her father, she
discovered—to her secret delight—that while he
might be Uromathian by blood, he was no subject of Emperor
Chava.
"Junni Fai Yujin, King of
Eniath, and Crown Prince Howan Fai Goutin," the Othmalizi
functionary handling the introductions intoned.
Like many of the semi-nomadic
people he ruled, Junni Fai Yujin was a large man for someone of
Uromathian blood. He was shorter than Andrin, but only by half a
head, and his shoulders were actually broader than any part of her.
That was a distinct first for any of the men she'd so far met from
the other Uromathian delegations, and he bowed over her hand
with fluid grace, despite his size. He spoke no Ternathian, and her
Uromathian wasn't up to the radically different dialect spoken in
Eniath, which shared almost as much linguistic heritage with
Arpathian as it did with Uromathian.
She curtsied deeply, indicating
her respect for his kingdom and his people—and for their
renown as falconers. To her amusement, the king was staring at
Finena more rapturously than he was at her, and she angled her
arm to bring the white-winged falcon to a better viewing angle.
"Finena," she said softly,
stroking the glossy white feathers.
"Finena," the King breathed in
response. He glanced up at her, his dark eyes filled with questions
he lacked the words to ask. Then he turned to his son and rattled
off something Andrin couldn't begin to catch. Crown Prince
Howan Fai Goutin, whose family name—like those of all
men of Uromathian dissent—was traced through the middle
name, not the last, spoke in halting Ternathian.
"Name of silver one
is . . ." he paused a moment, mentally
translating. "What for meaning?"
"What does her name mean?
"Please?" he nodded.
"White Fire," she said, and
Prince Howan's eyes glowed.
"Ahhhhh . . ."
The sound was almost reverent, and then the prince turned and
spoke formally to his father. Andrin caught three whole words of
the rapid exchange. Then King Junni ask another question, which
Howan relayed.
"Please, why Finena no corded?"
Andrin glanced at the jesses on
both the King's falcon and Prince Howan's. They were magnificent
birds, and she longed to see both of them flying unhindered
through the bright sky as free as Finena herself. Then she looked
up and met Prince Howan's gaze for a moment before she turned
and spoke directly to King Junni himself.
"Does one chain the wind?" she
asked simply. "Finena is free. She stays for love of Andrin."
Prince Howan hissed softly.
When Andrin risked a swift glance in his direction, she found not
the censure or displeasure she'd half-expected to see, but a look of
such respect it stunned her. He spoke briefly to his father, and
King Junni made a sound almost precisely like his son's. Then he
lifted Andrin's free hand and drew her fingers forward, resting
them briefly against his own heart. He turned to her father, still
holding her hand, and bowed with deep formality. Then he spoke
again, and prince Howan once again translated.
"My father says Ternathia grows
wise daughters. He must talk with you. Soon. Before Conclave."
"Ternathia is honored." Her
father bowed. "It will be my pleasure to speak with Eniath,
whenever King Junni Fai Yujin chooses."
King Junni bowed again, still
with that deep formality, and departed with great dignity. The
crown prince gave Andrin a piercing glance and an equally formal
bow, then followed his father down the receiving line, and Zindel
leaned close to stroke Finena's wings.
"Well done, indeed, 'Drin," he
murmured in a low tone, for her ears alone. "That was as nice a
piece of diplomacy as I've seen in many a year. I need Eniath's
support in Conclave, and I wasn't sure I could get it. Now there's
at least a piece of common ground—and mutual
respect—to build from."
She went nearly giddy with
pleasure and wanted to give him a radiant smile, but contented
herself with a small upturn of her lips, acutely conscious of the
crowd of people watching her every move. Controlling her face
was difficult, but she managed it, and his eyes lit with an approval
that made her feel as if her feet were floating ten inches above the
marble floor.
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Shaylar and Jathmar sat in their
quarters in Fort Wyvern, talking quietly with Gadrial, and listened
to the wind.
It was dying down at last, and
they were glad. The thunderstorms on the far side of the portal had
raged with only occasional periods of relative calm for better than
twenty-four hours after their arrival here, and the violent weather
seemed to have spread to this side. At least, that was what it had
felt like for the next two days, as rain and strong winds pummeled
Fort Wyvern. None of the transport dragon pilots had been at all
happy about the prospect of taking off under such conditions, and
Jasak had decided not to push the issue. Instead, they'd settled
down to wait out the weather on both sides of the portal
before proceeding.
It had not been a comfortable
wait. Five hundred Grantyl, Fort Wyvern's commanding officer,
was very different from Five Hundred Klian. There'd been none of
the sympathy, none of the awareness that what had happened
certainly wasn't their fault, that they'd seen in Klian. Instead,
there'd been suspicion, hostility, and more than a little fear. It had
been obvious to Shaylar that Grantyl would have been far more
comfortable locking them up in a dungeon somewhere, and
preferably losing the key.
The fact that he hadn't gone
ahead and done exactly that underscored the accuracy of what
Jasak and Gadrial had told them about the institution of
shardon. Shaylar had been too far away to catch more than a
few fragments of the "discussion" between Jasak and Grantyl, but
she hadn't needed her Talent to recognize how
disgruntled—and angry—Grantyl had been. Yet
despite his anger, and despite the fact that he outranked Jasak
substantially, the five hundred hadn't even attempted to put them
into close confinement. He'd insisted on stationing sentries
outside their quarters, but aside from that, they'd been treated
almost as guests. Not welcome guests, perhaps, but still
guests.
"You know," she said now to
Gadrial, "I don't think I'd truly realized—not deep down
inside—just how lucky we are that Jasak is basically a
decent man."
Jathmar stirred, sitting on the
bed at her side, and she reached out and took his hand. Her
husband's attitude towards Jasak remained far more ambivalent
than her own.
"I don't think this fort's
commander," Shaylar went on, "was all that happy about not
throwing us into chains the instant we got here."
"You're right, Grantyl did want
to lock you up in the brig beside vos Hoven," Gadrial said. "But
he's an Andaran himself, which didn't leave him much choice but
to accept Jasak's position. Of course," she smiled thinly, "he also
knows who Jasak's father is, which may have had a little
something to do with it."
"I'll settle for that," Jathmar said
with a slightly grim answering smile.
"So would I, in your place."
Gadrial nodded, but there was an edge of unhappiness, or concern,
perhaps, in her tone, and Shaylar arched her eyebrows.
"You don't seem entirely
satisfied about something," she observed, and Gadrial grimaced.
"It's just that I'm not too happy
about the commander of the next fort," she admitted.
"Why?" Jathmar demanded, his
eyes suddenly intent.
"Two Thousand mul Gurthak
most definitely isn't Andaran. In fact, he's a Mythalan, and
although he hasn't chosen to flaunt it, he comes from a fairly
prominent shakira clan-line. He's also a long way away
from any authority which might overrule
him . . . or punish him. Frankly, if
anyone's likely to try to violate Jasak's role as your
baranal, it's going to be a Mythalan."
"Why do you and Jasak hate
Mythalans so much?" Shaylar asked. Gadrial simply looked at her,
and Shaylar shrugged. "You said Magister Halathyn was a
Mythalan, and from what I saw and sensed about him, he was a
wonderful man. But I've never heard you or Jasak say a positive
thing about any other Mythalan, aside from Sendahli. And that
other soldier of Jasak's—that vos Hoven—almost
sets himself on fire with his own hatred every time he looks at
Jasak."
"It's a long, complicated
situation," Gadrial said slowly. "And I take the point you're trying
to make. In fact, it's probably true that the mere fact that mul
Gurthak is Mythalan would be enough to make
me . . . wary of him. But if the
question you're really asking is whether or not our opinions of
Mythal and its society are warranted, you might think about the
fact that Jasak and I come from extremely different
backgrounds . . . and neither of us
can stomach the way Mythalans think societies should work."
"Why?" Jathmar asked, and
Gadrial sighed.
"In our universe,
Mythal—what you call Ricathia—has the oldest
civilization of any of our major cultures. It's also where almost all
of the techniques for handling magic, tapping the energy field,
were first worked out. A lot of that development stemmed from
pure trial and error in the early days, but Mythalans have been
studying magic for a long time, and they began working
out the theory behind those early brute force applications well
over two thousand years ago. The true scientific method only
evolved in the last few hundred years, but most of their original
theoretical work has stood up extremely well. Even today, they
dominate in the field of theoretical sorcery. They're not as good at
devising practical applications of their own research as, say, my
own people are, but the most prestigious of all of the academies
of magic is still the Mythal Falls Academy, where Magister
Halathyn used to teach."
Pain flickered through the
magister's dark eyes. More pain than mentioning Halathyn usually
caused her, Shaylar thought. But whatever its cause, she brushed it
off quickly, almost angrily, and continued in that same level tone.
"No one—especially a
magister like me—can fail to respect the work Mythal Falls
has carried out over the centuries. But it's unfortunately true that
Mythal developed a very different society from the rest of Arcana,
one based almost entirely on whether or not the members of that
society are Gifted. In fact, I've often thought that they developed
their society as a result of their single-minded focus on the
principles of magic.
"If you're Mythalan and Gifted,
then you belong to the shakira caste, or perhaps to the
multhari caste; if you aren't Gifted, then you belong to the
garthan caste. There are some exceptions, but not very many."
"Castes?" Shaylar frowned at the
totally alien word, and Gadrial sighed.
"The best way to think of it is
that the Mythalans divide their society into three distinct groups,
what we call 'castes,' each of which have a specific place. The
relationships between castes—and what's permissible
behavior within a caste—are defined by ironbound
tradition and, in most cases, statutory law, as well. For the most
part, the caste you belong to—shakira, multhari, or
garthan—depends on whether or not you were born
Gifted, and there's nothing you can do about that.
"As I say, the shakira are
the Gifted caste. They're the small percentage of the total
population, no more than twenty percent or so, at best, who form
the tip of the social pyramid. They control the wealth and political
power of the entire society, and they think of themselves as
extremely enlightened because they practice a form of direct
democracy no other Arcanan nation practices. Of course, the only
people who get to vote are members of the shakira and
traditional multhari families. That's one reason they can
use direct democracy; they've got so few voters that the system
actually works.
"Next in power and prestige after
the shakira are the multhari, the traditional
Mythalan military caste. You might think of them as the Mythalan
equivalent of Andarans, although there are tremendous differences
between them. Not least because one of the multhari's
primary responsibilities is to keep the garthan's neck
firmly under the shakira's heel. Some of the multhari
—many of them, in fact—are also shakira, and the enlisted ranks of the Mythalan military have always
contained quite a lot of garthan, although all of its officers
are multhari.
"In Mythal, most garthan
who end up in the army are conscripts. Traditionally, the
shakira who entered the army could usually expect to attain
high rank, especially if their families were also part of the
traditional multhari hierarchy. Since the creation of the
Union, there isn't any official Mythalan Army these days, and the
integration of the multhari into the Union armed forces
hasn't always gone smoothly. They've tended to carry a lot of that
traditional shakira sense of superiority and automatic
privilege around with them, and they seem to resent the fact that
they have to compete with the non-Gifted—and non-
Mythalans—on an equal basis for promotion. Their
resentment when they don't get it has had a tendency to
be . . . fairly evident, let's say, and
that's created a lot of friction between them and, say, Andaran or
Ransaran personnel.
"For the last forty years or so,
Mythal appears to have been trying to overcome some of those
problems. More multhari have been attending the Army
Academy at Garth Showma before joining the army, which appears
to have smoothed down at least some of the rough edges. For that
matter, some of the younger shakira from outside the
multhari have actually been signing up for at least a tour or
two in the enlisted ranks. They're being encouraged to do so by
their caste-lords, on the grounds that whether their caste agrees
with the rest of us or not, they're stuck with the terms of the
Accords, and they have to learn to get along with those restrictions
if they ever want to reduce the traditional friction between their
own people and the rest of us.
"It's at least a pragmatic idea,"
Gadrial admitted a bit grudgingly, "and I suppose they may
actually be sincere. Unfortunately, their 'solution' doesn't come
without problems of its own. For example, the soldier you were
talking about, Shaylar—vos Hoven—belongs to the
shakira. That's what the 'vos' in his name indicates. But
Sendahli belongs to the garthan caste. He fled Mythal and
enlisted in the Union Army as a way to escape the limited,
second-class future which was all he could expect at home. And
the reason vos Hoven is under arrest is that Jasak caught him
brutally beating Sendahli to extort Sendahli's pay out of him."
Jathmar frowned deeply and
quickly. He opened his mouth, but before he could say anything,
Gadrial continued.
"The reason he was doing
that—and the reason Sendahli was letting him do
that, despite the fact that he could have broken vos Hoven's neck
any time he wanted to—is that under Mythalan custom and
law, garthan have no legal rights in any
dispute with a shakira. They can't even testify in court
against a shakira defendant. Up until the formation of the
Union of Arcana, garthan were legally property. They were
required to belong to someone from the shakira caste, and
they were denied the right to own property, the right to vote, or the
right to choose their own trades and professions . . or to any
income they might have earned from that trade or profession. In
many cases, they were denied even the right to choose who they
married, and even today, Gifted children of garthan parents
are taken from their birthparents by the courts and placed for
adoption by shakira families."
"That's barbaric!"
Shaylar burst out, and Gadrial nodded.
"That's exactly what it is," she
agreed grimly. "I'm Ransaran. My people believe in the
fundamental equality of all human beings. We're the dangerous,
humanistic, liberal part of the Union, and there's been a
fundamental hostility, almost a hatred, between us and the
Mythalans for as long as anyone can remember on either side.
Jasak, on the other hand, is an Andaran, and they're as different
from us as the Mythalans are. Their entire culture is bound up in
concepts of mutual obligation and duty, of responsibilities that
define who they are. They believe in the rights of the individual,
but they also believe that those rights have to be earned by meeting
all of those obligations and responsibilities, and they have no
sympathy for anyone who fails to measure up to their standards of
honor.
"Yet they despise the Mythalans
as much as we Ransarans do, because of the Mythalan attitude
towards the garthan—that the mere fact that people
like Sendahli aren't Gifted makes them less than human in the eyes
of their own rulers. It turns them into something which exists
solely for the convenience of their natural superiors, the
shakira. If an Andaran like Jasak considered the non-Gifted as
truly inferior—which he never would—his cultural
obligation would be to protect and defend them, not to abuse
them. When he came across vos Hoven beating Sendahli, he
ordered vos Hoven off . . . and vos
Hoven tried to kill him."
Jathmar shook his head in a
combination of dismay and disbelief, and Gadrial smiled
humorlessly.
"I'm sure there are people back
home in Sharona you wouldn't exactly be proud to be associated
with, Jathmar. Maybe not anyone as bad as the Mythalans, but I
can't imagine your people are that different from ours, Talent or
no. Unfortunately, we Ransarans and Andarans had no choice but
to include Mythal in the Union. Partly, because whether we like
them or not they do live on the same planet we do, which I
suppose gives them at least some inherent right to share in the
exploitation of the portals. But, frankly, mostly because when the
first portal appeared on Arcana, it sparked the most terrible war in
our history. The weapons that were developed were devastating,
so terrible we barely managed to stop short of our own complete
destruction."
Jathmar and Shaylar froze, their
faces suddenly tight with fear.
"Andara and Ransar realized the
situation was about to spin totally out of control," Gadrial
continued grimly. "We proposed the creation of the Union
as a world-government to ensure that every Arcanan nation had the
same opportunities to profit from the existence of the portals, and
the Andarans supported us strongly. It was only our united front
which forced Mythal to accept the proposal, and the
Mythalans held out for a much greater degree of local
autonomy—essentially the protection of their own social
system within their own territory—than any of the rest of us
wanted to give them. Unfortunately, they'd been the leading
researchers for the weapons which had been used in the Portal
Wars. They had more of them them, and better ones, than the rest
of us, and they refused to destroy them unless we accepted their
terms in that regard."
Shaylar's face was white as she
absorbed the implications of magical weapons capable of
destroying an entire planet's civilization. Jathmar looked equally
horrified, and Gadrial faced them squarely.
"I know what you're afraid of,
and I don't blame you. But I will tell you there are severe
limitations on even the most deadly weapon, when it's applied to
inter-universal warfare. For one thing, no spell can be cast
through a portal, so you'd still have to physically assault each
portal and establish a bridgehead on the other side before you
could deploy any sorcerous weapon. That wasn't a factor in the
Portal Wars, because they were fought entirely on Arcana, over
who'd end up with possession of the portal in the first place.
"For a second thing, those
weapons were outlawed two hundred years ago. As part of the
Union Accords, all signatories were required to destroy all
weapons of mass destruction and the spellware and research which
had supported them. Several other particularly nasty spells were
outlawed at the same time, and an inspection process was set up to
ensure that there were no holdouts and that no one was doing
fresh research in the proscribed areas."
"But if things get nasty enough,
your people could always change the law, couldn't they?"
"Yes, Jathmar, we could,"
Gadrial said very, very quietly. "And the people most likely to
push for doing just that are going to be the Mythalans. They're
xenophobic to an almost crippling degree, even with their fellow
Arcanans. I don't even want to think about how they're going to
react when they find out about your people. Especially," she
smiled wanly, "because they're going to think they're looking at an
entire worldwide civilization of Ransarans."
Shaylar and Jathmar looked at
one another, and Gadrial leaned forward in her chair to take
Shaylar's hand. Shaylar's eyes stung with tears as she realized the
other woman was deliberately giving her the opportunity to read
her emotions, her honesty.
"The Andarans and Ransarans
would never stand for the resurrection of those hideous weapons,"
she said flatly. "Not unless your people were foolish enough to
convince us that our only other alternative was our own complete
destruction. From what I've seen of the two of you, I don't think
that's ever going to happen. I can't promise that, obviously, but I
truly, truly believe it."
She
decided—again—not to mention the fact that she'd
already received specific instructions from mul Gurthak to
program all available data on the Fallen Timbers cluster into the
other three prototypes of the portal detector she and Halathyn had
come out here to field test. She could think of only one reason he
might want those, and while she had to agree, however
unwillingly, with the logic, she doubted that Shaylar or Jathmar
would find the news reassuring.
"Still, you need to be aware that
Mythalans share neither my own people's belief in the inherent
rights of the individual—especially not of non-Gifted
individuals—nor (to anyone outside their own caste, at
least) Jasak's people's ironclad belief in honor obligations and an
individual's overriding obligation to meet them. You need to be
careful—very careful—what you say to any of them,
and you have to be aware that if one of them thinks he sees an
opportunity to get around Jasak's protection, he may well try to
seize it.
"That's the bad news. The
good news is that seventy or eighty percent of the entire
Arcanan army is Andaran, just like Five Hundred Grantyl. Even if
they don't like what Jasak's done, they'll respect it, and they won't
like it one bit if some Mythalan dishonors all of Andara by
harming you in any way."
Shaylar thought about that
conversation three days later as their transport dragon circled
above yet another fortress. This one was even bigger than Fort
Wyvern, and unless she was very much mistaken, it lay in what
would have been east Farnalia back home in Sharona. Endless
ocean waves of coniferous forest spread out in every direction,
and the flight over the sharp-spined mountains between Fort
Wyvern's portal and this new fort—Fort Talon—had
been just as freezingly cold as Jasak had warned them that it
would be.
It had also required them to fly
so high that the dragon's pilot had issued each of his passengers a
small cylinder of oxygen attached by a tube to a tightfitting mask
which had covered mouth and nose. Shaylar had huddled down in
her thick, fur-lined flying garments and leaned against Jathmar's
back as the dragon carried them through the ice-cold, crystal-clear
gulfs of the heavens. Despite her protective clothing (and another
one of those unnatural seeming little spells which had actually
heated her furs), she'd never been so cold—nor felt so far
from Shurkhal's beloved, sunstruck warmth—in her entire
life, and she'd been almost prayerfully thankful when they landed
on the western side of those towering mountains.
The total flight from Fort
Wyvern had taken almost a full three days. She and Jathmar had
been rather relieved to realize there were some real physical
constraints on the Arcanans' uncanny capabilities. Dragons could
fly at preposterous speeds, but their endurance clearly wasn't
unlimited. They appeared to be capable of perhaps a thousand
miles or a bit more in a single day, but the greater exertion of
crossing those high mountains had taken its toll. Their dragon had
required additional rest after they finally landed, and Jasak and the
pilot had agreed to take an extra day at the small, bare-bones
dragonfield.
But they were here at last,
descending through a drizzling rain towards their next destination.
Their next interim destination, she reminded herself
grimly, smearing moisture away as she wiped her protective
goggles and recalled what Gadrial had said about the distance
between them and New Arcana.
Fort Talon's portal rose out of
the forests behind it. It was larger than Fort Wyvern's, and the
terrain on the other side of it looked like the flat sweep of
Jathmar's native New Ternath's midwestern plains. She could see a
small river, but it was late night on the far side, and she didn't have
much time to consider details before the dragon planed gracefully
down. She was still trying to get used to how suddenly and
abruptly the huge beasts decelerated when they landed, and her
arms tightened around Jathmar's waist as they hit the ground.
Then they were down—
once again in one piece—and she drew a huge breath of
relief.
I'm going to have to get over this fear of landing, she told
herself firmly. Of course, given how far we've got to go, I
should have plenty of time for it.
The thought made her chuckle
sourly, and then they were once again climbing down for yet
another brief stay.
Aside from her, Jathmar, Jasak,
and Gadrial, they were accompanied only by Jugthar Sendahli,
Otwal Threbuch, Javelin Shulthan, and Bok vos Hoven. That left a
lot of unused passenger space aboard the dragon, and Shaylar was
just as happy that it did. vos Hoven was a brooding, hate-filled
presence, and she was relieved that there was enough room for
him to be kept well away from her and Jathmar. Not that the
Mythalan was likely to pose much of a threat, given his manacles
and the eagle eye Threbuch kept trained upon him. Shaylar was
reasonably certain that nothing would have pleased Threbuch
more than for vos Hoven to try something which, regrettably,
ended up with the prisoner plunging several thousand feet to his
doom after a brief, desperate struggle with his guard. From vos
Hoven's attitude, he probably thought the same thing.
A uniformed reception
committee waited for them on the edge of the dragonfield hacked
out of the virgin forest which rose like green walls around it.
None of them were Mythalans, and all of them looked remarkably
young, certainly not much older than Jasak. Apparently the fort's
commander couldn't be bothered to greet the new arrivals in
person, and she saw what looked like a hint of irritation far back
in Jasak's eyes.
"Hundred Olderhan," their
baranal said, with one of his people's crisp, clenched-fist
salutes, "en route to New Arcana with Magister Kelbryan
and party."
"Commander of One Hundred
Neshok," the officer Jasak had greeted responded in a cool voice.
"You're late, Olderhan. Five Hundred Klian's hummer message
told us to expect you three days ago."
"We had a weather delay at Fort
Wyvern," Jasak replied in a level voice. "And the pilot and I agreed
that the dragon needed some extra rest after clearing the
mountains."
"I see." Neshok's tone made it
perfectly clear he did nothing of the sort, Shaylar thought, holding
Jathmar's hand tightly. The Fort Wyvern hundred gazed at them for
a second or two, then looked back at Jasak.
"The Commander of Two
Thousand will see you shortly. Follow me."
Neshok turned on his bootheel
and started toward the fort without another word.
"If there'd been any more warmth
in that greeting," Shaylar murmured to Jathmar in Shurkhali, "the
air would've frozen solid."
"I'd say that was a bit of an
understatement," Jathmar agreed. "And frankly, after what Gadrial
told us about this mul Gurthak, I find that disturbing. I hope she
was right about how hard it would be for anyone to take us out of
Jasak's custody!"
"Yes. Mother Marthea, yes,"
Shaylar replied fervently, but her attention wasn't on Neshok. She
was looking at two men who stood well back in the little crowd
beside the hard-packed dirt road leading from the dragonfield to
the fort's gates. Most of the men in that crowd were soldiers, but
not the two who'd drawn her attention. They stood out because
they weren't in uniform, and because they were also older than the
soldiers standing around them.
Jathmar followed her eyes and
frowned.
"Wonder who they are?" he
muttered under his breath.
"So do I." The edge in Shaylar's
voice surprised Jathmar. She'd wrapped both arms around herself
as though still warding off the chill of flying across the
mountains, and her reaction worried him.
He turned his attention back to
the two unknowns. Both were in their forties or fifties, at a glance,
and although Jathmar knew nothing of Arcanan fashions, their
clothing was clearly made of high-quality material. It looked
custom-tailored, too. That kind of garment wasn't what he'd
expected to see in a frontier fort, and they looked even more out
of place than he felt.
According to Jasak and Gadrial,
Arcana's exploration of virgin universes was conducted by the
military. So who were these two civilians? And what were they
doing out here among the trees, mosquitos, and swamps, wearing
tailored garments made of what looked like silk?
Government functionaries of
some kind, perhaps. Or could they be independent businessmen
intent on opening trade routes? He knew there wasn't much point
in speculating in the dark, but something about them compelled
his curiosity. There was a hardness in their eyes, or perhaps a
hooded look of speculation, that made him intensely
uncomfortable. He'd grown used to seeing fear, or at least anxiety,
as the rumors of the Sharonians' "demonic weapons" traveled up
the transit chain ahead of them. But these men weren't looking at
Shaylar and him fearfully. There was something measuring,
watchful . . . calculating about them.
He couldn't put his mental finger
on just what it was about them that bothered him any more
accurately than that, but it was enough to raise his hackles, and he
put his arm around Shaylar as they walked past the silently
watching civilians.
Neshok led them up the road
toward the new fort, and Jathmar abruptly found the two civilians
displaced from the forefront of his concerns. The landing field was
literally ringed with dragons. There were dozens—possibly
even scores—of the beasts, and their path led them directly
past half a dozen of them.
Skyfang, the dragon which had
transported them here from Fort Wyvern, had shown no sign of
Windclaw's ferociously hostile initial reaction to Shaylar. Jathmar
had concluded that she'd been right in her suspicion that it was her
attempt to use her Voice which had set the original transport
dragon off. Now, as they headed across in front of six of
them, he found himself hoping fervently that they'd both been
correct after all.
Most of the beasts ignored them
completely, but one of them raised its head abruptly. The
predominately crimson and gold beast was smaller than any of the
dragons Jathmar had previously seen, but that scarcely made it
tiny. Its head was still longer than his body, much less Shaylar's,
and the spikes protecting its throat and head were sharper looking,
and proportionately longer, than Windclaw's had been.
It cocked its head, like some
huge falcon, turning to fix its knife-sharp gaze upon Shaylar, and
its mouth opened, showing carnivore fangs the size of serving
platters and a long, shockingly red forked tongue. Then its forefeet
thrust at the rain-slick ground, shoving it half-upright, and it
hissed like a Trans-Temporal Express locomotive venting steam.
Shaylar went white. She closed
her eyes, trembling, and Jathmar felt her desperate effort to
completely close down any hint of Talent. Even the marriage bond
was abruptly muted, almost impossible to feel, and his arm
tightened around her.
The dragon's reaction hadn't
escaped Jasak or Gadrial. As if they'd been the telepaths,
the two of them moved as one, in perfect coordination, to
interpose their own bodies between the clearly agitated beast and
Shaylar. And Gadrial, Jatham realized with sudden shock was
abruptly outlined by a literal corona of light. Fire seemed to
crackle in midair, three inches from her skin, her hands rose in an
odd, intensely graceful posture which reminded him of some sort
of martial artist, and he felt a sudden, ominous, ozone-breathing
pressure radiating from her. It was like knowing he was standing
directly in the path of a lightning bolt, a corner of his mind
gibbered, and for the first time since they'd met, he was actually
afraid of her.
Neshok, on the other hand, didn't
even seem to have noticed. He'd halted, but he was staring with
obvious perplexity—and what looked like quickly growing
suspicion—back and forth between the dragon and the two
Sharonians, not at Jasik or Gadrial.
"What—?" he began, but
Jasak overrode his questions savagely.
"Get us out of here—
now!" he barked. Neshok turned his head to glare at him, and Jasak
snarled. "Now, godsdamn it! Unless you want a massacre
on your hands!"
Fury tightened the other
hundred's expression, but then he glanced at Gadrial, and his eyes
widened. He'd opened his mouth as if to say something more, but
it snapped shut as more fire began to crackle at the tips of her
fingers. That and the look on Jasak's face—and the fact that
a second dragon was beginning to rouse—seemed
to get through to him. He barked orders to the escort, and the
entire party moved into a half-run.
The agitated dragons began to
calm once more as soon as Shaylar was forty or fifty yards away.
The one who'd roused up first looked after her with one last
almost querulous hiss. Then it, too, settled back into its original
position and laid its fearsome head on its forelegs.
"It wasn't me, Jasak! It wasn't! It
couldn't have been me! I wasn't doing anything!"
Shaylar cried, and Jasak looked down at her as she hastened along
between him and Jathmar.
"I believe you," he said, laying
his own hand on her shoulder, but he also shook his head. "I just
wish I knew why those two reacted that way, when none of the
transport dragons have since Windclaw."
"What are you talking about?"
Neshok demanded harshly. He was glaring at Shaylar, his eyes
flinty, and he didn't seem to be very much happier than that with
Jasak. "What does she mean, she 'wasn't doing anything'?"
"The transport dragon that
airlifted my wounded out reacted violently to Lady Nargra-
Kolmayr's presence." Jasak's voice was level, his expression calm,
but Shaylar could sense his emotions through the hand still on her
shoulder. He wasn't at all happy about broaching this entire
subject, she realized. "We didn't have any problems with the
dragon from Fort Wyvern, though. I'd hoped it was just a fluke the
first time."
"That still doesn't answer my
question," Neshok said flatly, stopping in the road now that they
were far enough away from the dragons and glaring at Jasak.
"What did she mean about not doing anything?"
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr," Jasak
said, and Shaylar realized he was deliberately stressing the
Andaran title he'd suddenly assigned her rather than use her first
name, "has what her people call a Talent. It's an ability to
communicate with others using her mind, and we think some of
the dragons may be reacting to it."
Neshok's eyes flared wide in
sudden alarm, and Jasak shook his head quickly.
"It's very much like our Gifts,
Hundred," he said. "In fact, you could just think of it as a different
sort of Gift. It doesn't turn her into some kind of magic
mindreader, nor can she influence your thoughts or communicate
with her own people from this far away."
"And just how do you know
that?" Neshok demanded, his face dark with anger.
"I know because she told me so,"
Jasak said flatly. "And because if there'd been any way for her to
use her Talent effectively against us, she'd certainly have done so,
and she hasn't."
"Because she told you
so!" Neshok repeated in a scathing tone, completely ignoring
Jasak's second sentence. "The woman's a prisoner of war, and you
expect her to tell you the truth? Are you a complete idiot? She's going to lie with every breath she takes! I ought to
put a bolt through her right now—or throw her back to the
dragons!"
Jathmar stiffened, his hands
closing into fists. Neshok was speaking too rapidly, and too
angrily, for Jathmar to completely follow the conversation, but
he'd understood enough. He started to step in front of Shaylar, but
before he could move, Gadrial's hand—no longer limned in
fire, thank the gods!—closed on his elbow. He looked
down at her, then looked back up . . .
just in time to see Jasak step in front of his wife.
Jasak was a good three inches
taller than Neshok, and much broader across the shoulders, but it
was his expression and his body language, not his size, which
made the other hundred abruptly step back a pace.
"I'm getting tired of explaining
this to pigheaded, pea-brained, bigmouthed excuses for Andaran
officers who frigging well ought to know better," Sir Jasak
Olderhan said very, very softly. "But I'll try one more time, and I
advise you to listen to me very carefully, because I'm not going to
repeat myself again. Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband are my
shardonai. Any insult, any injury or threat, offered to
them is offered to a member of my family. Perhaps you'd care to
reconsider that last sentence of yours."
His hand hovered in the vicinity
of the short sword at his hip, and Jathmar's tension clicked up yet
another notch as Jugthar Sendahli and Otwal Threbuch quietly
stepped out on either side of Jasak, facing Neshok and his detail.
The Second Andaran Scouts, Jathmar abruptly remembered from
Gadrial's explanations, were the hereditary command of the Dukes
of Garth Showma. Apparently, he realized, that relationship
extended rather further than he'd assumed it did.
None of them actually touched a
weapon. But none of them had to, either.
"Very well," a white-lipped
Neshok grated after a moment. "I withdraw the last sentence. But
shardonai or not, how can you be so sure they're telling
you the truth? For that matter, how can you be sure you didn't
decide to make them shardonai in the first place because
she somehow influenced your mind?"
"Because she was three-quarters
unconscious with a concussion when I made my decision," Jasak
said almost contemptuously. "And because after three weeks in
their company, I've discovered that unlike certain Arcanans I could
mention, these are both people of honor who understand the
mutual obligations of a baranal and his shardonai.
They may not volunteer information, and they may even refuse to
answer questions, but they won't lie to me, Hundred."
Neshok's angry, frightened
expression didn't change. He was obviously not convinced, but
equally obviously he couldn't think of a way to continue the
argument without edging back into potentially dangerous waters.
That was when Gadrial spoke up unexpectedly.
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr is as
clear as glass, Hundred Neshok. It's not in her nature to lie! God
above, man—all you have to do is look at her to
know that!"
Gadrial's outburst had drawn
Neshok's angry eyes back to her. Now those eyes softened with an
expression of pity.
"Magister Kelbryan, your work
with Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah is renowned, even out here
on the frontier. I can't imagine the grief and shock you must have
experienced after his murder by these—" his glance flicked
once more toward Shaylar and Jathmar, hardening again "—
barbarians."
White-hot fury exploded
suddenly inside Shaylar made even worse by the lingering echoes
of the terror she'd felt when the dragons began to hiss, and she
jerked free of Jathmar's arm. She took a long, angry stride towards
Neshok, stepping around Jasak. The Fort Wyvern officer towered
above her, but the mantle of her anger made her a giant.
"Barbarians?" she hissed
in his face. "Don't you dare call us barbarians! Don't you dare
use the word 'murder' after what your soldiers did to us!
We were civilians, damn you—civilians! And if
you don't believe that, look what happened when your soldiers
finally had to face ours. You kill civilians—use
weapons that burn civilians alive!—but you call me a barbarian?
"My country is four thousand
years old—four thousand years of civilization, art,
science, and literature! Sharonian civilization is over five
thousand years old. Five thousand years of recorded
history—how many do you have?"
Neshok looked like a man who'd
picked up his boot and suddenly discovered a cobra in it.
"We're not the ones who've acted
like barbarians, but don't think for a moment that we don't know
how to respond to barbarians! My mother is a Shurkhali ambassador! Do you think she, or any of our countries, will
ever forgive you for what you've done? They think—she
thinks—that I'm dead, curse you!"
She stood there in a puddle of
utter silence, glaring up at Neshok, and naked shock had detonated
behind his eyes. Even Jasak seemed stunned.
"Your mother is an
ambassador?" he asked hoarsely, and she turned on him with
flaming eyes, too shaken by the encounter with the dragons to
contain the pain and rage Neshok had roused.
"Yes! What? You thought our
people were too primitive, too violent for something that
civilized?"
"No, Shaylar," he said,
deliberately taking both her hands in his so that she would
know. "I never thought that. Any civilization that could
produce you is worthy of respect. But your mother's status makes
this whole situation even more difficult, more complicated."
Shaylar bit down on a hysterical
laugh as it tried to break loose in her throat.
"You don't have the slightest
idea how much more," she told him. "You don't have any
concept of how the Shurkhali honor code is going to react to
what's happened."
"No, but I'm trying to
understand, for your sake, as well as because it's my duty. And it's
also," he flicked a cold glance at Neshok, "just one more reason to
treat Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband with courtesy."
His eyes locked with Neshok's,
and a muscle jumped in the other man's jaw.
"The Two Thousand is waiting,"
he half-snapped after a moment and turned on his heel one more to
march toward the fort.
Some people, Shaylar thought,
couldn't be forced to see reason, even at gunpoint. But Neshok's
reaction to Halathyn's death—not to mention his instant,
unthinking attitude towards her and Jathmar—only
underscored how dark the future had become.
She could scarcely imagine how
Sharona must have reacted to the belief that she was dead. She'd
never been a vain person, but she'd been embarrassedly aware for
years of the way the Portal Authority had used her face, her image,
in its public relations campaigns. She knew how all of Shurkhal,
even the men who'd harbored the most reservations about her
choice of career, had taken a fierce and possessive pride in her
accomplishments. If Darcel had relayed everything she'd
transmitted over their link before she was injured, then all of
Sharona had probably been swept by a fury it hadn't seen in
centuries, if not longer. As for how Shurkal must have
reacted—!
Now Neshok's attitude gave her
some idea of how Arcana was going to react to news of
Magister Halathyn's death. And the fact that he'd been killed by an
Arcanan soldier, not by Sharona, wasn't going to matter a bit.
Her shoulders slumped as an
abrupt, crushing weariness crashed down across her. She wanted
to curl up someplace sheltered and private, someplace she could
hide. Someplace where men like Neshok didn't exist, where
monstrous weapons didn't threaten Sharonian lives, and where no
unnatural creatures could crawl inside her mind.
"We'll settle you into your
quarters and let you rest," Jasak promised her quietly. "I can see
how shaken you are. Jathmar will help you, all right? It shouldn't
be too far now."
She just nodded, and he released
her hands. Jathmar slid his arm back around her, taking some of
her weight, and met Jasak's gaze levelly.
"When we leave this place," he
said in a low voice, "would it be too much to ask to have those
murderous beasts moved someplace else?"
"That's a very reasonable
request," Jasak said, and turned a cool glance on Neshok. "And a
damned good idea from a security standpoint. Not only is it my
duty to protect my shardonai, but I somehow doubt the
Commandery would appreciate losing Lady Nargra-Kolmayr to
dragon attack."
"They'll be moved," Neshok
snapped without even turning his head. "Satisfied?"
"For now," Jasak said coldly. "In
the meantime, if you'll escort us to our assigned quarters, I'll see
my shardonai—" he emphasized the noun
deliberately "—settled in, and then pay my compliments to
the Two Thousand. Will he want to debrief Magister Kelbryan or
Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband?"
"If he does, he'll send for them.
This way."
If anyone thought the
confrontation between Neshok and Jasak was over, they were
speedily disabused of the notion when they reached the fort and
Neshok tried to lock Shaylar and Jathmar into the cell beside vos
Hoven's.
It was not a wise decision on his
part. The exchange between him and Jasak was short, ice cold, and
bitter, with Neshok taking spiteful refuge in the instructions he'd
received from Two Thousand mul Gurthak. He insisted that he
was merely following mul Gurthak's explicit orders—
orders he lacked the authority to countermand.
"Two Thousand mul Gurthak
doesn't have the authority to order the arbitrary incarceration of
any civilian member of my family without specific charges under
Arcanan law," Jasak told him savagely. Neshok started to open his
mouth again, but this time Gadrial interposed before the situation
could get totally out of hand.
"Fine!" she snapped, glaring up
at Neshok as furiously as Shaylar had. "If those are your orders,
obey them. Lock them up in your filthy jail. But you'll do it with
me locked in the same cell with them!"
"Magister Kelbryan, you can't be
serious!" Neshok protested.
"I've never been more serious in
my life," she told him icily, and her lip curled. "I wouldn't want to
suggest that they might have some sort
of . . . accident locked up here in
your jail, Hundred. But I think we'd all feel better with a senior
magister who's fully trained in combat magics—who's
taught combat magics at the Garth Showma Institute for the
last ten years—between them and any unfortunate little
episode. Don't you agree, Hundred Neshok?"
Neshok's troopers, Jathmar
noticed, seemed to stiffen into statues at the phrase "combat
magics." After what he'd seen down by the dragonfield, he found
he could understand their attitude perfectly.
Shaylar, on the other hand, was
watching Neshok, and the sudden, dark flush which spread down
his neck told her everything she needed to know about the
intentions of this fort's commander. Or—just as
possible—about Neshok's intentions. A man who
extracted information from recalcitrant prisoners for his superiors
might just find it easier to climb the rank ladder. And if he
succeeded in getting information, it was unlikely anyone would
quibble too strenuously with his methods,
however . . . unpleasant they might
have been for the prisoners in question. She shivered in Jathmar's
arms at the thought.
"Very well," Neshok bit out. "I'll
escort you to other quarters."
The room the Sharonians ended
up in was small and utilitarian, and Jasak made a point of
assigning Jugthar Sendahli to deal with any of their needs. Neshok
flushed angrily again at Jasak's none-too-subtle provision of a
guard he knew he could rely upon. More than that, their room was
next to Gadrial's, and the guard Neshok posted at their door was
fully cognizant of Gadrial's open door.
"I will hear any attempt you make to have them removed by
force," that door said, without a word spoken aloud. "And
if anyone tries it, they'll wish they had never been
born . . . briefly."
Neshok looked as if he wanted
to chew live snakes, but he choked it down raw and accepted the
situation. That satisfied Jasak, who saw them settled in before he
disappeared in the direction of the commanding officer's office.
Shaylar sank down onto the bed
and simply looked at her husband.
"He intended to hurt us," she
said, and Jathmar nodded silently.
"It's going to get worse," she said
even more quietly, and her husband nodded once more.
"I'm scared, Jath," she whispered,
and he wrapped his arms about her and held her very, very tightly.
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Commander of Two Thousand
Nith mul Gurthak sat his chair like the throne. He was one of the
small but growing number of Gifted Mythalan officers who'd
chosen a career as a line officer rather than to serve in one of the
specialist slots most Gifted soldiers—Mythalan or
otherwise—usually preferred. Jasak didn't know how
strong mul Gurthak's Gift might be, although the fact that the two
thousand chose to go by "mul Gurthak" rather than the "vos and
mul Gurthak" which a shakira officer was entitled to
claim could be an indication that it wasn't extraordinarily
powerful.
That was only one of the things
Jasak didn't know about mul Gurthak, for they'd never met before.
The Mythalan officer had been away from Fort Talon on an
inspection trip when Jasak had passed through on his way to
Mahritha and Five Hundred Klian's command. He hadn't met
Rithmar Skirvon or Uthik Dastiri before, either, although he'd
noticed the two civilians down by the dragonfield. The chestnut-
haired, green-eyed Skirvon was obviously of Andaran descent,
although the last name sounded more Hilmarian. Dastiri, younger,
darker, almond-eyed, much shorter, and slimmer, with an evident
abundance of nervous energy, was obviously Ransaran.
"We just arrived last night,
ourselves," Skirvon told Jasak as the hundred settled into the chair
at which mul Gurthak had rather brusquely gestured. Neshok
stood just inside the office door, a brooding, still angry presence,
and Otwal Threbuch stood behind Jasak's shoulder with his hands
clasped behind him in a stand-easy position. "We came in response
to the hummer message Commander Five Hundred Klian sent
out."
"Master Skirvon and Master
Dastiri are field representatives of the Union Arbitration
Commission," mul Gurthak put in. "We were fortunate they were
in Ilmariya on another matter when Five Hundred Klian's hummer
message arrived. They arrived by transport flight at about two
o'clock this morning."
Jasak nodded with an undeniable
edge of relief. The UAC reported directly to the Union Senate. It
was a quasi-diplomatic organization charged with resolving inter-
universal disputes between both local governing entities and
private individuals. Skirvon and Dastiri might not be formally
accredited as Union ambassadors to extra-universal civilizations,
but they were certainly the closest anyone was going to be able to
come to that, and at least they did have diplomatic training.
"I'm very glad to see you,
gentlemen," he said. "And I've learned something else today which
may be of interest to you. Lady Nargra-Kolmayr is the daughter of
a Sharonian ambassador."
Skirvon and Dastiri twitched in
visible surprise. They looked at one another, then back at Jathmar.
"I heard there'd been
some . . . disturbance down at the
dragonfield," mul Gurthak said after a moment. "Something about
the female prisoner." His eyes flickered briefly toward Neshok,
and he grimaced in obvious distaste. "I understand she made quite
a scene."
"I suppose someone might put it
that way, Sir," Jasak said just a bit coolly, never even glancing at
Neshok. "For myself, I believe that almost being attacked by a
battle dragon and then treated with obvious contempt by her escort
would probably constitute justification for losing her temper."
mul Gurthak's lips tightened.
"I've read Five Hundred Klian's
dispatch, and I know all about your decision to declare them
shardonai, Hundred," he said frostily, and something ugly
glowed in his eyes for just an instant. But then he drew a deep
breath and shook his head slightly.
"That's part of your people's
culture, not mine," he continued in a somewhat less chilly voice.
"I don't say I agree with your decision, but I understand its
implications. At the same time, however, both you and your
shardonai need to understand that they are
prisoners—prisoners of war—and the
only intelligence resource we currently possess. If they continue to
refuse to cooperate with us, it's going to place everyone in a
very . . . difficult position."
"Refuse to cooperate, Sir?"
Jasak arched one eyebrow. "I fail to understand how anyone could
accuse them of refusing to cooperate. Obviously, as you've just
observed, they're the prisoners of people who killed all of their
companions, and they aren't going to voluntarily disgorge
information which might help us kill more of their people. But
they've been working as hard as anyone could possibly ask in their
efforts to learn to communicate with us. In fact, Lady Nargra-
Kolmayr has learned to speak fluent Andaran in less than two
weeks, and she's been able to teach her husband how to speak it
amazingly well. And—"
"Excuse me, Hundred, but did
you say they're fluent in Andaran?" Skirvon interrupted.
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr is,
certainly," Jasak confirmed. "Frankly, the speed at which she's
mastered it is astonishing."
"And has she reciprocated?" mul
Gurthak asked, his brows furrowed in an expression that
practically shouted mistrust.
"Taught us Sharonian, you mean,
Sir?" Jasak asked. mul Gurthak nodded, and Jasak gave a tiny
shrug.
"Like us, Sharona has many
languages, Sir. Between themselves, they normally speak one
called Shurkhali. That's Lady Nargra-Kolmayr's native language,
but not her husband's. Just as Magister Kelbryan has concentrated
on teaching them a single one of our
languages—Andaran—we've been learning one they
call Ternathian. According to Lady Nargra-Kolmayr, it's the
language of Sharona's most powerful nation."
"You say you've been learning
it?" Skirvon pressed.
"Not nearly so quickly as they've
been learning Andaran," Jasak assured him with a wry smile. "But
Magister Kelbryan has been working with them using the
translation spellware programmed into her PC. Every time she
taught them a word in Andaran, they gave her the equivalent word
in Ternathian. Magister Kelbryan's spellware stores the words both
in written phonetic form and in audio, and it's been analyzing and
deriving the Ternathian rules of grammar, as well. For all intents
and purposes, it's produced a primer for Ternathian, and its
capable of running audio translation, as well. I'm sure there are
still holes in what we've got, and I'm equally sure that it wouldn't
give one of our people anywhere near the fluency Lady Nargra-
Kolmayr has attained in Andaran, but it's a very substantial
beginning.
He reached into the breast of his
uniform tunic and extracted a sheaf of neatly printed pages.
"Magister Kelbryan generated
this from her PC last night," he said, and handed the pages to
Dastiri, the nearer of the two diplomats.
"Incredible," Dastiri muttered,
flipping through the pages. He shook his head and handed it to
Skirvon, who was senior to him in the UAC.
"Very impressive," Skirvon
agreed. "Could you arrange for Magister Kelbryan to download
copy of this to our PCs? And of her translation spellware. The
UAC would find it of incalculable value."
"And I'll want a copy, as well,
Hundred," mul Gurthak said.
That was fine with Jasak. As the
senior military officer at this end of the transit chain, mul Gurthak
was definitely in a need-to-know position. Indeed, the more
Ternathian-fluent officers they could produce, the better. There
was going to be additional contact with the other side, no matter
what happened, and having some means of communication besides
shooting at one another struck Jasak as a very good idea, indeed.
"I'm sure Magister Kelbryan will
be happy to download copies for both you and Master Skirvon and
Master Dastiri, Sir," he said. "And if you'd be so kind, Master
Skirvon, you could download a copy for Five Hundred Klian's use
when you reach Fort Rycharn, as well."
"That's an excellent idea,"
Skirvon said. "We'll be sure to do that."
He looked back down at the hard
copy for a moment, then tucked it away in his briefcase and
extracted his own PC. He activated it and tapped the menu with
the stylus to switch it to audio recording mode, then leaned back
in his chair.
"We're scheduled to depart for
Fort Rycharn tomorrow," he said. "Obviously, I'm not going to
have time to acquire a great deal of fluency before we arrive there,
although this 'primer' of yours will be an enormous help. But if
we're not going to be able to indulge in complex discussions with
them at first, it's vital that we have as much background
knowledge as we can get. So what can you tell us about these
people we've encountered, Sir Jasak?"
"Quite a bit, actually, Master
Skirvon. That's one reason why I said it would be difficult to
legitimately accuse Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband of
refusing to cooperate. They've been extremely reticent about
military matters—and, frankly, I believe they truly are
civilians and probably not all that conversant with the details of
their military, in the first place—but they've been very
forthcoming about their home universe and its political and social
structure."
"Indeed?" Skirvon's eyebrows
rose.
"We've learned a great deal
about how Sharona is organized," Jasak said. "Most of the details
are recorded in Magister Kelbryan's PC, along with the notes on
the Ternathian language. I think you'll be astonished at how
ancient their civilizations are, and although they don't have the
sort of world government we do in the Union, most of their
nations appear to share an amazing degree of common values and
beliefs. According to Lady Nargra-Kolmayr, the Ternathian
Empire, their oldest state, is over five thousand years old. At one
time, it ruled more than two thirds of the then-known world, and it
apparently left its cultural imprint behind when it gradually
disengaged from its high-water mark."
Skirvon nodded, although Jasak
had the distinct impression the diplomat didn't really believe him.
Or, rather, that Skirvon suspected Shaylar had deliberately
exaggerated the antiquity and strength of her home civilization.
"You'll be able to review her
comments for yourself, Master Skirvon," Jasak said. "Personally, I
believe what she's told us is substantially accurate, but I'm sure
you'll form your own opinion."
"I'll review them very carefully,
Sir Jasak," Skirvon promised. "In the meantime, however, there's a
more immediate point I'd like to address. Five Hundred Klian's
reports state that these people's technology is very different from
our own."
"That probably ranks with the
most severe understatements I've ever heard, Master Skirvon,"
Jasak replied with a twisted smile. "We've brought the captured
equipment with us, and with your permission, Sir," he glanced at
mul Gurthak, "I'd like to leave a representative selection of
it—especially of their weapons—here with you. I'm
sure the Commandery will want us to transport most of it back to
New Arcana where it can be thoroughly examined, but as close as
you are to the point of contact, I'd like you to be able to form
some idea of its capabilities for yourself."
"An excellent idea, Hundred,"
mul Gurthak said with the first unqualified approval Jasak had
sensed from him.
"But in answer to the point
you've raised, Master Skirvon," Jasak turned his attention back to
the diplomat, "they have a great many devices and tools we don't
begin to understand yet. They're remarkably good engineers and
artisans, and their metallurgy and textiles are every bit as good as
our own, but they don't appear to have any equivalent of
our arcane technology."
"So I understood from Five
Hundred Klian's report," Skirvon said, yet he was frowning
heavily. "I find that very difficult to accept, however. Obviously, I
haven't spent as much time in these people's company as you have,
Sir Jasak. But they certainly appear to be just as human as we are,
so presumably they ought to have the same basic genetic heritage.
The same Gifts."
"I can't debate that point with
you," Jasak said. "At this point, we know too little about them for
me to be comfortable making any sweeping assumptions, even if I
had the medical or technical background to make that sort of
judgment in the first place. But I can tell you that any magic-based
technology clearly astonishes them. Anything, no matter
how simple. Magister Halathyn conjured a simple light-rose,
something any four-year-old with a decent Gift could do, so that
he could give Lady Nargra-Kolmayr a flower. When it blossomed
from his fingertips, it shook them both to the core. Both of them
reacted exactly the same way, spontaneously: with astonishment
so deep it bordered on terror."
"Terror?" Skirvon's
frown deepened. "Great gods, why? What's to be afraid
of? It's just magic!"
"Because Sharonians don't use
magic. In fact, they have nothing at all even resembling magic, let
alone our technology. They didn't even believe it was possible
until they were shown ordinary tools that use it."
"That's ridiculous," Dastiri
muttered. Then he seemed to realize he'd spoken aloud and waved
one hand. "I'm sorry, Sir Jasak, but it just sounds
too . . . bizarre for words."
"Oh, I certainly agree with you
there," Jasak said feelingly. "Nonetheless, it's true. Magister
Kelbryan and I have discussed it with them at considerable length,
and they're very emphatic. The Sharonian civilization isn't built
around the laws of magic at all."
Skirvon was sitting bolt upright
in his chair now, staring at him. So was mul Gurthak, but there
was something besides simple astonishment in the two thousand's
eyes.
"But—" the senior
diplomat sputtered. "But how in the gods' names does anyone
build a civilization without it?"
He glanced around mul
Gurthak's office, an austere frontier room which nevertheless
boasted more than a dozen magic-powered appliances, from his
own PC to the lighting to the insect-repelling spell to the quietly
turning blades of the ceiling fan, all in plain view, and doubtless
many others in storage in the various cabinets.
"I'm sorry, Sir Jasak, but Uthik is
right. It sounds . . . impossible. They'd live under appallingly crude conditions. People in a
place like that would be little better than barbarians!"
"With all due respect, Master
Skirvon, I wouldn't use that term within their earshot," Jasak said
mildly, and heard a smothered sound from behind him. mul
Gurthak looked past him and raised an eyebrow.
"You had something you wished
to add, Hundred Neshok?" he asked in a deceptively mild voice.
"I was just going to say, Sir, that
no one should say it around that girl, for sure. The little bitch has
quite a temper."
"That's quite enough, Neshok!"
The mildness had vanished from mul Gurthak's voice, and his face
was hard. "You insulted the lady and her people, and you
threatened her, and the fact that she's fluent in your own language
only made it worse. Whatever else we may think about her and her
people, it's difficult to condemn her for becoming angry in the
face of such boorishness and discourtesy. Consider yourself
fortunate that only she has reprimanded you so far."
"Yes, Sir." Neshok's voice
sounded strangled, and Jasak could almost feel the heat radiating
from his flushed face.
"Don't repeat that mistake,
Hundred."
"No, Sir."
No one, Jasak mused, enjoyed
eating crow. Neshok appeared to hate it more virulently than
most . . . which was just fine with Sir
Jasak Olderhan.
Silence lingered for several
seconds. Then Jasak cleared his throat, looked back at Skirvon,
and continued.
"I was saying that I wouldn't
assume their civilization is either crude or simple just because
their technology isn't magic-based. We manufacture mechanical
things ourselves, but there's a huge difference between an arbalest
that fires a steel bolt and one of their weapons. Jathmar field-
stripped one of their shoulder weapons—a 'rifle' he calls
it—for me at Fort Wyvern. Frankly, it's a complex
nightmare of tiny, precisely machined parts. They serve
interlocking functions, designed to load and fire the projectile, but
even the projectile has multiple parts. The most fascinating part, to
be honest, is the granular gray powder inside what he calls the
'cartridge.' It's the powder that performs the 'chemical'—
that's another one of his words we're still trying to figure
out—operations which actually fire the projectile. As
nearly as I can picture it in my own mind right now, they basically
set off something very like one of our infantry-dragon fireballs
inside the cartridge, and that expands with enormous speed
and drives the 'bullet' down the hollow barrel of the 'rifle' and
through its target."
"An arbalest sounds far more
practical and reliable," Skirvon observed with another frown.
"They're reliable enough, Sir."
Jasak almost blinked in surprise as Otwal Threbuch inserted
himself into the conversation. "And practical, too, begging your
pardon. Have you ever seen an arbalest quarrel punch clean
through a man three hundred yards away? Have you ever seen an
arbalest mow down thirty men in three seconds? A whole line
of men, forty feet across? They went down like one
man—like they'd run into an invisible wire.
"Only it wasn't a wire. The things
hitting them were blowing holes straight through them—
big holes. Big enough to put your thumb through in front and your
fist through in back. And that doesn't even begin to
describe what their artillery can do. They fired it
through the portal and dropped it behind Hundred
Thalmayr's fieldworks." The big noncom shook his head grimly.
"Believe me, Sir, an arbalest may be less complicated, but it's
definitely not more practical or reliable."
Both diplomats were ashen, and
mul Gurthak looked more than a little shaken himself. Another
brief silence fell, until Skirvon shook himself again.
"I'm not a military or a technical
man myself, Sir Jasak," he admitted. "I still find the entire concept
of a civilization without any magic at all extremely difficult to
accept, but for now, I don't think we have any choice but to accept
that your description—yours and the Chief
Sword's—is accurate.
"Still, if I'm not particularly well
versed in technological matters, I do have a bit of
experience in diplomatic affairs. You say they don't have a world
government. In that case, how do they manage their portal
exploration?"
"There's some sort of central
authority, an organization that operates their portal forts and
apparently runs the actual portals. It sounds like the equivalent of
our UTTTA, and it has some sort of authority over their survey
crews, but it's also some kind of private entity, I think. I'm not very
clear on it yet. It sounds to me as if it's some sort of government-
approved or supervised private company. But whoever sponsors it,
their 'Portal Authority' decides who's permitted to work on their
survey crews. Lady Nargra-Kolmayr says she's the first woman
ever approved to join a team; she anticipates being the last, as
well."
The diplomats exchanged
thoughtful glances. Then they looked back at Jasak.
"So it would probably be this
'Portal Authority' we'd be speaking to, not the representatives of
an actual government?" Skirvon mused aloud.
"I'd guess so." Jasak nodded.
"But let me emphasize that it would be only a guess on my part.
One thing we haven't been able to discover is how extensively the
Sharonians have explored. My distinct impression from several
things they've let drop is that they were operating on the leading
edge of a very extensive frontier when we encountered one
another. If that's so, then I'd think it would be difficult for them to
get diplomats to the front much more quickly than we could. And
that completely ignores the fact that if they don't have a world
government, the first thing they'd have to do is decide which
government should be talking to us."
"A very well taken observation,
Sir Jasak." Skirvon nodded vigorously, then cocked his head to
one side.
"I know I'm jumping around a
bit," he said, semi-apologetically, "but it's just occurred to me that
if they don't have anything like magic, then presumably they don't
have anything like our hummers, which should give us a
substantial advantage in response time."
"I wouldn't count on that if I
were you, Master Skirvon," Jasak said, a bit grimly. "No, they
don't have hummers. But that's because they don't need
them."
"Why not?" mul Gurthak asked
sharply, and Jasak grimaced.
"We only discovered after we
left Fort Rycharn that while these people don't have Gifts, they do
have what they call Talents," he said heavily.
His own reluctance to mention
the matter surprised him. It also made him realize just how
protective he truly felt where Shaylar and Jathmar were concerned.
Yet he was an officer of the Union of Arcana. It was his duty to
pass the information along, and so he told them everything Shaylar
and Jathmar had told him about their own Talents and how those
Talents had served the survey crews and Sharona in general.
"Obviously," he concluded,
several minutes later, "the military applications of
this . . . living technology are
enormous. And, frankly, the civilian applications must be equally
staggering."
His audience looked stunned.
Then mul Gurthak leaned forward over his desk, his body
language and expression angry.
"When," he asked icily, "did you
discover this little bit of information?"
"About one day out from Fort
Wyvern, Sir," Jasak said coolly. "Since we were coming through
by dragon ourselves as soon as possible, I decided not to send it by
hummer. I thought you'd probably prefer to hear about it in
person, and with as little chance for it to leak as possible."
"I see." The two thousand sat
back in his chair again, toying with a stylus, and the anger slowly
ebbed out of his expression. But he still didn't look precisely
satisfied, and he frowned at Jasak. "What prompted them to make
such a revelation? They have to know how seriously that
knowledge will compromise their side in any conflict."
"I'm not certain they are aware of
all the implications," Jasak said reluctantly. "As I say,
they're civilians, not soldiers. As to why they admitted it, partly it
was because they didn't have much choice. I confronted them over
something that had shaken Magister Kelbryan pretty badly, which
pressured them into making a partial explanation. They
volunteered the rest, though."
"But why?" Skirvon sounded as
baffled—and skeptical—as mul Gurthak.
"I think it's because they're trying
desperately to find some grounds for mutual understanding,
Master Skirvon," Jasak said slowly. "They're fully aware of how
different we are from one another—in fact, they're probably
far more aware of it than we are, since they're the ones trapped
inside our culture. I think they believe that the more we
know about them—the more completely we understand that
they aren't monsters, just different—the greater the
chance for establishing some sort of trust between us. And I also
think they have a point. When you get right down to it, the
implications of these Talents of theirs aren't a lot different from
the implications of our own Gifts. Just as we've done with our
Gifts, they seem to have concentrated their Talents through
specific family lines, and everything we've been able to learn from
Shaylar so far suggests their Talents are probably much less useful
for what Magister Kelbryan calls 'macro effects' than magic is.
That's probably why they rely so heavily on complex mechanical
devices.
"But however frightening or
threatening this capability of theirs may seem—for that
matter, however dangerous it may yet actually prove to
be—one fact remains. Sharona has also produced two
individuals from very different Sharonian nations who share
similar traits which are important to our understanding of them.
They're honorable, courageous, and—under the
circumstances—surprisingly honest and forthcoming.
One again, the diplomats
exchanged glances. Jasak wasn't at all sure he cared for their
expressions.
"Most helpful, indeed, Sir
Jasak," Skirvon said after a moment.
"There's another point I'd like to
make, as well, if I may," Jasak said. "We know Sharona has many
countries, and we also know Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her
husband don't come from the same one. You only have to look at
them to see that they're obviously from different genetic stocks.
Yet their ideas, their values—what they believe at the
deepest core level—are remarkably similar. And when you
stop to think about it, how many Arcanans actually choose to
marry outside their birth cultures? Not very many, yet we've been
a united world, under one government, for two centuries."
The mention of cross-cultural
marriages tightened mul Gurthak's lips in visible disapproval.
Despite that, it was the two thousand who first grasped the point
Jasak was trying to make.
"What you're trying to say is that
even though they may not have a world government, their
culture—their civilization—may be much closer to
monolithic than we'd assume?"
"Exactly, Sir," Jasak said with a
nod.
"One wonders," Dastiri said
thoughtfully, "how common this marriage pattern of theirs truly
is?"
"That's certainly something to be
curious about," Skirvon agreed. "It's possible that it's not actually
very common at all, but I'm inclined to trust Sir Jasak's instincts
on this matter. He doesn't have any formal training in diplomacy, I
know, but as the heir to Garth Showma, he probably has a better
sense of political and cultural nuances than most people. Certainly
a better one than most officers of his seniority," the diplomat very
carefully did not glance in Neshok's direction, "and he's spent a
great deal of time with his prisoners. Excuse me, with his
shardonai." The diplomat smiled apologetically at Jasak, then
looked back at Dastiri. "If he believes we're dealing with a cultural
monolith, regardless of their political organization, I'm inclined to
trust that judgment."
Neshok's nostrils flared, and mul
Gurthak's eyes went a shade frostier, but only for a moment. Then
the two thousand drew a slow, deliberate breath.
"A well-taken point," he said. "It
appears we're fortunate to have your insight into these matters,
Hundred Olderhan."
He studied Jasak with opaque
eyes for several seconds, then shrugged.
"Given the role the late Shevan
Garlath played in the disaster at Fallen Timbers," he finally said,
"I'm forced to revise my first, overly hasty assessment of your
judgment as a field officer. Five Hundred Klian's evaluation of
Fifty Garlath's fitness as an officer makes it clear you were
saddled with a . . . difficult situation,
even before you made contact with these Sharonians."
He produced a wintry smile.
"One is always tempted to blame
messengers who bear unpalatable news, particularly when military
and political disasters are involved. But Chief Sword Threbuch's
report on the second encounter with these people makes it
clear—to me, at least—that you did a brilliant job of
containment."
Jasak bristled silently at the use
of the word "containment." It was accurate enough—he'd
certainly "contained" the Sharonians, at least physically—
but something about the word, or perhaps the way it had been
delivered, set him on edge. That surprised him, but he didn't have
time to ponder it now, for mul Gurthak was still speaking.
"I may never forgive Hadrign
Thalmayr," the two thousand said in a bitter tone, "for promptly
throwing away all you'd accomplished and losing the men you'd
managed to bring safely back. Not to mention losing control of the
portal."
He shook his head, leaned far
back in his chair, and steepled his fingers across his chest.
"I realize your primary concern
will be sending reports ahead as you make the return trip to New
Arcana. The Commandery has to know everything you learn as
soon as possible. The time lag is immense, as it is. Even at the
speed hummers fly, this is a long transit chain."
"Yes, Sir. I know that only too
well." The initial message that there'd been a contact with another
civilization was still winging its way—literally—
back to New Arcana. "No one even knows the Union has new
neighbors, Sir. Let alone that battles have already been fought. No
one in the Union, that is."
His eyes met mul Gurthak's, and
the two thousand nodded, his expression grim. Skirvon and
Dastiri's ears seemed to prick up, as if they realized something
they didn't understand had just been said, and mul Gurthak favored
them with a hard, thin smile.
"You gentlemen weren't
listening to the Hundred," he said. "What was it he said? They
don't need hummers, I believe."
Skirvon stared at him, then
blanched visibly.
"Gods! They already know, don't
they? They've probably known for weeks!"
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr's
effectively confirmed that," Jasak agreed unhappily. "I don't know
exactly how long it took their message to get home, but given the
structure she described, with official Voices stationed
permanently at every single portal they've discovered, and at relays
in between, as necessary, their home world may have known
within hours. I'd bet that someone in their Portal Authority knew
by the time we airlifted out the wounded. And something she said
this afternoon confirms that her family thinks she's dead. She used
the present tense, and I don't think it was a slip of the tongue. She
knows that whatever message she was sending out when she was
knocked unconscious at Fallen Timbers has already reached her
home world."
Both diplomats had turned a
sickly shade of yellow-green.
"This is a first-class disaster,"
Skirvon groaned. "They've had time to move in whole
divisions of troops!"
"It's not quite that bad," mul
Gurthak disagreed. They looked at him incredulously, and he
shrugged. "I've been operating on the assumption that word might
have gotten back to their high command ever since I received Five
Hundred Klian's initial dispatches. The force which attacked
Hundred Thalmayr was undeniably stronger than anyone
anticipated, however it scarcely represented the kind of troop
strength I'd have expected from a major base. And we know these
people don't have dragons, or, apparently, anything else that flies.
Neither, according to the Chief Sword," he nodded at Threbuch,
"do they have enhanced cavalry mounts like our own. So what
we're probably facing is a situation in which their high command
can receive reports and dispatch new orders much more rapidly
than we can, but our forces can move much more rapidly
than theirs can."
Jasak nodded. He'd already
reached the same conclusion himself, and it should have been
reassuring to know that the senior officer in the area agreed with
his own assessment. And it was . . .
mostly. Still, there was something about mul Gurthak's
eyes . . .
"Hundred Olderhan," the
commander of two thousand continued, turning his attention back
to Jasak and smiling much more warmly than before, "I want to
thank you for a first-class briefing. I'm very impressed by the
amount of information you've been able to obtain from the
prisoners. I suppose it's another case of that old cliché
about catching more flies with sugar than with salt," he added,
giving Neshok a speaking glance.
"I also concur that it's critical
that we get our diplomatic presence as far forward as we can, as
quickly as we can. And that you continue to New Arcana
with all dispatch. Indeed, I'm coming to the conclusion, based on
what you've said here, that we could scarcely have acquired a
more valuable source of intelligence if we'd been allowed to
choose who to capture ourselves."
One again, something bristled
deep inside Jasak. It was his protective instinct, he knew. His
shardonai had become personally important to him, not just
an honor obligation, and that might not be a good thing, from the
perspective of the Union of Arcana. mul Gurthak was undoubtedly
correct about Shaylar and Jathmar's value, and Jasak ought to
place the same priority on squeezing them for every bit of
information, as long as they weren't mistreated in the process.
"I'm sure you're fatigued after so
long on dragonback, Hundred," mul Gurthak went on after a
moment. "Moreover, given the . . .
unpleasant episode down by the dragonfield, I'm certain both your
shardonai and Magister Kelbryan are rather anxious to
discover just how well this debriefing went. With that in mind, I'll
let you go find your own quarters and reassure them that no one at
Fort Talon has any intention of changing their status or attempting
to remove them from your custody."
"Thank you, Sir."
Jasak recognized his dismissal
and stood, although leaving that office at that particular moment
was the last thing he wanted to do. Unfortunately, whoever his
father might be, Jasak was only a commander of one hundred.
There was no way he could insist upon remaining for the
additional discussion he knew was about to begin.
"Chief Sword, Javelin, you're
also dismissed," the two thousand continued. "Hundred Neshok
will see to it that you're quartered."
Threbuch and Iggy Shulthan
braced briefly to attention, then turned and followed Jasak and
Neshok out of the office.
The sound of the door closing
behind them wasn't really a thunder-crack of
doom . . . it only sounded that way to
Jasak.
Chapter Thirty-Nine
The man who thought of himself
as Nith vos Gurthak only when he was totally alone,
watched the door close behind Sir Jasak Olderhan and his
noncommissioned officers, then swiveled his eyes slowly across
Rithmar Skirvon and Uthik Dastiri.
"A passionate young fellow,
Hundred Olderhan," the commander of two thousand observed
with a thin smile.
"No doubt," Skirvon said. "But
he seems to know his job. After the initial contact blew up in his
face that way, he did very well indeed, in my opinion. It's a pity he
wasn't still in command when the Sharonians hit our base camp."
"Indeed it is," mul Gurthak
agreed. And for more reasons than you can possibly know,
he added silently. "However, I'm afraid he may have allowed
himself to get a bit too close to his prisoners since then. He's
obviously very protective of them, and I'm not convinced they
aren't using that against him."
"Playing on his sympathy to
convince him of how saintly their own people are, you mean?"
"Something like that. And quite
possibly the reverse, you know." mul Gurthak tipped back in his
chair once more. "If they can convince us they have a truly unified,
militarily powerful culture when they really don't, we may end up
grossly overestimating the amount of combat power they could
commit to any shooting war. I can certainly see how they might
think that inspiring . . . excessive
caution, shall we say, on our part could be very useful to their
side."
"That's true enough, sir," Dastiri
said. "At the same time, though, aren't we effectively constrained
to assume the worst, anyway?"
"To an extent, Master Dastiri,"
mul Gurthak said. He and Skirvon exchanged a glance Dastiri
didn't notice, and the commander of two thousand continued. "The
problem is that as we all just agreed during our conversation with
Hundred Olderhan, nobody back home in New Arcana has any hint
of what's going on out here. They won't for a long time, either,
and once they do find out, it's going to take even more
time for them to get any instructions out here for our guidance.
Which means that, as the senior local commander, I have
to decide what to do about these people."
"Without instructions from
Parliament or the Commandery?" Dastiri looked horrified, and
mul Gurthak raised one hand, palm uppermost, in an eloquent
gesture of fatalism.
"We're at the pointy end of an
incredibly long transit chain," he pointed out. "The nearest
sliderhead is twenty thousand miles from here, and this chain
hasn't exactly been packed to the heavens with combat power."
mul Gurthak chuckled sourly. "If it had been, there'd be someone
far senior to a mere two thousand in command out here. Under
those circumstances, I don't have any choice but to act on my own
initiative while praying that I get comprehensive instructions as
quickly as possible."
"That's certainly true," Skirvon
said, his expression thoughtful. "Under the circumstances, as you
say, and given that there have already been at least two military
clashes, I think there's no question but that the decisionmaking
authority has to rest with you, as the senior military officer. How
can Uthik and I help?"
"Hundred Olderhan's entirely
correct in his belief that we need to get diplomats involved in this
as soon as possible," mul Gurthak replied. "Obviously, the best
solution would be a peaceful, diplomatic one, with no more
deaths on either side. Failing that, however, we need to at least
keep these people talking long enough for me to assemble what
forces are available to me."
"Excuse me, Two Thousand,"
Dastiri said, "but didn't you just say there weren't very
many forces available to you?"
The younger diplomat, mul
Gurthak reflected, had that annoying Ransaran habit of asking
questions whether or not their answers were any of his business.
Still, the man had been partnered with Skirvon for almost a year
now, which said a lot. Obviously, Dastiri wasn't too
Ransaran in his attitudes, so mul Gurthak might as well be polite.
"What I said was that the chain
hadn't been packed with combat power, Master Dastiri," he
corrected in as pleasant a tone as possible. "That doesn't mean
there aren't a lot of individual Army battalions and Air Force
combat and transport strikes scattered around it. As soon as I got
Klian's initial dispatch, I sent out orders for as many of those
scattered units as possible to report to me here, at Fort Talon, as
quickly as transport can be arranged. The first few infantry
companies have already arrived. Others are on their way, and
they're bringing more transport dragons—and cargo
pods—with them as they come in."
"I see." Skirvon studied the
commander of two thousand's expression thoughtfully. His own
professional diplomat's expression was almost impossible to read,
but, then, mul Gurthak didn't have to read it to know
exactly what was going on behind it.
"How confident do you feel
about your ability to hold against a serious attack, Two
Thousand?" the civilian asked after a moment.
"That's difficult to say." mul
Gurthak rocked his chair gently from side to side, his lips pursed
in thought. "I suppose it depends on a lot of factors. As I pointed
out to Hundred Olderhan, the other side has the advantage in terms
of communications speed, given these Voices of theirs, and any
strategist could tell you how huge an advantage that constitutes.
But we have the advantage in terms of tactical and
strategic movement speeds, and that's just as big an
advantage. Remember, gentlemen, these people not only don't
have magic—assuming our prisoners are, in fact, telling us
the truth—but they also don't have dragons. And if they
don't, then they can't begin to imagine how rapidly we can
transport military forces across even totally unimproved terrain.
"As for these weapons of theirs,
I'm entirely prepared to admit that they appear to be powerful and
dangerous. But the real reason Thalmayr managed to get himself
captured or killed, and all of Hundred Olderhan's company along
with him, was the simple fact that unlike us, they can fire artillery
through a portal. In a straight-up firefight in the open, between his
infantry and field-dragons and their artillery, I strongly suspect that
Thalmayr would have massacred them. What happened to him
was, in the final analysis, the result of a totally unanticipated
tactical advantage of the other side.
"We know, now, that they can do
that. It won't be a surprise next time—assuming, of course,
that there is a next time. They, on the other hand, have yet
to see what our weapons can really do. And if they're truly as
ignorant about magic and arcane technology as they seem, they're
in for a whole series of equally nasty surprises of their own."
"Forgive me, Two Thousand,"
Dastiri said, "but it sounds to me as if you think there will
be a next time."
"I'm a soldier, Master Dastiri,"
mul Gurthak replied, just a bit more frostily. "It's my job to think
in worst-case scenarios. And it's also my job to have the forces
under my command as advantageously positioned as possible to
meet any contingency. Obviously, no one wants a war. But if we
have one on our hands, anyway, it's my responsibility to see to it
that we win the opening engagements."
"Quite so," Skirvon murmured.
"And there's another point to consider, as well. If Magister
Kelbryan and Magister Halathyn are correct, if this really is a
genuine cluster of portals in close proximity to one another, it
would scarcely be in the Union's best interests to leave a
demonstrably hostile power in control of it. I expect they probably
feel the same way about us, too. Which means," he glanced at his
civilian subordinate, "that it's our job to convince them to see it
our way, Uthik. And if Two Thousand mul Gurthak can provide
us with a significant force advantage, it will strengthen our
bargaining position substantially."
"Precisely," mul Gurthak agreed,
nodding vigorously. "Whether we want a war or not, there are a
huge number of reasons for us to position ourselves to be ready to
fight if we have to, and no reason not to."
"Unless they decide we're
threatening them, sir," Dastiri pointed out respectfully. "Or unless
we're wrong about how quickly they can bring up forces of their
own, after all."
"There's no reason why they
should feel the least bit threatened, Master Dastiri." mul Gurthak
made himself smile again. "The logical staging point for any
deployment against this cluster would be Fort Rycharn. That's
over seven hundred miles from the swamp portal, and unlike us,
these people don't have any aerial reconnaissance capability. If we
move in enough troops and transport dragons, we'll have the
flexibility to conduct a mobile defense against any invasion
attempt they might decide to mount, or to execute a lightning
offensive of our own, if that should prove necessary. Our aerial
units could be right on top of them before they even had a clue we
were in the same universe with them."
Dastiri's eyes had widened
slightly as he listened to the two thousand. Now he looked at his
civilian colleague, and his eyes were dark with speculation. He sat
that way for a moment or two, then turned back to mul Gurthak.
"I think I understand, Two
Thousand," he said, and let his eyes drop briefly—
significantly—to the PC in Skirvon's lap, still operating in
recording mode. "You're right, of course, that no one wants this
thing to escalate any farther than it already has. I'm sure Rithmar
and I will both do our best to see to it that it doesn't. But it clearly
is your responsibility to prepare for the possibility that we'll fail."
"Exactly." mul Gurthak smiled at
Dastiri yet again—rather more warmly, this time—
then glanced at the digital time display on the corner of his desk.
"I see it's approaching time for
supper, gentlemen, and I still have a few administrative chores to
deal with this evening," he observed. "I suggest we adjourn this
meeting until after everyone's eaten."
"Of course." Skirvon nodded and
deactivated his PC.
Dastiri stood, then paused as he
realized Skirvon had made no move to climb out of his
chair. He glanced back and forth between his civilian superior and
the military officer still sitting behind the desk, and, for just a
moment, he seemed to hover on the edge of saying something
more. But then he gave his head a little shake, bestowed a half-
bow upon mul Gurthak, and smiled at Skirvon.
"I have a couple of minor
errands of my own I need to deal with before supper, Rithmar," he
said easily. "I'll see you then, shall I?"
"Of course, Uthik," Skirvon said,
and watched the other man walk out of mul Gurthak's office and
close the door behind him.
"So, what do you really think of
Olderhan?" mul Gurthak asked the diplomat as soon as the latch
clicked.
"An ardent and reasonably
intelligent young officer," Skirvon replied. "I'm not prepared to
evaluate his military capability, beyond what I've already
said—I'll defer to your judgment, in that area—but
he's obviously observant, and he's done surprisingly well not just
in extracting information from these people, but in developing
insights into them, as well. Into how they organize themselves,
how they think."
"But—?" mul Gurthak
prompted when the diplomat paused.
"As you say, 'but'." Skirvon sat
back in his chair and rested his elbows on the armrests. "He'll
probably make a good Andaran duke, one day, but he really doesn't
understand diplomacy."
The two men smiled thinly at
one another. Skirvon might be of Andaran descent, but his family
had been Hilmaran for centuries, and there was still that lingering
tradition of hostility between Hilmarans and the northern
kingdoms which had once conquered and ruled so much of their
continent. The diplomat didn't much care for any Andarans, and
particularly not for the Duke of Garth Showma, the most
powerful of them all. Most people didn't realize that, largely
because Skirvon was of Andaran descent himself, on his
mother's side. But mul Gurthak and
his . . . associates had been aware of
the man's true leanings for quite some time.
Then Skirvon's expression
sobered.
"Quite aside from any other
considerations," he said, "young Olderhan doesn't seem to realize
that there's only a vanishingly small chance of averting war with
these Sharonians. I suppose he has a powerful motivation to find
one before still more people get killed, but there honestly wasn't
much hope of that even before his own discovery about the things
they can do with their minds. Given what we know about them
now, about what they are, I'd say the chances of avoiding war are
virtually nonexistent. As a Mythalan, you'll appreciate better than
many how this news will play at home."
"An entire universe filled with
people—non-Gifted people—who read
minds and turn thoughts into weapons?" mul Gurthak snorted.
"The shakira lords will froth."
"Precisely." Their eyes met, and
then Skirvon shrugged. "It's clear Olderhan believes his prisoners
are honest and decent people. And they may very well be. On a
person-to-person basis, justice and fair play and equality with
others are concepts most of us value, after all, particularly as
applied to ourselves."
His smile was so tart it could
have soured milk, and mul Gurthak snorted a chuckle. "Fair play"
and "equality with others" were nasty habits indulged in by
dangerously unstable and degenerate societies. Societies whose
chaotic habits were a serious threat to the properly regulated,
orderly political and religious structure that kept the world in its
proper alignment. Not to mention keeping the shakira
lords precisely where they belonged: in charge, at the top of a very
steep and very narrow ladder of power.
It was so very fortunate that
Rithmar Skirvon had been the closest senior diplomat available
when this entire catastrophe began to unravel. Of course, there'd
been a reason mul Gurthak had requested Skirvon for the
arbitration assignment with which he'd been dealing when Klian's
first reports arrived. Men who understood the realities of
diplomacy—and also where their own best interests
lay—were always useful.
"How . . .
pragmatic do you think your young friend Dastiri is going to be
about this?" the two thousand asked after a moment.
"Well, he is Ransaran,"
Skirvon observed with a slight grimace. "On the other hand, he
prides himself on being a realist. And he's from Manisthu."
"Ah." mul Gurthak nodded.
The Kingdom of Manisthu
dominated the Manisthu Islands off the eastern coast of Ransar.
They'd retreated into a self-imposed isolation for several centuries
at one point in their history, and even today, they remained
somewhat out of step with the rest of Ransar. They were just as
irritatingly insistent on individual rights—especially their
own individual rights—but they also labored under
a sense of being looked down upon by their mainland neighbors.
Of being considered rubes, without quite the same degree of
sophistication and philosophical superiority to all those other,
more backward, irritating, non-Ransaran people the gods had
unfortunately and thoughtlessly scattered around the globe.
Perhaps as a result, Manisthuans had a pre-Union historical
tradition of practicing garsulthan, a Manisthuan word
which translated roughly as "real politics." On more than one
occasion, they'd proven as pragmatic—and at least as
ruthless—in international affairs as any Andaran warlord or
Mythalan caste-lord.
mul Gurthak and Skirvon gazed
at one another for several moments, while the two thousand
considered the implications of what the diplomat had just said.
Then Skirvon cocked his head to one side.
"How do you really want us to
play this?" he asked, getting down to serious business at last.
"That's the difficult question,
isn't it?" mul Gurthak frowned thoughtfully, toying with an
antique dagger he used as a paperweight. Not many people would
have recognized it as a Mythalan rankadi knife. More
modern rankadi knives were far simpler and more
utilitarian. "There's no way the shakira lords are going to
support some sort of 'peaceful coexistence' with these people,
whatever those lunatic Ransarans want. I'm not sure where the
Andarans are going to come down, though. If it weren't for the
fact that Garth Showma's son is right in the middle of this, I'd
expect them to be closer to agreement with us, for a change. As it
is, I think it's going to depend on how the story plays out in public
opinion back home.
"For the moment, we really do
need to keep a lid on this situation, at least until we can
completely redeploy our own forces. And we also need someone
who's a bit older and wiser—maybe even a bit more
cynical—" he smiled quickly at Skirvon, "to make a
firsthand analysis of the other side. Someone not quite so blinded
by the . . . intricacies of the Andaran honor
code."
"I've always been considered a
pretty fair analyst," Skirvon observed.
"Yes, I've heard that about you."
mul Gurthak smiled again, but his eyes were very serious as he
continued. "Still, don't forget that you're dealing with a complete
unknown here. These prisoners of Hundred Olderhan can insist all
they want to that their people don't know anything at all about
magic. I'm not going to take that as a given without some
additional, independent confirmation."
"And if it turns out that they
really don't know anything about magic?" Skirvon asked
delicately.
"Why, in that eventuality," the
two thousand half-drew the dagger, turning it to let the light gleam
wickedly on its razor-sharp edge, "our menu of choices would
change quite radically, wouldn't it?"
mul Gurthak leaned back in his
chair again, once more alone in his office, and grimaced at the
ceiling.
Rithmar Skirvon was almost as
smart as he thought he was, the two thousand reflected. But only
almost. He'd been perfectly happy to enter into certain subsidiary
business arrangements with various Mythalan financiers and
banks, and he'd always held up his end of any arrangements. But by
and large, he seemed to think money and personal power
were all that were at stake. He knew he was involved with
shakira, but he thought they were acting as individuals, in
their own self-interest. He didn't have a clue about the bigger
picture . . . which was fortunate for
him. Men who knew too much about the Council of Twelve and
its plans inevitably had accidents.
Which didn't do a thing to
simplify mul Gurthak's present nasty situation.
The two thousand sighed. As
he'd said to Skirvon, he couldn't begin to forecast how the
Andarans were going to react to this. The Ransarans—aside
from Dastiri's Manisthuans, perhaps—were far easier to
predict. They'd want to understand these Sharonians,
because Ransarans, for reasons only they could fully comprehend,
wanted to understand everything and everyone. It was the second
most maddening thing about them, after their obnoxious
conviction that everyone else should agree with their mad notions
about the total equality of everybody everywhere with everyone.
mul Gurthak managed not to
shudder at the thought only because he'd spent so many years
dissembling. Ransaran democracies were just short of mentally
aberrant, and their citizens—who were usually as vocal
about their absurd beliefs as they were lunatic—frequently
left him feeling queasy. He hadn't been at all distressed to learn
that Magister Kelbryan had chosen to stay with the prisoners in
order to reassure them.
That choice of hers told mul
Gurthak everything he needed to know about Kelbryan's views on
Jasak Olderhan's precious shardonai. It was scarcely a
surprising position for her to take, given her pedigree and history,
and if she wanted to spend time with them, so much the better. The
woman represented one of the greatest public relations disasters in
the history of Mythal, after all, not to mention a staggering affront
to anything approaching decent behavior. And at least this way, he
wouldn't have to clench his teeth against nausea while listening to
her expound her thoughts about these Sharonians. If it should
happen that she developed any genuine insights, they'd
undoubtedly show up in Olderhan's reports, anyway, so he wasn't
overly concerned about depriving himself of critical military
intelligence.
The problem was that, aside
from the regrettable power of her Gift, Kelbryan was typical
of Ransarans, and there were a lot of them. An appalling
number of them, as a matter of fact, when it came to seats in the
Union Parliament. Unlike Mythal, which was experiencing a
steady decline in population, thanks to the current massive
garthan exodus (which had the caste-lords howling in outrage
and threatening to impose emigration quotas—as if the
Accords would have permitted them to do any such thing), the
Ransaran population on Arcana Prime was growing steadily. Not
just in absolute terms, but as a percentage of the total planetary
population, as well.
Despite their much vaunted
individualism and the depressing technological advantages it had
given them, however, Ransarans as a group tended not to relocate
as much as other Arcanans. In part, that was simply because they
preferred the creature comforts of home. Given the almost
universally high standard of living amongst Ransarans, higher than
that of any other group in the Union, outside a few dozen
shakira ruling families, Ransarans simply preferred to stay
home.
Roughing it in a cabin in the
wilderness, with no hospitals, no universities, no theaters or
museums, no banks or stock exchanges, and no shopping emporia
stuffed with luxury goods from every Arcanan universe, was
simply too crude for most self-respecting Ransarans. That was one
Ransaran attitude mul Gurthak understood perfectly. He
missed the comforts of home, as well. Bitterly, at times.
But sacrifices had to be made.
That was a concept he'd embraced long ago, although it clearly
continued to elude most Ransarans. Of course, one of these fine
days, those same Ransarans would wake up to discover that a few
changes had been made. Nith mul Gurthak took great
personal satisfaction in being part of the mechanism which would
make that moment inevitable.
The world would be a far
safer—and vastly more stable—place when that day
finally came, but that wasn't something he could discuss even with
Skirvon. He had allies, to be sure, and the diplomat was one of
them. But Skirvon wasn't part of the inner circle, and never would
be, for the simple reason that however useful he might be,
he wasn't Mythalan.
mul Gurthak grimaced again at
that thought, then pushed his chair back and stood, reviewing the
string of unutterably bad news he'd received over the past few
weeks. One hand clenched itself around his belt dagger's hilt, and
he managed—somehow—not to swear. This whole
nasty business had thrown a serious spanner into a very delicate
piece of machinery, and he had so many piles of pieces to pick up
that he hardly knew where to start. He could perceive—
imperfectly, as yet, but perceive—certain strands of
opportunity running through the chaos which had engulfed so
many years of effort. But even the best of those opportunities
were problematical, and it had taken all of his formidable self-
control not to curse out loud during the past few hours.
Dissembling was a game which
had long since palled. He'd grown weary of presenting a calm and
measured face to the world, hiding his true opinions in order to
accomplish his mission. But it had never been as difficult as it had
while he listened to Olderhan—Olderhan, of all
people—spouting his goodness-and-light interpretation of
the current situation. He'd needed to curse someone,
starting with the incomparably incompetent Shevan Garlath and
ending with the next problem on his list.
He glowered out his office
window at the rapidly settling evening and reached a decision.
Then he turned his back on the dusk and his eyes hardened as he
looked down at the antique rankadi knife on his desk.
That problem he could safely vent spleen on to his heart's
content, he decided. And by all the gods of his grandfathers'
fathers, the stupid little bastard had earned every ounce of spleen
mul Gurthak intended to vent.
He opened his office door and
looked at his clerk.
"Send someone to the brig. I
want to see Bok vos Hoven."
"Yes, Sir." The clerk snapped a
salute and stepped out to arrange for the brig's sole occupant to be
escorted to the commandant's office. Eight minutes later, there
was a tap at mul Gurthak's door.
"Come!" he called, and the door
opened six inches.
"The prisoner and escort have
arrived, Sir."
"Good. Have the escort wait in
your office, but send the prisoner in."
"Yes, Sir."
The clerk disappeared again,
briefly, and Nith mul Gurthak reseated himself behind the desk
and assumed the stern guise of a thoroughly disgruntled
shakira caste-lord. A moment later, the door opened once
more to admit a single person.
Bok vos Hoven was all starch
and swagger as he entered. Clearly, he was confident mul Gurthak
would get him out of the trouble he'd gotten himself into, and the
two thousand shook his head mentally. This was what the
caste was coming to?
The clerk closed the door with a
sharp click. vos Hoven smiled and started to step closer to mul
Gurthak's desk, then paused. His smile seemed to falter as mul
Gurthak simply sat staring at him through narrow eyes and said
nothing at all. The younger shakira looked around,
uncertainly, and mul Gurthak waited until the first few beads of
sweat appeared on his forehead.
"Would you kindly explain," the
two thousand said then, suddenly, coldly, chopping the first hole
in the icy silence he'd so carefully built, "which variety of dragon
shit you use for brains?"
"Sir?" vos Hoven's eyes shot
wide in shock, and fury exploded through mul Gurthak. It was the
depth and genuineness of the swaggering jackass's confusion that
did it. Did the blundering idiot expect mul Gurthak to
congratulate him for his conduct?
Pure rage jerked the two
thousand explosively out of his chair. He snapped to his feet and
slammed both fists against his desktop.
"Imbecile!" he snarled. "How dare you risk
everything we've accomplished for your petty personal
convenience?"
The prisoner stumbled backward,
almost falling as he flinched from mul Gurthak's wrath.
"Mightiest Lord," vos Hoven
whispered in Mythalan, using the form of address the most
groveling supplicant used to address the highest caste-lord of his
birth line, "how have I erred so grievously? I thought—"
"You thought?" Mul
Gurthak hissed. He stepped around his desk and snatched vos
Hoven up onto his toes by the front of his suddenly sweat-stained
uniform blouse. "If you'd thought, you wouldn't be
chained and awaiting trial! Did you honestly think I'd lift a
fingernail to save you? When you've proven yourself to be the
stupidest fool ever born in Mythal?"
He released the fool in question
with explosive energy, shoving him away, and vos Hoven went to
his knees, shaking. Weeping. mul Gurthak glared at him, then
slapped him hard enough to send him sprawling all the way to the
floor.
"You're so proud and conceited
you can't even grovel properly!" the two thousand grated.
"A man in your shoes should be on his belly begging not to be
ordered to commit rankadi!"
The words struck home—
and finally pierced the armor of vos Hoven's inflated self-worth.
He went rigid for a long, horrified instant, then rolled onto his
belly, where he belonged, moaning and covering his head with his
chained hands to hide his shame.
"Better!" mul Gurthak hissed.
"M-may I plead with My Lord?"
vos Hoven's voice quivered with the tremors running through him.
"Plead for what? Your miserable
life?"
"N-no, Mightiest Lord. That is
yours, to end, if you demand it," vos Hoven whispered, then
gulped and waited.
"It's good to see that at least a
few basic facts continue to rattle around inside that empty skull of
yours. What do you plead for?"
"Understanding. I have failed the
caste, and I don't know how!"
There was genuine anguish in
that confused cry—the anguish of a spoiled, selfish child
taught poorly by careless, empty-headed adults. A child now
caught in the jaws of a genuinely vicious trap. If he could see and
admit that he'd erred without knowing how, there might—
just might—be some hope of salvaging something from the
ruins.
"What fool raised you?"
vos Hoven cringed under the
withering scorn of that question. There was no more profound
insult than to openly denigrate a Mythalan's family line. In the
world of the shakira, there was nothing more important
than family line. The family determined one's position in the caste,
just as the caste determined one's position in the world of men and
the realms of the gods. Without caste, a man was nothing to the
gods. Without family line, a man was nothing to the caste. To be
born of a line of fools was to serve the forces of
chaos . . . and to well deserve one's
inevitable divine destruction.
mul Gurthak listened to the
desperate weeping of the man whose place in the eternal cosmos
he'd just ripped so totally and unexpectedly into shreds. The two
thousand felt no pity at all. Mithanan's bollocks! That terrible
deity, God of cosmic destruction, would wreak vengeance on the
entire caste for the utter idiocy of this worm at his feet.
Such awe-inspiring stupidity was beyond belief.
"Please, Mightiest Lord," vos
Hoven cringed, "will you not instruct me? How have I sinned?
How have my teachers failed me and caused me to fail the caste?"
mul Gurthak paced thoughtfully
around the creature on his office floor, trying to decide how best
to go about attempting to salvage something out of it.
"Explain the purpose of the
garthan," he commanded finally, and for just a moment, vos
Hoven lifted his face off the floor, staring up at him in total
confusion.
"My Lord?" he said, and mul
Gurthak reached for patience.
"What is the purpose of the
garthan?" he repeated. "Of their entire caste?"
"To serve the shakira,"
the prisoner managed to get out as he pressed his face back where
it belonged: on the floor.
"To serve the shakira?"
mul Gurthak glowered down at the prostrate body. "How?"
"As our slaves." vos Hoven's
voice was low, tentative. Obviously he wondered why he was
being taken through this basic nursery school catechism. "To do
whatever we demand."
"Fools." mul Gurthak shook his
head almost pityingly. "Triple-cursed fools have had the raising
and teaching of you."
"B-but . . .
why are they fools?"
"Garthan exist to make it
possible for the shakira to carry out the most critical work
in the cosmos: the study and mastery of magic. To understand
magic, at all its levels, in all its nuances, is to touch the minds of
the gods themselves. To gain admittance into the Divine's sacred
presence. To bring one's yurha to a point of growth worthy
of Divine notice, as a first step toward achieving oneness with the
Divine.
"If the shakira had to
plow the ground and grow food out of it, if shakira had to
weave cloth and cook and raise the cattle that provide leather for
shoes, if shakira had to haul the freight and clean the
latrines, no one in all of Arcana would understand magic. No one
would be able to use magic. It was Mythal that tapped the Divine
spirit and won the Gifts for the human race. It was Mythal that set
down the laws of magic, mapped the dimensions of magic,
discovered what magic could do when properly harnessed. It was
Mythal that built Arcanan civilization, spell by spell, and
Mythal did it through the shakira caste's tireless efforts
across millennia of study.
"But none of that would have
been possible without the garthan. Without the magicless
masses—unwashed, untutored, unlettered, inferior in every
possible sense of the word. Yet without them, Arcana—and
the glories of Arcanan civilization—would be nothing
more than a collection of illiterate laborers and herders. That
is the purpose of the garthan. That is their sole purpose. They don't exist to polish your boots and pop the zits on
your worthless arse because you're too godsdamned lazy to do it
yourself!"
vos Hoven flinched under the
whiplash of that caustic voice, and mul Gurthak snorted harshly.
"Next question. What does caste
law say of the man who beats his children in a public place?"
"The Law Giver's holy command
is that such a man be punished by his caste-lord in kind, for the
disciplining of children is a private matter, to be carried out in the
domain of the family line, the privacy of the home. To beat
children in public shows lack of judgment, lack of patience, and
lack of sufficiently wise instruction of the young entrusted to the
family line. These things bring shame to the family line and to the
caste."
He was parroting the words by
rote, without the slightest understanding of their meaning, mul
Gurthak thought disgustedly.
"Under caste law—
true caste law, not the bastardized, compromised version
forced upon Mythal when the Union formed—what were a
family's garthan?"
"Its property."
"A narrow reading. Give me the
ancient reading of that law—its full meaning."
mul Gurthak could practically
see vos Hoven's mind searching through the texts memorized by
rote, repeated recitations spanning one's entire childhood.
"The oldest text I have heard
mentioned, although I was never shown a copy of it, Mightiest
Lord, mentioned garthan as
our . . . children. . .
."
vos Hoven's voice trailed off,
and he gulped.
"But I didn't discipline the
garthan in public!" he protested. "I was careful to do it in
private! Away from the eyes of others."
"And that is precisely why you
are a fool!" mul Gurthak hissed. "Because you understand
nothing. You can parrot back the words, but your brain is full
of sand and your yurha is as avoid of understanding as the
gulfs between the stars. The words have no meaning in your
emptiness, and so you make mistakes—stupid mistakes. Costly ones. Mithanan's balls, do you have any idea
of the cost of this mistake? Out here, outside the borders
of the homeland, we are all under scrutiny—we are all
in public, fool! Is it so impossible for you to understand that
there is no privacy?! Now, because of what you've done,
every Andaran officer will watch every shakira in uniform,
looking for evidence of garthan abuse! And what will any
evidence of the 'abuse' of garthan do? It will taint all
of us. It will cause these honorbound Andarans to watch our
every move. And what will that do to the cause you and I are here
to serve? What will that do to our mission?"
The prisoner whimpered, and
mul Gurthak sneered.
"Oh, you see it now, do you? A
shakira who's watched too closely can't function as we
need him to function, can't acquire the seniority we need. You've
jeopardized everything the Council of Twelve has spent the last thirty years putting into place. Our whole timetable must
come to a screeching halt while we try to make certain that no
one's stumbled across what we're doing because of the way
you've made all of them look so much more closely at all of
us. I'll have to send messages, you utter, cursed moron, warning
others to stop. To lie low. Messages that will put me at
risk of exposure!"
vos Hoven trembled violently,
whimpering once more. mul Gurthak was so angry he wanted to
kick the idiots ribs until something broke, but he couldn't—
not without risking even more probing questions than vos Hoven
had already set in motion. Yet his fury was too great not to do
something, so he crouched beside the other shakira, seized his
hair, jerked his head up off the floor by the long braids. Dark eyes
rolled in abject terror, and mul Gurthak leaned close to hiss into
his face.
"I've worked too hard,
swallowed too many insults from socially and spiritually inferior
louts, to attain my present position. I've gone without too many
creature comforts to see everything I've struggled to achieve come
crashing down in ruins. And why is it falling apart? Because you
used your fists to bruise a garthan for not licking the mud
off your feet! I should feed your worthless carcass to the
dragons."
vos Hoven shuddered violently.
No court in Arcana had actually ordered that court-martialed
soldiers or other prisoners be fed to dragons in the last two
centuries. But the actual law had never been repealed, and there
were a handful of shakira lords in Mythal who did
still feed the damned to their dragons. In strict and careful privacy,
of course . . .
mul Gurthak straightened, letting
let the stupid worm stew in his own juices for long, silent
moments, and the stink of vos Hoven's sweat was sharp and foul,
the smell of terror.
"I had plans for you," the two
thousand said at last, coldly. "Plans that must now be scrapped.
Why do you think I transferred you to Jasak Olderhan's company
in the first place? Or is your memory so short you've already
forgotten the private mission I assigned you to carry out?"
"Mightiest Lord, I-I tried! But I
couldn't. He never comes right out and says it, but he hates
us—hates shakira. You should have seen him
fawning over that garthan. Praising him—
recommending him for promotions. But he hated the rest of us
Mythalans, the shakira in the Company. He shunned and
loathed us. You could see it in his eyes whenever he looked at us."
"He hated shakira?" mul
Gurthak asked softly. "Even Halathyn vos Dulainah?"
"vos Dulainah," vos Hoven all
but spat the dead magister's name, "was a filthy traitor. He
abandoned his caste, even his wife and son. Yes, Olderhan doted
on the old man. And why? Precisely because vos Dulainah
had shunned and betrayed the rest of us. The rest of the shakira
."
"So you say he treated the
shakira in his company badly?" mul Gurthak glared sternly at
vos Hoven. "Be certain of your answer, fool. If you lie, I'll know,
and I do not tolerate lies from a subordinate. Not in my command,
and not in my caste."
vos Hoven gulped. For several
seconds, he kept his face pressed firmly into the floor, silent. But
then, finally, he answered in a low, reluctant voice.
"No. He didn't treat us badly. If a
shakira kowtowed and obeyed like a good little
garthan, Olderhan treated him like anyone else. It was a
double insult. First he demanded that we act like garthan,
and when we did, he treated us equally, as if he
were just as good as we."
mul Gurthak was genuinely
appalled.
"How in Mithanan's name did
someone with your awe-inspiring stupidity get chosen for
the great cause?" he demanded.
"My family line is one of the
oldest and greatest in Mythal." Pride had crept back into vos
Hoven's voice, despite his plight. "My mother's brother is a caste-
lord. My father's father is a caste-lord. That's two caste-lords in
the near-kin family!"
Nepotism. mul Gurthak wanted
to rend something—preferably Bok vos Hoven—
into very small, bleeding pieces. This fool had been sent out on a
mission that called for guile and dissimulation, the acting skills of
a professional stage player, not because he was fit for it,
but because his relatives were politically powerful!
"So you're superior to Olderhan,
are you?"
"Of course I am!"
"Did it never occur to you that
you'd joined the Army? That in an army, officers give
orders to men of lower military rank—regardless of their
respective birth ranks? That you are required to give your
commanding officer your respect, your instant obedience, be he
ever so low-born? Even if that man were a garthan from
your own family's fields, you would still be required to obey him
and show him respect!"
"Never!" vos Hoven
gasped, fiery rebellion burning in his eyes, and mul Gurthak
slapped him. Jerked his head up off the floor and slammed a
backhanded blow across his mouth.
"Silence!"
Rebellion fled. vos Hoven stared
wide-eyed at mul Gurthak, unable to believe even now that he'd
just been struck.
"You were supposed to get close
to Olderhan. To win his confidence, his trust. To learn things from
him—about his father. Things we can't find out any other
way. To become the one who could deliver him to us at the proper
time, in the proper place. You say he didn't trust you, but he doted
on vos Dulainah. Did it never occur to you that the way to win his
confidence would be to act the way vos Dulainah did? To mimic
his attitudes, his professed beliefs? No matter what you really felt
about them?
"No, it didn't, did it? And
because you were too infernally stupid to use the means at your
disposal, we've now lost all hope of getting anyone close to him.
Not just because he's going back to New Arcana, where it would
be difficult to get close to him under the best of circumstances,
but because you've made him doubly wary of us. Do think he'll
trust any Mythalan now?"
vos Hoven tried to make himself
as small as possible while mul Gurthak glared down at him, still
looking for some way to salvage something.
Garth Showma was the key, the
linchpin of Andaran political power. If Garth Showma could be
brought down, it would be far easier to pick off the other Andaran
noble houses, and that had to be done. Parliament trusted the
Andaran aristocracy to run the military for it, because Andarans
were good at it. Because they liked to do it, and everyone knew
they were sufficiently honorbound to be worthy of others' trust.
Which meant that the only way
to replace the Andaran military leaders was to destroy that faith in
them. The Council of Twelve had spent thirty-plus long, patient
years getting shakira officers into the field army, where
they could work their way up the command-grade ranks. The plan
remained some years short of fruition, but the necessary cadre of
highly ranked shakira officers, men with "Arcana's best
interests" in mind, who had distanced themselves from the
stereotypical shakira arrogance and cultural chauvinism by
choosing to serve the mainstream of Arcanan society, would be
ready when—if—the time came for them to
step into the gap left by Andara's disgrace and take charge.
But for the plan to work, Andara
had to be disgraced, starting with Garth Showma, and the
imbecile on mul Gurthak's office floor had botched one of the
most critical components of the entire plan. Jasak Olderhan had
been supposed to be the chink in his father's armor. A source for
useful information, true, but even more the tool who could be led
into the carefully prepared trap with all the exquisitely devised
"evidence" to prove to all of Arcana that the heir to the most
powerful Andaran aristocrat of them all had disgraced himself
through his gross violation of the honor code he and his fellow
aristocrats were supposed to hold so dear.
But Olderhan was out of his
reach, now. Out of Mythal's reach. It was entirely possible
he would be cashiered over this business, but mul Gurthak had
learned a great deal about the way the Andaran mind worked.
Whatever happened to Jasak's military career, his fellow
Andarans—and the critical members of Parliament—
would recognize that his performance throughout had actually
been exemplary. Klian's report already made it blindingly obvious
that if Jasak's advice had been followed, the entire portal attack
would never have happened.
That might not be enough to
prevent him from being cashiered, but it would certainly prevent
him from being disgraced. And if Jasak left the Army, he
would have to find another career worthy of Garth Showma,
which meant just one thing: politics. An Andaran might actually
turn a disaster like being cashiered, despite having done all the
right things, into a political asset, if he were clever enough. And if
Jasak Olderhan wasn't, Thankhar Olderhan certainly was.
But what if it turned out that he
hadn't done all the right things?
Nith mul Gurthak stood very
still, thinking furiously.
If future conflict with these
Sharonians was avoided, it would be obvious to almost anyone
that a great deal of the credit for it went to Hundred Olderhan.
After all, he would be the one who'd saved the lives of the two
Sharonian prisoners—made them his own shardonai—who had provided the critical insight into who and what
Sharona truly was. Not to mention the prisoners who had taught
Arcanan diplomats how to speak the Sharonians' language.
But if future conflict wasn't
avoided, then young Jasak would get no credit for preventing
it and still have to face the consequences of having started
it. And if it turned out that it had all started out of his own
incompetence or cowardice, and that he'd then falsified his report,
knowing it couldn't be challenged because every man of his
company had been killed or captured by the enemy as a direct
consequence of his incompetence while he himself was safe in
the protection of Fort Rycharn . . .
It wouldn't be easy to sell, but it
wouldn't be impossible, either. Not with the proper groundwork,
and not with the elimination of so many witnesses who might have
corroborated Olderhan's version of what had happened. There
were only three survivors from the company, beside vos Hoven
and Olderhan himself, and if they couldn't be suborned, there was
always the possibility of securing obedience by taking hostages.
That had worked often enough in the past. Or they could simply be
eliminated. Klian would have to go, too, of course. But with
all of them gone . . .
mul Gurthak drew in several
breaths, then, finally, looked back down at the chained shakira
on his office floor.
"All right, there may be one way
out of this mess you've made. Listen closely, do you
understand me? Because if you bungle this, I will personally hunt
you down, put the rankadi knife in your hands, and watch
you cut your own throat with it. Have I made myself perfectly
clear on that point?"
"Y-yes, Mightiest Lord."
"Good. See that you remember,
because you're not going to enjoy this process. I don't give a rat's
ass about that, either, do you understand me? You'll do exactly
what I tell you. You'll swallow the stigma, the shame, and the
punishments you've earned, and in the end, you may well fail
anyway. But if you succeed, I won't issue the order to commit
rankadi. That's the only bargain you'll get; is it one you can
live with, or shall I hand you the knife right now?"
vos Hoven lay trembling under
the two thousand's cold, implacable stare for a small eternity.
Then, finally, he gulped and nodded convulsively.
"Yes, Mightiest Lord," he
whispered. "I understand."
"Good!" mul Gurthak repeated.
"Now shut up, and for once in your worthless life, listen!"
Chapter Forty
Zindel chan Calirath's head
ached.
So did his back. And after twelve
murderous hours in the instrument of torture some sadistic
furniture joiner had managed to pass off as a chair, his backside
had gone from aching to screaming to numb, with occasional
needles and pins that ran down the backs of both thighs.
Whoever designed these chairs should be shot, he
groused. Or chained to one of them for a month or two.
His mood, he thought, wouldn't
have been quite so sour if his fellow world rulers hadn't been so
utterly, pigheadedly, invincibly, blissfully parochial. All
their insufferable demands, excuses, obstructionist arguments, and
refusals to simply get the job done were driving him rapidly mad.
They needed to suck down their petty personal concerns and vote
in a government—even a temporary one—so
they could get on with the urgent business of preparing Sharona
for war.
Didn't anyone see the
dire risks they all faced?
It took time to gear up for a
military campaign—especially one of this magnitude. No
Sharonian nation had ever fought a war that stretched across
multiple universes. The logistics problems alone would be the
stuff of nightmares. This Conclave needed to be thrashing through
that, not arguing over who would have the right to install traffic
signs and draw school zones in local towns and villages.
When the Limathian Prince
Regent stood up and started demanding that any planetary
governing authority must have the power to grant guarantees on
deep-sea fishing rights, something snapped inside Zindel. It jerked
him to his feet. Sent his fists crashing down upon his delegation's
table in the vast Emperor Garim Chancellery which had been
chosen as the Conclave's initial meeting site.
"Mr. Director! Ternathia lodges
a formal protest!"
The Prince Regent's mouth fell
open. Every head in the chamber swiveled, like so many
marionettes on strings, as their owners stared at him. Orrin
Limana, visibly drooping against the presiding officer's lectern
after twelve hours on his feet, straightened abruptly.
"Emperor Zindel," he said
crisply, "what is the nature of your protest?"
"Mr. Director, I protest the utter
waste of our time into which shortsighted members of this
Conclave are forcing us! This is the second day we've met. We sat
here for fourteen hours yesterday. We've been sitting here for
twelve and a half more hours today, and we've decided
exactly nothing. Not one, solitary, blessed thing! The troop
movements arranged unilaterally by Emperor Chava and myself,
with your cooperation, are the only military preparations
anyone outside the Portal Authority has managed to carry out,
even though three weeks have passed since the attack on
our survey crew."
He glowered around the huge,
marble chancellery's gorgeous precincts, as if daring any person
present to dispute what he'd just said.
"This Conclave has one purpose.
Just one. We aren't here to decide where to put traffic
signs. We aren't here to decide which school our children should
attend. While we sit here bickering over inconsequential trivia,
Sharonian men and women—Sharonian
children—are in mortal danger.
"We have colonies—not
just forts with garrisons of soldiers, but colonies—
within four transits of New Uromath, and by my conservative
count, there are no fewer than twenty-three survey crews in that
region. The Chalgyn Consortium crew was less than two days
away from a portal fort, yet every member of it was massacred.
Ternathia's Third Dragoons are en route to Fort Salby, but
they won't arrive there for more than another full month, although
Uromathia's cavalry regiments, fortunately, will reach Salby in
two weeks, and the remaining divisions of Fifth Corps will entrain
over the next several weeks.
"I'm sure we're all relieved to
know troops are moving towards the front. But those troops are all we have moving towards the threat, and it's another
five thousand miles from Salby to New Uromath," he said
grimly. "It will take them almost a month and a half just to reach
Salby, and then another two and a half months to reach the
front, and we have no idea what sort of attacks they may face
along the way. No way of knowing what numbers of troops we'll
need at the front. And still we haven't taken a
single step towards organizing our planet for the sort of war we
may face. Not
one . . . single . .
. step."
His voice echoed in a dead
silence.
"It's obvious the other side
knows about multiple universes and portals, since Company-
Captain chan Tesh found them camped right in the middle of one. I
shouldn't have to point out that we have no idea how large their
territory is, how many universes they've already occupied. How long have these people known about portals? How many
universes have they explored? How many have they colonized?
"How big are they?"
He paused again, sweeping them
with his eyes before he resumed.
"We've been exploring for eighty
years. That seems a long time, my friends, but it isn't. Not really. It
certainly hasn't been long enough for us to build a large
population base out there. Most of our colonies have been
established in the last thirty or forty years, directly from Sharona.
That leaves our out-universe populations stretched thin. We're
strung out, like beads on a broken necklace, and none of
our colonies have the manpower, out of their own resources, to
hold against a powerful attack. None of them is capable of self-
defense, yet there are far too many people living in them for
evacuation to be a practical option even if we decided to pull them
all back to Sharona.
"Our enemies might
have just discovered portals in their backyard, but it's just as likely
they've been exploring and colonizing for centuries. We
could be facing a population two, or ten, or even a hundred times our size. Yes, the point of contact is forty thousand miles
from here. Yes, the thought of someone being able to successfully
project military power along an invasion route that long boggles
the mind. But think about the troop movements rail lines and
steamships make possible. We can get troops from here to Fort
Salby, even allowing for water crossings, in less than two months.
That's how long it took Captain of the Army chan Baraeg to march
an infantry army from the Bernith Channel to the Janu
River three thousand years ago. Does anyone in this
chamber wish to suggest that we haven't fought wars—
terrible, destructive wars—over greater march distances and
despite far greater logistical challenges than that?
"With modern transport, wars can be fought at distances that great. Never think they can't! I
pray that we can avoid fighting any war at all, that diplomacy and
sanity can still stop this situation from lurching into an all out
military confrontation with someone we know nothing
about. But what if they can't? If diplomacy fails, we do
have a war to fight, and however long it might take for that
fighting to reach Sharona itself, it will sweep over our colonies
far, far sooner unless we prevent that. Are we going to sit
here, secure in the safe insulation of distance, and try to use this
Conclave to settle long-standing, purely Sharonian problems while
combat marches towards those colonies? Are the people who live
there somehow less important than where we put our traffic
signs?
"We have lives to save,
godsdamn it! Do you honestly believe the mothers in the colonies
closest to the people who've massacred an entire survey crew of
civilians give a single solitary damn about who catches
fish off the coast of Limathia? They're too busy wondering when
their children will be shot down before their eyes, or burned to
death in a fireball!"
He glared at them, and all of his
frustration, anger, and driving need to save Sharonian lives, boiled
up in a bullthroated challenge roar.
"We don't have time to
argue about the godsdamned fish!"
Somebody in a high gallery
behind him cheered. An instant later, what seemed like every
gallery in the chancellery—and at least a third of the
delegates on the chamber floor itself—had broken into
thunderous applause. The Prince Regent of Limathia had gone
crimson. Reporters were snapping photographs so fast the flash
powder half-blinded Zindel, and Orem Limana wasn't even trying
to gavel the crowd of spectators to order. He just stood there,
watching it roar its approval, while a strange half-smile flickered
across his face.
The tumult eventually wound
down, and when Limana finally raised his hands for silence, the
last of the applause died away. People settled back into their seats
at last, but Zindel remained standing. Not only could he not abide
the thought of sitting back down in that hateful chair, but he
intended to finish this business.
"Emperor Zindel," the Portal
Authority's First Director said into the restored silence, "thank you
for lodging your protest. It is well taken—very well taken,
indeed. If more Sharonian lives are lost because we fail to act
swiftly enough, their blood will be on our hands, and no one
else's."
"Will the Emperor yield?"
another voice asked, half-lost in the enormous chamber, yet firm.
Zindel turned his head until he saw the speaker, standing in the
midst of the Shurkhali delegation.
"Master Chairman," the Emperor
said to Limana, "Ternathia yields temporarily, and without
prejudice, to the Honorable Parliamentary Representative from
Shurkhal."
"Representative Kinshe, you
have the floor," Limana said, and actually managed to sound as if
he had absolutely no idea what Halidar Kinshe was about to say.
"Your Majesty, I thank you,"
Kinshe said simply, then turned to face the rest of the assembled
delegates.
"As Emperor Zindel has just
so . . . eloquently pointed out, we've
sat here today for twelve and a half hours—over twenty-six
hours, in all—listening to what amounts to no more than
opening remarks," he said into the ringing silence. "I suppose that's
inevitable, to some extent. This is the greatest gathering of heads
of state in Sharona's history. Of course every nation represented
here has some problem, some dispute, some need which it wishes
to place upon the record, and for which it wishes to seek
resolution.
"Yet the fact is, that those very
desires, and the very fact that they are so natural, so inevitable,
underscore the true nature of the challenge we all face. We are
gathered here as representatives of scores of independent nations,
yet we face a menace—a danger—to all of
our citizens. One which we cannot possibly meet unilaterally, out
of our own national resources.
"Every person in this chamber
knows of Shurkhal's loss." Kinshe's voice was suddenly harsh, his
expression bleak. "Thousands of Shurkhali men have already
flocked to the colors, already sworn themselves to blood
vengeance for Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband. Yet
Shurkhal recognizes that she cannot seek justice by herself. We
must act together, we must act as one, and above all, we must
act."
He paused, and silence hovered,
unbroken by so much as the rustle of feet or a single cough.
"My friends," he said finally, "we
need a system of world governance, and we have no time to thresh
out all the details of some new and splendid system with which we
will all be content. And since we have too little time for that task,
it seems to me most fortunate that we don't have to undertake it."
He paused once more, and this
time the silence was so intense it seemed to hurt his audience's
ears.
"We already have a working
model of governance to draw upon," he said quietly. "A model
which has endured the test of time, war, natural disaster, and
adversity of every kind. The model of a government which has
administered a region spanning half the globe. Governed diverse
peoples from dozens of different cultures and languages, and done
it justly and well. A government which has fought more
successful wars than all the other nations of Sharona combined
, and yet one which has never embraced militarism for its own
sake. One whose subjects enjoy great personal freedom, and
perhaps the highest average standard of living in the world.
"Sharona has no better model for
a world government. Indeed, Sharona cannot have a better
model. Rather than thrash around creating something new and
untested, something whose strength we cannot know and whose
stability we cannot trust, let us turn to one all of us know, most
from our own history. There is too much at stake for us to settle
for anything less. And, perhaps most important of all, its current
ruler has already demonstrated the ability to see very clearly the
most important tasks ahead of us. The nature and magnitude of the
risks we face, and what must be accomplished to meet them."
"I move that we create a united
Empire of Sharona, based on the model and institutions of the
Ternathian Empire."
Zindel's jaw tried to drop, but
before he could do more than draw breath to protest, another
voice called out.
"Farnalia seconds the motion,
provided that we also adopt the current Ternathian Emperor,
Zindel chan Calirath, as the new Emperor of Sharona!"
"The Queens of Bolakin second
the motion as amended!"
Zindel stared hard at his
longtime allies, who merely gazed back at him as if the
motion—and its amendment—were truly
spontaneous. And, despite his own sudden suspicion, he knew he
would never be able to prove they hadn't been.
But if it was a put up job, the
well-organized steamroller wasn't allowed to proceed to its
destination unchallenged.
"Uromathia protests!" Chava
Busar, Emperor of Uromathia, was on his feet, his face livid, and
another uproar swept the chamber.
It took several minutes for Orem
Limana to gavel the chaos back to order once again. He managed
it in the end, not without a bit of shouting of his own, then looked
very formally at the Uromathian ruler.
"What protest do you wish to
lodge, Emperor Chava?"
"I protest the unseemly and
improper haste with which certain parties wish to call for a vote
on two critical issues at once, without open debate or formal
nominations for each separate issue!"
"Those two issues
being—?"
"The first being the motion to
adopt the Ternathian Empire as the model for a world government,
as if Ternathia's were the only great empire in Sharonian history,"
Chava bit out. "And the second being the question of who would
head this proposed Empire of Sharona. They are separate
issues. They must be voted on separately!"
"They are not separate issues!"
the Emperor of Farnalia bellowed, surging to his feet in furious
disregard of the formal rules of parliamentary procedure. Ronnel
Karone, a bigger man even than Zindel, towered two feet and more
taller than the Emperor of Uromathia, and his expression was not
pleasant. "We're not adopting Ternathia as a model. We're
adopting Ternathia as our government, and Ternathia
has a ruler. A capable, intelligent, honest ruler."
Zindel winced; Chava went
purple; Karone didn't even pause.
"We're voting to place all of
Sharona under the rule of the Ternathian Empire, so we don't need
a separate nomination and vote, because there is no
separate issue. Ternathia has an Emperor; Sharona will
have the same one!"
"Uromathia will never tolerate
you, or anyone else, shoving an emperor we don't trust down our
throats without so much as the courtesy of open debate, let alone
open and honest nominations!" Chava bellowed back, and
pandemonium erupted once more.
Shouts and threats flew thick as
hailstones while the First Director banged his gavel again and
again, shouting for order. No one even seemed to notice for what
seemed like hours, but finally, slowly, the raucous uproar began to
wane.
"We have a motion on the floor,"
Limana announced firmly, once order had finally been restored. "It
has been seconded. We also have a serious protest on the floor. In
the interest of justice, I cannot in good conscience allow the vote
to go forward until the protest has been addressed."
"Master Chairman!"
"The Chair recognizes the
Emperor of Ternathia."
"Thank you." Zindel stood once
more and faced the other delegations, shaking his head.
"My friends, First Director
Limana has a point. Technically, I suppose, we should proceed to
debate the motion as stated and vote upon it. Any protests would,
obviously, form a part of that debate.
"But Ternathia didn't seek this
proposal, and Ternathia's Emperor has no wish to rule the people
of Sharona under a vote whose propriety is in any way
questionable. We cannot afford to create a situation in which
any nation feels it was coerced or pressured into accepting
what amounts to foreign rule. That, my friends, is the very
definition of tyranny, and I will not play the part of tyrant,
be the emergency we face ever so great.
"With all due gratitude to the
Emperor of Farnalia and the Queens of Bolakin for their
confidence in me," he bowed formally in their direction, "I must
insist that this protest be honored. It's one thing to spend twelve
hours arguing about trivia; it's quite another to ram through a vote
of this magnitude without open debate and the opportunity for
nominations from all of Sharona's sovereign rulers."
Chava's triumphant smile was
very nearly a gloating sneer. Zindel knew perfectly well that if
anyone had been mad enough to nominate Uromathia as a
government to rule all Sharona, Chava Busar would never have
insisted on a fair and open debate as to who should do the ruling.
Zindel understood that. Indeed, it had taken all of his own
determination to insist upon scrupulous honesty, and that decision
on his part might yet cost him and all of Sharona dearly.
But as he'd said, he would not
rule under what amounted to a fraudulent nomination, no matter
how attractive it might be in ensuring that Uromathia's current
Emperor didn't end up in power. Karone looked at him for a
moment, then shot a glowering look at Uromathia's gloating
ruler—a glare which said all too clearly, Every hell in
Arpathia will freeze solid before I see you on the imperial
throne of Sharona!
"Ternathia moves—
indeed, insists," Zindel said, "that the current motion and
nomination be withdrawn and replaced by two separate motions.
The first, that Sharona adopt the model and institutions of the
Ternathian Empire as the basis for a worldwide government. The
second, that nominations be opened for who shall serve as
Emperor—or Empress—of a united Sharona."
"Second both motions!" Chava
called instantly.
"Very well," Limana said. "It has
been moved, and seconded, that the current motion and
nomination be withdrawn and replaced by two new motions. First,
that Sharona adopt the Ternathian Empire as the basis for a
worldwide Empire. Second, that nominations be opened for
Emperor or Empress."
He paused just long enough for a
profoundly respectful half-bow to Zindel, then gazed back out
across the enormous chamber.
"The Chair will now entertain
debate upon the first motion," he announced.
Chapter Forty-One
"Something's bothering you,"
Gadrial said quietly.
Jasak twitched in surprise at the
sound of her voice. He hadn't noticed her walking up behind him
as he stood on Fort Talon's fighting step, weight balanced on his
crossed forearms while he leaned forward against the parapet and
gazed out into the gathering evening. It was unusual for anyone to
be able to approach him that closely without his noticing. He'd
always had a particularly well developed case of what his father
called "situational awareness" and his mother called "that damned,
nervous cat Olderhan paranoia," and he'd been paying even more
attention than usual to his built-in warning system since his
encounter with vos Hoven.
And, he thought wryly, since I started worrying as
much about my superiors as about potential enemies.
Now he turned toward the
magister, arching one eyebrow.
"What makes you think
something's bothering me?" he asked mildly.
"I'm not developing Shaylar's
'Talent,' if that's what you're afraid of," she replied with a tart
smile. "Mind you, it would probably come in handy trying to
understand you inscrutable Andarans! But the explanation is
actually a lot less exotic than that. You've been standing here
staring at the dragonfield for the better part of thirty minutes
without even moving. Which suggested to my powerful intellect
that either something was bothering you or else you'd chosen a
remarkably uncomfortable spot for an after-dinner nap."
"I see." He smiled back at her,
but there was more tension in his smile than in hers.
"It's all right, Jasak," she said
more gently. "Chief Sword Threbuch is standing in the hallway
right outside their door. And—" she studied his expression
for a moment, as if considering whether or not to tell him
something, then shrugged "—I might as well admit that I'm
not quite as trusting as I ought to be."
"Meaning?" His eyes narrowed,
and she shrugged again.
"Meaning I've tagged both of
them with magister-level security spells. If anyone whose personae
I didn't include in the original spell comes within four feet of
them, I'll know. And if anyone tries to hurt them or drag either of
them off against their will . . . Well,
let's just say whoever it is won't enjoy the experience one bit."
She studied his expression far
more anxiously than her own expression might have indicated. Sir
Jasak Olderhan was Andaran, after all, with an Andaran's faith in
the honor of the Arcanan Army and its officer corps.
"Is that legal?" he asked after a
moment.
"As long as the enforcement
aspect of the spell is nonlethal, it's not illegal," she replied.
"It's a gray area, in a lot of ways. Under the circumstances, and
given our shared commitment to see to their personal safety and
the importance of the intelligence asset they represent, I don't think
there could be any objection. Not any legitimate objection,
anyway."
"Except, of course, from the
people who try to do the dragging," he observed lightly. He
smiled, but it was a fleeting smile, and his eyes turned bleak.
"Which, Magister Kelbryan, won't bother me one tiny bit. Thank
you."
"You're welcome," she said
quietly, and laid one hand on his forearm. "I said it was 'our
commitment,' Jasak. It is. I may not understand everything about
your people's honor code, but what I do understand, I respect. I
even admire most of it, although it's all very unRansaran. But even
if I didn't, Shaylar and Jathmar have suffered enough. If anyone
wants to hurt either of them ever again, they're going to have to
come through both of us, not just you."
"Thank you," he repeated in a
much softer tone, and patted the hand on his forearm once, lightly.
She looked into those dark,
brown eyes of his and felt a twinge of surprise. She kept her
expression serene, but her pulse seemed to have speeded up
unaccountably, and she scolded herself for it. That was the last
thing either of them needed at this particular time!
"So," she said more lightly,
"what's bothering you?"
He snorted. It should have
sounded amused, but it didn't, and then he turned back to the fort
parapet and pointed at the forest-walled dragonfield with his chin.
"What do you see out there,
Gadrial?"
"What?" Gadrial blinked in
surprise, then stepped up beside him to gaze out over the same
vista for several seconds. "Just the dragonfield," she said finally.
"'Just the dragonfield,'" he
repeated softly, almost musingly.
"Obviously you're seeing
something I'm not."
"No." He shook his head. "It's
just that I know what we ought to be seeing. I know
you've spent a lot of time in Garth Showma, but you're still
basically a civilian, Gadrial. I'm not."
"So tell this poor 'civilian' what
she's missing."
"Sorry." He flashed her a grin,
acknowledging her tone's exaggerated patience. "I didn't mean to
be mysterious. It's just that there are an awful lot of dragons out
there, Gadrial. A lot."
Gadrial frowned, gazing out
over the field once more, and then nodded slowly. She'd noticed
when they arrived that the field seemed unusually crowded, but
her mind had been on other matters at the time. Now that Jasak
had called her attention to it, she realized that the number of
dragons out there actually exceeded the field's designed capacity
by a substantial margin. Each dragon was supposed to have its
own assigned nesting place, with overhead cover against the
elements, but there were too many of the huge beasts for that to be
possible. At least a quarter of those she could see were
housed—if that was the word for it—in hastily
improvised wallows the recent rain had turned muddy, giving
them a bedraggled, down-at-the-heels look she was unaccustomed
to seeing from the Air Force.
"You're right," she
acknowledged. "I hadn't noticed."
"That's not all," Jasak said
soberly, and nodded towards the flatter area to the south of the
dragonfield.
The area to the north was given
over to paddocks and holding pens filled with the imported cattle
and locally rounded up bison which provided the dragons' primary
food supply. Now that Jasak had drawn her attention to the
number of beasts actually thronging the field, she realized that the
holding pens were unusually full, as well. But he was pointing in
the opposite direction, and she felt her forehead furrowing as she
saw the neat rows of white tents.
"That's at least a two-company
bivouac," he told her. "And that's the next best thing to five
hundred men."
Gadrial nodded slowly. Once
upon a time, she knew, the Andaran rank titles which the Union's
military establishment had adopted had been literal descriptors of
the size of an officer's command. Over time, however, as armies
grew and evolved, that had changed. Jasak was a commander of
one hundred, and one hundreds had always commanded infantry
companies. But a company consisted of almost two hundred and
fifty men these days, not the hundred men it had once contained.
And Five Hundred Klian's battalion consisted (or should have,
assuming it had been at full strength) of almost eleven hundred
men, not five hundred, while a commander of two thousand's
regiment was over three thousand men strong.
None of which explained what
five hundred men were doing living in tents outside Fort Talon's
barracks.
"mul Gurthak's calling in
reinforcements," she said.
"That's exactly what he's doing,"
Jasak agreed. Then he inhaled deeply. "We shouldn't be surprised.
After all, he's the most senior officer this side of the Ucala
sliderhead, and that's still over twelve thousand miles from here.
It's his responsibility to concentrate as much combat power as he
can, just in case. It's just . . . "
His voice trailed off, and he
shook his head. Not that he needed to complete the sentence for
Gadrial's benefit.
She stood beside him, gazing at
the innocent looking white tents which housed the men mul
Gurthak couldn't squeeze into his available barracks space and at
the transport dragons ringing the field. There were at least a dozen
battle dragons, like the two which had reacted to Shaylar so
strongly, as well, and Gadrial's blood ran cold at the thought that
dragons might actually be used in battle once again.
And if we're prepared to use dragons for the first time in two
hundred years, she thought with a bone-deep shiver, recalling
a conversation with Shaylar and Jathmar, what else are
we prepared to do for the first time in two hundred years?
It was a question she couldn't
answer, and she felt like a coward for being grateful that she could
not.
"Well, gentlemen," Nith mul
Gurthak said, tipping back his chair and smiling at Rithmar
Skirvon and Uthik Dastiri, "I suppose it's time that you were on
your way."
The sun had barely risen over
Fort Talon, but the two diplomats were already packed and ready
to go. Their beautifully tailored civilian clothing had been
exchanged for utilitarian Air Force flight suits, and neither of
them looked any more enthralled by the prospect of a five
thousand-mile journey than mul Gurthak would have been in their
place.
"I'm afraid so," Skirvon agreed
with a grimace. "I wish we were eligible for flight pay!"
"Understandable, I suppose,"
mul Gurthak conceded with a slight smile. Then his expression
grew more sober. "A great deal depends upon you
gentlemen—on your judgment and your efforts. I won't
belabor that point further, since I know we're all already aware of
it. I wish there were time for us to seek formal guidance from
Parliament and the Commandery. There isn't."
"Understood, Two Thousand,"
Skirvon replied somberly. "I assure you that we'll do our best."
"I never doubted it." mul
Gurthak rose behind his desk and extended his right hand. "Good
luck, gentlemen."
"Thank you, Two Thousand,"
Skirvon said very seriously. Then mul Gurthak shook hands with
both of them and watched them walk out of his office.
"How far did you say it was to
the next portal?" Shaylar asked as she and Jathmar followed Jasak
and Gadrial towards the dragonfield.
"About nine hundred miles,"
Jasak replied. "One day's dragon flight."
"Assuming, of course," Shaylar
forced an edge of humor into her voice, "that the dragon in
question doesn't just decide to eat me and be done with it,
instead."
Jasak stopped. The rest of their
small procession—including a still obviously irked
Hundred Neshok and half a dozen soldiers from his
company—stopped as well, and Jasak turned to face her.
"That isn't going to happen,
Shaylar," he told her firmly. "We're taking Skyfang, and we haven't
had any problems with him."
"No, we haven't," Shaylar agreed.
She couldn't keep her intense relief from showing, not that she
tried particularly hard. The Fort Wyvern dragon Skyfang and his
pilot, Commander of Fifty Daris Varkal, were a well oiled team.
They'd obviously been together a long time, possibly as long as
Muthok Salmeer and Windclaw. Unlike Windclaw, however,
Skyfang—who was even larger than Windclaw—had
shown no inclination to take large, messy bites out of her. In fact,
she'd almost felt as if the dragon actually liked her,
although she wasn't about to invest any great confidence in that
possibility.
"As a matter of fact, Shaylar,"
Gadrial said with a slight smile for Jasak, "Jasak's requested that
we stick with Skyfang and Fifty Varkal as long as possible. We
may have to change dragons in Rycarh or Jylaros—we have
fairly long sea voyages crossing each of those universes, and we
may not have enough room aboard ship for Skyfang—but if
we can, we'll hang onto both of them all the way to Ucala."
"Is that likely to be possible?"
Jathmar asked.
"It depends on the available
shipping," Jasak said. "That's one reason I hadn't mentioned the
possibility to you. Not all of our ships are configured as dragon
transports, so we may not be able to. I'd say the odds were
probably slightly in our favor, but I can't guarantee it."
"Whether we can or not, I truly
appreciate the thought, Jasak," Shaylar said. "Thank you."
"I told you, Shaylar," Jasak said
quietly, taking her delicate hand in one of his and squeezing it
gently, "you and Jathmar are members of my family, now.
However deeply I may regret the circumstances which make that
so, I'm honored to have you as a sister, and I look out for all
my sisters. And—" he looked across her head at the
Jathmar "—my brothers, too. Now that I have one."
Jathmar looked back at him,
more than a little uncomfortably. Then the Sharonian grimaced.
"Like Shaylar, I appreciate the
thought," he said. "On the other hand, has anyone suggested why
some of the dragons seem to react so much more strongly to her?
Or why they don't react to me the same way?"
"As to why they react to her, the
only logical explanation is that it's something about her particular
Talent," Gadrial said. "My best guess is that a 'Voice's' abilities
produce some sort of . . . signature,
or emission, dragons are sensitive to. And, obviously, one they
don't much like."
She smiled without any humor at
all, and Jathmar snorted.
"I believe you could safely say
that," he agreed.
"As for the reason some of them
respond more strongly than others," Jasak took over as they began
walking towards the field once again, "I've got the beginnings of a
theory."
"You do?" Jathmar glanced
sideways at his Andaran "brother" as they headed down the dirt
road. He was relieved to see that all of the field's dragons had been
moved back from the roadway for a safe distance.
"Yes," Jasak said. "I want to ask
Daris a couple of questions before I say anything more, though.
And even if I'm right, it only changes the question, it doesn't really
answer it."
"We're supposed to be the ones
concealing sensitive information from you," Jathmar said
dryly, and Jasak chuckled.
"I'm not really trying to be
mysterious, Jathmar. It's just that I didn't want to get anyone's
hopes up for what may turn out to be the wrong reasons.
Besides—"
He broke off as they reached the
field itself. Fifty Varkal and Skyfang were waiting for them, and
the dragon's head rose, turning towards them, nostrils flaring. As
always, Jathmar was acutely uncomfortable when any of the huge
beasts showed an interest in Shaylar, but Skyfang gave no sign of
hostility. Indeed, something suspiciously like a deep, subterranean
purr seemed to rumble in his enormous chest.
"Good morning, Hundred.
Magister Kelbryan." Varkal greeted Jasak and Gadrial, then looked
past them. "Good morning, Master Nargra. Good morning, Lady
Nargra-Kolmayr."
"Good morning, Daris," Jasak
replied for all of them while Shaylar and Jathmar smiled at him.
Unlike most of the Arcanan officers they'd encountered, Daris
Varkal had been genuinely and naturally courteous from the
moment they met.
"We're cleared and ready to go as
soon as we're all on board, Sir," the fifty told Jasak.
"Good," Jasak replied
approvingly. Varkal reached out a hand to Gadrial, preparing to
assist her in mounting to Skyfang's back, but Jasak's raised hand
stopped him.
"Sir?"
"I've been wondering about
something, Daris. How well do you know Squire Salmeer and
Windclaw?"
"Pretty well, Sir," Varkal said
just a bit cautiously. "Muthok's a good man—one of the
best. I've learned a lot from him, and Windclaw's one of the most
experienced transports you're ever going to see."
"That was my impression of
them, as well." Jasak nodded. "What I was wondering, though, is
how much you know about Windclaw's pedigree." Varkal looked
surprised, and Jasak chuckled a bit sourly. "The first time
Windclaw met Lady Nargra-Kolmayr, he wanted to eat her," he
reminded the pilot, "but Skyfang here actually seems to like her."
"He does, Sir." Varkal seemed a
little surprised that Jasak had noticed and turned to smile at
Shaylar. "The Hundred's right about that, My Lady," he said
earnestly. "Skyfang's smart. He's not as old as Windclaw, but he's
been around, and I've had him for a long time now. I know him
pretty well, and he does like you." He shook his head, his
expression turning more than a little chagrined. "I should have told
you that already, I guess. After all, Muthok warned me about how
Windclaw reacted. I should have realized you'd be worried."
"I thought he liked her," Jasak
said with a hint of satisfaction. "That's what started me wondering
about pedigrees. I'm no Air Force officer, but I've seen quite a few
dragons over the years. I hope it won't offend you if I say that
Skyfang here looks a bit bigger
and . . . less agile than Windclaw."
"No offense taken, Sir," Varkal
said with what certainly looked like a genuine grin. "Old Skyfang's
a transport to the bone. All of his ancestors—clear back to
the first egg in Ransar, as far as I know—have been
transports." He reached higher than his head to pat his dragon's
massive foreleg with affectionate pride. "Windclaw's a fine beast,
but Skyfang can out-lift him any day. We can haul half again the
weight Muthok and Windclaw can, although, to be fair, you were
lucky you drew them for your medevac. Like you say, Windclaw's
quite a bit more agile. From your description, I don't think we
could have gotten in and out again where he and Muthok did."
"Because Windclaw's line is a
transport-battle dragon cross, isn't it?"
"Yes, Sir. I couldn't say exactly
how far back, but it's easy enough to see if you know what to look
for." Varkal shrugged. "A pure transport like Skyfang is bred for
strength, stamina, and range before anything else. He's
a . . . strategic transport, I guess you'd
say—bred for moving the maximum loads well behind the
front line. Windclaw, now, he's more of a tactical
transport, bred to support the air-mobile outfits. He can't carry as
much, but he's fast and maneuverable—for a transport. That
counts when you're trying to get troops or supplies into a hot LZ,
and a lot of mission planners like to have at least some breath
weapon capability in their frontal area tac transports."
"That's what I thought." Jasak
looked at Shaylar and Jathmar. "As nearly as I can tell, all of the
dragons who have reacted so negatively to Shaylar have been
either battle dragons or, like Windclaw, a transport-battle dragon
cross. So whatever it is about you, it would appear that it only
bothers the combat types, and we should see less and less of those
as we get further to the rear."
"That's a relief—assuming
you've got it right," Jathmar said. "On the other hand, I'd still like
to know exactly what causes the reaction in the first place."
"So would I. I'm not sure we
ever will, though. And at the moment, I'll settle for anything that
lets us keep Shaylar safely away from dragons that won't like her."
"Me, too," Shaylar said firmly.
Emboldened by Jasak's theory,
she reached out and patted Skyfang's huge, scaly, tree trunk of a
leg the same way Varkal had. The huge dragon raised his head
once more, cocking it to one side and looking down at her. Then
he lowered it—not with the quick, angry motion the other
dragons had shown, but slowly, almost gently.
Shaylar heard Jasak inhale
sharply and felt Jathmar's sudden spike of fear through the
marriage bond, but she stood her ground as that enormous head
hovered just above her. The gigantic right eye considered her
thoughtfully, reassuringly calmly, and then Skyfang's vast forked
tongue flickered out and touched her on the shoulder. The tongue
alone—narrow as a serpent's, in proportion to the
dragon—was as broad as her torso, and she felt its
enormous weight . . . and strength.
But its touch was gentle, and she smiled delightedly as she sensed
something at the very edge of her Talent.
She'd always known she had at
least a trace of her mother's Talent. She'd felt it quite often,
swimming with the dolphins at her mother's embassy, although
compared to her Voice Talent, it had been far too weak to bother
trying to train. Now she felt Skyfang, the same way she had felt
those dolphins and whales, and unlike Windclaw's angry, almost
savage aura, Skyfang was a calm, relaxed presence. Her
impression of him lacked the . . .
brightness, the sharpness, of true sentience, but it came much
closer to fully developed self-awareness than she'd expected. And
without the other dragon's fury, the big transport suddenly felt no
more threatening to her than the huge whales with which she had
swum since childhood, and she patted his leg again in simple
delight.
Jathmar exhaled explosively as
he tasted her emotions through his own bond with her, and she
smiled at him before she turned back to Jasak.
"I think you may be onto
something," she said. "I can't feel Skyfang's emotions the same
way I could a person's, but I am getting at least a little something
from him, and it's a lot different from what I felt from Windclaw."
"Good," Jasak sighed, then
grimaced. "I'm glad to hear we may not have to worry about the
way other transports react to you, Shaylar. All the same, would
you please not do things like that?" He jerked his head at
the hand she still had on Skyfang's leg. "I'm sure Jathmar would
feel better if you'd at least consult with him before you rush in to
test one of my theories, and—" he looked at Jathmar again
across her head and grinned crookedly "—I know damned
well that I would."
Chapter Forty-Two
"Now that's impressive."
Division-Captain chan Geraith
stood with his hands on his hips, watching as one of his Bisons
snorted up the loading ramp onto the massive flatcar under a
floating banner of black smoke and the careful direction of the
loadmaster. The Bison—technically, the Transport Tractor,
Mark I, Model B—was based on the same powerplant as the
next to largest of the Trans-Temporal Express's bulldozers,
although its suspension and caterpillar tracks had been
substantially modified in an effort to allow for greater speed over
even rougher terrain. It wasn't an actual transport unit itself, but
rather designed to tow a capacious wheeled or tracked trailer, and
despite its funnel, it was sleek, low-slung, and powerful looking.
It was also dwarfed by the flatcar
it was busily climbing onto. Indeed, two more Bisons were already
in place on the same car. TTE employees were tightening the tie-
down chains on the second of them even as the third clanked into
position, and there was still going to be almost enough room for a
fourth, he realized.
"You think so, Division-
Captain?"
chan Geraith turned his attention
from the flatcar to the man standing beside him. Train Master
Yakhan Chusal of TTE's Directorate of Operations was the
sprawling transportation giant's senior train master. He'd been
overseeing the loading of TTE freight trains for almost thirty
years, and his eyes were rather more critical than the soldier's.
"Yes, I do," chan Geraith said. "I
never realized you had flatcars that size. Oh, I've seen pictures of
the special, articulated cars you use to transport ship hull sections,
but I'd never realized you had standard cars this big."
"I wish we could make them
even bigger," Chusal replied with a grimace. "They're just barely
large enough for our biggest steam shovels as it is, and you can't
put a shovel on an articulated car and get it through some of the
mountains we've got to transit on this run. Some of the curves are
way too sharp, not to mention the little question of whether or not
the trestles would stand the weight. In fact, I understand
Engineering had to turn down a new shovel design because we
couldn't guarantee that we could transport it."
"You mean you need a flatcar
that size for one steam shovel?" chan Geraith demanded in
an almost shaken tone.
"That's right." Chusal shrugged.
"In fact, we have to break them down into two loads, even with
cars that size. Which, of course, means we need big damned
cranes—which we also have to ship out—to
put them back together again at the other end. When you've got to
dig your way through a godsdamned mountain range, or dig a
frigging canal, you need a really big shovel. Well, we've got
them."
chan Geraith shook his head with
a bemused sort of expression. Before his own recent experiences
with the experimental mechanization program, he probably
wouldn't have been as impressed as he was. Now, though, he'd had
far more firsthand experience with incredibly powerful and yet
sometimes frustratingly fragile heavy machinery.
"I guess we're lucky TTE's got as
much rolling stock as it does," he said after a moment, and Chusal
snorted.
"Depends on how you look at it,
Division-Captain. Our charter from the Portal Authority requires
us to maintain a fifteen percent reserve over and beyond our
normal operational and maintenance requirements. Frankly, it's
always been a pain in the ass for the bean-counters, and I've got to
admit that there have been times when I was royally pissed to have
that many cars—and engines—basically just sitting
in sheds somewhere. But there wasn't much luck to it.
And," his expression darkened, "I don't think the reserve's going to
be big enough after all."
"You don't?"
chan Geraith's eyes narrowed.
Short of TTE's Director of Operations, Chusal was undoubtedly
the most knowledgeable person, where the Trans-Temporal
Express' rails were concerned, in any of the many universes
Sharona had explored. If he thought there were going to be
bottlenecks, then chan Geraith was grimly certain that there were.
"Well," Chusal looked away,
shading his eyes against the afternoon sun with one hand while he
watched the loading activities under the sky of autumn blue, "I
can't say for certain, of course. But unless this new government
does go through, and unless it budgets one hell of a lot more
money for the line after it does, there's no way we're going to be
able to meet the transport requirements we're facing. We're
transferring engines and cars from every other trunk line to the
Hayth Chain, but just getting them where we need them is going to
be a royal pain. I've been sending them out basically empty, or
half-empty, at least, just to get them where we're going to need
them down the road."
"How bad is it, really?"
"Honestly?" Chusal looked up at
the considerably taller Ternathian officer with a thoughtful
expression, as if considering whether or not chan Geraith really
wanted to know the truth, then grimaced. "The biggest problem's
going to be the water gaps. There's a six thousand-mile voyage to
cross Haysam to get to Reyshar, and another nine hundred-mile
cruise between Reyshar and Hayth. Then there's another eleven
hundred miles of water between Jyrsalm and Salym. We're going
to have to detrain all of your people, all of your horses, all of your
equipment, at each water gap, load it onto ships and sail all of it
across the gap, then load it back onto another set of cars,
and haul it to the next water gap. Then repeat the process."
It was chan Geraith's turn to
grimace, although he wasn't really all that surprised. He could read
a map, after all.
"I can't say I'm looking forward
to the process," he said after a moment, "but surely it's one you've
had to deal with before."
"Oh, yes. Of course we have."
Chusal nodded. "We have to deal with it constantly, in fact.
Unfortunately, we've never had to deal with it on quite this
scale before, Division-Captain. Moving whole armies, not to
mention all the ammunition and other supplies they're going to
need—and all the coal our engines and steamships
are going to need, if we're going to go on moving all that other
stuff—simply devours rail capacity. And,
obviously, shipping capacity between ports.
"Haysam and Reyshar are pretty
well provided with freighters and passenger liners we can
conscript for the military's needs, since everything moving in and
out of the home universe has to pass through both of them. But
we haven't needed anything like this sort of transport capacity in
the Hayth Chain before. Sealift's going to be a real problem in the
move between Salym and Traisum, and then there's the rail ferry
across the Finger Sea in Traisum itself to consider, at least until
they get the bridge built.
"That's all bad enough, but we've
never had to assign the Hayth Chain anywhere near the rolling
stock we're going to need now on the outbound side of Hayth.
That's why I've been sending so many perfectly good engines and
freight cars out empty. And it's also why every heavylift freighter
in both Haysam and Reyshar has been withdrawn from regular
service and assigned to hauling those engines and cars across the
water gaps. Which," he added sourly, "has created a monumental
bottleneck in commercial cargo service."
"I see." chan Geraith frowned. "I
hadn't realized it would impose quite that much of a strain."
"Division-Captain, you haven't
even begun to see 'strain' yet," Chusal said grimly. "We're building
up as much capacity as we can, but basically, we're looking at at
least three totally separate rail lines, for all intents and purposes.
That's what those water gaps do to us, since we've got to have the
rolling stock we need between each of them. Worse, in
Reyshar and Salym, we've got two separate rail legs
divided by water too wide to bridge. So we can't just load you
onto one set of cars and send you all the way to the end of the line.
We can do a lot to economize if we plan our turnarounds on the
shorter legs carefully, but it's still going to be a nightmare keeping
everything moving. And so far, we're only looking at moving one
division at a time. What happens if we have to start sending entire
corps down the same transit chain simultaneously? For that
matter, the line's only double-tracked as far as Jyrsalm! We're
working on that, too, and that's another logistical consideration
we have to juggle somehow."
The train master sounded both
weary and frustrated, and chan Geraith couldn't blame him for
either emotion. On the other hand, he'd known men like Chusal
before. Yakhan Chusal hadn't become TTE's senior train master by
accident, and chan Geraith suspected that he was going to prove
much more capable of doing that logistical juggling than he
thought he was at the moment.
None of which invalidates a single thing he's said, of course
.
The division-captain shook his
head. He'd known going in that managing his logistics down a
single supply line as long as this one was going to be
a . . . challenge. No one in history had
ever before even considered attempting such a thing, far less
planned for it, and the urgent need to get his division loaded up
and moving in the right direction had kept him from giving it the
sort of attention and preplanning any peacetime maneuver would
have permitted. He'd been painfully aware of that, but he'd also
known he and his staff were going to have literally weeks in transit
to work out the details.
"Train Master," he said after
moment, "would it be possible for you to assign someone from
your operations staff to me on a temporary basis? My staff and I
are reasonably competent when it comes to planning moves
around the Empire, or across a single planet. I'm beginning to
think, though, that we need someone with a better feel for genuine
trans-universal movements. Besides, we're accustomed to simply
telling the quartermaster how much lift capacity we need. This
time around it looks like we're going to need an expert just to tell
us how much capacity there is!"
"Now that, Division-Captain, is
a very good idea," Chusal said warmly. "And, as it happens, I think
I have just the man for you." chan Geraith arched one eyebrow,
and Chusal chuckled. "I've assigned Hayrdar Sheltim as your train
master. He just happens to be one of our more experienced train
masters . . . and he also just finished
a three-month assignment to operations right here at Larakesh
Central. If you've got questions, Hayrdar can answer them as well
as anyone I can think of."
"Thank you, Train Master. I
appreciate that—a lot."
"It doesn't look like much, does
it?" Second Lord of Horse Garsal grumbled.
"Perhaps not," Lord of Horse
Jukan Darshu, Sunlord Markan replied quietly as they watched the
first of his Uromathian cavalry troopers climb down from the
passenger cars which had carried them as far as Fort Salby.
They were moving slowly,
stiffly, and the sunlord's lips quirked in a wry sympathy he would
never have admitted to feeling. The last twelve days had been a
severe jolt to their systems, he thought. The rail trip from Camryn
to Salym hadn't been all that bad, but then there'd been the move to
the hastily improvised transports in Salym for the voyage from
Barkesh to New Ramath. The horses had hated it, the heavy
weather they'd encountered en route had left half the men
miserably seasick, and at the end of it, they'd had to climb back
into the rail cars for the trip from New Ramath to Fort
Tharkoma covering the portal between Salym and Traisum.
New Ramath was only a few
hundred miles from Tharkoma, but they were mountainous,
inhospitable miles, and the slow, swaying trip along the steep
tracks which twisted like broken-backed serpents between the port
city and the fortress had been exhausting, especially for the men
who hadn't yet fully recovered from their seasickness. Yet even
that hadn't been the end of it, for the Traisum side of that portal
was located in the equivalent of the Kingdom of Shartha.
Shartha lay on the west coast of
Ricatha, which lay thousands of feet lower than—and three
thousand miles south of—the Salym side of the portal, and
it had been snowing hard in Salym. The change as their train
wheezed through the portal from sub-freezing Tharkoma to the
brutal, brilliant heat of the Shartha Plain had been stunning even
for hardened trans-universal travelers. The cold, insufficiently
heated passenger cars had gone from icebox to oven in what had
seemed mere minutes as the ice and snow which had encrusted
them turned abruptly into water. Indeed, Markan rather thought
that most of it had probably gone straight to vapor without even
bothering with the intermediate liquid stage. The shock to the
system had been profound, and the day and a half it had taken to
get from there to Salby had offered insufficient time for
men—or horses—to adjust.
"Impressive or not," Markan
continued now, "it will serve neither the need of the moment nor
the Emperor to reflect upon that fact too loudly."
He glanced levelly at his second-
in-command. The two of them stood on the front platform of the
palatial passenger car which had been assigned to Markan's senior
officers for the move, and a flicker of what might have been mere
irritation or might have been anger showed in Garsal's eyes.
Whatever it was, it was gone as quickly as it had come, however,
and he nodded.
"Point taken, Sunlord," he said.
Markan nodded back. There was
no need to do more, for several reasons. First, Jukan Darshu was a
sunlord, what a Ternathian would have called a duke, whereas
Tarnal Garsal was only a windlord, or earl. Second, despite
Garsal's fastidious, finicky dislike for frontier conditions (and his
undeniable arrogance), he truly was a highly competent officer.
And third, because Garsal was a distant relative of Chava Busar,
and knew better than to disappoint his imperial cousin.
Not to mention the minor fact that our entire
multiverse—Ternathia and Uromathia alike—is at
risk this time, Markan reflected.
It
felt . . . unnatural to think of the
Empire and the long-resented Ternathians facing a common threat.
For as long as Markan (or any other Uromathian) could
remember, Ternathia had been if not precisely the enemy,
the next closest thing available. And, he admitted, since Chava had
come to the throne, the long-standing rivalry between the two
great Sharonian empires had once again grown both more intense
and nastier.
I suppose it's a little silly of us, the sunlord reflected.
Or, at least, it was in the beginning. By now, it's taken on a life of
its own.
Markan knew he was rather more
sophisticated, in many ways, than most Uromathians, including all
too many members of the high aristocracy. Despite that, however,
deep down inside, he still suffered from that ingrained
Uromathian sense of . . . not
inferiority, really, but something close.
The truth was that Uromathia
could never quite forgive Ternathian for being almost four
millennia older than it was. Ternathia had made Tajvana its capital
thirty-three centuries ago, and the Caliraths had stayed there until
less than three centuries ago. In the interim, their empire
had lapped as far east as the Cerakondian Mountains, in the south,
and eventually as far as Lake Arau, in the north, until it finally
stopped against the Arau Mountains in far eastern Chairifon. It had
reached the Araus just under nine hundred years ago, and on the
far side of that mountain barrier, it had finally encountered
another empire almost as large as it was.
That empire had been
Uromathia, which had controlled everything beyond the
Cerakondians and the Araus as far south as Harkala. In terms of
territory, Uromathia had been the smaller of the two; in terms of
population, they'd been very nearly evenly matched. But
Uromathia had been far younger, hammered together only over the
previous three or four centuries as the various Uromathian kings
and, eventually, emperors had watched the Ternathian tide
sweeping steadily and apparently unstoppably towards them.
There hadn't really been
a Uromathia until that steadily approaching Ternathian
frontier—and example—had created it. In fact,
Markan's ancestors had been too busy fighting and slaughtering
one another in the service of their innumerable nobles and kinglets
to pay the notion of "civilization" a great deal of attention. The
threat of being ingested by Ternathia had concentrated the minds
of the more powerful Uromathian kingdoms marvelously,
however, and they'd begun cheerfully eliminating one another by
conquest in an effort to build up a powerbase sufficient to remain
uningested. Strictly, of course, out of a patriotic sense of their
mission to resist foreign occupation. Perish the thought that
personal power could have had anything to do with it!
They'd succeeded. In fact, they'd
built a very respectable empire of their own by the time Ternathia
arrived on their doorstep. They'd actually been even more
centralized, since they had deliberately constructed their imperial
bureaucracy for streamlined, military efficiency, whereas the
Ternathian bureaucracy had been the product of millennia of
gradual evolution and periodic bouts of reform. Their military
capability had been impressive, as well, and they'd already
acquired most of the Talents by intermarriage. Taken altogether, it
had been an enormous accomplishment, one of which anyone
could have been proud, and they had been.
But the thing which had stuck in
the Uromathians' collective psyche was the lingering suspicion
that Ternathia had stopped where it had not because Uromathia's
power had given the Winged Crown pause, but because Ternathia
had chosen to stop. The two great empires had sat
there—coexisting more or less peaceably, with occasional,
interspersed periods of mutual glaring—for the better part
of six hundred years. Until, in fact, the Calirath Dynasty had begun
its long, steady disengagement from the Ternathian Empire's high-
water mark borders. And in all that time, there had been only three
true wars between them . . . each of
which Ternathia had won quite handily.
Ternathia had never made any
effort to conquer Uromathia. That had never really been the
Ternathian way, as Markan was prepared to admit, at least
privately. But Uromathia had never quite been able to forgive the
Ternathians for never—not once—letting the
Uromathians beat them. The Uromathian Empire had fought its
own wars, established its own prowess, but always in the
Ternathian shadow. Never as Ternathia's equal. In fact that Chava
Busar's was the fourth dynasty to rule Uromathia while the
Caliraths were only the second dynasty and Ternathia's history
(and that they had ruled Ternathia in unbroken succession for over
four thousand years) didn't exactly help the situation,
either. Uromathia had become the perpetual younger, smaller,
weaker brother who deeply resented his older brother's
patronizing
attitude . . . even—or perhaps
especially—when that older brother didn't even mean to be
patronizing.
And that attitude lingered, even
today.
Of course, Fort Salby didn't
belong to Ternathia, the sunlord reminded himself. It was a Portal
Authority base, which—theoretically, at least—
meant it was a multinational installation, belonging to neither
empire. The fact that the Portal Authority Armed Forces had seen
fit to adopt Ternathian rank structures, weapons, tactical
doctrines, and even military tailoring might, perhaps, explain the
fact that it didn't feel that way.
But this time, we were the ones close enough to
respond when the lightning struck, Markan thought with a
certain grim satisfaction. I only wish the Emperor had seen fit
to send us more detailed instructions.
Part of Chava's vagueness was
undoubtedly due to the Emperor's suspicions of the Voice
network. Unlike Zindel of Ternathia, Chava of Uromathia was
completely unTalented, and he cherished a deep and abiding
distrust for those who were. Despite all evidence and experience
to the contrary, he was absolutely convinced that the Portal
Authority Voices would violate their sworn confidentiality any
time it suited their purposes. And, of course, their
purposes—whatever in all the Arpathian hells they
might be, Markan thought waspishly—were inevitably
hostile to Chava's own.
In this case, however, it was at
least equally probable that the Emperor's failure to provide
detailed instructions had as much to do with the totally
unprecedented nature of the threat as with his undeniable paranoia.
It was certainly enough to strain
Markan's . . . mental flexibility,
at any rate.
The sunlord wasn't especially
fond of Shurkhalis, whether as individuals or corporate entities,
like the Chalgyn Consortium. While he might sometimes feel his
Emperor took his hatred for all things Ternathian to unnecessary
extremes, the fact remained that Shurkhal had been a part of the
Ternathian Empire for almost three thousand years and that it had
stubbornly aligned its national interests and foreign policy with its
one-time imperial masters, rather than its much closer neighbor in
Uromathia, since regaining its nominal independence. As a
consequence, it was normally a bit difficult for him to work up a
great deal of sympathy for any minor misfortunes which might
befall the desert kingdom.
Then there was the fact that this
particular survey crew had included Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr.
Markan had never met the woman, and had nothing against her
personally, but her exploits had been a direct affront to his own
notions of proper female behavior, and he was scarcely alone in
that. Not in Uromathia, at least. Nor did the fact that the Portal
Authority had been using her so heavily in its own propaganda
leave him feeling much more cheerfully inclined towards her,
given how unfond of the Authority he was.
Like most Uromathians, Markan
had always resented the Portal Authority. His resentment was less
pointed than that of many Uromathian aristocrats, especially those
closest to the Emperor, but it was nonetheless real. No
Uromathian could quite forget that the Authority stemmed directly
from a Ternathian demand (although courtesy had
required that it be called only a "proposal," of course) for the
internationalization of the Larakesh portal. Nor could any
Uromathian forget that the then-Emperor of Uromathia's efforts
to assert control over the portal and the proposed international
authority had been stymied by a direct threat of Ternathian military
action. Or that it was Ternathia which had insisted that the
Authority's board of directors must represent all major nations yet
remain completely and rigorously politically independent of any of
them.
If pressed, Markan was prepared
to admit—grudgingly—that Ternathia had no more
direct control over the Authority than Uromathia did.
Unfortunately, it didn't need direct control. Not when the
"independent" Authority had fallen all over itself adopting
Ternathian models for everything from its internal organization
and exploration techniques to its military forces. Including,
probably, the way they wiped their arses.
Stop that, the sunlord told himself sharply. You're
letting your own paranoia get the better of you again!
He snorted in wry amusement,
then shook his head when Garsal looked at him inquiringly.
"Just a thought, Tarnal," he said.
"Just a thought."
He looked around for a moment
longer.
It was appropriate, he supposed,
that Fort Salby was located in what would have been Shurkhal on
Sharona. At the moment, they stood on a plateau in the rugged
Mountains of Ithal, which fringed the western coast of Shurkhal
along the Finger Sea. Back home, the location was the site of the
city of Narshalla, built around an oasis and bounded by an
extensive lava field to the east and by the arid hills of the Ithal
Mountains on the other three sides. In Traisum, where thousands
of years of human habitation hadn't completely deforested the
Shurkhali Peninsula, those hills were less arid than their Sharonian
equivalent. They weren't what Markan would have called lush or
luxuriant, even here, but they were far less forbidding and desolate
than the ones Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr must have known.
Despite any improvement in the
local climate, driving the rail lines from Traisum's entry portal on
the flat coastal Plain of Shartha to Salby had been a gargantuan
task. The straight-line distance between Fort Galsar and Fort Salby
was over fourteen hundred miles; the actual distance
imposed by the terrain was at least half again that far. To reach the
rail ferry across the southern terminus of the Finger Sea while
avoiding the rugged, tangled mountains of the Shartha Highlands,
the engineers had been forced to run their lines clear up and
around both sides of the Horn of Ricathia. The route from the
ferry's western terminus through the Ithals hadn't been any picnic,
either, he reflected, although at least they'd been able to make up
some of the lost time in the fast, fairly straightforward run along
the coastal plain at the Ithals' feet until they had to turn inland to
reach Fort Salby.
He'd been impressed, as always,
by the accomplishments of the TTE construction crews. Especially
by the fact that they'd already more than half completed the
construction of a multitrack bridge across the Strait of Tears
which connected the Finger Sea to the Gulf of Shurkhal. The
coral-encrusted Strait of Tears was shallow and
constricted—back home, it required constant blasting and
dredging to keep it open for deep-draft shipping, and the span
across the narrower, two-mile-wide eastern channel was already
complete. They were well advanced on the longer, sixteen-mile
length required to cross the western channel, as well, and work on
it was proceeding twenty-four hours a day.
No doubt, he thought sardonically, recent events
further down-chain have something to do with all the overtime
TTE is accumulating at the moment. I wonder who'll get the final
bill for that?
"I suppose you'd better look after
getting our people off the train while I go find this Regiment-
Captain chan Skrithik," he said finally.
"Better you than me," Garsal
muttered, but quietly enough Markan could pretend he hadn't
heard. Then the windlord saluted. "I'll see to it, Sir," he said much
more crisply.
"Good," Markan replied, and
climbed down from the platform.
Actually, "go find" was scarcely
the correct choice of verbs, he admitted as a tall Ternathian
officer—and aren't they all tall? Markan
thought wryly—stepped up to greet him.
"Lord of Horse," the Ternathian
said in barely accented Uromathian. "Welcome to Fort Salby. I'm
delighted to see you."
"Regiment-Captain," Markan
responded in Ternathian, offering his right hand for a Ternathian-
style handclasp. He was impressed by chan Skrithik's command of
Uromathian, which was actually better than his own Ternathian.
Nonetheless, there were appearances to maintain. A Uromathian
lord of horse—and a pedigreed sunlord, to boot—
could scarcely permit a Ternathian to be more cosmopolitan than
he was, after all, he told himself sardonically, and rather suspected
that he saw a matching flicker of amusement in chan Skrithik's
eyes.
"We got here as quickly as we
could," Markan continued. "Indeed, I was rather astonished by how
quickly the TTE was able to arrange things once our troop
movement was authorized."
"TTE's always been good at
improvised movements," chan Skrithik agreed. "And just so we get
off on the right foot, let me say that I'm as grateful as I am
delighted to see you. I realize there's always been a certain degree
of friction between Ternathia and Uromathia, and I don't imagine
your men are going to be any more immune to that tradition than
the Ternathians in my own garrison are. However, this isn't about
Ternathia or Uromathia—it's about Sharona, and
I've seen to it that everyone under my command understands that.
As one Sharonian to another, then, welcome to Fort
Salby."
"Thank you," Markan replied. He
was impressed by chan Skrithik's willingness to confront the
situation so openly. And pleased, as well. And the Ternathian had
shown considerable tact in suggesting that the "friction" existed
only between his own empire and Uromathia, he thought. Any
Arpathians and Harkalans in the Fort Salby garrison were probably
torn between welcoming Markan's troopers with open arms and
shooting them in the back at the first opportunity.
"I've stressed the same points to
my own personnel," the sunlord said, and indeed he had. "I'm sure
there are going to be at least some incidents, anyway, of course.
But my officers have been instructed that
if—when—such incidents occur, they are to be
reported first to you, as the base commander and the senior officer
in the PAAF chain of command. They've also been instructed to
warn their men that any breach of discipline will be severely
punished under our own regulations after any penalties
you may see fit to award under the Authority's."
He showed his teeth in a tight
smile.
"That's good to hear," chan
Skrithik said. "Of course, your troops' internal discipline is your
own affair. I'm sure any difficulties which arise can be dealt with
expeditiously."
"As am I," Markan said with a
slight bow.
He didn't add that he'd told chan
Skrithik about his instructions to his officers for a specific reason.
Markan's own rank was the equivalent of the Ternathian rank of
brigade-captain, which made him senior to chan Skrithik. But chan
Skrithik was the ranking PAAF officer present, and this
was a Portal Authority post. More to the point, one instruction
Emperor Chava had made crystal clear was that Markan
was not, under any circumstances, to do anything which might be
construed as attempting to undermine the Authority chain of
command. In fact, Markan had been specifically ordered to obey
chan Skrithik's orders, regardless of who might technically be
senior to whom. Clearly the Emperor wanted no unfortunate
incidents in the field while the Conclave back home was still
debating what sort of political arrangements were going to emerge
out of all this.
Markan doubted there was any
need to be more explicit with chan Skrithik. The man was
obviously intelligent, and the quality of his spoken Uromathian
suggested a certain degree of familiarity with Markan's native
culture. He would recognize Markan's message—that
Markan intended to obey the spirit, not just the letter, of the orders
subordinating him to chan Skrithik's command—without
the sunlord having to be more direct.
"In that case, Sunlord," chan
Skrithik said after a moment, "let's see about getting your people
settled in."
"I think that's an excellent
suggestion, Regiment-Captain."
"About damned time!" Hardar
Jalkanthi announced with profound satisfaction as the signal arm
swung into the upright position and the signal lamp glowed green.
"Try to be at leaitst a little
patient, Hardar," Charak Tarku grunted with a laugh. "I'm
supposed to be the impatient barbarian around here."
Jalkanthi chuckled. Tarku was
his regularly assigned senior fireman, and he knew he'd been lucky
to hang onto him under the present chaotic circumstances. The
burly, broad shouldered Arpathian was a rarity in TTE, given the
usual Arpathian attitude towards technology, and Jalkanthi was
glad to have him. He knew better than most just how sharp a brain
lurked behind the typically Arpathian façade Tarku chose to
present to the rest of the multiverse. The engineer wasn't quite
certain why Tarku had decided to play to the Arpathian stereotype,
and it often irritated Jalkanthi, but the two of them had been
together for almost four years now. That was more than long
enough to cement a solid friendship, despite their very different
backgrounds, and Tarku knew him better than just about anyone
else.
"I always thought Arpathians
were supposed to be deadly nomadic hunters, patient as the very
stones," he said now, as the two of them swung up the high steps
to the footplate of TTE's Paladin 20887.
"Nothing but a fairytale," Tarku
said, waving one hand airily. "Just another baseless exaggeration
we put about to bolster our fearsome reputation and mystique."
"Well, I think it's about time
your mystique settled down and started doing its job," Jalkanthi
told him.
"Orders, orders. Always
orders," Tarku grumbled with a grin. Then he caught hold of the
vertical handrail and leaned well out to peer back past the bulk of
20887's integral tender, the auxiliary sixteen thousand-gallon
water tender, and the second Paladin and tenders coupled in behind
20887.
"See him?" Jalkanthi asked.
"No, not—Ah! There
he is!" Tarku leaned a bit further out, waving to show Train
Master Sheltim he'd seen him. The train master waved back from
his place on the station platform, but the green flag was still
tucked firmly under his arm.
"Well?" Jalkanthi pressed.
"No point fretting at
me," Tarku told him. "Sheltim will waggle his little flag at
us when he's good and ready to."
Jalkanthi grimaced, then tapped
the glass face of the pressure gauge pointedly. Tarku only grinned,
and Jalkanthi produced an oily rag and carefully wiped the already
gleaming bronze of the burnished throttle lever. He was always
inordinately proud of his big Paladin's speed and power, but today
he had a special reason for his impatience to be off.
Jalkanthi was Ternathian, from
the city of Garouoma in the Province of Narhath, but his wife was
Shurkhali. In fact, it was almost frightening how much like a taller
version of the murdered Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr Jesmanar
Jalkanthi-Ishar looked. Jalkanthi might not have been born
Shurkhali, but he'd absorbed more than enough of his wife's
culture to feel the same fury which had swept across her native
kingdom. Worse, Jalkanthi had just enough Talent to have Seen
SUNN's Voice broadcast of Shaylar's final message. He didn't
really care what the assembled heads of state decided in their
precious Conclave. He'd been gratified by his own Emperor's
attitude, and he wasn't very happy about even the most remote
possibility of winding up with Chava of Uromathia running
things, but he didn't have time to waste worrying about either of
those things just now. He knew what he wanted to happen
to the bastards responsible for the Chalgyn Consortium crew's
massacre, and he was impatient to deliver the first installment of
Sharona's vengeance.
He'd been prepared to pull every
string in sight when he heard about the decision to send the Third
Dragoons forward to Fort Salby. He'd wanted that train,
and he'd been determined to have it. But he hadn't had to pull any
strings in the end, because Yakhan Chusal knew who TTE's best
engineer was. So at least—
"Green flag!" Tarku announced
suddenly.
"At last!" Jalkanthi replied, and
cracked the throttle.
Steam hissed, and the enormous,
powerful engine shuddered, trembling like a living creature. The
ten huge drivers, each of them almost seven feet high, began to
move—slowly, at first, with a deep, strong chuff, spinning
on the steel rails as they fought the incredible inertia of a train
over two miles long. Then, behind 20887, the second, identical
engine hissed into motion as well, drive rods stroking, and the
massive drag began to creep slowly forward. Jalkanthi propped
one elbow on the window frame as he leaned out of the cab and
felt the incredible mass of the train behind him. Thirteen
thousand tons, Train Master Sheltim had told him. Most
people would have found that hard to believe, but this was the
TTE. It routinely hauled loads that massive—or even
larger—down the ribbons of steel which stitched the
endless universes together.
The vast semicircle of the
Larakesh Portal loomed ahead of him. Beyond it, he could see the
high mountain plateau of South Ricathia and the thriving city of
Union.
He'd always thought calling it
"Union City" was more than a little silly. For one thing, Union
was really no more than an extension of the vast sprawl of
Larakesh into the universe of New Sharona. At the time it had
been founded, the newborn Portal Authority had felt it was
imperative to establish a new, independent city with its own
government beholden to no existing Sharonian government, even a
purely local municipal one.
Since then, practices had
changed—most other portals the size of Larakesh had
spawned single cities, with quite efficient unified governments,
which sprawled across their thresholds—but Union City
had been a special case on several levels. Not only had it been the
first extra-universal city Sharonians had ever established, but the
Portal Authority, at Harkala's suggestion (although it was widely
rumored that the original idea had come from Ternathia), had been
granted ownership of the massive South Ricathian gold fields. The
vast majority of the authority's operating revenues over the
ensuing eighty years had come from the exploitation of those gold
deposits—whose location, of course, had been easy to
project from Sharona's own experience—which had neatly
absolved the governments which had established it from any
requirement to provide it with long-term funding. And, Jalkanthi
knew, it had also avoided a situation in which those governments
which made disproportionate contributions to the Authority's
budget would have acquired an equally disproportionate amount
of clout with the authority Board of Directors. That was why he
tended to believe the rumors about Ternathia's behind-the-scenes
involvement in creating the arrangement in the first place.
Rather than develop and mine
those deposits itself, however, the Authority had chosen to lease
the mining rights for a percentage. Union City had been built
largely for the specific purpose of overseeing and accommodating
that exploitation.
Still, "Union City" had been a
silly choice of names, whatever the Authority's reasoning, given
the fact that the one thing exploration of the multiverse hadn't
done was to unite all of Sharona. When Jalkanthi had been
much younger, his grandfather had told him how so many people
had hoped that the abrupt appearance of the Larakesh Portal truly
would bring their own world together at last. The old man had
cherished the dream of a restored Ternathian Empire as a
worldwide bastion of freedom and just governance, both
welcomed back to the many lands it had voluntarily freed and
extended beyond them, as well, and he'd scarcely been alone in
that.
Unfortunately for those dreams,
Sharonians had been too attached to their nations and their
national identities. And, his grandfather had grudgingly admitted,
the Portal Authority had done too good a job of administering the
portals in everyone's name. There'd been no need to create
a true world government, and so "Union City" had remained no
more than a name. No more than an unfulfilled promise, in the
eyes of people like his grandfather, at least.
But maybe that's going to change at last, Grandpa. And it
looks like we may even get the Empire back, just the way you
wanted, Jalkanthi thought as the endless train of passenger
cars, freight cars, and flatcars loaded with the tools of war moved
steadily forward. Thick black smoke plumed from the funnels of
both Paladins. Steel drive wheels flashed, and the trucks of the
cars behind banged, grated, and squealed with ear-stabbing
shrillness, then began to sing as they moved faster. Buffers rattled
and banged thunderously as the double-headed train crossed the
switches, swinging onto the mainline.
Jalkanthi watched the familiar
landmarks, watched the front end of his own streamlined engine
cross the portal threshold. Unusually for portal connections,
Larakesh and Union City, although they were almost six thousand
miles "apart" in their respective universes, were in the same time
zone. Of course, what was fall in Larakesh was spring in Union
City, and the sun was at a totally different angle, whatever clocks
and watches might say. But Jalkanthi was accustomed to that. He
was more concerned with getting through the vast Union City side
of the enormous Larakesh Central yard and its innumerable
sidings—the biggest and busiest rail terminal in the entire
known multiverse, by any standard of measurement—and
out into the Ricathian countryside, where he could open 20887's
throttle wide.
Not much longer now, he told himself, caressing the
smooth bronze lever like a lover. No, not much longer.
Chapter Forty-Three
Sarr Klian tried not to swear out
loud.
It wasn't easy.
"So, Master Skirvon," he said
instead, "as I understand it, then, my instructions from Two
Thousand mul Gurthak are to defer to your judgment where any
contact with these people is concerned?"
"I suppose you could put it that
way," the senior of the two civilians who'd arrived at Klian's fort
that morning replied. "Obviously, Five Hundred, no one is going
to try to take away or undermine your military authority,"
he hastened to add, which softened Klian's frustration quite a bit.
"But, as you yourself so cogently suggested in your dispatches to
Two Thousand mul Gurthak, it's clearly essential that we get a
civilian diplomatic presence established here as quickly as
possible." He smiled. "Men in civilian suits and carrying briefcases
are much less threatening than men in military uniforms carrying
arbalests," he pointed out.
"I couldn't agree more," Klian
said. It was, after all, as Skirvon said, exactly what he himself had
asked for. But mul Gurthak's orders seemed to imply that Skirvon
did have authority, even in purely military matters. Klian
didn't like that a bit. Besides, there was something about this
Skirvon and his sidekick that . . .
bothered the five hundred. He couldn't quite put a finger on what
it was, and he couldn't help wondering if a part of it wasn't that he
resented having any of his own authority supplanted by a "mere
civilian." He hoped it wasn't, but he couldn't be certain.
And I truly don't think that's what it is, either, he thought
grimly. In fact, he looked back down at the message
crystal from mul Gurthak, I'm pretty damned sure it's at least
as much the tone of mul Gurthak's orders and dispatches as
anything about these two.
"Well, gentlemen," he said aloud
after a moment, looking back up at them, "how soon do you want
me to arrange transport forward? And how big a military escort
are you going to require?"
"I don't see any reason to be in a
blazing hurry at this point," Skirvon replied. Klian's eyebrows
rose, and the civilian shrugged. "Master Dastiri and I are still
studying this language primer Magister Kelbryan was able to put
together. Fortunately, we both have good ears for foreign
languages—frankly, his is better than mine—but
both of us could still use a few more days of study before we get
dropped into the deep end. And since there's no present contact
between our forces and theirs, it would probably make more sense
for us to do just that rather than rush forward with incomplete
preparation and risk some overly hasty contact that could have
additional unfortunate consequences."
Klian nodded. His instincts all
shouted to get the two sides talking to one another as quickly as
possible, yet Skirvon had made at least two very telling points.
"As for military escorts,"
Skirvon continued thoughtfully, "I don't know that one's going to
be required at all, at least initially. It seems to me that, so far, both
sides have been reacting militarily to immediate, perceived threats.
I don't think either side's gotten much beyond that so far, and it
occurs to me that making the next move from our side by sending
in two unarmed, civilian diplomats without any military presence
at all, might help us pour a little water on the flames."
Klian frowned. What the man
had said made sense, but the professional officer in the five
hundred wasn't at all happy with the thought of sending out an
official embassy without any military protection at all.
"You don't think that leaving
everyone behind—not taking even a token honor
guard—might be misconstrued as a sign of weakness?" he
asked.
"Not everyone is automatically
impressed by the presence of soldiers armed to the teeth," Dastiri,
the junior diplomat, said, speaking up for the first time. "And not
everyone will automatically interpret their absence as a sign of
weakness. Under the circumstances, I think it would be best all
round for us to proceed as cautiously as possible. In fact," his tone
was cool, "part of the reason the situation is as bad as it is at the
moment is that we've had military people on both sides who were
too close to things, too unwilling to give ground, to back off and
deescalate the situation."
Klian bristled. He couldn't help
it. It was possible Dastiri hadn't intended to sound
insulting—or at least dismissive—in his analysis of
the Army's actions to date. Unfortunately, it didn't sound that way.
"Contrary to what you may
assume, Master Dastiri," the five hundred said in an equally cool
tone, making no particular effort to hide the dislike in his eyes,
"not every military man wants to charge into every situation,
sword in one hand and arbalest in the other. As I indicated in my
report to Two Thousand mul Gurthak—which you and
Master Skirvon have obviously had an opportunity to
read—I concur with Hundred Olderhan's view that we
would have been far wiser to simply pull back to Fort Rycharn in
the first place. I allowed myself at the time to be convinced by
Hundred Thalmayr, which I deeply regret, given what happened to
Charlie Company when these Sharonians attacked. Or
counterattacked, or whatever. I'm in favor of anything that allows
us to—how did you put it? 'Back off and deescalate the
situation.' My only concern is how best to go about doing that."
Dastiri flushed and his almond
eyes hardened, but Skirvon laid a hand on his subordinate's
shoulder and smiled at Klian.
"I apologize if it sounded as if
either of us intended to denigrate the Army or your legitimate
concerns, Five Hundred. That certainly wasn't our intent. All the
same, I think my colleague here has a point. Two Thousand mul
Gurthak is mobilizing all available forces to support us if and as
required. We'll have quite a lot of firepower available, very
shortly, if we need it. In the meantime, however, I'd very much
prefer to keep this a completely civilian contact from our side,
initially at least. After all," he smiled again, more broadly, but
there was a faint, unmistakable tang of iron in his voice, "this is
what we do. I'd never try to tell you how to conduct a military
operation, because I wouldn't have the least idea where to begin.
But with all due respect, I believe Master Dastiri and I are
probably rather more experienced at diplomacy than you are."
"No doubt," Klian conceded, yet
deep down inside, he wasn't fully convinced. After all, the Union
of Arcana hadn't really needed diplomats for the last two
hundred years. With the emergence of the Union, traditional
international diplomacy had been replaced by what were
effectively bureaucratic administrators. Or perhaps "facilitators"
would have been a better choice of word: arbitrators, with full
authority to issue binding decisions and full access (officially, at
least) to all information on both sides of any issue which had to be
settled. There wasn't a single living "diplomat" in the entire Union
who'd ever had to sit down across a bargaining table from
a completely separate and sovereign entity, far less one about
which the "diplomat" in question knew absolutely nothing.
That's what bothers me, he realized. These two keep
talking about diplomacy and diplomatic judgments, but they don't
really seem to understand that they're dealing with something
completely outside their experience. They really do think
they understand what's going on, and I suppose it's possible they
do. But what if they don't?
"Very well," he said, standing
behind his desk to signal an end to the meeting, "please let me
know if there's anything I can do for you during your stay. And
whenever you're ready to move forward to the swamp portal, I'll
be happy to arrange transportation."
"Thank you, Five Hundred,"
Skirvon said.
He and Dastiri departed, and
Klian sat back down, toying with the message crystal from mul
Gurthak and considering the two thousand's dispatches and their
implications.
He couldn't say he was
particularly surprised by them, except, perhaps, for how quickly
the two thousand was moving. He could hardly disapprove of
that, of course, although he didn't much look forward to
finding himself superseded by someone else.
Come now, Sarr, he told himself. mul Gurthak
specifically says you'll remain in command of Fort Rycharn
whatever happens. Surely you didn't expect anything else?
No, of course he hadn't. On the
other hand, he hadn't exactly expected to find himself superseded
by Commander of Two Thousand Mayrkos Harshu, either.
Of all the officers it could have been, why did it have to be Harshu? Klian demanded of his office's silent walls.
There was nothing at all wrong
with Two Thousand Harshu's military credentials, but the man had
a reputation within the Union Army. Worse, he knew he did. In
fact, he'd deliberately cultivated it.
Harshu was a throwback, one of
those who bemoaned the fact that he'd been born into such
"boring" times. He embraced what he believed was the true
Andaran tradition, although Klian had always suspected that men
like Thankhar Olderhan were truer keepers of that tradition.
Harshu's version of it was heavily laden with the trappings of
military glory, which there'd been precious little of in the two
centuries since the Union was formed, and he seemed remarkably
oblivious to just how much that "military glory" had cost in lives,
as well as money. It might not be precisely fair to call him a
hothead, but Klian was unable to come up with a better term, and
that worried him.
Of course, he's always been a top performer in every
maneuver, too, the five hundred forced himself to concede.
However full of himself he may be, he didn't earn that
reputation by sitting around being stupid. And if he's the next
most senior officer in the area, mul Gurthak doesn't have much of
a choice
about putting him in command, unless he wants to
come forward and take the field command himself.
Which, now that I think about it, presents an interesting
question of its own, doesn't it? Why isn't mul Gurthak
moving himself closer to the point of contact, since he's
ultimately responsible for whatever happens out here?
Klian frowned. There could, of
course, be all sorts of reasons for mul Gurthak to choose to
remain in Erthos. For one thing, his lines of communication were
substantially better, and he might well feel that he needed to keep
himself available to browbeat anyone who wanted to drag his feet
when the two thousand ordered him to send all of his available
fighting strength forward. But judging from mul Gurthak's
message crystal, he was going to be sending at least the equivalent
of a full air-mobile brigade—possibly even a
division—to Fort Rycharn. With cavalry support, no less.
A brigade was a commander of
five thousand's billet, and a division was properly commanded by
a commander of ten thousand—neither of which,
unfortunately, Arcana had available at the moment. And this was
the first time in the Union of Arcana's entire history that its army
had confronted the possibility of open combat with another power.
So why was the officer with the ultimate responsibility for what
happened—not to mention the opportunity to command the
most important troop deployment in the Union's history—
staying behind and sending someone junior to him forward to
assume operational command?
Klian tipped his chair back, arms
crossed, and thought about it. And the more he thought, the less he
liked it.
You're just being paranoid because he's Mythalan, he
scolded himself. After all, he didn't say he intended to
stay behind in Erthos forever, did he? Harshu's in command of the
immediate deployment; there's no reason mul Gurthak can't come
forward and relieve him as soon as he's convinced he's got
everything running smoothly in the rear areas.
In fact, that actually made more
sense than rushing forward would have made. As long as mul
Gurthak stayed in Erthos, where he had his own command staff
well broken in (not to mention far better hummer and dragon lines
of communication than he could possibly expect from Fort
Rycharn), he was well placed to see to it that the troop movements
went as smoothly as possible. And that was at least as important
as—if potentially much less glamorous than—
actually commanding in the face of the enemy.
Maybe it's because he is Mythalan, Klian thought,
then shook his head with a wry snort. You're worried about
Harshu because he's a throwback to what he thinks were the good
old days of Andaran militancy. And you're worried about
mul Gurthak because he isn't acting like a throwback to
the good old days of Andaran militancy! Not very consistent of
you, Sarr.
He grimaced and let his chair
come back upright. Whatever might or might not be going through
mul Gurthak's head, Klian's immediate responsibilities were
unpleasantly clear.
The voyage between Fort
Rycharn and Fort Wyvern was completely unacceptable from a
logistical viewpoint. There were only two true "transports" in
Mahrithan waters, and only one of them was configured to carry
dragons. Even that ship could transport only two dragons at a
time, for that matter, and that wasn't even a fraction of the sealift
required to move or supply the troop strength mul Gurthak was
talking about.
There was a way around that, of
course, but it came with its own price. No dragon, not even one of
the long-range heavylift transports, could make the flight from
Fort Wyvern to Fort Rycharn in one hop. But any dragon—
even one of the shorter-ranged battle dragons—could make
the hop from Fort Wyvern to the long isthmus connecting the
continents of Andara and Hilmar. From there, they could proceed
southward overland, which would permit them to make it clear to
Fort Rycharn in a four-day flight rather than a five-day voyage.
They'd have to delay their flight
at least once to permit the dragons to hunt, but this universe's
Hilmar teemed with game animals which had never heard of
dragons and could be expected to be relatively unwary—for
a time, at least. And by flying the transports forward instead of
sending them by ship, mul Gurthak could send in as many of them
simultaneously as he could lay hands
on . . . and take advantage of the
beasts' airlift capacity, as well. Whereas a medium-weight
transport like Windclaw could carry perhaps half a platoon of
infantry and its personal weapons, the heavy transports could lift
much bigger loads, even before the Quartermaster Corps' spell
engineers got into the act.
With the proper levitation spells
added to the equation, a pair of heavylift transports could easily
tow a freight pod capable of transporting an entire company of
infantry, its support personnel and weapons, and enough rations
for several days of operations. Cavalry units devoured transport
volume at a much higher rate than infantry outfits, of course, but
with the cargo pods and levitation spells, even heavy cavalry could
be airlifted to within striking range of the enemy. The spells were
difficult—more because of the power levels involved than
because of their technological complexity—and they didn't
last long. The same accumulator that could power a surface ship
for a week would support levitation spells of that level for less
than twenty-four hours, although freight pods were routinely
fitted with multiple accumulators to give them more endurance.
Even with the pods, though,
transporting the numbers of men mul Gurthak's message crystal
suggested were en route was going to be a massive undertaking.
And it was going to tie up an incredible number of transport
dragons. In fact, the availability of transports was probably going
to prove at least as big a limiting factor as the availability of
manpower, when all was said and done. Which probably explained
why mul Gurthak was busy gutting the air transport network for at
least half a dozen universes rearward from Erthos—thus
neatly illustrating one of the many unpleasant costs involved in
getting significant numbers of troops forward deployed in a hurry.
It explained Klian's rapidly
approaching problems, as well, because there was no provision in
mul Gurthak's orders for all of those transport dragons to turn
around and fly back to Erthos. Instead, he wanted them held at
Fort Rycharn, available to Two Thousand Harshu in the event that
military operations became necessary, after all. That, too, made
sense, Klian supposed, but Rycharn had never been intended to
support that many men and—even more difficult—
that many dragons for any length of time.
Fortunately, dragons were quite
willing to eat fish or whale meat, and the water between Fort
Rycharn and Fort Wyvern was just as rich with life as the
continent. The entire Fort Wyvern fishing fleet—such as it
was, and what there was of it—was already on its way
forward to help feed the dragons once they arrived. And, also
fortunately, it was going to take at least four waves to get all of
mul Gurthak's earmarked troop strength forward.
According to the two thousand's
tentative movement orders—which were undoubtedly
going to suffer considerable revision as the realities of moving
that many men impinged upon them—he'd have the first
two Air Force strikes and the first battalion of infantry at Fort
Rycharn within the next week. A strike was a standing formation
which consisted of three four-dragon flights (and why,
Klian wondered, not for the first time, can't those Air Force
pukes use the same names for their formations everyone else
uses?), which meant he was going to have to figure out
how to feed twenty-four battle dragons, with their notoriously
overactive metabolisms, in addition to all of the transports
necessary to get the rest of Harshu's force forward. Worse,
according to those same orders, mul Gurthak would have an entire
three-strike Air Force talon—thirty-six battle dragons, not
twenty-four—at Fort Rycharn within a month. In fact, he
might have as much as twice that many.
Feeding seventy-two battle
dragons and their supporting ground crews would be a gargantuan
task, all by itself. Adding in the two hundred or so transports mul
Gurthak was projecting (and their ground element), plus
the reconnaissance and strike gryphons, plus the fodder for
the unicorns and heavy cavalry mounts on the movement list, not
to mention all of the men he was going to have to feed, was only
going to make things incomparably worse. And the responsibility
for managing all of those "minor" housekeeping details was going
to land squarely on Sarr Klian's shoulders.
No wonder mul Gurthak is staying safely in Erthos! he
thought with another snort. He knows damned well what kind
of nightmare he's about to dump on me.
It was the first truly amusing
thought the five hundred had entertained since Skirvon and Dastiri
turned up in his office.
He didn't expect to have a great
many more of them over the next few weeks.
Chapter Forty-Four
"You look tired,"
Regiment-Captain Namir Velvelig observed dryly, tilting back his
head to regard the enormous young officer who'd just dismounted
from the magnificent blue roan Shikowr.
"Thank you, Sir," Platoon-
Captain chan Calirath replied with exquisite politeness.
"Somehow that had escaped my notice."
Velvelig's lips twitched. For the
hard-bitten Arpathian, that constituted the equivalent of anyone
else's deep belly laugh, and Prince Janaki smiled. He'd been
attached to Velvelig's command for just over six months before
being sent forward to New Uromath when Company-Captain
Halifu appealed for help covering the vast new frontiers the
Chalgyn Consortium had been so unexpectedly opening up back in
those ancient days—all of two months ago—before
everything had gone straight to hell. During that time, he'd
developed a deep respect, even admiration, for the shorter,
squarely built regiment-captain, and in turn, Velvelig had made it
clear that he intended to treat young Platoon-Captain chan
Calirath like any other junior
officer . . . within limits, of course.
"I didn't expect to see you back
so soon, Platoon-Captain," Velvelig said now, his voice lower, as
Janaki handed his reins to an orderly and stepped up onto the
wooden veranda which fronted the administrative block of Fort
Raylthar.
No, he reminded himself, it's Fort Ghartoun
now.
He'd noticed the new name on
the signboard outside the fort's main entrance, and he wondered
whose idea it had been to rename Raylthar. From what he knew of
Velvelig, he rather suspected what the answer was. The regiment-
captain was as immune to fear and as implacably determined as
any Arpathian stereotype, but there was a warm and caring human
being down inside all that armor.
The fort itself lay on the eastern
flank of New Ternathia's Sky Blood Mountains, barely ten miles
from the deep, beautiful waters of Snow Sapphire Lake and within
twenty miles of the legendary Sky Blood Lode, probably be
biggest silver deposit in history. The discovery of this portal was
going to make the Fairnos Consortium, which had first surveyed
it, unbelievably wealthy once the railhead steadily advancing from
Fort Salby reached it. Although the portal and the fort which
covered it were located at little more than forty-five hundred feet
of altitude, the Sky Bloods' higher peaks between Ghartoun and
Snow Sapphire rose to almost ten thousand snowcapped feet.
Their lower flanks were heavily forested, although Ghartoun itself
got precious little rain or snow, even in the winter, and the lower
mountains and foothills east of the fort were drier and far less
hospitable. Still, Janaki preferred Fort Ghartoun's normal climate
to the soggier environs of Company-Captain Halifu's post. This
late in the year, the temperature was dropping close to freezing at
night, but it was no more than pleasantly cool during the day, with
just enough nip to make a boy from Estafel feel refreshed and
vigorous. For the last two weeks, Janaki had been looking forward
to spending at least a day or so out on the lake, but Velvelig's
remark reminded him of why he'd really returned to Ghartoun.
"I didn't expect to be
back so soon, Sir," he said now, his expression turning grimmer.
"Then again, a lot of things no one expected have been happening
lately, haven't they?"
"That they have, Platoon-
Captain," Velvelig agreed. He looked up at Janaki for another few
seconds, then twitched his head at the admin block door. "Come
into my office."
"Yes, Sir."
Janaki followed Velvelig into
the administration building, down the short, rough-planked
corridor to the regiment-captain's office, and through its door. He
closed it behind himself and started to brace to attention, but
Velvelig shook his head impatiently.
"Forget that nonsense," he said
briskly. "Consider yourself already reported on-post."
"Yes, Sir. Thank you."
"Don't start thanking me yet,"
Velvelig snorted. Janaki quirked an eyebrow, and the regiment-
captain seated himself in the swivel chair behind his desk with a
grimace.
"May I ask why I
shouldn't thank you, Sir?" Janaki asked after a moment.
"Because I'm pretty sure you
were hoping to spend at least a day or two resting up before
heading on up-chain to Failcham."
"Ah." Janaki nodded slowly. "I
take it that's not going to happen, Sir?"
"You take it
correctly . . . Your Highness."
Both of Janaki's eyebrows went
up at that, and Velvelig leaned back in his chair and sighed.
"I know you specifically asked
not to receive any special treatment when you reported to me eight
months ago, Janaki," he said, "and overall, I thought you were
right. Still do, in fact. I'm not Ternathian myself, of course, but
I've always thought the Ternathian tradition that the heir to the
throne ought to have military experience—real
military experience, not just a token version of it—makes a
lot of sense. That's why I went ahead and deployed you forward to
New Uromath when Halifu needed reinforcements. But I'm sure
you're aware of how things have changed out here in the last
month or so."
He paused, his head cocked
slightly to one side, and Janaki shrugged.
"Of course I am, Sir," he said
quietly. "And I also understand why I was detailed to escort these
prisoners to the rear. I don't say I like it, but I understand
it. But if you'll pardon me for saying so, you sound as if you've
got something even more specific in mind."
"I do." Velvelig turned his chair
just far enough to one side to be able to gaze out his office
window at Fort Ghartoun's parade ground. "You don't have a
Voice assigned to your platoon, do you?" he asked.
"No, Sir." Janaki was a bit
puzzled by the question. "Company-Captain chan Halifu
considered sending one along with us, given the prisoners we're
escorting. But we're short along this entire chain, especially with
all the troop movements going on. Certainly too short to start
assigning Voices to mere platoons. Besides, the company-captain
knew Darcel Kinlafia was coming with us, so we were covered.
Until he . . . went on ahead, of
course."
"I know." Velvelig chuckled
slightly. "Kinlafia came through here a week and a half ago like
his horse's tail was on fire. For that matter, he looked like a man
whose arse was on fire, too! But he didn't even state to
soak his saddle sores." The regiment-captain appeared to be
studying something on the empty parade ground with great
intensity. "Seemed to be in quite hurry, now that I think about it.
Had a note from you, too, I believe."
"Yes, Sir. I, ah, felt it was
advisable to get him home to make a firsthand report as quickly as
possible."
"You did, did you?" Velvelig
glanced back at the crown prince. "Well, maybe you were right
about that. But my point is that you've been more or less out of
communication since you left Brithik."
"Yes, Sir."
The long overland march from
Fort Brithik had taken the next best thing to three weeks. He'd
been able to make better time (until, at least, he'd hit the
mountains between Brithik and Salby) after leaving the majority
of his wounded prisoners, in no small part because there were
actual roads between Brithik and Fort Ghartoun. Several small
towns—little more than a handful of roughly constructed
buildings clustered around Portal Authority remount stations and
Voice relay posts—had been strung along those roads like
beads when Janaki and his platoon originally deployed forward
from Fort Raylthar. On the journey back, many of them had been
deserted, except for the Voices and Authority personnel still
manning the remount stations.
Although he'd left the majority
of the wounded at Brithik, he was still accompanied by half a
dozen ambulances. It was far simpler to load the prisoners onto
the vehicles rather than try to find individual mounts for
them . . . and accept the additional
security problems which would have gone with it. A single
mounted Marine with a Model 10 at the ready could guard an
entire ambulance full of prisoners quite handily, and none of them
was in the position to make an individual break for freedom. And,
because he'd had to bring the ambulances along anyway, he'd also
brought along Commander of One Hundred Thalmayr.
He hadn't wanted to do that, for
several reasons. One was the fact that he continued to hold the
idiotic Arcanan officer responsible for the massacre of Thalmayr's
own command. Janaki had had more time now to think over what
Thalmayr had done, and the more he'd thought about it, even after
allowing for the unknown nature of Company-Captain chan Tesh's
weapons, the stupider he'd realized the man had to be. But he was
honest enough to admit that the main reason was that Thalmayr
reminded him entirely too much of a zombie in his present state.
Petty Captain Yar had, indeed, "shut him down" completely, and
Janaki hadn't made sufficient allowance for
how . . . creepy he was going to find
that totally expressionless, blank-eyed face whenever he was
forced to look at it.
Unfortunately, Petty Captain
chan Rodair, the Fort Brithik Healer, had insisted that Thalmayr be
taken on to what had been been Fort Raylthar. From his own
examination of the captured Arcanan officer, chan Rodair believed
that Thalmayr's paralysis might be the result of pressure on his
spinal cord, rather than actual damage to the cord itself. If that
were the case, then surgical intervention might restore the
Arcanan's mobility, but chan Rodair wasn't trained as a surgeon.
Company-Captain Golvar Silkash, Velvelig's post Healer, was
a school-trained surgeon, and a good one. In addition,
Silkash's assistant, Petty Captain Tobis Makree, was not only a
trained surgeon in his own right, but also a powerfully Talented
Healer. Given that—and especially given Makree's unusual
combination of skills and Talent—chan Rodair had argued
that Thalmayr's best chance for an actual recovery lay at Fort
Raylthar.
Personally, Janaki had decided
that he didn't give much of a damn one way or the other whether
or not Hadrign Thalmayr ever walked again. He didn't much like
admitting that, but there was no point lying to himself about it.
And whether he cared about it or not didn't affect his duty to see to
it that the man had the best chance for recovery he could provide,
even if rank stupidity was one of the two most unforgivable sins
of which any officer could be guilty. So, rather against his will,
he'd delivered Thalmayr to the renamed Fort Ghartoun.
"I did manage to check in once,
about . . . eighteen days ago, Sir," he
said now. "May I ask why the fact that I couldn't do so more
frequently is significant?"
"Because," Velvelig said with a
crooked smile, "about twelve days ago, your father stood
up on his hind legs at the Conclave and informed the assembled
heads of state of Sharona that they were sitting there with their
thumbs up their arses while people were being shot at out here.
He, ah, suggested that they might have better things to do
than debate fishing rights on Sharona. Suggested it rather
forcefully, as a matter of fact. If you'd care to hear what he
had to say for yourself, I believe my senior Voice could replay the
Voice broadcast of the session for you."
"Oh . . .
my," Janaki said after a moment, and, Arpathian impassivity or no,
this time Velvelig laughed out loud at the crown prince's
expression.
"I'd heard rumors about the
Emperor's temper before," the regiment-captain said, shaking his
head, once he'd stopped laughing. "Apparently they actually fell
short of the reality."
"Father is one of the most
patient people in the universe . . . as
long as the people around him are at least trying to do their jobs,"
Janaki replied. "He drives himself harder than he ever drives
anyone else, too. But may the gods help anyone he thinks is
shirking his responsibilities to others."
"That's about what I'd gathered.
In this case, according to the SUNN reports we've been getting
over the Voicenet, he was more than justified. In fact, most of the
Conclave seemed to feel that way. Which explains why he's been
nominated as the first planetary emperor of Sharona."
For a moment, Janaki just
looked at the regiment-captain. He'd known from the beginning
that his father and his family were going to have a prominent part
to play in whatever decisions the Conclave ever came to, but he'd
never expected anything remotely like what Velvelig appeared to
be suggesting.
For several seconds, it simply
refused to sink in. Then it did, and his first reaction was that he
couldn't think of anyone on Sharona who could possibly do the
job better than Zindel chan Calirath. His second reaction was that
it had been extraordinarily thick with it at him not to see this
coming. And his third reaction was a stab of sheer,
unmitigated terror as he realized who would someday have to
succeed his father in that role, if it was confirmed.
Which, he thought a moment later, might just explain
why I wasn't about to let myself think about this
particular possibility!
Velvelig watched the
implications sink home in the broad-shouldered youngster sitting
across his desk from him, and he was impressed by what he saw.
Very few people would have realized what the sudden, slight
widening of Janaki chan Calirath's eyes represented. Velvelig did,
and he watched those broad shoulders come a fraction of an inch
further back as Janaki's spine straightened and he drew a deep
breath.
"That's . . .
quite a bit to take in, Sir," he said.
"Oh, it gets even better,"
Velvelig assured him. "You see, there were two candidates for the
nomination. Your father . . . and
Chava Busar."
The eyes which had widened a
moment before abruptly narrowed and went very cold, Velvelig
observed. That, too, pleased him immensely. There were very few
Arpathian septs which didn't have at least one bone to pick with
Emperor Chava, and Velvelig's sept—what was left of
it—nursed long and homicidal memories of the debt it
owed the Busar Dynasty. Which, although he'd never actually
explained it to Janaki, was one of the reasons Namir Velvelig had
been so pleased when Platoon-Captain chan Calirath reported to
him for duty.
"I can see where that could get
ugly, Sir," Janaki said after a moment. "Still, I suppose it was
inevitable. Who else could possibly put together an opposition
candidacy?"
"It wasn't much of a 'candidacy,'"
Velvelig demurred. "As nearly as I can tell from the reports we've
gotten so far—and remember, they're a week old—
your father buried him in the voting. It wasn't even close.
Unfortunately, Chava's refused to accept that the Conclave's
decision is binding upon him. Which, since the Conclave is a
purely voluntary association, is probably a not unreasonable
position," the regiment-captain conceded unwillingly.
"He's flatly refused to accept the
outcome of the vote, then?"
"No, not quite. But he's put
forward an incredible shopping list of demands which he insists
have to be met before he'll even contemplate the possibility of
'surrendering Uromathia's sacred sovereignty to a foreign crown.'"
The regiment-captain made a face. "The Conclave is considering
those demands now. Personally, I don't see any way he can
genuinely expect to get ninety-nine percent of them, but he seems
perfectly prepared to go on arguing about them forever."
"Which means he is
going to get at least some of them," Janaki said grimly. "He may be willing to go on burying his head in the sand while the
tide comes in, and he may be perfectly willing for everyone else to
drown with him rather than give in, but the rest of the Conclave
isn't going to be that capricious."
"That's my reading of the
situation, too," Velvelig agreed. "Since the only two options are to
give him at least some of what he wants or to start a second war
between Uromathia and the rest of the planet to force him to
submit, I'm guessing he'll probably end up settling for two or three
concessions. Which, I'm sure I hardly need to point out to you, are
going to be the ones he figures are best calculated to hamstring
your father's ultimate authority over him."
Janaki nodded, and Velvelig
shrugged.
"That's why you're not going to
get a rest stop here after all, Janaki," he said quietly. "I'll take the
rest of the wounded off your hands, and we'll provide you with
additional teams for your ambulances so that you can make better
time with the unwounded prisoners, but I want you back in
Sharona as quickly as I can get you there. Whatever Chava's up to,
your father doesn't need his heir universes away at a time like this.
In fact," he looked sympathetically at the younger man, "I'm afraid
your days in uniform are over. We can't afford to have anything
happen to you now."
Janaki wanted to protest. In fact,
he started to, then stopped as an echo of the Glimpse he'd had of
Kinlafia and Andrin rippled through the back of his mind. It
remained frustratingly unclear—probably because he
himself wasn't in it—but something about what Velvelig
had just said had waked that echo. He knew that much, even if he
had no idea at all what it had been. And whatever it was, Velvelig
was undoubtedly correct. What had been an acceptable risk in
peacetime for the heir to the Winged Crown was not an
acceptable risk in wartime for the man who might be about to
become heir to the crown of all Sharona.
"I understand, Sir," he said
finally, and Velvelig nodded in approval. He'd seen the protests
fluttering in the backs of Janaki's eyes, and he'd also seen the
Calirath sense of duty which kept those protests silent.
"I know you do," the regiment-
captain said quietly. "And for what it's worth—and it may
not feel like it's worth very much at this particular
moment—I think it's a damned shame. About the uniform, I
mean. There are some people who simply wear it without ever
learning what it really means. You already knew that when you
arrived. I think you would have been one of the really good ones."
"Actually, that means quite a lot
coming from you, Sir," Janaki replied. He inhaled again, then
stood. "With your permission, Sir, I'd better go and alert the
Platoon that we won't be staying over after all. At least everyone
ought to have time to get a hot bath and a sitdown meal in a
proper mess hall before we hit the road again."
"Of course." Velvelig stood as
well, then reached across the desk to offer his right hand. "Good
luck, Your Highness. And I hope you won't object if a heathen
Arpathian spends the odd night hour praying for you and your
father." He smiled crookedly as the prince clasped his hand firmly.
"After all, it could hardly hurt, could it?"
Petty Armsman Harth Loumas
sat in the hot patch of shade cast by the small canvas tarp and tried
to ignore the insects whining around his ears. He told himself that,
despite the bugs' irritation quotient, he couldn't really object to his
present duty. Or, he shouldn't, anyway; obviously he
could, because he was. All the same, he knew that most of his
fellow PAAF troopers would willingly have exchanged places
with him. For one thing, he did get to sit in the shade, which was
more than they got to do. He knew that, and in an intellectual sort
of way, he actually agreed. But that wasn't exactly the same thing
as saying that he actively enjoyed sitting here sweating.
He checked his watch, then
closed his eyes again and reached out with his Talent. Loumas had
extremely good range for a Plotter, but he was still limited to no
more than four miles, and he had to concentrate hard, at any range
beyond about two miles, if he wanted to separate human life
essences from those of other animals. It took him a good twenty
minutes to sweep the total area he could See from his present
location, and the portal itself created a huge blind spot in his
coverage. Since no Talent could operate through a portal, he had
to move physically around to its far aspect in this bug-infested
swamp if he wanted to See around it. That was why he was parked
at one end of the portal with Tairsal chan Synarch, Company-
Captain chan Tesh's senior Flicker. They were outside both the
sandbagged outer picket posts and the main defensive position
chan Tesh had thrown up on the Hell's Gate side of the portal, but
they could shift to the other aspect of the portal by simply walking
around it in this universe, which took all of fifteen minutes.
It also meant that if anything did
turn up, chan Synarch could nip around to the Hell's Gate side of
the portal and Flick a message straight back to chan Tesh and
Company-Captain Halifu in a handful of seconds.
Loumas and chan Synarch
changed positions every hour on the hour, moving around to the
far aspect, in order to maintain a three hundred sixty-degree watch.
It was, quite frankly, boring as hell, but it was also necessary. No
one had any idea where the enemy troops—the "Arcanans,"
as they called themselves—had come from. Platoon-
Captain Arthag had led sweeps a full fifteen miles out in every
direction without finding any sign of human habitation. He'd lost
one man and two horses to the local crocodiles in the process, and
Company-Captain chan Tesh had decided there was no point in
sweeping further out. No officer worth his uniform liked losing
men for no return, and if there'd been any evidence of where these
people had come from, or how they'd gotten here, some indication
of it should have turned up inside that thirty-mile circle. Besides,
he hadn't wanted Arthag and any of his men that far out from the
field fortifications he'd thrown up here at the portal itself.
Frankly, Loumas was beginning
to wonder if there might actually be anything to the wild rumors
about flying beasts. He wasn't certain where they'd started. The
Arcanan prisoners had all been sent further back, safely beyond the
possibility of any attempt to rescue them. Loumas would have
preferred for at least some of them to have been kept closer to
hand, where the local garrison might have been able to begin
learning their language and possibly conduct some useful
interrogations. On the other hand, he understood just how vital an
intelligence resource those prisoners were, and he could hardly
blame Company-Captain chan Tesh or Company-Captain Halifu
for wanting to make sure nothing happened to them.
But if none of the prisoners had
been spreading ridiculous stories about huge, winged creatures,
Loumas had no idea where they might have come from.
Probably a combination of sheer boredom
and the fact that we don't know diddily about these
people—except that they've got some fucking dangerous
weapons!
He snorted in what he wanted to
be amusement but which was tinged with something entirely too
much like fear for comfort. He reminded himself that the other
side obviously didn't know anything more about Sharona and the
capabilities of Sharonian weapons than he did about their
weapons. The way they'd tried to defend this very portal was proof
enough of that! But that didn't make him—or anyone
else—any happier about confronting the completely
unknown, and the eerie way these people had somehow managed
to establish their base camp here without anything remotely like
roads or leaving a single boat behind didn't make it any better.
Well, at least they won't be sneaking up on us, he told
himself firmly. It may be boring, but I'm damned sure
not—
His thoughts froze and he
stiffened, focusing in tightly. Then he swore aloud.
Damn!
I wish we had a decent Distance Viewer! he
thought.
His Talent would let him spot
living creatures, but what he Saw of them was
always . . . fuzzy. The creatures
themselves were clear enough, but exactly what they might be
doing, or exactly what their surroundings were, was often almost
impossible to discern. Half the time, he had to extrapolate, and
like most Plotters, he was fairly good at that. But extrapolation
depended on some sort of familiarity with what the people he was
Plotting were likely to be doing, and who the hells knew what
these people were likely to be up to? If he'd had a Distance
Viewer to team with, he'd have been able to coach the other Talent
into finding the proper distance and bearing, and the Distance
Viewer would have been able to See exactly what was happening.
Loumas closed his eyes,
concentrating hard, then punched chan Synarch's shoulder.
"Huh?" The wiry Marine snorted
awake. His head snapped up, and his eyes cleared almost instantly
as he looked a question at Loumas.
"We've got an incoming
contact," Loumas said crisply. "I think it's a small boat, headed in
from the east."
chan Synarch nodded sharply and
reached into the cargo pocket on his right thigh and extracted a pad
of paper and pencil.
"Shoot," he said tersely, pencil
poised.
"It's not as clear as I'd like,"
Loumas admitted, knowing chan Synarch would understand why
that was. "They're about four miles out. I can't get much of a feel
for the boat, but it's moving damned fast—I make it
at least twenty-five or thirty miles an hour, whatever that is in the
'knots' or whatever it is you Ternathian swabbies use."
The two of them grinned tensely
at each other, and he continued.
"There's three of them. One of
them's in some kind of uniform, but it doesn't look like anything
we saw here. I don't think he's wearing a helmet, and his tunic or
jacket is red, not the camouflage pattern they had." His hand
stabbed in the direction of the wrecked Arcanan fortifications and
camp. "I think the other two are in civilian clothes. Doesn't look
like any uniform I ever heard of, and they aren't dressed alike. I
don't See any weapons on any of them. None of those tube things,
and no crossbows anywhere I can See, either." Loumas grimaced.
"A Distance Viewer could probably tell us more, but that's all I've
got right now."
"Understood." chan Synarch had
been writing quickly and clearly in the shorthand every Flicker was
trained to use while Loumas talked. Now he read back what he'd
written, and Loumas listened carefully, then nodded.
"That's it," he agreed.
"Then I'd better get it off," chan
Synarch said. He ripped off the sheet on which he'd written, folded
it, put it into one of the metal carrier cartridges on his belt, and
trotted briskly around the edge of the portal until he crossed over
into the cool, forested depths of Hell's Gate and had a clear line of
sight to Company-Captain chan Tesh's HQ bunker. As soon as he
did, he Flicked the message cartridge directly to the company-
captain's orderly.
"Sent," he reported laconically to
Loumas as he jogged back around to the swamp side, and the
Plotter nodded. He was still tracking the incoming boat. In the
three minutes it had taken him and chan Synarch to get the
message off, the boat had covered almost another mile and a half.
It was going to be here in another three minutes—four,
tops—and—
A bugle awoke suddenly from
the far side of the portal, sounding the "Stand-To," and Loumas
exhaled the breath he hadn't realized he was holding. He watched
men double-timing towards their assigned actions stations, and his
lips skinned back from his teeth in a tight smile.
I might have missed some kind of super weapon in their
frigging boat, he thought, but they aren't going to take us
by surprise with whatever it is.
Chapter Forty-Five
Balkar chan Tesh lowered his
field glasses with a thoughtful frown. He'd gotten to Platoon-
Captain Parai chan Dersal's forward observation post from the
Hell's Gate side of the portal while the boat Loumas had detected
was still a good mile out. He'd stood beside the Marine and
watched it during its final approach, and he hoped his perplexity
was less apparent to his men than it was to him.
How the hell do they make the thing move? he wondered.
There was no sail, no oars, no paddle, and certainly no steam
launch's tall spindly funnel or plume of smoke. Yet the
boat—not more than fifteen feet long, at most—
came sliding through the deeper channels of the swamp fast
enough that its stern squatted and its bow planed across the water.
It's not natural . . . and
isn't that a silly thing to be thinking after everything that's
already happened out here?
He slowly and deliberately cased
the field glasses, then folded his arms and stood waiting while the
boat slowed abruptly as it slid the last few dozen yards to the
raised hillock before the portal.
As Loumas had reported, there
were three men in it. Two of them wore what was obviously
civilian clothing of some sort, although—not
surprisingly—chan Tesh had never seen garments cut that
way. They were much more tightly tailored, more formfitting, than
any current Sharonian fashion, and the civilian jackets were long-
tailed, with broad, cutaway lapels and outsized silver buttons.
Both jackets were dark colored—the larger, chestnut-haired
fellow in the bow, who looked to be the older of the two, wore
one that was the color of port wine, while the younger,
Uromathian-looking one on the midships thwart wore one of a
dark, rich green—but the tight trousers were light-colored,
and tucked into pointy-toed dress boots which rose to midcalf. All
in all, chan Tesh couldn't imagine a less practical outfit for wading
around in swamps.
The man sitting in the stern of
the boat and managing the simple rudder—at least I
know what that's for, chan Tesh thought
wryly—was obviously in uniform, although as Loumas had
already informed him, it didn't match anything they'd seen yet.
There was something about him which suggested a
noncommissioned officer, chan Tesh decided, and his red jersey-
like tunic reminded the company-captain vaguely of naval
uniform, for some reason. Possibly, he thought, because the man
seemed to be doing what one might expect a sailor to do.
The boat drifted gently and
silently through the reeds in the shallower water, then nosed into
the mud with a soft slosh of swamp water and a muddy slurp. Its
occupants sat very still, their hands in plain sight. Even the man at
the rudder was very careful to make no sudden moves as he
released the tiller bar and placed his open hands palm-down on his
thighs, and chan Tesh smiled humorlessly at the sight. He'd be
doing exactly the same thing if twenty Model 10 rifles and at least
one machine-gun (that he could see) was aimed at him.
The older of the two civilians
had busy eyes, chan Tesh observed. They swept back and forth
across the waiting Sharonians, and the company-captain had the
distinct impression that they weren't missing much. Then the
moving eyes seemed to narrow slightly as they settled on chan
Tesh himself.
"Hello!" the stranger said, in
oddly accented but perfectly intelligible Ternathian. "We come
talk?"
chan Tesh stiffened. Despite
everything, he was shocked to be addressed in his native tongue,
and he hoped his astonishment didn't show. Nor was he the only
one who reacted strongly. He heard someone inhale sharply behind
him, and then someone else snarled in what he obviously thought
was a whisper, "Those bastards have a live prisoner!"
The talkative civilian started to
stand up in the boat, then froze as half a dozen rifles tracked him.
He obviously knew what the weapons were, and he swallowed
hard, sweating more heavily than the swampy heat alone could
explain. But he didn't panic; chan Tesh had to give him that much.
"No shoot," he said in a
commendably level voice. "We talk, please? Much killing mistake.
You send word? Say we talk. Important."
"You think they really want to
parley, Sir?" chan Dersal said softly behind chan Tesh.
"I'd sooner parley with a fucking
cobra!" Platoon-Captain chan Talmarha half-snarled, and the
Marine grunted.
"We hit them hard, Morek," chan
Dersal pointed out to chan Tesh's mortar commander. "Twice. In
their shoes, I'd think about talking truce. Hard."
chan Tesh made a very slight
gesture with his right hand, and the two platoon-captains shut up
instantly. The company-captain gazed back at the Arcanan in
silence for several seconds. Although he'd cut off the conversation
behind him, he realized that he found himself favoring chan
Talmarha's position.
Unfortunately . . .
"Master-Armsman chan
Kormai," he said quietly.
"Yes, Sir?" his senior
noncommissioned officer replied from behind his right shoulder.
Frai chan Kormai was a typical Ternathian, unlike chan Tesh. He
was a good foot taller than the company-captain, with shoulders
broader than an icebox, and if he carried more than two ounces of
excess weight anywhere about his person, chan Tesh had never
noticed them. The master-armsman had enlisted in the Imperial
Ternathian Army when he was sixteen, and he would be
celebrating his forty-sixth birthday in two months. Over those
thirty years he'd seen just about everything, and chan Tesh found
his unflappable professionalism more comforting than he cared to
admit. Especially at this moment.
"I think we need to make certain
these . . . gentlemen aren't carrying
anything we'd prefer for them not to be carrying, Master-
Armsman."
"Understood, Sir." chan
Kormai's cool green eyes surveyed the boat. "You want it polite,
or thorough, Sir?"
"After what they've already done,
I think I can stand it if their feelings get a little bruised, Master
Armsman," chan Tesh said dryly. "Let's just try not to leave too
many physical bruises, shall we?"
"I think we can handle that, Sir."
"Good." chan Tesh looked back
at the man in the boat. "We'll talk," he said, speaking slowly and
carefully and wondering how much the other fellow actually
understood. "First, though, we're going to take a few precautions."
"'Pre-cautions?'" the civilian
repeated, obviously not understanding the word.
"First we search you," chan Tesh
told him, and pantomimed slapping his own pockets with his
hands. The civilian cocked his head to one side for a moment, then
grimaced.
"Understand," he said in less than
enthralled tones. "You—" He paused again, obviously
trying to find the word he wanted, then used one in his own
language. chan Tesh looked politely blank, and the civilian puffed
out his cheeks in apparent frustration. Then he twitched his
shoulders in an obvious shrug and said something to his
companions. chan Tesh recognized the language their prisoners
had spoken, but he hadn't had the opportunity to learn to
understand it, and so he simply waited until the civilian turned
back to him.
"Understand 'precautions,'" he
said, speaking the new word carefully.
"Good," chan Tesh said, and
nodded to chan Kormai.
The master-armsman had been
quietly picking his assistants while the company-captain explained
to the ignorant foreigner. Now he moved forward, followed by
four more men. All of them were Marines, chan Tesh noted, and
they were also older, more experienced men.
"Get out of the boat," chan
Kormai told the talkative civilian, speaking as slowly and
carefully as chan Tesh had. "Slowly. Put your hands like this."
He demonstrated lacing his
fingers together behind his head, and this time a flash of anger
showed in the civilian's eyes. That was fine with chan Tesh.
Frankly, he didn't give a damn how angry they got.
The younger civilian said
something sharp in their own language, but his superior shook his
head. Then, as chan Kormai had instructed him, he stepped slowly
and carefully ashore. His boots sank to the ankle in the mud, and
he grimaced in obvious distaste as suction tried to pull them off
his feet. He managed to reach solider ground without losing them,
then put his hands behind his head as chan Kormai had
demonstrated.
The master-armsman stepped
around behind him, and the civilian's jaw set hard as the noncom
proceeded to search him very thoroughly, indeed. chan Tesh was
impressed as the master-armsman demonstrated a previously
unsuspected talent. The company-captain had seen very few
police—civilian or military—who could have
frisked a man so competently . . . and
thoroughly. chan Kormai wasn't especially gentle about it, either,
although it was obvious to chan Tesh that he wasn't being
deliberately rougher than he had to be, and the civilian winced
once or twice. By the time the master-armsman was through,
however, it was quite obvious that the civilian couldn't have
anything hidden away outside a body cavity.
chan Tesh was tempted to insist
that those be searched, as well, given the bizarre things of
which these people appeared to be capable. There were limits to
even his paranoia, however, he decided. If these people were
equipped with some sort of super weapon so small that it could be
hidden someplace like that, then they had no need to send anyone
out to talk to them in the first place. Besides, if this really was an
effort to establish some sort of diplomatic contact, there was
probably some professional code of conduct which ought to be
followed. He didn't have a clue what it might insist that he do, but
he was pretty sure it existed and that ordering a foreign envoy to
bend over and spread his cheeks wasn't very high on the list of
approved greetings.
chan Kormai finished and stood
back. The civilian turned to face him with what struck chan Tesh
as commendable aplomb, and raised his eyebrows.
"Finished," the master-armsman
told him, and pantomimed lowering his hands.
"Are satisfied?"
"For
now . . . sir," chan Kormai replied,
and gestured for the man to move further away from the water.
Two of the master-armsman's Marines kept a careful eye on the
civilian without being particularly unobtrusive about it, and chan
Kormai turned to the second civilian.
His search was just as thorough
this time, and the younger man lacked his older companion's self-
control. His face flushed with anger, and his jaw muscles bunched
in obvious humiliation as he was searched. chan Kormai was no
rougher than he'd been with the first man, but neither was he any
gentler, and it was obvious that the ire in the younger civilian's eye
left him totally unmoved.
"Finished," he said eventually,
for the second time. The younger man wasted no effort on
conversation. He simply stamped across the damp ground to his
companion, and chan Kormai glanced at chan Tesh. There was a
slight, undeniable twinkle in the master-armsman's eyes, the
company-captain observed, and felt his own lips twitch as they
tried to smile.
The man who'd managed the
steering on the way in was calmer and more phlegmatic about it
than either of the two civilians had been. Unlike them—or,
unlike the younger of them, at least—he clearly understood
there was nothing personal about it, which suggested to chan Tesh
that his original estimate that the man was a long-term noncom
had probably been correct.
Once all three of the Arcanans
were safely ashore under the watchful eye of chan Kormai's
Marines, the master-armsman turned to the boat itself. As with his
search of the passengers, he took his time, proceeding with
methodical thoroughness.
Each of the civilians had come
equipped with what was obviously a briefcase, and chan Kormai
went through both of them carefully. He took pains not to damage
or disorder any of the indecipherable documents he found inside
them, but he examined each folder individually. Then he paused,
halfway through searching the first case, and held something up.
"Look at this, Sir," he said to
chan Tesh.
The company-captain crossed to
the boat and frowned as the master-armsman held out a rock. That
was certainly what it looked like, anyway. A big chunk of clear
quartz crystal, larger than chan Tesh's fist. For that matter, it was
larger than chan Kormai's fist, which took considerably
more doing.
"What do you make of it, Sir?"
chan Kormai asked as chan Tesh accepted it just a bit gingerly. It
wasn't quartz after all, he decided. It was too heavy, too dense, for
that. In fact—
"Well, Master-Armsman," he
said dryly after a moment, "I doubt they brought it along just to
use as a paperweight. It reminds me of the stuff those artillery
pieces of theirs are made of, which suggests at least a few
unpleasant possibilities, doesn't it?" He grimaced. "It's not the
same thing—not quite. But it's got that
same . . . feel to it."
"I think you're right, Sir.
And—" chan Kormai's eyes flicked sideways at the envoys,
if that was what they were "—they're watching you like
hawks."
"Really?" chan Tesh murmured,
never looking up from the piece of crystal as he rotated his wrist
to catch the hot sunlight on its polished surface. "Do they look
nervous, Frai?"
"Don't know as I'd call it
'nervous,' Sir," the master-armsman replied softly. "Curious,
though. And maybe a little worried. Hard to say. But I'd
say they're at least as curious about your reaction to it as we are
about what the hell it is."
chan Tesh snorted in amusement.
He wondered how the Arcanans would react if he suddenly tossed
the piece of not-rock as far out into the swamp as he could. He
was actually quite tempted to do just that, if only to see how they
responded. But he didn't. Instead, he handed it back to chan
Kormai.
"Put it back in the bag," he said.
"And I'll bet you you'll find another one in the other briefcase."
"Sorry, Sir. I don't take sucker
bets—even from officers."
As both of them had expected,
there was, indeed, a second, almost identical crystal in the other
briefcase. Those two enigmatic artifacts made chan Tesh a bit
nervous—more nervous than he wanted to let on, at any
rate—and he carefully didn't immediately return the
briefcases to their owners. Instead, he set them to one side while
chan Kormai finished with the boat.
In addition to the briefcases,
there were three canvas knapsacks which contained food and water
and what looked—and smelled—like some sort of
insect repellent. Aside from what were obviously eating utensils,
there was nothing even remotely resembling a blade or any other
recognizable weapon.
Once the boat had been emptied,
chan Kormai waved a half-dozen more troopers forward and had it
hauled completely out of the water. chan Tesh wasn't sure whether
the master-armsman was taking caution to its logical conclusion,
or whether he was simply as curious as chan Tesh himself about
how they'd made the boat move. Whatever it was, neither of them
found his question answered. There was nothing at all out of the
ordinary about the boat, aside from the fact that it was obviously
designed for a higher rate of speed than most boats its size which
chan Tesh had ever seen before. Well, nothing besides that and the
small, dense, glittering block of crystal fastened to its keel near the
stern.
Unlike the lumps of not-quartz
in the briefcases, the block clearly was made of exactly the
same material as the rod-like weapons they'd captured from the
other side and the perplexing bits and pieces Soral Hilovar and
Nolis Parcanthi had turned up. Which clearly suggested that it was
the source of the boat's motive power. It just didn't do a thing to
explain how it provided that power.
Finally, chan Kormai
straightened with a reasonably satisfied expression.
"That's it, Sir," he said. "Aside
from those rock-things, and this," he waved at the glittering block,
"I don't see anything they could be planning on using as some sort
of weapon."
"I just wish we knew whether or
not they were weapons," chan Tesh said dryly, and the
master armsman-shrugged.
"If you want, Sir, I'll see how
this block stands up to a forty-six," he said, tapping the butt of the
Halanch and Welnahr holstered at his hip.
"And would you be willing to
fire at the fuse of a twelve-inch naval shell, Master-Armsman?"
chan Tesh inquired in an interested tone.
"Depends, Sir," chan Kormai
replied with a slow grin. "Wouldn't be willing if it were a
Ternathian shell, but if it was one of those Uromathian pieces of
shit, I might take a chance."
"Well, I don't think we'll do that
this time," chan Tesh told him.
"Yes, Sir. In that case, begging
the Company-Captain's pardon, but what are we going to
do with them?"
"Now that, Master-Armsman, is
the pressing question, isn't it?"
* * *
"I'm going to get that bastard,"
Uthik Dastiri muttered, glaring at the big, red-haired Sharonian
who'd search them.
His voice was soft, but he was
unable to suppress the bitter hatred in its depths. Rithmar Skirvon
understood his reaction, although he didn't share it. After all, he'd
understood the reason for the search, as well, and he couldn't hold
it against the soldier. It hadn't been personal, merely professional,
which was obviously something Dastiri hadn't quite grasped yet.
But personal or not, it had been brutally thorough, and because
Skirvon understood Dastiri's distress he only shrugged and
refrained from reprimanding him for his anger.
"I've had warmer welcomes in
my life," he observed instead.
"Is that all you've got to say?"
Dastiri demanded, his face heating, and Skirvon patted his
shoulder.
"I understand you're a little
upset, and I can't blame you for that. But remember this—
the longer you hold onto your anger, the longer you'll spend at a
disadvantage in this situation. The angrier you are, the less clearly
you'll be able to see or think, notice important details about these
people."
"How can you be so calm about
it?" Dastiri asked, his expression wavering between contrition and
bitter hatred. "When he shoved—"
"He was doing his job, Uthik,"
Skirvon said gently but firmly. "In his boots, I'd have done exactly
the same thing, for exactly the same reasons."
The younger diplomat chewed
on that in silence for several uncomfortable moments. Then,
finally, he sighed.
"I'll try to remember that,
Rithmar. But as Torkash is my witness, I'd sooner put an arbalest
bolt between his eyes than smile at that bastard for any
reason."
"Yes," Skirvon said dryly. "I
gathered that."
The older diplomat started to say
something more, then changed his mind. There wasn't much point,
at this stage, and Dastiri had to learn someday. In the meantime, he
had other things to think about.
They'd been careful in their
approach to deny the Sharonians any additional militarily useful
information. Including, especially, any hint of the existence or
capabilities of their own dragons. It was always possible, perhaps
even probable, that the Arcanan prisoners these people had taken
had already revealed the existence of the beasts, but there was no
point in giving the other side any better feel for what they could
do. So Five Hundred Klian had ordered the transport dragon to fly
them and their boat to within forty miles of the swamp portal.
They'd made the rest of the trip the hard way, and Skirvon devoutly
hoped that the Sharonians would be thinking solely in terms of
other boats for the future.
There wasn't anything else he
could do about that at this point, so he'd concentrated on the
Sharonians' reaction to his and Dastiri's PCs. Their curiosity had
been obvious to someone with Skirvon's training, although he
wasn't prepared yet to venture a guess as to exactly what had
spawned their curiosity. It was always possible, he supposed, that
Olderhan and Kelbryan's preposterous theories about a civilization
which didn't use magic at all were accurate, but that still seemed
so—
His thought broke off in mid-
sentence as the man who was clearly these people's commanding
officer said something to the man—probably a chief sword
or something of the sort, Skirvon had decided—who'd
conducted the search. The hulking noncom said something back,
then the officer nodded, turned, and walked across to Skirvon.
"I am Company-Captain Balkar
chan Tesh," he said. "Who are you, and what do you want?"
Well, Skirvon thought. That's certainly blunt and to
the point.
"Rithmar Skirvon," he said,
speaking slowly and carefully. Then he introduced Dastiri, as well.
chan Tesh—whose name
indicated he was Ternathian, according to the information
Magister Kelbryan had assembled for them—didn't look
particularly happy to see them. His expression was controlled, but
Skirvon had been a diplomat for a long time. He didn't need any
"Talent" to recognize the anger crackling around in the back of
chan Tesh's outwardly calm eyes.
"How did you learn Ternathian?"
the company-captain demanded, as soon as the introductions were
over, and Skirvon nodded mentally. He'd been reasonably certain
that was going to be the first question, and he'd prepared his
answer carefully.
"One person live. Short time," he
said. "Bad hurt. Spoke words, recorded. Try to save, but Arcanan
healer die in fight. Long days to new healer. Many, many days. Bad
hurt. Talk words, but not live. Die before see healer," he ended
sorrowfully. "Arcanan grief. We talk?"
chan Tesh's expression never
wavered, but his eyes were cold, suspicious.
"Who was it?" he asked. "Who
survived?"
Skirvon and Dastiri had argued
repeatedly over how to address that particular point. Thanks to the
girl, Shaylar, they had a complete list of names for the dead crew,
not that he intended to admit that, even if this chan Tesh held him
over hot coals. But they did know everyone's names, and they even
knew which men she'd personally seen die. The Sharonians would
have that same list, as well, since the little bitch had sent out her
report—her visual report, no less!—right in
the middle of the fighting.
Dastiri had wanted to select a
name from the list of Sharonian men Shaylar hadn't seen die,
rather than admit that she herself had survived. Skirvon had
waffled back and forth over that choice, but he'd finally decided
that they couldn't afford to take chances, given the number of
Arcanan soldiers these people had taken prisoner. They'd had the
survivors of Olderhan's company in custody for a month now, and
if they'd had another of those damned "Voices" available to help
interrogate them, gods alone knew how much they'd managed to
learn. Shaylar had insisted she couldn't "read minds," and she
might even have been telling the truth.
However . . .
Skirvon found it disturbing that
both survivors from a crew as small as the one Olderhan
had encountered had "Talents" of the mind. They weren't even the
same Talents, for that matter, which meant there was no way to
know what else these people could do with their minds. Skirvon
wasn't quite willing to risk everything by getting himself
caught in an easily detectable lie this early in the negotiations, so
he'd decided to play the hand cautiously.
"Arcana much, much grief," he
said sadly. "Girl bad hurt. Try hard to go healer. Far, far walk. She
die," he added, and actually managed to summon a few tears.
"Shaylar?" Shock
exploded in chan Tesh's face. The man's hand dropped to the butt
of the weapon—the "pistol"—holstered at his side,
and his fingers curled around the polished wooden grip. "Shaylar
survived? And you let her die?"
The sudden violence seething in
chan Tesh's eyes was a terrifying shock, especially given the
obvious strength of the man's self-control. Nor was he alone in his
reaction. Every Sharonian soldier in sight mirrored the same
sudden, explosive rage.
"Try hard save life," Skirvon
insisted, dredging up more tears. "But bad, bad hurt. Hard talk.
Long, long walk go healer. Arcana big, big grief. Arcana, Sharona,
no shoot. Ne-go-ti-ate," he said with exaggerated care. "No
shoot."
"If she was so badly hurt," chan
Tesh demanded coldly, "how did you manage to get enough of our
language out of her to learn to talk to us?"
Skirvon saw the man's knuckles
whiten around the pistol grip and realized abruptly—
emotionally, not just intellectually—that his own life hung
by the proverbial thread. Obviously, Olderhan's estimate of
Shaylar's importance in these people's eyes had been on the mark.
In fact, Skirvon was beginning to think Olderhan had
underestimated it.
He managed (he hoped) to keep
his thoughts from racing across his expression, but it suddenly
occurred to him that his strategy of insisting Shaylar was dead
might have been a mistake. Returning her and her husband before
they'd been thoroughly interrogated back in Arcana or New Arcana
was clearly out of the question, of course. He'd figured that
insisting they were both dead—and he knew from
Olderhan's report that Shaylar had believed Jathmar was dead even
while she was busy sending her accursed report back
home—would be the simplest and neatest way of keeping
their return off the table. Now he was suddenly confronted by the
fact that because he'd claimed she was dead he couldn't put her
return onto the table even if he wanted to. Which, given
the hatred looking at him out of all those Sharonian eyes suddenly
seemed as if it might have been a very good idea, indeed.
Unfortunately, there was no
going back now.
"She hurt bad," he said instead.
"Head hurt—inside." He tapped his own temple,
where—again, thanks to Olderhan's invaluable
report—he knew the little bitch actually had been injured.
"Not . . . work right," he continued,
deliberately searching for words. "She talk. Not to us—to
her. We recorded it."
He intentionally used the
Andaran verb for "recorded," and chan Tesh glared at him right on
cue.
"That's the second time you've
used that word—'record,'" he said. "What does it
mean?"
"It mean—" Skirvon
paused and rolled his eyes in obvious frustration. "Not know
words. Can show. Please?"
He managed not to heave an
overt sigh of relief as chan Tesh's eyes narrowed. The company-
captain's anger didn't disappear, but he was obviously forcing it
back under control.
He even managed to take his
hand away from his pistol.
"Show how?" he asked
skeptically.
"Please, bag," Skirvon said,
pointing to his own briefcase. chan Tesh cocked his head for a
moment, then nodded and said something to the big chief sword.
Although Skirvon's Ternathian language skills were far better than
he was prepared to admit, they weren't good enough to follow the
rapidly spoken sentence. On the other hand, they didn't need to be,
as the noncom handed him the briefcase.
Skirvon opened it cautiously,
then withdrew his PC. To his surprise, chan Tesh tensed
obviously, and the diplomat found it less than easy to ignore the
half-dozen rifles which were suddenly pointed in his direction
once again.
"What is that?" chan Tesh asked
sharply.
"Is only personal crystal,"
Skirvon said soothingly, once again using the Andaran words and
holding the crystal up. chan Tesh looked blank.
"What does it do?" he demanded.
"Rock hold talk. It records talk."
"What?" chan Tesh blinked.
"Hold talk," Skirvon said again,
and murmured the activating incantation. The PC's glow as he
initiated the spellware was lost in the brilliant sunshine, of course,
but it was angled so that he could see its display. He
tapped the menu with the tip of his stylus, calling up the special,
limited word list they'd manufactured from Magister Kelbryan's
primer specifically for this exchange. Then he touched the
playback command.
"Shaylar," a woman's voice said.
Putting together that word list
had required days of careful work. He and Dastiri had deliberately
limited the audio recordings Magister Kelbryan had downloaded
to them, choosing individual words on the basis of how clear
Shaylar's voice had sounded when they were recorded. All of them
were recognizably her voice, but distorted by
fatigue . . . or pain. In some cases, he
knew, the pain had been purely emotional, but that didn't matter
for his purposes. What mattered was that the chosen
words sounded like someone who'd been severely injured. Like
someone who was muttering to herself, wandering through her
own injury-confused thoughts.
He'd expected a powerful
emotional reaction, but not the one he got.
chan Tesh's jaw fell. Literally.
Skirvon stared at him and
experienced a sudden epiphany. Despite everything Olderhan had
told him, despite his study of the notes Kelbryan had meticulously
recorded, despite even chan Tesh's obvious reaction when his chief
sword had found the PCs in the first place, he hadn't really
believed until that moment that Sharonians had no experience with
magic. He couldn't believe it, because no one could
possibly build a real civilization without it. He'd been absolutely
convinced that Shaylar and Jathmar had been shamming in a
successful effort to confuse and mislead their captors.
But chan Tesh wasn't shamming.
The company-captain was clearly a disciplined, confident officer,
and what his forces had done to Hadrign Thalmayr's command was
brutal evidence of his competence. Yet his astonishment at hearing
a simple recorded word played back from a completely standard
personal crystal was total. Indeed, it appeared to border on
superstitious terror, and deep inside, Rithmar Skirvon grinned like
a kid with his daddy's jar of accumulators.
Olderhan had been right.
They had no magic!
Why, they weren't nearly as
formidable as he'd first believed. If they couldn't do something this
simple, they were babes in an adult world—a mean and
nasty one. mul Gurthak had been right, too. All they had going for
them was their machines, the "guns" they'd used—used by
surprise—in both violent encounters. And, as mul Gurthak
had pointed out, it was only that surprise, that totally
unanticipated ability of theirs to throw not a spell, but a physical
projectile, through a portal which had defeated Thalmayr.
Skirvon had been convinced
these people must actually have their machines and their "Talents"
in addition to the magic which was the necessary
foundation for any advanced civilization. But they genuinely
didn't have it, and that reordered everything he'd thought
about them.
But first things first, he told himself firmly. First
things first.
He waited until chan Tesh shook
himself.
"How did you do that?" The
Sharonian's voice was ever so slightly hoarse, Skirvon noted with
carefully hidden satisfaction.
"Rock is personal
crystal," he repeated the Andaran phrase carefully. "Shaylar
talk, it record—" again he used the Andaran
"—her word. Then spellware—" yet another
Andaran word "—work words.
Make . . . list our words, your
words."
He tapped the menu again,
bringing up the Andaran and Ternathian word for "word" side by
side in the display, then angled it so that chan Tesh could see it.
The company-captain's eyes narrowed once again. Clearly, the
phonetic spelling of the Ternathian word meant no more to him
than the totally unknown characters of the Arcanan alphabet
floating decided. Equally clearly, he was intelligent enough to
realize what he was seeing. He stared into the crystal for several
seconds, then shook himself and looked back at Skirvon.
"So you say
this . . . 'personal crystal' of yours let
you capture Shaylar's words and then analyze our language?"
"Please," Skirvon said,
summoning up a pained expression, "too many words. Not have
big number."
chan Tesh scowled in evident
frustration.
"If you could do that," he
gestured at the PC," why couldn't you save Shaylar?"
"Tried. Tried hard,"
Skirvon insisted soulfully. He remembered Olderhan's account of
the prisoners' reaction to magic healing. Given these people's total
ignorance about magic, it would undoubtedly be even simpler than
he'd expected to convince them that Shaylar had died of her
injuries. Especially since she undoubtedly would have
without the Healers' intervention.
"Head hurt bad," he said once
more. "Our healer killed in fight. Tried walk to second
healer, but many, many days. She die before we reach. She very
brave," he added sadly. "Arcana much grief."
"Yes," chan Tesh said harshly,
glowering at him. "She was very brave. And my people
will demand punishment for whoever killed her."
"Please," Skirvon said again,
earnestly. "Too many words. Must learn more. But now, come talk
Sharona. No shoot, talk."
"A truce?" chan Tesh sounded
massively skeptical, but that was a distinct improvement over the
white-hot fury of a few moments before. "You want to negotiate a
truce?"
"Truce is no shoot?" Skirvon
said, and chan Tesh nodded.
"A truce is a time to talk, yes. A
time to talk, not shoot. That's what you want? To talk about not
shooting us again?"
"Sharona no shoot, Arcana no
shoot. Yes."
"I can't authorize a truce. You
understand? I must talk to someone higher than me. With more
power, more authority. Understand?"
"Yes. Send talk?"
"I'll send a message."
"Ah . . .
message." Skirvon tapped the crystal's menu again,
dutifully recording the "new" word into it. The word "message"
was already in its real vocabulary list, of course, but these
yokels would never know that.
chan Tesh watched as the word
appeared in both Andaran and phonetic spelling. Then Skirvon
looked back up at him expectantly, and the company-captain
frowned.
"You understand you can't talk
to me about a truce?" chan Tesh pressed. Skirvon only
looked at him and said nothing, and the Sharonian tried yet again.
"I'm not a diplomat. I'm a
soldier—a 'diplomat' is someone who speaks for a
government. You understand?"
Skirvon nodded sharply, busily
coding the "new" words into his crystal.
"I'll have to send for a diplomat,"
chan Tesh continued. "I'll send a message, and the diplomat will
come here."
"Ah!" Skirvon nodded again,
more enthusiastically. But then he stopped nodding and shook his
head instead. "No," he said. "Not here."
"What?" chan Tesh's eyes
narrowed once more, and Skirvon knelt in the mud with a silent
apology to his tailor as he contemplated what it was going to do to
the knees of his trousers.
"Sharona portal," he said, using a
dead twig to draw a circle in the mud. Then he drew another circle,
about two feet from the first. "Arcana portal," he said, and
indicated the portal soaring high above them.
chan Tesh scowled and opened
his mouth, but Skirvon held up one hand, gesturing for patience.
chan Tesh looked at him, then shrugged and nodded.
"Go on. Say the rest, I mean."
"Arcana, Sharona di-plo-mats
meet here."
Skirvon drew an "X" in the mud
between the two circles he'd already drawn and tapped it to
indicate the approximate spot of the slaughter. He let his face fall
into a deeply sorrowful expression which Dastiri mimicked
beautifully. Even the Navy petty officer who'd managed the boat
for them contrived to look sad.
"Great grief," Skirvon said.
"Much hurt." He touched his chest to indicate his heart, then
patted the "X" again. "Diplomats talk here." Then he pointed to the
portal overhead and said, "Sharona stay here. Arcana want Sharona
stay here." He pointed at chan Tesh's soldiers and their sandbagged
positions. "But diplomats go, talk here."
He pointed to the "X" again, and
chan Tesh cocked an eyebrow at him.
"You mean you're willing to
accept that we keep this portal? You just want your diplomats to
meet our diplomats here?" It was chan Tesh's turn to point at the
"X" in the mud.
"You stay—soldiers stay,"
Skirvon said, very carefully not answering chan Tesh's first
question directly, then indicated the "X" once more. "Diplomats
talk here. Me. Dastiri. Sharonian diplomats."
"Under a flag of truce?"
"No shoot, yes. Talk. Negotiate."
chan Tesh gazed thoughtfully at
the muddy diagram, then studied Skirvon and Dastiri carefully
before he finally spoke once more.
"I'll send a message to bring a
diplomat here." He pointed at the "X." "To Fallen Timbers."
"Fall En Tim Burr?" Skirvon
asked, this time genuinely puzzled, and chan Tesh pointed at the
massive trees behind him on the Sharonian side of the contested
portal.
"Trees," he said. "Also 'timber.'"
He pantomimed a tree with his arm, positioning his forearm
vertically with his fingers outstretched as branches. "Timber."
Then he blew hard at his hand and lowered it as if his arm were a
falling tree. "Fall. So we call the site where you murdered our
civilians 'Fallen Timbers.'"
"Ah . . .
grief place." Skirvon nodded. "We walk, negotiate Fallen
Timbers."
"Why?" chan Tesh's eyes were
cold again, the soul-deep anger back again, burning coldly in their
depths. "Why at Fallen Timbers?"
"Sharona fight hard. Arcana
grief. Arcana want see, want re-mem-ber—" Skirvon spoke
the Ternathian word carefully "—brave Sharona."
chan Tesh's eyebrows soared.
Then he frowned thoughtfully.
"You want to meet where they
were murdered? To do them honor?"
"'Honor'?" Skirvon repeated.
"If someone does a brave thing
and dies doing it, we feel respect. We feel honor. We say they were
good and brave and should be remembered with a good feeling
here." chan Tesh touched his own heart, and Skirvon nodded
emphatically.
"Yes. Meet at Fallen Timbers,
honor brave Sharona." Then he gave the soldier a concerned look.
"No bad anger, meet at Fallen Timbers?"
"Will we be so angry we won't
negotiate?" chan Tesh shrugged. "I can't say. I don't have the
authority. Meeting there to honor our murdered civilians
will help, but it won't be easy to set aside our anger. We
didn't start this."
Skirvon cocked his head and
smiled gently.
"Arcana no start," he said. "
Who start? Two men dead, no man see. Who start?"
chan Tesh blinked, then
grimaced.
"So that's your story?
You didn't start it because no one saw who killed Falsan? I find
that profoundly interesting."
He gazed at Skirvon
thoughtfully, but, to Skirvon's surprise, the uneducated rube didn't
continue. He neither badgered Skirvon in an attempt to forcibly
change his mind, nor pointed out—as they certainly could
have—that it was Arcana who had run a party of civilians to
ground and then slaughtered them. Skirvon kept smiling, gently,
and revised—just a tad—his opinion of this
particular provincial rube in uniform. At least the man was
intelligent enough to leave that chore to the diplomats.
"When meet?" Skirvon asked.
"Stay here," chan Tesh replied.
"We'll send a message. Wait here until the answer to that question
comes back."
Either chan Tesh didn't know
where the nearest diplomat was, Skirvon reflected, which was an
interesting piece of information. Or he didn't want to admit how
far away he was, which would be another interesting piece of
information.
"We'll feed you while we wait,"
chan Tesh added stiffly. "We'll give you water and loan you
blankets, if they're needed."
If they were needed? Could these thought messages,
which Skirvon still found almost impossible to credit, really
travel that fast? Or was a diplomat that near? The lack of
information was maddening, but at this stage in the negotiations,
their best was all they could do.
"We wait," Skirvon agreed.
chan Tesh nodded sharply and
turned on his heel as smartly as any Andaran aristocrat on a parade
ground. That was interesting, as well. Out in the middle of the
godsforsaken wilderness, this company-captain—the
equivalent of a mere commander of one hundred, assuming
Kelbryan's primer had gotten it correct—was as spit-and-
polish formal as some self-important, blue-blooded Andaran.
Either these people were as
virulently militant as Andara itself, or else he was putting on a
show for them, exaggerating his militancy for effect. Either
answer would present its own possibilities, once Skirvon managed
to figure out which one applied. It would, he realized with a
slowly building emotion almost akin to relish, be a very
interesting little exchange all around, wouldn't it?
The possibilities, he thought,
licking his mental chops, were boundless.
Chapter Forty-Six
Dorzon Baskay, Viscount
Simrath, had dropped the "chan" from his name for his new role. It
was possible that the Arcanan diplomats had discovered that the
word indicated military service, and Platoon-Captain Simrath
wasn't being a member of the military just now. After all, a
diplomat as young as he was wouldn't have had time to become a
military veteran, as well, so he couldn't be one, either, because
right this minute he had to be a diplomat. A very convincing diplomat.
He wasn't at all happy about that,
but he didn't have much choice. Sharona didn't have a real
diplomat within less than three months' travel, and no one was
prepared to admit that to the other side. They'd already delayed for
the better part of two days while Company-Captain chan Tesh had
conferred by Voice with Regiment-Captain Velvelig, but chan
Tesh and Velvelig had both been aware that the possibility offered
by the Arcanan contact might well be fleeting. If it wasn't seized now, it could slip away and never be offered again. Neither
of them wanted to lose any possibility of avoiding an all-out war,
and so Velvelig had finally made the decision which had led to
chan Baskay's present unhappiness.
"We don't have an official
diplomat, and we don't have time to get one," chan Tesh had told
chan Baskay bluntly. "I don't have any idea whether or not these
people are sincere. Even if they are, they've made it fairly
clear that they're at the end of a long—and slow—
communications chain. So whatever they may want
doesn't necessarily mean a damned thing about their superiors' or
their government's ultimate intentions. But I agree with Regiment-
Captain Velvelig that we can't afford to let this possibility slip
away if they are sincere. That means we don't have time to
sit around, literally for months, with our thumbs up our arses
while we wait for a 'real' diplomat—from whatever
government we finally wind up with—to get all the way out
here to Hell's Gate. Which brings us to you, Platoon-
Captain."
chan Baskay had nodded,
although he hadn't cared at all for where chan Tesh was obviously
headed. chan Baskay was no diplomat; he was a cavalry captain,
even if he had been born into the aristocracy, and a cavalry officer
was all he'd ever wanted to the. He might be the son of an earl,
with a lineage of political service to the Ternathian Empire that
could have stretched from Hell's Gate clear back to Estafel, but he'd never wanted that part of the family tradition.
He'd hoped that he'd managed to
dodge it when he'd been assigned to the PAAF. Unfortunately, it
appeared his bloodline had caught up with him after all.
"According to your personnel
file," chan Tesh had continued, "you've served in the House of
Lords. Is that right?"
"Not exactly, Sir," chan Baskay
had replied. "My father holds a seat in the Lords. As his eldest son,
I've deputized for him on a few occasions, mostly while I was still
at the Academy." He'd smiled a bit tartly. "Frankly, I think it was
his way of trying to convince me to change my mind and go into
the Foreign Service instead of the Army. It didn't work."
"I see." chan Tesh had sat back in
his camp chair, considering the young cavalry officer for several
seconds. He'd wondered why the platoon-captain went by "chan
Baskay" instead of the "Viscount Simrath" to which he was
certainly entitled.
"I suppose it's ironic—at
least—that I should wind up talking to you about this, if
you never wanted Foreign Service in the first place," he'd said
then. "At the same time, I hope you can understand why I'm glad to
have someone with your background available. Frankly, Platoon-
Captain, there's no one else out here with any background
in diplomacy or high-level politics. I suppose the ideal person for
this would have been Crown Prince Janaki, but just between you
and me, I'm delighted that he's no longer available."
"You won't get any argument for
me about that point, Sir," chan Baskay had said fervently. The
mere thought of having the heir to the throne hanging out here at
this particular moment had been enough to make the platoon-
captain shudder.
"But with him gone, you're our
next best choice," the company-captain had pointed out. "On the
other hand, I don't suppose this is something we can simply order
someone to do."
chan Tesh had paused, looking at
him with a waiting expression, and chan Baskay had heaved a deep
and mournful mental sigh. He would vastly have preferred to be
able to decline, but that was impossible, of course. For a lot of
reasons—not least that endless lineage of service to the
Winged Crown. A Ternathian noble simply did not refuse when
duty called. Not if he ever wanted to face the scrutiny of his
revoltingly dutiful ancestors. Or, chan Baskay had conceded, his
own conscience.
And at least if he had to do this,
he had the proper background for it. chan Tesh was right about
that, too. He'd imbibed a basic understanding of political realities
almost with his mother's milk, whether he'd wanted to or not. And
he'd also had those dozens of generations of blue-blooded
ancestors—not to mention his observations of several
hundred currently carnate fellow aristocrats—upon which
to draw for role models. He'd been reasonably confident he could
act the part.
What he hadn't been confident of
was whether or not he could do the job. He'd been
crushingly aware of the responsibility looming before him, and it
had terrified him. This wasn't a job for someone pretending to be a
seasoned diplomat—it was a job for the most experienced
diplomat Sharona had ever boasted. And what Sharona actually
had was . . . him.
"It's all right, Sir," he'd finally
sighed. "I understand, and I'll give it my best shot. How exactly do
you and Regiment-Captain Velvelig want me to handle it?"
Which was how he came to find
himself riding steadily through the breezy woods under a dancing
drift of blowing red and gold leaves towards his first meeting with
the representatives of another trans-universal civilization.
A civilization, he reminded himself, with which we're
effectively at war, at the moment.
Vothon, please don't let me screw this up!
At least he'd had two genuine
strokes of luck. The first was his baby sister's idiocy. Charazan
Baskay was enrolled in one of those ghastly finishing schools that
specialized in turning young ladies' brains into mush, and it
appeared to be working just fine, in her case. She'd decided, on the
basis of logic so . . . unique that chan
Baskay hadn't even tried to follow it, that it would be a good idea
to send him a dress suit and cloak to wear at "cotillions and
military balls." Exactly where she'd expected him to find either of
those out here on the bleeding edge of the frontier eluded him, and
he'd rolled his eyes heavenward and stuffed the ludicrous outfit
into the bottom of a trunk the day it arrived. He'd intended for it to
languish there until the day he finally returned to Sharona, and he
certainly hadn't realized that his batman had packed the contents of
that trunk into his duffel bags when he'd been ordered forward
with the rest of Company-Captain chan Tesh's column.
But there it was, and he was
inclined to see the hand of fate in his batman's apparent lapse into
lunacy. Thanks to that, and Charazan, he actually had the proper
civilian attire to pull off this charade. He'd blessed his harebrained
baby sister fervently when he realized that he did.
The second stroke of good
fortune was the presence of Under-Captain Trekar chan Rothag.
The dark-haired and dark-eyed chan Rothag was a Narhathan
who'd grown up almost in the shadow of the Fist of Bolakin.
Where chan Baskay had the fair hair and gray eyes so common
among the Ternathian nobility, chan Rothag's hair was so dark a
brown it was almost black, and his swarthy complexion and
powerful nose could almost as well have been Shurkhali. Unlike
chan Baskay, chan Rothag had no connection whatsoever to either
the aristocracy or the Foreign Service. What he did have
was a Talent which police agencies and military intelligence
organizations had always found extraordinarily useful.
chan Rothag was a Sifter. He
couldn't read minds, wasn't actually a telepath at all. But he knew,
instantly and infallibly, when someone lied. He couldn't
magically—chan Baskay shuddered at his own choice of
adverb, under the circumstances—divine the truth they were
lying to conceal or distort, but knowing they'd lied at all was
almost as useful. Most commanders above the platoon level in any
Sharonian army tried to get at least one Sifter assigned to them.
More often than not, they failed; Sifters were too useful for senior
officers to be willing to turn the limited supply of them loose.
Balkar chan Tesh, however, had what amounted almost to a Talent
for scrounging the personnel he wanted, which was how chan
Rothag had ended up attached to his column.
chan Rothag had also spent
several days in company with their Arcanan prisoners before
Crown Prince Janaki carted them off. As a trained interrogator,
he'd found his complete inability to communicate with them
frustrating, and chan Baskay knew that chan Tesh had been
tempted to send chan Rothag along with Janaki. But the company-
captain had decided not to in the end, because there'd been plenty
of equally well-trained interrogators further up the chain, while
chan Rothag had been the only interrogator at this end of
it. Under the circumstances, chan Baskay had decided to regard
chan Rothag's continued presence, like that of Charazan's gift, as
another example of the hand of fate in action.
"Well," he said now, his voice
low pitched as the tangle of fallen and broken trees where the
Chalgyn Consortium survey crew had died came into sight, "here
we go."
"Be brave, Viscount," chan
Rothag replied with a slight smile, using the title by which every
member of their party now addressed chan Baskay. "You'll do just
fine."
"Easy for you to say,"
chan Baskay growled back.
"Just play the part, Viscount, and
remember our signals." chan Rothag sounded revoltingly calm,
chan Baskay thought. Which might be because, unlike chan
Baskay, he was about to spend the next several hours basically
saying nothing at all. They had no proof at this time that the
Arcanan's command of Ternathian was as limited as it appeared to
be. If they were concealing a greater fluency, then trained
diplomats might well be able to recognize that chan Rothag had
about as much diplomatic expertise as a pig on roller skates. chan
Baskay had done his best to get some of the rudiments, at least,
through to the under-captain, then given up in despair.
"Just keep your mouth shut,"
he'd advised finally. "We'll work out some sort of signal system so
you can tell me whether or not they're lying. And at least we both
speak Farnalian. We'll use that, if we have to talk to each other
without—hopefully!—the other side understanding
us.
And . . . hm . .
."
He'd regarded chan Rothag
thoughtfully.
"I think you've just become
Shurkalian," he'd said finally. The Narhathan had raised one
eyebrow, and chan Baskay had shrugged. "If we can convince them
you're related to Shaylar, then we'll have an excuse for you to
break in—as emotionally as possible, in Farnalian, of
course—if we twang something sensitive and you need to
warn me about it. Right?"
"Right," chan Rothag had agreed,
not even trying to hide his relief at being denied a speaking part.
Which was what made his current breezy confidence particularly
irritating. On the other hand, it was also the best advice chan
Baskay was likely to get, and he let his mind run back over the
cover story one last time, like an actor settling his stage character
comfortably into place.
According to what chan Tesh had
told the senior Arcanan diplomat, Viscount Simrath was a middle-
ranked Ternathian diplomat, who'd been visiting his sister in the
last (carefully unnamed) civilian city in this transit chain (also
carefully unnamed), to which she'd emigrated after her
marriage. When the Chalgyn crew had been slaughtered, the
viscount had sent a Voice message back to Sharona, asking the
Emperor if he should try to reach the contact universe. On the
Emperor's subsequent orders, he'd set out immediately, reaching
Company-Captain Halifu's fort—now formally named Fort
Shaylar—almost simultaneously with the Arcanan message
requesting a truce and negotiations for a genuine cease-fire.
chan Baskay would have felt
much better if the Emperor truly had authorized his
mission—and this ruse—but there hadn't been time
for any message to reach Sharona and come back down the chain.
As a result, he didn't even have an official set of conditions
acceptable to the Emperor or the Portal Authority. He hoped chan
Tesh and Velvelig were right—that approval would
definitely be forthcoming. In fact, he was almost certain they
were right, but part of his job was going to be to keep talking
until somebody in authority sent him a real set of terms.
They reached the agreed upon
conference site, and chan Baskay felt his jaw muscles tighten. It
wasn't the first time he'd seen the lingering burn marks and other
scars left by the brief, vicious battle, and a familiar hatred kicked
him in the gut. He kicked it right back.
Your job is to put together a negotiated cease-fire and stop
something like this from ever happening again, he told
himself. Besides, you just got here after traveling down-chain.
You've never seen it before, and you're a frigging
diplomat, not a soldier. Act like one—they're
watching you.
He did allow his face to harden
slightly as he surveyed those telltale signs, then glanced at the
waiting Arcanan contingent with exactly the right edge of
aristocratic hauteur. They were, indeed, watching him closely, he
noticed, and wondered if they'd deliberately insisted on meeting at
this spot to push Sharona's diplomats into a state of rage.
On the face of it, the idea was
silly. Why ask for talks at all, if they only meant to sabotage them
by enraging the other side? On the other hand, they might have
done it in hopes of keeping the Sharonians sufficiently distracted
by anger and hatred to give them an edge in the talks. To win extra
points for themselves because the Sharonians were too busy being
furious to notice that they were giving up important concessions.
It sounded paranoid, even to
him, he realized. It sounded devious. It even sounded insane,
perhaps.
But it felt accurate.
The Arcanan negotiating party
had arrived early. As stipulated by the initial agreement, the two
men in civilian clothing—who had to be the Arcanan
diplomats, Skirvon and Dastiri—were escorted by no more
than twenty-five of their own soldiers. Company-Captain chan
Tesh had accompanied them—ostensibly as a mark of
respect; actually to make sure they didn't get up to anything of
which Sharona would have disapproved—along with Petty-
Captain Arthag and the Arpathian officer's cavalry platoon. When
the twenty men of "Viscount Simrath's escort were included, that
gave Sharona a manpower advantage of over two-to-one, and none
of those troopers were taking any chances.
My, chan Baskay thought mordantly as he watched the
various military contingents not quite fingering their weapons as
they glared at one another, isn't this a soothing
atmosphere, well suited to the dispassionate negotiation of an
inter-universal cease-fire?
Petty-Captain Arthag "honor
guard" acknowledged the arrival of Viscount Simrath's party, and
Company-Captain chan Tesh gravely and respectfully saluted one
of his more junior platoon commanders.
"Viscount," the company-captain
said formally. "Welcome to Fallen Timbers."
"Thank you, Company-Captain,"
chan Baskay replied with a pleasant, if somewhat distant, smile.
Then he allowed the smile to fade. "I could wish that none of us
had to be here," he continued, deliberately pitching his voice
loudly enough for the Arcanan diplomats to hear. "I've Seen the
reports, of course, including Shaylar's message." He shook his
head, allowing his expression to turn a bit bleaker. "The personal
messages I've received from home are as furious as anything I've
ever heard before, and the official correspondence isn't much
better."
"I don't doubt it, My Lord." chan
Tesh shook his head. "Still, according to these people, it was all
mistake."
"So I've been told." chan Baskay
glanced at the Arcanans again. "I would dearly love to find that
that's the truth, and that we can end all of this without still more
bloodshed."
"Well, My Lord, I suppose that's
largely up to you. And to these . . .
gentlemen, of course."
"True enough, Company-
Captain," chan Baskay agreed. "True enough. So I suppose we'd
best get started. Could you perform the introductions for us,
please?"
"Of course, My Lord."
chan Baskay dismounted,
handing his reins to one of Arthag's troopers. Then he and chan
Rothag accompanied chan Tesh across to the waiting Arcanans.
The Arcanans in question had set
up a conference table at which the deliberations were to take
place, and that "table" was sufficiently startling to capture chan
Baskay's attention for several seconds. It was made from several
narrow slats of wood which had been hinged together to form a
folded up bundle that could fit onto a pack saddle. When it was
unfolded, crosspieces slid into place across the bottom, stiffening
it and locking it in the open position.
That much was fairly
unremarkable, but it did have one small feature guaranteed to
arrest his attention instantly: it had no legs.
The tabletop simply floated
there, perfectly level despite the rough terrain, hovering in midair
at the ordinary height of a standard table, and chan Baskay's scalp
crawled at the sight. It wasn't natural, he thought, and the back of
his brain even whispered the word "demonic," before he squelched
it back down where it had come from.
Not demonic, he told himself. It's just different. Very different, perhaps, but only different.
He told himself that rather
firmly, and he knew—intellectually—that it was
true. That this was merely a form of technology his own people
had never seen before, assuming that anything which caused a ten-
foot-long tabletop to float thirty-six inches off the ground under a
canopy of flame-shot autumn leaves could be called "merely"
anything.
It was the obvious solution to
their need for a portable table, of course, but it was sufficiently
alien to distract chan Baskay from the business at hand. It took
him a heartbeat or two to realize it had. Then he glanced up,
swiftly and without moving his head from its "gosh-look-at-the-
table" position, and saw the faintest hint of smug satisfaction in
the Arcanans' eyes.
That satisfaction vanished
instantly when they realized he was watching them closely without
seeming to do so. Their own eyes narrowed, and they stood up
straighter, put on notice that they weren't dealing with a total
babe-in-swaddling. He noticed that, too, and gave them a polite
little smile which, he was pleased to observe, replaced their
satisfaction with an edge of speculation, instead.
chan Baskay managed to keep his
smile from growing and very carefully concealed his own flicker
of satisfaction. He'd also noticed—and ignored—
what looked remarkably like a half-dozen chairs whose legs had
been amputated. They were tucked underneath the floating
conference table, as if the Arcanans had hoped they wouldn't be
immediately spotted, and he carefully paid them no attention at all
even as he filed away their presence for future consideration.
"Viscount Simrath," chan Tesh
said formally, "this is Rithmar Skirvon and Uthik Dastiri, the
diplomatic representatives of something called the Union of
Arcana. Master Skirvon, Master Dastiri, this is Sir Dorzon Baskay,
forty-sixth Viscount Simrath, of the Ternathian Foreign Ministry,
acting in behalf of the Portal Authority and the Emperor of
Ternathia, and Lord Trekar Rothag, his associate and adviser."
Everyone bowed gravely to
everyone else, and chan Baskay raised one aristocratic eyebrow.
"I understand you gentlemen
speak our language?"
"Speak some," the older of the
two Arcanan civilians—Skirvon—said. "Learn more
with PC while talk. Can show?"
He indicated the large lump of
quartz sitting in the center of the floating table, and chan Baskay
allowed his other eyebrow to rise.
"By all means," he invited.
Skirvon bowed slightly, then
murmured something in his own language. The lump of quartz
glowed briefly, and then the floating words chan Tesh had already
described to chan Baskay appeared within it. Skirvon leaned over
it, touching it with a crystal stylus, then said something else, much
longer and considerably more involved, in his own language.
"The PC can help learn
languages," another voice said suddenly. It sounded a great deal
like Skirvon's, but not exactly, and it was coming not from the
Arcanan, but from the glowing lump of rock. "When we talk, it
listens. Learns. It will turn words in my language into your
language, and your language into my language."
The words coming from the
"PC" were much clearer, smoother, than anything Skirvon had
produced in Ternathian. Even chan Tesh, who'd already seen
multiple examples of the Arcanans' astounding technology, was
clearly taken aback, and it took all of chan Baskay's self-control
not to show his own astonishment. But he managed it somehow,
and looked at Skirvon levelly.
"So, if I speak to your rock, it
will translate whatever I say into your own language?" he said, and
heard a voice which wasn't quite his saying something in a
language he'd never spoken.
Skirvon watched the Sharonians'
response to his newest ploy and managed not to smile like a fox in
a henhouse. Despite their best efforts to conceal it, they were
clearly impressed by this fresh manifestation of magic. Of course,
they didn't know the PC had an unfair advantage. They
thought it was still learning the language as it went, and he had no
intention of suggesting otherwise. In fact, he'd loaded the same
translation spellware Magister Kelbryan had used with Shaylar
into his own crystal. It contained the complete vocabulary the
magister had acquired from her prisoner, as well, and Skirvon had
to remind himself to phrase his comments in Andaran rather more
simply then he would have normally. It would never do to
inadvertently reveal the fluency in Ternathian which he already
possessed.
On the other hand, he thought, it won't hurt a bit to
impress these yokels with how quickly the "learning spellware
"improves its grasp of Ternathian in the course of our little chats
.
"Is this acceptable?" he asked
earnestly in Andaran.
"Is this acceptable?" the crystal
on the table said in Ternathian, and chan Baskay nodded.
"Indeed. And quite convenient,
too," he said calmly.
Skirvon was impressed. This
Viscount Simrath obviously had been just as surprised as chan
Tesh and the others, but there was remarkably little evidence of it
in his expression or his voice. The man's title—forty-
sixth Viscount of Whatever?—indicated an incredibly
long aristocratic pedigree, which was entirely in keeping with the
preposterous age Shaylar had imputed to this Ternathian Empire.
That was impressive enough, but his obvious self-control and
total self-confidence was even more impressive. Clearly, the man
was an experienced diplomat, as well, despite his apparent relative
youth, and Skirvon wondered what stroke of luck had put him far
enough down the transit chain from Sharona to get him to this
place at this time.
Perhaps I'm better matched than I expected, he thought
almost cheerfully. After all, it was always more satisfying to
match wits with a fellow professional, rather than simply steal
candy from unwary babies. Not that the end result was likely to be
any different.
"In that case," he gestured
casually and spoke the word which activated the spell
accumulators on the camp chairs he'd had a member of his
military escort arrange around the conference table. The
comfortably cushioned chairs rose immediately, floating levelly at
the exactly correct height.
"Be seated, please," he invited
blandly.
This time, chan Baskay didn't
even turn a hair. He'd expected nothing less, and he simply smiled,
handed his cloak to one of Platoon-Captain Arthag's troopers, and
seated himself. The pit of his stomach felt just a bit hollow as he
parked his posterior on the unnaturally floating chair. A part of
him couldn't quite help expecting it to collapse under his weight,
but no sign of it showed in his expression, and he laid his forearms
on the conference table, folded his hands neatly, and gazed at them
with a politely attentive expression.
Like the comfortably padded
chair underneath him, the conference table didn't even quiver
under the weight of his arms. It was as rock-steady as any table
he'd ever sat at before, which his intellect had known would be the
case. It would scarcely have worked to the Arcanans' advantage for
it to be anything else, after all.
Definitely a professional, Skirvon thought ungrudgingly,
giving the Sharonian diplomat points for composure.
He glanced at Dastiri as the
junior Sharonian diplomat, Rothag, seated himself somewhat
more gingerly at Simrath's right. Then they took their own seats,
facing the Sharonians across the conference table. Skirvon opened
his mouth, but Simrath spoke before he could say anything.
"This translating rock of yours
will be most convenient," he observed. "On the other hand, words
are only tools, are they not? What truly matters are the answers to
two simple questions. Do you plan to end your acts of violence
against Sharonian civilians? And do you intend to stop attacking
soldiers attempting to negotiate under flags of truce?"
Skirvon's eyes widened. Despite
his own many years of experience, he couldn't quite conceal his
surprise at the other man's directness.
"With all respect, Viscount," he
said after a moment, "those questions are not as simple as you
suggest. You say your people were civilians. Our soldiers did not
know that, and many of them were killed in the same fight. Arcana
deeply regrets what happened, but how it came about is not at all
clear to us at this time."
"It is very clear to us,"
Simrath said with a pleasant smile. "Your soldiers attacked our
civilians. When one of our officers—Platoon-Captain
Arthag, I believe—" he gestured at one of the officers who
had accompanied the Arcanans and their escort from the swamp
portal "—attempted to approach your soldiers under a flag
of truce to inquire as to the fate of our people, he was fired upon.
From our viewpoint, it's quite clear who fired the first shot in
each of those incidents."
Skirvon ordered his expression
not to change. Clearly, Simrath intended to cut right to the heart of
things, and it was equally obvious that his plan was to place
Arcana squarely on the defensive. To some extent, that would
work out very well for Skirvon's chosen strategy, but it would
never do to allow the Sharonians to feel they were driving
the negotiations. Or, rather, to allow them an expectation of a
quick resolution to those same negotiations. He had to keep them
talking for at least a couple of weeks, and allowing this Simrath's
forcefulness to push him into premature concessions or
admissions could make that considerably more difficult. What he
needed was something that could keep them "negotiating" without
reaching any premature final agreement.
"Excuse me, Viscount," he said,
"but I am afraid you are speaking too quickly and using too many
new words for my crystal to translate them correctly. It will get
better as we continue to speak to each other, but it has not yet
learned enough words for long, complicated talk."
chan Baskay laced his fingers
together atop the conference table as he considered what the
Arcanan had just said. It made sense, he supposed. And he
certainly had no way to judge what the glowing hunk of rock's
true capabilities might be.
"So," he said with a thin smile
which would have done his most arrogant ancestor proud,
"your . . . crystal isn't up to the task
after all?"
"That is not what I said," the
crystal translated a moment later. "What I said is that it will take
time. We wish to talk, wish for there to be no more shooting, but
it is important that we understand what is said. That we are clear
when we talk. And that you understand what we think happened
while we understand what you think happened."
chan Baskay cocked his head to
one side and pursed his lips thoughtfully. He suspected that the
Arcanans' marvelous hunk of rock was doing a better job of
translating than this Skirvon wanted to admit. At the same time, he
had to concede that the man had a point. If they were going to talk
to each other at all, they had to at least listen to the other side's
view of the events which had led them to this point.
"Very well," he said after a
moment. "You asked us to meet with you. What does Arcana wish
to say? Sharona is willing to listen."
That's better, Skirvon thought. Get him tied up in
formal exchanges and we can kill lots of time without actually
saying a damned thing we don't already both know anyway.
"Arcana is grateful that Sharona
is willing to listen," he said aloud, and arranged himself into what
he thought of as "formal discourse posture" to make it clear that
what he was about to say was a formal position statement.
"Arcana is shocked by the
violence that has taken place between our people and yours," he
continued. "It caused us great grief to discover that the sole
survivor was a young woman. We do not allow women to serve in
our military, so we were not expecting to find one."
"She was not serving in the
military," Simrath said in a voice chipped from solid ice. "They
were civilians."
"Yes," Skirvon said. "We know
that now. We did not know that then, however. And we did not
expect to find a girl in the middle of such combat."
chan Baskay considered pointing
out that the Arcanans had gone into that same battle with a woman
of their own in tow, but he chose not to play that particular card
just yet. So far, the other side had given no indication that there
were any Talented Arcanans. It was difficult for him to conceive
of a human civilization in which that was true, but, then, he'd
never seriously conceived of one which routinely used magic to
float tables in midair, either. So it was entirely possible the
Arcanans were as ignorant of the possibilities open to the Talented
as Sharona was—or had been—to the possibilities of
magic. If that was the case, the less the Arcanans knew about the
capabilities of Sharonian Whiffers and Tracers, the better.
"Very well," he said instead,
after a moment. "I will accept that you were not aware our people
were civilians . . . at first, at least.
Continue."
"Thank you, Viscount," Skirvon
replied, then drew a breath.
"We were horrified to find her,"
he resumed after a moment. "We tried hard to keep her alive. But
the healer attached to our soldiers was killed in the fighting. They
had a magister with a minor arcana for healing, but nothing even
remotely close to an actual healer. So they tried to carry her to a
real healer."
chan Baskay frowned, then
unlaced his fingers and leaned back in his floating chair, tugging at
the lobe of his right ear in one of his prearranged signals to chan
Rothag. The Narhathan petty-captain didn't appear to notice, but
he sat back himself and crossed his legs.
So, chan Baskay reflected, not exactly a lie, but not
the entire truth, either. Well, that's hardly a
surprise from a diplomat, now is it?
"A moment," he said. "Your
crystal failed to translate two of the terms you just used. What is a
'magister'? And what is a 'minor arcana'? Isn't Arcana the name of
your world?"
Skirvon blinked in what certainly
looked like genuine surprise. Then he smiled.
"Ah, I see the problem. First,
Viscount, a 'magister' is someone with a Gift, an ability to use
magic." He tapped the floating table. "Like this. Some people with
Gifts can make things float or perform other similar actions.
Others—what we call 'magistrons'—are able to use
healing magic. The only magister our soldiers had with them
immediately after the fighting was not a magistron.
"Second, we use the word
'arcana' to mean a specific Gift or magical ability. The tradition
among my people is that the same word is used to mean the entire
world because the world is a gift from the gods to all men. That is
where the confusion about 'minor arcana' came from.
"What I tried to say was that the
magister who was with our soldiers had only a minor, weaker,
Gift for healing. It was not a strong, trained Gift, which could
have healed the young woman's injuries."
"I see." chan Baskay nodded,
then glanced at chan Rothag. The petty-captain's posture was
unchanged, but he rubbed the tip of his right index finger gently
across the cuff of his left sleeve. Which meant that this time, at
least, the Narhathan was confident that pretty much everything
Skirvon had just said was the truth.
"Very well," he said. "You say
you were horrified to discover a woman among your victims." He
allowed his eyes to harden slightly. "How and when did Shaylar
die?"
"She had suffered a terrible head
injury," Skirvon said. "She was burned, as well. Not as badly as
some of the others, but the burns made her other injuries worse.
We transported her as quickly as we could to our nearest base with
a fully trained healer, but we were unable to get her there in time.
She lived for six days."
chan Rothag sat up, uncrossing
his legs, and chan Baskay's nerves tightened abruptly.
"A moment, please," he said
courteously, and glanced at chan Rothag. "Look sad," he said in
Farnalian. "Then tell me what he's lying about."
"He's lying through his teeth
about the burns, and about the six days," chan Rothag replied in
the same language. He looked as if he wanted to weep. "The rest
of it is pretty much true. Do we want to call him on the part that
isn't?"
"Not yet." chan Baskay leaned
towards the other man, laying a hand on his shoulder with a
concerned, sorrowful expression. "There's no point letting them
know you can tell when they're lying," he said softly, gently.
"Besides, let's see how much rope he'll give himself."
chan Rothag nodded, still
looking stricken, and chan Baskay patted his shoulder
comfortingly, then turned back to Skirvon.
"Lord Rothag is Shurkhali," he
lied with an absolutely straight face. "The confirmation that his
countrywoman suffered such horrible wounds and lingered for so
long is very painful to him."
He watched Skirvon's expression
carefully without seeming too. Presenting such a bald-faced lie
would have been unthinkable if he'd faced other Sharonians, since
both sides knew the other one was bound to bring its own Sifters
to any negotiations. But he'd done it deliberately, as a test, and he
saw no sign Skirvon could tell that he'd just lied. Which
was something to bear in mind. Clearly, Skirvon and Dastiri came
from a totally different tradition, one which used no equivalent of
Sifters.
I'll bet they're used to being able to lie to each other, he thought. Which means they'll do it at the drop of a hat. That's something else to bear in mind.
"I am sorry to have caused him
grief," Skirvon said. "But there is great grief in Arcana, as well.
We had never met you or any of your people before. We did not
mean for the original battle to take place. The officer in charge of
the soldiers in that battle was removed from command as soon as
his superiors heard what had happened. Yet before we could learn
your language, or make any new, peaceful contact with you, you
attacked our camp without warning and killed still more soldiers."
He allowed himself a slightly aggrieved expression. "The officer
you attacked was not even the one responsible for the attack on
your civilians, but you did not attempt to learn that before you
attacked."
"When we attacked your camp
without warning?" chan Baskay repeated flatly, shaking his head. "
We did not do the attacking. Your officer may have been
'innocent' of the carnage you'd already committed, but he gave a
deliberate order to fire on a single officer who had approached
him under a flag of truce to ask for the return of our wounded.
You attacked us. Again."
He met Skirvon's eye very
levelly, his expression cold.
"It's one thing to state your
position, Skirvon. It's quite another to twist the truth out of all
recognition, and to insult our intelligence in the process."
Skirvon and Dastiri conferred
briefly in a language that wasn't Andaran and which the crystal
didn't translate into Ternathian. Then Skirvon turned back to him.
"This is very difficult," he said.
"We have one view of these things; you have another view. We are
trying to apologize for the violence, but you are so suspicious, we
cannot even finish a thought. And while we understand how angry
you must be, there is—or will be, once the news gets all the
way to our home universe—great pain and anger in our
world, as well. Not only have we lost many of our soldiers, not
only have we killed civilians, but we have lost a civilian, as well.
"The civilian killed in your
attack on our camp was one of the most important research
magisters our civilization has ever produced. Magister Halathyn
vos Dulainah was in our camp. He did not even try to fight, but he
was killed without pity. The whole of Arcana is or soon will be in
an uproar. Magister Halathyn was beloved by millions,
hundreds of millions. The shock of his death, the anger felt
over it, is very terrible."
"So now you say one of your
civilians has been killed as well?" chan Baskay frowned.
"Indeed, a most important and
very beloved one."
"Perhaps," chan Baskay said
coolly, "one as beloved as Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr was among our people?"
Skirvon appeared to wince
slightly, and chan Baskay shook his head.
"Lord Rothag is Shurkhali," he
said, repeating his earlier . . .
misrepresentation. "A moment, please, while I discuss this with
him. I'll be . . . interested in his
perspective on our relative losses."
He turned to chan Rothag and
cocked his head.
"I think we may actually be
looking at something important here, Trekar," he said, once again
in Farnalian. "The problem is, I don't know what—or how
important it may be—and I've got the feeling he's about to
try selling me a used horse. Can you give me any guidance on how
many lies he's telling this time?"
"Actually he's telling the truth
about this fellow being killed," chan Rothag replied in the same
language. "And about how popular he was and the sort of reaction
he anticipates. But you're right that something funny's going on, as
well. I notice he's not saying anything about why this important
researcher was out here in the middle of all this nowhere. And he's
being careful not to say that we actually killed him."
"I caught that, as well," chan
Baskay replied, managing to keep his frustration out of his tone or
his expression. "I wonder what these twisty bastards are up to this
time?"
He turned back to Skirvon. The
Arcanan's expression remained attentive, leavened with exactly the
right degree of sorrow and regret, but chan Baskay saw the
curiosity in the backs of the man's eyes. Obviously, Skirvon was
simply dying to know what he and chan Rothag had just said to
one another. The thought gave chan Baskay a certain amount of
amusement, but he produced a dutifully sad frown of his own.
"Sharona grieves to learn that
another civilian has died, and especially one who was so beloved
that his death can only add to the anger and fear between our
peoples," he said, meaning every word of it. "But that only
underscores the urgent need for us to negotiate a cease-fire.
Sharona does not want any more innocents to die."
"That is exactly Arcana's
position, as well," Skirvon said earnestly. "We want an end to the
shooting while we talk with you about a permanent settlement." It
was his turn to smile sadly. "It may take a long time for us to agree
as to where guilt and innocence truly lie. And I am sure it will take
even longer for us to reach agreement on the terms of any final
settlement, and on how best to manage further contacts between
our peoples. For example, there is the question of who holds
ultimate possession of this entire universe."
"Hell's Gate is Sharonian
territory." chan Baskay's tone was flat.
"Hell's Gate?" Skirvon repeated,
and chan Baskay smiled coolly.
"Given what your soldiers did to
our civilians here, it seemed an appropriate name to us," he said.
Then he allowed his expression to soften very slightly. "And, I
suppose, given what happened to your troops, it may seem
appropriate to your people, as well."
"Indeed, it may," Skirvon agreed.
"Still, whatever we may call it, the question of who controls it must be of vital importance to both your world and mine."
chan Baskay allowed his eyes to
narrow once more, and Skirvon shrugged with an open, honest
expression.
"Surely, My Lord, your people
realize as well as my own that this—" he waved at the trees
about them and the steady drift of bright colored leaves sifting
downward whenever the breeze blew "—is what we call a
'portal cluster.' There are many portals close together, giving
access to many universes. However much we may regret the
violence which has already occurred, your Emperor and your
Portal Authority must recognize that the control of so many
portals is not something either of us will gladly give up, especially
to someone we do not fully trust because of the violence which
has already occurred.
" At the moment, each side
desires complete control of the entire cluster, if only to provide
for its own security, and neither side will be willing to concede
that to the other. In the end, some sort of agreement—
possibly some compromise, under which control is shared, or
under which certain portals are ceded to either party—
would have to be worked out if we were to have any real hope that
our natural desires and fear of one another will not push us into
additional conflict. Working out any such agreement would
certainly be difficult, and would without doubt take much time
and patience. But surely, it is always better to talk rather than to
shoot."
Beside chan Baskay, chan
Rothag crossed his legs once more, and chan Baskay sighed inside,
wishing chan Rothag could tell him exactly which parts of
what Skirvon had said this time were "mostly true."
Part of him wanted to stand up
and call Skirvon on his lies about Shaylar right then and there. In
fact, the cavalry officer in him wanted to choke the truth out of the
bland-faced Arcanan. If Shaylar hadn't died the way he said she
had, then how had she died? What had they really
done to her in their quest for information like the words stored in
their crystal? He could think of several reasons why her stored
voice might sound slurred, confused, even broken. Reasons which
had nothing at all to do with any wounds she might have suffered
here at Fallen Timbers. Had they done those things to her? Was that how she'd died—in some grim little cell
somewhere? And if so, did this smiling bastard across the table
from him know she had?
The questions burned inside him,
demanding answers, but he kept his expression under control. He
couldn't give in to the anger he felt, couldn't call them cold-
blooded murderers, even if he did know that an innocent,
courageous young woman had not died the way they'd told him
she had. And the fact was that Skirvon also had a perfectly valid
point about the question of who would hold eventual sovereignty
over the Hell's Gate Cluster. Certainly, no one in Sharona would
be at all happy about the thought of abandoning the
cluster—which the Chalgyn crew had clearly discovered
before the Arcanans ever ventured into it—to a
bloodthirsty, murderous lot of savages whose uniformed soldiers
had slaughtered its original surveyors. And whatever he thought of
Skirvon, or his unknown superiors, the man was right that Arcana
would be no happier at the thought of conceding all of those
portals to Sharona. Especially not with the spilled blood which
already lay between them.
The sovereignty issue was going
to have to be dealt with. That much was painfully obvious,
as was the fact that he must not do anything at this point to
prejudice Sharona's position on the issue. It would be another five
days before Company-Captain chan Tesh's message that the
Arcanans had asked for talks could even reach Sharona; it would
take another week after that for any response to reach Hell's Gate.
He could not allow his own emotions to erupt and sabotage any
possibility of a diplomatic solution—especially not when
he'd never actually been authorized to represent the Authority or
his own Emperor in the first place!
"Of course it's better to talk than
to shoot," he said, smiling at the lying bastard across the table
from him. "Is that your formal position?"
"We wish for there to be no
more fighting while we talk," Skirvon said, nodding vigorously,
and chan Rothag touched his left cuff once more.
Well, that's certainly something I can agree to in good
faith, chan Baskay thought with a distinct feeling of relief. And he's right, I suppose. Talking is better than
shooting. I just wish I knew what else is going on
inside that twisty brain of his. And I suppose the only way to find
out is to go ahead and talk to him.
"Very well," he said. "Sharona
will agree to talk, instead of shooting."
Chapter Forty-Seven
"I have to say that this is a
heavenly relief," Shaylar sighed, leaning back in her deck chair.
"Don't get me wrong," she cracked one eye, glancing at Gadrial as
the magister reclined in the deck chair beside hers. "I've gotten
very fond of Skyfang, and I'm delighted they were able to fit him
aboard, but dragon riding is still
pretty . . . strenuous. Especially for
Jathmar and me."
"Especially for you?" Gadrial
looked back at her.
"Well, at least you and Jasak
have more experience with the entire process."
"We've done it before, if that's
what you mean. But if you think having made the same trip on the
way out is making it any more restful to make the trip on the way
back in, I'm afraid you're mistaken." The Arcanan woman
grimaced. "Believe me, I'm not particularly enjoying all those
endless hours with the wind whistling around my ears any more
than you two are."
"I suppose not," Shaylar
conceded with a smile. "And I have to admit, it is
fascinating to watch the world rolling by underneath. Jathmar's
always had dreams about wanting to fly. I think it has something
to do with his Mapping Talent. The fact that his dreams had to
come true this way's put a pretty heavy damper on his
enjoyment, of course, but there's still a 'little kid in a fairy tale'
excitement to it. Of course, it starts to wear a little thin after the
first five or six hours in the saddle."
"Oh, you noticed that, did you?"
Shaylar grimaced at Gadrial's
teasing tone, and the magister chuckled. Then, reminded of
Jathmar by Shaylar's comments, she turned her head, glancing up
at the fat lookout pod on the ship's single mast. Jasak and Jathmar
were both up there at the moment, gazing out across the endless
blue waters of the southern Evanos Ocean. She doubted that they
were going to see anything significant from up there, but that
wasn't really the point.
Jathmar's emotions remained
much less . . . resolved than Shaylar's
where Jasak was concerned. That was undoubtedly inevitable, for
at least two reasons, Gadrial admitted unhappily.
First, Jathmar lacked Shaylar's
ability to directly sense the emotions of those around her. Shaylar
was a Voice. As she'd said, she'd been born and bred to
communicate. She couldn't help communicating, even
when she didn't want to. That meant she had a much more direct
grasp of Jasak's feelings about what had happened. And from
several things she'd said, Gadrial also suspected that the Shurkhali
honor code was probably quite a lot closer to that of Jasak's native
Andara than the one Jathmar had grown up with. Which was
particularly ironic, given that it sounded as if Jasak and Jathmar
had probably grown up within a few miles of one another on their
respective home worlds.
But, second, and possibly even
more important, Jathmar was also male. Gadrial tried not to sigh
in exasperation, but there it was. There was a zoologist's term one
of her friends at the Garth Showma Institute had explained to her.
It was "alpha male," and from the moment her friend had explained
what it meant, Gadrial had thought it was a great pity that the
Andaran military hadn't been required to take courses in zoology.
If she'd ever met an "alpha male," it was that paragon of all
Andaran virtues, Sir Jasak Olderhan. And if she'd ever met a
second "alpha male," it was Jathmar Nargra.
Which just goes to show you that truly irritating male
characteristics are inter-universal in scope, she thought
grumpily. Rahil!
What did I do to deserve two of them at a time like
this?
Jathmar knew that Jasak was
completely—one might almost say fanatically—
dedicated to protecting him and Shaylar from additional harm. But
he was also Shaylar's husband, and he loved her, which meant that
primitive male wiring of his demanded that he protect her. That he protect her. Which, of course, he couldn't do. The fact
that he was totally reliant upon Jasak (the officer whose men had
slaughtered all of his and Shaylar's friends, whatever Jasak might
have wanted to happen) to provide the protection he couldn't, only
made his own sense of frustration and failure even worse. And the
fact that Shaylar, as deeply as she loved Jathmar, was comfortable
with the notion that Jasak's honor code required him to protect
her—and that she looked to Jasak (who was not
her husband) as the protector for both of them probably
punched more than a few male jealousy buttons, as well.
Then there was the fact that
Jasak, in his own invincibly "alpha male" fashion, couldn't
conceive of any circumstances which could possibly absolve him
of his responsibility to protect his shardonai. That him
with a protective attitude not just towards Shaylar, but towards Jathmar, as well. Which, despite the fact that Jathmar's
intellect knew better, struck his raw-edged and bleeding emotions
as . . . patronizing. Not to mention
insulting, diminishing, and infuriating.
That was why Gadrial and
Shaylar had effectively packed the two of them off to the lookout
pod where they could—hopefully—spend a little
time getting over the worst of their mutual prickliness.
Of course they can, the magister thought dryly. And
the Evanos is only a little damp.
"Do you think they've said three
words to each other the whole time they've been up there?"
Shaylar asked, and Gadrial blinked as the other woman's words
broke in on her thoughts.
"What?" she asked, and Shaylar
snorted in amusement.
"I asked if you think they've said
three words to each other the whole time they'd been up there," she
repeated, waving one hand at the lookout pod.
"I'd like to think so," Gadrial
said after a moment, grinning as they both admitted what was
really going on. "I'm not holding out a lot of hope, though."
"Me either." Shaylar's slight
smile slowly faded, and she drew a deep breath. "Not that I can
really blame either of them. It's
an . . . ugly situation, isn't it?"
"Very," Gadrial agreed with a
heavy sigh of her own. "If there were any way we could
undo it, we'd—"
"Don't say it," Shaylar
interrupted. Gadrial's eyes widened, as if with an edge of hurt, and
Shaylar shook her head. "What I mean, is that you don't have
to say it. I know it's true, and so does Jathmar,
however . . . uncomfortable he may
still be around Jasak. It's just that there's not any point. Saying it
won't change anything, and there's no good reason why you should
keep beating yourself up over it, apologizing for things that
weren't your fault and that no one can change, anyway."
"I suppose not. But in that case,"
Gadrial smiled crookedly, "what can we talk about to wile
away this pleasant little ocean voyage?"
Shaylar chuckled. As nearly as
she could figure out, they were traveling from the eastern coast of
the great island-continent of Lissia across the Western Ocean to
the western coast of New Farnalia. That was almost five thousand
miles, which was going to take them around nine days, even
aboard one of the Arcanans' marvelous ships. Still, as she'd told
Gadrial, she was profoundly grateful for the break in their arduous
travels, even if every mile of seawater they crossed did remind her
of her mother's embassy back home.
"Actually," she said, after
moment, "I've been thinking about what Fifty Varkal and Jasak
had to say about the difference between Skyfang and Windclaw."
"Yes?"
"I got the distinct impression that
there are more significant differences between 'battle dragons' and
what Fifty Varkal calls 'transports' than just their size and
maneuverability." Shaylar ended on an almost questioning note
and raised both eyebrows.
"Oh, there are," Gadrial agreed.
"Mind you, I'm no magistron, and what I know about
dragons—or, for that matter, any other augmented
species—isn't much more than any other layman would be
able to tell you. Well," her lips quirked, "maybe a little
more than that, given what I do for a living, but not a lot. Still, if
you'd like, I'll tell you what I know."
"By all means, please," Shaylar
said, sitting up a bit straighter in her deck chair and rolling slightly
up on one hip as she turned to face the other woman more
squarely.
"Well," Gadrial began, "as Daris
suggested back at Fort Talon, battle dragons are deliberately
designed to be faster and more maneuverable than transport
dragons."
"'Designed'?" Shaylar repeated.
Gadrial looked surprised by the question, and Shaylar gave her
head a little shake. "I haven't had much choice but to accept that
your people can do all sorts of 'impossible' things, but I guess I'm
still just feeling a bit . . .
uncomfortable over the notion of 'designing' a living creature."
"As I said, I'm not a magistron,
so it's not remotely my area of specialization," Gadrial replied,
"but the actual techniques have been around for a long time. As
matter of fact, it's one of the few areas in which Ransar actually
led the way in both theoretical and applied research for something
like three hundred years."
"Over Mythal, you mean?"
"Exactly." Gadrial looked away,
gazing out across the endless, steady swell as the passenger ship
sliced through it with a graceful, soothing motion. "It was a
Ransaran magistron who first perfected the spells for examining
what he called the genetic map of living creatures."
"And what's a 'genetic map'?"
Shaylar inquired with an air of slightly martyred patience.
"Sorry." Gadrial looked back at
her and smiled. "The word 'genetic' is derived from the Old
Ransaran word for race or descent. And the reason
Hansara—Rayjhari Hansara, the magistron who developed
the original concept and spells—called it that was that it's
basically a symbolically congruent representation of the physical
characteristics of the creature. It's a fundamental principle of
magic that the map is the territory, and once Hansara came up with
a way to represent a living organism's characteristics in a fashion
which could be visualized and manipulated, it really did become
possible to 'design' creatures to order."
Shaylar shivered as if a sudden
icy wind had found its way up and down her spine. And, in fact,
one had, in a metaphorical way of speaking.
"And does that include
people?" she asked after moment.
"No," Gadrial said firmly.
Shaylar looked both relieved and skeptical, in almost equal
measure, and Gadrial shrugged. "There's no arcane reason it
couldn't include people," she conceded. "Human beings' codes
can be visualized just as well as those of any other creature. But
from the very beginning, any efforts to tinker with humanity were
outlawed."
"Even in Mythal?" Shaylar said,
with rather more skepticism, and Gadrial surprised her with a
harsh bark of laughter.
"Especially in Mythal!
The last thing any shakira would want to do is come up
with a way to turn garthan into shakira. Given
their religion, they'd see it as blasphemous, at the very least. And
from a practical perspective—which I personally happen to
think is even more important to them than their ludicrous
religious concepts—if they were to turn all of the
garthan into Gifted shakira, what happens to the
existing shakira's slave class? It's been my observation that
their 'religious principles' serve their more worldly ambitions
much more than the other way around."
"But what about turning
garthan into even more obedient slaves?"
"Now that probably
would be something that would appeal to the caste-lords," Gadrial
admitted with a grimace of distaste. "These days, at least. But at
the time the rules and laws which prohibit tampering with humans
were being put into place, no Mythalan garthan had any
hope of ever managing to escape or defy his overlords. There was
no need to turn them into 'more obedient slaves,' because it was
impossible for them to be disobedient under the existing
system."
"And why did everyone else feel
it should be outlawed?"
"Because, at the time, it was all a
process of trial and error," Gadrial said. "In fact, that's still the
case whenever anyone begins mapping a new species, in a lot of
ways. Hansara had found a way to producer congruent map, but
it's an incredibly complex chart, Shaylar, and initially, he had no
way of establishing the congruency between a particular section of
the map and specific characteristics of the creature it
represented. So he and his fellow magistrons not only had to come
up with techniques to modify the chart, they also had to figure out
which parts of it they needed to modify to achieve a
specific objective. Most of their initial efforts—for
decades, literally—produced creatures which couldn't
possibly survive on their own. Or, at best, which were far, far cries
from what they'd wanted to produce. No one was willing
to allow them to experiment on humans when they might as
readily produce a three-headed monster as an improvement on the
original model. And, of course, Hansara and his colleagues were
almost all Ransarans."
"Which was significant why?"
Shaylar asked, and Gadrial paused with an arrested expression.
"You know," she replied after
moment, "you speak Andaran so well that I keep forgetting how
little you actually know about Arcana. Like all of the reasons,
aside from the purely personal, of course, a Ransaran like me
would have for disliking a Mythalan."
"Should I take it that one or
more of those reasons would have a bearing on all of this?"
"Oh, I think you could probably
take it that way. You see, one of the primary causes for the
hostility between Mythal and Ransar is that we have totally
different religious beliefs. Mythalans believe in something they
call reincarnation. They believe that each individual human
soul—they call it a 'yurha'—experiences
dozens, possibly thousands, of lives, and that the purpose of those
lives is for each yurha to become more completely
realized—a 'higher being'—in each incarnation.
Ultimately, the individual yurha reaches a state of actual
divinity, in which it becomes one with the entire universe. That's
what they visualize God to be: the entire universe. He's not an
individual entity, not a creator, but a sort
of . . . confluence of all of the
magical energy bound up in all of creation. That's why the
shakira are 'obviously' the highest of the Mythalan castes.
Because they're the ones with the Gifts which allow them to
manipulate that magical energy, they're clearly much closer to
attaining the godhead than anyone else, since they as a caste
must consist solely of people with highly evolved yurhas
.
"It also justifies their treatment
of the garthan on several levels. The function of the
garthan is to do all of those dirty, demeaning, physically
exhausting jobs the shakira couldn't possibly take the time
to do, since it would draw them away from their mastery of magic
and thus separate them from the godhead. It would actually be
sinful for them to allow themselves to be diverted, since
that might cause their yurhas to move downward
through their 'great chain of being.'"
"That sounds a little bit like a
really distorted version of what some Lissians believe," Shaylar
said cautiously. "But the Lissians are among the gentlest, most
compassionate people on Sharona."
"Well, Mythalans certainly aren't
gentle or compassionate," Gadrial said tartly. Then she
sighed.
"I suppose my own experiences
with them really do color my reaction," she admitted. "But part of
the problem I have with their entire culture is that once you accept
their religious beliefs, and the mindset they've developed to go
with them, then their treatment of the garthan is perfectly
logical and reasonable. They really and truly simply don't
understand why the rest of us can't just see that and admit
that Mythal's been right all along . . .
which is one of the reasons both Ransar and Andara simply can't
stand them.
"As they see it, the whole object
of the human race, the whole reason we exist—according to
the Mythalans—is for all of us eventually to obtain
oneness. And, since they believe in reincarnation, each of us has an
effectively limitless number of lives in which our yurha
can advance. So no matter what they do to an individual
garthan—or to all garthan, as a caste—
they aren't really harming that individual, are they? After
all, this is only one brief stop in an endless journey, and eventually
all garthan—aside, of course, from the inevitably
willful or evil ones—will become shakira
themselves. In fact, some of the greatest cruelties the shakira
have traditionally practiced upon the garthan, like the
law codes which take Gifted children away from garthan
parents and give them to shakira to raise, are justified on
the basis of helping their victims attain enlightenment
sooner."
Shaylar looked at Gadrial for
several seconds, reminding herself that, by her own admission,
Gadrial hated Mythalans. But she'd also come to know Gadrial
Kelbryan. If the magister hated Mythalans, it was probably because
she despised their beliefs, rather than a case of her
despising—or distorting—their beliefs because she
hated them.
"So how do Ransaran beliefs
differ from Mythalan beliefs?" she asked finally.
"In just about every conceivable
way," Gadrial snorted. "First, every Ransaran—with the
exception of the Manisthuans—is monotheistic. That is, we
all believe there's only a single God, since God is, by definition,
infinite and since, equally by definition, there can't be two
infinite beings. All of our theologians agreed long ago that if two
beings are separate from one another, then neither can be truly
infinite, since they have to stop somewhere if there are
going to be two of them in the first place. Unfortunately, we're
Ransarans. While we may all agree that there's only one God, we
don't all agree on who He—or She—is."
The corners of her eyes crinkled
with amusement at Shaylar's expression, and she chuckled.
"In fairness to the Mythalans,"
she said, "and much as it pains me to even consider being
fair to them, I can't conceive of anyone who could possibly be
more profoundly . . . irritating to
them than Ransarans. It's almost as if God deliberately designed us
to drive them crazy. And vice-versa, of course.
"There are three major Ransaran
religions, Shaylar, and quite a few subsidiary sects floating around
the fringes. I personally belong to the Fellowship of Rahil, and we
Rahilians follow the teachings of Rahil, the Great Prophetess. By
all accounts, she was a magistron of truly phenomenal ability back
in the days before the theoretical basis for magic was at all
understood. We believe her abilities in that regard were directly
inspired by God as a sign of His favor, and her writings about God
constitute the seminal text of our religious beliefs. In the Rahilian
view, God is infinite, and as such infinitely unknowable, but a
benign and loving Creator who progressively reveals to us as
much about Him as finite mortals are capable of understanding.
Like the Mythlans, Rahilians
believe that the purpose of a physical, mortal existence is for the
individual soul to live and grow—to 'evolve' upward, to
use the Mythalan term—by making choices and acquiring
experience. But we also believe that God is separate from the
universe around us, that He extends beyond and transcends it as an
individual distinct from it, and that He seeks an individual
relationship with each of us. That was what Rahil taught, at any
rate.
"Over the centuries, the
Rahilians and the other two major Ransaran religions have spent
quite a lot of their time massacring one another over various
points of religious disagreement," Gadrial admitted. "We stopped
doing that about, oh, nine hundred years ago, I guess. Not that we
all turned into sunshine and light where our differences are
concerned, of course. But at least all of us got to the point where
we agreed that whoever was right, God would probably be fairly
irritated with His—or Her—worshipers if they
insisted on slaughtering everyone else in job lots simply for being
mistaken.
"At any rate, there are three
things that all three of our major religions have in common. First,
we believe there's an individual God, an all-powerful being who
exists outside the material universe, rather than being
bound up in it.
"Second, none of us believe in
reincarnation, although all of us do believe in the immortality of
the human soul. And we believe that each soul has a single mortal
existence in which to establish its relationship to God. There's
some disagreement among us about what happens to the souls that
don't manage to establish the right relationship with God.
In fact, that's one of the points we used to kill each other over,
back in the good old days.
"Third, we believe each
individual must have the greatest possible opportunity to become
all that he or she can become. Not simply because all of us
agree God wants us to love one another, but because it's in the
process of becoming all a person can be, that person is brought
closer to God and so to the ability to establish that 'right
relationship' we all believe in . . .
even if we're not quite in total agreement over what it ought to
be."
She stopped again, gazing at
Shaylar, and the Voice nodded slowly. Gadrial was right, she
reflected. Assuming that the magister had described the Mythalans
and Ransaran viewpoints as accurately—or, at least,
honestly—as Shaylar was confident she had, it was scarcely
surprising that the Mythalans would hate, despise, and fear
everything Ransar stood for. And she could think of nothing
someone with Gadrial's religious and philosophical values would
find more revolting and cruel than the Mythalan caste system.
Which only made the deep and obvious love which had existed
between Gadrial and Magister Halathyn even more remarkable.
"At any rate," Gadrial continued,
"given the Ransaran views on the preciousness of each individual
life, the possibility of any of our major religions—most of
which were still quite cheerfully chopping up the adherents of
their Ransaran coreligionists at the time—signing off on
the notion of trial-and-error experiments on humans
was . . . remote, shall we say. So
both the Mythalans and the Ransarans, each for their own very
different reasons, outlawed that sort of experimentation on
humans from the very beginning."
"But not on other creatures,"
Shaylar said, and managed not to grimace when Gadrial shook her
head.
The more Shaylar heard about
the Mythalans, the more she preferred the Ransarans. Yet it was
obvious to her that even the humanistic Ransarans were very, very
different from her own people. Most Sharonians would have
found it exceedingly difficult to "sign off on" that sort of
experimentation upon any creatures, not just humans.
There were exceptions, of course, as she was well aware, but the
existence of those like her mother, whose Talent allowed
communication with sentient non-human species, made them rare.
Very few Sharonians would have been prepared to suggest that a
cow, or a chicken, was intellectually or morally equivalent to a
human being. But, by the same token, very few Sharonians would
have been prepared to deny that the great apes and the
cetaceans had attained a very high level of intelligence which, if
not equal to that of human beings, certainly approached it very
closely. In some ways, that same Talent kept them from over-
anthropomorphizing the lesser animals, with whom no meaningful
contact was possible. Still, by and large, they tended to regard
themselves as the stewards of the worlds in which they lived, and
the notion of creating experimental monsters would have been
highly repugnant to them.
Not that she had any intention of
discussing that with Gadrial just now. Especially since, so far,
she'd managed to conceal the existence of that specific Talent,
despite her mother's life work.
If they ever ask me exactly who Mother's an ambassador
to, keeping that particular secret a secret is going to get sticky
, she thought. So let's not go there just now, Shaylar.
"So, how does all of this relate
to transport dragons and battle dragons?" she asked, instead.
"Well, it was Ransaran
magistrons who built the first dragons," Gadrial said, as if she
were discussing how to go about baking a cake, Shaylar thought.
"'Built' them out of what?" the Voice demanded.
"There's some dispute about
that," Gadrial admitted. "According to at least one tradition, there
were still some of the great lizards living in Ransar at the time."
She shrugged. "I've always had problems with that particular
explanation, myself, since the fossil record seems to indicate that
all of the great lizards had died out—rather abruptly, in
geological terms—long before dragons were ever
developed. Still, there are undeniable similarities.
"At any rate," she continued, as if
blithely oblivious to the way Shaylar's eyes were bugging out ever
so slightly, "the original dragons were developed in Ransar strictly
as beasts of burden. As a way to move cargo quickly from point to
point, for the most part, although there are still some wingless
dragons in Ransar, where they've been used for centuries instead
of horses or unicorns as really heavy draft animals. For the most
part, though, their military applications were limited strictly to
improving transport. Until the Mythalans got into the act, that
was."
"And why did I see that
one coming?" Shaylar demanded rhetorically.
"Because you're so clever,"
Gadrial told her with a wry chuckle.
"I've always rather suspected that
Mythalan resentment that we primitive Ransarans had produced
something they hadn't played a part in what happened," the
magister continued. "After all, to be brutally honest, most of us were pretty primitive compared to Mythal, at that particular
point. Hansara was a Tosarian, and Tosaria had evolved a much
higher level of civilization than most of the rest of us. My
ancestors, for example, were still painting themselves blue and
yellow and pickling their enemies's heads as door ornaments at the
time. As far as Mythal was concerned, though, all
Ransarans were still doing that, and yet the Tosarians had
produced not just dragons but Hansara's basic work. Given
shakira arrogance, I'm sure they felt an enormous temptation
to prove they could do it better than we had. But they weren't
interested in simply improving transportation capabilities; they
were looking for direct military applications."
Gadrial's amusement of only
moments before had vanished.
"Skyfang is a pure transport type.
As Daris says, he probably goes clear back to the first egg. Which
means he's bigger, stronger, and less maneuverable than a battle
dragon, but that he has more endurance and basic lift capability.
And, aside from his teeth and claws, he has no natural weapons."
"You mean battle dragons do
have other weapons?" Shaylar's eyes widened.
Mother Marthea! she thought shakenly. Surely the
things' fangs, claws, and horns are vicious enough! How could
even Mythalans want to add still more weapons to their
nightmare?
"They certainly do." Gadrial's
voice was as grim as if she'd actually Heard Shaylar's
thought . . . and shared it. "The
weapons Jasak's men used against your people are called 'infantry-
dragons' because they replicate the 'natural' weapons the
Mythalans built into their real dragons, Shaylar. Some battle
dragons breathe fire—or, rather, spit fireballs. Others throw
lightning bolts. And still others, despite periodic efforts to ban the
breeds in question entirely, project poisonous gases and vapors."
Shaylar gazed at her in horror,
and the magister shrugged. She was obviously sympathetic to
Shaylar's reaction, but there was something more than simple
sympathy behind that shrug, and she returned Shaylar's gaze
levelly.
"I can understand that you find
the thought frightening and unnatural, Shaylar," she said. "And I
don't disagree with you that building something like that into a
living creature is a typically Mythalan sort of thing to do. In fact,
I've always thought battle dragons are probably the most horrific
battlefield weapons—short of the mass destruction spells
which were banned when the Union was formed, at least—
that Arcana's ever deployed. But I can't believe your people are
that much different from ours when it comes to fighting wars.
You've thrown the fact that Jasak's troopers' infantry-dragons
burned your people to death into the face of every Army officer
you've confronted, and I admit that that's a horrible way to die.
But war is full of horrible ways to die, isn't it? Are you
going to tell me your people never poured flaming oil onto
someone trying to storm a castle wall? That they never blew
someone's abdomen open with those artillery pieces of
yours—those "mortars"—and left him to bleed
slowly to death on the field of battle, screaming in pain? Never
used fire as a naval weapon that gave men the choice between
burning to death or drowning when their wooden ships went up in
flame around them?"
Shaylar started to open her
mouth in a quick response, then paused and closed it once more.
Gadrial was right, she realized. When it came to the organized
slaughter of combat, there were countless horrific ways to die. No
one had a monopoly on ghastliness.
"I'm not saying you don't have
every right to regard what happened to your survey crew as an act
of barbarism," Gadrial said more gently. "If nothing else, your
people were civilians, and all you were doing was defending
yourselves. But when you think about all the horrors Arcanan
weapons could unleash against your people, you need to
remember that our people are worrying about horrors just as great
coming from your people. Both sides are terrified, and
both sides think the people on the other side are barbarians. I pray
to God every night that we're both wrong, that Master Skirvon and
Master Dastiri are going to sit down with your people and
somehow negotiate an end to all of this without one more single
person being killed.
"But if Skirvon and Dastiri don't
pull that off, then Jasak's father is one of the men who are going to
decide what happens next, how Arcana goes to war against
Sharona. You already know what Jasak's going to tell him, but it's
going to be almost as much up to us—to you, Jathmar, and
me—to convince the Duke that prosecuting the war with
every weapon at our disposal is the wrong thing to do. And if
you're going to help convince him of that, you've got to be able to
be brutally honest about just how much barbarism there really is
on both sides."
She stopped speaking, and there
was no sound except the noise of wind and water for several
seconds. Then Shaylar gave a tiny nod.
"You're right," she said. "Or
partly right, at least. I'm sure being caught in the explosion of an
artillery shell is just as terrible as being killed by one of your
lightning bolts. And, yes, my people have used flaming oil and set
their enemies' ships on fire with what we call 'Ternathian Fire.' I
suppose the only real difference is how we go about inflicting our
mutual atrocities, isn't it?"
"I'm afraid so," Gadrial agreed
sadly.
"Maybe it's only the fact that I am a civilian," Shaylar continued. "I'd never seen anyone
actually killed in front of me before, never even thought about
how horrible and terrifying and ugly that would be. And," she
managed something that was almost a smile, "something about
being on the receiving end of something like that does tend to give
you a somewhat biased opinion of just
how . . . humanitarian it is.
"But I'll try to think about what
you've said. Especially the bit about helping to convince Jasak's
father Sharona isn't simply a pit of horrors waiting to consume
Arcana."
"From what I've heard of the
Duke, he's not likely to think that, anyway," Gadrial said. "But
there are going to be others, as well, and some of them very well
may."
"I understand." Shaylar nodded.
Then she inhaled deeply and squared her shoulders.
"But you were saying about the
dragons?" she said.
"I was saying that they call the
infantry support weapons 'dragons' because of the way they
replicate dragons' natural weapons," Gadrial said. "But they aren't
anywhere near as deadly as an actual battle dragon. The artillery's
field-dragons are many times more powerful than the infantry-
dragons Jasak's men had with them that day, and much longer
ranged. But even the heaviest field-dragon is much less powerful
than the weapons built into battle dragons. All of the infantry and
artillery weapons rely on charged spell accumulators, but battle
dragons are spell accumulators. They charge
themselves from the magic field after every shot."
"I'm trying very hard to
remember what we were just saying," Shaylar told her a bit wanly.
"It's a bit difficult, though, when you tell me about something like
that."
"I never said it would be easy.
Just that we've got to do it, anyway."
"I know, I know." Shaylar shook
her head. "But are you saying that you think it's something about
the . . . magic the Mythalans used to
graft those horrible capabilities into their battle dragons that
causes them to hate me where transports like Skyfang don't?"
Shaylar asked, deliberately trying
to step back from the horrendous vision of dragons flying over
Sharona belching death and devastation.
"Probably," Gadrial said, leaning
back in her deck chair as if she, too, was grateful to back away
from the same vision. "Although, actually, I think it probably has
less to do with the weapons themselves than with the changes in
the dragons' . . . personalities, for
want of a better word, that went with it. The original Ransaran
dragon breeding lines had deliberately emphasized docility. The
breeders didn't want something that size which would
suddenly decide it ought to be eating its handlers. The Mythalans,
typically, decided to 'improve' upon that when they set out to
create dragons for combat. So they spliced in several of the
characteristics of a Mythal River crocodile." She grimaced once
more. "You might say that their personalities are just a little
more aggressive than those of a pure transport, like Skyfang."
"I see," Shaylar said slowly, and,
in fact, she rather thought she did. She'd sensed a similarity
between Skyfang and the huge whales who sought out her mother
when they needed an interface with humanity. The dragon wasn't
as intelligent as the great whales—or, at least, she certainly
didn't think he was—yet there was that undeniably familiar
"feel" to his personality. But if Skyfang was somehow similar to
whales, then the battle dragons were more akin to the great
sharks . . . or, perhaps, to barracudas.
"That's very interesting," she said
after several seconds. "It's a lot to take in, of
course . . . even without your well-
deserved little lecture." she smiled crookedly, then she yawned. It
wasn't completely feigned, and her smile turned lopsided. "In fact,
if you don't mind, I think I'm going to take advantage of the sun
until lunchtime and sleep on it."
"By all means, get as much rest
as you can," Gadrial advised her with an equally crooked smile.
"We won't be getting much of it over the next half-dozen
universes or so."
"In that
case . . . "
Shaylar settled back in her deck
chair and tucked the light blanket around her legs. Then she gave
Gadrial a smile, closed her eyes, and dreamed nightmares of
Sharonian nights filled with the ghastly pyres of dragon breath.
Chapter Forty-Eight
"So, Davir. What kind of effect
do you expect these negotiations to have?" Darl Elivath asked.
It was late as he and Davir Perth
sat sipping tea. They were in the Sharonian Universal News
Network's green room, in the wing of the Great Palace set-aside
for the press, waiting for official word that the Conclave's
Committee on Unification had finally managed to report out draft
language for the proposed amendment to the initial Act of
Unification.
"On the Conclave and the
Unification? Or on whether or not we go to war with these
people?" Perthis asked.
"Both, I suppose," Elivath said.
"It took the threat of a war to get the Conclave assembled in the
first place, after all."
"Well," SUNN's Chief Voice
scratched his chin thoughtfully. "I suppose the fact that they want
to talk at all has to be a good sign. At least it's not what you expect
out of the kind of murderous barbarians we've all assumed we
were facing. And the possibility that it was all a mistake—
that they thought our people were soldiers who'd attacked one of
their people—genuinely hadn't occurred to me."
Perthis was a bit surprised by
how unwillingly he made that admission, and he wondered
why he was so unwilling. Was it that he'd invested so much in
hating the "Arcanans" for what they'd done that he simply didn't
want to give up his hate? Or was it what he'd Seen from Shaylar's
final Voice transmission? He remembered once again Seeing
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl stand up with his hands
empty . . . and go down again,
choking on his life's blood.
Perthis was a man who'd spent
his entire adult career in the news business. He knew, beyond any
shadow of a doubt, that what he'd Seen from Shaylar was the truth.
It was, quite literally, impossible for a Voice to lie about
something like that in such a deep linkage to another Voice. But
the professional newsman in him also recognized how even the
truth could be misread, misinterpreted. Was that what had
happened here?
It was entirely possible that it
was, he admitted. And if it was, the fact that relatively few people
on Sharona—Davir Perthis, included—had ever
seen a violent death with their own eyes had undoubtedly
contributed to it. The sheer, horrifying emotional impact of seeing
that sort of carnage with your physical eyes would have been bad
enough for someone who'd never seen it before. Going the extra
step and Seeing it with the total clarity (and emotional overtones)
which could only come from a powerful Voice trapped in the
middle of it only made it infinitely worse.
"What about what they say
happened to Shaylar?"
Elivath's question broke in on
the Chief Voice's thoughts, and Perthis looked back up at him
with a sour expression.
"They haven't really said all that
much, when you come right down to it," he pointed out. "Aside
from the fact that she wasn't killed outright—which we
already knew—all we have is their claims that they tried to
get her to one of their Healers before she died. Or that they could
have done anything for her if they'd managed to reach one in time.
We didn't get that from a Voice, either, you know. And either way,
she's still dead, and they still killed her."
"So you think they're lying?"
"I didn't say that." Perthis
realized he sounded a little defensive, and waved one hand. "All
right, I admit I thought it. I'm having a hard time getting
past my original image of them, I guess. But the fact is, Darl, that
we don't have any sort of confirmation of a single thing
they've said, and I'm just . . .
uncomfortable with the fact."
"But if they did try to save her,
and if it turns out they can prove it, don't you think it would make
a difference with public opinion?"
"If they genuinely tried
to save her life after making an honest mistake, then probably yes,"
Perthis said. "But that's a lot of ifs, Darl. They've still got a lot of
talking to do, as far as I'm concerned, to explain how what were
supposed to be a bunch of trained soldiers mistook someone
standing up and holding out empty hands as an act of aggression.
Mind you, I'm not saying mistakes like that can't happen. Gods
know they've happened in our own past. I'm just saying that after
actually Seeing the events from our crew's side, it's going to be
hard to convince a lot of our people, including me, that that's what
happened here."
He started to say something else,
then stopped himself. He didn't know exactly how much Elivath
actually knew about the rumors regarding the Voice messages to
Emperor Zindel and the Conclave. The original message from
Regiment-Captain Velvelig, informing the Emperor and the
Conclave that the Arcanans had asked for negotiations, had been
released directly to the Voice network and the general public. The
follow-on messages had not been, and neither had any of
the Conclave's—or Zindel's—responses to Velvelig.
Ostensibly, that was to avoid
further exacerbating public opinion by generating unreasonable
expectations, on the one hand, or generating additional fury when
the bobbles and stumbles which were undoubtedly inevitable in
opening negotiations with a totally alien civilization occurred, on
the other hand. Perthis supposed that the official reasoning made
sense, but he'd picked up on a few very quiet rumors that it was
because those follow-on messages from whoever was actually
talking to these people included reports that the Arcanans weren't
being completely truthful. He had no idea what they were
supposed to be lying about, but the thought that they were lying at
all was hardly reassuring.
"Well, let's assume it turns out
they really did their best to save her life," Elivath said. "And that
they really do want to settle this as peacefully as they can, given
everything that's already happened. If all that's true, what kind of
effect do you think it's going to have on the Conclave and
the unification?"
"I don't know that I expect it to
have any effect," Perthis replied. Elivath raised one
skeptical eyebrow, and the Chief Voice shrugged. "By now," he
pointed out, "the debate's taken on the life of its own. Besides,
even if we manage to put the brakes on this current confrontation,
we still know the bastards are out there, don't we? All of our
conventional political equations are going to have to take them
into account from now on."
"Do you really think so?"
Elivath grimaced and set down
his tea cup. He sat turning it on its saucer for a moment, lips
slightly pursed, while he gazed out of the green room's window at
the Great Palace's well-lit grounds under the great, midnight-blue
dome of the starstruck heavens. Then he returned his gaze to
Perthis.
"I was talking to one of the
Authority's theoreticians," the Voice correspondent said. "From
the way he was talking, this may be the only point of contact we'll
see with these people. So if we get control of it, or just seal it off,
wouldn't that be more or less the end of it?"
"Only point of contact?"
Perthis leaned back in his own
chair. To be totally honest, he'd never thought of Elivath as the
sharpest pencil in SUNN's box. He respected the strength of
Elivath's Talent, and his integrity, but he'd also always thought of
Elivath as one of his correspondents who required rather more
careful direction than many.
He knew Elivath knew
he regarded him that way—that was one of the problems
when Voices with powerful Talents worked with one
another—but he also knew that both he and Elivath had
qualities the other respected, as well. Still, he'd never really
considered Elivath an investigative reporter. The
correspondent was extraordinarily good at explaining even
complicated concepts to his audience, once he'd mastered those
concepts himself, but he usually needed them explained to him
in the first place by the investigators who'd gone out and
turned them up initially. Part of Perthis' job was to see to it that
the proper experts were found to explain things to him, and he was
unaccustomed to having Elivath go out and do the finding for
himself, especially in technical matters. But if the correspondent
had, indeed, turned up some new technical information, Perthis
wanted to know about it.
"Why should this be the only
point of contact?" the Chief Voice continued after a moment.
"Aside from the fact that we've never had one before, which might
predispose us to expect it to be the only one, that is."
"I'm not the best technical man
we've got," Elivath pointed out mildly—and, Perthis
thought, with considerable understatement. "We both know that.
But according to this fellow, the latest models for how the
multiverse works suggest that our particular universe is part of
what I guess you might call a 'cable' of universes. Sort of like
those stranded cables they used to hang the bridge across the Ylani
Strait, I guess."
He waved one hand, frowning, as
if he weren't completely satisfied with his own analogy. Not too
surprisingly, Perthis reflected. No one, as far as he was
aware, had ever come up with an analogy for the multiverse's
structure that he really liked.
"Anyway, this fellow I was
talking to says that all of the empirical and theoretical work that's
been done suggests that all of the universes in the multiverse had
the same common starting point. What caused them
to . . . separate from one another
were events that had multiple possible outcomes. Each possible
outcome happened somewhere, and that started the
separate, divergent universes."
He paused, one eyebrow raised,
and Perthis nodded to indicate that he was still following. That
part of the theory had been explained to everyone, over and
over again. There might be an Arpathian septman somewhere so
far up in the hills that they still hadn't invented fire who hadn't
heard it, but everyone else was fully aware of it.
"Well," Elivath continued, "this
guy I was talking to says that up until recently we always figured
that whenever a new universe was created, it went off in its own
unique direction. That each new universe radiated at what I guess
you could think of as right angles to the universe it split off from
because of the particular event that created it. But he says that that
theory's been challenged lately, and that the brains' best current
guess is that the universes that are most similar
lie . . . parallel to one another, for
want of a better word, instead. They're all 'headed the same
direction,' so to speak, not racing away from each other."
"I got the same briefing when
this whole thing blew up in our faces," Perthis agreed, nodding
again. "In fact, they said something about the Calirath Glimpses
proving the existence of parallel universes."
"Yeah." Elivath made a face. "I
remember. It made my head hurt, actually."
"Only if you tried to follow the
theory instead of the consequences," Perthis pointed out with a
wry grin. "Just remember that the boffins think that what a
Glimpse is is really a sort of precognitive peek across into those
parallel universes, whereas a straight precog is stuck looking
along the event line in his own universe. A Glimpse isn't true precognition, but more of
a . . . statistical process. They do have
some unique capability in their Talent which lets them follow
possible human actions and outcomes, but the unpredictability of
human nature means they can't be sure what any particular human
in any particular universe is going to do. What they can do,
apparently, is see the possible actions and outcomes of a whole
bunch of people simultaneously. The same people, living
in parallel universes. And what their Glimpses are is the most
common outcomes of all those actions."
"Like I say, it made my head
hurt. It still does."
"Mine, too, if I'm going to be
honest." Perthis grinned. "But, the main point, is that that's the
reason the Caliraths can See the consequences of human actions
when no one else can. And if the universes in question weren't
really, really close to one another—really 'parallel,' and
really similar to one another,I mean—then a Glimpse based
on what's going to happen in any other universe—or
universes, for that matter—wouldn't help when it comes to
figuring out what's going to happen in this one."
"That's probably what this fellow
was getting at when he said that the parallel universes stay 'close
together,'" Elivath said. "But he also pointed out that where the portals form is where one universe 'runs into' another one,
and since similar universes stay close together
and . . . head in the same 'direction,'
then it's the most dissimilar universes which are most
likely to collide and form portals. He says that's the best current
theory for why we've never run into humans before. As different
from us as these people obviously are, they still almost have to
come from a universe that's in our basic 'cable,' since there are
humans in it at all."
"I think I see where you're
headed with this," Perthis said slowly. In fact, he was impressed by
Elivath's analysis. Of course, he realized the Voice hadn't come up
with it on his own, but it was obvious he'd been thinking hard
about it for some time.
"So your basic point," the Chief
Voice continued, "is that since we're
all . . . traveling along in this same
direction of yours, the odds are against any of the universes in our
'cable' colliding with another universe in their 'cable.'"
"Exactly." Elivath nodded
vigorously, and it was Perthis' turn to gaze out the window into
the night while he thought.
"I'm not sure it follows," he said
finally. "Mind you, Darl, I'd like it to. Given how murderous these
bastards seem to be, I'd like it a lot, actually. But if I'm following
the logic properly, then didn't we start a fresh 'cable' at the
moment our universes made contact? What I mean is, isn't there a
new batch of universes spreading out from the point at which our
universe and their universe found the same portal cluster? And if
that's true, aren't the strands of that new 'cable' all laying out
parallel to one another . . . and at
right angles, for want of a better description, to our original
'cables'?"
"Now my head really hurts,"
Elivath said plaintively, and Perthis chuckled.
"It's not that bad. Or, at least, I
don't think it is," he said. "At the same time, it sort of
underscores our basic problem, doesn't it? You and I are hardly
multi-universal theorists, but from what I'm hearing out
of the people who are, they don't really have any idea at all what
the ultimate consequences of this contact are likely to be. We may
never find ourselves sharing another portal with these people, or
we might find ourselves running into them every time we turn
around! At any rate, I think we have to plan on the basis that we could be running into them again and again."
"And," Elivath said, cocking his
head, "you see this as an opportunity to put Ternathia in charge of
the planet, anyway."
Perthis managed not to blink,
although the shrewdness of the correspondent's observation had
taken him considerably aback. I think I've been underestimating
him, the Chief Voice thought after a moment. Either that,
or I've been an awful lot more obvious about my little
manipulations than I ever meant to be! He gazed at Elivath for
several seconds, then shrugged.
"I suppose you're right," he
conceded. "Oh, I started out feeling that way simply because of the
threat these people represented. I figured somebody had to
be in charge if we were going to respond to them the way they
obviously deserved, and Zindel was absolutely the best person I
could think of for the job." The Chief Voice's lips twitched
humorlessly. "For one thing, he's so damned levelheaded I figured
he'd probably help restrain my own murderous impulses if they
needed restraining.
"I still do think we need a world
government that can not simply take advantage of whatever we
manage to negotiate with these people this time around, but keep
an eye on them for the future. But I'll admit that I've been more
and more impressed with the possibilities of a world
government—especially one with Ternathia's traditions
behind it—for dealing with all the rest of our problems,
too."
"Somebody to make the children
behave right here on Sharona, you mean?" Elivath asked, but
Perthis shook his head.
"That's probably part of it," he
conceded, "but not all of it. Not by a long shot."
He paused briefly, trying to
decide how best to say what he was thinking. It was odd. He was a
professional newsman, yet putting his own thoughts into words in
a conversation like this one often refused to come easily for him.
"We do have some problem
children here on Sharona that need somebody to look after them
until they finish growing up," he continued seriously at last. "But
in realistic terms, and especially given the safety valve the portals
have given us, the nations whose problems are a simple lack of
maturity aren't any particular threat to the rest of us.
Unfortunately, that's not true for all of our problem
children."
"You're thinking about
Uromathia, aren't you?" Elivath challenged.
"Mostly," Perthis admitted. "But
even the current problems with Uromathia are almost all due to
Chava, when you come right down to it. I mean, Uromathians in
general sometimes seem to me to walk around with a king-sized
chip on their collective shoulder, especially where Ternathia is
concerned. But by and large, they're not really any more jingoistic
or just naturally nasty than anyone else. The fact that their current
emperor—and all three of his sons, as far as I can
tell—are certifiable lunatics, now,
though . . . that's a problem.
"On the one hand, that means
getting rid of him (and of them) would solve our presence
difficulties with Uromathia. But, on the other hand, it means the
next Chava—whether he's Uromathian or from
somewhere else entirely—will simply present his own
clutch of problems. Putting someone like Ternathia in charge of a
world government with the mechanisms in place to deal with
future Chavas as they arise will save us all an awful lot of grief
down the road. Whatever happens at Hell's Gate."
"Assuming someone like Chava
doesn't wind up in charge of it, instead," Elivath pointed out.
"That's not going to happen,"
Perthis said firmly.
Elivath looked rather more
skeptical than the Chief Voice, but he didn't disagree. He couldn't,
really, and Perthis knew it.
It had become painfully evident,
even to Chava Busar, that his own candidacy for Emperor of
Sharona had been a complete nonstarter. Only his closest
neighbors had voted for him, and they'd obviously done it more
because they were afraid of him (and how he might react if they hadn't voted for him) than because they'd thought he'd make
a good planetary Emperor. The fact that anyone outside
his own empire had voted for him, coupled with the military and
economic clout of that empire, gave him a degree of bargaining
power when it came to the terms under which Uromathia might
accept the Conclave's decision, but that was about it.
And it's enough, Perthis thought glumly.
"So you think this new
compromise the Committee on Unification is supposed to be
getting ready to report out is going to go through?" Elivath said.
"That's what Tarlin thinks,"
Perthis replied.
"He said so?"
Elivath sounded surprised, and
Perthis laughed. Tarlin Bolsh and his international news division's
analysts were notorious for covering their posteriors carefully
when it came time to prognosticate on major international events.
Without a Glimpse for guidance—and there weren't any
Caliraths working for SUNN—precognition was pretty
much useless when it came to political events, and it often seemed
to Perthis that the analysts were more concerned with not being wrong than they were with being right.
"More or
less . . . although he wasn't prepared
to admit it for public consumption," the Chief Voice said dryly,
and it was Elivath's turn to laugh.
"On the other hand," Perthis
continued, his smile fading, "I think he's probably right."
"If I were Zindel, I wouldn't want
Chava marrying into my family," Elivath said sourly.
"Neither would I," Perthis
agreed. "But, as Tarlin pointed out, Chava's picked his demands
pretty shrewdly. He's right, after all. Intermarriage has
always been part of the traditional Ternathian approach to
guaranteeing the inclusion of 'subject peoples'—although I
hate the way Chava keeps throwing around that particular
term—in the mainstream of their Empire." The Chief Voice
shrugged. "If we're going to institute a planet-wide Ternathian
Empire under the Calirath Dynasty, then demanding that the heir
to the throne has to marry someone from the Uromathian
royalty actually makes a lot of sense."
"In a perfect world," Elivath
snorted. "In this world, it's going to make Chava Busar Janaki
chan Calirath's father-in-law. Now, does that strike you as
a marriage made in heaven?"
"Not by a long shot," Perthis said
again. "But Janaki's a Calirath, and they've been making dynastic
marriages for as long as anyone can remember. For that matter, for
as far back as the oldest histories go! They haven't all worked out
very well on a personal level, of course, but Janaki's going to
understand the political necessities. And let's be fair, Darl.
Whatever we may think of Chava, Uromathia is still the second
most powerful nation on Sharona, and there are an awful lot of
Uromathians. They deserve to be fairly represented in any
world government. And if they aren't represented, what
does that say to everyone else? You and I may be confident that
Zindel chan Calirath isn't going to produce some sort of tyranny,
but if we expect countries all over the planet to surrender their
national sovereignty to him, then they need to know he's
prepared to be reasonable about inclusiveness, honesty,
fairness . . . and access to power."
"Maybe. No," Elivath grimaced,
"not 'maybe'. You're right. But I don't think Zindel's especially
happy about the prospect of sharing grandkids with Chava!"
"Given the fact that there
probably aren't two men on the face of the entire planet who
loathe each other more than he and Chava do, that's probably just a
bit of an understatement." Perthis' tone was drier than a Shurkhali
summer wind. "Of course, he knows Chava knows that, too. That's
why he's dug in his heels so hard over 'resisting' the entire
marriage proposal. Tarlin says his people figure it's Zindel's way
of telling Chava that it's the only one of Uromathia's
demands that Chava's going to get. And, frankly, I think Chava's
entirely prepared to settle for it. He knows he can't possibly put a
planetary crown on his own head; he's too hated and distrusted for
that. So the best he can realistically hope for is to put it on a
grandson's head. He'll settle for that, especially since somebody
like him will figure that, if he's patient, sooner or later a
possibility for him to . . . improve his
own position is going to present itself."
"Now there's a charming
possibility," Elivath said sourly.
"I wouldn't be very happy if it
worked out that way, myself," Perthis said more mildly. "On the
other hand, you—and Chava, for that matter—might
want to think about how long Ternathia's been playing this sort of
game."
The Chief Voice showed his
teeth in a smile that was really quite unpleasant, Elivath thought.
"Chava Busar thinks he's clever,
and in a brutal sort of way, he is," Perthis said. "And he thinks
Uromathia is an ancient empire, and that he's a ruthless sort of
fellow. Both of those are true, too. But Ternathia's one hell of a
lot more ancient, and the fact that the Caliraths have traditionally
put their subjects' best interests first doesn't mean they
aren't ruthless. In fact, Darl, if you go back and look at Ternathian
history, I think you'll discover that nobody's ever been
more ruthless than a Calirath when there was no other way to win.
And do you really think Chava is even in the same league
as Zindel chan Calirath when it comes to intelligent
ruthlessness?"
Elivath opened his mouth. Then
he stopped, looking thoughtful, and his frown turned slowly into a
smile of its own.
"Actually, when you put it that
way," he said finally, "no."
Chapter Forty-Nine
Hadrign Thalmayr lay rigidly on
his side on the white-sheeted bed in the airy, sunlit room. His eyes
were screwed tightly shut, beads of sweat stood out on his
forehead, and his fists were clenched so tightly that his nails had
cut bleeding crescents into his palms.
The breeze through the open
window moved gently, almost caressingly across him. He could
hear the distant but unmistakable sounds of a drill field: voices
shouting orders in a foreign language, whistles shrilling at
irregular intervals, the occasional clatter of weapons as troops
went through their own version of the manual of arms, and the
deep-voiced sound of drill formations counting cadence. The air
was cool, the distant background noise—deeply familiar to
any professional soldier, despite the fact that he couldn't
understand a single word of the orders he overheard—only
made the quiet around him even more soothing, and he could
almost literally physically feel the relaxing, comforting
peacefulness which had settled over this place.
It was all reassuringly calm and
normal . . . and its very normality
only made his terror and helpless rage still worse.
The man sitting in the chair
beside his bed spoke again, in that same utterly incomprehensible,
comforting voice, but Thalmayr wasn't fooled. He squeezed his
eyelids even more tightly together and bit his lip, welcoming the
pain of the bite as it helped them summon all of his resistance
while that insidious, loathsome touch slid once again
across the surface of his mind.
It took all he could do not to
moan or whimper in terror. He called up all of his hatred, all of
his fear and disgust, to bolster his defiance, but it was hard. Hard.
He never knew exactly how long
it lasted this time. Sometimes the man behind that lying, soothing
voice stayed longer; sometimes he gave up sooner, and left. But he
always came back, Thalmayr thought despairingly. And he always
would come back, again and again. Until, finally, he
managed to breach his victim's defenses at last, and the mere
thought of what would happen then filled Hadrign Thalmayr with
horror.
But eventually, finally, his
tormentor gave up . . . this time. The
commander of one hundred lay rigidly still, refusing to move or
even open his eyes until he was positive the other man had
truly left. That he wasn't just waiting, lurking above the bed like a
vulture.
He lay there for a long time, then
slowly and cautiously let his eyes slip back open. The chair beside
the bed was empty, and he heaved a tremendous sigh of relief and
finally allowed himself to relax, at least a bit.
He wanted to roll over onto his
back, but the sandbags holding him on his side prevented it.
Which, he admitted, was just as well, given the incision across his
spine.
His teeth clenched again as he
thought about that wound and all the pain their so-called "healers"
had inflicted upon him. Butchers—barbarians! He'd been
right about them all along, and he cursed Sir Jasak Olderhan in
vicious mental silence as he remembered the other hundred's
precious "shardonai."
I should've fed the pair of them to the nearest godsdamned
dragon! he thought savagely. Them and all their fucking
friends!
He'd long since figured out that
that sneaky little bitch with her bruised face and pitiful "poor me"
eyes had somehow managed to get a message out to her
butchering friends. He still didn't know how, but the way they'd
flung her name at him again and again in their questioning proved
she had . . . and the way they kept
battering at his own mind suggested several ugly possibilities as to
how she had.
The whole time that fucking idiot Olderhan was standing there
'protecting her,' she was busy telling her friends where we
were and how to come find us and kill us! It's the only way they
could've known she was still alive!
His molars ground together. It
was all her fault. She was the one who'd brought the attack
in on Thalmayr's command. It wasn't his fault. There was
no way he could possibly have known what the little bitch was
doing, that she'd managed to bring an entire godsdamned
regiment down on him! If it hadn't been for her, his
men would still be alive. Magister Halathyn would still be
alive.
And Hadrign Thalmayr wouldn't
be the half-paralyzed prisoner of the butchers who'd started all of
this by massacring that brainless incompetent Olderhan's men in
the first place. The butchers who'd somehow transported him over
what had to be hundreds, if not thousands, of miles without his
remembering a single thing about the journey. The butchers who
cut open the flesh of helpless captives in some obscene pretense of
trying to "help them," and then, when they were weakened by the
pain, tried to rape away any useful information in their minds.
Well, they might break him in
the end. Any man could be broken by enough torture,
enough cruelty, and he had no way of knowing what other, even
more horrendous powers of mental destruction they might yet be
able to bring to bear upon him. But they wouldn't find it easy. He
swore that to himself yet again, repeating it like a precious mantra
of defiance, while despair poured over him with the gentle,
soothing breeze.
"Frankly, Sir," Company-Captain
Golvar Silkash said, "I'm at a loss." The Healers' Corps officer
shook his head, his eyes unhappy. "I've done all I can, and
Tobis is still trying, but I've never had a patient with this
man's attitude. I just don't know what else we can do to get
through to him."
Namir Velvelig grunted
unhappily. It wasn't the first time Silkash had reported the same
things to him, but the regiment-captain kept hoping that somehow,
some way, something would change. But it didn't, of
course, he thought moodily, playing with the mug of tea on his
desk. Silkash had a matching mug in his left hand, but the Healer
had been ignoring it ever since he sat down.
"Is Tobis right, do you think?" he
asked.
"What? About the man having at
least a trace of Talent of his own?"
"Yes. Could that be
what's going on?"
"I suppose it could," Silkash said
with a grimace. "Tobis knows a lot more about that sort of thing
than I do, but I think even he's shooting blind on this one. We just
plain don't have any experience with people who've never even
heard of Talents!"
Velvelig grunted again, gazing
out his window, where the steadily setting sun sank slowly behind
the Sky Bloods, as if he imagined he could somehow find the
answers he needed out there in the bronze and copper glow gilding
the mountains. Company-Captain Silkash was the finest surgeon
and medical doctor with whom Namir Velvelig had ever had the
pleasure of serving. But, unlike the majority of the Healers'
Corps's commissioned officers—or Platoon-Captain Tobis
Makree, his assistant surgeon, for that matter—he had no
Talent at all. That put Silkash at a distinct disadvantage when it
came to trying to analyze the Arcanan prisoner's reaction to
Makree's Healing Talent. And, as Silkash had just pointed out,
no one had ever had to deal with a patient who didn't even
know what the Healing Talent was!
"How's chan Tergis coming with
their language, Sir?" Silkash asked, as much for a frustrated
change of subject as out of genuine curiosity, and Velvelig
grunted yet a third time. It was remarkable, the surgeon reflected,
just how expressive his CO's grunts could actually be, and he
wondered if all Arpathians were like that. Velvelig's first grunt
had expressed unhappiness; the second had expressed both
agreement and frustration; and the third had expressed frustration
and anger. Which, now that Silkash thought about it, was a logical
enough progression whenever it came to dealing with
these maddening "Arcanans," whether collectively or as
individuals.
"Not well," the regiment-captain
amplified after a moment. "We're keeping him so damned busy
relaying messages up-chain from chan Baskay and chan Tesh that
he really doesn't have a whole lot of time to devote to the project.
And even when he does, he's running into the same sort of non-
cooperation Tobis seems to be encountering with this Thalmayr
idiot."
The regiment-captain paused,
then forced himself to be fair.
"I suppose, if I'd been
captured—especially after the sort of massacre these people
got put through—I wouldn't be in any hurry to cooperate
with my jailers, either. After all, they're probably as imbued as our
own people with the idea that it's their duty to refuse to give the
enemy any useful information. And despite the total incompetence
of their commander, it's obvious these are elite troops."
"If you say so, Sir," Silkash said
dubiously. Velvelig raised an eyebrow at him, and the surgeon
shrugged. "I know I've only seen them since they got here, but they
don't exactly look like 'elite troops' to me."
"No?" Velvelig gazed at him
speculatively, then snorted. "They seem a bit demoralized to you,
do they? Sullen? Uncooperative? Silently resentful?"
"Yes, Sir. All of those." Silkash
cocked his head to one side. "Why?"
"Because that's exactly the
reaction I'd expect out of elite troops who'd suffered the sort of
pounding these men survived. Think about it, Silky. From chan
Tesh's reports, it's obvious they never even suspected we could
fire on them through a portal. Their CO—such as
he was, and what there was of him—went down in the first
volley, which decapitated their entire command structure. The
mortar rounds coming in on them must've been the most terrifying
thing they'd ever experienced. chan Tesh was massacring
them—literally—and they couldn't even shoot back.
So how did they react?"
Silkash's perplexity was obvious,
and Velvelig waved his tea mug for impatient emphasis.
"They charged, Silky.
They came out of their fortifications, got up out of their
protective holes under fire—which is harder than
hells for anyone to do, trust me—and they charged
straight into the fire that was killing them." He shook his
head. "Whatever we may think of what they did to the Chalgyn
crew, and however stupidly they may have been commanded when
chan Tesh hit them, these men were magnificent soldiers. In fact,
I'll absolutely guarantee you that that idiot Thalmayr didn't have a
thing to do with training them. Not these men. They were so much
better than he was that there's no comparison. And that's exactly
why so many of them got killed. Instead of turning around and
running away, instead of breaking, they charged in an
almost certainly spontaneous effort to get their own weapons into
action on the far side of the portal. It's probably the bloody-
minded septman in me, but I'm prepared to forgive men for a lot
when they show that kind of guts."
"I guess I hadn't thought about it
quite that way," Silkash admitted after a moment.
"No, I didn't think you had. But
it also explains a lot about their present attitude, I imagine. These
men weren't used to the idea that they could be beaten. They
expected to win. And if they were going to lose, they
never would have believed that anyone could have
simply . . . wiped them out for the
loss of barely half a dozen men on the other side. They're smart
enough to have figured out that it was because they were up
against weapons they had no experience fighting and had an idiot
for a CO, but that's an intellectual understanding, not an
emotional one. It doesn't get down inside a soldier's guts and heart
where his belief in himself lives. Defeat is one thing for an elite
unit at that level; abject, humiliating, total defeat is
something else again. So they're bitter, ashamed, and convinced
that they've failed their country, their honor, and themselves. But
instead of simply collapsing, what have they done?
"They've dug in and refused to
cooperate with us in any way, that's what they've done," Velvelig
continued, once again answering his own question. "Maybe, in
time—and especially if these negotiations actually go
somewhere—that may change. I've been trying to help that
change along; that's why I've been so insistent on our men treating
them not just correctly, but with dignity. In the meantime, though,
I'm not surprised by their attitude."
"Now that you've got me
thinking in the same direction, neither am I," Silkash conceded.
"But Tobis is probably right that their lack of familiarity with
Talented people is also a factor. First, because they don't have a
clue what chan Tergis is trying to accomplish, which sort of
automatically precludes the possibility of cooperating, even if they
wanted to. And, second, because if any of them do have a
touch of Talent of their own, they might well react the same way
Thalmayr is."
"Probably," Velvelig agreed.
"Which, I'm afraid, brings us back to Thalmayr." The Arpathian's
lips twisted briefly with all of the contempt he refused to feel for
Thalmayr's unfortunate subordinates. "Just what is his prognosis?"
"Physically?" Silkash shrugged.
"I can understand why Petty-Captain chan Rodair sent him on to
us here at Fort Ghartoun, but I really wish he hadn't. For several
reasons."
"Such as?"
"As much as I've grown to
dislike the man, Sir, I'm a Healer. My Healer's Oath requires me to
treat any patient with compassion and respect, and to offer him the
very best treatment possible. That's why chan Rodair wanted him
here at Ghartoun, because he thought the damage to Thalmayr's
spine might be amenable to surgical intervention. Well, he was
wrong. For that matter, I was wrong when I first examined
the man. I think it may have been because I wanted so badly for
chan Rodair to have been right, but that doesn't change the fact
that we were both wrong. So we subjected him to a
completely unnecessary—and useless—operation.
That's bad enough, but even worse, whatever it is that's causing
him to be so resistant to Tobis' efforts to get at his mental and
emotional traumas is also hampering our efforts at pain
management. So we've inflicted that additional suffering on him,
as well."
"That's hardly your fault,"
Velvelig said. "You were doing the best you could for him, under
very difficult circumstances."
"Oh, I know that, Sir. And so
does Tobis. The problem is, I rather doubt Thalmayr does.
And it doesn't change our responsibilities towards him, either."
"Well, we already knew the man
was an idiot," Velvelig said comforting way. "No reason he
shouldn't be an idiot about that, too, I suppose."
"I
hadn't . . . quite looked at it that way,
Sir." Silkash found that he was experiencing an unanticipated
difficulty not smiling.
"Then you should. But I noticed
that you prefaced your remarks by referring to his physical
recovery. So, how do his mental and emotional prospects shape
up?"
"It's really hard to be sure about
that when our Talented Healer can't even reach the man. Still, as
near as Tobis can tell, he's at least managed to divert Thalmayr's
drive towards suicide."
"Which even Thalmayr should
admit is a positive step!" Velvelig snorted.
"Assuming that he gives Tobis
credit for it, yes, Sir. Of course, if he doesn't understand what
Tobis is doing in the first place, he probably doesn't."
"No, I'm sure he doesn't,"
Velvelig said glumly. "You know, I really wish Prince Janaki
hadn't brought us this particular guest."
"At least dropping him off with
us helped get the Prince out of the combat zone, Sir. That's got to
be a plus, however you look at it."
"It certainly does." Velvelig
sipped more tea, gazing ruminatively out the window once more.
The sun was almost gone, he noticed, leaving the mountain
summits etched dark and black, looming against the afterglow. He
was going to have to light the lamps, he thought.
"If you don't mind my asking,
Sir," Silkash said out of the gathering dimness after a moment,
"you mentioned how busy chan Tergis is passing messages back
up-chain. How well are the negotiations going?"
"I don't mind your asking, but if I
had the answer to that, I wouldn't be a regiment-captain sitting out
here at the ass-end of nowhere," Velvelig said dryly. "I'd be
making my fortune as a Precog back home."
He drank a little more tea, set his
mug back down on the desktop, got out a box of matches. He lit
the lamps, replaced the glass chimneys and adjusted the wicks,
then tipped his chair back and folded his hands behind his head.
"chan Baskay and Rothag are
still convinced these people are lying about entirely too many
things for my peace of mind," he admitted. "What bothers me most
about it isn't that diplomats . . . shade
the truth. Gods know, they do that back home whenever they can,
and if our diplomats didn't have Talents on the other side to keep
them honest, they'd probably do a lot more of it. But if they're as
urgently interested in negotiating some sort of permanent cease-
fire as they claim to be, then I'd think they should have a lot more
incentive to be at least forthcoming, if not completely honest. But
they haven't really given us a lot more information. They seem
almost obsessed with the little stuff, the fine details about how
we're supposed to go about negotiating, rather than more
substantive questions like what we're supposed to be negotiating
about. And I don't much care for the attitude their military
escort seems to be showing. There've been a couple of potentially
ugly incidents already."
"What sort of incidents, Sir?"
"That's just it, they're the stupid
kind. People who take umbrage or even insult from innocent
remarks. Or people who insult our people, apparently by
accident. Three times now, this Skirvon of theirs has suggested
postponements in the talks themselves in order to 'let tempers
cool.' I'm not there, of course, but I'm inclined to back chan
Baskay's view. I think their troopers are actually under
orders to provoke incidents as a deliberate delaying tactic
and I've said as much in my own reports up-chain."
"But why would they be doing
that, Sir?" Silkash's puzzlement showed.
"That's what neither chan Baskay
nor I can understand," Velvelig admitted. "Logically, if all they
want to do is waste our time, then why talk to us at all?"
"So you don't have any idea why
they might be doing it?"
"Actually, chan Baskay's come
up with one possible explanation that sort of makes sense. After
all, one of the reasons we haven't pressed them
harder is the delay in message turnaround between here and
Sharona. We don't know exactly how these people communicate
over long distances, but if they don't have Talents, they obviously
don't have Voices. They may use this magic of theirs to do
the same sort of things our Voices can do, but they may also have
to physically transport messages, as well, and chan Baskay's
suggested that their communications loop may well be even
longer than ours. He thinks this Skirvon may be trying to kick grit
into the works to slow things down until he can get definite
orders—or maybe even until a more senior diplomat can
arrive at Hell's Gate with official instructions from home about
exactly what they are and aren't willing to settle for when it comes
to possession of the cluster."
"And they're bothering to talk
with us in the meantime because—?"
"I'm not sure, although I suppose
it's possible they want to make sure we don't press on with our
own exploration beyond the swamp portal. From Voice Kinlafia's
Portal Sniffing, we know their entry portal for that universe isn't
very close to the swamp portal, but that's really all we
know. They might have some particularly important installation or
colony much closer to it than that, and they might be trying to
divert us from any exploration in its direction."
Velvelig shrugged, clearly
unhappy with his own hypothesis.
"I don't say that's the only
explanation. It's just the only one I can come up with. And,
at least while we're negotiating, we're not shooting anymore. So,
in some ways, it's as much to our advantage as to theirs to just
keep right on talking. Besides," he grinned suddenly, "it gives
us some time to get a 'real diplomat' in here to relieve poor
chan Baskay!"
Commander of Two Thousand
Mayrkos Harshu looked up from the paperwork in his PC as
someone rapped gently and respectfully at the frame of his office
doorway. His dark, intense eyes focused like a hunting gryphon on
the officer standing in the open door. Then he laid his sarkolis
crystal stylus on his blotter, much the way another man might have
sheathed a sword.
"Enter," he said, and acting
Commander of Five Hundred Alivar Neshok obeyed.
"I assume you're here for the
afternoon briefing?" Harshu said, raising his eyebrows, and
Neshok nodded.
"Yes, Sir, I am. May I go ahead
and set up for it?"
"Of course you can, Five
Hundred," Harshu said testily. "Unless my memory fails, that's
why you're here, isn't it?"
The two thousand had a near-
fetish for not "wasting time." Especially with what he considered
pointless, unnecessary questions. Of course, he also had a
reputation for cutting people off at the knees if they made
mistakes because they were too stupid or too lazy to ask
questions. Which could make things
rather . . . difficult upon occasion.
"Yes, Sir," Neshok said, and
moved quickly, uncasing his own crystal and bringing it swiftly
on-line. He Felt Two Thousand Harshu's impatient eyes on him
while he made his preparations, but he found them far less
intimidating than some of his fellow officers did. He had an even
more powerful patron of his own, after all. Besides, he was far too
well aware of the opportunities of his present assignment to worry
about the two thousand's famed temper tantrums.
And that asshole Olderhan probably thought he'd spiked my
career with his godsdamned shardonai, the acting five
hundred thought with a mental sneer. Gods! He's even
stupider than Two Thousand mul Gurthak told me he was
.
Neshok hadn't enjoyed the
reaming-out mul Gurthak had given him in front of Olderhan and
the two diplomats. Nobody would have, and he'd labored under
the additional suspicion that mul Gurthak intended to leave him
swinging in the wind if Olderhan lodged any formal protests about
Neshok's behavior when he got back to Garth Showma. But he'd
wronged the two thousand. mul Gurthak had simply been covering
his own back, and Neshok's brevet promotion to his present rank
and his assignment as Two Thousand Harshu's senior intelligence
analyst was sufficient proof of mul Gurthak's continuing
confidence in him.
And if it hadn't been for Olderhan's
insistence on extending shardon to that arrogant little
bitch and her husband—and 'Magister Kelbryan's' backing
him up—the two thousand's plan would have worked,
he reflected. We didn't know she'd already managed to learn a
civilized language, but that only would've made it easier
to get her to talk. She'd damned well have told me
anything I wanted her to by the time I got through with
her.
He let the fingertips of one hand
brush the unsleeping eye insignia of the Intelligence Corps on his
collar. He'd taken that off, at mul Gurthak's instructions, before he
ever went to "greet" Olderhan and his prisoners. Aping the part of
a line officer hadn't been all that difficult, however distasteful it
might have been, and the two thousand had hoped a fellow line
officer might have found it easier to separate Olderhan from his
prisoners. And once they'd been separated and "administratively
lost" somewhere at Fort Talon, it would all have turned out to
have been a completely honest case of confused orders at a junior
officer's level. Most unfortunate, of course, but just one of those
things. Neshok had never doubted that Olderhan would have been
furious, even if he'd gotten his prisoners back with only minor
damage, but his own Intelligence superiors would have been quick
to protect him, if only behind the scenes, if he'd managed to
extract vital information first.
Well, that hadn't happened, but
mul Gurthak clearly recognized the debt he owed Neshok for
having made the attempt. That was why he'd been promoted and
assigned to his present duty, which should allow him to acquire at
least as many career points with his superiors.
And one of these days, I'll be in a position to give that
smug, sanctimonious prick Olderhan exactly what he
fucking well deserves, he thought viciously. Yet even as he
thought it, he felt a tingle of remembered fear as he recalled the
cold, fleering contempt in Sir Jasak Olderhan's dark eyes. And the
fact that Olderhan's precious Second Andaran Scouts flunkies had
actually been willing to take on his entire detachment if he'd so
much as laid a finger on that little bitch.
He pushed the thought aside
with a fresh promise of vengeance . . . and
wished he could push aside the memory of a crackling corona of
combat magic ready to strike and the steely-cold promise in
Gadrial Kelbryan's lethal almond eyes, as well.
Unfortunately . . .
Behind him, Two Thousand
Harshu cleared his throat in his patented "get on with it" style, and
Neshok shook himself free of his brooding thoughts.
"Beg pardon, Sir," he said. "I'm
ready, now."
"Good." Harshu's tone added an
unspoken "and it's about time," and Neshok ordered the office's
spellware to dim the lights. Then he tapped his PC with the stylus,
and a moving, living image glowed into being above Harshu's
desk. The fidgeting two thousand stopped fidgeting instantly, as
his fiercely intelligent eyes darted from place to place, carefully
comparing the present image to the ones he'd seen before. As
always, once the keen intellect behind those eyes had a fresh task
to engage it, most of the affected impatience and hyperactivity
disappeared quickly.
"As you can see, Sir, we're still
getting very good imagery," he began.
"Yes, we are," Harshu agreed
thoughtfully. "In fact, are we sure they don't know we are?" His
eyes darted up from the small moving images of Sharonian
soldiers to impale Neshok. "Could they possibly be setting all this
up to show us what they want us to see?"
"No, Sir," Neshok said
confidently, then snorted. "They're still pulling every boat up onto
the island and turning it keel-up before they let anyone cross over
into Hell's Gate." The Arcanans had adopted the Sharonian name
for their contact universe. After all, as the Sharonian diplomat,
Simrath, had pointed out at the time, it was grimly appropriate for
both sides. "It's obvious Master Skirvon's observation is correct.
The stupid, superstitious barbarians don't have a clue how magic
works, so they aren't taking any
chances . . . they think."
"It might not be a bad idea,"
Harshu said almost pleasantly, his eyes returning to the images
before him, "to spend a little less time patting ourselves on our
backs for cleverness and a little more time making certain we
aren't underestimating the other side."
"Yes, Sir. Point taken," Neshok
said just a bit more crisply. Harshu's notoriously short fuse with
subordinates who he thought had screwed up might be as carefully
cultivated as other parts of his reputation. Still, the stories about
what had happened to people who'd really screwed up or
ugly enough to dissuade even Neshok from relying upon his
Intelligence patrons' protection.
"What I meant to say, Sir," he
continued, "is that, as you know, we went to considerable lengths
to convince them that the spell accumulators for the boats have to
be attached to the keels. They haven't even looked inside the
flotation tank under the after thwart, which—in the opinion
of my staff and myself—strongly indicates that they don't
have any idea we've hidden the real movement accumulator in
there. And because they're still turning the boats upside down as a
security measure, they're giving the recon crystals attached to their
bottoms a three-hundred-sixty-degree field of view. It's not as
good in terms of flexibility and total reach as we'd get if we could
actually move them around, or as good as what a gryphon pass
with an RC could give us, and their actual bivouac area is outside
our zone from where the beach the boats. In other ways, though,
it's actually better. The RC is close enough to get a good look at
their fieldworks and their deployments, and it just sits there, which
gives us an excellent opportunity to eavesdrop on anything they're
saying within its scan area, as well."
Harshu glanced at him again,
then nodded in grudgingly approving acceptance.
"Although the boat-mounted
RCs never move," Neshok continued more confidently, "we have
managed six RC walk-throughs." He smiled thinly. "Sending
Master Skirvon's escort in dress uniform was a brilliant idea, Sir. I
wish I'd thought of it myself." It never hurt to show a superior
officer you knew how to give a subordinate credit for good
ideas . . . especially when the
superior officer in question already knew the idea in question had
come from a subordinate. "They'd never seen our dress
uniforms, so they didn't have any reason to suspect that the crystal
mounted on that ridiculous horsehair crest on Fifty Narshu's
helmet is actually a reconnaissance device, not just a particularly
tasteless bit of decoration.
"At any rate, everything Narshu's
RC has picked up only confirms what we're getting from the boat
RCs."
"I see." Harshu frowned
thoughtfully, leaning his folded forearms on his desk. "And is
there confirmation about these two?" He twitched his head at the
two Sharonians under the canvas sunshade at one end of the
portal.
"Yes, Sir." Neshok nodded.
"We're still not certain how they do what they're apparently doing,
but thanks to the translation software Master Skirvon and Two
Thousand mul Gurthak provided, we've definitely confirmed from
their conversation and the chatter of their buddies that they're
some sort of lookouts. And we've also confirmed that whatever it
is they're doing, they can't do it through a portal any more
than we could cast a spell through one. They rotate around the end
of the portal on a quite rigid schedule, apparently to clear the blind
spot the portal creates for them. We've watched them for days
now, and they never deviate by more than a very few minutes from
their set timing."
"I wish we had managed to
determine exactly what it is they're doing," Harshu mused, and
Neshok nodded.
"So do I, Sir, but there's just no
way of guessing how these 'Talents' of theirs work. From what
we've been able to overhear, it sounds as if the Talent this one is
using—" he indicated the smaller of the two Sharonians
"—works sort of like one of our scrying spells. It
isn't the same, obviously. For one thing, they don't need a crystal
to gather the image. And, for another, they appear to be able to
sweep a general volume, rather than needing to know exactly
where whatever they're trying to observe is within that volume.
And, for a third thing—and we're not certain about this one,
Sir; it's based on a couple of fairly cryptic remarks we've
overheard and translated—he appears to be limited
to the ability to detect living creatures."
"I suppose that could make
sense," Harshu said thoughtfully. "If these Talents of theirs are all
some kind of weird mental powers, then perhaps what they're
picking up on is some sort of vibration or mental wave. Wouldn't
get much of that off of a rock, I imagine."
"No, Sir."
"And you've managed to confirm
their detection range, have you?" Harshu inquired.
"Ah, no, Sir," Neshok admitted.
Harshu slanted his eyes sideways, looking back up at the acting
five hundred, and Neshok grimaced. "So far, they haven't actually
referred to their maximum range—not, at least, where any
of our RCs have overheard them."
"That's not so good to hear, Five
Hundred," Harshu observed. "It could have a rather significant
effect on our military options, don't you agree?"
"Yes, Sir." Neshok refocused his
own attention on the display rather than continuing to meet
Harshu's gaze. Then he cleared his throat.
"Actually, Sir, we do have at
least an approximation. Or perhaps I should say a bottom limit at
which we know they can't 'see' us."
Harshu unfolded his arms and
made a "go on" gesture with his right hand.
"As you know, Sir, we've been
taking pains to conceal the existence of our dragons from them.
And while I'm on the subject, Sir, the recorded take from the boat
RCs confirms that they've never even dreamed about any sort of
aerial capability for themselves and don't seen to have a clue that
we have one." Which, he didn't add aloud, just
confirms what utter barbarians they are, doesn't it?
"Apparently they'd been wondering for some time how we got
people in and out from the Second Andarans' base camp through
all that muck and mire. Now that they've seen our boats, they think
they know."
"Well, that's certainly
good to hear."
"Yes, Sir. It is. And the fact that
they don't know about dragons or gryphons clearly indicates that
their lookouts haven't 'seen' our diplomats or their escort being
flown in. We've been landing our people on an islet about forty
miles from the portal and sending them the rest of the way in from
there in the boats. Partly, that was because we needed an excuse to
get the boats' RCs right up to the portal. But, just as importantly,
we wanted to keep our dragons safely out of sight. We hadn't
realized at the time that they had whatever kind of Talent this
lookout of theirs is using—somehow Hundred Olderhan's
shardon neglected to mention its existence to us, for some
odd reason—but Master Skirvon and Five Hundred Klian
agreed that it would be best to err on the side of caution.
Fortunately, it would appear.
"At any rate, at forty miles, they
haven't seen our people arriving. If they had, I'm positive someone
would have remarked on it by now where our RCs could hear it.
That both suggests that the dragons have remained safely unknown
to them, and gives us a limit—forty miles—beyond
which we ought to be safe from detection."
"Forty miles," Harshu
murmured. "Call it thirty minutes for a dragon—twenty
minutes, minimum."
"Yes, Sir. On the other hand, as I
say, that's a minimum safe distance. His actual range for
spotting us may be quite a bit shorter than that."
"And it may not be, too," Harshu
replied tartly.
"No, Sir. As you say," Neshok
agreed. "On the other hand, there is one other point." He paused
until the two thousand looked at him again, then shrugged very
slightly. "From a couple of things our RCs have overheard, while
this fellow appears to be able to . . .
sweep, for want of a better term, an entire volume, and while we
don't really know how large a volume that is, it would seem that
he does have to define the volume pretty carefully. We've watched
him while he's doing whatever it is he's doing, and he sits very
still, with his eyes closed, but his head turns slowly from side to
side, as if he's looking at something behind his eyelids."
"And?" Harshu prompted.
"And he never tilts his head
back, Sir."
Harshu frowned at him for a
moment, and then the two thousand's eyes narrowed slightly.
"So you're suggesting that since
they don't know about dragons, he's not looking up, just
out?"
"That's what I think he's doing,
Sir," Neshok said, and this time he chose not to mention that it
was one of his noncommissioned analysts who'd actually first
spotted the Sharonian lookout's head movements. "If they don't
have any flight capability of their own, it would make a lot of
sense for them to be concentrating on surface threats.
After all, they wouldn't know there was any other kind, would
they?"
"No, they wouldn't," Harshu
agreed slowly.
His eyes were focused on
something else, something only he could see, and they stayed that
way for the better part of two minutes. Then they refocused on
Neshok.
"Anything else? Anything new?"
he asked.
"That's most of the new
information, Sir. I've prepared a complete download for you, of
course. Shall I transfer the file to your PC?"
"Yes, go ahead."
"Yes, Sir."
Neshok arranged the transfer
with brisk efficiency. As he did, he noticed the headers for the
documents Harshu had been working on when he arrived. Troop
strengths and arrival schedules, the acting five hundred noted
without very much surprise.
"There you are, Sir," he said as
the little icon that indicated the file transfers were complete
appeared in both crystals.
"Thank you." Harshu considered
him for a moment or two, then nodded. "Aside from a certain
tendency to denigrate the enemy, that was an excellent brief, Five
Hundred," he said. "Keep up the good
work . . . and try like hell not to let
the fact that you dislike these people lead you into making the
sorts of mistakes contempt produces. Am I clear?"
"Yes, Sir! You are, Sir!" Neshok
said, bracing quickly to attention.
"Good. Carry on, Five Hundred."
"Yes, Sir."
Neshok turned with rather more
than normal military precision and marched out of Harshu's
office. The compliment on the quality of his work had felt
good . . . which, of course, only made
the sting of Harshu's admonition sharper.
Well, the two thousand was
good at that sort of thing. It was one of his hallmarks.
Everybody got a zinger from him every so often, Neshok
reminded himself; far fewer got the compliment which had gone in
front of this one.
He decided to concentrate on
that as he stepped out onto the Fort Rycharn parade ground.
Rycharn wasn't much of a fort,
he thought. About right for that broken down ass-kisser Klian to
command. At the moment, though, it was crowded to the bursting
point and beyond by the scores of dragons thronging its
improvised dragonfield. There were more transports than Neshok
had ever seen in one place in his entire life. The heavy transports'
cargo pods were parked as neatly as possible around the field's
perimeter, but there wasn't room to be very neat about it.
The tactical transports and the battle dragons were based on the
western side of the field, as far away from the fort's palisade and
the troop encampments as they could get. Three of Two Thousand
mul Gurthak's planned four reinforcement waves had arrived
already, and the fourth was due within the next week.
And what happens then, I wonder? Neshok mused,
listening to the sounds of the immensely overcrowded
encampment. Everybody's still being very careful to insist that
no final decision's been made yet. I wonder just how true
that actually is?
He snorted wryly at the thought.
From what mul Gurthak had said to him in his own private
briefing before he was sent out here, especially about the
importance of not allowing the enemy to tighten his grip on Hell's
Gate even further, he was fairly certain what the Fort Talon
commander had in mind. Of course, he could be wrong, and even
if he wasn't, circumstances might have changed—depending
on what Skirvon and Dastiri had been able to accomplish
diplomatically—since Neshok had been sent forward
himself. And there was also the problem that Harshu was
the commander actually on the spot. mul Gurthak couldn't push
Harshu too hard without being rather more direct than Neshok
was pretty sure the Mythalan two thousand wanted to be.
Which, of course, is the reason he sent me out
here, isn't it? A military commander's decisions are always based
on the intelligence available to him. Which means that the
fellow who provides him with that information has a better
chance than most to . . .
shape his probable command decisions.
Commander of Five Hundred
(Acting) Alivar Neshok smiled thinly as he gazed out across the
ranks of dragons, the cargo pods, the white canvas tents of the
waiting troopers, and the rows of field-dragons lined up so neatly
in the artillery parks, and reflected upon the influence which had
come to rest in his hands. It was a heavy responsibility, he told
himself. One which had to be discharged carefully, thoughtfully.
And the fact that it put him in a
position to help kick that sanctimonious, cowardly son-of-a-bitch
Olderhan's gutless plans to just hand the biggest, most important
portal cluster in history over to the enemy right in the balls was
totally beside the point.
Chapter Fifty
"You look unhappy, Five
Hundred."
Sarr Klian looked up. Two
Thousand Harshu sat across the table from him, holding his wine
glass loosely cradled in his right hand. That table was covered with
a white cloth and empty plates, for the two of them had just
finished dining in what had been Klian's sitting room before
Harshu arrived to take command of the steadily growing military
power which had come to be based here at Fort Rycharn. Klian
didn't resent giving up his quarters to the two thousand. Not
precisely, at any rate. He did rather resent giving up his office
space, but he knew that was silly. Harshu was the senior
officer present. He needed the best facilities available, and it was
inevitable that he should have them.
"Unhappy, Sir?" Klian repeated,
and Harshu smiled.
"Sparring for time, are we, Five
Hundred?"
His voice was almost gentle, at
odds with his normal public persona, and he shifted his hand
slightly, tilting his wine glass. The gleaming light elements of the
wall-mounted lamps had been turned down, reducing their normal
brilliance to a level more comfortable for dining, but they were
bright enough to light a red glow in the heart of the glass.
"I suppose I am, Sir," Klian
admitted levelly. He looked across the table into Harshu's eyes.
"It's been my experience that when a superior officer makes that
sort of statement, it's often the prelude to
a . . . counseling session, shall we
say?"
"Ah." Harshu's smile grew
broader, and he cocked his head to one side. "I suppose that's a fair
enough observation, Five Hundred. In this case, though, I'm
genuinely curious about your thoughts. You've been sitting out
here at the sharp end longer than anyone else. I don't say that
automatically gives you any sort of special insight none of the rest
of us can share, but I'm very well aware that I've come waltzing in
and taken over your territory with less than three weeks'
experience on the job, as it were."
"Curious about my thoughts
about what, precisely, Sir?" Klian asked. "If you mean about being
effectively superseded, I don't suppose any commanding officer
worth his salt is ever happy to see that happen. But I'm certainly
not sitting here nursing a sense of resentment over it. That would
be pointless, at best, and stupid, at worst. I'm a five hundred, and
what we're looking at out here right now is a five thousand's
command—maybe even a ten thousand's. Exigencies of
the service or not, there's no way I'd be fitted to command a force
that size, even if I were the senior officer present."
"I think you actually mean that,"
Harshu observed. He sipped a little wine, then shrugged. "I'm
relieved to hear it, too. After all, you're going to be in command
of our logistics node here, no matter what happens. I can think of
very few things better suited to trip someone up in a field
command than having his
logistics . . . creatively tangled, shall
we say, by a resentful subordinate."
"I can assure you, Sir," Klian
said just a bit stiffly, "that it never crossed my mind to—"
"I didn't mean to suggest it had,"
Harshu interrupted. "In fact, I meant to suggest rather the opposite.
However," he set down his wine glass, plucked a roll out to of the
breadbasket between them, and began tearing it into small pieces
and piling the fragments on the rim of his plate, "that wasn't the
question I meant to get at earlier. It seems to me, Five Hundred,
that you don't really approve of our contingency planning. I'd like
to know why."
Klian sat very still for a moment,
then drank from his own wine glass, mostly to buy a little more
time to marshal his thoughts. Then he cleared his throat.
"Two Thousand," he said,
"you're in command. Whether I 'approve' of your contingency
planning or not is really beside the point, isn't it? Since you've
asked, though, there are aspects of your plans—as I
currently understand them, at any rate—that do cause me
some concern."
"Specifically?" Harshu invited.
"Well," Klian sat back in his
chair, folding his hands neatly on the tablecloth and wishing he
didn't feel quite so much like an officer cadet who'd just been
handed a trick question in his third-year tactics class, "I can't fault
anything I've heard about your defensive planning, Sir. I think
you're entirely right that without any equivalent of our
dragons—and while I haven't seen Five Hundred Neshok's
reports to you, I'm inclined to agree that the evidence clearly
suggests they don't have any aerial capability—they'd be at a
hopeless disadvantage trying to fight their way out of that swamp.
They'd have to have a simply enormous advantage in manpower to
slog through that kind of mud and muck—especially
without any sort of spell-powered boats of their own—
while fighting off continuous air attacks, no matter how good
their weapons are.
"And no one could deny your
legitimate responsibility to plan for possible offensive
operations, either." The five hundred shrugged. "We're both
soldiers, Sir. We both know that, ultimately, battles and wars are
won by taking it to the enemy, not simply sitting still and letting
him bring it to us. I guess what concerns me is the feel I'm picking
up from the majority of your officers that they're actually
anticipating offensive operations."
He paused, still looking levelly
at Harshu, and the two thousand gazed back in silence for perhaps
twenty seconds. Then it was Harshu's turn to shrug.
"I don't doubt that they are," he
admitted calmly, and showed his teeth in a thin smile. "The bottom
line, Five Hundred, is that the most important quality any soldier
can have as he goes into battle is the offensive spirit. Even if we
wind up standing totally on the defensive, having the troops
thinking in terms of 'taking it to the enemy,' as you just said, won't
hurt a thing. If we do go on the offense, on the other hand, there
won't be time to turn everyone's thinking around if all we've been
planning for is digging in and holding our ground."
"I can see that, Sir," Klian said in
a neutral tone, and Harshu's smile grew wider.
"But you're still concerned," he
observed. Klian started to say something else, but the two
thousand waved it away. "No, that's all right, Five Hundred. I
asked for your opinion, and I really want it. And I don't think your
concerns are limited to the troops' attitude."
"Sir," Klian leaned forward
slightly, "I guess I'm worried on two levels.
"First, however good our
intelligence on their tactical dispositions right at the swamp
portal, or even between there and Fallen Timbers, may be, we
know literally nothing about these people's real military power.
We don't have any clear indication of what their heavy weapons'
capabilities may be, how close to the point of contact their major
military bases may be, or how big they are. I know the current
intelligence assessments are that they're not anticipating
reinforcement within the next several weeks, but what does that
actually tell us? We don't know anything about how big the
reinforcement they are expecting might be, or what might
be in the pipeline behind it. Even if we managed to punch
right through everything they've got in the immediate vicinity,
what happens when we run into their reserves? How does the fact
that we'd presumably have better reconnaissance capabilities,
thanks to our dragons and gryphons, play off against the superior
communications these Voices of theirs give them? And
how do these 'Talents' of theirs—including any we can't
evaluate at all, because we've never seen them in action—
play off against the capabilities our Gifts give us?
"Second, if Hundred Olderhan is
right, and I believe he is, then all of this started out of a
misunderstanding. A monumental fuck-up by Olderhan's second-
in-command, followed by a bad judgment call on my own part,
and what looks like terminal stupidity on the part of Hundred
Thalmayr. If that's what it was, if neither side deliberately set out
to create the situation, then surely the possibility of negotiating
our way out of it really exists. I don't want to see that thrown
away. And, if I may speak completely frankly, I'm concerned about
how the other side would perceive any further offensive military
action on our part. Especially after we initiated the
diplomatic contact between us."
"It may surprise you to hear this,
Five Hundred, but I think your concerns are well taken," Harshu
said. Klian felt his eyebrows inch upwards, despite himself, and
the two thousand chuckled harshly.
"I know I'm considered a loose
dragon," he said. "And there's probably some truth to that, if I'm
going to be honest. But I'm not blind to the risks and the potential
costs you're talking about. The problem is that I have my
instructions from Two Thousand mul Gurthak, and I can't allow
myself to be paralyzed by all of the perfectly good arguments for
doing nothing.
"The tactical concerns you've
just put your finger on have given me the odd sleepless night since
mul Gurthak handed this particular hot potato to me," he
continued. "Trust me, I've thought about them a lot.
"At the moment, I'm inclined to
think that the combination of our mobility and reconnaissance
advantages would more than compensate for their Voices. We
don't know how many of these Voices they've actually got, how
far down through their formations they'd be available. Do they
have them only at the battalion level? Or at the company level? I
find it difficult to believe that they have them all the way down to
the platoon level, and as I understand it, it takes a Voice at
either end for the whole system to work. So in an actual combat
situation, I suspect that our ability to see further and more clearly,
and the information that makes available to our commanders,
would give us what amounted to a shorter command and control
loop, even if we did have to send physical messages back and
forth. Now, in a strategic sense, that certainly wouldn't be
the case, and they'd probably have an edge in orchestrating troop
movements at the operational level, as well. But how important
would that be if we dominated in the tactical zone? How
much use is a communication advantage, if you simply don't know
what the other side is doing . . . and
the other side does know that about you?"
He shrugged, as if to
acknowledge the fact that neither one of them had the answer to
that question.
"On the other hand, from the size
of the forces they've got forward-deployed, and from the
conversations our recon crystals have recorded, it seems pretty
obvious that these people's transportation capabilities are even
more inferior to ours than we'd originally thought. They're clearly
dependent on unenhanced animal transport, and they're talking in
terms of literally months before any substantial
reinforcements can arrive. From the things they've said, however,
they're also anticipating that those reinforcements will be
substantial when they do arrive.
"Obviously, there are still some
really big holes in our own ability to translate what they're saying.
Even when we get the words, we don't always have the
context to make sense out of them. Still, it's clear that they're
bringing up a lot of combat power. Quite possibly more than
we've been able to assemble. But they won't be able to get it into
position for some time, whereas ours is almost completely into
position now. And, of course, there's a corollary to that, because
the striking power we'll have concentrated here by the end of next
week represents everything currently available in this entire chain.
We're going to be as strong as we're ever going to get—at
least for the foreseeable future—very quickly now, whereas
they apparently have substantial additional reinforcements ready to
move in behind the ones they're currently expecting, as you
yourself have just suggested. In other words, we're probably
looking at the most favorable balance of forces we're likely to see,
at least until the Commandery finds out what's going on and starts
sending in additional forces, and that's going to take months yet.
"And, finally, there's the
difficulty that what we're talking about here is the biggest, and
almost certainly the most valuable, portal cluster in our history.
From some of the things they've said, it seems apparent the same
thing is true for them, and at the moment, they've got possession
of it. If we had it, how quick would we be to give
it up, or to share it? Especially with someone we regarded as
murderous barbarians? Which," the two thousand's eyes suddenly
bored into Klian's across the table, "is precisely how they
think about us, judging from the RCs' take."
Klian looked back at his superior
and wished he had an answer for those last two questions. Or that
he quite dared to ask how important the possession of any portal
cluster was compared to the possibility of a general war with
another inter-universal civilization.
"I have to balance all of those
questions and considerations against Two Thousand mul
Gurthak's instructions and my own evaluation of the situation,"
Harshu continued after moment. "And, despite my loose-dragon
reputation, I'll be honest and admit that it scares the tripes out of
me. But that doesn't mean I don't have to do it anyway, now does
it?"
"No, Sir. I guess not," Klian
conceded. He wanted to ask just what Harshu's instructions from
mul Gurthak were, but that information hadn't been volunteered,
and he knew it wouldn't be.
"As far as the potential
diplomatic consequences are concerned," Harshu said, "I'm like
you, Five Hundred—a soldier. I was never trained as a
diplomat, and I've never wanted to be one. Master Skirvon and
Master Dastiri, on the other hand, are diplomats, and I
assure you that I'm giving very serious consideration to their
advice and conclusions. In his original briefing, Two Thousand
mul Gurthak made the point to me that it would be foolish to
neglect the resource they offer, and I have no intention of doing
so."
Klian nodded, suppressing yet
another of those nagging questions he wanted to ask but couldn't.
He strongly suspected that Skirvon and Dastiri were making more
than purely diplomatic assessments of the other side, and he
wondered how much influence those "advice and
conclusions" were going to have with Harshu.
Silence fell for several long
moments, and then Harshu inhaled sharply and gave his head a
little shake.
"Whatever we may end up doing,
Five Hundred, I have no intention of doing anything until
the rest of our assigned strength arrives three days from now. And
Master Skirvon and Master Dastiri are due to report back to us
here for 'consultations' the day after that. At this time, I can
honestly tell you that I definitely have not decided in favor of
launching any sort of offensive."
Klian's shoulders started to
relax, but Harshu wasn't quite finished.
"I haven't firmly decided
against it yet, either," he said. "I can't, not until I've heard what
Skirvon and Dastiri have to say about these Sharonians' current
attitude and fundamental posture. But," he looked into Klian's
eyes very, very levelly, "I can't possibly justify delaying my
decision much longer. Our logistics situation is going to be
difficult enough, just trying to hold all of our dragons and troops
here and keep them fed somehow. You know that better
than anyone else. And even if that weren't true, if offensive
operations seem unavoidable, then it would be criminally
negligent of me to wait for the reinforcements they're expecting to
actually get here."
"I wonder if Chava would accept
a dinner invitation?" Zindel XXIV wondered aloud, as he gazed
out across the Great Palace's immaculately landscaped grounds.
The sun was high in a clear blue sky, and a not so small army of
gardeners moved steadily across the grounds. The Great Palace
and its gardens were so vast that not a hint of the normal city
noises of Tajvana were audible here in the sitting room of his
palatial suite, and he wished passionately that the realities behind
that almost pastoral façade matched its appearances.
"I rather doubt he would, Your
Majesty," Shamir Taje replied from behind him. "I may not think
very much of the man's intelligence, and even less of his
morals—assuming he has any—but he does seem to
have quite well developed survival instincts."
"Are you suggesting he might
think I was inviting him here with ulterior motives, Shamir?" the
Emperor demanded in injured tones, turning away from the
window to look at his old friend.
"Oh, certainly not, Your
Majesty," Taje said piously, and the Emperor chuckled,
"Well, you're probably right. He
wouldn't come. And, I suppose that if I'm going to be honest, I
would have ulterior motives. Just think of all the room for
unmarked graves the Palace gardens offer. Just yesterday, I noticed
a bed of flowers that looks like it could use some fertilizer."
Zindel's tone was light; the
expression in his eyes wasn't.
"Your Majesty," the First
Councilor said, "I wish, with all my heart, that we could simply
ignore Chava. And I have to admit that some of our allies'
suggestions that we should simply leave Uromathia out of any
new world government are very tempting. Given time, the
Uromathians would have to recognize how much their isolation
was costing them, in both political and economic terms, and one
of Chava's successors would undoubtedly find himself forced to
reach some sort of rapprochement with us. Unfortunately, his
most probable successor is one of those loathsome sons of his,
which probably wouldn't be all that much of an improvement. And
even that presupposes Chava would be willing to settle for that
sort of ostracization long enough for a successor to enter the
picture at all."
"And," Zindel said grimly, "it
also overlooks the fact that we may just find ourselves needing
Uromathia's military capabilities quite badly."
Taje started to say something,
then visibly changed his mind. The Emperor looked at him for a
moment, then turned back to the window, clasping his hands
behind them as he returned his gaze to the gardens.
"Go ahead, Shamir," he said.
"Your Majesty, they are
talking to us at Fallen Timbers," Taje pointed out to his Emperor's
back.
"I'm aware of that. And I'm
aware also that the analysts and pundits are having a field day with
it. And, believe me, no one in the entire multiverse could more
fervently hope that something comes of these negotiations."
The Emperor's voice was calm,
but his expression was grim as he watched birds fluttering through
the grounds groves of trees and imagined how his falcon,
Charaeil, would have reacted to all those tasty treats.
It's a pity I can't invite her to dine on Chava, instead, he thought. And then, despite himself, he smiled.
Assuming, of course, that Finena would be willing to share.
Then his smile faded, and he
looked back over his shoulder at Taje. The First Councilor could
see the same peaceful, tranquil scene outside the window, but
there was something else entirely in his Emperor's eyes.
Something dark and terrible.
"I want us to settle this without
anybody else getting killed, Shamir. But I'm Calirath. And in here,"
he tapped his temple, "what I've Glimpsed doesn't include a
peaceful resolution."
"Your Majesty," Taje said gently,
"not all Glimpses come to pass."
"But very few which haven't
proven accurate have been this strong," Zindel countered. "And
don't forget Andrin." He shook his head. "I haven't been saying her
Talent is stronger than mine simply to bolster her stature in the
Privy Council's eyes, you know. It is stronger, gods help
her. It's not as developed as mine—she simply hasn't had the
life experience to train it the way mine's been trained. But it's
strong, Shamir. Strong."
His eyes were darker than ever,
and his jaw tightened as he stared at something only he and his
daughter could See. Then they refocused on the First Councilor.
"Peaceful coexistence isn't what
she's Glimpsed, either," he said.
"But even if that's true, when do
you and she See it happening?" Taje asked. The Emperor quirked
an eyebrow, and the First Councilor shrugged. "Even if these
negotiations only buy us a few years—even just a few
additional months—they'll be worth it, Your Majesty," he
pointed out. "As you've been telling everyone for the last month
and a half, we have a monumental task in front of us just to
prepare for this sort of conflict. Every day we can buy could be
invaluable."
"That's true enough," Zindel
conceded. "Especially," he added grimly, "with Chava dragging his
godsdamned feet this way."
"Well, at least he's finally stated
what have to have been his real terms all along."
"I know." Zindel's expression
changed subtly. Taje knew he would never have been able to
describe the change to anyone else, yet it was instantly
recognizable to someone who knew the Emperor as well as he did.
It was the expression of a weary, worried father, not a nation's
ruler.
"I know," Zindel repeated
quietly, "and I wish to all the gods that I could spare Janaki this."
"Your Majesty, you don't have to
accept," Taje said. "We can send it back to the Committee on
Unification with counter proposals of our own. Whatever he may
think, Chava isn't really the sole arbiter of this process, you know.
Or we could take Ronnel's advice and simply ignore Chava
completely."
"Don't tempt me, Shamir,"
Zindel said grimly. He turned back to the window once again,
letting his eyes feast on the peacefulness and calm. Yet even that
small pleasure was flawed, because it was his job—his and
his family's—to see to it that that peacefulness and calm
were preserved. He wished he could be certain it was a job they
could do. And he wished, almost as strongly, that there were some
way he could spare his son the price of that preservation.
And how many godsdamned generations of our family have
wished the same thing? he asked himself in a rare burst of
self-pity. The question hovered in the back of his brain, but no
sign of it colored his voice as he went on.
"As you've just said, we need all
the time we can buy. I can't possibly justify wasting more of it in
ultimately pointless maneuvers trying to avoid what has to be
done. Chava's traded away a lot of bargaining points to get to this
final demand—enough of them that is "reasonableness" has
actually managed to sway a hefty minority of the delegates into
actively espousing it on his behalf. Not only that, but this
campaign of his of exhuming every single bone anyone's ever had
to pick with Ternathia hasn't been totally useless from his
perspective, either. He doesn't need a majority to spike the wheel
of any modification of the Act he doesn't like, only a big enough
minority."
"Of course he doesn't, Your
Majesty," Taje agreed. "On the other hand, if you do decide to
accept his terms on behalf of Ternathia, you've still got to get our
allies in the Conclave to agree to it. I'm not at all sure that's going
to be a simple proposition."
"You're thinking about Ronnel, I
see," Zindel said dryly, and shook his head with a wry smile as he
considered the Farnalian Emperor. "I sometimes wish Ronnel
weren't such a throwback to his ancestors. I can just see him
charging the shield wall, foaming at the mouth, bellowing war
cries, and whirling his ax around his head as he comes!"
"He's not quite that bad,
Your Majesty," Taje protested, and Zindel snorted.
"He's exactly that bad,"
he corrected, "and he hates Chava with a pure and blinding
passion. Of course, he's had more actual contact with Chava than
we have, since he shares that section of border with Uromathia
near the Scurlis. He hasn't told me exactly what Chava's done, but
I've had enough reports from others to have a pretty shrewd idea.
And Junni of Eniath's told me quite a bit—more, actually,
than I suspect he realizes.
"So I understand why Ronnel's
so passionately opposed to any sort
of . . . accommodation with
Uromathia. And if he thinks he could be any more opposed than I
am to the notion of sharing grandchildren with Chava, he's sadly
mistaken. But ultimately, he's going to have to swallow it, just
like I am. We can't afford to split Sharona between Chava and his
supporters and all the rest of us. And let's be honest here,
Shamir—if we weren't the ones Chava was making that
demand of, we'd probably think it wasn't unreasonable in
light of the actual balance of power between Ternathia and
Uromathia."
Taje had no choice but to nod.
"Very well." Zindel never turned
away from the window. "Inform Representative Kinshe that
Ternathia formally accepts Uromathia's proposed amendment of
the draft Act of Unification. I suppose," his mouth twitched with
just a trace of genuine humor, "that the crown of Sharona is worth
a Uromathian daughter-in-law."
Chapter Fifty-One
"HISTORIC VOTE DUE
TODAY"
Thaminar Kolmayr barely
glanced at the banner headline on the morning issue of the
Gulf Point Daily News their new press secretary had brought
in. He didn't need to do any more than that, because he was
intimately familiar with the story beneath that headline. Indeed,
he'd gotten depressingly good at political analysis over the past
dreary, endless weeks.
Thaminar had never been a
particularly political person before, but since the murder of their
daughter, he and Shalassar had followed the news coming out of
Tajvana with quiet, grieving intensity, for reasons very different
from those motivating most other Sharonians. Everyone else was
worried about who would rule them, and how their lives would
change. Thaminar couldn't bear the thought of more change in
their lives—not after the traumatic savagery of the "change"
they'd already endured—but he knew it was inevitable. And
however little interested he might have been in change for change's
sake, he and Shalassar were profoundly interested in justice.
It had hurt desperately, seeing
their daughter's photograph and name splashed across newspaper
and magazine pages, or embedded in the telepathic Voicecasts.
None of it carried anything approaching the sheer agony of
Shaylar's final Voice message, but neither he nor Shalassar had the
heart any longer to View those Voicecasts. Using their Voices at
all, these last two months, kept bringing back the searing pain of
their daughter's death. So they read the newspapers, instead, and
told themselves they'd almost gotten used to seeing little Shaylar's
picture everywhere they turned.
But the endless, aching grief had
not yet passed, and he'd come to realize it never would truly heal.
It had faded enough to let them pick up enough of the shattered
pieces of their lives to move forward again, yet the pain remained,
wrapped around the jagged, empty void her death had left in their
hearts, and impossible to forget or assuage. To lose a child, no
matter how, was agony. To literally know how she'd died,
to have experienced with her the horror and terror of her final
minutes of life and yet been forever unable to so much as touch
her one last time . . .
Shalassar came in from the
kitchen, carrying their breakfast on a tray. He wasn't especially
hungry—he seldom was, these days—yet the
steaming scent of the coffee was a comforting reminder of normal
home life that he welcomed gratefully. They clung to such things,
little rituals, familiar things done a thousand ordinary times, as a
way of holding themselves together and getting them through each
day.
Shalassar glanced at the headline.
Just beneath it was yet another black-bordered photograph of
Shaylar between the photographs of the only two men in the entire
Conclave who truly mattered. The Conclave's delegates had
already voted to create a united Empire of Sharona based on the
Ternathian model and with Zindel chan Calirath as Emperor.
Uromathia's refusal to accept the outcome of that vote as binding
upon it had created an enormous amount of anger, but no one had
really been surprised. What had been at least a little surprising was
the fact that Emperor Chava had managed to convince half a dozen
smaller nations to stand with Uromathia by appealing to supposed
ancient Ternathian wrongs.
Actually, Thaminar reflected, it probably has less to
do with 'convincing' them to go along with him than it does with
finding ways of threatening them into going along. He's supposed to be good at that, after all, and every one of
them borders on Uromathia.
However he'd gotten their
support, it had given his protests an added degree of legitimacy.
Thaminar didn't much care to admit that, but he couldn't deny it,
either. Whether or not anyone liked it, Chava Busar and his
adherents had positioned themselves well behind their single
"reasonable demand." Now it remained to be seen whether the
nations which had already accepted Zindel of Ternathia as their
new world emperor were prepared to accept the amendment Chava
had demanded.
"Do you think they'll accept?"
Shalassar murmured, biting her lip gently as she set out the
breakfast neither of them truly felt like eating.
"I don't know," Thaminar
admitted. She paused, a plate of cut melon slices poised in her
hand above the polished tabletop in the bright, sunlit dining nook,
and looked up at him, and he shrugged. "I would have thought that
when Zindel accepted in Ternathia's name that that would have
been the end of it. But apparently Chava is even less popular than
I'd thought, difficult though that is to believe."
Shalassar surprised him with a
slight smile, then shook her head.
"Do you really think there's
significant opposition? Or is this another example of the papers
needing to play up the drama to help circulation?"
"My dear, that's pretty cynical,"
Thaminar observed. "Not that it couldn't be true, too."
He smiled back at her, but the
truth was that he didn't really know what was going through the
minds of the men and women in Tajvana. On the one hand, it
seemed remarkably cut and dried; on the other, some of the
delegates—the reports suggested that Emperor Ronnel of
Farnalia had probably had a little something to do with it—
had dug in their heels in stubborn resistance. Apparently the
thought of finding themselves one day living under the rule of
Chava Busar's grandchild was more than they could stomach. They
were a minority of the total Conclave, but they also included many
of the strongest original supporters of the concept of a world
empire. Besides, the Act of Unification had required a
supermajority for its original ratification. The same supermajority
would be required for any amendment of the original Act, and
there were enough holdouts to put final approval very much up
for grabs.
"In the end," he said, "I suppose
it depends on whether or not Ronnel goes on holding out.
According to everything I've read, he's one of Zindel's closest
allies on almost everything else. I can't believe he won't eventually
come around to Zindel's thinking on this issue. It's not as if it's his son who's going to have to marry one of Chava's
daughters, anyway."
"Oh? And what about Fyysel?
How reasonable was he when Chava's name was placed in
nomination?" Shalassar challenged, and Thaminar grimaced.
She had a point, he conceded.
Fyysel had strongly supported Halidar Kinshe's original proposal.
But when Chava tried to put his own candidacy forward, Fyysel
had spoken for his subjects' blazing outrage at the very suggestion.
If, the King of Shurkhal had said bluntly, the world were stupid
enough to ramrod Uromathia's ruler down Shurkhal's throat, it
would discover that Shurkhali honor still burned hot and that
Shurkhali men and women still knew how to fight a war.
Thaminar hadn't even tried to
keep track of the number of times he'd read or heard the phrase
"Death before Uromathia!" in his kingdom's newspapers and
public debates. He'd been in total agreement with the sentiment,
and he'd been well aware, through news reports, that Uromathia
had done everything in its power to stir up old and vicious hatreds
of Ternathia amongst those nations she'd once conquered in an
effort to generate some sort of counterbalancing backlash against
Zindel.
Despite the miserable failure of
Chava's effort to put his own candidacy forward, he had succeeded
in energizing a vociferous lunatic fringe almost everywhere
outside the current-day boundaries of Ternathia. Fortunately, that
fringe had found itself increasingly marginalized as the debate had
raged. And as Zindel had emerged more and more strongly as a
reasonable, moderate-minded, honorable man who
steadfastly refused to allow his own allies to ram his
candidacy down anyone's throat, the tide had shifted decisively in
his favor.
Yet it remained to be seen
whether or not Ternathia's ruler could talk his own
"allies"—including King Fyysel—into accepting an
arrangement which would guarantee Chava Busar's
dynastic grasp on the crown of Sharona.
"I think, in the end, they'll have
to accept," he said finally. "If Zindel is willing, how can
they refuse? They intend to make him the Emperor of all Sharona.
Are they going to start right out by telling him he doesn't have the
right to make this sort of decision for his own family?" Thaminar
shook his head. "That's insane."
"And people don't regularly get
insane where Chava is concerned?" Shalassar shot back.
"I don't have any easy answers
for you, love," he said. "I wish I did. I wish I still believed
in easy answers. But the only way we're going to find out is to
wait until the votes are counted."
"I know, I know," Shalassar said,
and managed to smile at him. He smiled back at her, then folded
the paper and deliberately set it aside as she began spooning
melon, grapes, and dates onto his plate. He wished that he could
put his worries away as easily as he could discard the newspaper,
but that wasn't going to happen. Today's vote was so critical that
neither of them really wanted to think about it, but he
knew they weren't going to be able to avoid it.
Which didn't mean they wanted
both going to try to pretend they could.
"Do you have any delegations
coming in today?" he asked, deliberately turning away from the
vote in Tajvana and concentrating on their own lives, instead.
Shalassar gave him another
smile, but he felt the terrible tension in her through their marriage
bond. It was just as hard for her to let go of the Unification vote as
it was for him.
"I'm not expecting any," she said,
shaking her head. "That doesn't mean the bell won't ring anyway,
of course."
Her smile turned a little less
forced as she added the qualification. An ambassador to aquatic
sentients couldn't do her job the way other diplomats did theirs,
and Shalassar's life—and that of her family—had
always reflected that inescapable reality.
Human-to-human ambassadors'
jobs were almost boringly easy in comparison. They simply
received written, verbal, or Voice messages about meeting dates,
times, and places, then went and had them. They could actually
calculate their calendars, at least for a day or so in advance.
The ambassadors assigned to
serve the great apes—the mountain gorillas, chimpanzees,
orangutans, baboons, some of the higher monkey species, and so
on—lived far lewith ifss organized lives. They couldn't
expect comfortable quarters in the fashionable, diplomatic
sections of Sharona's capital cities, because they had to live close
to the populations they served. So they ended up parked out on the
fringes of the wilderness areas set aside for the
apes . . . which allowed primate
emissaries to simply walk up to their houses and knock on the
door whenever they felt like it. Which they were notoriously prone
to do. The apes were much less interested in the sort of formal,
regimented protocols and scheduling humans preferred.
More often, of course, contact
with the apes was actually initiated from the human side. The
human ambassador would find himself compelled to trek out into
the wilderness, seeking out the population of apes affected by a
proposed development in their area—a construction site,
road, or mine—in order to ask the apes' permission to build
on their territory.
Sometimes no permission was
forthcoming, but those cases tended to be the exception, not the
rule. Usually, some sort of quid pro quo could the arrived
at. Sometimes the agreements hammered out provided for moving
the whole clan into an unoccupied region capable of sustaining
them. Sometimes all it took was a gift of technology to help the
clan improve its standard of living. More than one large cat had
been unpleasantly surprised by sword-wielding chimps protecting
their young and infirm, and most of the clans loved steel axheads
and saws. Other clans had acquired access to medicines and
Healers, paid for by the private developer or government
negotiating the treaty.
Word of that sort of agreement
generally spread to other clans in the region. Thaminar and
Shalassar had smiled over one news story, in particular. The
Nishani chimps had allowed mines to be developed in their clan's
territory in exchange for medical care. Not to be outdone, the
neighboring Minarti chimpanzee clan had plied their
telepathic ambassador with questions about what humans might
need or want from them. Once they'd discovered that
several varieties of rare medicinal herbs which grew in profusion
in their territory could be found virtually nowhere else, they'd
offered to exchange them for the same medical care.
Horticulturists had been
imported to coach the Minarti clan on propagation techniques
designed to promote a cultivated supply of the herbs, rather than
deplete the wild sources. The delighted chimpanzees had settled
down to enjoy their improved health care, tending the plants upon
which it depended, and everyone had been quite satisfied by the
arrangement.
It was all very
human-like . . . which was one of the
reasons it had amused Shalassar and Thaminar so much, since
Shalassar's own experiences had been rather different.
For one thing, even chimpanzees
had a far better developed sense of time—by human
standards, at least—than the cetaceans did. There was, quite
literally, no way to predict what hour of the day or night a whale
or dolphin might suddenly come seeking the human ambassador.
The denizens of the sea lived at an entirely different pace, and in a
totally different environment, from humanity or its close cousins,
and their perceptions and interests were shaped accordingly. If the
cetaceans had even been aware of the Minarti clan's activities at
all, they would have thought the entire business was unutterably
boring.
Most of the land-dwelling
sentients of Sharona (including the majority of humans) felt sorry
for and smugly superior to the cetaceans, which had no hands and
couldn't use human technology for much of anything. Most
cetaceans, on the other hand, didn't think about the apes at all,
except to feel sorry for and smugly superior to the hapless
primates (including the majority of humans) who were stuck on
dry land and unable to exploit a full three-quarters of their home
planet's surface. They were totally disinterested in the goings-on
of chimpanzees and mountain gorillas, although they'd been
forced to modify that attitude where the humans who routinely
crossed their home waters were involved.
Human beings might be unable
to do much more than barely scratch the shallows of the cetaceans'
endless oceans, but they did exploit at least some of the same
territory. And since the emergence of Talents among them, it had
been the humans who had initiated contact. No one—
Shalassar included—quite understood how cetaceans
maintained their historical record, but the fact that they did was
beyond dispute. And because they did, they remembered the days
in which even the greatest and most intelligent of them had been
no more than one more food source for
humanity . . . and how that had
changed.
There were those, among the
cetaceans, who remained wary of, even hostile towards, humanity
because of things which had happened thousands upon thousands
of years ago. More of them, though, remembered that humanity
had altered its actions once it realized that it was dealing with
other intelligent species. And even those who remained
wary, recognized that at least some contact with human beings
was inescapable.
That was where ambassadors
like Shalassar stepped into the picture. She'd spent her life
establishing contacts with the cetaceans, and even more than the
ambassadors to the apes, she'd discovered that the nonhumans
with whom she dealt had become the very center of her life and
career. She wasn't simply their official conduit to land-dwelling
humanity; she and her family had made friendships among the
great whales, the dolphins and the porpoises, building intensely
personal bridges across the inter-species gap.
Still, she was an
ambassador, which meant she had more than a merely personal
interest in the outcome of today's vote. She had a professional
interest, as well, because if Zindel chan Calirath did, indeed,
become the Emperor of a united Sharona, he would also become
Shalassar's ultimate superior. In essence, she'd find herself
working for him, as his representative to the cetaceans,
rather than for the Kingdom of Shurkhal. Which meant that
somehow she'd have to find a way to explain to those aquatic
intelligences just what sort of bizarre political convolutions those
peculiar bipeds were up to now.
That thought brought her back to
the vote once again, and she glanced at the clock on the mantle. It
was nearly time for the SUNN Voicecast from Tajvana, and she
suddenly felt Thaminar's arms wrap themselves around her from
behind. She closed her eyes and leaned back against him, clinging
to the love pouring through their marriage bond like another, even
stronger set of arms, and he kissed the side of her neck.
"Let's go out to the beach," he
said gruffly. "I don't want to stay inside."
Shalassar nodded, and they
walked outside. They moved well down the beach from the house,
past the official Embassy with its dock and bell, to a favorite spot
well shaded by palms. Then they sat down on a blanket between
the endless sweep of sea and sky. Shalassar sat in front of her
husband, leaning back against the solidness of him, and treasured
the cherishing strength of the arms about her.
Out here, there was enough
sunlight and wind and sky to make the ache of loss feel smaller
than it did enclosed by walls and a ceiling. They'd been spending a
lot of time out here, in recent weeks, and Shalassar sighed as she
leaned her head back against his chest. Memories slipped into their
shared awareness. They saw Shaylar skipping down the beach,
playing with her older brothers, building castles in the sand and
hunting for shells. They saw her laughing in the surf, riding on the
back of one of the dolphins who'd come as an emissary to the
Embassy.
They sat there for a long time,
watching the birds wheeling overhead, listening to their
inexpressibly lonely cries as they drifted against the vast infinity of
sea and sky. Shalassar's people believed that the human soul rose
like a seabird after death, singing its way into the sky in search of
its final resting place in the heavens, out in the endless vastness of
the ether where the gods dwelt. . . .
Shurkhali believed the soul was
like a grain of the endless sands that swept across their arid
homeland. When a Shurkhali died, his soul would be blown, like
those grains of sand, back into the great drifts of souls that
marched across the face of heaven, like the dunes of sand blowing
across the face of Shurkhal. The soul of a person found worthy
would be swept up and placed like a jewel in the diadem of
heaven, to shine as a beacon to guide others on their way home.
Whether her journey had ended
as a bird singing its way to heaven, or as a star shining in the
diadem of the gods, Shaylar's parents had to believe their daughter
had found the peace and happiness reserved for those who had
lived life in joy and service to others. Surely her final action,
safeguarding every living soul in Sharona by destroying the maps
that might have led her killers here, had earned their child a place
in the arms of the gods.
"Do you think Ronnel is
really on our side?" Ekthar Shilvass murmured quietly in
Shamir Taje's ear.
Andrin knew she hadn't been
supposed to overhear the Internal Affairs Councilor's question,
but she'd always had remarkably acute hearing. And, she had to
admit, she found Shilvass' inquiry well taken. The Emperor of
Farnalia was on his feet once more, his eyes crackling with fury,
as he rebutted the comments of yet another of Chava Busar's
allies.
He'd been doing a lot of that
over the past several hours, as early morning turned into late
afternoon, she reflected.
Taje's lips twitched in what
could have been amusement or irritated agreement—or
both, Andrin supposed—but the First Councilor didn't
respond. Perhaps he was too well aware of all of the attention
focused on the Ternathian delegation as the debate raged onward.
Andrin wished he'd responded anyway, and, after a moment, she
decided to take advantage of her own youthfulness. She didn't do
it very often, but she was barely seventeen years old. There
were times when being a teenager allowed her a degree of latitude
the official adults around her were denied.
"Papa," she said quietly, looking
up at her father in the chair beside hers, "why is Emperor Ronnel
kicking up such a fuss?"
Zindel chan Calirath found
himself restraining an abrupt temptation to burst into deep, rolling
laughter. "Such a fuss" was precisely the right word for what his
old friend was doing at the moment, although he rather doubted
that anyone except his Andrin would have described it with such
succinct accuracy. It took him a few seconds to be sure he had his
voice under control, then he looked down at her and shook his
head slightly.
"Ronnel is just a
bit . . . stubborn," he said, with
massive understatement. "To put it bluntly, he doesn't like Chava,
he doesn't trust Chava, and he doesn't want Chava
anywhere near the imperial succession. Not in any empire that
he belongs to, at any rate."
"But if you don't object to it,
then how can he?" she asked. "I mean, it doesn't seem very
logical."
"Politics often aren't
logical, 'Drin," he replied. "People think with their emotions at
least as much as they do with their brains—probably more, I
often think. Part of the art of ruling is to recognize that. To allow
for it when it's likely to work against you, and to figure out how
to use that same tendency when it can help to accomplish
the things you have to accomplish.
"At the moment, though, Ronnel
is convinced—in some cases for some pretty emotional
reasons—that he has a lot of perfectly rational reasons to
hate and distrust Chava. And he does, actually. To be honest,
most people who know Chava have reasons to hate and
distrust him."
He considered telling her about
his intelligence reports on Chava's use of terror tactics against
suspected opponents among his own
people . . . and against his neighbors,
as well. The "brigandage" which no one could ever quite stamp
out in the mountains and valleys along his borders had been
inexplicably on the upsurge over the last couple of
decades—a period which just happened to coincide with his
accession to the throne. And for some peculiar reason, it appeared
to be directed primarily against people the Uromathian Emperor
didn't like very much. That was bad enough, but there were other,
still darker reports which even Ternathian Imperial Intelligence
hadn't been able to definitely confirm or rebut.
He thought about those reports
as he looked down into his daughter's clear, sea-gray eyes, and
decided not to share them. Someday he might have to, but that day
had not arrived yet, and for all of her strength, she was still only a
girl. His girl, and the father in him decided that just this
once he would shelter her a little longer.
"No one is ever likely to confuse
Chava with one of the paladins out of the old tales," he said
instead. "Ronnel—and some of the other delegates—
aren't about to forget that. And, to be perfectly honest, I suspect
that the fact that Ronnel is one of my closer friends has something
to do with his present attitude."
Andrin looked puzzled, and he
squeezed her shoulder gently.
"I've told Ronnel this is how it
has to be," he told her. "But he's not at all convinced that it's how I
want it to be. Which is fair enough," he conceded, "since if
I had any choice at all, I certainly wouldn't do something like this
to Janaki! But the point is that Ronnel is convinced I made my
decision for reasons of state, and he's furious at the thought of
seeing me backed into this sort of corner by someone like Chava.
And don't forget, he's Janaki's godfather, as well. Do think he
really wants to see Janaki with Chava Busar as a father-in-law?"
Andrin shook her head with a
grimace, and Zindel shrugged.
"To be perfectly honest, neither
do I. But we don't seem to have a great deal of choice, and I know
your brother, 'Drin. Once everything was explained to him, he'd
make exactly the same decision I've made. Getting back to your
question, though, it's the combination of Ronnel's own reasons to
despise Chava, coupled with the fact that he's trying to 'defend' me
from a decision he feels has been forced upon me, which accounts
for his decision to oppose me on this particular issue. I did say,"
he reminded her, "that politics often aren't logical."
"But if this is
necessary—?" she said, and he shrugged once again.
"Ronnel and I differ on just how
necessary it is," he said. "I think we need Uromathia included from
the outset. And I think we need to do it in a way which makes it
perfectly clear to everyone that we've made an extra effort to
accommodate Chava's reasonable demands. I think we can't afford
to leave an excluded Uromathia sitting out there like some sort of
canker, distracting us while we're trying to gear up for a major war
against the Arcanans. And if we're going to include Uromathia, I
want to do it in a way which cuts the legs out from under any
future attempt on Chava's part to argue that we didn't meet him at
least halfway.
"Ronnel's view is that the
Conclave's already approved Unification and already approved my
election as Emperor. As far as he's concerned, the rest of Sharona
can get along quite handily without Uromathia. In fact, I think he'd
just as soon see Uromathia excluded in order to keep Chava as far
away as possible from the levers of power. And the news that the
Arcanans have initiated negotiations leaves Ronnel feeling less of
a sense of urgency than he felt when unification was originally
proposed. So where I'm willing—even determined, however
little I like it—to include Uromathia, he's perfectly prepared
to exclude it. And all he has to do to accomplish that is to
prevent me from assembling a big enough supermajority to amend
the original Act."
He smiled down at his daughter,
but his eyes were dark.
"So you see, 'Drin, it's the very
fact that he's my friend which is driving him to do everything in
his power to defeat what I'm trying so hard to accomplish."
Andrin nodded slowly, but the
youthful eyes looking up into his were just as dark, just as
shadowed, and he knew. She'd Glimpsed what he had. Neither of
them had Glimpsed it clearly—not yet—and, in many
ways, that was even more terrifying than it would have been if they
had. Over the millennia the Calirath Dynasty had discovered that
the more deeply involved someone with the Calirath Talent was in
the events he Glimpsed, and the more harshly those events
impinged directly upon him, the harder it was to See that
Glimpse's details sharply. That was what frightened Zindel chan
Calirath now, because there was too much darkness, too much
loss and pain, woven through the chaotic scenes he and Andrin had
managed to Glimpse for him to force clarity upon them.
But because his daughter shared
his Talent, she understood what Ronnel Karone—who did
not—never could.
"I do see, Papa," she said quietly,
laying her slender hand atop one of his. "Thank you for explaining
to me."
Chapter Fifty-Two
The bright morning sunlight only
made Sarr Klian's mood even darker by comparison.
The final draft of Two Thousand
Harshu's reinforcements had arrived last night, and it was, Klian
conceded, an impressive force. mul Gurthak had managed to
assemble even more fighting power than he'd projected in his
original dispatches to Klian. He'd not only managed to dig up two
complete Air Force talons, but he'd even come up with an
additional four-dragon flight of the rare yellows. Klian hadn't
expected that.
The Air Force's battle dragons
were divided into flights and strikes on the basis of their breath
weapons. The reds (the traditional colors of the original Mythalan
war dragons bore very little resemblance to modern dragons'
actual colors but still made a convenient shorthand for purposes
of reference) were the fire-breathers, although it probably would
have been more accurate to describe them as spitting fireballs.
They'd been bred as a general attack type, although the "flight
time" required for a fireball to reach its target made them less
suitable for air-to-air combat.
The blacks were the lightning-
breathers, who'd originally been developed expressly to fill that
gap in dragon-versus-dragon combat. Their attacks delivered less
total damage than a red's, but it was extremely focused. More
importantly, it struck with literally "lightning-speed," which meant
there wasn't any point in attempting to evade it the way someone
might a fireball, if he was fast—and lucky—enough.
Both weapons sites were, of
course, also effective against ground targets. No one in his right
mind wanted to get in the way of dragon-spawned fireballs or
lightning bolts, and it had been two hundred years since anyone
had. But however little Klian might have liked the thought of
being incinerated or flash-fried by lightning, the yellows were the
ones that really gave him nightmares.
Almost every peace organization
on Arcana—and a rather surprising number of officers
within the Air Force itself—had tried repeatedly to have the
yellows banned along with the weapons of mass destruction which
had been outlawed when the Union was formed. Although the
yellows' opponents hadn't succeeded in getting them completely
banned, the Air Force had allowed their numbers to run down
drastically. There simply weren't very many of them left, and Klian
hadn't imagined that any of them were out here in the Lamia
Chain. Nor could he imagine why they'd been sent in the first
place, or what possible use anyone in the Commandery might have
expected them to be.
Yellows were poison-breathers.
The shortest-ranged of all the
dragons, they were also the most lethally effective against
unprotected personnel. Their breath weapon had the largest area of
effect, and without gas masks and a sound doctrine in their use,
there was no defense against it.
They came in several varieties,
the most deadly of which breathed what the Healers called a nerve-
toxin that was uniformly lethal. Others breathed gases like
chlorine, which were horrible enough but at least offered some
possibility of survival if the wind was in your favor, or if you
could get out of the gassed area quickly enough. But even a tiny
concentration of the nerve-toxin was deadly once it was inhaled.
There were rumors that the Mythalans had developed contact
nerve-toxins during the Portal Wars. If that were true, at least
they'd never been used, thankfully, but the existing varieties of
yellows were more than enough to make Klian's skin crawl.
Especially now, as he stood on
the Fort Rycharn parapet, gazing out across the crowded
dragonfield at the rows upon rows of canvas tents. According to
the latest returns, Harshu currently had two cavalry regiments and
eight infantry battalions, plus artillery support, assembled under
his command. That gave him over two thousand cavalry and
almost nine thousand infantry, even before he counted the
artillerists, the Air Force personnel, and the special combat
engineer units. All told, Harshu had better than fourteen thousand
men—as many men as many a full division could have
boasted—and Klian felt a deep surge of inexpressible
bitterness as he gazed out across that crowded encampment and
thought how easily he might have contained this situation at the
outset if he'd had it under his command.
Assuming you hadn't pissed it away the way you did Charlie
Company, he told himself with bleak self-honesty.
He heard the flag above the fort
cracking and popping in the crisp wind, and he was tempted to turn
around and gaze back at the central office block. But he didn't.
There wasn't any point. He'd already heard everything he needed to
hear.
"Gentlemen," Two Thousand
Harshu had told his assembled officers less than two hours ago,
"Master Skirvon's latest dispatches make it quite clear the other
side is not negotiating in good faith. That fact has become
increasingly clear to him over the past several weeks, and he's
communicated that conclusion to Two Thousand mul Gurthak. In
addition, our reconnaissance has confirmed that the enemy
actually on the portal are anticipating the arrival of substantial
reinforcements within the next sixty to ninety days."
He'd paused, and Klian's heart
had sunk into his boots. The five hundred had looked around at the
silently watching faces, willing one of them to speak. When no
one else had, he'd drawn a deep breath and lifted his own hand.
"Yes, Five Hundred Klian,"
Harshu had said.
"Excuse me, Sir. But if they
aren't negotiating in good faith, what, exactly, does Master
Skirvon think they are doing? Why talk to us in the first
place?"
"They haven't requested a freeze
on troop movements," Harshu had pointed out. "Obviously, that's
because they believe—or hope, at any rate—that they
can move their reinforcements to the front faster than we can.
Unfortunately for them, they appear to be wrong. Master Skirvon's
assessment is that they've basically been intent on buying time to
bring those troops into play, without any intention of ever
seriously attempting to resolve the differences between us
peacefully. They continue to insist that the original confrontation
was entirely our fault, and they've persistently refused to
move beyond that to any discussion of the future possession of the
portal cluster. Master Skirvon—who, I hardly need to
remind anyone in this room, has by far the most personal
experience in dealing with them—is of the opinion that they
intend, at a bare minimum, to secure their own permanent and
exclusive possession of Hell's Gate. Whether or not they intend to
move beyond the cluster into our own territory is more
than he's prepared to say at this point. That possibility cannot be
overlooked, however."
Klian had hovered on the brink
of pointing out that Skirvon hadn't requested any freezes
on troop movements, either. But he hadn't said it. Harshu already
knew that, and Klian had no doubt that Skirvon had waited to see
what the other side proposed specifically as a test of the
Sharonians' sincerity.
"Based on Master Skirvon's
dispatches," Harshu had gone on, "Two Thousand mul Gurthak
has authorized me to take preemptive action against the enemy, if,
in my judgment, the situation requires it." Klian's plummeting
heart had seemed to freeze as the two thousand paused briefly,
then continued in measured tones. "He hasn't ordered us to attack,
but he's eleven days away by dragon. As he says, he can't possibly
be as good a judge of the immediate situation as we can here, at
Fort Rycharn."
He'd surveyed the taut ranks of
his officers. His eyes had challenged them to disagree with
anything he'd said, but not a single voice had spoken. Not even
Klian's.
"At the moment, we have a clear
and overwhelming superiority. All of our reconnaissance confirms
that they have less than one full regiment equivalent, and they
remain in complete ignorance of our aerial capabilities. We have
an equally overwhelming advantage in the speed with which we
can move our troops. Given the fact that we know they have heavy
reinforcements headed in our direction, I believe we have no
option but to strike quickly and decisively."
Klian's jaw had tightened as he
heard the words he'd dreaded from the beginning of the meeting,
but Harshu hadn't been finished.
"Our immediate objective,
obviously, is to secure Hell's Gate and control of its portal
cluster," he'd said. "Two Thousand mul Gurthak has made it quite
clear that the Union can't afford to leave it in Sharona's
possession. Especially not given the fact that they may well have
designs upon even more Arcanan territory. However, while the
seizure of Hell's Gate itself ought to be a relatively
straightforward proposition, given the balance of forces currently
available, holding it may be quite another matter, given the
hostile forces we know are already headed in this direction. To be
blunt, we need additional defensive depth, especially given the size
of the Sharonians' entry portal to that universe. We can't possibly
adequately defend a portal that size with the forces currently
available to us.
"Accordingly, I've decided that
we'll continue through Hell's Gate. Thanks to Magister Halathyn's
final discovery, we're equipped with portal detection devices of
unparalleled range and sensitivity. If necessary, we can survey for,
locate, and secure all of the portals in a given universe far more
quickly than was ever possible before. Our objective, however,
will be to get as far forward as we can. Ideally, I'd prefer to find
another portal, no larger than our own swamp portal, to use as a
chokepoint against the inevitable Sharonian counterattack. Failing
that, I want enough depth for us to use our air power to hammer
them mercilessly as they advance, and rip apart their supply lines
behind their spearheads. It's essential that we buy enough time for
the Commandery to dispatch heavy reinforcements of our own,
and we can't do that by standing passively on the defensive in
Hell's Gate."
Still no one had spoken, and he'd
shaken his head slowly.
"I realize that if we continue
beyond Hell's Gate we'll be clearly and unambiguously moving
into Sharonian territory. That, of course, would constitute an act
of war by anyone's definition. But there's no point in deceiving
ourselves, gentlemen. The moment we attack Hell's Gate, we
will be at war with these people."
He'd said it unflinchingly, and
continued in the same level tones.
"I don't say that lightly.
Nonetheless, as Two Thousand mul Gurthak has pointed out,
leaving Sharona in possession of Hell's Gate, and a
foothold in our own territory, constitutes an unacceptable risk to
the security and interests of the Union of Arcana. As soldiers in
the Union Army, it's our duty to protect that security and those
interests. I intend to do so. And once we've opened the ball by
attacking at all, it would be criminally negligent of us to fail to act
in accordance with the military realities and imperatives of our
mission. The diplomats can sort out who's responsible for what
and which of their universes we're prepared to hand back at the
negotiating table, after the shooting is over. Our job is to make
sure that when they sit down at that table, they sit down with the
winning cards already in their hands. Is that clearly understood?"
Heads had nodded all around the
room, and he'd nodded back.
"Good," he'd said, then showed
his teeth in a feral smile.
"Now, as I'm sure we're all
aware, the greatest single disadvantage we face are these 'Voices'
of the Sharonians. Frankly, I'm not convinced they represent as
much of a threat as some of us have suggested. It doesn't matter
what kind of messages they pass along if they don't have the
military wherewithal to stand up to us, after all. Nonetheless, I
could be wrong about that, and even if I'm not, denying the enemy
information about your own movements is one of the cardinal
principles of warfare.
"I confess that I'd given this
problem considerable thought without hitting on a solution to it. I
wasn't the only one thinking about it, though, and Five Hundred
Neshok has come up with an approach which may just work. It has
its downsides," his expression had gone grimmer, "and it's more
complicated than I'd prefer in an ideal world. In the world we've
got, though, I think it may just work.
"Five Hundred?"
He'd gestured for Neshok to
stand. The intelligence officer had obeyed, and as he'd explained
the concept he'd come up with, Klian had understood exactly why
Harshu's expression had been less than delighted.
Now, as he stood on the parapet
in the clean morning air, he felt . . .
dirty. And frightened. He had no doubt that Harshu was right
about the immediate tactical situation. Nor did he doubt that the
two thousand's initial operational plan would succeed.
But what happened after that?
What happened when the Sharonians discovered that they'd been
attacked yet again? And that this time no Arcanan could claim it
had been a simple "misunderstanding"?
Neshok keeps calling these people "barbarians," the five
hundred thought almost despairingly. Harshu's always careful
to avoid doing that himself, but it's there in the way he thinks about them. I don't know how much of that
stems from the fact that it's what Neshok keeps feeding him in his
intelligence analyses, and how much of it comes from
inside his own head, but I've met Shaylar and her
husband. Whatever these people may be, they aren't "barbarians," and after what they already did to Charlie
Company, they're not going to be military pushovers,
either, even if they don't have magic. Am I the only one who sees that?
He had no answer to that
question. Or not one that didn't terrify him, at any rate.
The sun wheeled slowly
overhead. Neither of them even tried to tune into the real-time
Voicecasts of the ferocious Conclave session they knew was
raging in Tajvana. Near the noon hour, the staff King Fyysel had
assigned to them brought a beautiful little luncheon out to them,
and they made a show of trying to eat it, although neither of them
could work up much enthusiasm.
"The debate has been furious,"
Dalisar Tharsayl, the head of their new staff said as he watched
them nibble at the food. "The Emperor of Farnalia keeps shouting
about Chava's 'extortion' and 'blackmail.' The King of Hinorea
keeps responding with rants about Ternathian 'crimes against
humanity' from two thousand years ago and demanding to know
just why Emperor Ronnel seems so eager to put his good friend
Zindel on the throne of Sharona, yet so bitterly opposed to
accepting any Uromathian representation in the dynasty he intends
to 'foist off upon the rest of us.'"
He shook his head, his
expression a mixture of bemusement, anger, and concern, and
Shalassar lifted her gaze to his.
"Did you expect anything else?"
she asked, and he shook his head again, harder.
"No, Lady," he conceded. "I've
given up expecting rationality out of human beings under any
circumstances. Why should I expect that to change under
these? Ancient prejudices and resentments, coupled with
opportunism where the possibility of power is involved, are more
than enough to reduce any semblance of reason to pure emotional
chaos."
Shalassar surprised herself with
a ghost of a laugh, and he smiled. Then he half-bowed in her
direction.
"The debate continues," he said,
"but I truly believe it's winding towards a conclusion. Our King
has spoken several times, and surely everyone in the entire world
must know how much King Fyysel—and all of our
people—loathe and despise all Chava stands for. Yet the
King speaks steadily and powerfully in favor of accepting the
modification to the Act of Unification. To those who oppose the
amendment, he points out that they intend to make Zindel of
Ternathia Emperor of all Sharona, their ruler, and asks if they
expect this man to be a mere figurehead. And if they don't, then
why do they propose to begin his reign by questioning his
competence to decide upon the political acceptability of the
marriage of his own heir?"
Thaminar couldn't quite keep the
surprise out of his eyes, and Tharsayl smiled crookedly.
"I wouldn't say His Majesty
makes the argument cheerfully, Master Kolmayr," he said. "Indeed,
the mere thought that his children must someday bow to Chava
Busar's get, even knowing that any child of Prince Janaki will also
be Zindel's grandchild, must be taking years off of his life.
But," the chief of staff's smile vanished, "he's determined to accept
it. Believe me," Tharsayl looked at both of them, "the Act of
Unification will be amended and sustained. King Fyysel—
and Emperor Zindel—will settle for no less than the
creation of a world government capable of fighting any war,
meeting any foe. It will happen, and justice will be done
for your daughter."
Shalassar's eyes burned, and
Thaminar reached out to grip her hand fiercely.
"Thank you," she got out, and
King Fyysel's servant bowed deeply. Then he departed, directing
the rest of the staff with silent gestures as they carried away the
remnants of lunch.
"Ladies and Gentlemen of the
Conclave, may I have your attention please."
Orem Limana's voice was tired
but clear and strong, and the huge chamber of the Emperor Garim
Chancellery stilled. It didn't happen instantly, but it did happen
quickly, and Davir Perthis smiled tensely at Tarlin Bolsh in the
Universal News Network booth high above the chancellery floor.
A corner of his own Talent was tapped into the Voicecast going
out from Darl Elivath, but most of his attention was on the
Conclave before him.
It all came down to this, he
thought. Everything he'd done, all of the corners he'd cut where
the letter of his profession's official ethics were concerned. All of
the Delegates' debates, all of the horsetrading and the
convincing . . . and the threats, and
the browbeating. All of it came down to this moment, and
this final vote.
He'd never thought for a moment
that it would be this close, but no one was prepared to predict
whether or not the vote to amend the Act of Unification would
succeed.
Who would have thought that Ronnel Karone would
fight so hard against Zindel's obvious wishes?
The Chief Voice shook his head,
bemused by the way the bizarre convolutions of politics could
surprise him even now. The spectacle of Ternathia's oldest and
closest ally fighting to the last ditch against a Ternathian
proposal would have been one for the history books even if the
issue in question hadn't been so grave.
"What do you think?" he
whispered to Bolsh.
"I don't," the International News
Division chief replied out of the corner of his mouth, never taking
his own eyes from Limana. "And I'm not sticking my neck out
with a guess, either, so don't try to get one out of me. By my
count, it's going to come right down to the finish line."
"You're a lot of help!"
"Sorry," Bolsh grunted. "You
want accurate predictions about something like this, hire a
Calirath."
"I—" Perthis began, then
shut his mouth as the chancellery finally settled into the sort of
silence that hurt a man's ears.
"Ladies and Gentlemen of the
Conclave," Limana repeated into the stillness, "the vote has been
tabulated. Chairman Kinshe?"
Halidar Kinshe, the chairman of
the Committee on Unification, stood with a sheaf of papers in his
hand.
"Ladies and Gentlemen," he said,
"the motion before this Conclave was to amend Section Three of
Article Two of the previously approved Act of Unification, by the
addition of the following subsection."
He looked down at the papers in
his hand and read in a slow, clear voice, giving each delegation's
Voices the time to guarantee a clean translation to its delegates.
"Article Two, Section Three,
Subsection Fourteen: It shall be agreed that the Heir to the co-
joined Thrones of the Empires of Ternathia and Sharona shall,
within three months of the ratification of this Act of Unification
by all Parties, wed a Royal Princess of Uromathia, and that the
Issue of this Marriage shall in perpetuity displace the claim of any
other Individual, Dynasty, or Nation upon the Crown of the
Empire of Sharona."
He paused and cleared his throat.
"The vote in favor of amending
the Act by the addition of the preceding subsection is four hundred
and sixty-three in favor, two hundred and thirty-seven opposed.
The motion to amend," he drew a deep breath, "is carried."
The sun had continued to wheel
steadily overhead. Now, at last, it was sliding down the sky and
painting the western heavens in glorious colors as it descended.
The day had faded nearly into dusk, and a chill breeze had begun to
blow in across the water, when Tharsayl reappeared. He walked
down the beach in the loose white robes which marked him
instantly as a royal servant and gave them a profound bow.
"It is done," he murmured.
Shalassar's heart shivered under
Thaminar's arm, and they looked up into Tharsayl's face, more
than half-dreading, even now, what they might see there. The chief
of staff loomed up across the last of the golden sunset as he
straightened and looked back at them.
"The amendment was sustained
by a single vote more than was required, and Uromathia, as was
agreed, has formally ratified the Act," he said simply. "We have a
new Emperor: Zindel chan Calirath. Zindel XXIV of
Ternathia . . . and Zindel the First of
Sharona."
Thaminar's breath exploded out
of him. Until it lifted, he hadn't truly realized how heavy the
weight of his fear had been. Despite all he'd said to Shalassar, all
the arguments logic and reason could present, he'd been so afraid
that at the last minute . . .
"Mother Marthea," he whispered,
feeling Shalassar's matching relief rippling through her, "thank
you for this mercy."
A burst of light dazzled their
eyes for just an instant; then the sun slipped down past the edge of
the world, and he realized that their long vigil here by the sea had
come to its close, after all.
"Let me take you in, love," he
murmured to Shalassar. "You're cold and tired."
She turned in his arms, peering
up into his eyes, and then her eyes lit with their first real smile
since the dreadful news had arrived.
"So are you," she said.
"And . . . I'm actually hungry."
She sounded almost surprised,
and Thaminar crushed her close for just a moment, nearly weeping
with relief. Then he stood and reached down, pulling her up from
the sand, and walked slowly with her back to the home they'd
made together over so many years.
They were just passing the dock,
when the bell rang. The sound startled them, and they paused. Then
Shalassar gave Thaminar's hand an apologetic squeeze and hurried
out onto the dock. He and Tharsayl followed her more slowly,
then stopped.
It was a dolphin. There was just
enough light to see its sleek hide, glistening wetly where the
elegant snout had lifted out of the water to reach the bell pull, and
Shalassar knelt down beside it, resting one hand on the dolphin's
head, just behind one large, liquid eye.
Those eyes had always seemed to
Thaminar to watch her—and him—with deep and
endless curiosity whenever one of these beautiful, mysterious
creatures came calling at their dock. But there was something
different about it, this time, and he stiffened as Shalassar's breath
caught in obvious surprise.
The dolphin made a sharp
staccato, chittering noise that
sounded . . . happy, somehow.
Thaminar wasn't actually able to Hear the dolphins his wife Spoke
with. But he could sometimes feel echoes of her conversations
through their marriage bond, and the dolphin's reaction felt light
and buoyant in a way he couldn't explain. It lingered for several
moments, then rolled slightly in the water, nodding its head
deliberately toward Thaminar and Tharsayl. And then it uttered a
strange burbling sound and slipped away from the dock.
It submerged, but only for an
instant. Then its dorsal fin reappeared, cutting through the water
with a dark V-shaped wake until the entire dolphin suddenly
exploded out of the water once more. It leapt into the air, droplets
of spray flying high enough to catch the fringe of the setting sun
and glitter like a shower of topazes and rubies. The dolphin made
a complete flip, three feet above the dark water, then splashed back
into its mysterious world and was gone.
Shalassar straightened slowly,
turning away from the waves, and Thaminar felt her sense of
wonder through the marriage bond.
"They wanted to know if we'd
decided yet," she said. "They wanted to know if we'd decided who
would lead us."
"They what?"
Thaminar wasn't quite sure he'd
heard her preposterous statement correctly. In all the years she'd
served as an ambassador, the dolphins had never taken notice of
human political affairs. Not like this.
She crossed the dock to his side
and slipped one arm around him. She stood beside him, leaning
her head against his shoulder, gazing at the spot where the
emissary had vanished from sight.
"They knew, somehow, that we
were making this choice today," she said softly. "Marthea alone
knows how—tonight, I could actually believe She told
them! But however they learned about it, they knew. So one of
them came to ask, when the light went. He was an emissary I'd
never met before, but it felt as if he must be very important in the
pod in which he travels, and he was very concerned when he
asked."
"What did he say when you told
him?" Tharsayl asked in an almost reverent voice, and a smile of
wonder spread slowly across her face.
"He didn't say anything. Yet I felt
a burst of joy, one unlike anything I've ever sensed in dolphin-kind
before. I don't understand it. You may tell King Fyysel that,
Dalisar. I don't understand it, but . . .
the dolphins are pleased—very pleased—that Zindel
chan Calirath has been chosen to lead us. It felt—"
She hesitated, biting her lip.
"Lady?" Tharsayl prompted
gently, and she met his gaze in the steadily darkening evening.
"It felt as though their emissary
had reached a decision. A desperately important decision. It's very
difficult to put dolphin-speech into human words, but they've
decided something. I'm sure of it. Decided something critical, but
whether or not they ever tell us what it
is . . . "
She shrugged and held out her
palms in a gesture indicating helplessness.
"We may never know. But I find
it very intriguing that the dolphins, at least, are paying attention to
what happens to human politics. That's never happened before."
"Never?" Tharsayl asked almost
sharply, and she shook her head.
"Never. The cetaceans are
remarkably indifferent to most of us land-dwellers, on the whole.
The great whales are more indifferent than the dolphins or orcas,
who are naturally curious souls. But even the dolphins, who enjoy
playing with us in the water and almost always help swimmers in
trouble, have never shown any interest in how we govern
ourselves. Their only 'political concerns' have always been strictly
limited to how our actions, our plans, might affect them, and
vice versa, not how we reached our decisions in the first
place."
Tharsayl stood frowning at the
dark water, barely visible now, and his eyes were troubled.
"Crown Prince Danith had a
remarkable story to tell his father, the day he came home from
here, Lady. The day you learned what had happened."
Thaminar frowned. So did
Shalassar.
"When you were linked with the
Portal Authority's Voice—" The chief of staff hesitated,
clearly choosing his words with care. "There were dolphins here,
in the floating ring, and one of the singing whales, and
they . . . reacted to the news.
"Reacted?" Shalassar repeated
with a frown. "Reacted how? To what?"
"There came a moment, a terrible
moment, when you screamed, Lady," Tharsayl said. "And when
you did, the sea came alive. They leapt from the water—all
of them. His Highness said . . . He
said the sound that broke from them was unearthly, horrifying. A
sound of rage."
Shalassar's eyes went wide in
shock. She stared at the chief of staff, and Tharsayl shook his head
slowly.
"Representative Kinshe said your
pain was so great, Lady, that it spilled across into their minds.
They were angry, Lady. Both the Representative and His
Highness agreed on that."
"But why?" Shalassar
half-whispered, her eyes meeting Thaminar's equally
dumbfounded gaze. "I could understand grief. Most of the
emissaries who come here knew Shaylar, watched her grow up.
Many of them, of the dolphins and orcas, at least, have played with
her in the water. But anger? I've never felt anger from a
cetacean." She turned a baffled look on Tharsayl. "Why did they
say it was anger?"
"I don't know, Lady, but they
both felt the same thing. The sound was a sound of rage, and their
anger was so deep, so powerful, that Lady Kinshe Felt it through
her Healing Talent. The singing whale came completely out of the
water Lady. It stood on its tail and bellowed so loudly it shook the
windows."
Shalassar gasped and her hand
tightened on Thaminar's forearm.
"They don't do that!" she
protested. "They just don't."
Neither man spoke, and
Shalassar shivered, abruptly and oddly frightened as the night
closed in around them.
"I want to go inside now," she
said in a small voice.
Thaminar nodded and slipped his
arm around her once again, steadying her on the walk back to their
home. She was more shaken, he realized, than she'd been by
anything since the day the news from Hell's Gate had shattered
their world.
He glanced back once at the dark
water, where the vast sweep of black sea met the equally vast bowl
of mostly-black sky. A faint glow remained visible on the western
horizon, where the sun had set beyond the coast of Ricathia, but
stars were already visible in the eastern sky and overhead.
Why were the cetaceans
angry over Shaylar's death? Why were they so interested in the
outcome of the day's vote? The world which had been so quiet and
predictable for the vast majority of his life seemed very cold and
frightening tonight. And under other skies, he knew, there were
Sharonians even closer to the danger that loomed, out there in the
darkness.
Keep them safe, Mother Marthea, he prayed with a sudden
fervor he couldn't explain. Keep us all
safe. . . .
Then they reached the house,
with its warm gas lamps to dispel the cold and frightened feelings
which had overwhelmed them all on the darkened dock. Merely
closing the door felt like an act of preservation, somehow. An act
that barred the way against the evil that lay waiting, out there in
the multi-universal darkness.
He helped Shalassar into a chair,
poured whiskey into three glasses, and handed them around. While
they sipped their whiskey and felt safe behind the closed door, here
inside these walls where the lights were warm and comforting, he
wondered again what the cetaceans were
planning . . . and why he'd felt that
sudden, deep surge of fear.
Keep them safe, he found himself praying once more.
Please, keep them safe.
"All right, Five Hundred,"
Commander of Two Thousand Mayrkos Harshu said to his senior
Air Force commander as the early afternoon sunlight burned down
across Fort Rycharn. "Let's get these dragons in the air."
About The Authors
David Weber is author of the New York Times
best-selling Honor Harrington series as well as In Fury Born,
1633 (with Eric Flint), and other popular novels. With Steve
White, he is the author of Insurrection, Crusade, In Death
Ground, and the New York Times best seller The
Shiva Option, all novels based on his Starfire SF
strategy game. Other collaborations include the four novels of the
Prince Roger series with John Ringo.
Linda Evans is coauthor with John Ringo of The
Road to Damascus and with Robert Asprin of four novels in
the Time Scout series for Baen, and has also collaborated with
Asprin on the recent For King & Country. An expert
on weapons both modern and ancient, she puts her expertise to
good use in her science fiction. She has also written the novel
Far Edge of Darkness (Baen), and several short novels for
volumes in Baen's popular Bolo series. She lives in Archer, FL.
THE END
Hell's Gate - David Weber and Linda Evans
Launching a Blazing New SF Adventure Series!
HELL'S GATE—ARC
David Weber
& Linda Evans
Advance Reader Copy
Unproofed
This is a work of fiction. All the
characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
Copyright ©2006 by David Weber and Linda Evans
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this
book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN-10: 1-4165-0939-9
ISBN-13:
978-1-4165-0939-4
First printing, November 2006
Cover Art by Kurt Miller
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Weber, David, 1952-
Hell's gate / by David
Weber & Linda Evans.
p. cm.
"A Baen Books original"--T.p. verso.
ISBN 1-4165-0939-9
1. Space
warfare--Fiction. 2. Life on other planets--Fiction. I. Evans,
Linda. II. Title.
PS3573.E217H45 2006
813'.54--dc22
2006019700
Typesetting by Joy Freeman, PagesByJoy.com
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
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Baen Books by David Weber
Honor Harrington:
On Basilisk Station
The Honor of the Queen
The Short Victorious War
Field of Dishonor
Flag in Exile
Honor Among Enemies
In Enemy Hands
Echoes of Honor
Ashes of Victory
War of Honor
At All Costs
Honorverse:
Crown of Slaves (with Eric Flint)
The Shadow of Saganami
edited by David Weber:
More than Honor
Worlds of Honor
Changer of Worlds
The Service of the Sword
Mutineers' Moon
The Armageddon Inheritance
Heirs of Empire
Empire from the Ashes
In Fury Born
The Apocalypse Troll
The Excalibur Alternative
Bolos!
Old Soldiers
Oath of Swords
The War God's Own
Wind Rider's Oath
with Steve White:
Crusade
In Death Ground
The Stars At War
The Shiva Option
Insurrection
The Stars At War II
with Eric Flint:
1633
with John Ringo:
March Upcountry
March to the Sea
March to the Stars
We Few
with Linda Evans:
Hell's Gate
Hell Hath No Fury (forthcoming)
Baen Books by Linda Evans
Far Edge of Darkness
Time Scout (with Robert Asprin)
For King and Country (with Robert Asprin)
Chapter One
The tall noncom could have stepped
straight out of a recruiting poster. His fair hair and height were a
legacy from his North Shalhoman ancestors, but he was far, far
away—a universe away—from their steep cliffs and
icy fjords. His jungle camo fatigues were starched and ironed to
razor-sharp creases as he stood on the crude, muddy landing
ground with his back to the looming hole of the portal. His
immaculate uniform looked almost as bizarrely out of place
against the backdrop of the hacked-out jungle clearing as the
autumn-kissed red and gold of the forest giants beyond the portal,
and he seemed impervious to the swamp-spawned insects zinging
about his ears. He wore the shoulder patch of the Second Andaran
Temporal Scouts, and the traces of gray at his temples went
perfectly with the experience lines etched into his hard, bronzed
face.
He gazed up into the painfully bright
afternoon sky, blue-gray eyes slitted against the westering sun,
with his helmet tucked into the crook of his left elbow and his
right thumb hooked into the leather sling of the dragoon arbalest
slung over his shoulder. He'd been standing there in the blistering
heat for the better part of half an hour, yet he seemed unaware of
it. In fact, he didn't even seem to be perspiring, although that had
to be an illusion.
He also seemed prepared to stand
there for the next week or so, if that was what it took. But then,
finally, a black dot appeared against the cloudless blue, and his
nostrils flared as he inhaled in satisfaction.
He watched the dot sweep steadily
closer, losing altitude as it came, then lifted his helmet and settled
it onto his head. He bent his neck, shielding his eyes with his left
hand as the dragon back-winged in to a landing. Bits of debris flew
on the sudden wind generated by the mighty beast's iridescent-
scaled wings, and the noncom waited until the last twigs had
pattered back to the ground before he lowered his hand and
straightened once more.
The dragon's arrival was a sign of
just how inaccessible this forward post actually was. In fact, it was
just over seven hundred and twenty miles from the coastal base, in
what would have been the swamps of the Kingdom of Farshal in
northeastern Hilmar back home. Those were some pretty
inhospitable miles, and the mud here was just as gluey as the
genuine Hilmaran article, so aerial transport was the only real
practical way in at the moment. The noncom himself had arrived
back at the post via the regular transport dragon flight less than
forty-eight hours earlier, and as he'd surveyed the much below,
he'd been struck by just how miserable it would have been to slog
through it on foot. How anyone was going to properly exploit a
portal in the middle of this godforsaken swamp was more than he
could say, but he didn't doubt that the Union Trans-Temporal
Transit Authority would find a way. The UTTTA had the best
engineers in the universe—in several universes, for
that matter—and plenty of experience with portals in terrain
even less prepossessing than this.
Probably less prepossessing, anyway.
The dragon went obediently to its
knees at the urging of its pilot, and a single passenger swung down
the boarding harness strapped about the beast's shoulders. The
newcomer was dark-haired, dark-eyed, and even taller than the
noncom, although much younger, and each point of his collar bore
the single silver shield of a commander of one hundred. Like the
noncom, he wore the shoulder flash of the 2nd ATS, and the name
"Olderhan, Jasak" was stenciled above his breast pocket. He said
something to the dragon's pilot, then strode quickly across the
mucky ground towards the waiting one-man welcoming
committee.
"Sir!" The noncom snapped to
attention and saluted sharply. "Welcome back to this shithole,
Sir!" he barked.
"Why, thank you, Chief Sword
Threbuch," the officer said amiably, tossing off a far more casual
salute in response. Then he extended his right hand and gripped the
older man's hand firmly. "I trust the Powers That Be have a
suitable reason for dragging me back here, Otwal," he said dryly,
and the noncom smiled.
"I wish they hadn't—dragged
you back, that is, Sir—but I think you may forgive them in
the end," he said. "I'm sort of surprised they managed to catch you,
though. I figured you'd be well on your way back to Garth
Showma by now."
"So did I," Hundred Olderhan
replied wryly. He shook his head. "Unfortunately, Hundred
Thalmayr seems to've gotten himself delayed in transit somewhere
along the way, and Magister Halathyn was quick enough off the
mark to catch me before he got here. If the Magister had only
waited another couple of days for Thalmayr to get here to relieve
me, I'd have been aboard ship and far enough out to sea to get
away clean."
"Sorry about that, Sir." The chief
sword grinned. "I hope you'll tell the Five Thousand I tried to get you home for your birthday."
"Oh, Father will forgive you,
Otwal," Jasak assured him. "Mother,
now . . . "
"Please, Sir!" The chief sword
shivered dramatically. "I still remember what your lady mother had
to say to me when I got the Five Thousand home late for their
anniversary."
"According to Father, you did well
to get him home at all," the hundred said, and the chief sword
shrugged.
"The Five Thousand was too tough
for any jaguar to eat, Sir. All I did was stop the bleeding."
"Most he could have expected out
of you after he was stupid enough to step right on top of it." The
chief sword gave the younger man a sharp look, and the hundred
chuckled. "That's the way Father describes it, Otwal. I
promise you I'm not being guilty of filial disrespect."
"As the Hundred says," the chief
sword agreed.
"But since our lords and masters
appear to have seen fit to make me miss my birthday, suppose you
tell me exactly what we have here, Chief Sword." The hundred's
voice was much crisper, his brown eyes intent, and the chief sword
came back to a position midway between stand easy and parade
rest.
"Sir, I'm afraid you'll need to ask
Magister Halathyn for the details. All I know is that he says the
potential tests on this portal's field strength indicate that there's at
least one more in close proximity. A big one."
"How big?" Jasak asked, his eyes
narrowing.
"I don't really know, Sir," Threbuch
replied. "I don't think Magister Halathyn does yet, for that matter.
But he was muttering something about a class eight."
Sir Jasak Olderhan's eyebrows rose,
and he whistled silently. The largest trans-temporal portal so far
charted was the Selkara Portal, and it was only a class seven. If
Magister Halathyn had, indeed, detected a class eight, then
this muddy, swampy hunk of jungle was about to become very
valuable real estate.
"In that case, Chief Sword," he said
mildly after a moment, "I suppose you'd better get me to Magister
Halathyn."
* * *
Halathyn vos Dulainah was very
erect, very dark-skinned, and very silver-haired, with a wiry build
which was finally beginning to verge on frail. Jasak wasn't certain,
but he strongly suspected that the old man was well past the age at
which Authority regs mandated the retirement of the Gifted from
active fieldwork. Not that anyone was likely to tell Magister
Halathyn that. He'd been a law unto himself for decades and the
UTTTA's crown jewel ever since he'd left the Mythal Falls
Academy twenty years before, and he took an undisguised, almost
child-like delight in telling his nominal superiors where they could
stuff their regulations.
He hadn't told Jasak exactly why he
was out here in the middle of this mud and bug-infested swamp,
nor why Magister Gadrial Kelbryan, his second-in-command at the
Garth Showma Institute, had followed him out here. He'd insisted
with a bland-faced innocence which could not have been bettered
by a twelve-year-old caught with his hand actually in the cookie
jar, that he was "on vacation." He certainly had to the clout within
the UTTTA to commandeer transportation for his own amusement
at that was what he really wanted, but Jasak suspected he was
actually engaged in some sort of undisclosed research. Not that
Magister Halathyn was going to admit it. He was too delighted by
the opportunity to be mysterious to waste it.
He was also, as his complexion and
the "vos" in front of his surname proclaimed, both a Mythalan and
a member of the shakira caste. As a rule, Jasak Olderhan
was less than fond of Mythalans . . .
and considerably less fond than that of the shakira. But
Magister Halathyn was the exception to that rule as he was to so
many others.
The magister looked up as Chief
Sword Threbuch followed Jasak into his tent, the heels of their
boots loud on its raised wooden flooring. He tapped his stylus on
the crystal display in front of him, freezing his notes and the
calculations he'd been performing, and smiled at the hundred over
the glassy sphere.
"And how is my second-favorite
crude barbarian?" he inquired in genial Andaran.
"As unlettered and impatient as
ever, Sir," Jasak replied, in Mythalan, with an answering smile.
The old magister chuckled appreciatively and extended his hand
for a welcoming shake. Then he cocked his canvas camp chair
back at a comfortable, teetering angle and waved for Jasak to seat
himself in the matching chair on the far side of his worktable.
"Seriously, Jasak," he said as the
younger man obeyed the unspoken command, "I apologize for
yanking you back here. I know how hard it was for you to get
leave for your birthday in the first place, and I know your parents
must have been looking forward to seeing you. But I thought
you'd want to be here for this one. And, frankly, with all due
respect to Hundred Thalmayr, I'm not sorry he was delayed. All
things being equal, I'd prefer to have you in charge just a
little longer."
Jasak stopped his grimace before it
ever reached his expression, but it wasn't the easiest thing he'd
ever done. Although he genuinely had been looking forward to
spending his birthday at home in Garth Showma for the first time
in over six years, he hadn't been looking forward to
handing "his" company over to Hadrign Thalmayr, even
temporarily. Partly because of his jealously possessive pride in
Charlie Company, but also because Thalmayr—who was
senior to him—had only transferred into the Scouts
seventeen months ago. From his record, he was a perfectly
competent infantry officer, but Jasak hadn't been impressed with
the older man's mental flexibility the few times they'd met before
Jasak himself had been forward-deployed. And it was pretty clear
his previous line infantry experience had left him firmly imbued
with the sort of by-the-book mentality the Temporal Scouts
worked very hard to eradicate.
Which wasn't something he could
discuss with a civilian, even one he respected as deeply as he did
Magister Halathyn.
"The Chief Sword said something
about a class eight," he said instead, his tone making the statement
a question, and Magister Halathyn nodded soberly.
"Unless Gadrial and I are badly
mistaken," he said, waving a hand at the letters and esoteric
formulae glittering in the water-clear heart of his crystal, "it's
at least a class eight. Actually, I suspect it may be even larger."
Jasak sat back in his chair,
regarding the old man's lined face intently. Had it been anyone
else, he would have been inclined to dismiss the preposterous
claim as pure, rampant speculation. But Magister Halathyn wasn't
given to speculation.
"If you're right about that, Sir," the
hundred said after a moment, "this entire transit chain may just
have become a lot more important to the Authority."
"It may," Magister Halathyn agreed.
"Then again, it may not." He grimaced. "Whatever size this portal
may be—" he tapped the crystal containing his notes
"—that portal—" he pointed out through the
open fly of his tent at the peculiar hole in the universe which
loomed enormously beyond the muddy clearing's western
perimeter "—is only a class three. That's going to
bottleneck anything coming through from our putative class eight.
Not to mention the fact that we're at the end of a ridiculously
inconvenient chain at the moment."
"I suppose that depends in part on
how far your new portal is from the other side of this one," Jasak
pointed out. "The terrain between here and the coast may suck, but
it's only seven hundred miles."
"Seven hundred and nineteen-point-
three miles," Magister Halathyn corrected with a crooked smile.
"All right, Sir." Jasak accepted the
correction with a smile of his own. "That's still a ridiculously
short haul compared to most of the portal connections I can think
of. And if this new portal of yours is within relatively close
proximity to our class three, we're talking about a twofer."
"That really is a remarkably
uncouth way to describe a spatially congruent trans-temporal
transfer zone," Halathyn said severely.
"I'm just a naturally uncouth sort of
fellow, Sir," Jasak agreed cheerfully. "But however you slice it,
it's still a two-for-one."
"Yes, it is," Halathyn
acknowledged. "Assuming our calculations are sound, of course.
In fact, if this new portal is as large as I think it is, and as closely
associated with our portal here, I think it's entirely possible that
we're looking at a cluster."
Despite all of the magister's many
years of discipline, his eyes gleamed, and he couldn't quite keep
the excitement out of his voice. Not that Jasak blamed him for
that. A portal cluster . . . In the better
part of two centuries of exploration, UTTTA's survey teams had
located only one true cluster, the Zholhara Cluster. Doubletons
were the rule—indeed, only sixteen triples had ever been
found, which was a rate of less than one in ten. But a cluster like
Zholhara was of literally incalculable value.
This far out—they were at
the very end of the Lamia Chain, well over three months' travel
from Arcana, even for someone who could claim transport dragon
priority for the entire trip—even a cluster would take years
to fully develop. Lamia, with over twenty portals, was already a
huge prize. But if Magister Halathyn was correct, the entire transit
chain was about to become even more
valuable . . . and receive the highest
development priority UTTTA could assign.
"Of course," Magister Halathyn
continued in the tone of a man forcing himself to keep his
enthusiasm in check, "we don't know where this supposed portal
of mine connects. It could be the middle of the Great Ransaran
Desert. Or an island in the middle of the Western Ocean, like
Rycarh Outbound. Or the exact center of the polar ice cap."
"Or it could be a couple of
thousand feet up in thin air, which would make for something of a
nasty first step," Jasak agreed. "But I suppose we'd better go find it
if we really want to know, shouldn't we?"
"My sentiments exactly," the
magister agreed, and the hundred looked at the chief sword.
"How soon can we move out on the
Magister's heading, Chief Sword?"
"I'm afraid the Hundred would have
to ask Fifty Garlath about that," Threbuch replied with absolutely
no inflection, and this time Jasak did grimace. The tonelessness of
the chief sword's voice shouted his opinion (among other things)
of Commander of Fifty Shevan Garlath as an officer of the Union
of Arcana. Unfortunately, Sir Jasak Olderhan's opinion exactly
matched that of his company's senior non-commissioned officer.
"If the Hundred will recall," the
chief sword continued even more tonelessly, "his last decision
before his own departure was to authorize Third Platoon's
R&R. That leaves Fifty Garlath as the SO here at the base
camp."
Jasak winced internally as Threbuch
tactfully (sort of) reminded him that leaving Garlath out here at
the ass-end of nowhere had been his own idea. Which had seemed
like a good one at the time, even if it had been a little petty of him.
No, more than a little petty. Quite a bit more, if he wanted to be
honest. Chief Sword Threbuch hadn't exactly protested at the time,
but his expression had suggested his opinion of the decision. Not
because he disagreed that Fifty Therman Ulthar and his men had
earned their R&R, but because Shevan Garlath was arguably
the most incompetent platoon commander in the entire brigade.
Leaving him in charge of anything more complicated than a hot
cider stand was not, in the chief sword's considered opinion, a
Good Idea.
"We'd have to recall Fifty Ulthar's
platoon from the coast, if you want to use him, Sir," the chief
sword added, driving home the implied reprimand with exquisite
tact.
Jasak was tempted to point out that
Magister Halathyn had already dragged him back from the
company's main CP at the coastal enclave, so there was really no
reason he shouldn't recall Fifty Ulthar. Except, of course,
that he couldn't. First, because doing so would require him to
acknowledge to the man who'd been his father's first squad lance
that he'd made a mistake. Both of them might know he
had, but he was damned if he was going to admit it.
But second, and far more
important, was the patronage system which permeated the Arcanan
Army, because patronage was the only thing that kept Garlath in
uniform. Not even that had been enough to get him promoted, but
it was more than enough to ensure that his sponsors would ask
pointed questions if Jasak went that far out of his way to invite
another fifty to replace him on what promised to be quite possibly
the most important portal exploration on record. If Magister
Halathyn's estimates were remotely near correct, this was the sort
of operation that got an officer noticed.
Which, in Jasak's opinion, was an
even stronger argument in favor of handing it to a competent
junior officer who didn't have any
patrons . . . and whose probable
promotion would actually have a beneficial effect on the Army.
But—
"All right, Chief Sword," he sighed.
"My respects to Fifty Garlath, and I want his platoon ready to
move out at first light tomorrow."
* * *
The weather was much cooler on
the other side of the base portal. Although it was only one hour
earlier in the local day, it had been mid-afternoon—despite
Jasak's best efforts—before Commander of Fifty Garlath's
First Platoon had been ready to leave base camp and step through
the immaterial interface between Hilmaran swamp and subarctic
Andara in a single stride. The portal's outbound side was located
smack on top of the Great Andaran Lakes, five thousand miles
north of their departure portal, in what should have been the
Kingdom of Lokan. In fact, it was on the narrow neck of land
which separated Hammerfell Lake and White Mist Lake from
Queen Kalthra's Lake. It might be only one hour east of the base
camp, but the difference in latitude meant that single step had
moved them from sweltering early summer heat into the crispness
of autumn.
Jasak had been raised on his
family's estates on New Arcana, less than eighty miles from the
very spot at which they emerged, but New Arcana had been settled
for the better part of two centuries. The bones of the Earth were
the same, and the cool, leaf-painted air of a northern fall was a
familiar and welcome relief from the base camp's smothering
humidity, but the towering giants of the primordial forest verged
on the overpowering even for him.
For Fifty Garlath, who had been
raised on the endless grasslands of Yanko, the restricted sightlines
and dense forest canopy were far worse than that. Hundred
Olderhan, CO of Charlie Company, First Battalion, First
Regiment, Second Andaran Temporal Scouts, couldn't very well
take one of his platoon commanders to task in front of his
subordinates for being an old woman, but Sir Jasak Olderhan felt
an almost overpowering urge to kick Garlath in the ass.
He mastered the temptation sternly,
but it wasn't easy, even for someone as disciplined as he was.
Garlath was supposed to be a temporal scout, after all.
That meant he was supposed to take the abrupt changes in climate
trans-temporal travel imposed in stride. It also meant he was
supposed to be confident in the face of the unknown, well versed
in movement under all sorts of conditions and in all sorts of
terrain. He was not supposed to be so obviously
intimidated by endless square miles of trees.
Jasak turned away from his
troopers to distract himself (and his mounting frustration) while
Garlath tried to get his command squared away. He stood with his
back to the brisk, northern autumn and gazed back through the
portal at the humid swamp they had left behind. It was the sort of
sight with which anyone who spent as much time wandering about
between universes as the Second Andarans did became intimately
familiar, but no one ever learned to take it for granted.
Magister Halathyn's tone had been
dismissive when he described the portal as "only a class three."
But while the classification was accurate, and there were
undeniably much larger portals, even a "mere" class three was the
better part of four miles across. A four-mile disk sliced out of the
universe . . . and pasted onto another
one.
It was far more than merely
uncanny, and unless someone had seen it for himself, it was
almost impossible to describe properly.
Jasak himself had only the most
rudimentary understanding of current portal theory, but he found
the portals themselves endlessly fascinating. A portal appeared to
have only two dimensions—height, and width. No one had
yet succeeded in measuring one's depth. As far as anyone could
tell, it had no depth; its threshold was simply a line, visible
to the eye but impossible to measure, where one universe
stopped . . . and another one began.
Even more fascinating, it was as if
each of the universes it connected were inside the other
one. Standing on the eastern side of a portal in Universe A and
looking west, one saw a section of Universe B stretching away
from one. One might or might not be looking west in that
universe, since portals' orientation in one universe had no
discernible effect on their orientation in the other universe to
which they connected. If one stepped through the portal into
Universe B and looked back in the direction from which one had
come, one saw exactly what one would have expected to
see—the spot from which one had left Universe A. But, if
one returned to Universe A and walked around the portal
to its western aspect and looked east, one saw Universe B
stretching away in a direction exactly 180° reversed from
what he'd seen from the portal's eastern side in Universe A. And if
one then stepped through into Universe B, one found the portal
once again at one's back . . . but this
time looking west, not east, into Universe A.
The theoreticians referred to the
effect as "counterintuitive." Most temporal scouts, like Jasak,
referred to it as the "can't get there" effect, since it was impossible
to move from one side to the other of a portal in the same
universe without circling all the way around it. And, since that
held true for any portal in any universe, no one could simply step
through a portal one direction, then step back through it to emerge
on its far side in the same universe. In order to reach the far side of
the portal at the other end of the link, one had to walk all the way
around it, as well.
Frankly, every time someone tried
to explain the theory of how it all worked to Jasak, his brain hurt,
but the engineers responsible for designing portal infrastructure
took advantage of that effect on a routine basis. It always took
some getting used to when one first saw it, of course. For
example, it wasn't at all uncommon to see two lines of slider cars
charging into a portal on exactly opposite headings—one
from the east and the other from the west—at the exact
same moment on what appeared to be exactly the same track. No
matter how carefully it had all been explained before a man saw it
for the first time with his own eyes, he knew those two
sliders had to be colliding in the universe on the other side of that
portal. But, of course, they weren't. Viewed from the side in that
other universe, both sliders were exploding out of the same space
simultaneously. . . but headed in exactly opposite directions.
From a military perspective,
the . . . idiosyncrasies of trans-
temporal travel could be more than a little maddening, although
the Union of Arcana hadn't fought a true war in over two
centuries.
At the moment, Jasak stood
roughly at the center of the portal through which he had just
stepped, looking back across it at the forward base camp and the
swamp they'd left behind. The sunlight on the far side fell from a
noticeably different angle, creating shadows whose shape and
direction clashed weirdly with those of the cool, northern forest in
which he stood. Swamp insects bumbled busily towards the
immaterial threshold between worlds, then veered away as they hit
the chill breeze blowing back across it.
This particular portal was relatively
young. The theorists were still arguing about exactly how and why
portals formed in the first place, but it had been obvious for better
than a hundred and eighty years that new ones were constantly, if
not exactly frequently, being formed. This one had formed long
enough ago that the scores of gigantic trees which had been sliced
in half vertically by its creation had become dead, well dried hulks,
but almost a dozen of them still stood, like gaunt, maimed
chimneys. It wouldn't be long before the bitter northern winters
toppled them, as well, yet the fact that it hadn't happened yet
suggested that they'd been dead for no more than a few years.
Which, Jasak told himself acidly,
was not so very much longer than it appeared to be taking Fifty
Garlath to get his platoon sorted out.
Eventually, however, even Garlath
had his troopers shaken down into movement formation. Sort of.
His single point man was too far from the main body, and he'd
spread his flank scouts far too wide, but Jasak clamped his teeth
firmly against a blistering
reprimand . . . for now. He'd already
intended to have a few words with Garlath about the totally
unacceptable delay in getting started, but he'd decided he'd wait
until they bivouacked and he could "counsel" his subordinate in
private. With Charlie Company detached from the Battalion as the
only organized force at this end of the transit chain, it was
particularly important not to undermine the chain of command by
giving the troops cause to think that he considered their platoon
CO an idiot.
Especially when he did.
So instead of ripping Garlath a new
one at the fresh proof of his incompetence, he limited himself to
one speaking glance at Chief Sword Threbuch, then followed
along behind Garlath with Threbuch and Magister Kelbryan.
Although Jasak had enjoyed the
privilege of serving with Magister Halathyn twice before, this was
the first time he'd actually met Kelbryan. She and Halathyn had
worked together for at least twenty years—indeed, she was
one of the main reasons the UTTTA had acquired the exclusive
use of Halathyn's services in the first place—but she
normally stayed home, holding down the fort at the institute at
Garth Showma on New Arcana which Halathyn had created from
the ground up for the Authority. Jasak had always assumed, in a
casual sort of way, that that was because she preferred civilization
to the frontier. Or, at least, that she would have been unsuited to
hoofing it through rugged terrain with the Andaran Scouts.
He still didn't know her very well.
In fact, he didn't know her at all. She'd only reached their base
camp three weeks earlier, and she seemed to be a very private
person in a lot of ways. But he'd already discovered that his
assumptions had been badly off base. Kelbryan was a couple of
years older than he was, and her Ransaran ancestry showed in her
almond eyes, sandalwood complexion, and dark, brown-black hair.
At five-eight, she was tall for a
Ransaran . . . which meant she was
only eight inches shorter than he was. But delicate as she seemed
to him, she was obviously fit, and she'd taken the crudity of the
facilities available at the sharp end of the Authority's exploration
in stride, without turning a hair.
She was also very, very good at her
job—as was only to be expected, given that Magister
Halathyn must have had his choice of any second-in-command he
wanted. Indeed, Jasak had come to realize that the true reasons
she'd normally stayed home owed far less to any "delicacy" on her
part than to the fact that she was probably the only person
Magister Halathyn fully trusted to run "his" shop in his absence.
Her academic and research credentials were impressive proof of
her native brilliance, and despite the differences in their cultural
heritages, she and her boss were clearly devoted to one another.
It had been obvious Magister
Halathyn longed to accompany them this morning, but there were
limits in all things. Jasak was prepared to go along with the fiction
that vos Dulainah wasn't far past mandatory retirement age as long
as the old man stayed safely in base camp; he was not about to risk
someone that valuable, or of whom he was so fond, in an initial
probe. Magister Kelbryan had supported him with firm tactfulness
when the old man turned those longing, puppy-dog eyes in her
direction, and Magister Halathyn had submitted to the inevitable
with no more than the odd, heartfelt sigh of mournful regret when
he was sure one of them was listening.
Now the hundred watched the
team's junior magister moving through the deep drifts of leaves
almost as silently as his own troopers. Despite—or possibly
even because of—the fact that he'd never worked with
Kelbryan before, he was impressed. And, he admitted, attracted.
She opened a leather equipment
case on her belt and withdrew one of the esoteric devices of her
profession. Jasak was technically Gifted himself, although his own
trace of the talent was so minute that he was often astonished the
testing process had been able to detect it at all. Now, as often, he
felt a vague, indefinable stirring sensation as someone who was
very powerfully Gifted indeed brought her Gift to bear. She gazed
down into the crystal display, and her lips moved silently as she
powered it up.
Jasak saw the display flicker to life
and moved a little closer to look over her shoulder. She sensed his
presence and looked up. For an instant, he thought she was going
to be annoyed with him for crowding her, but then she smiled and
tilted her wrist so that he could see the display more clearly.
In many ways, it looked a great deal
like a standard Authority navigation unit. He quickly identified the
latitude and longitude readouts, and the built in clocks—
one set to the base camp's time, and one which automatically
adjusted to local time on this side of the portal—and the
compass and directional indicator Barris. But there was another
arrow in the glassy heart of the sphere of sarkolis crystal, and it
was flanked by two waterfall displays which had never been part
of any navigation unit he'd ever used.
"This one," she said quietly, tapping
the green waterfall, "indicates the approximate distance. And this
one," she tapped the red waterfall, "indicates its measured field
strength. And the arrow, of course," she grinned, "indicates the
direction."
"I've never seen a unit quite like
that one," Jasak admitted, and she snorted in amusement.
"That's because Magister Halathyn
and I built it ourselves," she told him. "Actually, he did most of
the design work—I was just the grunt technician who put it
together."
"Oh, I'm sure," he said, shaking his
head.
"No, it's true!" she insisted. "The
beauty of it is in the theoretical conception. Once he'd done the
intellectual heavy lifting, actually building the spells was
relatively easy. Time consuming, but not difficult."
"Maybe not for you," Jasak
said dryly, and she shrugged. "But the important thing," he
continued, allowing her to drop the subject of her own
competency, "is that I've never had a nav unit that pointed me
directly at an unexplored portal before. It beats the hell, if you'll
pardon the language, out of humping the standard detectors
around the countryside on a blind search pattern. Especially
someplace like this—" he waved a hand at the heavy tree
cover "—where it's all but impossible to get a dragon, or
even a gryphon, in for aerial sweeps."
"That's exactly why Magister
Halathyn's been working on it for several years now," Kelbryan
agreed. "In fact, the whole reason I let him come out here in the
first place—" somehow, Jasak felt confident, her choice of
the verb "let" was probably painfully accurate "—was still
let him field test the spellware."
"And is that the reason you're
out here, if I may ask?" Jasak inquired.
"Well, for
that . . . and to keep an eye on
Magister Halathyn," she admitted with a slight smile.
"Which suggests to my keen
intelligence that you were, indeed, being overly modest about your
contribution to the project," Jasak said. "Somehow I don't see the
Institute letting both of its top magisters wander around three or
four months' travel from home if they weren't both needed."
"I suppose there might be some
truth to that," she conceded after a moment. "Although, to be
completely honest, and without trying to undervalue my own
contributions to the R&D, the real reason I insisted on
coming was to keep him from wandering around out here
to handle any field modifications the spellware might require.
Besides," she smiled infectiously, "it's the first 'vacation' I've taken
in over five years!"
"But why all the secrecy?" Jasak
asked. She looked at him, and he shrugged. "The UTTTA must the
champing at the bit to get this deployed, so why was Magister
Halathyn so busy insisting that he wasn't really up to
anything?"
"I didn't have anything to do with
UTTTA, or any other official part of the Union," she replied. It
seemed evident from her toad and her expression that she really
would have preferred to leave it at that, but after glancing at him
consideringly for a second or two, she shrugged.
"You may have heard that
magisters can be just a
little . . . paranoid about their
research." She smiled briefly, and Jasak managed to turn a laugh
into a not particularly convincing cough. "A little paranoid," in
this case, was rather like saying that White Mist Lake was "a little
damp."
"Well, all right, maybe it goes a bit
further than that," she said with a reluctant grin. But the grin faded
quickly, and she shook her head. "In fact, it goes a lot further than
that where Magister Halathyn is concerned. Especially for
something like this. There's no way he was going to let even a
whisper about this project out where the Mythalans might hear
about it before he was ready to publish."
Jasak nodded in suddenly sober
understanding of his own.
"While I'd never like to suggest
that Magister Halathyn doesn't hold you in the highest respect,
Hundred Olderhan," she continued, "the real reason we're out
here? It's the farthest away from the Mythal Falls Academy he
could get for his field test. And—"
She paused, looking at him with
the sort of measuring, considering look he was unused to
receiving. After a moment, she seemed to reach some inner
decision and leaned closer to him, lowering her voice slightly.
"Actually," she said quietly,
"we've done a bit of refining on his original theoretical work, as
well. The sort which requires absolute validation before anyone
publishes. I have to admit that I didn't really expect to be able to
test all of the features in a single trip, but take a look at this."
She tapped the unit with her wand,
and both waterfalls and the arrow disappeared instantly. A brief
moment passed, and then they lit
again . . . but this time, they were
noticeably different.
She looked up at Jasak, one
eyebrow crooked, and he frowned. Then, suddenly, his eyes
widened and he gave her a very sharp glance indeed.
"Exactly," she said, even more
quietly. "Magister Halathyn's original idea was to produce a unit
which would detect the closest portal and home a survey team in
on it. But once we got into the theory, we discovered that we
could actually nest the spells."
"So that—" Jasak indicated
the display, "—means there's a second gate out
here?"
"If it's working properly.
And—"
She tapped the display again. And
again. And a fourth time. With each tap, the process
repeated, producing new directional arrows and new distance and
strength displays, and Jasak swallowed.
"Is that why Magister
Halathyn's been talking in terms of a cluster?" he asked, and she
nodded.
"Either the thing's completely
screwed up—which is always possible, however little we
might want to admit it—or else there are at least a
total of five portals associated with this one." A jerk of her head
indicated the swamp portal. "Or, more precisely, this one is one of
at least five associated with this one," she amended,
bringing up the original display on the strongest and nearest of the
other portals.
"You said 'at least,'" Jasak
observed intently, and she nodded again.
"We never expected to hit
anything like this on our first field test, Sir Jasak, so there are only
a total of six 'slots' in the spellware. In theory, we could nest as
many as fifteen or twenty—it just never occurred to us to
do it. I suppose that was partly because the Zholhara Cluster only
has six portals, and it seemed unlikely anyone might find one even
bigger."
"Gods," Jasak breathed. He stared
at the unit for several seconds, then shook himself. "I'm beginning
to see why you were keeping this whole thing so quiet!"
"I thought you might. Still," her
eyes brightened, "as happy as I am with how well it seems to be
performing, I think you may still be missing something about this
cluster as compared to Zholhara."
"What?" He moved his gaze from
the unit to her face,
"The Zholhara portals are as much
as three thousand miles apart. The maximum range on our
detector—assuming we got our sums right—is only
about nine hundred miles. In fact, according to the readouts, the farthest one we've detected is less than six hundred miles
from this portal right here."
Jasak sucked in a deep, hard
breath. A minimum of five virgin portals, all within a
radius of only six hundred miles of one another? Gods!
They could have five entirely new transit chains radiating from
this single spot! It took him several seconds to wrap his mind
around the implications, and then he smiled crookedly.
"So that's why Magister
Halathyn's like a gryphon in a henhouse!"
"Oh, that's exactly what
he's like," she agreed with a grin. "And it'd take a special act of
God to get him out of here before every one of these portals is
nailed down. Assuming, of course, that they're really there. Don't
forget that this is our first field trial. It's going to be mighty
embarrassing if it has us out here chasing some sort of wild
goose!"
"Not very likely with both of you
involved in chasing the goose in question, Magister Kelbryan," he
told her with a grin. She waved one hand in an almost
uncomfortable gesture, and he gave a tiny nod of acknowledgment
and shifted conversational gears.
"Well, I guess we'll know one way
or the other pretty soon," he said. "How far away from the nearest
are we now?"
"Assuming Magister Halathyn and
I got it right when we built this thing, it's about thirty miles that
way," she replied, pointing almost due north, directly away from
White Mist Lake.
"About fifteen hours hard hike, in
this terrain," Jasak said thoughtfully. "Twice that with rest breaks,
a bivouac, and the need to find the best trails. And that assumes
basically decent going the entire way."
He glanced at the local time
display, then craned his neck, looking up through a break in the
autumnal canopy at the sun, and grimaced. The local days were
getting short at this time of year, and there was absolutely no way
they were going to make it before dusk, he decided, and raised his
voice.
"Fifty Garlath!"
"Sir?" Shevan Garlath was a lean,
lanky, dark-haired man, almost ten years older than Jasak, despite
his junior rank. Although he'd been born in Yanko, his family had
migrated from one of the smaller Hilmaran kingdoms barely fifty
years earlier, and it showed in his strong nose and very dark eyes
as he turned towards the hundred.
"We need to swing a little further
east," Jasak said, chopping one hand in the direction indicated by
Kelbryan's illuminated needle. "About another thirty miles. We'll
move on for another three or four hours, then bivouac. Keep an
eye out for a good site. "
"Yes, Sir," Garlath responded
crisply enough to fool a casual bystander into thinking he was
actually a competent officer. Then he nodded to his platoon
sword.
"You heard the Hundred, Sword
Hernak," he said.
"Yes, Sir," the stocky, neatly
bearded noncom acknowledged, and went trotting briskly ahead to
overtake the platoon's point and redirect its course. Jasak watched
him go and reflected on how fortunate Garlath was to have
inherited a platoon sword good enough to make even him look
almost capable.
Platoon-Captain Janaki chan
Calirath jerked upright in his sleeping bag so suddenly the nearest
sentry jumped in surprise. Under-Armsman chan Yaran whipped
around at his platoon commander's abrupt movement, then
flinched as a huge, dark-barred peregrine falcon launched itself
from the perch beside the's sleeping bag. The bird screamed in
hard, angry challenge, hurling itself into the clear, cold night to
circle overhead furiously . . .
protectively.
Yaran stood for a moment,
waiting for the platoon-captain to say something—
anything. But the platoon-captain only sat there. He didn't even
move.
"Sir?" chan Yaran said tentatively.
There was no response, and the under-armsman stepped a little
closer. "Platoon-Captain?"
Still no response, and chan Yaran
began to sweat, despite the chill breeze blowing across the
encampment. There was
something . . . ominous about the
officer's total immobility. That would have been true under any
circumstances, but Janaki chan Calirath wasn't any old Imperial
Marine officer. No one was supposed to take any official notice of
that, but every member of the platoon-captain's command was a
Ternathian (which, chan Yaran knew, wasn't exactly an accident),
and that made this officer's petrified lack of response
downright frightening.
Chan Yaran moved to the side
until he could see his CO's face in the firelight. The platoon-
captain's eyes were wide open, unblinking, glittering with reflected
fire, and chan Yaran swallowed hard. What the hell was he
supposed to do now?
He looked around, then leaned
closer to the officer.
"Your Highness?" he said very,
very quietly.
The wide, fixed eyes never even
flickered around their core of firelight, and he muttered a soft,
heartfelt curse. Then he drew a deep breath and crossed to another
sleeping bag and touched its occupant's shoulder lightly.
Chief-Armsman Lorash chan
Braikal twitched upright almost as abruptly as the platoon-captain
had. Unlike the officer, however, Third Platoon's senior noncom
was instantly and totally aware of his surroundings. chan Braikal
hadn't drawn his present slot by random chance, and his eyes
tracked around to chan Yaran like twin pistol muzzles.
"What?"
The one-word question was quiet
and remarkably clear of sleepiness for someone so abruptly
awakened. It came out almost conversationally, but chan Yaran
wasn't deceived. chan Braikal wasn't the sort to jump down
anyone's throat without thorough justification. Gods help you if
you screwed up so seriously enough to give him that
justification, though.
"It's the Platoon-Captain, Chief,"
chan Yaran said, and chan Braikal's eyes snapped wider. "He
just . . . sat up," the under-armsman
said. "Now he's just staring straight ahead, right into the fire. He's
not even blinking, Chief!"
"Vothan's chariot," chan Braikal
muttered. He shoved himself upright and crossed to the platoon-
captain's side. He knelt there, looking into the young officer's
eyes, but taking extraordinary care not to touch him.
"Shouldn't
we . . . well, do something,
Chief?" chan Yaran asked. chan Braikal only snorted harshly,
never looking away from Third Platoon's commanding officer.
"There's fuck-all anyone can
do," the senior chief-armsman growled. "Not till it runs its
course, anyway."
"Is . . . is
it a Glimpse?" chan Yaran's voice was almost a whisper, and chan
Braikal barked a laugh deep in his throat.
"You've seen just as many
Glimpses as I have," he said. "But I'm damned if I can think of
anything else that would hit him like this. Can you?"
chan Yaran shook his head
wordlessly.
"What I thought," chan Braikal
grunted, and sat back on his heels. He gazed at the Crown Prince
of Ternathia's profile for several seconds, then sighed.
"One thing we can do," he said,
looking up at chan Yaran at last. "Break out that bottle of whiskey
in my saddlebag. He may just need it in a little while."
chan Yaran nodded again and
hurried off. The chief-armsman scarcely even noticed his
departure, although half his reason for sending chan Yaran off had
been to give the other Marine something to do as a distraction.
Now if someone could just distract him, as well.
The tough, experienced noncom
snorted again, without a trace of humor. Third Platoon was still a
week out from Fort Brithik on its way forward to reinforce
Company-Captain Halifu. The mountains were far behind them
them, as they headed out across the broad stretch of plains to
Brithik, but the autumn nights were cold under the brilliant stars.
They were also indescribably lonely out here under the endless
canopy of the prairie heavens. The ninety-seven men of Third
Platoon—outfits this close to the frontier were always at
least a little understrength, and Third Platoon was lucky to be only
eleven men short of establishment—were a tiny band of
humanity amid these ancient mountains which had never known
the step of man.
Lorash chan Braikal had joined
the Imperial Marines seventeen years before largely because he'd
known Marines tended to get sent places just like this. Places on
virgin worlds, where the emptiness stretched out forever, wild and
free. Over his career, he'd seen thousands of them, and along the
way he'd discovered that he'd made exactly the right choice when
he enlisted.
But tonight, he felt the vast
emptiness of a planet not yet home to man stretching out around
him in all directions, sucking at his soul like a vacuum as he knelt
here in this fragile bubble of firelight, watching the heir to the
imperial crown in the grip of a precognitive Glimpse of terrifying
power.
Gods, the chief-armsman thought. Gods, I wish we'd
never left
Fort Raylthar!
But they had, and there was
nothing he could do but wait until Prince Janaki woke back up and
told them what vision had seized him by the throat.
Well, wait and pray.
The next morning dawned clear
and considerably chillier. There was frost on their bedrolls, and
Jasak found it difficult to radiate a sense of lighthearted adventure
as he dragged himself out of his sleeping bag's seductive warmth.
Magister Kelbryan, on the other hand, looked almost disgustingly
cheerful. She'd taken being the only woman in the expedition in
stride, but Jasak had unobtrusively seen to it that her sleeping bag
was close to his. Not because he distrusted his men—the
Second Andarans were an elite outfit, proud of their
reputation—but because his father's maxim that it was
always easier to prevent problems than to solve them had been
programmed into him at an almost instinctual level.
And, he admitted cheerfully as he
watched her rolling her bag as tightly as any of his troopers,
because he enjoyed her company. It was even more enjoyable
talking with her than looking at her, and that was saying quite a
bit.
He chuckled, shaking his head in
self-reproving amusement, but then his humor faded a bit as he
listened to Fifty Garlath issuing his morning orders.
His "discussion" with Garlath the
evening before had been even more unpleasant than he'd
anticipated. The fifty had always resented Jasak. Everyone in the
Second Andarans—and in the entire Arcanan Army, for that
matter—knew Sir Jasak Olderhan was the only son of
Commander of Five Thousand Sir Thankhar Olderhan, Arcanan
Army, retired. Who also happened to be His Grace Sir Thankhar
Olderhan, Governor of High Hathak, Duke of Garth Showma,
Earl of Yar Khom, and Baron
Sarkhala . . . and more to the point,
perhaps, the man who had commanded the Second Andaran Scout
Brigade for over fourteen years before his medical retirement. The
Second Andarans were, for all intents and purposes, an hereditary
command of the Dukes of Garth Showma, and had been for
almost a hundred and seventy years. In fact, they had originally
been raised as "The Duke of Garth Showma's Own Rangers."
All of which meant that although
Jasak might on paper be only one of the brigade's twelve company
commanders, he was actually a little more equal than any of the
others. Jasak himself had always known that, and the knowledge
had driven him to demonstrate that he deserved the preferential
treatment an accident of birth had bestowed upon him.
Unfortunately, not everyone recognized that, and the Arcanan
Army's tradition, particularly in its Andaran units, was for officers
and noncoms to remain within their original brigade or division
for their entire careers. It produced a powerful sense of unit
identification and was an undoubted morale enhancer, but it could
also enhance petty resentments and hostilities. Family quarrels,
after all, are almost always nastier than quarrels between strangers.
Shevan Garlath remembered the
day a skinny, gawky young Squire Olderhan, fresh out of the
Academy, had reported for duty. Shevan Garlath had been a
commander of fifty then . . . and he
still was. Barring a miracle or the direct intervention of the gods
themselves, and despite the fact that he was the younger cousin of
a baron, he would still be a commander of fifty when he reached
mandatory retirement age. Not even his aristocratic cousin
possessed the pull to get someone of his demonstrated inability
promoted any higher than that. But since he wasn't prepared to
admit that it was because of his own feckless incompetence, it had
to be because other people—people like then-Squire and
now-Commander of One Hundred Olderhan—had stolen
the promotions he deserved because their connections
were even loftier then his own.
He'd listened to Jasak
expressionlessly, without saying a word . . .
and certainly without ever acknowledging that a single one of the
Jasak's tactful criticisms or suggestions was merited. Jasak had
wanted to strangle him, but he'd been forced to admit that it was
his own fault. He ought to have jerked Garlath up short six weeks
ago, when the man was first transferred from Baker Company to
Charlie Company as an emergency medical relief for Fifty Thaylar.
But he'd told himself it was only a temporary arrangement, just
until Thaylar returned from hospital and he could pack Garlath
back off to Baker. So instead of sorting the idiot out—or
getting rid of him—then, Jasak had let things slide. And
now, as his father had always warned him, he was discovering just
how much more difficult it was to correct a problem than it would
have been to prevent it in the first place.
"I regret that the Hundred is
dissatisfied with my efforts," Garlath had said in a cool voice
when Jasak finished. "I believe, however, that my deployment of
the men under my command has been both prudent and adequate."
Despite everything, Jasak had been
flabbergasted.
"I don't believe you quite
understand my point, Fifty Garlath," he'd said after several
seconds, once he was confident he could control his own tone.
"My point is that we were very slow getting started this morning
and that I disagree with your assessment as to the adequacy of our
formation once we did get moving. I want it changed."
"I believe, Sir, that—as my
report will make clear—the reasons for any delay in our
departure time were beyond my control. And my understanding of
Regulations is that my chosen formation and interval fall within
my own discretion, as this unit's commanding officer, so long as
my deployment meets the standards laid down by Army doctrine
and general field orders."
"This isn't about standards," Jasak
had replied, trying to keep the anger out of his tone as he realized
Garlath truly intended to defy him. "And it certainly isn't about
regulations, Fifty. It's about getting the job done."
"I understand that, Sir. And I
would point out that First Platoon, under my command, has
successfully accomplished every task the Hundred has assigned to
it."
"Whenever you finally got around
to it." Jasak's response had come out a bit more icily even than
he'd intended, but the defiance flickering in Garlath's eyes—
the challenge, which was what it amounted to, to officially
reprimand him, despite his patrons, when there was no overt
failure in the field to point to—had infuriated him. As, he'd
suddenly recognized, it had been intended to. Garlath, he'd
realized, was actually attempting to provoke him into words or
actions which the fifty would be able to claim proved the
hundred's no doubt scathing endorsement of his efficiency report
stemmed solely from the fact that Jasak nourished some sort of
private vendetta against him.
It was the kind of cunning which
proved the other man's fundamental stupidity, but that hadn't
changed the parameters of Jasak's current problem, and he'd
inhaled deeply.
"Listen to me, Fifty," he'd said
then, "this isn't a debate, and this isn't some sort of Ransaran
democracy. Tomorrow morning, you will place your point
element the required two hundred yards ahead of your main body.
You will place a man between your point element and your main
body, in visual contact with each, and you will deploy scouts a
maximum of one hundred yards out on either flank, where they
can maintain adequate contact with the main body. Moreover,
you will maintain one squad at immediate readiness, with
its dragon locked and loaded. And when we return to base camp,
you and I will . . . discuss our little
differences of opinion about the adequacy of your command
performance. Is all of that understood, Fifty Garlath?"
Garlath's already dark face had
darkened further, yet he'd been left little room for maneuver. His
jaw had clenched, and his eyes had blazed hotly, but he'd drawn
himself up and saluted with a precision that was a wordless act of
insubordination in its own right.
"Yes, Sir. Understood. And I
assure the Hundred that his instructions will be obeyed to the
letter. Is that all, Sir?"
"Yes, it is."
"By your leave, then, Sir," Garlath
had said with frozen formality, pivoted on his heel, and stalked off
to find Sword Harnak.
"I hope I'm not out of line, Sir
Jasak, but you and Fifty Garlath don't exactly seem to like one
another."
"Oh?" Jasak looked across at
Magister Kelbryan, once more following along behind Garlath
with him, and his mouth quirked in a humorless smile. "What
makes you say that?"
"I could say it's because I'm
Gifted, and that I was always good at social analysis spells. Which
happens to be true, actually." Her smile had considerably more
amusement in it than his had. "On the other hand, those spells have
always been overrated in the popular press. They work quite well
for mass analyses, like the polling organizations undertake, but
they're pretty much useless on the microlevel." She shrugged. "So
instead of falling back on the prestige and reputation of my Gift,
I'll just say that he seems a trifle . . .
sullen this morning."
The magister had a pronounced
gift for understatement, Jasak reflected. In fact, Garlath's
"sullenness" had communicated itself to his platoon. Sword
Harnak had obviously done his best to defuse the worst of it, but
Garlath had made his own air of martyred exasperation only too
plain when he ordered his troopers to assume the formation Jasak
had insisted upon. He'd been careful about the actual words he
used, obviously determined to provide the hundred with no overt
ammunition if it came to charges of insubordination. But tone and
body language could be remarkably eloquent.
Jasak had considered making a
point of just that. Punishable offenses under the articles of war
included one defined as "silent insubordination," which could
certainly be stretched to cover Garlath's attitude. He was tempted
to trot it out—Garlath was busy creating the very situation
Jasak had hoped to avoid by refraining from criticizing him in
front of his men—but he resisted the temptation. Whatever
else he might be doing, the fifty was complying, however
ungraciously, with the specific instructions he'd been given.
Of course, he was sending out
only a single point man, instead of the entire section Jasak himself
would have assigned. The hundred recognized that as yet another
petty defiance, but Garlath had obviously figured out that Jasak
was reluctant to ream him out in front of his men. So the fifty was
challenging him to demand that he change his orders, or to simply
overrule him and "usurp" command of his platoon. And Jasak had
been almost overwhelmingly tempted to do just that.
But the very strength of the
temptation had warned him that it was born at least as much of
anger as of professional judgment, and anger was not the best
basis for making command decisions. Better to wait until he was
certain his own temper wasn't driving
him . . . and until he could bring the
hammer down as Garlath deserved without doing any more
damage to the platoon's internal discipline while they were in the
field. If there'd been any prospect of running into some sort of
opposition, or even any dangerous predator, it might have been
different. But this was a virgin portal. There wouldn't be even the
threat of the frontier brigands or claim jumpers the Army was
occasionally called upon to suppress.
"I'm afraid the Fifty and I don't
exactly see eye to eye on the proper conduct of a first survey," he
said after a moment, answering the magister with rather more
frankness than he'd initially intended.
"And I'm afraid that that's
because the Fifty is a frigging idiot," Magister Kelbryan replied
tartly.
Jasak blinked in surprise, and she
giggled. It was an astonishingly bright, silvery sound, almost as
unexpected as her earthy language had been.
"I'm sorry, Sir Jasak!" she said, her
tone genuinely contrite despite the laughter still bubbling in the
depths of her voice. "It's just that Magister Halathyn and I had to
put up with him for almost six full days after your departure, and
I've never met a man more invincibly convinced of his own
infallibility. Despite, I might add, the overwhelming weight of the
evidence to the contrary."
"I'm afraid it would be quite
improper for me to denigrate the abilities of one of my officers,
especially in front of a civilian," Jasak said after a moment.
"And the fact that you feel
constrained to say that tells me everything I really need to know,
doesn't it, Hundred?" she asked. He said nothing, only looked at
her, smiling ever so faintly, and she giggled again. Then she eased
the straps of her pack across her shoulders, inhaled hugely, and
looked up at the crystal blue patches of autumn sky showing
between the dark needles of evergreens and the paint brush glory
of seasonal foliage.
"My, what a magnificent day!" she
observed.
Trooper 2/c Osmuna swore under
his breath as the rock shifted under his right heel. His left arm
rose, flailing for balance as he teetered in the middle of the broad,
shallow stream. The heavy infantry arbalest in his right hand
threatened to pull him the rest of the way off center and down, and
the prospect of tumbling into the crystal clear, icy water rushing
over its stony bed wrung another, more heartfelt obscenity out of
him.
He managed, somehow, not to
fall. Which was a damned good thing. Sword Harnak would have
had his guts for garters (assuming that Gaythar Harklan, Osmuna's
squad shield didn't rip them out first) if he'd fucked up and given
Fifty Garlath an excuse to pitch another damned tantrum. Garlath
was a piss-poor substitute for Fifty Thaylar, and he was already in
a crappy enough mood. Fifty Thaylar would only have laughed it
off if his point man fell into a river; Garlath would probably rip
everyone involved a new anal orifice just to relieve his own
emotional constipation.
Personally, Osmuna reflected, as
he continued on across the stream, stepping more cautiously from
stone to stone, he thought the bee the Old Man had obviously
gotten into his bonnet was probably a bit on the irrational side.
Oh, sure, The Book insisted that point elements and flanking
scouts be thrown out and that they maintain visual contact with
one another at all times. But despite all of that, it wasn't like they
were going to run into hordes of howling savages, and everyone
knew it. No one ever had, in two centuries of steady exploration
and expansion. Still, between the Old Man and Garlath, Osmuna
knew which he preferred. Officers who let themselves get
sloppy about one thing tended to get sloppy about other
things . . . and officers who got
sloppy, tended to get their troopers killed.
His thoughts had carried him to
the far bank, and he started up a shallow slope. The line of the
stream had opened a hole in the forest canopy, which permitted the
growth of the sort of dense, tangled brush and undergrowth which
had been choked out elsewhere in the virgin mature forest. As he
began to force his way through it, a flicker of movement higher up
the slope, on the edge of the trees, caught his attention. He looked
at it, and froze.
Faslan chan Salgmun froze in
disbelief, staring down at the river.
The man—and it was,
indisputably, a man, however he'd gotten here—
looked completely out of place. And not simply because this was a
virgin world, which meant, by definition, that no one lived there.
It wasn't just his uniform,
although that pattern of dense green, black, and white would have
been far better suited to a tropical rain forest somewhere than to
the mixed conifers and deciduous trees towering above him. Nor
was it his coloring, which, after all, was nothing extraordinary. It
was the totality of his appearance—the peculiar spiked
helmet, covered in the same inappropriate camouflage fabric of
which his uniform was made; the clubbed braid of bright, golden
hair spilling over the back of his collar; the knee-high, tightly
laced boots; the short sword at his left
hip . . . and the peculiar looking
crossbow carried in his right hand.
It was like some weird composite
image, some insane juxtapositioning of modern textiles and
manufactured goods with medieval weaponry, and it couldn't be
here. Couldn't exist. In eighty years of exploration under the Portal
Authority's auspices, no trace of any other human civilization had
ever been discovered.
Until, chan Salgmun realized,
today.
And what the fuck do I do now?
* * *
Trooper Osmuna stared at the
impossible apparition. It wore brown trousers, short boots, and a
green jacket, and its slouch hat looked like something a Tukorian
cattle herder might have worn. It had a puny looking sheath knife
at one hip, certainly not anything anyone might have called a
proper sword, and something else—something with
a handgrip, almost like one of the hand crossbows some hunters
used for small game—in an abbreviated scabbard on the
other hip. It was also holding something in both hands. Something
like an arbalest, but with no bow stave.
It couldn't be here, he thought.
Not after two hundred years! Despite all of his training, all of his
experience, Osmuna discovered that he'd been totally unprepared
for what had been laughingly dismissed as "the other guy
contingency" literally for generations.
His heart seemed to have stopped
out of sheer shock, but then he felt his pulse begin to race and
adrenaline flooded his system. He didn't know exactly what the
other man was holding, or how it worked, but he knew from the way he held it that it was a weapon of some sort.
And what the fuck do I do now? he wondered
frantically.
chan Salgmun shook himself. He
was only a private employee of the Chalgyn Consortium these
days, working for one of the private firms licensed by the Portal
Authority to explore the links between the universes. But in his
day, he'd served in the Ternathian Army, which considered itself
the best on Sharona, with reason, and he recognized the other
man's confusion. Confusion that could be dangerous, under the
circumstances.
Here we both stand, armed, and scared as shit, he thought.
All we need is for one of us to fuck up. And that damned
crossbow of his is cocked and ready to go. I know I don't
intend to do anything stupid . . . but
what about him?
His thumb moved, very carefully
disengaging the safety on his Model 9 rifle.
Osmuna saw the not-arbalest
move slowly, stealthily, and the level of adrenaline flooding his
system rocketed upward. Doctrine was clear on this point. In the
inconceivable event that another human civilization was
encountered, contact was to be made peacefully, if at all possible.
But the overriding responsibility was to ensure that news of the
encounter got home. Which meant the people who had
that news had to be alive—and free—to deliver it.
And if Osmuna intended to stay
alive and uncaptured, it probably wouldn't be a very good idea to
let this stranger point an unknown weapon at him.
He moved his left hand to the
forearm of his arbalest and tipped it upward slightly.
Craaaaccccckkkkk!
"What the he—?"
Jasak's head snapped up at the
sharp, totally unexpected sound. He'd never heard anything like
that flat, hard explosion. It was almost like a tiny sliver bitten off a
roll of thunder. Or perhaps the sound a frozen branch made
shattering under an intolerable weight of winter ice. But it was
neither of those things, and whatever it was, it wasn't a
natural sound, either. He didn't know how he could be so positive,
yet he was, and his first instant flare of astonishment disappeared
into a sudden, terrible suspicion.
Chapter Two
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr ducked
under the open flap of her tent, stepped out into the early chill, and
sucked in a deep double lungful of morning. The crisp autumn air
tasted like heaven, and she stretched, closing her eyes to sort out
the delightful scents floating on the breeze. Cinnamon-dry leaves
underfoot mingled with the soft, green fragrance of moss, and the
deep, rich scent of wet earth from the forest floor. She grinned in
sheer delight, then opened her eyes to watch the gold-tinted mist
that hung in a thick, whisper-soft curtain along the stream they'd
been following for three days. She could hear the broad
creek—it nearly qualified as a river—gurgling and
chuckling its way through the ravine it had cut through the forest.
Her husband, Jathmar Nargra,
emerged from the tent behind her, and slanting sunlight turned his
thinning sandy hair into copper fire. The ends curled slightly from
the dampness, like the baby curls in the pictures Jathmar's mother
had shown her after their marriage. Field equipment festooned his
sturdy canvas web gear: metal canteen, waterproofed compass,
field glasses, canvas rucksack. He had his rifle slung across one
shoulder for greater ease in carrying, and a Halanch and Welnahr
revolver rode his belt.
The lever action rifle and heavy
single-action pistol were for protection against inimical
wildlife—today, at least. There was literally no chance that
they'd run into anything like claim jumpers or a gang of portal
pirates in a virgin universe, but that wasn't always the case out
here on the leading edge of the frontier. Shaylar was more than a
little relieved that he wasn't going to need all that hardware today,
but she had to admit he made a brave and dashing figure, standing
there in the golden sunlight that filtered down like shafts of
molten butter through the gorgeously colored leaves overhead.
Jathmar's sun-bronzed face broke
into a broad grin as her delight sparkled to him through their
marriage bond.
"It is a good morning, isn't
it?" he observed. "Even with my unheroic figure squarely in the
middle of it."
"Oh, absolutely!" Shaylar laughed.
"You wound me, woman." His
long face took on a crestfallen tragedy that would have fooled
anyone else. "You weren't supposed to agree with me!"
"My dear, you're armed and
dangerous enough to take on any black bears, timber wolves, wild
boars, or cougars native to this part of the world." She batted her
eyelashes at him. "What more could any delicately reared maiden
ask?"
"Hah! That's more like it!"
He waggled his eyebrows and
swaggered over for his good-morning kiss. Rather, his fifth good-morning kiss since they'd rolled out of their sleeping bags,
twenty minutes previously, she thought with an inner laugh as he
enfolded her in his arms. Jathmar Nargra was nothing if not an
opportunist. And since they'd spent the vast bulk of the past four
years in the company of forty unmarried men—give or take
the odd one or two security types who'd hired on, then decided to
homestead, or gotten eaten by the odd crocodile—Jathmar
made the most of whatever opportunities came his way.
So did Shaylar, for that matter.
Since most of the universes explored to date did have cougars in
this region, and since—so far as anyone had been able to
tell after eighty years of constant exploration—every
portal's universe was very nearly identical to every other, Shaylar
didn't mind in the least Jathmar's tendency to run about armed like
a proper brigand. His various bits and pieces of lethal hardware
might get in the way at moments like this, but that was just fine
with her.
When Jathmar finally decided
their kiss had been adequate, for now, at least, he stepped back,
and she grinned as she noticed the sketchbook peeking out of his
rucksack.
"Planning to loaf today, are we?"
she inquired sweetly, and his clear hazel eyes twinkled.
"Tease me all you like, faithless
wench. One of these days, I'll have to beat the art buyers off with a
club, and we'll find ourselves retired, rich, and happy."
"I'm happy now," she smiled. "And
with all of this," she swept an expansive arm at the pristine
wilderness surrounding them, "who needs to be rich?"
"Who, indeed?" he echoed,
brushing a lock of raven-black hair from her brow. A few strands
always escaped the practical braids she wore while in the field.
"You really are happy," he said, smiling as he read her
emotions through the special bond between married Talents. "I
worried about it, you know. When we first started our crusade to
place you on a field team."
"Yes, I know," she said softly.
"And I know how hard you pushed the Board to pull it off."
"Halidar Kinshe turned the tide of
opinion, not me," Jathmar demurred. "And you've known the
Parliamentary Representative a lot longer than I have, dear heart.
Still," he grinned, "if you want to lavish thanks on your husband's
humble head, far be it from me to discourage you."
"You," she said severely, swatting
him with her rolled up tube of charts, "are incorrigible!"
"Not at all. Encouragable,
now . . . "
She laughed as he waggled his
eyebrows again. Then he tipped his head up to peer through the
crimson and golden clouds of fall foliage high overhead.
"It is a grand morning for
sketching, isn't it? Not to mention perfect weather for a survey.
The mist ought to burn off early, I think."
"Not that you need a clear
day," Shaylar chuckled. Jathmar's Talent was the ability to "see"
terrain features in a five-mile circle around him, regardless of
weather or ambient light—or the complete lack thereof.
"But weather like this should make the hike more exhilarating. I'll
give you that. In fact, I think I'm jealous about being stuck in camp
while you go gadding about!"
"You're happy as a pearl in a bed
of oysters," he told her, tweaking her nose gently. "Besides, after
that last universe, you should be thrilled by any sunshine we can
get."
"I'll say."
Shaylar's shudder of memory was
only half-feigned. The universe they'd mapped prior to entering
this one had connected via a portal in the middle of what had to be
one of the rainiest spots in any known universe. Back home, it
would have been northwest Rokhana, near the mouth of the
Yirshan River where it spilled into the immense Western Ocean.
They'd been incredibly lucky in that their arrival portal and the
portal leading to this universe were less than three
hundred miles apart, and they knew it. Portals in such close
proximity to one another were almost unheard of, and
correspondingly valuable.
Despite that, and despite the
guidance Darcel Kinlafia, their Portal Hound, had been able to
give them, it had taken them almost a month and a half to cover
the two hundred and sixty-five dripping wet miles between them,
and the last three weeks had been horrible. They hadn't seen the
sun for twenty-three straight days, and most of their gear had
sprouted mold that had required copious amounts of bleach once
the rains finally stopped. After six weeks spent in perpetually
soggy clothes, squelching through perpetually soggy wetlands,
pushing through perpetually thick undergrowth with machetes,
and sleeping under perpetual shrouds of mosquito netting and the
smoke of smudge pots, this crisp, clear autumn air was heaven
itself.
"I'm not complaining," she said
cheerfully. "At least we could come through the portal and leave
the rain behind. Poor Company-Captain Halifu had to build a
fort in that mess. I don't think I've ever seen such an
abundance of unenthusiastic soldiers in my life."
Grafin Halifu had favored Jathmar
and Shaylar—carefully out of earshot of the men of his
command—with a piquant rendition of his opinion of the
multiverse's inconsiderate ill manners in placing a portal in that
particular godsforsaken spot. And since Uromathians worshiped
just about as many deities as there were individual Uromathians, a
spot had to be nigh well lost at the back of forever before all
the Uromathian gods decided to forsake it.
For some odd reason, the
company-captain had seemed less than amused by Ghartoun chan
Hagrahyl's decision to name that universe "New Uromath" in
honor of Halifu's homeland.
"No, Grafin's troops weren't very
happy, were they?" Jathmar chuckled. "Of course, I
wouldn't have been very happy if Regs had required me to
build on the already-mapped side of that particular portal, either.
There they sit, sinking slowly into the mud, and right in front of
them is all of this."
It was his turn to wave
expansively at the towering forest giants all about them.
"At least Darcel wasn't bound by
the PAAF's policy," Shaylar pointed out.
"I think some of Grafin's troopers
were ready to commit mayhem when they realized he was bugging
out for a better spot," Jathmar agreed.
"They couldn't possibly blame
him," Shaylar replied primly, eyes laughing wickedly. "He's a
telepath. And everyone knows that not even the best Voice can
transmit through a portal."
"That's what all of you keep
telling the rest of us, anyway," Jathmar said. "I'm not too sure
Grafin's troopers were buying it this time around, though."
Shaylar chuckled. Like her, Darcel
Kinlafia was a Voice, a Talented long-distance communications
specialist. Voices, who were born with the gifts of perfect recall
and the ability to connect, mind-to-mind, with other Voices, were
essential in many aspects of Sharonian society.
Governments, the Portal
Authority, and private industries ranging from manufacturing to
news broadcasters used Voices to transmit complex messages that
were word-and image-perfect. The military used Voices, as well,
for its long-range communications. But as useful as Voices were
throughout Sharona's multiple-universe civilization, they were
utterly indispensable to the work of surveying new
universes.
Every survey crew fielded a bare
minimum of two Voices. One remained at the portal giving access
to a new universe, serving as a link between the field team
conducting the survey and the established settlements in the
universes behind them. The more portals a field team surveyed, the
more Voices it needed to cover the portals in their particular
transit chain. And when their team reached the distance limit of
Shaylar's transmission ability, they would need to move Darcel
forward and replace him with a new Voice in a game of telepathic
leapfrog.
This portal, in particular, was part
of the reason they were so stretched for manpower. During the
past ten months, Chalgyn Consortium's teams had found no less
than three new portals, including New Uromathia and this one,
which they hadn't named yet. That had forced them to split up,
trying to claim and explore them all, and that was before they
crossed into this universe and started to realize what they might
have stumbled across. Their discoveries were going to be a
massive windfall, and not just for them and their employer. In all
of its eighty previous years of exploration, the Portal Authority
had located and charted only forty-nine portals. The Chalgyn teams
had already increased that total by over six percent, and if Darcel
was right about this portal, the consequences for their
entire civilization (not to mention their own bank accounts)
would be stupendous.
All of that was wonderful, but it
also left them incredibly shorthanded. Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl
had split their team twice, already, claiming the other two portals
and exploring the universes beyond them. As a result, they were
down to only two Voices and a bare minimum of other crewmen,
not to mention supplies, but nobody was complaining.
Fortunately, the Portal Authority
was in charge of all portal transit traffic, which meant the units of
the PAAF—the Portal Authority Armed Forces, composed
of multinational military units assigned to the Authority
duty—built the portal forts and provided most of the
personnel to man them, including at least one Portal Authority
Voice. Or, that was the way it was supposed to work, at any rate.
This portal was so new, and there were so many other
portals along what had been designated the Karys Chain that
needed forts, as well, that the military hadn't been able to bring in
a new Voice, yet.
All of which left Darcel Kinlafia
holding down the listening post for their team until a fort-based
Voice could be moved in. Darcel would pass their field reports
along from one Voice to the next, creating a chain of rapid
communications. They could, if emergency required it, get a
message all the way back to humanity's birth world, Sharona, in
little little more than a week. If not for the water gaps between
some of the portals, which had to be crossed by ship, since no one
could permanently post a relay Voice in the middle of an ocean,
they could have gotten a message home in a matter of hours.
Shaylar was grateful that she
would never be the Voice stuck at the portal, just waiting for
someone else's messages. She wasn't merely the Voice assigned to
the survey team, she was married to—and inextricably
linked with—its primary Mapper. That made her not only an
integral part of the survey, but meant she was critical to the team's
primary mission: mapping a new universe. Jathmar could "See"
the terrain around him, but Shaylar was the team's actual
cartographer. It was her job to translate Jathmar's mental
"pictures" of distant terrain features into the maps which would
guide later exploration and settlements. Even if they stumbled
across another portal, they wouldn't—couldn't—
leave Shaylar there to cover it. They would have to send word
back to field another survey crew to explore the new universe, or
else to take over the exploration of this one so that they
could concentrate on the new one.
Then again, they couldn't really
leave Darcel, either. Not for long, anyway. He might not be as
essential to the everyday operations of the field team as Shaylar
and Jathmar were, but his secondary Talent was, in its own way,
even more important to the Consortium's long term operations.
She knew exactly how lucky she
was. Not just to escape the tedium of portal sitting, while others
enjoyed all the fun of exploration, but to be out here at all. On the
whole, Sharonian women enjoyed equal status with Sharonian
men, although legal rights varied from one kingdom or republic to
the next. After all, there was no question about female intelligence
or inherent capabilities in a population where one in five people
possessed at least some degree of Talent. That sort of
discrimination had gone out with the dark ages, thousands upon
thousands of years ago, during the first Ternathian Empire.
But mapping virgin universes was
arduous, frequently dangerous work. The Portal Authority, whose
governing members were drawn from each of Sharona's dozens of
nations and city-states—not to mention the current
Ternathian Empire—had decreed that women should not
risk the dangers routinely braved by virgin-portal survey teams.
Shaylar was the Portal Authority's
first exception to that ironclad rule, which had carried the weight
of eighty years of precedent. She was very much aware that her
performance was under scrutiny. She had the chance of a
lifetime—the chance to blaze the way for other women who
wanted to explore where no other human had ever set
foot—but she was equally conscious of her responsibility
to prove once and for all that it was time to set that long-standing
rule permanently aside.
Shaylar had helped survey two
other virgin universes before this expedition, not to mention
putting in her time, along with Jathmar, pushing back the frontiers
of other, already claimed universes. Each portal gave access to an
entire planet, after all, and however physically similar all of those
duplicate worlds might be, they still had to be explored and
surveyed. And that wasn't the sort of chore which could be
accomplished in the snap of your fingers. Besides, that sort of
exploration was the final training period—the
internship—the Authority required before it was prepared
to turn a team loose on the far side of an unexplored portal.
It was just as rugged a life as
everyone had warned her it would be. The frontier wasn't gentle,
and it didn't make allowances for the "frailer sex." But despite the
worries of the general public and the dire predictions of the
naysayers—not to mention the very real harshness of
conditions, and the ever-present dangers any pioneer faced in the
wilderness—she was profoundly happy. Not to mention
tremendously successful.
Having Jathmar at her side to
share the experience only deepened the wonder of at all. Her eyes
met his and the love that came rolling to her through their
marriage bond was so strong and sweet tears prickled her eyelids.
Jathmar leaned down the seven inches between their mismatched
heights and placed a gentle kiss on her brow, a more tender
expression of his feelings than a mere ardent lip-lock. Then he
grinned and jerked his head towards the deep timber.
"Time's a-wasting," he said. "Let's
see how much we can get mapped before lunch. And the sooner
we talk to Ghartoun, the sooner we'll get started."
Their camp was nestled in a
natural clearing where the stream looped its way through the
timber. It had taken them three days to come this far, and they'd
been here for nearly three more days, mapping the region. Shaylar
knew she would miss the campsite when they moved on, but she
was just as anxious as the others to see what lay ahead. Any survey
was always slow work, of course, but it had taken five full days
just to map the portal itself. Not surprisingly, since it was by far
the largest any of them had ever seen, far less mapped.
In fact, at over thirty miles wide, it
was actually larger than the Calirath Gate. That made it the largest
portal ever discovered, and their first task on stepping through it
had been to map the actual portal and lay out the grid coordinates
of what would become this universe's primary base camp, one
day's journey from Company-Captain Halifu's fort. This one
would be a substantial affair—a fully manned fort and
forward supply depot that would house portal Authority
administrators, medical teams, more soldiers, and enough
equipment and supplies to serve as the staging area for other
exploration teams, construction crews, miners, and the settlers
who would inevitably follow.
One they'd found a suitable site
for that base of operations and sent its coordinates back for the
Chalgyn Consortium to begin organizing the follow-on
construction crews, they'd set out along a line to the south. As
they pushed forward, they'd built small brush enclosures at the end
of each full day's travel, designed to keep out unfriendly local
wildlife. They'd remained in place at each camp long enough to
thoroughly map the surrounding region—which meant
hiking far enough to telepathically Map a twenty-mile
grid-square—then pushed forward another full day's
journey and built another camp to start the process all over again.
It was no accident that the Portal
Authority had drawn upon the Ternathian Empire's method of
expansion. Ternathia had been building empires for five thousand
years, after all. That was an immense span of time in which to
develop methods that worked, and the Portal Authority
had borrowed heavily whenever and wherever appropriate,
including the custom of building fortified camps along any line of
exploratory advance through virgin territory. The fact that
Ternathia provided over forty percent of the PA's multinational
military contingent, and something like half of its total attached
officers, might also have had a little something to do with it,
Shaylar supposed.
With only twenty people on their
currently understrength crew, she and her crewmates couldn't
build the elaborate stockades which had comprised the Ternathian
system of day-forts. But they could construct a perimeter of
interwoven branches that served to keep out anything short of a
herd of charging elephants. There were even tales from veteran
crews of stampeding cattle and bison herds numbering in the tens
of thousands, turning aside and flowing around the camp, rather
than run directly into the jagged, sharp projecting branches of its
brush wall. All in all, the system worked as well for the Portal
Authority as it had for the Ternathians.
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl was
intimately familiar with that system, since he'd served with the
Ternathian Army, as the honorific "chan" in his name
proclaimed. He'd been an engineer, and after fulfilling his
commitment to the Army, he'd returned to school. He taken
advantage of a major scholarship offer to pursue graduate studies
in engineering and actually taught engineering at the branch of the
Ternathian Imperial University in New Estafel on New Sharona,
the first major colony established outside Sharona's home
universe.
After a decade in the classroom,
however, he'd succumbed to the lure of the portals. That had been
almost twenty years ago, and for the last seven, he'd been with the
Chalgyn Consortium.
She and Jathmar both found
Ghartoun's experience comforting. Jathmar was especially
conscious of it, since he himself had never served in any military
force. The Republic of Faltharia, colonized long after the last real
shooting war had rampaged across Sharona, had only two
neighbors, neither of whom were interested in expanding their
territories through conquest. Not when there was free land for the
taking in unexplored universes, just waiting to be colonized.
Jathmar had learned his woodcraft during his childhood, living
near and honing his Talent in the trackless Kylie Forest, the
greatest of Faltharia's protected state forests, which preserved the
wilderness Faltharia's earliest settlers had found when they arrived
from Farnalia nearly three hundred years ago.
Jathmar was grateful that
Farnalians—and their Faltharian descendents—
understood the multiple values that large tracts of wilderness
bestowed on a nation. And for giving him a place to hone the
skills which had helped earn him a slot on a survey crew.
And if he lacked formal military
training, he'd been through the Portal Authority's own rigorous
training program. Coupled with a lifetime as a hunter, he felt more
than capable of holding up his end of anything that came his team's
way. Not that he spent very much of his time in camp.
His Mapping duties were the main
reason it had taken them three days to move this far south. They
could have made the same trip much more quickly—they
were little more than a single day from their entry portal for
someone hiking at his best emergency speed—but you
simply couldn't Map that quickly. While Darcel Kinlafia loafed
around at the portal with a fishing pole and a stewpot full of
whatever he could bring down with his rifle, Jathmar and Shaylar
were hard at work, earning every cent of their fat paychecks.
They frequently toiled well past
darkness to lay down their expanding grid. Jathmar didn't need
daylight to "see" terrain features, and Shaylar could work by the
light of the oil lamps they carried in their packs, with reflectors to
give her plenty of light to fill in the charts and field reports she
was responsible for creating. With any luck, their chosen direction
would carry them straight toward some kind of valuable real
estate that they could claim for the Chalgyn Consortium.
The consortium's main income, of
course, would come from portal-usage fees. Once a survey crew
discovered a new portal, the company which employed them
earned the right to charge fees for every person and every load of
goods that traveled through it. The Portal Authority actually ran
the portals and set the fees, which were very low on an individual
basis. But the cumulative totals added up to a staggering annual
income for busy portals.
That was the driving force behind
fielding survey crews. Any crew that found a new portal
guaranteed a potentially massive income for its company. Mineral
wealth and other natural resource rights simply added to the
lucrative venture, and the team which found them shared in the
money derived from them.
Now Jathmar offered his wife an
arm, and Shaylar giggled as she laid her hand regally on his elbow.
The gesture was curiously refined, in that subtle and mysterious
way Harkalian women seemed to master in their cradles. For just
an instant, the grubby, dirt stained dungarees and scuffed hiking
boots wavered as his mind's eye showed him a vision of his wife
in High Harkalian formal dress. She looked stunning in its
multitude of embroidered layers, each one dyed a different,
luminous color, setting her skin aglow with the colors of sun-
struck emeralds and gold-flecked lapis and the rich, burgundy
tones of Fratha wine.
Blue lapis remained to this day the
most precious gemstone in any Harkalian culture, for
reasons Jathmar still wasn't sure he entirely grasped. Harkalian
mythology tended toward the complex, with layers of meaning
Shaylar was still explaining after nearly ten years of wedded bliss.
Of course, most of Shaylar's lessons ended prematurely, since
virtually all of Harkalian mythology revolved around the pleasures
of intimacy shared between willing
participants. . . .
Shaylar caught the drift of his
emotions and smiled gently, with a seductive promise that hit
Jathmar like a blow to the gut. That smile made him grateful all
over again for the victory they'd won, securing Shaylar's place in
this survey crew. He couldn't have done field work without her. Wouldn't have, rather, for the simple reason that being
separated from her for extended periods of time would have felt
entirely too much like premature death.
"I love you, too," Shaylar
murmured, drawing his head down for another kiss that was
altogether too brief. He sighed regretfully and promised himself
an early end to the evening, thankful that they'd pitched their tent
just a little further from the others, for privacy's sake. Shaylar
picked up that emotion through their marriage bond, too,
and her eyes smoldered as they met his. Then she schooled her
features, patted his arm in a decorous, wifely fashion, and headed
him toward the center of camp, where Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's
voice rang out clearly above the chatter of birds defending their
chosen territories.
"Ghartoun sounds just like them,
doesn't he?" Shaylar chuckled, nodding toward the deep timber
and its glorious explosion of birdsong. "Defending what we've
marked on our charts and figuring ways to outfox our competition
when the rival survey teams arrive."
"I'd lay money that nobody else
has ever suggested that Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl shares
anything in common with birds," Jathmar laughed. The stocky
Ternathian looked more like a Tadewian bison than anything
avian. The former soldier's black hair was cut short, military
fashion, despite thirty years on the civilian economy, and his blue
eyes were as crisp as the morning air.
He wasn't a brilliant man, but he
knew his job, and a lively intelligence lived behind those intense
blue eyes. At six-feet-one-inch, he was taller than Jathmar, and far
more heavily built, brawny with muscle. At five-two, Shaylar
looked like a child beside him. Her chin barely reached his chest,
and she weighed a hundred and five pounds, soaking wet, but
appearances were deceiving. She was an experienced
outdoorswoman, capable of holding her own on any march they'd
ever had to make—and that ghastly three weeks-slog
through wetlands and riverine floods had taxed all of them
to the limits of their endurance.
"You're ready?" chan Hagrahyl
asked, glancing up from sharpening his camp ax at their approach.
He tested the edge with a cautious thumb, then grunted in
satisfaction. He'd dulled it thoroughly yesterday, cutting branches
for the camp's brush fence.
"Do you have a preference for
which direction we start this morning?" Jathmar asked.
"Not really. Just bear in mind that
Falsan headed southwest about thirty minutes ago, following our
creek downstream. He's after something he can bag for supper. I
told Cookie that if he served up another slop-pot of trail-rats, I'd
scalp him alive."
Jathmar laughed. He was
delighted that their team leader was such an ardent believer in
saving their dried and canned emergency rations for genuine
emergencies. He enjoyed eating fresh meat from the game they
brought down, along with whatever edible plants were in season
where they'd camped. Still . . .
"Fair's fair, Ghartoun, and we're
lucky to have him," he pointed out. "Naldar's the best cook on any
team this side of Sharona. He can even make trail-rats edible."
"That's what you say,"
Shaylar muttered. "I'd almost as soon eat shoe leather."
"A woman after my own heart,"
chan Hagrahyl chuckled. "At any rate, I trust Falsan's judgment.
He's not going to shoot at something he can't see, but there's no
point taking chances. I'd just as soon you didn't jostle his elbow
when he's trying to stalk whatever's out there, either. If you head
straight south, you might cross his firing line, so I'd recommend
going east."
"Agreed," Jathmar said dryly.
Unlike his wife, Falsan was not a telepath, and without something
like their own marriage bond, not even a Voice as strong as
Shaylar could contact someone who wasn't telepathically
Talented. Falsan chan Salgmun was as steady and reliable as they
came, but accidents happened, and Jathmar didn't want to risk
trailing a man with a loaded rifle in unknown territory. Not when
the man didn't realize he was being trailed.
"All right, I'll hike a mile out
along the eastern line and work around the perimeter toward the
terminus of the southern transit. That'll let Shaylar build up a
detailed record of everything within six miles of our camp in that
grid quarter. My terrain scans are picking up a fork in the stream,
about a mile east of here. The main creek runs almost straight east,
and the other branch flows south, so I'll follow those as a rough
guide. I'll use the compass for directional corrections when the
streams twist out of true with the baselines."
"You always were a cautious
fellow, Jathmar," chan Hagrahyl observed with another chuckle.
"You've got the best directional sense of any terrain scanner I've
worked with—and that's saying a lot, I might add. But you
still carry a compass."
Jathmar shrugged off the
compliment to his skill, although Shaylar's grin could have
cracked solid oak and her delight fizzed in his awareness.
"A careful Mapper lives to map
the next portal, my friend," he smiled. "Careless Mappers, on the
other hand, can get themselves and their crews killed." He wrapped
an arm around Shaylar's shoulders. "And just between you, me,
and the fence we put up yesterday, I plan to survive long enough to
see worlds we never dreamed were out here!"
chan Hagrahyl grinned and
clouted him across one shoulder.
"Well spoken, Jathmar. Well
spoken, indeed." Then his manner settled back into
professionalism. "Will you be able to complete the baseline grid
today?"
Jathmar frowned thoughtfully up
at the sky as he considered the question. Then he tossed his head in
something which was almost a nod.
"Probably," he said, "although it
should take us most of the day, at a minimum. At least this," he
waved one hand at the towering trees of the mature climax forest
about them, "means we don't have much underbrush to slash our
way through, thank the gods. But I'll be following streambeds for
a fair portion of the day, and there's enough understory along these
banks to slow me down a good bit. Once I start the perimeter
swing down toward the southern baseline, the terrain ought to be
easier going."
Jathmar would essentially be
walking along an L-shaped path that would fill in a square-shaped
area of ground. Survey base grids were always square, given the
nature of a terrain scanner's Talent. This morning's first square
would begin the newest section of their base grid for this day-fort.
Once that grid was completed, they would decide which direction
to move to begin the next grid-square of exploration. Ideally, that
would depend on where they were, and what valuable resources
might be nearby.
"If we can get a good look at the
stars tonight," Shaylar said hopefully, "we ought to be able to
place our location a little more precisely."
"That'll make me feel better, I
don't mind admitting," chan Hagrahyl agreed with a nod. "It's one
thing to know approximately where you are, but I'll be happier
when a star-fix pinpoints our location more accurately."
The clear autumn day was
welcome for more than the simple absence of rain. The skies had
remained overcast since their arrival, almost as though the rain
clouds had followed them through the portal and dogged their
heels before finally attenuating with distance. That was actually
possible, Jathmar mused, given the size of that portal and the
collision of air masses between the two universes.
The simple expedient of pouring
water through a funnel to see which way it spiraled had told them
they'd stepped through into the northern hemisphere. Based on the
vegetation and wildlife, Jathmar was betting they were somewhere
in the northern portion of what would have been his own birth
country, back on Sharona. The massive oak trees, sugar maples,
tulip poplars, and sycamores, coupled with the cardinals and
chipmunks, and the majestic white-tail deer they'd spotted, all
suggested a spot within perhaps two or three hundred miles of the
lakeshore city of Serikai in his native Faltharia.
If so, the five immense lakes of
Faltharia—larger than many a Sharonian sea—
should lie very close to their present position. Jathmar had made a
private bet with himself that they would end up fixing their
position of within a few days' hike of this universe's analog of
Emlin Falls. Emlin was one of the two most spectacular
waterfalls on Sharona—and, of course, on any of its many
duplicates which had already been discovered and at least partially
explored. But Jathmar wasn't thinking solely about the scenery. If
they were near Emlin Falls, they wouldn't be too terribly far from
some valuable iron ore deposits. Still, he didn't want to raise
anyone's hopes yet, so he said nothing about his suspicion to chan
Hagrahyl.
"We'll get started, then," Jathmar
told their expeditionary leader instead. "I'll plan to rendezvous
back at camp around noon."
chan Hagrahyl grunted his
satisfaction and turned back to carefully finish sharpening his ax
blade.
Jathmar and Shaylar headed for
the eastern end of the camp, passing Rilthan's tent, where the
gunsmith was busy making field repairs to one of the rifles which
had started jamming yesterday. The tools of his trade were spread
out around him, along with pieces of the partially disassembled
weapon. It was one of the Model 9's. The Ternathian Army had
disposed of thousands of the lever-action .48-caliber rifles on the
civilian market over the last several years. They were powerful,
reliable weapons, especially with the newly developed
"smokeless" powders, even if their tubular magazines made it
unsafe to use the equally new (and ballistically far superior)
"Spitzer-pointed" rounds. They were certainly sufficient for any
civilian need, at any rate, and the Army had just about completed
reequipping its active-duty formations with the newer bolt-action
Model 10.
Past Rilthan, the drovers were
working on the pack saddles, examining their tack carefully while
a dozen sturdy donkeys stood slack-footed and bored in the
temporary pen. Pack animals were essential to a long expedition,
and donkeys were sturdy enough to require very little veterinary
care. They were also rugged enough to subsist on vegetation on
which horses would have starved, although they couldn't match
the speed and carrying capacity of the mules the military used as
pack animals. The mingled scents of gun oil, dust, warm hide, and
dung lent a pungent note to the early morning air.
Several of the little animals shook
their heads and followed Jathmar and Shaylar with hopeful eyes,
wanting fresh carrots or a handful of grain. Shaylar reached across
the rope that served to pen the animals into one corner of the
stockade and scratched one of them between its ears. It butted her
hand, begging for more, and she laughed.
"Sorry, pet. That's all the
scratching I have time for. And I'm fresh out of carrots."
Jathmar grinned as Shaylar
followed him out through the rough gate in the stockade and
trailed him a short distance into the trees. Her dark hair caught the
early sunlight with a silky gloss, like a blackbird's wing. She
looked . . . not out of place in this
towering timberland, but still somehow alien. Like a visitor from
another, very different world, not just another universe.
Perhaps it was just that Jathmar
knew exactly what world she'd been born to, for he'd visited
Shaylar's home before marrying her. The diminutive beauty who'd
captured his heart was not Faltharian. Shaylar had been born in
Shurkhal, a prosperous kingdom of ancient Harkala that sprawled
across a hot and arid peninsula between the eastern coast of
Ricathia and the great triangular jut of land that lay a thousand
miles across the Harkalian Ocean.
Shaylar's features bore the
unmistakable stamp of Harkalian ancestry, as well they might,
since Shurkhal had once been the cultural center of the Harkalian
Empire. Swallowed up by the massive Ternathian Empire, ancient
Harkala had prospered, thanks to its placement along the trade
routes running east and west. When Ternathia had finally
dissolved most of its empire, retreating back to its core provinces,
the Harkalian kingdoms had come into their own again as
independent realms. Shaylar's family wasn't part of the wealthy
traders' class, let alone the ruling families, but they had welcomed
him—a genuine outsider—with open arms and that
worlds-famous, genuine Shurkhali welcome that Ternathian bards
once had written of so eloquently.
Shaylar's dark eyes lifted, meeting
his as she caught the nuances of his emotions.
"Well, why wouldn't my family
welcome you?" she asked softly. "You were quite a coup for a girl
like me."
"A girl like you?" He chuckled.
"Do you have any idea how many Mappers at the Portal Authority
I had to knock over the head to get myself assigned to you?"
Shaylar laughed out loud.
"Jath, you never had a chance! Not
after I'd made up my mind. Which I did about five minutes after
meeting you in Halidar Kinshe's office."
He grinned, hazel eyes dancing
impishly with the delight that could speed her pulse even after ten
years of marriage. They'd met while interning at the Portal
Authority during the early phases of their training. Halidar Kinshe
was a Royal Parliamentary Representative from Shaylar's
kingdom, who also held a position on the Portal Authority's board
of governors. No portal survey crewman—or crew
woman—could accept employment from anyone, not
even a private consortium like Chalgyn, without being bonded by
the Portal Authority. And the Authority wouldn't bond anyone
who hadn't completed its rigorous coursework successfully. Part
of that included a political internship with a Board director, whose
evaluation of an intern's performance literally made or destroyed
that intern's hope of future employment.
Shaylar had sometimes despaired
of surviving those grueling years of intensive classwork,
combined with field expeditions and mandatory training in things
like marksmanship and self-defense. They'd taxed her to the utter
limits of her intelligence, Talent, and endurance. But she'd made
it—one of only sixteen women who'd ever completed the
full course, and the only one allowed to join an active survey
team. While Halidar Kinshe had proven himself an unexpected ally
and mentor, for which she would always be grateful, it was
Jathmar who'd helped get her through the classwork and the
agonizing fieldwork, which was designed to weed out as many
applicants as possible. She'd fallen hard for Jath, as he'd been
called then, long before their graduation from the Portal Authority
Academy.
He'd done the same. He'd even
adopted the customary "-ar" suffix married couples from Shurkhal
added to their first names once they'd exchanged wedding vows. It
wasn't a Faltharian custom, but he'd told her he wanted to follow
it before she could work up the nerve to ask if he might consider
it. His offer had melted her heart with joy, and not just because it
had underscored how much he loved her. She'd also recognized
what it would mean to her family, and she'd been more afraid than
she'd been prepared to admit even to herself that her family
wouldn't approve of her independent-minded Faltharian and his
republican notions and dreams that her father, at least, would
never fully understand.
Her father was, at heart, a simple
agriculturalist, tending admittedly large flocks of russet-wool
sheep, silk-hair goats, and the surly, hump-backed dune-treaders
that Shurkhali merchants had used for centuries to cross the desert
trade routes between their coast and the rich markets far to the
east. He couldn't understand the dream that drove
Jathmar . . . and he understood
Shaylar's dreams even less well.
But he loved her, and he seemed
to realize that her mother's dreams had been reborn and reshaped
in her own heart. Shaylar's mother was a cetacean translator. A
very good one, in fact, employed by one of the largest cetacean
institutes on Sharona. Thalassar Kolmayr-Brintal had come to
Shurkhal as a young woman, following her own dreams. She'd
helped found the Cetacean Institute's Shurkhali Aquatic Realms
Embassy, which was—as sheer happenstance would have
it—located on land the Institute had purchased from Amin
Kolmayr. Their unexpected courtship was still Institute legend.
Shaylar had grown up with
"playmates" whose playground was the long, narrow Finger Sea
that lapped against Shurkhal's eastern shoreline, linking the the
Mbisi Sea—by way of the Grand Ternathian Canal—
with the Rindor Ocean. Dolphins and whales from the Rindor
Ocean swam to the Embassy to pass messages and conduct treaty
negotiations with the Cetacean Institute, by way of the Embassy.
The Embassy passed those messages to the cetacean Institute's
headquarters in Tajvana, as well as passing the Institute's messages
to the whales and dolphins.
Jathmar had been as delighted as
an eager adolescent, not only meeting but swimming with
dolphins who could hold actual conversations with Shaylar's
mother. Their approval of Jathmar had gone a long way
toward endearing him to her mother's heart. Like all cetacean
translators, Thalassar had a high opinion of Sharona's ocean-
dwelling citizens. An opinion that Shaylar—and now
Jathmar—shared.
But there wasn't all that much
wealth in dune-treaders and goats, no matter how you added up
the small change. And while her mother was a respected and
Talented professional, there wasn't a great deal of money in
cetacean translation, either. Not even at the embassy level.
Of course, if that black liquid
seeping up through the sand in her family's ancient holding proved
to be as valuable as some of the Ternathian engineers thought it
might, Clan Kolmayr might just find itself possessed of more
wealth than their entire lineage—stretching back nearly two
thousand years—had ever possessed. That was what
everyone else seemed to think, at any rate, although Shaylar wasn't
so sure there was enough of the "crude oil" beneath the family
holdings to make it worth the developers' while. Investing the time
and machinery necessary to drill wells and pump out whatever oil
might be there would surely take a hefty chunk of money up front.
And once they'd pumped out
whatever was there, what would they use it for? She
couldn't help feeling skeptical about those newfangled engines
that used the refined products made from oil. She couldn't imagine
a world where the noisy, smelly, dirty things would ever be as
widespread and useful as the more wide-eyed fanatics claimed
they would. But the thought of her parents and cousins wearing
silks and building fancy houses and gardens was enough to tickle
her sense of humor. Those images flickered across the marriage
bond into Jathmar's awareness, and his eyes twinkled.
"Of course they'll be rich as kings.
Why do you think I married you, my little sand flower?"
Shaylar thumped him solidly on
the shoulder with the best glower she could produce. It wasn't very
convincing. Jathmar was the least money-oriented human being
she'd ever known.
He laughed and kissed her likely,
then sighed.
"Time to get busy," he said. "Give
me time to get into position before making contact. Call it at least
half-an-hour, given that underbrush."
He was eying the thick growth
along the stream's steep banks.
"Half-an-hour, then," Shaylar
nodded, and he turned and headed east along the creek.
Shaylar watched him vanish
around the bend, allowed a small sigh to escape her—
mostly because she wanted to go with him this morning—
then shook herself firmly and returned to camp. She set up her
work table, which was a lap desk that unfolded to give her a
smooth writing surface. The donkey assigned to them carried it,
when they were on the move, since that level writing surface was a
necessity. Mapping was ninety percent of the reason they were out
here, after all.
She chose a spot on the eastern
edge of camp, outside the stockade, since chan Hagrahyl had most
of the survey crewmen taking their gear apart to check for damage.
It was a ritual they performed each time they stopped. Frayed
straps could lead to damaged equipment, which could put lives at
risk, and chan Hagrahyl was too good team leader to risk that kind
of sloppiness.
While most of the crew busied
themselves inside the stockade, Shaylar laid out her materials,
sitting within visual range of the remaining three crewmen who
were busy along the stream. Braiheri Futhai, the team's naturalist,
was peering through the weeds, sketching something in his
notebook. Elevu Gitel, the team's geologist, was dutifully
absorbed in taking soil samples. Futhai had already laid out his
collecting nets, waiting until the mist burned off and the dew dried
from the grass before scooping butterflies and other insects out of
the air. Both men were self-absorbed, scarcely aware of one
another.
The third man caught Shaylar's
eye, rolled his own at the scientists, and gave her an irreverent
grin. Boris Kasell was a former soldier, an Arpathian who'd served
his time in the infantry of his native kingdom, which made him
something of an oddity. Most Arpathians were horsemen,
renowned for their equestrian skill and ferocity, both of which
they needed to guard their borders from the powerful Uromathian
kingdoms and empires south and east of them.
Unlike chan Hagrahyl, Kasell had
a wicked sense of humor. He usually drew guard duty, watching
over the scientists—and her, as well—because he
didn't mind the job and was extremely diligent. His almond-shaped
eyes, legacy of the mixed blood in that region of Arpathia,
twinkled after.
Shaylar wore her own handgun at
her hip, as did every other member of chan Hagrahyl's team. But
she couldn't do her job and pay attention to her
surroundings, so Kasell watched out for danger while she charted
and the others did their collecting.
The heavily forested region
around them teemed with birdlife and dozens of small mammal
species, one of which had already sent Futhai into fits of ecstasy,
since it was a completely unknown type.
"A black-and-white chipmunk!
Gods and thunders, a black-and-white chipmunk! And
look—there are dozens of them, so it's not an
isolated deviant individual!" Over the course of their three-day
march, that had become Futhai's favorite cry. "They're everywhere!
It's not an isolated population! Black-and-white chipmunks! A
true new subspecies!"
Braiheri Futhai was a man whose
fastidious nature showed itself not so much in the way he carried
himself, or engaged his surroundings—he was every bit as
good a woodsman as any other member of the team—but in
the way he thought, down deep at the core of his Ternathian soul.
Futhai was not Braiheri chan Futhai, for
he'd never served in Ternathia's military. Not because he was
unpatriotic, but because soldiering was not a gentleman's
occupation.
Futhai was a very good naturalist,
with a veritable treasure trove of scientific information stored in
memory. His knowledge ranged from geology to meteorology,
from zoology and botany to physics, and the mathematical
precision with which all worlds—including their beloved
Sharona—whirled through the ether in their journeys
around duplicates of Sharona's sun. He had a keen eye and a keen
mind, and a gift for detailed observation that made him a valuable
member of the survey team.
Unfortunately, those excellent
qualities shared brain space with all too many notions about
proper attitudes and behaviors for a certifiable (by birthright and
exalted pedigree) gentleman of Sharona's most ancient, prestigious
empire. Worse, he expected others to treat him with the deference
he, himself, believed he merited, as the grandson of a Ternathian
duke. And he treated everyone else in accordance with those same
social rules, as carefully learned as his science. He wasn't
demanding or petty, or even rude about it, which only made
matters worse, as far as Shaylar was concerned. He was
insufferably polite, in fact, particularly with her, treating her to an
unending barrage of courtesies, looking after her every
need . . . whether she wanted him to
or not.
But the thing that drove Shaylar
craziest was his unshakable conviction that his notions and
customs were as unalterably and exclusively correct as the
physical laws of the University so delighted in studying. It had
simply never occurred to Braiheri Futhai that not everyone on
Sharona thought the Ternathian way of doing things was the best
way. He possessed just enough Talent for Shaylar to realize he
truly believed, in his innermost heart, that someday every
enlightened Sharonian would metamorphose himself or herself
into a clone of a Ternathian gentleman or lady. He simply didn't
grasp the basic truth that Shaylar preferred her Harkalian
viewpoint and beliefs, just as Jathmar preferred his Faltharian
ones, and Elevu Gitel preferred his Ricathian ones.
Not that there weren't profound
similarities between most of Sharona's great societies. With
psionic Talents running through at least a fifth of the world's
population, there were bound to be some similarities. And given
the enormous territory the Ternathian emperors had once ruled,
and the colonies that had spread across vast oceans from
Ternathian shores, at least half of Sharona's population could
claim at least some Ternathian heritage, whether it was by blood
relation or the holdovers of colonial civic administration.
Personally, Shaylar preferred Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's
straightforward military mindset to Futhai's more civilized
notions. It was probably rude of her, but she simply couldn't help
it when Futhai went to such pains to make himself so utterly,
unctuously disagreeable.
So she grinned back at Kasell,
rolled her own eyes toward the self-absorbed naturalist, then sat
down facing the stream and tuned out the distractions around her
with the practiced ease of an experienced professional. She
unrolled the chart they'd compiled to date, weighted it down so
that it couldn't roll up again, and marked off the section due east
of their campsite. Then she laid out her tools: compass with pencil
fixed in place, steel ruler, protractor, a second pencil, and a
template with precut map symbols to speed and simplify her work.
She wouldn't ink the chart until she and Jathmar had gone over it
tonight, doublechecking her accuracy after supper.
She also laid out her field
notebook, and one of the piston-fill pens she and countless other
survey crew members—not to mention ordinary clerks and
officials—blessed on a daily basis. She filled the pen from a
metal flask of ink she'd carried with her through three virgin
universes, made sure the flask's cap was screwed into place, and
carried it back to her tent.
By the time she returned to her
work table, Jathmar had hiked far enough to start picking up new
terrain features. When Shaylar reached out to contact him—
the nature of his Talent meant she had to contact him, since he
could See but wasn't able to transmit to her or anyone
else—the pictures in his mind started flowing into hers. The
process was second nature to her, now, although she paused now
and again to reflect on how dull life must be without any Talent at
all to turn the multiple universes into a maze of fascinating
playgrounds.
The glorious, crisp morning and
the sunshine that glowed across her shoulders combined to keep
her contented with life. She hummed under her breath, not even
really aware that she did so, and concentrated on what Jathmar was
seeing—and on what he was Seeing, since there was a
distinct difference. When she'd first begun her training, Shaylar
had found it difficult to sort out the images Jathmar saw with his
two physical eyes from those the Saw with his "third eye." The
screen in Jathmar's brain Saw a far wider slice of terrain than mere
eyes could take in, and that screen was what Shaylar tapped when
establishing her link with him.
Her husband was actually looking
at a bend in the creek that already existed on their chart, since it
was well within his five-mile radius from camp. Although that
image was the stronger of the two, she ignored it with practiced
ease and focused on the other, ghostlier image he was Seeing.
For Jathmar, the mechanics
involved seemed to be a sort of looking "up" and then "out" along
an invisible gridwork that registered as faint threads of light. He
Saw terrain superimposed across that gridwork, like shadows
glimpsed through mist. For Shaylar, the mechanics of her Talent
took the form of a sudden gestalt, a totality of impressions that
simply appeared, complete, in her own mind's eye. She Saw what
he did as a whole, complete image—like a stage play
containing nothing but scenery. Had Shaylar been in contact with
another Voice, the images would have been far sharper, more like
seeing it with her own eyes, rather than catching shadows that had
the look of a watercolor painting left too long in strong sunlight.
She had to reach out consciously
to pluck the images from Jathmar's mind, which took
concentration. But he was close enough to camp that it wasn't
particularly taxing. The further apart she and Jathmar—or
another telepath—were, the more concentration it took to
make contact and maintain it. Shaylar's maximum range was just
over eight hundred miles. That put her in the top ten percent of all
Voices, although at that distance it took every ounce of
concentration she could summon to hold contact.
Other Voices had even more
limited ranges, which gave her team a distinct advantage. When
she and Darcel had first been assigned to the same team, Darcel
had been startled at the range she achieved. Startled and a little
worried, since his own maximum range was barely two-thirds as
great as hers. It was entirely possible for Shaylar to go far enough
out of his range that he could pick up her transmissions, yet be too
far away for him to transmit a reply back to her. They'd worked
carefully together in a well-established colony world before
heading for the wilderness, using the railroads in a very serious
game of leapfrog to gauge effective distances at which they could
both make contact. In the end, they'd found that he could Hear her
at up to eight hundred miles, whereas she could Hear him at
almost six hundred and fifty. Unfortunately, at anything over five
hundred and eighty miles, he could Hear her only if he knew she
would be trying to contact him and went into Voice trance to
Listen for her, which limited their effective maximum
range to that figure.
Once deployed, that maximum
effective range dictated how far they could travel from any new
portal before a relay team had to follow them out, to serve as a
connection that would enable them to push deeper into the
wilderness. It was an awkward arrangement, in some respects, but
far better than the alternative would have been. If the survey crews
hadn't been able to report without physically sending a member all
the way back to the portal, it would have taken decades longer to
reach as many portals and virgin universes as Sharonian teams had
already mapped. As it was, the exploration of the intricately
connected universes was moving forward at a steady pace. The one
thing everyone wished for was a Talent that would lead
them directly to new portals.
The best they could manage at the
moment was to push outward with as many teams as they could
reasonably field, with at least one member of each team sensitive
to the still unexplained physics behind portal formation.
Some—and only a few—Talented people, like
Darcel, could actually sense the presence of other portals well
enough to at least provide a compass direction to them, which was
enormously better than nothing. Still, the task of actually locating
no more than one or two portals anywhere within any given
universe, when an entire planet identical to their own had to be
searched, was far worse than hunting a needle in a haystack.
Shaylar shuddered every time she
thought about the Haysam Portal, for example. The inbound portal
from New Sharona was almost eight thousand miles from the
outbound portal to Reyshar, and over six thousand of those miles
were across the Western Ocean. Getting to that portal
must have been an indescribable nightmare, she often thought.
Indeed, she considered it remarkable that Sharonian exploration
teams had managed to find as many portals as they had, even after
eighty years of steady exploration.
Meanwhile, she and her husband
were doing their part to further that exploration. The Portal
Authority had already sent a full contingent of soldiers and
supplies down the transit chain to build forts at each of the new
portals they'd opened up. The Authority didn't conduct
exploration, but it maintained absolute jurisdiction over every
portal into a new universe. Private companies hired teams like
Shaylar and Jathmar's to push forward into new universes, with
the greatest incentive known to humanity: profit. The Portal
Authority charged only "users' fees" on traffic through a portal,
but it was the internationally appointed guardian of all of the other
rights and commerce which passed through the portals. And the
rights to land and minerals and other valuable natural resources
belonged to whatever company or individual got there first and
staked a claim to them.
That was one reason Shaylar's
notebooks and charts were so valuable. The Chalgyn Consortium
could lay claim to everything she and Jathmar—and the rest
of the team, who made their presence here possible—could
map. Other companies' teams could, and eventually would, follow
them through the portal, but the first-comers held all the
advantages.
As soon as a team could figure
out exactly where it was, which took a combination of painstaking
mapping and star-fixes, combined with strong backgrounds in the
natural sciences—geology and biology in
particular—all the team had to do was compare their
location here with master charts of Sharona to figure out which
areas to reach first. If, for instance, they had emerged near
a spot where valuable iron deposits existed on Sharona, they
would head straight there and claim them before any other
company's teams got word that a new portal had opened at all, let
alone where it led.
The team which made it through a
portal first could make a great deal of money for the company
which employed it. And since survey crews were paid, in part, on a
system of shared stocks in the assets of the company, team
members could get rich, as well, with just one or two lucky
breaks. This was the third virgin universe Shaylar and Jathmar had
"pushed" on behalf of of Chalgyn. There wasn't much in the way
of value anywhere near the swampy mess just behind them, but
they'd mapped some valuable terrain in the one prior to that, which
meant they would have quite a nest egg built up for their
retirement years. As for what they might yet find in this
universe . . .
They'd had to wait for the Portal
Authority's garrison to arrive before stepping through into this
universe, but they were the only team anywhere near this end of
this particular transit chain. The other major consortiums were
going to chew nails and spit tacks when word of this lovely little
cluster of portals filtered back. Shaylar grinned at the very
thought, having been on the other end of the stick all too often.
She'd lost track of the number of times they'd jumped through
portals somebody else had already opened up, crossing miles and
miles of someone else's claim in the hopes of reaching a valuable
area nobody else had claimed, or—best of all—
finding a new portal of their own.
This time, she told herself happily, we get first choice
of what's out here.
But for now, Jathmar's images
were coming through steadily as he began a long, leisurely sweep
from the eastern edge of his morning's hike, turning toward the
south to begin the leg that led him down parallel to the end of the
southern transit. By the time he finished the long day's hike, they
would have filled in the blanks remaining in the southeastern
transit zone. The portal lay behind them, almost due north of their
present camp, clearly marked on Shaylar's chart. Once they'd filled
in the entire region around their current day-fort, they would
compare what they had to the master charts and see if they could
come up with a correlation to Sharona. She doubted it, given the
immense sweep of land that usually had to be charted before a
terrain feature large enough or distinctive enough emerged to
make that accurate a determination possible. But a few more days
of charting ought to do the trick. Then all they had to do was
decide which way to head to secure the best chunks of land for the
Chalgyn Consortium.
Shaylar plotted out more terrain
features as Jathmar sent new images, with new topographical
features—gullies, a deep ravine, another stream that came
trickling in from the east of Jathmar's current position. She jotted
down a running commentary, as well, on the images flickering
through her awareness. She and Jathmar would go over her notes
tonight, while the information and both their impressions
remained fresh. They would make whatever amendments were
necessary before calling it a night, then begin again the next
morning.
When Jathmar halted for a rest at
midmorning, Shaylar sat back and was almost startled by the
sound of voices behind her. They'd gone virtually subliminal
during the previous two hours, no more noticeable than the
murmuring sound of insects. The noise was startling, now that
she'd come up for air, so to speak. From the sound of things,
Futhai was trying to talk chan Hagrahyl into letting him hike
further along the stream than the team leader thought prudent.
"—if you would just
authorize a guard, that wouldn't be a factor!"
"Not until Jathmar and Shaylar
complete the basic grid around this camp," chan Hagrahyl rumbled
in the tone that most of their team understood as "subject closed;
don't bother to debate it." Futhai, however, was a zealous
naturalist surrounded by new species—several of them, in
fact. He'd also already established a most unusual co-mingling of
species from different climatic regions. As far as he was
concerned, that clearly confirmed Darcel's belief that they'd found
an actual cluster. How else could so many species that didn't
belong here have wandered into the area?
He obviously wanted to be out
there collecting more specimens, and it appeared he wasn't
prepared to take "no" for an answer. Not when his professional
standing in the community of scientists was virtually guaranteed
by the notes he was making in this camp alone. His enthusiasm for
discovery was wreaking havoc with standard protocol, however,
and chan Hagrahyl didn't sound amused.
If he hadn't been such an irritant,
Shaylar might have felt a sneaking sympathy for Futhai. She knew
only too well what it felt like to have something wonderful
dangled in front of her, only to be told "no, you can't." Braiheri
Futhai was only doing what she herself had done: fight to get what
she wanted. Unfortunately for Futhai, chan Hagrahyl was a
tougher customer than the combined weight of the Portal
Authority's governing board and her own people's conservatism.
She grinned at that thought, then
caught a glimpse of blackberry brambles all around Jathmar, along
with a hint of deep satisfaction that the birds hadn't gotten all of
the berries yet. Shaylar chuckled aloud, then relaxed back from the
discipline of prolonged telepathic contact. She rose from her
makeshift desk and shook the cramps out of her fingers and
shoulders. Her work with Jathmar wasn't difficult, so much as
intense. Her concentration needed a breather almost as much as
Jathmar's legs—and taste buds—did.
She strolled west along the bank
of the creek, casting a sharp woods-wise eye around the entire
area, looking for any trace of hostile wildlife. She didn't expect
any, given the amount of noise they'd made since setting up camp
yesterday, but you could never be certain in a virgin universe.
None of the animals in this Sharona had ever even seen a
human being. They had no reason to be afraid of humans, which
could be delightful, but could also be dangerous, since it meant
their reactions to the presence of those humans was often difficult
to predict. Personally, however charming she might find it to have
wild deer willing to take food from her hand, Shaylar was in favor
of having cougars or grizzly bears be wary enough of humans to
leave her in peace.
She was also too experienced a
field operative to take her safety for granted in the wilderness. All
it would take to injure her, possibly fatally, would be a moment's
carelessness, and the presence of several armed men in camp did
nothing to absolve her of the responsibility for her own safety.
This lovely forest doubtless had snakes in it, at the very least, and
a rattle-tail's bite would be serious, indeed, even with Tymo
Scleppis available. The telempathic Healer could speed the healing
of deep cuts or broken bones, or help repair internal injuries, but
pharmacological trouble like snake venom was another matter
entirely, and their team was a long way from the nearest medical
clinic. She scanned the terrain for potential trouble, aware almost
peripherally of the weight of the handgun at her hip. She'd never
needed it, but it was there, just in case of danger, and she knew
how to use it. Very well, as a matter of fact.
Once she was sure of her
environs, Shaylar descended the steep bank and crouched down to
wash smudges of graphite off her hands. The water was shockingly
cold, sending an ache up the bones of her hands to her wrists.
Somewhere far upstream, several miles away, from the sound of
it, a distant CRACK of rifle fire split the silence. Shaylar grinned,
wondering what Falsan had bagged for the cookpot. He'd have
plenty of time to clean the carcass, lug it back to camp, and
butcher it properly before it was time to throw supper on the fire.
Given the distance, she doubted
he'd brought down a deer, since he would've had to dress and haul
the carcass all the way back alone. A wild turkey, maybe, she
thought, straightening up and shaking excess water from her
hands. Then she dried them on her heavy twill pants, and her grin
turned into a fond smile as she recalled her father's reaction when
he'd learned Shaylar would be wearing trousers all the time.
"But, my dear!
That's—it's—"
"Practical, Papa," she'd said
firmly. "That's the word you're looking for: practical. You don't
object when Mama swims with her dolphin clients. She wears less
in the water than I'll have on anytime I'm outside our
sleeping tent."
"Yes, but your mother stays in
the water. She doesn't traipse out and about on land dressed
that way, and even when she comes out of the water, she's
still on our property, after all."
"Oh, Papa, try to understand. The
world is changing. Our little corner of Shurkhal isn't the whole
multiverse, you know."
Her drollery had coaxed a wan
chuckle from her father, which had, of course, been the beginning
of the end to his resistance. It hadn't taken much more to convince
him that she knew what she was doing, regardless of what her
aunts and cousins would think about her running about the
universes without a single skirt or tunic in sight.
Shaylar looked around the
towering forest giants and shook her head, still bemused by her
parents' notions of decorum and still a little mystified by her own
determination to be so stubbornly independent. Most of her
relatives halfway suspected she was a changeling of some sort,
since no other member of Clan Kolmayr had ever evinced a desire
to wander as far as Dahdej, the capital city of Shurkhal, let alone
through even one portal, never mind the fifteen or twenty-odd
between Sharona and this glorious forest.
She peered into one of the deep
pools nearby and thought about trying a dip net on the truly
immense trout she could see lurking in the dark water, back under
the overhanging rocks that jutted out just a little farther along the
bank. They would be mighty tasty eating, and she licked her lips as
a hunger that matched Jathmar's made itself felt in her midsection.
Maybe she could try netting the fish during lunch. Of course, they
wouldn't need fish if Falsan brought back something substantial.
Shaylar smiled a farewell at the fish, at least for now.
Another day, maybe.
She stood there for several more
minutes, just looking at all the incredible beauty around her. The
great forest was like a shrine, unlike anything Shaylar had known
growing up in the arid Shurkhali peninsula. The motes of sunlight
drifting down through the bright foliage danced and shifted on the
dappled, dark water of the stream, which flashed an almost painful
gold where of light struck ripples and eddies in the swift moving
current. The whispering laughter of the water was a hushed and
beautiful sound.
This, she sighed, stretching luxuriously, is the way to
really live.
Shaylar consulted her pocket
watch, which hung from her neck on a sturdy silver chain—
steel would rust under most field conditions—and realized
her fifteen minutes of break time were up. She climbed the bank,
resettled herself at her field desk, and contacted Jathmar. She
caught a brief glimpse of the blackberry brambles—greatly
denuded, now—then he shook the dust out of his trousers
and got busy again.
The ghostly pictures began to
flow once more as she and her husband settled back into the
familiar routine.
Chapter Three
The sharp cracking sound echoed
and faded into a silence that was as unnatural as the sound which
had produced it. Not a single bird was singing; even the squirrels
ceased their barking chatter for a long, startled moment, and
Gadrial Kelbryan looked at Sir Jasak Olderhan.
"What was that?" Her voice was
hushed, as though she feared the answer.
"I intend to find out."
The hundred kept his voice to a
whisper, too, prompted by an intuition he couldn't explain. But he
meant every word of it, and one glance at Fifty Garlath had already
told Jasak that he was going to have to be the one who did
the finding out. Any officer worth his salt would already have
ordered teams out to contact their drag and point men, their
flanking screen. Garlath hadn't done that. He simply stood there,
gazing thoughtfully at the same stretch of forest canopy he'd been
contemplating before the sudden, sharp sound.
If Jasak hadn't been looking at the
fifty at exactly the right moment, he might not have seen the way
the older officer had jerked. The way his head had snapped around
toward the mysterious sound. The flash of fear in those dark eyes
before Garlath returned to that pose of studied nonchalance.
But Jasak had seen those things,
all too clearly, and his jaw tightened. Unfortunately, he couldn't
accuse the platoon leader of the cowardice his current indifference
screened. Despite his own sudden, intuitive suspicion that
something was wrong—terribly wrong—Jasak had
no proof that it was. And a gut feeling wasn't grounds for making
a charge as serious as "cowardice in the face of the enemy,"
despite the fact that both of them knew exactly why Garlath wasn't
responding to the crackling danger that sound represented.
Or might represent, Jasak reminded himself. It
wasn't easy, but he made himself step back just a little,
determined to keep an open mind precisely because he recognized
his own hairtrigger willingness to attribute the worst possible
motives to Garlath's conduct as an officer of the Second Andaran
Scouts.
All the fifty had really done, after
all, was to ignore a sound that might be nothing more threatening
than an old tree coming down somewhere. Jasak might be willing
to bet his next five paychecks that the cause of that sound had been
nothing so benign, but until he had more information—
Squad Shield Gaythar Harklan
burst suddenly through a screen of brilliantly colored poplars,
crushing a patch of toadstool mushrooms underfoot in his wild,
headlong rush. He actually shot straight past Fifty Garlath and
came to a gasping halt directly in front of Jasak.
"Sir!" His salute was a hasty
affair, sketched with a hand that shook violently. "Sir, I beg leave
to report a hostile contact—"
"Hostile contact?" Garlath
snarled, abandoning his contemplation of the treetops to charge
forward like an angry palm-horned bull moose. "Don't play the
Hundred for a fool! And how dare you desert your post
without orders?"
"S-Sir—" Harklan
stuttered, swinging irresolutely between Jasak and the irate
Garlath. "It's just that Osmuna—he's dead, Sir!"
"Dead?" Jasak asked sharply,
cutting off another vitriolic outburst from Garlath with a
brusquely raised hand. "What killed him?"
He'd meant to ask "who," rather
than "what," but he had a sudden feeling that his meager Gift must
be functioning, because Harklan's answer should have shocked the
living daylights out of him.
"That's just it, Sir. I don't
know what killed him. None of us know. I-I think he missed
the halt order for the rest break, Sir. I was just about to pass the
word to our flankers that I was moving forward, trying to catch up
with him, when that sound came." He gulped hard. "It was right on
the line to Osmuna, whatever it was, but it took me a while to get
through the brush and find him. He's dead, Sir. Just fucking
dead, and the right-flank patrol caught up to me, and we can't
any of us figure out why he's dead or even how—"
"That is quite enough!" Garlath's
dark complexion had acquired a nearly wine-purple hue. "You're
hysterical, soldier! Place yourself on report and—"
"Fifty Garlath."
The ice-cold voice cut Garlath off
in mid-snarl.
"Sir?" The fifty's response was
strangled.
"We have a dead soldier, Fifty. I
might suggest making that our immediate priority. Discipline can
wait."
Garlath's jaw muscles bunched
visibly, and the enraged flush spread abruptly down his neck and
under the line of his uniform's collar. His furious, frightened eyes
snapped to Jasak's face, and for just a moment, it looked as if he
might actually explode. But then his eyes fell.
"Of course, Sir," he grated.
If his jaw had been any stiffer, the
bone would have shattered like ice, and the glare he turned on
Harklan was deadly with a promise of vengeance. Jasak took note
of that, too, and made himself a promise of his own where Shevan
Garlath and the squad shield were concerned. Then the fifty
wheeled away and began barking furious orders of his own.
Despite that, it took him nearly
ten minutes to shake First Platoon into anything approaching
proper threat-response posture.
Jasak watched the platoon
commander with eyes of brown ice. At least half of Garlath's
snarled orders only contributed to the confusion of the moment,
and the fifty's collar was soaked with sweat, despite the morning
air's persistent chill.
It was simple fear, Jasak realized.
Or perhaps not so simple, given the dynamics at play. It didn't
require a major Gift to detect the sources of Garlath's pronounced
lack of courage: fear of whatever had killed Osmuna, fear of
making a mistake grave enough to finally get him cashiered, fear
that he'd already made that fatal
mistake. . . .
Well, a man can dream, can't he? Jasak
thought sourly, wondering once again how Garlath had managed
to outlast every other commander of one hundred assigned to ride
herd on him.
"When we move out," he told
Gadrial quietly without looking at her, his attention fully focused
on the abruptly hostile shadows, "stay close to me."
He glanced at her, and she gave
him a choppy nod. She looked tense, but not overtly frightened.
Or, rather, on a second and longer look, she was scared spitless,
but she wasn't letting the fear dominate her. Fifty Garlath ought to
take lessons from this mere civilian—if anything about this
particular civilian could be labeled "mere."
His brief glance lingered on her
longer than he'd intended for it to. She didn't notice, because she
was too busy sweeping the forest with an alert and piercing gaze
that tracked any motion instantly. Her focused attention had a sort
of dangerous elegance, almost a beauty, like a hunting falcon's, or
a gryphon searching for a target to strike, and Jasak wondered
quite abruptly if the slim magister had any self-defense warding
spells tucked away as part of her extensive training in magical
theory and applications. That might explain her composure. Then
again, she struck Jasak as a thorough and competent professional,
well aware of her skills—and weaknesses—and
more than capable of weathering whatever unpleasant surprise the
multiple universes might conspire to throw her way.
He reminded himself sternly of his
own responsibilities and turned his attention away from her. It was
surprisingly difficult. His attraction to the magister was deepening
rapidly into profound respect as she resolutely refused to let
death's unexpected arrival tumble her into panic.
It took nine and a half minutes too
long, but Garlath did get his troopers moving within ten minutes,
which was undoubtedly a personal record. He even managed to
deploy them in the correct formation for responding to an
unknown threat in close terrain. Privately, Jasak was willing to bet
that it had taken Garlath those extra nine and a half minutes to
remember the correct formation.
Once underway, it took almost
twice as long as it should have to reach Osmuna's resting place.
Mostly because Garlath was jumping at
shadows . . . and a forest this size had
a lot of shadows.
Jasak put Gadrial directly behind
him as they moved through the trees.
"Stay right behind me," he told
her.
With another civilian, he might
have added a warning to keep quiet, but this civilian made
considerably less noise than Garlath did as they moved cautiously
forward through the brittle autumn leaf litter. The scent of the
crisp leaves underfoot—a dry, incongruous cinnamon
smell—reminded Jasak of holiday pastries. Unfortunately,
that scent mingled with the stink of electric tension flashing from
trooper to trooper as Garlath's insecurity filtered through the
entire platoon. Jasak felt the fifty's fear corroding the confidence
of the men under him and once again stamped on the
overwhelming desire to take direct command of the platoon.
The temptation was the next best
thing to overwhelming, but bad as things were, taking over from
Garlath right in the middle of things would only have made them
even worse. They didn't need anything confusing the chain of
command at a time when half the platoon was out of visual
contact with its CO and senior NCOs. He had no choice but to let
the commander of fifty do his job, so he hugged his irritated
impatience tightly to himself and took comfort in the fact that
Gadrial remained a constant, exact two paces behind him.
Which, perversely, only made his
frustration still worse. Garlath was supposed to be trained to do
what Magister Kelbryan was actually doing.
Despite his concentration on
Garlath and the men of First Platoon, a corner of the hundred's
attention noted that Otwal Threbuch had stationed himself as his
own silent shadow. Actually, it was a tossup as to whether the
chief sword had taken that position more to protect Jasak or the
petite woman behind him. It scarcely mattered, since Jasak had
carefully placed her close enough to himself for the chief sword to
do both, but he nursed a mild intellectual curiosity as to
Threbuch's primary motivation.
Even odds he just doesn't want to explain to Mother if
anything goes wrong on his watch, the hundred thought with
a small, tight grin.
The men of Shevan Garlath's
platoon finally reached the contact zone and deployed under
Jasak's—and Threbuch's—silent scrutiny. Garlath,
for once, actually followed the Book as he directed the platoon's
squads to set up a perimeter defense to completely secure the area.
He probably did it for the wrong (and entirely personal) reasons,
but at least he'd done something right for a change.
As three of the platoon's four
squads disappeared into the forest on divergent lines, the troopers
communicated via the birdcall signals the Andaran Scouts had
developed for covert movement. Somebody had even remembered
to use the correct bird species for this part of this particular
universe. Somehow, Jasak doubted that it was Fifty Garlath who'd
drilled the platoon in proper communications procedure.
While they waited for the rest of
the platoon to move into position, Jasak glanced at Gadrial and
raised a finger to his lips, signaling for silence. The warning was
pure reflex, and almost certainly superfluous. She was alert,
motionless except for her eyes, which continued to study their
surroundings with a strange blend of intense concentration and
something that puzzled Jasak for a moment. He couldn't quite put
a finger on it, until he realized that she hovered somewhere
between fear and excitement.
She was certainly afraid—
only an idiot, which she manifestly was not—wouldn't have
been. But she wasn't terrified, which put her considerably
ahead of Garlath, and she was deeply, intensely curious. Where the
fifty looked like a man who wanted nothing so much as to run
away and hide, she sensed the mystery as clearly as Jasak
did, and she wanted to understand what was happening. No one
needed to tell her that she—and they—could die at
any moment, but the brain inside that lovely head was still
working, still sifting clues, still looking for answers.
A sharp, trilling whistle finally
sounded from the heavier brush just ahead to signal a successful
perimeter deployment. Garlath twitched at the signal, but he didn't
respond. Chief Sword Threbuch's nostrils flared, and he glanced at
Jasak, who nodded slightly.
Threbuch whistled the approved
counter signal Garlath had failed to give, and leaves parted as
Jugthar Sendahli stepped from concealment. The dark-skinned
soldier who'd fled Mythal and his menial status as a member of the
non-Gifted garthan caste was one of Jasak's best troopers.
He was also smart as they came, and he proceeded to prove it once
again. He met the chief sword's gaze and glanced respectfully at
Jasak, but wisely saluted Fifty Garlath, instead.
"Sir, beg leave to report the area is
secure. The perimeter screen is in place. Arbalestiers are cocked
and locked, and the dragons' accumulators are loaded and primed.
Osmuna is this way, Sir."
Jasak frowned behind his eyes.
Despite an obvious effort to keep his delivery cool and
professional, Sendahli's voice was violin-string tight. What the
devil had these men so spooked? They were seasoned veterans,
who'd fought claim jumpers, border brigands, and commerce
pirates. Death was hardly new to any of them, but the men of Fifty
Garlath's platoon were shaken to their bones.
A trickle of sweat ran down
Garlath's temple as he reacted to his command's mood, and Jasak
glanced again at Gadrial. Her frown was narrow-eyed and
speculative as a she, too, took note of the fear in Sendahli's eyes.
The trooper turned to lead the
way, and Jasak, Garlath, Threbuch, and Gadrial followed him,
pushing cautiously through dense undergrowth towards the sound
of running water.
They halted at the edge of a good-
sized stream's embankment. The men who'd provided Osmuna's
original flankers had sorted themselves out properly, forming an
outward-facing picket line against any hostiles. They'd remained in
position, even though the rest of the platoon had extended their
own perimeter by several dozen yards. They hadn't slacked off
despite the new arrivals, and Jasak reminded himself to say a few
words of praise to Platoon Sword Harnak.
Osmuna's body lay in the stream
itself. Garlath had already started down the slope, moving like a
man who devoutly wished he were somewhere else. The hundred
followed him wordlessly, wondering if Garlath even suspected
how much Jasak wished the fifty were someplace far, far
away. Chief Sword Threbuch followed Jasak, in turn, watching his
back more closely than ever, but Gadrial stayed where she was,
looking more than happy to obey Jasak's restraining hand signal.
Osmuna was dead, all right. His
body lay half-submerged in the boulder-strewn creek. He'd struck
one of the boulders on the way down, and flies were already busy
about the huge smear of blood he'd left across the luxuriant green
moss which covered it. He'd rolled off that boulder, and splashed
into the stream, with his entire head immersed in a deep pool
between the rocks. Had he drowned after being struck by whatever
had produced that much blood?
Jasak frowned and stepped
cautiously closer. The Scout had come to rest on his right side, so
that his chest, back, and left shoulder were above water, and Jasak
could see the hole in his chest. It was a very small hole, almost
insignificant looking, and Jasak's frown deepened as he tried to
imagine what the devil could have made a wound like that?
It wasn't the right size or shape for
a crossbow quarrel. Nor was there any sign of a quarrel, or even
an ordinary arrow. He'd seen what both of those missiles did when
they entered flesh, and Osmuna's odd wound didn't look like that.
Nor did it look like the sort of wound left behind when someone
pulled a quarrel or arrow out again, either. The hole had drilled
straight through Osmuna's camo uniform blouse as easily as a hot
poker thrust through cheese. But the fibers hadn't been slashed
through—not the way a knife would have cut them. They'd
been stretched and ripped by the force of something which had
driven bits of fabric into Osmuna's chest. A powerful enough
arbalest might have produced that effect, but the wound would
have been much larger. And it couldn't have come from a sharp-
pointed blade, not even something like an ice pick, either, because
a weapon like that wouldn't have stretched, ripped, and embedded
those fibers into the wound.
Jasak balanced carefully on the
rocks, moving around to look at Osmuna's back, and froze in
sudden, ice-cold shock.
Graholis' bollocks! What the hell caused that?
Jasak abruptly understood the
shaken look in the men's faces.
Osmuna's back had been blown
open.
Literally.
The hole just to the right of
Osmuna's left shoulder blade was almost the size of a human fist.
In fact, Gadrial could probably have pushed her fist deep
into that gaping wound without the slightest trouble. The flesh
was mangled, looking as if someone had set off an explosive
incendiary spell inside Osmuna's body.
Horror, sudden and total, crawled
down Jasak's spine and lodged in the vicinity of his belt buckle.
He'd never heard of any explosive spell that would penetrate
human flesh like a crossbow quarrel, then blow up from the
inside, and Sir Jasak Olderhan's education had been the finest any
Andaran noble's son could have hoped to acquire. He'd studied the
bloody history of Arcana, including its Wizard Wars—
during which hair-raising atrocities had been unleashed on
helpless, non-Gifted populations—but no one had ever
come up with a battle spell that would do what Jasak was looking
at right now.
Movement at his shoulder jerked
his head around. Otwal Threbuch hissed between his teeth at his
first sight of the victim's back, then lifted worried, deeply shocked
eyes to Jasak's.
"Do you have any idea what did
that, Sir?" he asked, clearly hoping Jasak's education might have
the answer the chief sword needed to hear.
"No. I don't." Jasak shook his
head, and Threbuch cursed foully under his breath.
"I was afraid you're going to say
that," he muttered through clenched teeth. "What the fuck
do we do now, Sir?"
Jasak looked pointedly at Shevan
Garlath. The platoon commander was also staring at Osmuna's
back, swallowing hard. Every few seconds he looked away, darting
wild-eyed glances up the stream banks toward the ominous trees,
but every time, that gaping wound dragged his unwilling eyes back
to the corpse at his feet.
"Fifty Garlath?"
"Sir?" Garlath's voice sounded
constricted, and his eyes were unsteady as they skated across to
Jasak's.
"I would suggest you try to find
the bastards who did this."
Garlath nodded, the motion
choppy and strained. It took him three deep gulps of air to find
enough of his voice—or courage—to begin issuing
orders.
"Spread out. Look for any trace of
the attackers. We're going to find the whoreson who did this."
Oh, yes, Jasak promised the slain man's ghost. We
most certainly are.
Shaylar was busy filling in yet
another new stream on her chart when a sudden sound broke her
concentration. It was a hoarse, gasping cry, so faint it was almost
inaudible in the background noise of the stream, and it came from
very nearly under her feet.
"Shaylar!"
She jumped as though stung, her
pencil skidding across the paper. Then she peered down the bank
toward the creek and gave a sharp cry of her own. Someone was
trying to crawl up the bank. Even as she realized who it was, the
wiry scout slithered weakly back into the water with a mewling
pain sound.
"Falsan!"
She cast one wild glance around
the clearing, searching for Barris Kasell. He was a good fifteen
yards further east along the bank, where Braiheri Futhai was
poking into more bushes.
"Barris!" Her cry snapped
him around in surprise. "Get Tymo!"
Then she flung herself down the
bank, skidding through damp leaves and a slick spot of clay.
Falsan was struggling doggedly to get his hands under himself,
trying to stand back up. She reached him, braced him with one arm
as she tried to help him up, and—
Pain struck with a brutal fist. It
caught her right in the chest, robbing her of breath even as a
ghastly sound broke through Falsan's lips. He collapsed again,
sliding sideways, away from her, down the bank. He splashed into
the stream and rolled almost prone in the icy water. He came to
rest on his back—which let her see the dreadful red stain on
his shirt. It had soaked the whole front, spreading outward from
something that had penetrated cloth and flesh.
"Ghartoun!" she screamed
in a voice edged with knife-sharp horror.
Falsan clutched at her blouse with
one blood smeared, shaking hand. He whispered through grey lips,
his thready voice almost too weak to catch.
"Man . . .
shot me . . . stayed
in . . . water . . .
no trail . . . can't foll—
"
His breath wheezed away to
nothing. His eyes didn't close. They remained open. Horribly,
sightlessly open.
She felt him go. Felt the unseen
force that was Falsan chan Salgmun vanish like smoke in her
hands, even as she searched frantically for the wound. Her fingers
touched metal. Stupid with shock, she stared down at it, found a
thick steel shaft protruding nearly two inches from his flesh. Her
hands were hot with his blood, but the rest of her was frozen. She
sat half immersed in ice-cold water, shaking violently and trying to
focus her spinning mind on the impossibility of what he'd just
said.
A man had shot him.
A man . . .
Theirs was the only team
anywhere in this universe. That meant—
Barris Kasell, Tymo Scleppis, and
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl plunged down the bank, literally on one
another's heels. chan Hagrahyl cursed horribly as he splashed into
the water beside her. Their healer slithered down next, took one
look, and groaned.
"Too late," Shaylar heard him say.
"He's gone."
She lifted her head. It took
forever, that simple effort, like lifting a mountain with her bare
hands. She met Ghartoun's stunned gaze.
"Somebody shot him." Her words
came out like ax blows on solid ice. "He said a man shot him."
chan Hagrahyl wrenched his gaze
away from her face and stared at the ghastly metal shaft buried in
Falsan's flesh.
"My gods," he whispered.
Suddenly the whole stream was
looping and rolling in wild gyrations. Shaylar felt rough hands on
her shoulders, heard somebody saying her name, and fought the
roaring in her ears and the black tide trying to suck away her
consciousness.
I will not faint like a schoolgirl! a small, hard
voice grated somewhere deep inside her, and she shook off the
hands trying to drag her up the bank. She went to her knees as they
released her, but she forced her wildly spinning senses to steady.
She found herself kneeling in a
tangle of tree roots, panting and trembling, but in control once
more. She raised her head, and a worried pair of dark eyes swam
into focus. Barris was crouched beside her, one hand bracing her
so she didn't slide back down the bank.
"That's better," he said softly. "For
a minute there, I thought you were going to collapse."
Her face tried to heat up. But she
was still too shocky and pale to flush with humiliation, and his
next words eased some of the shame which had wrapped around
her like a blanket.
"You've had a nasty psychic
shock, Shaylar, and you're not combat trained."
"Combat trained?" she parroted,
appalled by the hoarse croak which had replaced her voice, and
Barris nodded.
"When a Talented recruit joins the
military, he's trained to handle something as brutal as combat
death shock, especially at point-blank range. Nobody teaches that
to civilian survey scouts."
The rough burr in Barris' voice
seeped through the numb ice encasing her. Anger, she realized
slowly. It was anger that she'd been exposed to something that
ugly, that unexpected. And a deeper anger that one of their own
had been murdered. Even shame that he hadn't seen Falsan
struggling along the streambed.
When that realization sank in,
some of her own shame eased. The abrupt loosening of her grip on
her shuddering emotions was followed almost instantly by a flood
of tears and violent tremors. She struggled grimly to hold them
back, but without much success. Barris took her by one elbow and
Tymo took the other. They helped her to climb to the top of the
bank, and Tymo slipped an arm around her.
"Let them come, Shaylar. Let the
shakes run their course. That's the way emotional shock will drain,
as it should, not fester in your mind and poison your body."
That almost made sense. The fact
that it didn't make complete sense, when it should have, rang faint
alarm bells. But Tymo knew what he was talking about, if anyone
did, so she sat there in the warm sunlight and waited for the
tremors to ease up. When they did, she drew down a final, ragged
gulp of air and looked up again.
"I heard his rifle," she said. "That
must've been when . . . "
"Yes, I heard it, too." Barris
nodded, his voice bitter with self-condemnation. "To think he'd
been struggling all that time, trying to make it back, and we didn't
do anything—"
"It's not your fault, Barris!"
Ghartoun's voice interrupted sharply, and Kasell looked up at the
team leader.
"I used to be a soldier,
curse it!" he snarled almost defiantly. "I should've—"
"Done what?" Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl demanded, his own expression angry and shaken.
"Snatched the truth out of thin air? You're not Talented. Neither
was Falsan. Shaylar's a Voice—the best telepath in
the five nearest universes—and she didn't feel a
thing. There's not a Voice that's ever been born who could have
picked up something like that from a non-telepath. So just stow
the frigging guilt, right now!"
Kasell's jaw muscles clenched for
a moment. Then he nodded and relaxed a fraction.
"Yes, Sir. You're right, of course.
It's just . . . "
"I know. Triad, but I
know. And I'd like to know where his rifle is, too. It's not with
him."
Kasell swore one filthy, ugly
word.
"Fanthi," Ghartoun called to a
rugged hulk of a man who'd always given Shaylar the impression
that every stretch of ground he walked across was a potential
battlefield, "set sentries in a perimeter fifty yards out in all
directions. We don't know where these bastards are, or how close
they might be, let alone how many of them there are."
Fanthi chan Himidi, who'd served
a double stint in the Ternathian infantry before signing on with
Chalgyn Consortium, nodded sharply and organized the rest of the
survey crew with swift, efficient dispatch. They had eight men
with at least some military experience, who took charge of the
others, sending their cook, their drovers, their smith—even
Ghartoun's clerk—out to form a circular guard around their
little camp. Shaylar felt better just watching the process chan
Himidi had set in motion.
Ghartoun hesitated, looking
unhappily into her eyes, then crouched down beside her.
"Shaylar," he said gently, "I have
to ask. Did Falsan say anything?"
"He—" She drew an
unsteady breath and made herself repeat those pitiful few words,
then added, "I'm pretty sure he started to say 'They can't follow,'
there at the last. But he didn't get the whole thing out before
he—"
She stopped and swallowed hard.
"They?" Ghartoun asked,
his voice sharp. "You're sure of that? Not 'he'?"
"No," she said slowly. "I'm not
sure. He said 'can't follow,' but the impression I got was 'they.' I
don't know if that means he saw several of them, Ghartoun, or if
he was simply afraid there might be more of them nearby."
The expedition's leader exchanged
grim glances with Barris Kasell. Then he looked back at Shaylar.
"Did you pick up anything else?
Anything at all that could help us figure out what in the gods'
names really happened out there?"
Shaylar drew another deep breath
and shook her head to clear it, then held up one impatient hand
when he misconstrued her meaning and started to speak. She
closed her eyes and sorted through every impression she'd been
able to catch during those fleeting seconds of contact. Falsan
hadn't been Talented, but Shaylar had been touching him, which
helped. She couldn't See anything that he'd seen, but the emotions
behind those gasped-out words of warning had slammed their way
into her awareness, along with the words themselves. If she could
just get a solid grasp on them . . .
"I don't think there was more than
one when he was actually shot, Ghartoun," she finally said. "I'm
not picking up a sense of 'me versus them'. It's more a 'me versus
him'. I think he was just afraid that there would be
others who could follow a blood trail back to us."
"Which is why he stayed in the
water," Ghartoun muttered.
"Where there's one, there are
bound to be more," Kasell said with quiet intensity. "And did you
get a good look at what killed him?"
"Oh, yes. A crossbow bolt."
"Crossbow?" Shaylar
stared at the expedition's leader. "But that's—that's
medieval!"
"So are clubs and rocks,"
Ghartoun snapped, his eyes crackling with suppressed fury. "And
they'll still kill a man just as dead as a rifle will. Crossbows were
weapons of war in our history for damned near a thousand years,
come to that, until we finally figured out how to make
gunpowder. These people don't have to be our technological
equals to kill us."
"That's a fact," Kasell muttered in
a voice of steel, and Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl glanced back at
Shaylar.
"Can you pick anything
else out of those impressions?"
She tried, but nothing else came.
"I'm sorry," she whispered
miserably. "I only touched him for just a few seconds,
and . . ." Her voice went unsteady. "I'm
sorry. I just can't get anything more."
"I'm grateful you got as much as
you did," chan Hagrahyl told her, squeezing her shoulder with
surprising force, as though he'd forgotten she was barely the size
of a half-grown Ternathian child.
"All right." He stood up, hands
curling around the butt of his handgun and the hilt of his camp
knife, both sheathed at his wide leather belt. "We don't know
exactly who or what we're up against, but we do know they're
nasty tempered and don't like company." He met Barris Kasell's
gaze, his own hard and grimly determined. "We may have
some time, especially if Shaylar's impression is right and there
really was only one of the bastards. If Falsan hadn't nailed him
with his first shot, we'd probably have heard at least two. And if
Falsan got him, it may be a little while before his friends figure
out he's not coming home. But we have to assume that there were
others of them fairly close by, and that they'll at least be able to
backtrack him to camp. And they will, too, after
something like this. So we've got to get back to the portal before
these bastards overrun us, and it's been a while since we heard that
rifle shot."
Shaylar's breath caught. She hadn't
thought about that, and the thick woods, so hushed and lovely,
suddenly menaced their little party from every shadow, every
movement of sun-dappled leaves in the breeze. In a single blink of
her eyelashes, the entire forest seemed to be in sinister motion,
tricking the eye and confusing the senses. And somewhere out
there, well over two miles east of their camp, Jathmar was alone
and unaware of what had just happened. She started to make
contact when Elevu Gitel's voice jolted her out of her reverie.
"We've got to warn Company-
Captain Halifu. Shaylar has to send a message. Immediately."
Shaylar looked up, and chan
Hagrahyl nodded, meeting her gaze.
"Contact Darcel. Let him know
what's happening. Have him take the message to Company-
Captain Halifu, then come back to our side of the portal to listen
for additional messages from you. Then try to contact Jathmar. I
know you can't talk to him, but we've got to warn him to break off
the survey and rendezvous with us."
"Rendezvous?" Braiheri Futhai's
voice was incredulous. "Don't you mean return to camp?"
chan Hagrahyl met the naturalist's
astonished gaze.
"No, I do not mean return.
We're abandoning this camp as fast as humanly possible. I want
everyone to pack up the absolute essentials and be ready to march
in ten minutes."
"We can't possibly be ready to
leave in only ten minutes!" Futhai protested.
"If you can't pack it that fast, leave
it," Ghartoun snapped. "And if you can't carry it at a dog-trot from
now until we reach the portal, abandon it. Is that clear enough?"
"But—but what about
Falsan?"
"Falsan's dead! And it's my job to
make sure none of the rest of us join him!"
Futhai's eyes widened at the
harshness in the expedition's leader's voice. But his jaw muscles
clenched, and he gave chan Hagrahyl the obstinate glare Shaylar
had come to associate with the naturalist at his absolute worst.
"We are not leaving this
camp until that poor man is properly buried!"
"We don't have time." chan
Hagrahyl's voice was a glacier grinding up boulders.
"We are civilized people, sir, and
civilized people bury their dead," Futhai shot back, and Kasell's
nostrils flared as he rounded on the naturalist.
"Not when the godsdamned
natives are shooting at them!" he snarled in a voice of
withering contempt.
"Nobody is shooting at us.
" Futhai pointed out in maddeningly reasonable, patiently
courteous, patronizing tones. "And since we're not in
immediate danger, we can at least behave with respect for that
poor man's death."
Barris Kasell's right hand
clenched into a white-knuckled fist around the carrying sling of
his rifle. From his expression, he would have vastly preferred to
have the naturalist's neck in that fist's grasp, instead.
"If you're that nonchalant about
the danger," he grated, "you stay behind to bury him. But
don't, by all the gods, expect the rest of us to hang around
here waiting for a pack of murdering bastards to follow Falsan's
trail back to us!"
"He stayed in the water, so there
isn't a trail to follow," Futhai pointed out almost pityingly. "You
said as much yourself, and—"
"Enough!" chan
Hagrahyl's bellow silenced the entire clearing. "We don't have the
luxury of time—not for funerals; not for arguments. Yes,
Braiheri, he stayed in the stream on his way back to us, but
there wasn't any reason for him to try to hide his tracks on the way
out, was there? It may take them a little while to get
organized, but they won't have any trouble finding as once they
do!"
He glared at the naturalist for a
moment, then turned back to Shaylar.
"Shaylar, send the message to
Darcel immediately. Then pack your essential gear and abandon
the rest. And don't leave behind anything that would let
Falsan's murderers trace us beyond the portal. Carry all your maps,
your notes—everything."
He shifted his gaze to include the
others.
"Don't abandon any technology
higher than knives and sticks, either. These people don't know a
solitary thing about us, and I'd like to keep it that way. Braiheri, if
it'll make you feel better, strip Falsan's gear and cover him with a
cairn of rocks. Preferably in the stream, so they don't find his body
and realize they've killed one of us. You can pack your notes, or
bury him: your choice. And that's all you have time for."
He switched his attention back to
Shaylar again.
"You understand why Jathmar
will have to rendezvous with us en route? Or catch up
with us as best he can? My duty's to get as many of us out as
possible. I can't wait for anyone."
He held Shaylar's gaze, pleading
with her to understand.
Her heart cried out with the need
to protest, but he was right. She nodded, stiffly, instead, her
muscles rigid with the knowledge that Jathmar was completely
alone out there in a forest where someone had already committed
murder.
Thank you, chan Hagrahyl's gaze seemed to say. Then he
turned back to the others.
"Let's get busy, then. Take only
enough trail rations to get us to the portal. We're marching light
and fast."
Shaylar saw eyelids twitch as
several of the men started to glance down at her. All of
them—except Futhai—managed to abort the
movement. But their thoughts were as clear as if each of them had
been a full-blown Voice, and she swallowed hard as the import of
those not-quite-glances sank in.
I'm going to slow us down. They know it; and I know it. And
we can't afford it.
Something hard and alien stirred
deep inside, giving her strength as she pushed herself to her feet.
She surprised herself when she realized she'd already shoved aside
the shock of Falsan's death. She had a job to do. It wasn't precisely
the job she'd signed up for, since a shooting war with unknown
people was the last thing anyone had expected to occur out here.
But that didn't change the facts.
"I'll send the message to Darcel
from my tent," she said in a hard voice she barely recognized.
"While I'm packing. And I'll do my best to warn Jathmar."
Her voice actually held steady,
and Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl looked into her eyes for long
moment, taking careful measure of what he saw reflected there.
Then he nodded.
"Good. Let's rip this camp apart
and hit the trail."
Chapter Four
They found the footprints first,
naturally.
"Whoever it was," Gaythar
Harklan said, pointing toward the far bank, "they came down that
into the water."
Jasak studied the steep slope
opposite them, and his eyes narrowed speculatively. The other
bank was steeper, rising a good ten or eleven feet above Osmuna's
body. Had the killer entered the water before he attacked? Or to
investigate the body after the killing was done? Or, the hundred's
eyes hardened, to make certain his victim was dead?
Nothing offered any answers, just
as nothing he saw could explain the sharp cracking sound which
had split the morning apart.
"What's up there?" he asked
Osmuna's squad shield.
"Nothing much, Sir. Looks like
he'd been following the stream bank when he spotted Osmuna."
"Show me."
"Yes, Sir."
Harklan started back across the
stream, with Jasak wading alongside. Threbuch followed the
hundred, and Garlath tagged sullenly along behind.
"Here's where he slid down the
bank, Sir," Harklan said. "See the gouges and footmarks?"
Jasak saw them clearly. Whoever
had come down that bank had been clumsy as hell doing it. No
Andaran Scout worth the uniform on his back would have left a
trail like that to follow. In fact, Jasak couldn't think of anyone
who would have.
He very carefully didn't glance at
Fifty Garlath for his reaction. Instead, he stooped closer to
the mud, peering intently.
"Send a couple of men both
directions along this creek, Fifty Garlath. Tell them to look for a
blood trail."
"Blood trail?" Chief Sword
Threbuch muttered to himself. He peered more closely at the same
marks, then grunted.
"By damn, Sir, you're right.
Osmuna nailed the bastard. I didn't even think to check his arbalest
to see if he'd fired it," the chief sword admitted in a chagrined
tone.
"We're all a little rattled," Jasak
answered, his voice dry as brittle weeds. "What I can't tell from
this is how badly Osmuna nailed him."
There were only a few drops of
blood splashed into the mud, but whoever had slithered down this
bank had been wounded when he did it.
"Search this whole area," he told
Garlath. "I want every inch of this ground run through a sieve, if
necessary. Get me some gods-cursed facts to look at
here!"
Garlath nodded sharply and turned
to spit orders with a brisk efficiency that Jasak
tried—hard—to give him credit for, since they were
actually the right orders for a change. Search teams spread
out, looking for a trail to follow and whatever else might be out
there waiting to be discovered.
"Fifty Garlath!" someone called
only moments later. "I've got something, Sir. I just don't know
what it is."
Jasak followed Garlath to the top
of the bank. Evarl Harnak, the platoon sword, was crouched down
in a tangle of weeds almost directly above Osmuna's body.
"Look here, Sir," he said. "Here's a
set of footprints. You can see where he must've been standing
when Osmuna came along."
The noncom pointed to a distinct
pair of footprints in the soft earth. Unlike the prints on the slope,
these were undistorted and crisp, and Jasak studied them closely.
The feet which had made them had
been wearing boots, he realized. Not soft-soled ones, either. They
showed deeply ridged treads, the sort of treads found in the
footgear of soldiers, or civilian outdoor enthusiasts. A design had
been worked into the tread, he noticed uneasily. The kind of design
an Arcanan bootmaker would use as a maker's mark, cut into the
thick leather of the sole. If that footprint hadn't been left by a
manufactured boot, Sir Jasak Olderhan would eat the ones on his
own feet.
The realization chilled him even
further. Osmuna's killer was no primitive half-wild savage. He
was wealthy and sophisticated enough to wear manufactured
boots and wield weapons of frightening, unknown power.
"You said you'd found something
you couldn't understand?"
"Yes, Hundred." Harnak nodded
and pointed into the clump of weeds. "The sunlight caught it as I
was bending down to look at the footprints. It's metal, Sir. But I'm
hanged if I can figure out what it is."
Jasak crouched for a closer look
of his own.
It was a metal cylinder, closed on
one end, open on the other. There was a small, distinct ridge or lip
formed into the metal around the closed end, as if to form a base,
and there were faint marks on the metal. Striations that were
discolored. It smelled sharp, sulfurous, a deeply unsettling smell.
Jasak measured the distance
between the footprint and cylinder with his eyes. Four and a half
feet, give or take. It hadn't been dropped, he realized. It had been thrown into the weeds. Deliberately? Or had the man hurled
it away accidentally, in reflex perhaps, when Osmuna's quarrel
struck flesh? It didn't look like a weapon, or even a part of one.
And it was certainly far too small to hold anything big enough to
punch a hole that big through solid flesh. Unless—
Jasak frowned in fresh
speculation. The hole in Osmuna's back was enormous, yes. But
the hole in his chest was small. Very small. Just about the
diameter of that cylinder, in fact.
"He used this to kill Osmuna."
"How?"
Jasak hadn't realized he'd spoken
aloud until the chief sword's one-word question told him he had.
Threbuch didn't sound incredulous—quite. But he did
sound . . . perplexed, and Jasak
scowled up at the grizzled noncom.
"Beats hell out of me, Otwal. But
look." He fished the thing gingerly out of the weeds, picking it up
by inserting a small twig into the open end. "It's the same diameter
as the hole in Osmuna's chest."
"That couldn't possibly have gone
through Osmuna." Fifty Garlath's tone was scathing enough to
cross the line into open insolence. "There's no blood on it, and the
angles are wrong, and it landed in the wrong place. If that thing
had gone through Osmuna, it would've landed on the other side of
the creek, not up here."
"I didn't say this had gone
through the poor bastard," Jasak snapped, gripping his temper in
both hands.
"Maybe whatever was in it
went through him? Chief Sword Threbuch mused, and Jasak tilted
the cylinder so that sunlight fell into it as he peered inside.
"If there was anything in here,
there's barely a trace of it left." He sniffed again. "Something
smells . . . burnt?"
He reached into the open neck
with one fingertip and felt some kind of residue inside. The chief
sword twitched violently, as though he'd just suppressed a need to
jerk Jasak's hand away, and the hundred managed to summon a
wry smile.
"I think it's fairly safe to say
Osmuna wasn't poisoned," he said.
"And you're sure of that
because—?" Threbuch growled.
"Point taken. So I won't lick my
finger, all right?"
"Sir!" Threbuch's eyes widened. "
Look at your finger."
Jasak glanced down, startled, and
discovered a black smudge on his fingertip.
"That's carbon," he said
wonderingly. "It's like ordinary lampblack."
"But—" Garlath began,
then clicked his teeth on whatever he'd been about to say.
"Go on, Fifty," Jasak said quietly.
"It doesn't make sense,
Sir. Osmuna wasn't burned, any more than he was poisoned!"
"No," Jasak agreed thoughtfully.
"No, he wasn't. But something was burned inside this thing,
burned so completely that all that's left is a film of lampblack. And
the end of this cylinder is the same size as Osmuna's wound. So
there's a connection somewhere, even if we can't see it."
"An incendiary spell-thrower,
Sir?" Gaythar Harklan asked nervously, and Jasak glanced at him.
"I'm not ruling anything out at this
point, Shield," he said. "How close were you to Osmuna when he
died?"
"About thirty yards away, Sir.
Maybe forty." The trooper pointed to the other stream bank, where
Gadrial sat on a boulder in the sun, waiting with commendable
calm for a civilian plunged into the middle of a military
emergency an entire universe away from the nearest help. "I was
behind all that mess of underbrush. Shartahk's own work getting
through it, too, Sir."
"And how loud was that cracking
sound we all heard?"
"Damned loud, Sir. Hurt my ears,
and that's no lie."
"It was loud enough where we
were that I can well believe it," Jasak said, nodding absently.
He stood frowning at the enigma
perched on the palm of his hand. Harklan was certainly right about
how obstructive the underbrush was. The noncom's own
nervousness—not to mention his military training's
insistence on advancing cautiously in the face of the
unknown—undoubtedly meant it had taken him even longer
to get through it. Which, unfortunately, had given Osmuna's
murderer a priceless gift of time in which to make his own escape.
He realized that his frown at the
bland metal cylinder had become a glower, instead, and felt a
burning frustration that he couldn't make any of the puzzle pieces
fit together.
But whether he could do that or
not, they still had a wounded killer to track.
"He went into the water," Jasak
said. "After he threw this into the weeds. Was he just
trying to rinse his wound, or was he trying to accomplish
something else? Was anything of Osmuna's missing?"
He glanced at Evarl Harnak, who
gave him a hangdog look of sudden guilt.
"I don't know, Sir," he admitted.
"We, uh, didn't look."
"Then look now, curse
you!" Garlath snapped so viciously Harnak paled.
"Yes, Sir!"
The platoon sword threw a sharp
salute and scrambled down the bank, and Jasak bit back an acid
comment. Harnak should have checked Osmuna's gear
immediately; he and Garlath actually shared that opinion. But the
men were already shaken, as it was. Snarling at them would only
make them more nervous—and mistake-prone—than
ever.
Garlath caught Jasak's tightlipped
disapproval and glared back defiantly, as though daring Jasak to
reprimand him for ordering a trooper to repair his dereliction of
duty. But the hundred couldn't do that, of course, however
severely tempted he might be. If he reprimanded Garlath, even in
private, it would only add weight to any charge of personal
prejudice against Garlath the fifty might make.
In that moment, Jasak realized just
how much he truly hated Shevan Garlath. Any man who abused
shaken troops in the middle of a crisis—let alone a crisis
bigger than anything the Union of Arcana had weathered since its
founding—was a man who deserved to be cashiered.
Preferably with his head stuffed up his nether parts.
Jasak wanted, more than he'd ever
wanted anything in his life, to do that stuffing. The fact that he
couldn't only fanned his cold fury, and his voice was an icy
whiplash when he spoke.
"I want that killer's trail found and
followed, Fifty. Send First Squad west, with one section on this
side of the creek, and the other section on the far bank. Have them
look for a place our man might've crawled out of the streambed.
We know he's been hit, but we don't know how seriously, or
which way he went. It'd be rough going for a wounded man to
wade very far through all those boulders, though, so send them,
say, half a mile.
"If we haven't found any trace of
him by then, chances are he headed back east again. His footprints
certainly appear to have come from that direction. So, in the
meanwhile, send Third Squad east, looking for the same thing."
"And you, Sir?" Garlath bit out.
Jasak held the older man's eyes
coolly, staring down the hostility in them. Hostility and a dark
flare of pure hatred. Both of them knew precisely how badly Jasak
wanted to be rid of Shevan Garlath, yet both of them also knew
they were stuck with one another—at least for the duration
of this crisis—and Jasak's reply would have frozen a lump
of lava.
"Chief Sword Threbuch and I will
backtrack the only solid evidence the bastard left behind. That
trail." He pointed toward the faint line of footprints along the
stream bank, prints that disappeared into the tangle of
undergrowth. "Give me a couple of point men—preferably
a fire team that's trained together."
He needed someone to watch out
for Gadrial, and neither he nor Threbuch could devote the proper
attention to that job. Not while tracking a murderer through
this terrain. But they couldn't leave her behind, either. The
multiple Mythalan hells would freeze solid before Jasak Olderhan
entrusted Magister Gadrial Kelbryan's safety to the likes of Shevan
Garlath.
"Yes, Sir!" Garlath made the
snappy precision of his salute an insult in itself. Then he spun
away and started snarling orders.
"Begging your pardon, Sir,"
Threbuch muttered, "but whoever this bastard is, he would have
done us a grand favor if he'd killed that asshole instead of poor
Osmuna."
Jasak didn't respond. The chief
sword was way too far out of line for a noncom of his seniority,
and he knew it. Worse, though, he obviously didn't care. And,
worse still, Jasak couldn't blame him. So he simply ignored the
remark entirely and gave the order no commanding officer liked to
give.
"Chief Sword, please see to it that
someone collects Osmuna's personal effects. We'll have to
forward them to his widow. Then find Kurthal. He's the best
draftsman we have. Have him render a sketch of those wounds,
front and back, to proper scale."
Threbuch nodded, and Jasak drew
a shallow breath.
"When he's done," he said, his
voice flat as the ice on Monarch Lake, "prepare Osmuna's body for
field rites. We can't just leave him, and we can't spare anyone to
take him back to camp."
"Yes, Sir."
The older man's expression told
Jasak he was about as happy with those orders as Jasak was.
Nobody enjoyed that particular duty, least of all Threbuch, who'd
conducted field rites over the years for more troopers than any
man cared to recall. Jasak's father had very nearly been one of
those troopers, and something in the chief sword's eyes said he
was determined to make certain Jasak didn't become one,
either.
While Threbuch went to deal with
that unpleasant chore, Jasak glanced across the stream to where
Gadrial sat, unobtrusively watched over by troopers who stood a
yard or so above her with loaded arbalests, their gazes roaming
ceaselessly for possible danger. She was watching Jasak. Even at
this distance he could practically see her blazing curiosity over
what they'd found. Not out of any ghoulishness, but because she
was worried. More than worried, however splendidly she was
concealing the fear he knew she must be feeling.
There was no point keeping her in
suspense, and he motioned for her to join him.
Gadrial rose from her perch on the
boulder, waded carefully across the swiftly moving stream, and
climbed the far bank to join Jasak. She carefully kept her face
calm, her manner composed, but she feared her eyes would betray
her inner agitation. She wasn't afraid, precisely, but she was
gripped by a strong emotion she couldn't readily identify. She was
unsure whether to call it anxiety, worry, nervous jitters, or healthy
caution, but whatever it was, she was determined to remain in
control of it.
She dug her boots into the soft
earth of the stream bank, resisting the temptation to rub her
posterior, which hadn't enjoyed its stony resting place. It was a
steep scramble, but she finally reached the top, where Sir Jasak
Olderhan stood watching her through hooded eyes.
Military secrets, she thought, and sighed mentally. He
would tell her only what he thought she needed to know. Which
wouldn't be much. That was going to be frustrating enough, but
the slight chill in his manner distressed her almost more, since she
knew its probable source.
She hadn't looked at Osmuna as
she waded the stream.
Sir Jasak didn't understand that,
she was sure. Mired in his rigid Andaran codes of behavior, he
probably thought she was being callous, possibly even
coldhearted. He'd expected her to stare, perhaps blink on tears and
bite her lip in an emotional display, because she wasn't Andaran,
and therefore didn't share an Andaran woman's set of responses to
such situations. He'd expected her to display curiosity, at the least,
particularly since his men hadn't let her get close enough to see the
wounds that had killed the poor man.
She had yet to meet any Andaran
male who'd bothered to learn the attitudes held by other cultures'
women on much of anything, let alone something as rigidly
prescribed as the Andarans' views on death and the proper
responses to it. Gadrial, on the other hand, wasn't particularly
interested in learning the proper responses to death, because she
held a profound respect for the sanctity of life, and murder
violated that sanctity unforgivably.
Staring at a murdered person's
remains was deeply disrespectful to the soul which had inhabited
those remains. Worse, that soul was usually still there, confused
by the sudden, brutal shift in its state and unwilling to move on
until the shock had worn off. But more importantly even than that,
her main concern—as always—was for the living,
not the dead. There was nothing she could do to help Osmuna's
brutalized soul, whereas there were a number of thing she could
do to help Sir Jasak Olderhan and his soldiers. If Hundred
Olderhan allowed her to help. Being a stiffnecked Andaran
noble, he was far more likely to order her wrapped up in cotton
gauze and protected like a child.
She bit back a sigh and scrambled
up the last two feet of the bank to level ground. She found herself
more upset than she'd expected to be by Jasak's cool manner. It
disturbed her that she wanted so deeply for him to
understand, even if none of the others did. But there was nothing
she could do about that, so she simply drew a deep breath and
looked up a long way to meet his hooded eyes.
"Did you find anything?" she
asked quietly.
"Nothing but more mysteries," he
admitted. "That, and a trail to follow. More precisely, to
backtrack. We're still looking for traces of where he went after he
splashed into the stream."
"At least we've got something
to follow," she said with a wan smile that lightened a little of
the grim chill in his brown eyes. He studied her for a silent
moment, then seemed to come to a decision.
"Ever see anything like this?"
He held a small metal cylinder on
the palm of his hand. Gadrial peered closely without touching it,
then frowned as she realized what she was seeing.
"Somebody burned something
inside that," she said, and he nodded, one eyebrow flicking slightly
upward.
"Yes, they did," he agreed.
"What?"
"I was hoping you might be able
to tell me that."
The morning air felt suddenly
colder. He didn't know what had killed Osmuna. He had no more
idea than she did, and she stared at the object on his hand.
"It's so simple there's nothing you
could use as a clue, trying to figure out what it does," she
said. "Of course," she frowned, "someone who'd never seen a
personal crystal might wonder what it was for, let alone
how to retrieve any notes stored in it."
"Why do you say that?"
She looked up, a bit startled by the
sharp edge in his voice and the sudden intensity of his eyes.
"What?"
"What in particular made you
think about someone who'd never seen a PC before?" he
amplified, and she pursed her lips.
"Well," she said, "the men under
your command are scared. I mean, really scared. There's something
wrong—terribly wrong—about Osmuna's death.
None of you seem to know what caused the poor man to die, and
now you're showing someone who isn't even a soldier an
unknown device found near the dead man. That suggests to me
that you have no idea who killed Osmuna, no idea how. And that
means . . . "
Her voice trailed off as the full
import of her own subconscious insight came sputtering up to the
surface.
"That means somebody who isn't
Arcanan did the killing," she said finally, slowly, and realized she
was rubbing her arms in an effort to persuade the fine hairs to lie
back down. She wanted desperately to stare into the woodline, and
kept her gaze on Sir Jasak's face instead through sheer willpower.
"I'm right, aren't I? Otherwise, you
wouldn't have asked me if I'd seen something like that."
He drew breath, visibly stepped
back from whatever white lie he'd been about to utter, and nodded.
"Right on all counts," he said
simply, and she shivered.
"You're sure it isn't a spell
accumulator of some kind, Magister?" Chief Sword Threbuch
asked. The question startled her, since she'd been concentrating
too hard on what Sir Jasak was saying to realize the noncom had
returned behind her.
And that's not the only reason it 'startled' you, either,
is it? she told herself tartly. There was something unnerving
about having a grizzled combat veteran old enough to be her
grandfather ask her such a question. Especially, in a voice filled
with such flagging hope. She wished she didn't have to, but she
shook her head.
"No, Chief Sword," she said
almost gently, hating to kill even that tiny hope. "It isn't an
accumulator. At least, it's nothing like any accumulator I've ever heard of, and I've had plenty of exposure to odd bits and
pieces of experimental equipment. It doesn't seem to contain any
sarkolis at all, so I don't see any way it could have been charged in
the first place. And there isn't even the faintest whiff of magical
energy clinging to it. Not even a faint residue. It's not connected to
anything arcane."
When she glanced at Jasak again,
she found a curious blend of relief and unhappiness in his eyes.
"Well," he muttered, "at least you
didn't identify it as some sort of super weapon cooked up by a
theoretical magician."
She couldn't stop the glance she
cast at Osmuna, sprawled so obscenely below their vantage point.
"You're afraid it's a super
weapon?"
"I don't know what the hell it is,"
he admitted with a frankness which astonished her.
"Then you really don't
know what killed him?" she said, and Jasak's mouth went hard as
marble.
"We know exactly what killed
him." His voice was as hard and flat as his expression. "Something
was driven through his body, straight through the heart."
"But you don't know what went
through him?"
"No."
Gadrial peered at the innocuous
metal cylinder again, then sighed.
"I'm sorry, Sir Jasak, but I haven't
the faintest idea what that thing might be." She met his gaze once
more. "And you have no idea how much I wish I could help you
with this."
His response surprised her.
"If anything crops up that you
can help with, be sure I'll call on you. We're a long way from
home. A long way from the nearest help. Before this business is
done, we may need the Gifts of every Gifted person we have.
Meanwhile, stay close to the Chief Sword and me, but stay behind
us."
She started to speak, but he held
up one hand and surprised her again.
"That isn't Andaran chivalry," he
added, his eyes glinting briefly with what might almost have been
an odd little flash of humor. "It's my duty to see that any civilian is
as safe as possible during a military emergency. That goes double
for a magister with a Gift strong enough for Magister Halathyn to
handpick her to head his theoretical research department."
His eyes dared her to protest that
assessment, when both of them knew his standing orders contained
no such official statement. Besides, Gadrial wasn't a
civilian—not precisely, since she was officially on the
payroll of the UTTTA and currently on sabbatical from her
Academy position to serve as a research liaison to the Second
Andaran Scouts.
But she wasn't about to take that
particular gryphon bait, much less run with it. She was no
adolescent, and the agony she'd endured at the Mythal Academy
had taught her which battles were worth fighting, so she conceded
the point.
"I appreciate your position,
Hundred Olderhan."
The relief in his eyes told her he'd
expected her to protest. She was, after all, Ransaran, with notions
most Andarans regarded as rife with anarchy and social chaos.
Gadrial didn't know whether to be irritated or amused. Then his
eyes darkened, and she was suddenly gazing at another person, a
grim stranger with skulls reflected in his suddenly frightening
gaze.
"We're trying to find a wounded
killer, Magister Kelbryan," he said softly, his near whisper far
more chilling than another man's ranting. "This isn't going to be a
simple hike through the woods. We're hunting the most dangerous
quarry any human can hunt, and the only thing we have to track
him by is the trail he left walking to this spot. I don't mean to give
offense, but you're not an experienced tracker. You could damage
a faint spoor without even realizing it."
"No offense taken. I'm a good
outdoorswoman, but I'm no soldier, and I won't pretend to possess
skills I don't."
"I appreciate your honesty. We're
going to be moving fast. Very fast. You're not combat trained,
Magister—"
"Gadrial," she interrupted, and one
of his eyebrows quirked. The light in his eyes changed, the
balefires flickering and dimming as surprise misted through the
flame.
"I beg your pardon?"
"My name is Gadrial. If were
going to face death together, I'd just as soon do it on a first-name
basis. Death is a little personal, don't you think? Much too
intimate to face with a stiff formality between us. If I were soldier,
it would be one thing. But I'm not. Frankly, I'll feel better if you
stop being so aristocratically formal and just talk to me."
He blinked. Actually blinked,
started to speak, and paused. He blew out his breath, and then a
tiny smile crooked one corner of his mouth.
"You have a point. Several points,
all of them valid." The smile flickered larger for a moment. "In
fact, you rather remind me of someone else. All right." He nodded.
"Where was I?"
"You were telling me I'm not
combat trained," she said in a dry voice which surprised another
tiny smile from him. Then he regained his equilibrium.
"Yes. Well, the point I was going
to make is that we'll be moving fast, trying to catch up. You may
find it difficult to keep up the pace," he said, not formally, but
certainly diplomatically, and she grinned.
"Is that all that's worrying
you? My dossier must not have mentioned that I run
competitively. Distance running. I may not match your speed," she
added with a droll glance at all those muscles in a body that was
certainly easy on the eyes, "but I've got endurance, and that's what
we'll need most, isn't it?"
Jasak was beginning to think this
delightful woman was just this side of perfection. But before he
could decide how to respond, she continued.
"There's something else you need
to know about me. You know I have a very strong primary Gift,
but I have two or three minor arcanas, as well. One of
those may be useful before this business is done."
"Oh?"
Gadrial tilted her head, studying
him for a moment before answering. His tone sounded hopeful,
rather than challenging or dismissive. Sir Jasak Olderhan might be
a blue-blooded Andaran noble to his bootsoles—he was,
after all, destined to become the next Duke of Garth Showma, Earl
of Yar Khom, Baron Tharkala, and at least another half-dozen
equally improbable titles—but that didn't seem to have
atrophied any of his brain cells.
"I would be grateful for
anything you can contribute, he said very quietly.
"Thank you. I'll be glad to help
however I can. And among other things, I possess a minor Gift for
healing. I'm no miracle worker, mind. Not even remotely in the
same class as a school-trained magistron, or even
an army surgeon with a fair dollop of Gift. But I can heal
relatively minor wounds all day long, if necessary. And if a man's
injured critically, I might be able to save his life. At the very least,
I could probably stabilize him until a real healer can take
over and do a proper job of tissue renewal."
"Magister Kelbryan—
Gadrial," he said softly, "you have no idea how glad I am to hear
that."
The glorious sunlight faded to a
pale blur, and the sounds of birdcalls, wind in the treetops, and the
bubbling wash of water below their feet all vanished from her
awareness when the depth of worry behind those quiet words hit
home. He was expecting trouble. Big trouble. Injuries worse than
his platoon medics could handle. His surgeon was with Fifty
Therman Ulthar, a universe away and seven hundred miles from
the swamp portal. No one had expected to run into anything like
this, and she glanced down at her hands, which could heal minor
things. Sprains and contusions, broken toes or fingers. Those lay
within her capabilities, and she hoped with sudden desperation that
she wouldn't be called upon to handle more than that.
For the first time since their
departure from the swamp portal, Gadrial Kelbryan was truly
afraid.
Chapter Five
Jathmar felt wondrously alive as
he sent his mind questing across the surrounding folds and dips of
land.
Mapping was as close to flying as
he ever expected to come. Oh, he'd gone ballooning, of course.
That was part of every licensed survey crewman's mandatory
training. But ballooning was a slow-motion, ponderous activity,
and the balloon was merely pushed hither and thither by whatever
capricious winds happened to be blowing. He'd heard rumors
about balloons fitted with one of the newfangled "internal
combustion" engines some of the more wild-eyed lunatics were
tinkering with back on Sharona. He didn't expect much to come of
it, though. And even if it did, the earsplitting racket and stink
wasn't going to be very conducive to enjoying the experience.
But Mapping, now. Mapping felt
more like what Jathmar imagined birds must feel, soaring silently
across the sky as forests and fields flashed beneath one's wings.
Jathmar had always envied birds, even drab and commonplace
little sparrows.
But, then again, sparrows can't Map.
Jathmar grinned at the thought,
but Mapping was a Talent only humanity possessed, and only a
tiny fraction of the ten billion or so human souls in existence
could lay claim to that specific Talent. Of course, that was still a
pretty damned large absolute numbers. Nearly a fifth of the
population had been blessed with some kind of psionic Talent.
Given the best current estimate, that worked out to around two
billion Talented people, of whom only two percent had inherited
the ability to Map. That meant there were—theoretically, at
least—something like forty million Mappers, but there
were several subtypes within the Talent, and they were clearly
concentrated in specific bloodlines. Not to mention the fact that at
least half of those technically Talented with the ability had Talents
too weak to bother training for professional use. Both of
Jathmar's parents had been Mappers, however, and so had three of
his grandparents, which explained why his own Talent was so
strong.
Unlike Shaylar, Jathmar's mother
and grandmother hadn't been able to join survey crews. But they'd
found ways to make use of their Talents on the home front,
working for the Park Service: mapping virgin woodland without
impinging on it, doing geological survey work, planning new
highway routes, doing the occasional Search and Rescue work for
lost hikers. Even taking on odd jobs like inspecting dams and
culverts for structural soundness.
Mapping was a Talent which was
always in high demand in the commercial sectors. Considerably
higher demand than his wife's usually was, actually. Voices were
always valuable, but they were also among the most numerous of
all the psionic Talents, the true telepaths of Sharonian society,
with nearly as much variety in potential employment as there were
individual variations between Voices. Shaylar was a very special
case, however. Very few Voices could match her sheer strength
and range, which would have been more than enough to make her
extremely valuable to someone like the Chalgyn Consortium. But
when the sheer strength of her Talent was combined with the
precision with which she was able to use it and her
marriage bond with Jathmar, it produced a team which could have
written its own ticket with just about any survey concern.
Jathmar's professional assessment
of his own Talent was tempered by a realistic view of his
shortcomings, as well as his strengths. He knew he was a good
Mapper—very good—and that Shaylar was a first-
class Voice. But it was the combination of their Talents, they way
they interlocked and complemented one another, which made them
such a truly formidable team, especially in virgin wilderness.
The reasons for that were simple
enough. Jathmar could See not only the topography of the
ridgeline that lay two miles due south of him, and the abrupt turn
this creek took a mile northeast, frothing through a white-water
staircase of rapids, but he could also See what lay under
the ground. Only a small percentage of Mappers had that degree of
Talent, and that was what made Jathmar so valuable to a survey
crew.
And Shaylar's ability to share that
Sight with him was one of the reasons Halidar Kinshe, her
government sponsor, had fought so hard to put them into the field
together as team.
Now, as he stretched his
awareness to its furthest limits, Jathmar caught a glimpse of
something vast and dense beneath the soil. It was large enough to
cause a wavering, almost like heat-shimmer, in the faint but
discernible—to a Mapper—magnetic field.
That magnetic field lay across his
Sight of the world like a precisely cast fishnet of crosshatched
lines. But the line just ahead of him was bent slightly out of true.
That caught his immediate, full attention, for he'd come to know
exactly what spawned that dark, massive magnetic anomaly. There
was a major iron deposit in this region, big enough to warrant
immediate investigation. If the deposit were large enough—
and if the clues they'd gathered so far added up to what he
suspected, it would be enormous—it would shortly be a
magnet (Jathmar grinned at his own word choice) for development
by the Chalgyn Consortium's Division of Mining and Mineral
Extraction.
If DOMME developed the deposit
into a profitable mining venture, every ton of ore extracted,
smelted, and turned into tools would put finder's royalties into
this survey crew's bank accounts. And if he really had stumbled
across the same iron deposit as Sharona's fabulously valuable
Darjiline Mines, the Consortium certainly would develop it.
It was one of the conundrums of
trans-temporal exploration that in a society with access to
multiple, duplicate worlds, with all the vast treasure troves of
mineral resources, rich untouched farmland, and incalculable
numbers of wild birds and animals that implied, there were
actually a limited number of key resources and all too many
companies in competition to grab them. With no fewer than
fifteen major corporations and consortiums—not to
mention nearly a hundred smaller independent outfits which
operated survey crews on a shoestring budget—contending
for the riches on the far side of any new portal, prizes like the
Darjiline Mines were actually scarce.
Which was the whole reason
survey crews worked so hard to figure out where they were when
they crossed the eerie boundary of a new portal. News that the
Portal Authority had sent troops to construct a new portal fort
would race outward through the web of development companies
literally at the speed of thought, despite all that a company's
Voices could do to encrypt their transmitted reports.
No telepath was ever permitted to
invade another's mind without permission. Prison sentences went
with that kind of abuse, not to mention massive fines and the ever-
present threat of closing down any company which knowingly
used or tolerated such practices. But industrial espionage tiptoed
around that particular law with increasingly sophisticated ways of
deducing the truth. Once the Portal Authority had taken the step of
sending out a troop detachment to build the fort, rival teams
would start sweeping into the area, looking for the fastest way to
reach the most valuable tracts of land before anyone else.
Shipyards went up first, in many
cases, built with surprising speed, since the only practical way of
reaching many of those valuable tracts would be to sail there. The
company that owned the forests and iron mines necessary to build
those ships would make a ton of money selling them to rival
outfits. Once they'd grabbed the best land for themselves first, of
course.
It was usually a free-for-all along
any portal border, which was why the Portal Authority insisted on
building its forts. Portal Authority troops weren't there to fight a
war, since there was nobody in any of the worlds they'd ever
explored. They were there to prevent claim jumping and timber
piracy and all the other uncivilized behaviors which went with the
territory when multiple groups jockeyed for position along a vast,
steadily expanding frontier. And, of course, to collect the
Authority's portal transit fees.
It was, on the whole, a delightful
and exhilarating time to be alive. He grinned and pulled out his
field notebook and pencil, making careful notations that included
compass headings, then set out again, eager to finish the routine
work so they could get to the iron deposit.
Jathmar's Talent was strained to
its utmost, feathered-out edge, feeling out the contours of the iron
deposit he couldn't quite See from its distortions of the magnetic
field, when it struck.
The psychic blow was so savage
that he literally lost stride, stumbled, and went to one knee.
Shaylar!
He exploded back to his feet and
whirled, blindly seeking the source of his wife's abrupt anguish,
and his hand blurred toward his hip. Steel hissed with an angry-
snake sound in the suddenly menacing silence as the H&W
cleared leather. But there was nothing to shoot. He was miles
from camp. Whatever was happening, he couldn't possibly get
there in time to do anything about it. Fright chittered along his
nerves while the rest of him stood frozen for long, soul-shaking
moments.
Shaylar's terror and shock rolled
across him in battering waves, but Jathmar wasn't a telepath. He didn't know what was happening. Couldn't glean the tiniest
detail from the jagged emotions tearing through him. Every nerve
in his body quivered with the need to run towards camp, but he bit
down on the panic and remained where he was, forcing himself to
breathe deeply.
You can't help anyone if you go crashing through the trees in
a headlong charge.
The steel in that mental voice, put
there by years of intense training and hardscrabble field
experience, steadied him. It was hard to do—the hardest
thing he'd ever done—but he managed to disassociate
himself from the tidal wave of Shaylar's emotions. He stood silent
for several more moments, just listening to the forest, but he
couldn't detect anything out of the ordinary. The birds still
chirruped and called through the trees. Squirrels and chipmunks
still frolicked like happy children on a scavenger hunt. Wind
rustled in the glorious crimson-golden foliage high overhead, and
rattled through the thickets of blackberry brambles. The stream
still bubbled its way across the rocks, splashing from one boulder
to the next on its long journey to the sea.
In all that ordinary sound, Jathmar
could detect not one single, solitary thing that might have
threatened Shaylar. And, by extension, the entire camp, since
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl would never have permitted Shaylar to
wander away from the base camp's protection. Nor was she
foolish enough to do so. All of which meant one simple thing; if
he wanted to find out what was wrong, he would have to return.
Immediately.
Jathmar eased his slung rifle off
his shoulder, holding the pistol one-handed while he clicked the
safety off the long gun. There was no sign of danger in his
immediate vicinity, but Jathmar wasn't taking any chances. He
holstered the revolver and worked the lever on the rifle,
chambering a round in one easy, fluid motion.
The metallic sound of the action
was profoundly reassuring. The Sherthan Model 70 had been
designed as a short, handy saddle gun, but it was still a powerful
weapon. Chambered for a .48 caliber, three hundred-grain round
based on the old Ternathian Army Model 9's. Its muzzle velocity
was lower then the military weapon's, due to its shorter barrel, but
with the new "smokeless powder," it still pushed the heavy,
hollow-pointed round at over nineteen hundred feet per second,
producing a muzzle energy of over two thousand foot-pounds.
That gave the weapon a nasty kick, but it was also sufficient to
blow a hole right through a man and lethal enough to deal with
anything short of one of the huge grizzlies.
At the moment, Jathmar found
that thought comforting. Very comforting.
Some survey crewmen routinely
carried their rifles pre-chambered, so a bullet was available to fire
instantly if a man needed to shoot in a hurry. Jathmar had more
shooting experience than most scouts, however. He could load,
lock, and fire a rifle or handgun in a fraction of a second, in total
darkness or blinding rain, and under normal circumstances a round
carried in the chamber was an accident waiting to happen.
This, however, was not a normal
circumstance.
So he loaded the chamber, then
moved forward cautiously, Model 70 in both hands (and trigger
finger outside the trigger guard), senses alert for the slightest hint
of danger. The emotional link with Shaylar had shifted. Horror had
faded away into a sense of desperate urgency that threatened to
swamp his hard-won calm. He literally could not imagine what
was happening at their base camp, but he commanded himself
once again not to panic and moved forward at a steady pace.
He forced himself to move more
slowly than he would have preferred, repeating to himself the
Authority mantra that coolheadedness was both a survey
scout's first line of defense and his most effective weapon. Yet the
urgency in the bond tugged at him, urged him forward as it grew
stronger. It felt almost as though Shaylar was shouting "Hurry!
"
Which, given the strength of her
Talent and their marriage bond, might be exactly what she was
doing.
Despite his determination to move
with caution, Jathmar found himself speeding up. He couldn't help
it. The forest was utterly normal, yet Shaylar's emotions were a
goad, driving him faster with every passing minute.
He was never sure when he'd
broken into a run, but he realized he was, in fact, running when he
slid down a leaf-slick gully, thrashing through the underbrush, and
found himself hurtling up the other side.
He paused at the top, panting,
cursing his carelessness, and listened again. Still he heard nothing.
Not a solitary, damned thing out of the ordinary. He checked his
watch and tried to calculate how far he'd come. Half a mile,
maybe. Jathmar grimaced, then set out again, opting for a
compromise between the utter silence of caution and the pell-mell
dash of panic.
Pushing through the dense
underbrush along the stream was heavy work. The luxuriant
growth's widespread, tangling limbs and brambles caught at his
rugged clothing and slowed him down. He slogged through it,
cursing its hindrance, then paused with another curse—this
one directed at himself.
He was a Mapper, damn
it. He was following the stream out of sheer habit, because it was
the way he'd come on his way out. But the sense of direction
which came with his Talent told him the precise bearing to the
base camp, and he changed course, angling sharply away from the
creek. The open forest floor away from the streambed's understory
was vastly easier—and quicker—going, and his
ability to See the terrain in front of him let him pick the best,
fastest way through it.
I should've thought of this sooner, he told himself
savagely. Guess I'm not quite as calm as I'd like to think I am
.
There was no point in kicking
himself over it, and he settled down to the steady lope the better
going permitted.
It took Jathmar another thirty
agonizing minutes to reach the campsite, where he found a rude
surprise.
It was empty.
He stood in a screen of thick
shrubs at the edge of the clearing, too uneasy to just step out into
the open without taking a careful look first. The brushwork
palisade stood silent in the glorious autumn sunlight, a circle of
protection lacking only its gate. He could see the tents inside it,
still pitched where they'd been this morning. The donkeys were
still there, too, looking bewildered and lonely. But there wasn't a
single person in sight, and not a single man-made sound
anywhere in the clearing.
An icy fingertip touched Jathmar's
heart. Deadly cold, unreasoning, it robbed him of breath for
several shuddering, superstitious moments. Then his gaze,
wandering in shock from one edge of the camp to the other,
caught on something totally unexpected. His eyes jerked to a halt,
fixed with sudden white-faced horror on something that shouldn't
have been there.
It was a cairn.
Someone had piled rocks across
something sickeningly man-sized and human-shaped. It lay at the
top of the stream bank, in the shadow of the abandoned brush
wall, and for a truly agonizing moment, Jathmar feared the worst.
But then reason reasserted itself. He could still feel Shaylar
through the marriage bond, closer than before. She was alive, not
buried under that pile of cold stone. He shuddered and forced
himself to push that terrifying image away, forced his mind to
begin functioning once more.
He frowned. He'd heard a distant
rifle shot, quite some time ago. Had someone accidentally shot
one of their teammates? It was hard to credit. Every member of
this crew, including Shaylar, knew weapons-handling inside and
out. You didn't shoot at a target you couldn't see. You didn't point
the muzzle at anything—like someone else on your
team—that you didn't want a bullet to go through.
You didn't carry your gun with a round chambered.
So who the hell was dead? And how? They hadn't even been felling timber, so there were no
fallen trees to have crushed anyone.
He pondered for a moment longer,
then moved cautiously into the open with the rifle butt snugged
into the pocket of his shoulder, muzzle down, so no one could
knock the barrel aside or rip it out of his hands. His finger was no
longer outside the trigger guard. Instead, it rested on the trigger
itself, ready to fire in an instant as Jathmar stepped through the
unfinished gate.
Nothing stirred but the wind. The
tent flaps, left open as though abandoned in a great rush, whiffled
in the breeze that wandered in over the tops of the interwoven
branches. Jathmar walked a quick perimeter recon inside the
palisade, making sure no one was hiding out of sight in one of the
tents. He felt like a fool, hunting for brigands who couldn't
possibly be there. And he was right. No one was there. The
camp was deserted.
He went back to chan Hagrahyl's
tent. The expedition's leader had obviously raked hastily through
his possessions, and Jathmar frowned again. What in the names of
all the infinite number of Uromathian gods could have rattled
chan Hagrahyl badly enough to simply abandon camp and run for
the portal? That was an unheard of decision for any expeditionary
leader. Teams only broke and ran from certifiable disasters:
volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, forest fires. Even when facing
brigands, running was inherently more risky than standing one's
ground in a prepared camp. Their team was large enough, and well
enough armed, to have dealt with any typical band of border
brigands. But the ex-soldier had run for the portal. Run so fast
he'd left Jathmar behind.
Jathmar was so rattled by the
implications that he found himself wondering why he was so
convinced his team was, in fact, running.
Because, idiot, his common sense muttered in some
exasperation, you're married to a Voice who's trying her
damnedest to warn you to follow as fast as your big, flat feet will
carry you.
A swift check of his own tent
confirmed his suspicions. Shaylar had packed in the same haste
evident from chan Hagrahyl's tent. She'd abandoned clothing, food
supplies, cooking utensils—everything but her camp ax,
guns, and charts. Or that was what he thought, until he suddenly
spotted his own backpack leaning against his sleeping bag.
She'd pinned a note inside the flap,
written in obvious haste.
Someone's murdered Falsan. We don't know who or how
many there are or where they came from. Ghartoun says we can't
wait for you. Head for the portal—and be careful, beloved
.
That was
all . . . and it was more than enough.
The shock burst between his ears
like an artillery shell. Falsan had been murdered? His
shoulder blades twitched as a chill crawled its way down his spine.
He'd felt foolish, looking for someone in the abandoned camp, but
his instincts had been correct. There was someone out here
besides themselves. Someone who'd already killed once. Someone
unknown.
"Dear gods
above . . ." he whispered.
An unknown human
contact?
No wonder chan Hagrahyl had
bolted for the portal. They were in over their heads, way
over, and Jathmar didn't hesitate a second longer. He paused only
to swiftly check the contents of his pack, nodding approval at
Shaylar's selections—rations for two days, pistol and rifle
ammunition, and his camp ax. Every one of their charts and
notebooks was missing, undoubtedly in her pack.
Jathmar slung the pack onto his
back, abandoning the rest of their meager possessions, then filled
his canteen at the stream and headed out at a hard jog. Falsan's
killers might well be mere minutes behind him—it had been
a long time since he'd heard that rifle shot—which made
speed more important than caution.
He made no particular effort to
cover his tracks. Any experienced tracker would have no trouble
following their trail, regardless of anything he might do. The
footprints, broken branches, and bruised leaves left behind by
eighteen people in a hurry would be as easy to follow as a
Ternathian imperial highway. The more quickly he left the vicinity,
the safer he'd be, and if it came to a fight, his two guns might
make the difference between survival and something else.
He refused to think about a
pitched battle between Falsan's killers and their survey crew, with
Shaylar caught in the middle of it. The very thought robbed him of
breath he needed for running, and Jathmar was grateful—
profoundly so—that Falsan's route this morning had been
nearly a hundred and twenty degrees off the bearing directly back
to the portal. Whoever had killed him would have to locate their
camp first, before following their tracks back to the portal. If they
ran fast enough, there was a chance they could reach the
Company-Captain Halifu's fort and its contingent of soldiers in
time.
He found himself cursing silently
in time with his strides. Eighty years! Sharonian
expeditions had spent eighty years exploring the
multiverse, and not once had they found a trace of other humans.
Why now? Why them?
He stamped on the anger. He
knew it was merely a smokescreen, a way to diverge his mind
from his own terror, and he couldn't afford to let either emotion
distract him. Nor was there any point in railing at the multiverse
for putting Shaylar in danger. He'd done that, fighting to
get her included on the field teams.
Well, he told himself grimly, you got her into this, so
you'll just have to get her out again.
The whisper of her presence
through their marriage bond seemed to chide him for blaming
himself. They'd both fought to put her out here, not just
him. Jathmar grimaced, knowing she was right, and tried to stop
kicking himself. But he couldn't help it. So he tried to at least
seethe at himself more quietly as he followed the trail the others
had left. He scanned for pitfalls ahead, where he might twist or
even break an ankle if he put his foot wrong, and listened intently
for any hint of pursuit.
The one thing he couldn't do, and
wished bitterly that he could—was to See what was behind
him. Or, rather, who. Unfortunately, Jathmar could See
only the land itself, not animals or people moving across it. It
wasn't like looking with his eyes. He didn't See the land as a
faithful image of reality. He Saw contours, shapes, protrusions
and depressions, dense places and less dense ones, that he had
learned to recognize as streambeds, mineral deposits, soil types,
and all the other features which made up the bones of the world.
He would have given a great deal to be able to scan the terrain
behind him for the people who'd murdered Falsan, but what they
needed for that was a Plotter, or a Distance Viewer.
What they had was one
outclassed and nervous Mapper.
He ignored the crawling itch
between his shoulder blades, told his spine to stop anticipating a
blow from concealment, and concentrated on moving as rapidly as
possible.
The trail—of
course—led uphill all the way. Jathmar was in excellent
physical condition—anyone who spent as much time hiking
as a survey crewman had to be in good shape—but he hadn't
pushed himself this hard in a long time. His thighs and calves were
feeling the strain, and his breathing was heavier than he would
have liked it to be. His Model 70 grew heavier with every stride,
but he gritted his teeth and kept going. He'd been running for the
better part of fifteen minutes when he heard a low voice from
behind a screen of wild spirea bushes just ahead.
"Jathmar!"
He slid to an instant halt,
breathing hard and turning his head to follow the sound.
"Ghartoun?" he panted, and the
stocky ex-soldier rose from a cautious crouch.
"Any sign of pursuit?" he asked,
his voice urgent but quiet, and relief jellied Jathmar's knees. He
shook his head, stiffening both weary legs in grim resolution.
"Not yet. The camp hadn't been
disturbed when I got there. And I haven't heard anything behind
me."
"That's something, at least," chan
Hagrahyl muttered. "You made good time catching up to us. Let's
hope to hell Falsan's killer doesn't to the same. All right, we're
moving out."
Jathmar pushed through the spirea
behind chan Hagrahyl, and Shaylar flung himself into his arms,
holding on tightly. She wasn't quite trembling, but he felt the
distress tightening her muscles, and spikes of emotion ripped
through their bond.
"I was so scared," she
whispered against his chest. "Thank all the gods you made it back
to us!"
"Shhh." He lifted her chin and
kissed her gently, then frowned as he glanced at her bulging pack.
"That's too heavy for you."
"Yes, but I didn't dare leave any of
this behind, in case . . . "
She swallowed hard, and he
brushed a fingertip across her lips.
"Never say it, love. It didn't
happen. Here." He slid off his pack, opened hers, and redistributed
the weight. "That ought to help."
She gave a sigh of relief when he
helped her shrug the straps back across her shoulders.
"Oh, that's lovely. Thanks."
"Don't mention it, M'lady," he said
with a courtly bow, and her smile wavered only slightly as she
squeezed his hand.
She headed out behind the others,
and Jathmar followed, carefully placing himself between her and
whatever might be coming up behind them. They moved at a rapid
pace, not quite jogging, but the difference was so tiny as to hardly
matter. The trail wasn't a friendly one. It still drove inexorably
uphill, and it was littered with underbrush, deadfalls, and deep
gullies that hindered their progress. It hadn't seemed like such
rough country coming through in the other direction, he thought
bitterly, then gave himself another mental shake.
Be fair, he told himself. It isn't that
rough—you're just scared too death and trying to get
through it five times as fast!
chan Hagrahyl kept them moving
for two hours without stopping. Shaylar strode grimly forward,
outwardly holding her own, but Jathmar could feel her aching
weariness and the need for rest that she managed to keep hidden
from the others. He'd never been so proud of her, nor so
frightened for her, but he wasn't surprised when chan
Hagrahyl finally called a halt and she cast pride to the winds and
simply sank to the ground, panting.
The stocky Ternathian who'd once
been an imperial officer cast uneasy glances at the forest behind.
Probing glances that tried to see into the shadows behind far too
much underbrush, far too many trees. Barris Kassel and the other
ex-soldiers spread themselves into a defensive ring without a
word, silently standing guard while everyone gulped a few
swallows of water and caught their breath. Shaylar had her
breathing under control again, but he could feel the aching
weariness in her.
She can't keep going hour after hour at this pace, Jathmar
thought despairingly. Not all the way to the portal.
He wasn't sure the rest of
them could keep up this wicked pace, for that matter. Jathmar
already felt the strain, and Braiheri Futhai was at least as badly
winded as Shaylar. Jathmar tried to keep his worries quiet, tried to
keep Shaylar from catching them, but he didn't succeed. When she
lifted her head, meeting his gaze levelly, he tried to smile, and her
answering smile's courage, and the strength of her love, nearly
broke his heart.
Being here with you is worth it, worth the risk and the
danger, her smile told him, and he smiled back, aware that
he'd never loved her more.
Far too soon, chan Hagrahyl gave
the soft-voiced order to move out again.
Chapter Six
"That's not a campsite, Sir. It's the
next best thing to a godsdamned fortress," Chief Sword
Threbuch breathed in Sir Jasak Olderhan's ear, and Jasak nodded
grimly. It was an exageration . . . but
not much of one.
They'd found no trace of where
their quarry had gone after murdering Osmuna, which told Jasak
that he'd turned back in the direction from which he'd come,
keeping to the stream to throw off the scent. It also meant the only
clue they had to follow was the trail he'd left on his way to the site
of the murder.
So they'd backtracked him. It
hadn't been especially difficult; whoever he was, he hadn't
bothered to cover his tracks when walking towards his murderous
rendezvous with Osmuna, so the trail itself was easy to pick up.
On the other hand, that trail had wound its way through the
underbrush along the stream like something a snake with epilepsy
might have left behind, and after what had happened to Osmuna,
Fifty Garlath's men moved with a certain understandable caution.
Jasak told himself the killer
couldn't be very far in front of them now. Not when he was
wounded and struggling through the boulder-strewn stream. Jasak
had halfway expected to overtake the bastard somewhere along the
creek, but they'd found no trace of him. And he had to admit that
they'd taken at least two or three times longer than they ought to
have to get their pursuit organized in the first place. He knew he
could legitimately blame most of that delay on Garlath's
inefficiency, but innate honesty forced him to admit that he'd been
more than a little slow off the mark himself.
In fairness to himself—and
Garlath—the sheer, stunning impossibility of what had
already happened would have thrown anyone off stride.
And despite the importance of finding the killer and anyone else
who might be with him, Jasak knew he'd been right to take the
time to try to learn everything he could before setting out in
pursuit.
However little "everything" turned out to be in the end, he
thought glumly, lying belly-down beside Threbuch with his chin
on his folded forearms while they studied the natural clearing on
the far side of the stream.
The camp in the middle of that
clearing made it painfully obvious that whoever he was, Osmuna's
killer wasn't out here alone. One man could never have built the
palisade-like wall they were studying from their vantage point
across the streambed. Not by himself. That high brush barrier of
interwoven branches and cut saplings surrounded an area at least
thirty yards in diameter, and it was too high to see over from their
present position.
There was too much timber down
around the edge of the clearing, too, all of it showing the white
scar of newly cut wood, for one man to have felled it all. If he'd
cut down that many branches and small trees by himself, the oldest
cuts would have started losing that raw, pale look of just-hacked-
down timber.
"At least fifteen or twenty, you
think?" he murmured to Threbuch.
"Couldn't be much less than that,
Sir," the chief sword replied. "Not from all the work the
bastards've put in over there."
Jasak nodded again and thought
some more.
If that estimate was accurate, First
Platoon had the mysterious strangers substantially outnumbered.
In addition to the fifty-seven men of his four line squads, Garlath
had an attached six-man engineer section, four quartermaster
baggage handlers, and a hummer handler. Adding Jasak himself,
and Chief Sword Threbuch, that came to seventy men, which
ought to provide Jasak with a comfortable superiority.
But he couldn't be sure of that.
Threbuch's estimate was based on the minimum number
the construction of that palisade would have required, but it was
large enough to house a considerably bigger number. A simple
division of labor could easily have put fifteen or so to work
building it while others hunted for food, prospected for
minerals—there was a substantial iron deposit in the area,
Jasak knew—or even pillaged some nearby village
unfortunate enough to have been targeted by pirates. There simply
wasn't any way to know from out here how many people really
were occupying that camp. Which meant someone had to go inside
to find out. Yet Jas didn't feel like rushing forward and risking the
lives of more of his men unnecessarily.
The palisade was strong enough to
repel anyone who wanted to get inside, unless he had a convenient
field-dragon to blast it down with explosive spells, which Jasak
didn't. The thick wall of saplings—cut from the stream
bank where there was enough open sunlight to allow heavy shrubs
and saplings to grow—had been interwoven with tough
brush, much of it thorn-covered, to create a high, virtually
impenetrable barrier. His scouts' infantry-dragons, far lighter than
the field-dragons the artillery used, would find it extremely
difficult to blow gaps in it.
Despite the chief sword's
comment, it wasn't quite a fortification. But it was more than
stout enough to keep out any wild animals, and the number of
people who could have been concealed in the area inside that high,
thorny wall was dismayingly
large . . . especially when those
people were equipped with whatever unknown sort of weaponry
they'd used against Osmuna.
Worse, the camp had been placed
by someone with an excellent eye for terrain. The land rose
towards it from the streambed, not steeply but steadily, and that
location and its wall—higher than necessary to stop any
native predator, but perfect for hiding its interior from an
aggressor and preventing him from seeing the placement of men
and weaponry on the other side—spoke of military
planning. That much was unmistakable, but who had built it?
And—more to the point—why?
In the face of so many unknowns,
Jasak was unwilling to assume anything. What he needed was hard
evidence, the answers to at least his most pressing questions, and
he had nothing. For all he knew, this might not even be be killers'
encampment. It might belong to someone else entirely—
someone the killer had been scouting, prior to attacking.
Yet Jasak didn't believe that for a
moment. Indeed, he was becoming more and more convinced that
what he was looking at was a base camp for another multi-
universal civilization. The very notion was absurd, but no more
absurd than what had already happened. And they were close to
what Magister Halathyn and Gadrial strongly believed was a class
eight portal. If they were right, no one could possibly have lived in
the vicinity without literally stumbling across the thing. A class
eight wasn't the sort of thing that could escape notice for very
long. The class three portal leading to their own swampy
encampment was almost four miles across; a class eight would be
closer to twenty-five or even thirty.
With something that size and the
swamp portal only a couple of days travel apart by foot, Jasak
couldn't believe any natives in the general vicinity would have
failed to notice them. Which meant they should have built cities,
or at least villages and transportation systems, to take advantage of
them. Yet all the Andaran Scouts had found was this tiny, semi-
fortified camp.
Which meant Osmuna's killer had
probably been doing much the same thing they were: mapping and
exploring.
Jasak conscientiously ordered
himself not to wed himself to any sweeping conclusions without
more evidence. They could be in the middle of some noble's huge
game preserve, after all. Whoever had killed Osmuna might have
thought he was eliminating a locally born trespasser or poacher.
Or Jasak and his men might have unknowingly trespassed upon
sanctified or unsanctified ground, in which case Osmuna might
have been killed for blasphemy. But however firmly he reminded
himself of those possibilities, he kept coming back to the totally
alien nature of whatever had been used to kill his man.
This isn't getting me anywhere, he told himself. And
every minute I waste speculating is another minute for anyone
inside that camp to make his ambush nastier, if he's planning one
.
The problem was what to do
about it. Anyone who stepped out into that open clearing would
undoubtedly find out if there was someone waiting inside that
palisade with a terror weapon in his hands. Getting holes blown
through more of his troopers didn't exactly strike Jasak as the best
way of going about finding out, though. Oh, for one lowly
reconnaissance gryphon to do an aerial sweep!
That gave him an idea.
He caught Fifty Garlath's eye,
which wasn't all that difficult since the platoon commander was
staring at Jasak with something close to panic in his eyes. The
hundred pointed silently toward the nearest tree, then upwards into
its widespreading branches. It stood along the bank of the creek
where they lay prone, and Garlath nodded convulsively, with a
look of relief that would have been comical under other
circumstances but managed to look mostly pathetic under these.
The fifty signaled to Sword
Harnak, then pointed at the same tree. Harnak, in turn, signaled to
Jugthar Sendahli, who nodded, tapped one of his squad mates on
the shoulder, and disappeared into the concealing brush.
It took the two troopers the better
part of six sweat-filled minutes to work their way around to the
back of the tree through the brush. Its trunk was more than broad
enough to conceal them when they finally reached it, and Jasak
heard the slightest of rustles as Sendahli's squad mate boosted the
garthan high enough to reach the lowest of the
widespreading limbs.
The dark-skinned scout went up
the tree in slow motion, each movement silent with caution, each
toehold tested gently before he used it to boost himself higher. He
scarcely jostled a single leaf on his way up, and Jasak gave an
internal nod of approval, pleased that Garlath's tenure hadn't
ruined the garthan yet. Jasak had recommended Sendahli
for promotion, and he hoped it went through.
The man was Mythalan, but hardly
shakira or even multhari. The garthan
caste was the lowest of the low in Mythalan society, comprised of
the vast masses born without any Gift at all. In most parts of the
Union of Arcana, those born without the ability to use magic were
simply ordinary citizens. They might not be able to aspire to the
magistery like Gadrial, but they could look forward to ordinary
careers and the same basic opportunity to earn a good living as
anyone else.
But not in Mythal.
Jasak's jaw muscles knotted as he
watched Sendahli's slow, skillful execution of his orders and felt
his Andaran sense of civilized behavior towards other human
beings rising up in fresh indignation. A garthan wasn't
legally property any longer. Chattel slavery had been outlawed two
centuries ago, under the Union of Arcana's founding accords. But
the accords had only limited power inside a country's national
borders, which meant most local laws had remained the same. And
in countries which had embraced the Mythalan culture and its rigid
stratifications, those born without the ability to use magic faced
lives little if any better than those of a Hilmaran serf from
Andara's first age of conquest.
People born to the garthan
caste lived painfully limited lives. Their employment choices were
a matter of heredity—a butcher's son became a butcher,
even if he was better suited to building wagon wheels—
unless the whim of their shakira lords and masters willed
otherwise. The magic-using castes and sub-castes, with the
ruthless support of the traditional multhari military caste,
still ruled Mythal and her allied colonies—including those
in several new universes—with an iron hand. They
jealously guarded their hereditary privileges and frothed at the
mouth at the slightest suggestion of abolishing the caste system
that relegated men like Sendahli to third-class citizenship and a
grimly limited future.
Jasak had never learned the details
of the debacle which had finally driven Magister Halathyn to sever
all connection with the great Mythal Falls Academy, the
premier magic research and development academy in all of
Arcana's many universes. Much as he personally detested the
shakira caste, Jasak had to admit that, historically, the
majority of the great breakthroughs in magical theory had
originated with the Mythalans. Which, of course, only made them
even more insufferably overbearing and arrogant.
It undoubtedly also helped to
explain what had happened with Magister Halathyn. Jasak did
know that Halathyn had infuriated many of his shakira
peers by devoting so much of his time and talent to the needs of
the UTTTA even before he left the academy. It wasn't so much that
they'd objected to trans-temporal exploration, but the shakira
as a caste harbored a fierce resentment for the fact that the
military (which meant Jasak's native Ardana) dominated trans-
temporal exploration. The Mythalans had tried for years to
secure control of the Union's exploration policies, only to be
frustrated by Andara and Ransar. Whatever their own differences
might be, the Andarans and Ransarans had formed a unified front
against shakira arrogance literally for centuries, which had
only made Mythal's resentment of the UTTTA's policies worse.
Halathyn had never had much patience with that particular view,
and he'd actually taken the time to find out how he could best aid
in the exploration process.
And then had come Gadrial
Kelbryan. She'd been only a lowly undergraduate, at the
time—not yet seventeen, which had been an almost unheard
of age for anyone, even a shakira, far less a
Ransaran, to win admission to the academy—but every
story agreed that she'd been at the heart of whatever had driven
Halathyn vos Dulainah out of Mythal Falls forever in a white-hot
rage. Given what Jasak had come to know of Halathyn, added to
the obvious strength of Gadrial's Gift and the deep and abiding
Ransaran faith in the individual, he rather suspected he could
guess how it had happened. And he was absolutely certain that the
Mythalan version—that Gadrial had been
Halathyn's out-of-caste lover, trading sexual favors for better
grades—was a total fabrication.
Ransaran and Mythalan societies,
and the religious beliefs which underpinned them, could not have
been more different. Mythalans believed in the reincarnation of the
soul, and that lives of virtue were rewarded by successive
incarnations in steadily higher castes on the path to a fully
enlightened existence. Virtually all Ransaran religions, whatever
else they might disagree about, were monotheistic and believed in
a single mortal incarnation and a direct, personal
relationship with God.
The Mythalan belief structure
validated the superiority of the shakira and bolstered the
monolithic stability of the structure which rested upon the
garthan's total subjugation. After all, how could someone
become a member of the shakira in the first place, unless
he had attained the right to it in his previous incarnations? But
Ransaran theology engendered a passionate belief in the right and
responsibility of the individual to take command of his own life,
to make of himself all that his own God-given abilities and talent
made possible. The Mythalan caste system was a loathsome
perversion in their eyes, and the clash between the two cultures
was long-standing and bitter.
The discovery that a Ransaran
possessed such a powerful Gift would have been gall-bitter
for most shakira, and it was widely believed that the
Mythal Falls faculty had a habit of washing out "unsuitable"
students any way it had to. Or, if the student in question was too
academically strong for that, using the requisitely brutal form of
harassment to drive him—or her—away.
Jasak had no way of knowing if
that was what had happened in Gadrial's case, but the towering
fury of Halathyn's vitriolic letter of resignation when he broke off
completely with his fellow shakira and formally joined the
faculty of the academy that served the Union of Arcana's military
headquarters at Garth Showma was legendary. And Gadrial
Kelbryan, then a lowly third-year undergrad, had accompanied him
as his protégée and student.
Over the two decades since,
Magister Halathyn had assembled the staff—including
Gadrial—which had built the Garth Showma Institute into a
true rival for Mythal Falls and improved the UTTTA's field
capabilities by at least twenty-five percent. In the process, he'd
carved out his own special niche in field
operations . . . and continued his
ruthless demolition of Mythalan stereotypes wherever he
encountered them.
It had been one of the greatest
pleasures of Jasak's military career to watch the aging magister
convert the suspicious garthan soldier now swarming so
carefully up the massive oak—a man who'd joined the
Andaran Army as a way to escape Mythal and buy a better future
and higher social status for his children—into an ally and
friend.
There was only one Magister
Halathyn, he thought. And the swamp portal where Halathyn was
currently camped, in a flimsy tent with only a single squad to
provide security, was far too close to whoever had come out of this fortified camp.
Jasak peered upward, trying to
spot Sendahli, but he couldn't see a trace of the trooper. Good. If
he couldn't see Sendahli, even knowing he was there,
nobody inside the palisade ought to see him, either.
On the heels of that thought, a
piercing trill came wafting down from the treetop.
All clear.
Jasak grimaced. So their mystery
camp was empty, but was it merely unoccupied at the moment, for
abandoned?
He glanced at Fifty Garlath, who
was sweating profusely again. Garlath darted a nervous glance
back at Jasak, then motioned to Gaythar Harklan. The squad shield
lay prone at the edge of the creek, but he rose at the gesture and
scrambled his way down the bank, across the swift-moving main
current, and up the other side. He scuttled across the ground in a
swift, crouching dash that carried him to the base of the palisade,
then came fully upright. He kept his back as close as he could to
the brush wall's outermost, sharply jutting branches, taking no
chances Sendahli's all clear might have been mistaken, but at least
no one was shooting at him with anything.
So far, so good, Jasak thought. And
now . . .
Harklan edged sideways along the
wall, then whipped through the opening in a rollover prone that
took him into enemy territory literally at ground level. Silence
gripped the waiting platoon. Flies whirred and buzzed past Jasak's
ears, and still the silence held. Then Harklan reappeared.
"It's abandoned," he called across,
"but they haven't been gone long. There are several fire pits in
here, and the coals're still hot enough to cook over. And they've
left their pack animals."
Jasak exchanged glances with
Threbuch.
"Whoever they are, they're in a
tearing hurry to be somewhere else, Sir," the chief sword observed
quietly, and Jasak nodded, then glanced at Gadrial.
"They're headed for your class
eight portal, is my guess," he said.
"It's not my class eight,"
she muttered. "If it's anyone's, I'd say it's theirs." She
waved at the abandoned camp. "They obviously got to it before we
did. It's even possible the class eight leads into their home
universe."
"You don't think they're from this
one?" Jasak was curious to see if her logic paralleled his own.
"I don't see how they could be,"
she said, shaking her head. "I'm no soldier, but it seems to me that
if there were more of them nearby, they'd have sent a messenger
for help and holed up behind those spiky walls while they waited
for it. But they didn't do that. They ran. That suggests they're
feeling outnumbered, guilty, or maybe just scared to death.
Whatever their motives, they're obviously determined to go
someplace where they can get help. That camp may look
formidable from out here, but it's actually pretty rudimentary. If
there weren't very many of them, they could've built that just to
keep out bears and panthers and what-have-you so they wouldn't
have to post a sentry to watch for predators."
Jasak was impressed. She might
be "no soldier," but her reasoning tallied closely with his own.
And from the flicker of respect in the chief sword's expression, it
tallied with Otwal Threbuch's, too.
"You'd have made an effective
military analyst, Gadrial," the hundred said, and her eyes glinted.
"One of these days, you Andaran
bully boys will be civilized enough to let us ladies join your ranks.
The effect ought to be bracingly beneficial."
"Ladies in uniform?" The chief
sword snorted. "Carrying arbalests and throwing war spells?
Ransaran democratic madness."
"I'm qualified expert with a hand
arbalest," she said tartly. "And I can throw spells that would singe
your braided Shalomarian hair. Literally," she added sweetly.
The chief sword just grinned,
unrepentant.
"I would suggest," Jasak
interrupted, before Threbuch succeeded in digging himself in any
deeper, "that we discover what we can about that."
He nodded toward the palisade,
and Fifty Garlath took his cue from that and ordered the platoon
forward. First and Second Squads split up and did a sweep of the
treeline surrounding the clearing, looking for possible ambushes
or snipers. Third Squad unlimbered its crew-served infantry-
dragon, setting it up in a cover position on this side of the stream.
Fourth Squad followed First and Second across the creek and
bellied down under cover of the far bank, waiting.
Gadrial watched with quiet
intensity from her vantage point in the scrub. She was perfectly
aware that Jasak had no intention of walking out there until the
security sweep was complete and the platoon's heavy weapons
were in place to respond to any threat. Had she not been present,
he would probably be out there already himself, but she was along
for the ride, so he was left with the responsibility for her safety.
He obviously placed a high
priority on keeping her in one piece, and she was scared enough to
appreciate that, yet independent-minded enough to flush with
embarrassment as she admitted to herself that she wasn't
able to hold her own out here. She had no formal military training.
She truly was a crack shot with a hand-sized arbalest, but she'd
never fired a shoulder weapon in her life, and she couldn't even
give the dragon gunners a hand. As strong as her various Gifts
were, she'd never used artillery and had only the vaguest sense of
how it operated.
Gadrial's main interest in the
infantry-dragons, and the heavier field-dragons of the true
artillery, was in the battle spells that powered them. She'd spoken
to combat engineers and knew battle spells were complex.
Building them demanded intense concentration frequently under
conditions that were challenging, to say the least, and not all of
them were directly related to the artillery. Infantry companies
included not just the dragons and their gunners, but also an
attached squad of combat spell engineers with multiple
responsibilities.
Combat spell engineers were
among the highest-skilled and highest-paid men in the Union of
Arcana's armed forces. There were never enough of them to go
around, though, and they were too valuable to put at the sharp end
and get them shot at if it could be avoided, so units like Hundred
Olderhan's routinely carried plenty of extra spell packs for
emergency use.
Infantry platoons were built
around squads, each twelve men strong. A squad was subdivided
into two maneuver teams, each consisting of three arbalestiers
commanded by a noncom, and supported by an infantry-dragon. It
took both of a dragon gunner's assistant gunners and two of the
squad's six arbalestiers to carry enough accumulator reloads to
fight any sort of sustained engagement, but in the absence of
someone who could recharge them, a team had only the
ammunition it could carry.
Now Gadrial shivered, watching
the heavy weapons deploy defensively. She was afraid a battle was
exactly what was going to happen. The question was whether it
would break loose here, or somewhere else.
When the final "all clear" whistled
across the open space, Fourth Squad rose out of its cover, spread
into a skirmish line, and headed into the abandoned camp. Jasak
strode ahead, leaving Gadrial in the care of two men assigned as
her bodyguards. She deliberately fell behind his rapid stride,
making sure she didn't get in anyone's way. Still, she'd nearly
reached the gap in the brush walls when she realized Jasak had
stopped dead in his tracks.
He stopped so abruptly she almost
collided with him, and when she stepped around him to see what
he was staring at, she caught her breath. A cairn of rocks lay in the
shadow of the brush wall, piled up between the interwoven
branches and the edge of the stream, and she felt a tremor in her
knees, and another in her chest, as she recognized its shape and
depth.
The fact that someone had died
here shouldn't have shocked her so brutally. She knew that. But as
she stared down at the pile of rocks over what had been a human
being, there was no doubt in Gadrial's mind that they'd found the
man who'd killed Osmuna.
Dismay stabbed deep as the
sickening import crashed home. There'd been only one man on the
bank above the creek where Osmuna had died. Only one trail
through the forest led back to this camp. Which meant that only
two men knew what had happened out there in the wilderness.
And both of them were dead.
She recognized the same
understanding in the grim look in Jasak Olderhan's eyes, the
knotted muscles in his jaw and the tension in his shoulders. She
wondered what he was thinking, then decided she didn't really
want to know. Then Jasak raised his gaze, granite eyes tracking
like a hunting gryphon after prey as they sought out his
commander of fifty.
"Search this camp," he said flatly.
"I want to know how many men were here. What they left behind.
Anything that might give us an idea of where they're from, and
why they're here."
"Yes, Sir!"
Garlath started spitting orders.
They sounded industrious enough, but they lacked a certain clarity,
and Jasak locked eyes with his chief sword. The grizzled noncom
nodded crisply and moved immediately to organize the search
Garlath was attempting to direct.
Once Chief Sword Threbuch
waded in, the swift, methodical search went so smoothly it was
like watching a choreographed dance, Gadrial thought. Except for
the fact that there was no music but the jittery rattle of wind in
dead leaves that scuttled across the rocky cairn where Osmuna's
killer lay, that was. She supposed she ought to be glad—in a
retributive, just-desserts fashion—that the man who'd
murdered Osmuna was dead, and a portion of her did want to be
glad, shocking as that seemed. But it was only a small part of her,
and the rest was horrified by what had transpired out here.
The Union Accords, the
cornerstone of the Union of Arcana, had put an end to the savagery
of the Portal Wars two centuries previously. They had united the
various warring kingdoms and republics into one cooperative
entity, dedicated to exploring the multiple universes and giving
everyone in the Union a better life. The opportunity to build
something new and worthwhile in pristine universes, the chance to
amass wealth in a civilization which was wealthy in a way pre-
portal Arcanans couldn't possibly have imagined.
Those Accords had governed the
use of portals and new universes for two hundred years. And they
also laid out the rules and contingency plans for contact with
another human civilization in the clearest possible terms. Every
soldier in the Union's military forces was put through training on
how to conduct such a first contact, which aimed above all else to
be peaceful. The last thing anyone had wanted was a shooting war
with another human civilization.
Yet in all the years of the Union's
existence, no such other civilization had ever been encountered.
The rules were still there, the troops were still trained in them, but
only as a contingency. No one had actually expected to
ever require them. Not really. Surely if there'd been other human
beings in existence, Arcana would have discovered them long ago.
But they
hadn't . . . until today. Until two total
strangers had met in a trackless wood. Met in fear and suspicion,
and despite the strictures of the Accords, promptly slaughtered one
another. Gadrial hadn't known Osmuna, but he'd seemed a bright
enough fellow, dedicated to his duty in the Andaran Scouts. He'd
seemed unhappy with Fifty Garlath, but proud to serve Hundred
Olderhan, and Gadrial found it difficult to believe he would have
thrown the Accords into the garbage can without extremely good
cause.
Her gaze returned again and again
to the silent grave while Jasak's men searched the camp for clues.
Ten minutes elapsed in grim silence, punctuated by the sounds of
angry men ransacking what had been an orderly camp, and their
ugly mood frightened her. These men had blood in their eyes,
looking for something—or someone—to rip
apart in retaliation for a comrade's murder. She couldn't really
blame them, but that made their anger no less frightening, and
when she glanced at Jasak, she saw him frowning as he, too,
watched the camp's destruction.
The facts they shook loose were
few and far between.
"We're not looking at more than
eighteen or nineteen people, at most," Chief Sword Threbuch
reported to Jasak and Garlath. "There's damn near nothing here but
spare clothes, sleeping rolls, and abandoned foodstuffs. We found
more of those little metal things we recovered on the bank above
Osmuna's body, though, and you're right, Sir. There is something
inside."
He produced several shiny metal
cylinders, each of which had a duller metal object stuffed into the
top. They weren't all identical; some were larger, some smaller.
Most of the metal caps were round-nosed, although some were
flatter than others. All of those had hollows in their tips, but there
were also three longer ones, each of which had a solid, sharply
pointed tip.
"That looks like lead," Jasak
frowned as he touched one of the round-nosed cylinders. "But this
one—" he took one of the three pointy ones "—looks
more like . . . copper?"
He glanced up at Threbuch, but
the chief sword's expression was baffled. Jasak looked at Gadrial,
who extended her hand. He laid the cylinder in her palm, and she
turned it, examining it from all angles.
"It is copper," she agreed. "But
look here." She tapped the end. "It's not solid copper. It's
more like a jacket around something else. And I think you're right
about that, too. The core is lead."
"I
wonder . . ." Jasak murmured as he took the
mysterious object back from her.
"Sir?" Threbuch asked.
"I wonder how much force it
would take to propel this," Jasak tapped the cylinder's pointed cap
with one fingernail, "across fifteen or twenty feet of space and
drive it through a human body?"
Garlath lost color and made a
strangled sound that drew Jasak's eyes to him.
"That—that's barbaric!" the
fifty protested.
"But damned effective," Jasak
pointed out.
"You can't be sure that's what
happened," Garlath objected. "There's not enough of anything
inside that little cylinder to do such a thing."
"Just because we can't imagine
how to do it, Fifty Garlath, doesn't mean someone else couldn't figure out how to do it," Jasak observed.
Garlath flushed, the color looking
even darker against his fearful pallor, and Jasak turned back to
Threbuch.
"Go on, Chief Sword," he said,
and Threbuch produced some other odd cylinders of metal. These
were much larger, as broad as his palm, and six inches long.
"There's a whole stash of these,
whatever they are, Sir. We found them in every tent. They don't
seem to be weapons of any sort, but there something inside them.
You can feel it slosh when you shake the thing."
"You shook one of them?" Jasak
frowned, and Threbuch snorted.
"One of the men had already been
shaking them, Sir. It didn't explode in his hand, so after I'd
ripped him a new asshole—pardon, Magister." He glanced
at Gadrial and colored slightly himself. "Anyway, I figured it was
probably safe enough to handle them."
"See if someone can cut into one
of them. But not here. Take it out to the woodline, just in case."
As the unhappy trooper who'd
drawn that particular job headed out with the dense metal object
and his short sword, Threbuch continued his situation report, such
as it was.
"They haven't been here more than
a couple of days, Sir. If I were to hazard a guess, I'd say this was a
forward observation post, or a base camp of some kind. A relay
station, maybe, for others to follow. They're no primitives,
whoever they are and wherever they've come from. You've seen
their metalwork. That matches ours, but it's just the beginning."
He motioned to another trooper,
who brought over an armload of examples.
"Their cloth is high quality," he
said, holding up a length of what looked like sturdy canvas. "If this
wasn't machine-loomed, I'll—" he flicked another glance at
Gadrial and amended the phrase on his tongue to "—eat my
shirt."
The magister just grinned, which
stained the hard-bitten noncom's cheeks pink once more. Then he
jerked his gaze back to his commanding officer.
"The same pattern repeats
everywhere you look, Sir," he said, doggedly ignoring the humor
glinting in Hundred Olderhan's eyes, despite the tension of the
moment. "We found high quality leather goods sewn on a
machine. Metal mess kits, with eating utensils and plates tucked
inside collapsible cookpots. Personal toiletry kits with combs and
brushes that look like something manufactured for a mass market,
not locally produced by some village shop."
"If they left dishes and combs
behind, they left in a damned hurry," Garlath muttered.
"And they weren't too worried
about replacing them, either," Threbuch replied. "That kind of
gear's hard to replace when you're at the end of a long transit
chain."
"They may not be at the end of a
long chain," Jasak said quietly.
Utter silence reigned for a long
moment, broken only by the wind and rustling leaves.
"They're running for the portal we
came out here to find," he continued after a moment. "I'm certain
of it. Not only did they abandon most of their gear so they could
move faster, they abandoned the donkeys they used to carry it here,
as well." He nodded toward the sturdy little beasts pinned in one
corner of the camp behind a fence made of rope. "I'm betting they
have another fortified base on the other side. Not a little camp like
this, either. A large base, with plenty of troops."
The chief sword swore colorfully.
Then he stopped himself abruptly. He looked at Gadrial again,
started to say something apologetic, then obviously decided he had
more serious things to worry about than her possible reaction to a
little rough language.
"We can't afford to let them reach
that portal ahead of us, Sir," he said. "If you're right, and if they get
to a bigger fort before we get to them, we'll be outnumbered.
Given what they did to Osmuna, and how fast they did it, I don't
like that scenario. Not one damned bit."
He glanced at Gadrial again as he
spoke, but this time his expression was very different. The tough-
as-dragons-scales chief sword looked terrified. And not, she
realized abruptly, for himself. He was horrified by the thought that
someone would kill her the same way they'd killed
Osmuna. She had to blink hard, and she looked away, unwilling to
embarrass him with her abruptly watery emotions.
"Hundred Olderhan," Fifty
Garlath said before Jasak could respond to Threbuch, "given the
Chief Sword's astute analysis, I respectfully recommend a course
of extreme prudence. The enemy has an unknown troop strength
and a head start. They're moving fast and light, whereas we're
burdened with considerable equipment, including the dragons.
Magister Kelbryan's calculations suggest that the portal's close
enough they'll undoubtedly reach it well ahead of us. And with
Fifty Ulthar's platoon at the coast, instead of the swamp portal,
we're badly understrength."
"Your point?" Jasak tried hard to
keep the acid out of his voice.
"In my considered opinion, Sir,
pursuing at this time would be the height of folly. The only
prudent response is to return immediately to our base camp in the
swamp and send for reinforcements from the coast before
attempting to run these people down."
Jasak stared at the older man,
disbelief warring with rage as Garlath looked defiantly back. An
ugly, triumphant glow lit the backs of his eyes, and Jasak felt his
jaw muscles aching as he clenched his teeth in comprehension.
Garlath's spineless cowardice was
equaled only by his incompetence as an officer and his hatred for
any officer promoted past him. But he was clever in his own way.
So damned clever it turned Jasak's stomach. Clever enough to
wrap his desire to flee from anything that looked remotely like
danger in the mantle of considered, prudent tactics.
Volcanic rage sizzled through
Jasak Olderhan, but before it could boil over Gadrial Kelbryan
shocked him by rounding on Garlath like a hissing basilisk. Her
almond eyes flashed with lethal lightning as she advanced on
Garlath, who actually backed away from her slender fury with an
expression of almost comical astonishment.
"Don't you dare use
my research as an excuse to cut and run!" she snarled.
"Magister Kelbryan, you mistake
my meaning!" Garlath replied, speaking so quickly the words came
out gabbled. "I didn't say we should run away. Not at all!
That would be as foolish as rushing forward. All I'm
recommending is a tactical retreat, just a temporary maneuver to
concentrate our forces. If we stay scattered, we won't be able to
withstand a united attack by an enemy of unknown strength using
weapons we can't even understand. We can't afford to risk walking
into some sort of ambush. We have to be sure we survive to carry
word of this staggering discovery to our superiors. And then
there's your own value as one of our finest magisters. If anything
were to happen to you, or if you, gods forbid, fell into
enemy hands, then—"
"Oh, stuff it someplace
interesting, Garlath!" Gadrial snapped.
"Magister," Garlath said almost
fawningly, "I only meant—"
"I know exactly what you meant!
I've been trapped in your revolting company for weeks,
Shevan Garlath. You are the most pathetic excuse for an officer
I've ever seen. One of your own men has been murdered—
murdered, damn you!—and the only thing you
want to do about it is run away and hide someplace safe! And
you have the unmitigated gall to use me as an excuse for
your cowardice?!"
Gadrial realized she was literally
shaking with fury, and a corner of her mind wondered how much
of that stemmed from her own fear and her own need to find
something to lash out at. Not that it made her contempt for
Garlath any less merited, even if it did.
"We have to find out what's going
on out here," she continued in a marginally calmer, icy voice. "We
have to find out now, before things get any further out of
hand. If we can't do that—and do it before it all goes totally
out of control—then I'm not going to be the only one at
risk. And I warn you, Fifty Garlath. If anything
happens to Magister Halathyn because of your fuck-ups, I will
come after you for blood debt. And I'll keep coming, through as
many godsdamned universes as it takes to track you down and feed
your miserable excuse for a soul to the crows!"
Naked shock flared behind
Garlath's eyes, and Jasak stepped in quickly.
"Magister Kelbryan, I fully
appreciate your concern for Magister Halathyn's safety. Believe
me, I want to protect him as much as you do. As for getting a
message back to our superiors," he swung his gaze to Garlath,
who flushed dark red under its withering contempt, "that's why we
carry hummers. Chief Sword, see to it. Send a priority message to
Javelin Krankark at the forward base, and another to Commander
of Five Hundred Klian, at the coast. Given the urgency of the
situation, I want Fifty Ulthar and his platoon recalled immediately.
And I'm sure Five Hundred Klian will also want to get a message
off to Five Hundred Grantyl at the Chalar base. Record and release
immediately with my chop on the header."
"Yes, Sir!" Threbuch saluted
crisply and darted one disgusted glance at Garlath before heading
for Javelin Iggar Shulthan, Charlie Company's senior hummer
specialist. Jasak watched him go, then turned back to the
infuriated woman still glaring at Garlath.
"Magister Kelbryan," he said
quietly and formally, breaking her concentration and drawing her
carefully away from the object of her rage, "I would consider it a
great personal favor if you would add your own message. Your
Gifts are far superior to mine, and I want Five Hundred Klian to
have as much information as possible."
"Of course," she said stiffly. "I
would be delighted to help in any way I can."
She flicked one final, fiery glance
at Garlath, then strode vigorously across the camp to join the chief
sword and their hummer handler. Jasak watched her for a moment,
then took a firm grip on his own temper and returned his attention
to Fifty Garlath.
As much as he wanted to, he
couldn't follow Gadrial's explosive example and call the man a
sniveling coward. She was dead-on accurate, but that didn't matter.
Garlath had given too many plausible, outwardly militarily sound
reasons to retreat. He knew how to play the game, all right. Jasak
had to give him that. That skill—playing the nasty little
game of power politics which was the worst curse of the
patronage system within the Arcanan military—was the one
thing Shevan Garlath was actually good at.
A deep and abiding hatred
crystallized in Jasak's blood, turning him cold as ice, and Garlath
backed up another involuntary step before his expression.
"Your tactical concerns are noted,
Fifty Garlath." Jasak's eye was granite-hard as he bit his words out
of solid ice and spat them at the older man like hailstones. "Your
assessment of the situation does not tally with mine, however. It's
imperative that we stop these people before they reach the portal. I
don't want a damned battle, Garlath. I want answers. And I
want to control the situation. Until we get those answers, until we
get to the bottom of what happened out here, we don't know
anything. But if these people are as confused as we are, and if
they get back to their superiors and tell them we
started it, it's going to change from a disaster to a godsdamned
catastrophe.
"We won't get any answers if they
reach the portal—and whatever base may lie
beyond—before we've caught up. And we won't be able to
put the brakes on this, either. Shartahk seize it, we don't even have
any idea how to communicate with them if we do catch up
with them! So the only option I see is to find them, stop
them, and try to make some sort of controlled contact with them,
just like the first contact protocols require. And, failing that, we at
least need to take them into custody and return them to base where
someone else, with the kind of diplomatic experience none of us
has, can try to figure out how to talk to them and, gods willing,
straighten this fucking mess back out. Do you read me on this,
Fifty Garlath?"
Garlath's jaw worked as he glared
back at Jasak. The fusion of fear, resentment, and hatred bubbling
away inside the man must be like basilisk venom, Jasak thought.
He doubted that explaining his own analysis had done a bit of
good, but he'd had to at least try to get through to this excuse for
an Andaran officer.
"Do you read me?" he
repeated very softly, and Garlath jerked his head in a spastic nod.
"Good," Jasak said, still softly.
"Because we're facing a fast, hard march, and I expect you to pull
your weight. Is that clear?"
"Yes, Sir." Garlath's tone was so
brittle Jasak wondered why his tongue hadn't shattered.
"Then get the men ready to march
within the next three minutes. May I assume you're capable of
carrying out that order, Fifty?"
"Yes, Sir." Hatred seethed in
Garlath's dark eyes. For a moment they met Jasak's. Then they
skittered away, and the fifty jerked out a salute and turned on a
bootheel, snarling orders at his men.
But they were, by the gods, ready
to march in three minutes.
Chapter Seven
Jathmar frowned as Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl and Barris Kasell exchanged grim looks for the
fifth time in ten minutes. He glanced at Shaylar for a moment, then
moved closer to them.
"Trouble?" he asked quietly, and
chan Hagrahyl nodded choppily.
"We're being followed."
Jathmar's stomach did a creative
dip and dive. His eyes went instantly to Shaylar, then he wrenched
them back to the other two.
"You're sure?" he asked, and
Barris nodded.
"For the last two miles, at least.
They're still behind as a good ways. Probably haven't spotted us
yet. But it's only a matter of time."
"Then how can you be sure
anyone's there?"
"Look," Ghartoun grunted, and
jerked his head sideways.
Jathmar frowned again. Then his
eyes followed the gesture, and it was his turn to grunt as if
someone had just slugged him in the belly.
A rabbit bounded past, not loping
from place to place but moving at a determined run. Moments
later he saw another, then a third. Chipmunks, too, were running
through the sparse undergrowth, and a quick glance at the trees
revealed agitated squirrels bounding from branch to branch,
streaking along in the same direction their survey crew was
traveling.
His jaw clenched in instant
understanding, mingled with chagrin. He'd grown up in these
woods, damn it. He should have seen it for himself, even sooner
than chan Hagrahyl and Kasell.
And you probably would have, if you weren't so worried
about Shaylar, a little voice told him.
"Something's spooked them," he
said, knowing it was unnecessary even as he spoke, and both the
others nodded.
"My guess is," Barris said as they
continued to move steadily forward themselves, "that they've hit
our trail and fanned out into a line. They're trying to circle around
and cut off any escape attempt. If I'm right, we're going to see
animals cutting across our path from the sides any moment now."
Jathmar grimaced. He drew breath
to ask what he could do . . . just as a
good-sized rabbit shot past, running on a diagonal path that
slashed from their right to their left. His eyes tracked it, and he
swore with quiet, heartfelt passion.
"We're not going to make the
portal, are we?" he said quietly.
"No." Barris Kasell was watching
the trees, not the rabbit, but he answered anyway. "We aren't."
Jathmar worried his lower lip
with his teeth.
"I'm no soldier, but there's got to
be something we can do. Something I can do. What do you
suggest?"
chan Hagrahyl was also watching
the forest. Now he looked back at Jathmar, his gaze like sharpened
steel.
"There's not much we can
do, except try to find a place to make a stand of some kind, and
out here, that isn't likely. There's nothing here but forest. No high
ground, no streambeds or gullies, not even a mountain pass to
defend—just open trees. Gods know how many of them out
there, let alone what they intend to do once they overtake us.
"We've only got four real
choices," he continued in a low tone, flipping his eyes back to the
trees. "We can keep going, even try to pick up the pace. We
might outrun them over a short distance, especially since we
have the advantage of already knowing where were going. But we
can't run all the way to the portal; we're a long, hard day's march
away. Or, we could pick a spot to make a stand, but Ghartoun's
right. There's not much out here that lends itself to digging in
against a siege. We certainly can't hide, not from trained trackers,
and given how quickly they've overtaken us, we're up against men
who know their business."
"So we can run, make a stand, or
fight. What's the fourth option?" Jathmar asked, not liking any of
the others.
"We can turn and carry the fight
to them," Kasell said. "I doubt they'd expect us to do that,
which would give us the advantage of surprise, initially at least."
"I thought about that," chan
Hagrahyl agreed, "but there are several major drawbacks. Among
other things, we don't have any idea how badly outnumbered we
might be, and we don't have all the ammunition in the world,
either. Judging by the number of animals they've spooked into
running, I'd say there's a fair sized group out there, so we'd
probably need all the ammo we've got and then some."
"I could take Fanthi," Kasell said
very quietly. "Maybe Rilthan and Elevu. Load up with all our
spare ammo. This kind of terrain—" he jerked his head at
the trees "—three or four experienced grunts could do a
hell of a lot of damage to somebody armed with crossbows."
"But Ghartoun just said—
" Jathmar began, only to be cut off by chan Hagrahyl.
"He's not talking about a stand,
Jathmar. He's talking about slowing them down, forcing them to
deploy and waste time. And he's right, the four of them could do a
lot of damage. But," he moved his eyes from Jathmar to Kasell, "I
don't think you could do enough. Not to buy us long enough to
get all the way to the portal. Besides, I'm kind of fond of all four
of you."
"Four of us against all these
civilians," Kasell replied quietly, and Jathmar swallowed as he
realized Barris was arguing in favor of a virtual suicide mission.
"I know."
For just a moment, Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl's face was simultaneously hard and haggard, but
then he shook his head again.
"No," he said. "And not just to
keep you from getting your stubborn Arpathian self killed, Barris.
We still don't know what happened out there, and I'm beginning to
wonder if they know for certain, either. Judging from how
long it took these people to catch up with us, they certainly
weren't hard on Falsan's heels. And Falsan couldn't have moved
very quickly with that damned crossbow bolt in his chest before
somebody who wasn't wounded could have caught up with him.
I'm starting to think he really did run into just one of them,
initially, at least. Maybe their man is wounded—maybe
even dead—too. They may have been delayed giving him
first aid. Hell, they may even have needed time just to find
him after they heard the shot! That might just explain why it could
have taken them so long to backtrack Falsan."
"You're saying this is all some
kind of misunderstanding?" Kasell demanded
incredulously.
"I'm saying it might be.
And even if it isn't, so far we've only lost one man and, as far as
we know, they haven't lost any of theirs. At the moment,
it's still at least remotely possible we could settle this whole thing
without anybody else getting killed. But to be effective at slowing
them down, you'd have to open fire from ambush. That's definitely
a hostile act—the kind that ups the stakes all around."
Kasell looked for a moment as if
he were prepared to continue arguing. But then he grunted
unhappily and nodded in acquiescence.
"So what do we do?"
Jathmar asked.
"A variant of forting up." chan
Hagrahyl sounded like a man who'd made his mind up. "Can you
See anything we might use for shelter, Jathmar? Anything at all?"
"I can't guarantee what I'll find,
but I'll Look."
"That's all I ask."
Jathmar had already crossed this
ground once, on their outbound leg, which helped. The dips and
low undulating hills, masked from ordinary eyesight by the dense
covering the forest, stretched for long, unchanging miles. The land
revealed to his inner eye was stark and easy to read. Unfortunately,
there wasn't a single spot in any of that rolling terrain that would
shelter them, or at least give them a fighting chance to defend
themselves.
He blinked, returning his
awareness fully to his body, and met chan Hagrahyl's worried eyes.
"Did you—" the
expedition's leader began, only to break off as a magnificent ten-
point buck came crashing through the trees at an oblique. Only
this time, the animal crossed their path from left to right.
"Nothing, Ghartoun." Jathmar
shook his head. "I'm sorry."
Ahead of them, Fanthi chan
Himidi broke abruptly left, signaling for the others to remain
where they were. He moved swiftly and silently, vanishing
between the thick tree trunks like a ghost.
Jathmar halted, heart pounding,
breathing heavily, and gripped Shaylar's hand. Her slim fingers
trembled against his, but they both drew comfort from the contact.
She peered worriedly up into his face, and he tried to summon a
smile, but she could read his agitation too easily through the
marriage bond.
A moment later, Fanthi returned,
jogging straight up to chan Hagrahyl.
"There's a clearing we can use.
Looks like a twister touched down at some point in the past year
or so. Lots of trees down. Tangled brush, tree trunks the size of
temple pillars. Good cover, as well as plenty of concealment. We
won't find a better spot."
Even Jathmar knew the
difference between "cover" and "concealment." The former was a
physical barrier between you and enemy bullets, like a shield. The
latter merely hid you from view. A screen of leaves concealed, but
nothing to stop incoming fire; a solid tree trunk did both.
chan Hagrahyl looked at chan
Himidi for a moment, then nodded.
"Take point." He raised his
voice. "Listen up, people. We're following Fanthi. Move it!"
chan Himidi had, indeed, found a
good spot. Little more than an acre across, the clearing
overflowed with raw distraction. A spinning funnel of wind from
some long-ago storm had ripped trees out of the earth, snapped
them like kindling, and twisted them apart, leaving jagged knife
blades of wood stabbing the sky. Small splinters had been driven
into other, still standing trees with such force that they were
embedded like nails. Tree trunks had crashed to earth in a jumbled
pile, digging broken branches into the ground.
"We know they're coming at us
from three sides," chan Hagrahyl said quietly. "We'll take position
there." He pointed to a confusion of tangled wood on the far side
of the clearing. "I want clear firing lanes, and someone to watch
our backs, in case the bastards succeed in circling all the way
around us."
"I'll cover our rear until your all
in position," chan Himidi volunteered through clenched teeth.
"Good." chan Hagrahyl nodded.
"But listen to me, everyone! No one shoots unless I say so.
Got that? Nobody shoots. I know we all want revenge for
Falsan, but there are men out there with weapons. If we have to
fight, we fight all out, but first we try and work things out so that
nobody else gets killed. Is that understood?"
Heads nodded all around, one or
two of them a bit unwillingly, and he grinned tightly at them all.
"Good," he said again. "In that
case, let's get under cover and dig in."
They took their positions in utter
silence, facing south, the direction from which the bulk of their
pursuers would approach, and fanning out slightly. Jathmar
stationed himself and Shaylar in a sheltered pocket where a
massive black walnut trunk, nearly five feet in diameter, formed a
solid barricade. It was the best protection he could find, and
branches thicker than his own torso jutted up and out from the
main trunk, forming angled braces he could use to steady the rifle
if it came to that.
Tymo Scleppis took up a
position to Jathmar's left, near the center of their all-too-ragged
line. The healer was opening his pack, trying to ready himself for
casualties if it came to open fighting. Rilthan—their best
marksman, by a wide margin—crawled in just to Shaylar's
right. The gunsmith was the only member of their party armed
with the new Ternathian Model 10 bolt-action rifle, with its
twelve-round box magazine. He said nothing as he settled into
position, but he flicked one glance briefly in Shaylar's direction
before meeting Jathmar's gaze. It was only a fleeting look, but it
told Jathmar that Rilthan had chosen his spot deliberately, and
Jathmar's throat was tight as he nodded, acknowledging Rilthan's
intention to protect her.
Beyond Rilthan was chan
Hagrahyl's clerk, a dark-skinned Ricathian who'd joined straight
out of high school. Not yet nineteen, Divis' color was closer to
last week's ashes than its normal warm chocolate hue, and his
hands shook as he tried to load his own rifle. The drovers formed
their flank guards, such as they were, but they had barely five men
on either side.
Jathmar crawled up onto one of
the immense branches, using it as a firing step to get just high
enough to shoot over the top of the trunk. It was too tall for him
to shoot across standing on the ground, but thanks to other
branches that had slammed into the earth, the fallen tree bole didn't
quite reach the forest floor. There was a gap, about fourteen
inches high, which allowed Shaylar to lie prone behind one of the
big branches, protected from incoming fire, yet able to shoot
through the gap if need be.
Everyone was checking
weapons, including Shaylar, and Jathmar's hands felt clumsy as he
pulled cartridge boxes out of his pack. He'd fired hundreds of
rounds through the Model 70, and thousands of rounds through
other rifles he'd owned, over the years. He'd hunted for food and
for sport, and he'd run into bandits more than once, trading shots
with desperate, lawless men. But he'd never seen real combat, and
his hands refused to hold steady as the reality of what they faced
hit home.
He slid his H&W out of its
holster and curled his fingers around the reassuring solidity of its
walnut grips. The big .44 caliber, seven-shot revolver was single-
action. The hammer had to be pulled back for each shot, but the
six-and-a-half-inch-barreled pistol was deadly accurate, and it had
immense stopping power.
It was also too big and heavy for
Shaylar to shoot accurately. She carried a Polshana—a
much smaller and lighter .35 caliber weapon, with a four-inch
barrel and smaller grip. Unlike the H&W, the Polshana was
double-action, and Rilthan had worked long and hard to tune its
action for her until it was glass-smooth. It held only six shots to
the H&W's seven, but unlike Jathmar, Shaylar had four
speedloaders, and he watched her tuck them into her the right hand
pocket of her jacket.
He swung out the H&W's
cylinder and loaded the chamber he normally left empty for the
hammer to rest on. Then he slipped it back into its holster and
finished arranging his ammunition boxes around him. At his feet,
Shaylar was doing the same thing with the ammo boxes from her
pack. From his slightly elevated vantage point, Jathmar could see
others settling into equally favorable spots amongst the fallen
trees.
Fanthi chan Himidi had
abandoned his post, watching for pursuers from the south, now
that everyone else had gotten into position. He settled into a new
spot of his own, behind everyone else, facing north into the forest
behind them and scanning restlessly for any sign of the men trying
to circle around to close the trap. Jathmar spotted chan Hagrahyl
at the center of their little group, hunkered down in an angle where
two tree trunks had fallen against one another as they crashed
down.
Braiheri Futhai had crawled as
far as possible from the expected line of fire, hiding in visible
terror and doing nothing to prepare for self-defense. Elevu Gitel
had hunkered down between Jathmar and chan Hagrahyl. The
geologist was loading his rifle in grim silence, and glancing in the
other direction, Jathmar found Barris Kasell less than a yard
beyond Rilthan.
Try as he might, he couldn't see
the others, which he took as a good sign. They settled in, uneasy,
on edge—waiting in a classic ambush position to see what
their pursuers would do.
Shevan Garlath had never seen a
likelier spot for an ambush.
He stared, mesmerized, at the
jumble of timber a tornado must have toppled in some relatively
recent storm. The entire clearing was a twisted mass of jagged,
broken wood, tree trunks, and branches that jutted out like the
sharp stakes of a basilisk trap.
And he had to search it.
Had to go out there, into that
deadly maze, and search it.
There was no question that their
quarry had gone into it. The trail was clear to see—even he
could follow it without difficulty—and the birdcall signals
from the Scouts who'd worked their way around to the other side
indicated that they hadn't come back out again. But the question
was why they'd stopped
here . . . and what they intended to do
next.
And of all the thousands of
soldiers spread out through this multi-universe, godsforsaken
transit chain it had to be him that drew the job of finding
out. Finding out if the murdering whoresons who'd killed
Osmuna—that lazy-assed, sleep-on-duty, worthless
piece of dragon-bait—planned on killing anybody else
today. Garlath cursed the dead man, wishing desperately that there
was a way to weasel out of this particular duty. If he'd dared, he
would have sent his point men in alone. Would have stayed back
here in the trees, where it was safe.
But Hundred fucking
Olderhan—the name and rank stuck in his craw like a
fishbone—was watching him. Watching, waiting with bated
breath for Garlath to screw up. Regs—and
tradition—were clear: a commander of fifty went out with
his platoon. He had to be right on top of the action, especially in
close terrain like this, to coordinate his troopers' movements and
respond instantly to any change in the situation.
Garlath cursed the Regs, cursed
the officers who'd written them, cursed the "follow-me" junior
officer tradition of the Andaran military, cursed the judge
advocates who'd established the punishments for failing to follow
Regs . . . and, with a passion and a
fervor which surprised even him, cursed Sir Jasak Olderhan for
ever having been born to make Garlath look so bad in comparison.
The Duke's Golden Brat could
do no wrong, he thought viciously. Fine, then. Garlath would just
have to do such an outstanding job on this operation that he'd
make Olderhan look sorry-assed inadequate for a change.
He ground his teeth together,
bitterly aware that it would take a miracle to do that, given
Olderhan's infernally good luck—not to mention his
fucking birthright. But there was nothing he could do about
that, either, and so he forced himself to stand there and listen
to the bastard's voice.
"Remember," Jasak said, making
his voice as calm and matter-of-fact as he could. "We want this
situation contained. We know they're in there somewhere,
and we need to make certain we don't lose any of them. But I want
this settled without shooting, if it's at all possible."
He looked at Garlath, trying to
will him to comprehend.
"Understand me, Fifty. We're
responsible for the lives of our own people, but our overriding
responsibility is to the Union. To preventing this from getting
any further out of hand. You and your men will not fire
unless and until you are attacked."
Garlath stared at him, face
sweaty and eyes wide. Jasak could almost literally feel the protest
just barely locked behind the other man's teeth.
"I understand your concern for
your men's safety," he said, his voice as soft and reasonable as he
could make it even as both of them knew whose safety Garlath
was truly concerned about, "and no officer likes giving an order
like that. But it's a direct order, and it will be obeyed, Fifty
Garlath. On the other hand, I'll understand if you feel unable to
order your men to obey my instructions under these
circumstances. If you do, I will relieve you without prejudice and
assume command of your platoon and responsibility for any
casualties it may suffer."
He felt Gadrial stiffen where she
stood beside Chief Sword Threbuch, but he kept his own gaze on
Garlath's, staring deep into the fifty's eyes, almost begging the man
to accept his offer. Jasak didn't feel any more eager than the next
man to wade out into that tangled, torn mass of timber, but he was
completely willing to offer Garlath a way out of the duty which
obviously terrified him.
Shevan Garlath
managed—somehow—not to glare back at the
officious, sanctimonious bastard in front of him. Relieve him
"without prejudice"! Oh, yes. Garlath believed that, didn't
he? If he declined the "honor" of walking out into that maze, his
career would be over. Whatever he might say now,
Olderhan's official report would slam him for "cowardice in the
face of the enemy," and his own request for relief would "prove"
the charge.
Which was a capital offense, if a
court-martial convicted.
Besides, he told himself, searching frantically for
something to bolster his own courage, he knows perfectly
well that whoever's actually in command when we finally make
contact with these bastards—however it comes
out—is going to be made for life. And if he has to
relieve me for "cowardice" to take over command, it'll only make
him look better!
"No, Sir," he grated. "It's my
platoon, my job. I'll do it."
Jasak swallowed a vicious, silent
curse as Garlath spurned the offer. But there was nothing he could
do about it. Whatever he might suspect, or even know, about
Garlath's terror, he had no overt evidence of cowardice, and
Garlath was right. It was his platoon, and under both
Union military law and the Andaran code of honor, Jasak had
to leave him in command unless he requested relief or openly
violated regulations or the articles of war.
"Very well, Fifty Garlath," he
said frostily. "You have your orders. Good luck."
Garlath clenched his jaw so
tightly it hurt all the way down his neck as he nodded to Gaythar
Harklan. The Second Squad shield nodded back, and started
forward, slowly and gingerly, with the squad's arbalestiers
deployed in a skirmish line.
Garlath followed behind them,
hands wet with sweat as he gripped his loaded arbalest. The squad
advanced slowly, painstakingly searching every twisted pile of
branches that offered a hiding place, and the fifty felt his heart
battering against his rib cage like a hammer.
Whoever these bastards were,
wherever they'd come from, they were not going to get the
drop on Shevan Garlath.
Shaylar watched the advancing
men from her hiding place through a screen of barren branches,
long since deprived of their leaves.
These men meant trouble. Big
trouble. They were dressed in military style uniforms, practical
and suited to an active life in rough country. Yet their appearance
was so incongruous, so odd, that it took a concentrated effort to
focus on them and what they were doing, rather than what they
wore and the anachronisms they carried.
Their bizarre, medieval weapons
made them look like play actors . . . until
you got a good look at their faces. Even at a distance of fifty
yards, it was clear the men behind those grim expressions were
capable of carrying out any kind of violence to which they might
set their hand. Shaylar hadn't grown up around soldiers, but she'd
seen a lot of them since joining the survey crews, and the tough air
of dangerous competence which surrounded these men left her
trembling.
Not even a rabbit could have
evaded their meticulous search. In fact, several didn't. Rabbits and
chipmunks darted into the open several times, running in panic as
men with swords—honest-to-goodness
swords—poked them into hiding places into which no
human being above the age of six months could possibly have
shoehorned himself.
Each animal that exploded out of
hiding tightened the thumbscrews on Shaylar's ragged nerves.
From the reactions of the soldiers, particularly the man behind
their advancing line, who seemed to be in charge, the strain was no
less acute on their side. On an immature, emotional level Shaylar
wanted to be glad these killers were afraid of them, but common
sense and a chilling voice at the base of her skull told her how
dangerous their fear could be.
Their advance narrowed the gap
steadily, bringing them within thirty yards of her hiding place.
They continued to search with methodical, terrifying
thoroughness. It was only a matter of time before one of those
grim faced men thrust a sharp steel blade through a pile of
branches and came sword-point-to-gun-muzzle with Shaylar or
one of her companions. She didn't dare move her head even to
look for Jathmar or Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl. She scarcely dared
to breathe. Surely it couldn't be much longer now!
The same thought must have
crossed chan Hagrahyl's mind. The nearest soldier was twenty
yards out, and chan Hagrahyl stood up.
Without his rifle. Without even a
handgun. He simply stood up, in the most stunning display
of pure, cold courage Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had ever seen in
her life.
"If you don't mind, that's far
enough," he said in a voice that sounded like someone talking to
his grandmother, not to a pack of armed strangers who'd already
murdered a friend of his.
He held his hands out in the
open, empty, nonthreatening, trying to show them he was no
danger. The men in the clearing whirled at the sound of his voice,
then froze where they stood, taking stock through wide eyes. They
stared from chan Hagrahyl's empty hands to his tense but pleasant
smile, and two or three of them turned uncertainly toward the
trees behind them, rather than towards the man Shaylar had
thought was in charge.
Then she realized that that man wasn't frozen in surprise.
The sound of a voice shouting
alien gibberish sent terror scalding through Garlath even as his
mind shrieked the word: Enemy! The jabbering stranger
thrust himself violently out of hiding, ready to strike with some
terrifying murder weapon, and the sorry-assed men of Second
Squad weren't even moving.
Terror fluttered at the back of
Garlath's throat, like a trapped basilisk, yet even as it strangled
him, a sudden wild exultation swept through him, as well.
I've got him! He's mine! Not Jasak Olderhan's, not anyone else's, but mine!
Visions of glory, of promotions
and the adoration of all of Arcana roared through him like
dragonfire, spreading to his fingertips and toes, and his arm came
up.
Jasak saw Garlath's arbalest
twitch as the stranger stood up, calling out in a friendly voice. He
saw the weapon start to swing up, start to track around towards
the voice.
"Hold fire!" he shouted. "
Hold fire, Fifty Garlath! Damn it, I said hold—"
Thwack!
The crossbow quarrel hit chan
Hagrahyl directly in the throat.
Shaylar screamed under
Jathmar's feet, echoing his own shock. Blood drenched the pile of
wood, spraying hot and terrible over chan Hagrahyl's hands as he
clawed at the shaft, choking on blood and steel. And then he was
falling backwards, against the pile of wood.
Jathmar snarled and threw his
rifle to his shoulder, but Barris Kasell beat him to the first shot.
The ex-soldier's rifle cracked like doomsday, and the bastard with
the crossbow staggered. Jathmar's shot slammed into him a sliver
of a second later, and then the entire survey crew opened up.
Sir Jasak Olderhan stared in
horror. Thunder shook the world. Crack after sharp, ear-splitting
crack tore the air, and he couldn't even see the weapons,
let alone the men using them. Puffs of smoke jetted from the
toppled timber here and there, and blood fountained from his
commander of fifty. The projectiles smashing into Garlath
exploded out of his back, ripping it open, turning him into so
much torn and shredded meat.
He went down, and before Jasak
could react to the stunning, horrifying response, Shield Harklan's
skirmish line returned fire. They brought their arbalests up,
shooting at the puffs of smoke which were the only targets they
could see, and then the entire clearing erupted.
Chapter Eight
Darcel Kinlafia was worried.
The initial message from
Shaylar—terse, shaken—had been to wild to believe,
too threatening to grasp with anything but cold horror, and yet too
vividly accurate to doubt. She'd sent him not only the message
from chan Hagrahyl, but also the images of herself splashing down
into the creek, watching Falsan die under her hands. Darcel had
felt everything she'd felt, and he wanted to do murder. He
wanted his hands around the throat of whoever had killed Falsan
and put Shaylar through something so horrifying.
Worst of all, there was
absolutely nothing Darcel could do to help. Even if Company-
Captain Halifu emptied the entire half-built fort and set out
now, Shaylar and Jathmar, Barris and Ghartoun—all of
the people who'd become his family over the past several years
were simply too far away.
And so he paced his solitary
camp, not wanting even the company of Halifu's soldiers, since
anyone's presence would rub him raw, like sand in a open wound.
My fault, he thought bitterly, even though he
knew—in his saner moments—that it was a lie. He
wasn't responsible for whatever was happening out there, but he
was the one who'd sent them to meet it, because Darcel Kinlafia
wasn't just a Voice; he was also a Portal Hound.
That wasn't the technical name
for his secondary Talent, but it was the one everyone associated
with the Portal Authority used. No one had yet found a way to
actually detect and pinpoint the locations of portals, but a Hound
had a special affinity to whatever disturbance in the fabric of
creation brought them into existence. No Hound could reliably
quantify what he sensed, he couldn't pluck distances and
classifications out of thin air, and yet Darcel simply "knew" the
compass bearing to the nearest portal. He had absolutely no way
of knowing how far away it might be, but he knew which way to
go to find the closest one.
Well, that wasn't entirely correct.
A larger portal might appear to be closer than a smaller
one which was actually much nearer to a Hound's physical
location. But the Hounds, who were even rarer than Mappers of
Jathmar's strength, were utterly invaluable to any exploration
team.
It was Darcel who'd found the
immense portal which had first admitted them to this universe. It
was Darcel who'd realized that they'd stumbled upon yet another
lobe of the cluster which had brought them here.
And it was Darcel Kinlafia
who'd sent his dearest friends towards the nearest/strongest portal
he'd been able to "scent" . . . and
directly into the horror which had been awaiting Falsan.
Stop that! he snapped at himself. Ghartoun's one of
the most experienced people in the game. He knows how
to handle himself and a crew. They'll be all right.
Surely they'll be all right.
Shalana's mercy, please let them be all right.
He'd already relayed Shaylar's
message. Even now, it was rushing back along the transit chain,
Voice to Voice, portal to portal, universe to universe, through
dozens—hundreds—of telepathic Voices, all passing
along the frantic message.
Warn the homeworld!
The Portal Authority wasn't
designed to meet this kind of emergency. Oh, the notion had been
bandied about, but not seriously. Not in the eighty years mankind
had been exploring through the portals. There were—thank
all the gods—forts at every portal, and larger military bases
at central nodes, even this far out. But that was entirely to police
the homeworld's own portal traffic and to provide security for
settlers and survey crews threatened by bandits. The possibility of
something like this had been only a theoretical one, and
one which had become increasingly less likely seeming as
exploration spread further and further outward with absolutely no
sign of any other human civilization.
When Shaylar's warning had
come in, he'd gone back through the portal to relay, then found
Company-Captain Halifu and delivered the disturbing message to
him in person. Grafin Halifu had dispatched Platoon-Captain
Hulmok Arthag and half his cavalry platoon—the only one
assigned to him—to find the civilian crew and escort them
safely back, if they could only make rendezvous with one another
in time.
Darcel had asked—almost
begged—for permission to accompany that platoon, but
Halifu had denied it. And rightfully so, Darcel admitted, however
grudgingly. He was the only Voice Halifu had. If anything
happened to him, Halifu would have no one to relay his own
reports further up the chain.
And so, Darcel could only stay
here, pacing, worrying, wondering if Arthag and his men would
reach Shaylar and the rest of his family in time. But that, he knew,
was up to the unknown adversary, to the faceless person or
persons who'd killed poor Falsan. Blood had already been shed,
but surely it wouldn't come to open warfare? Only madmen would
want to provoke that kind of—
We're under attack!
The scream was a knife, tearing
into his brain.
Then the connection deepened,
and the images thundered like a runaway freight train into his
shocked senses. He staggered, actually went to his knees. Men in
uniforms were shooting at him—shooting with
crossbows. A quarrel thudded into thick wood two feet from
his head. Gunfire cracked everywhere. Men screamed. A hail of
bullets mowed down the uniformed soldiers standing out in the
open. Only one of them survived long enough to drop and
disappear in the tangled timber about him, and Darcel gasped as
his gaze swung to another pile of shattered trees.
Ghartoun!
Dead, sprawled obscenely across
a tangle of broken branches. Sightless eyes widened shocked, face
twisted in pain and terror.
"Reload!" Boris Kasell was
shouting from somewhere just to his right. "There's more of them
back in the trees, trying to work around! Rilthan, watch our flank!"
"Shaylar." It was Jathmar, his
voice choked with fright. "Shaylar—are you all right?"
"Yes. Yes, I'm—Here
they come!"
Three men appeared,
carrying . . . something. A strange
object, perhaps four feet long and two or three inches in diameter,
made out of what looked like glass. No, not glass. Rock crystal? It
didn't seem to be either, but it certainly wasn't metal, and—
Crossbow fire screamed out of
the woodline to their right. Somebody shrieked in agony behind
him. Darcel—or Shaylar, if there was a difference—
jerked around and saw Braiheri Futhai writhing on the ground. A
steel shaft protruding from his chest, high and to the right. Blood
was pooling, foaming on his lips, and—
Flame erupted from nowhere at
all.
A huge, incandescent fireball
ripped into the toppled trees. Smoke blinded him. Someone else
was screaming.
"Shoot the gunners!"
It was Barris, shouting through
the smoke and confusion, and Darcel's eyes whipped back to the
men with the not-crystal tube. It was mounted on a tripod, now,
pointed in their direction, like some sort of weird fieldgun.
"Shoot the gunners!"
Barris bellowed again.
Darcel felt his hands move as
Shaylar snatched up the rifle. It shook wildly.
Steady! he told the portion of his mind that was Shaylar. Better . . . Yes, much
better . . . Brace
it . . . That's right. Sight
picture—front sight—center it—NOW!
The rifle kicked, the bullet
cracked, and one of the enemy gunners jerked, screamed, and went
to one knee.
Again!
Others were shooting, too,
picking off the gunners steadily.
"They're coming in from the
right!" Elevu Gitel shouted, and Jathmar spat curses above
Darcel's head and twisted around, shooting at the fresh
crossbowmen coming in along their vulnerable flank. Two men
went
down . . . three . .
.
"How many of them are
there?" the Mapper gasped. A quarrel thwacked wood two inches
from his cheek, buried in the tree trunk he crouched behind.
"Bastards!"
He fired at them again, cursed,
and ducked down to reload, shoving the cartridges into the loading
gate while all the universe roared and screamed madly about him.
Another fireball erupted from
somewhere. Dried leaves and twigs burst into flame. Someone
was screaming—high and mindless, on and on.
"Where's it coming
from?" Jathmar demanded hoarsely.
There were two of the not-
artillery things out there now, and the original one had acquired a
new crew. The other was fifty yards from the first one, identical to
it. And pointed almost dead at Darcel. It started to glow,
like eldritch fire, or the northern lights at midwinter, and—
Flame was everywhere.
Darcel flung himself to the
ground. Heat seared its way past, just above his back. He didn't
dare breathe. He squeezed both eyes shut. Heard ghastly howls that
belonged to human beings in mortal
agony. . . .
Blessed cool air rushed in. He
gulped down, coughed on smoke and the acrid stench of burnt
wood and what smelled sickeningly like roasting meat. The tree
trunk above him was smoking, bark blasted off in places.
"What the fuck was
that?" It was Jathmar's voice. Thick, terrified.
"DOWN!" Shaylar
screamed.
Another fireball ripped across
them. Someone was still shooting. Cursing monotonously and
shooting, mindless with terrible rage. Darcel grabbed for the rifle
he'd dropped, shouted at Shaylar's stunned mind.
They're coming in a mass! Shoot!
Infantry erupted across the
smoldering wreckage of the clearing. Fifteen, maybe twenty of
them. Shaylar snatched the rifle to her shoulder, pulled the trigger.
Worked the lever, took another
shot . . . worked the
lever . . . took another shot.
They fired the rifle dry, and the
bastards were still coming. No time to reload. Darcel weget. nt for
Shaylar's Polshana, but it was Shaylar who acquired the first
tarShe brought the gun up two-handed, centered a charging
soldier, squeezed the double-action trigger. The man staggered,
clutched at his chest, and then his face exploded as their second
hollow-nosed slug hit him squarely in the forehead and she shot
him down like carrion.
Rilthan wreaked havoc on the
center of the charging line. Each time his rifle cracked, a soldier
screamed and sprawled in the debris, leaving a widening gap in the
middle of their line. Shaylar tracked to the side, acquiring a target
at the right hand end of the charge and firing, again and again, as
she worked her way inward, and Darcel knew their revolver was
almost empty.
The charge wavered. Halted.
Broke apart. Shaken soldiers ran back into the cover of the trees,
and someone was shouting orders from back there. More men
were moving into position. Gods—how many of them
were there?
Reload! Darcel shrieked at Shaylar through their
connected minds. Reload!
Shaylar swung out the
Polshana's cylinder, tipped it up, hit the ejection rod. Empty cases
fell glittering to the leaves, and her left hand steadied the cylinder
as her right snatched the speedloader from her pocket. The fresh
rounds slid into the cylinder, perfectly aligned despite her choking
terror, and she twisted the speedloader's release knob and dropped
it, even as her left hand snapped the cylinder back into place. Then
she reholstered the revolver and reached for the ammunition box
ready at her elbow. Reloaded the rifle with hands which had
steadied down to a mind-numbed, rote-smooth motion. Cartridge
in, press it down, next cartridge in, press it down—
Darcel caught motion from the
corner of his eye. He slewed around, and Shaylar brought the rifle
with them, rising to a half-crouch and firing as a third
artillery crew laid in their fire mission.
"Jathmar! Down!"
Two blasts erupted from the
mouth of hell.
A fireball ripped through the
fallen trees again—and writhing through the incandescent
flames came a jagged streak of lightning. It slammed into Barris
Kasell, who was still shouting orders. For one horrifying second,
he twisted in midair, lit by blue actinic fire that burst from his very
skin.
Thunder struck. Fire crackled
everywhere. The entire world was ablaze. Then the cool air was
back again, and they gasped, shuddering fighting for breath.
Shaylar passed her rifle to
Jathmar to give him a backup weapon and fumbled for her pack.
She yanked it open and started dragging out her maps, her
notebooks—the records of every universe they'd mapped,
with the locations of every portal in the cluster they'd been
exploring, and—far worse—every portal between
here and Sharona itself.
She dragged them out, snatched a
branch from a blazing pile of deadwood, touched flame to each
and every map in her possession. Burned them to ash. Ripped out
notebook pages and fed them to the flames, as well. Rifles
cracked, men screamed horribly, and still she consigned pages to
the flames, destroying her work in a desperate bid to keep the
savage killers from overrunning every portal they could reach.
And even as she burned them, Darcel heard fewer and fewer rifles
still firing, knew his friends—his family—were
dying around her under the fury of those impossible, horrifying
balls of flame and bolts of lightning.
She set the final page aflame,
then tossed the leather binder and map case themselves into the
burning deadwood. Only a handful of rifles were still spitting
defiance, and she snatched out her Polshana again, turned back
towards her firing position.
And then it happened.
Jathmar had realized what she
was doing, and how important it was. He'd stood over her, firing
steadily, protecting her while she worked. But as she tossed the
final load into the flames, he jumped down to pull her back to a
safer spot . . . just as another fireball
struck. It caught his back, flung him against a fallen, crosswise
tree branch. His belly and chest struck hard, and he doubled up
around the wood, pinned for horrible seconds with flames
scorching his back.
His clothes ignited. Fire crisped
hair and skin.
"JATHMAR!"
This scream tore her throat.
Shaylar and Darcel were scrambling forward, trying to reach
Jathmar as he slid off a branch and fell to the ground. Lightning
branched and slammed inches away. The concussion of thunder
hurled them sideways. Their head struck something incredibly hard
with bone-crushing force—
Darcel exploded back into his
own body.
The air was clear. No smoke. No
screams. No dying men. The portal, silent as sunlight, stood thirty
yards to his left as he lay sprawled across the ground. Psychic
shock held him immobile for long, soul-shaking moments. He
heard distant voices shouting and saw someone running toward
him from the far side of the portal, where a slow but steady rain
was falling. Darcel shoved himself into a sitting position, groped
for a rifle that wasn't there. Then he realized who it was running
toward him. Grafin Halifu, himself. Commander of the new fort
that was only three hundred yards from where Darcel lay sprawled,
stunned, in the sunlight.
"What's wrong?" Halifu
demanded, his own rifle in his hand as he closed the last ten yards.
"You started shouting something about soldiers in the woodline!"
Darcel lifted unsteady hands,
scrubbed his face, tried to reorient himself.
"Attack," he managed to say in a
wheezing groan. "Our crew's under attack. Infantry, artillery
fire—"
"What?" Halifu's face washed white with shock.
"I was linked with Shaylar."
Darcel shut his eyes. "Oh, gods—Shaylar!"
He tried to contact her, tried
frantically to get through. But he found only deathly cold silence.
"She's not—" Halifu's
horror-choked voice broke off, unwilling—or
unable—to complete the question.
"I don't know." Darcel was
shaking, unable to control the runaway tremors. "We were hit by
an artillery blast of some kind. Thrown by the concussion. Hit our
head on something."
He wrapped his arms about
himself, gulped down air.
"Ghartoun's dead. So are Barris
Kasell and Braiheri Futhai. Elevu Gitel. And if Jathmar's still
alive—oh, gods, the burns were horrible—"
He realized he was rocking back
and forth only when someone else's arm around his shoulders
steadied him and Halifu pressed something metallic against his
chattering teeth.
"Drink!"
Darcel gulped, choked, wheezed
as the whiskey went down. His eyes
smarted . . . but his whirling senses
steadied.
"Thanks," he whispered as the
world stopped looping around him.
More people were arriving from
the fort, armed for battle and staring a little wildly at the trees
around Darcel's camp. Company-Captain Halifu got a second deep
gulp of whiskey into him, then waited until the worst of the shakes
had eased up.
"Can you give me a report
now?" he asked quietly.
Darcel couldn't look into the
officer's worried eyes. He knew if he did, he wouldn't be able to
speak at all. So he stared at the ground instead and started to talk.
He rambled, his voice unsteady
and hoarse, trying to convey the horror, the terrifyingly alien
attack, the inexplicable weapons that had sent death crashing
across the terrified, outnumbered survey crew. Most of them were
civilians, totally unprepared to deal with something as
brutal as an all-out attack by trained troops.
Darcel realized he'd finished
talking when Company-Captain Halifu ripped out a hideous oath.
He clenched his jaws so tightly his teeth creaked, still sitting on
the ground.
"Stinking bastards!"
Halifu snarled. "I may be supposed to have a company here, but all
I've got is two understrength platoons, less than a hundred and
fifty men, and Platoon-Captain Arthag's cavalry detachment. And
he's riding straight into a trap with half of his men right
fucking now! I can't possibly meet an attack by weapons like
that—not without reinforcements—and we're over
five thousand miles from the nearest railhead! The column from
Fort Salby's due any day, but how close it is yet is anyone's guess."
The fort's commander made
himself stop, draw a deep breath. He stepped back from his rage
and fear and shook his head.
"Armsman chan Therson!"
"Sir!"
Chief-Armsman Dunyar chan
Therson, Bronze Company's senior noncom, snapped to attention.
"Get Bantha. Tell him we need
to get a dispatch to Petty Captain Arthag at once. He's to
stop where he is and hold position."
"Yes, Sir!" Therson said.
"Then find Petty Captain chan
Shermayr. His infantry's going to have to assume full
responsibility for our security here; I want the rest of Arthag's men
in the saddle and moving up to reinforce him inside the next five
minutes. See to it that Arthag knows they're coming and that he's
not to move another yard until the rest of the rescue party catches
up with him."
"Rescue party?" Darcel
choked out. "What's the fucking point?"
Company-Captain Halifu went
white again.
"Surely there must be some
survivors," he said hoarsely.
Darcel never knew what showed
on his face, but suddenly Halifu was crouched in front of him,
gripping his shoulders with bruising force.
"Don't give up yet," the
Uromathian said in a voice full of gravel and steel grit. "I'm sure as hell not giving up, not until we've seen proof. If I
were the Commander of that military force, I'd want
survivors, someone I could question—"
Darcel flinched, and Halifu bit
his lip.
"I'm sorry, Darcel. I know they're
friends, almost family."
"Shaylar," Darcel groaned,
closing his eyes and despair. He was half in love with her himself.
He'd treated her like a kid sister, mostly to convince his heart it
didn't actually feel what it stubbornly insisted it felt. Oh, yes, he'd
loved Shaylar, just as he'd loved Jathmar for treating her like a
queen, as well as a beloved spouse and professional partner.
Shaylar, he whispered into the dead silence of his broken
telepathic link. Wake up, please. Please, Shay!
But her voice remained lost in a
black nothingness at the center of his soul, and Darcel slowly
lifted his head. He came to his feet, scrubbed at wet eyes while the
others scuffed tufts of grass with their boots and dug divots out of
the ground rather than embarrass him by noticing the tears.
"Company-Captain Halifu," he
said in a voice of steel-sharp hatred. "I believe you said something
about needing reinforcements?"
Halifu met his gaze
levelly—met and held it. Then he nodded.
"Yes, I did. If you'd be so kind as
to transmit a message for me, requesting them we'll get started on
that rescue mission."
"Compose your message, Sir,"
Darcel said very, very softly. "I'll be waiting when you're ready to
send it."
He turned away than, without
another word, and started breaking out the ammunition boxes in
his gear.
Chapter Nine
"Cease fire! Cease fire!"
Jasak plowed into the nearest
infantry-dragon's crew. He caught the closer assistant gunner by
the collar and heaved him bodily away from the weapon. The
gunner didn't even seem to
notice . . . until Jasak kicked him
solidly in the chest.
"Cease fire,
godsdamn you!"
The gunner toppled over with an
absolutely astonished expression. For just an instant, he didn't
quite seem to understand what happened. Then his expression
changed from confusion to horrified understanding, and he shook
himself visibly.
Two of First Platoon's four
dragons were still firing, blasting round after round into the tangle
of fallen timber. There hadn't been a single return shot in well over
a minute, but the gunners didn't even seem to realize it. They were
submerged in a battle frenzy, too enraged by the slaughter of their
fellow troopers—and too terrified by the enemy's
devastating weapons—to think about things like that.
"Graholis seize you, cease
fire!" Jasak bellowed, charging into a second dragon's crew
while Chief Sword Threbuch waded into the third.
The fourth dragon hadn't fired in
some time; its entire crew, and six other troopers who'd taken their
places, were sprawled around it, dead or wounded.
Threbuch tossed the last
operable dragon's gunner into a tangle of blackberry bushes at the
clearing's edge just as a final lightning bolt sizzled from the focus
point and slammed into a fallen tree trunk. Bark flew, smoke
billowed up with the concussive sound of thunder, and then the
discharge fizzled out.
Silence, alien and strange, roared
in Jasak's ears.
He stood panting for breath, his
pulse kicking at the insides of his eardrums like a frantic
drumbeat. He made himself stand there, fighting his shakes under
control, then dragged his sleeve across his face to clear his eyes of
sweat and grime. Only then did he make himself look, make
himself count the bodies.
His men lay sprawled like gutted
marionettes across ground that was splashed with far too much
blood. There were bodies everywhere, too many of them
motionless, not even moaning, and his stomach clenched in the
agony only a commanding officer could know.
Graholis' balls. Half his entire platoon was down out
there. Half!
"You're bleeding, Sir."
The quiet, steady voice punched
through his numb horror. Shocked, he slewed around to find his
chief sword tearing open a medical kit.
"What?"
"You're bleeding, Sir. Let's have
a look."
"Fuck that!" Jasak snapped. "It
can't be more than a scratch. We've got to search for the
wounded—all the wounded. Theirs as well as
ours."
"So order a search. But you're
still bleeding, and I'm still going to do something about that."
"I'm not—"
"Do I have to knock you down
and sit on you, Hundred?" Otwal Threbuch snarled so
harshly Jasak stared at him in total shock.
"You're our only surviving
officer Sir," Threbuch's voice was like harsh iron, fresh from the
furnace, "and you will damned well hold still until I find
out why there's blood dripping off your scalp and pouring down
your side!"
Jasak closed his mouth. He
hadn't realized he was bleeding quite that badly, and he made
himself sit quietly while the chief sword swabbed at the scalp cut
he hadn't even felt. Worse was the furrow that something
had plowed through the flesh along the edge of his ribs. Whatever
it was, it had barely grazed him, but it had left a long, stinging
wound in his side, ripped his uniform savagely, and left an
impressive bloodstain that had poured down over his side.
Another few inches inward, and it would have gone straight
through a lung, or even his heart.
Jasak gritted his teeth, directing
his surviving noncoms—there weren't many—to
search for the wounded while Threbuch applied a field dressing.
The instant the chief sword finished, Jasak strode out into the
clearing, checking on his own wounded as he headed for his real
objective: the enemy.
Some of his men had already
reached them.
"We've got a survivor, Sir!"
Evarl Harnak called out. "He's in bad shape."
Jasak hurried over to Garlath's
platoon sword wondering what miracle had brought the sword
through alive, since Harnak had led the charge the other side's
weapons had torn apart. It was hard to believe that any of
those troopers could have survived, Jasak thought bitterly. And
that, too, was his fault—he'd been the one who'd thought
the dragons had suppressed the enemy's fire.
He climbed through a tangle of
fallen tree limbs and hunkered down beside Harnak. The sword
was kneeling beside a man whose entire left side was badly
burned. He'd taken a crossbow bolt through the belly, too, doing
untold and probably lethal damage, even without the burns and the
inevitable severe shock.
He was breathing, but just
barely. It was a genuine mercy that he was unconscious, and Jasak
was torn by conflicting emotions, conflicting duties and priorities.
This whole disaster was his fault, which meant this man's
brutal injuries were his fault. He reached for the wounded man's
unburnt wrist and found the pulse. It was faint, thready, failing
fast. Helpless to do anything else, he watched the stranger die.
"More survivors, Sir!" another
shout rang across the smoke-filled clearing. "Oh, gods! One of
them's a woman!"
Jasak ran, sickness twisting in
his gut. He cursed the debris in his way, fighting to find a path
through it, then flinging himself down, crawling under a fallen
tree trunk to reach them. There were four survivors, fairly close
together. Three had been burned badly; the fourth was scorched,
but the infantry-dragon's breath had barely brushed her, thank
Graholis.
She was unconscious. One slim
hand was still wrapped around a weapon that was the most alien
thing Jasak had ever seen. Drying blood caked the hair on the right
side of her head, and a ghastly bruise was already swelling along
that side of her face. A nasty lump ran from her temple to the back
of her head.
"She must've been thrown
against the tree trunk," he said, turning his head, eyes narrowed.
Yes, there was hair and blood
caught in the rough bark, and it took all of Sir Jasak Olderhan's
discipline not to slam his bare fist into the bark beside them. His
only medic was dead—had been shot down, trying to reach
wounded dragon gunners—and at least three of these
people were so badly hurt they probably wouldn't have survived
even with a medic.
"I need Magister Kelbryan," he
barked over his shoulder, turning back to the savagely wounded
survivors. "Now, damn it!"
Somebody ran, shouting for
Gadrial, and Jasak bent over the unknown woman. Her pulse was
slow under his fingers, but it was steady, strong, thank the gods.
She was tiny, even smaller than Gadrial, with a beautiful, delicate
face. She looked like a fragile glass doll lying crumpled in the
ruins, and Jasak's heart twisted as he raged at Garlath and even at
this woman's companions for coming here, for killing Osmuna
and starting this whole disaster. And worst of all, for bringing this
lovely girl into the middle of the killing his men—and
hers—had unleashed in this clearing.
He'd kept Gadrial back at the
very edge of their own formation, flat in a shallow ravine where
she—and the men he'd assigned specifically to guard
her—were out of the line of fire. Why the hell
hadn't these men done the same?
Because, the stubborn back of his mind whispered in self-
loathing and disgust, you left them no choice, circling around
them to cut off their escape. . . .
Someone came crashing toward
him through the underbrush, and he lifted his gaze to see Gadrial
running recklessly through the tangled wood, past dead soldiers
and smoking rubble.
"Where?" she gasped, and Jasak
reached out and lifted her across the five-foot fallen trunk as if
she'd been a child. He set her down beside the wounded, and her
breath choked on a sound of horror.
All three of the male survivors
were burned. Two had been caught facing the fireball when the
dragon's breath detonated amongst them, and their crisped skin and
the stench of their burnt flesh twisted Jasak's stomach all over
again. The third man had been facing away, or at least partially
away, leaving him burned across the back. His shirt was a tattered
wreck of blackened cloth. He'd been slammed into a jutting limb
and fallen sideways, landing on one shoulder before sprawling
across the ground, and broken ribs were visible through the
tattered shirt.
"Rahil," Gadrial whispered.
Jasak looked at her, saw her eyes, and flinched inwardly.
"Can you save them?" he asked,
his voice hoarse. "Can you save any of them?"
She swallowed hard and nerved
herself to test the pulse of the nearest burn victim. He was semi-
conscious, and a hideous, gurgling scream ripped loose as his arm
shifted. Gadrial whimpered, but she didn't let go.
"Rahil's mercy," she breathed,
then forced herself to inhaled deeply. "The others?"
Jasak led her to them. She tested
their pulses in turn, her eyes closed, whispering under her breath.
Power stirred about her, gripping hard enough to twist Jasak with
a sharper nausea.
"It's bad—Heavenly Lady,
it's bad. I can't save them all. I'm sorry. I might—I can
probably keep one of them alive.
Maybe . . . "
She stood, staring down at them,
and Jasak felt her inner, helpless horror as she realized the hideous
choice which lay before her. He started to open his mouth, to
tell her which to try to save, to take the burden of that choice
from her. It was both his responsibility and all he could offer her,
but before he could speak, her shoulders twitched suddenly.
"Look!" She pointed at the
woman's wrist, and Jasak frowned. The tiny, unconscious stranger
wore a bracelet—a cuff of flexible metal that looked like
woven gold. He'd already noticed that, but Gadrial was pointing at
one of the wounded men, as well. He wore a matching cuff.
"That one," the magister said.
"I'll—"
Her voice broke as she turned
away from the others, the two who would die. The two she must
let die.
She knelt beside the man with
the wrist cuff. He was broken, as well as burned. The savagery of
his wounds bled back through her hands, carried by her minor
healing Gift, and she moaned involuntarily in the face of so much
pain, so much damage. . . .
She closed her eyes, rested her
hands carefully on his chest, and summoned the power of her Gift.
Whispered words poured from her lips, helping her shape and
direct the energy she plucked from the air about her. That energy
was everywhere, a vast, unseen, seething sea that rolled and
thundered like a storm-swept tide. It poured out of the emptiness
between mortal thoughts and the power of God and scorched
down her arms, out through her hands into the injured man. It was
enormous, that sea of energy, an unimaginable, infinite boil of
power flying loose and wild for anyone with the Gift strong
enough to touch and take it.
But Gadrial's healing Gift was
only a minor arcana. She could take only a little, only a sliver of
the power someone with a major healing Gift could have taken,
and even that small an amount had a price.
"He's . . .
stabilized . . ." she managed to whisper, and
the smoke-filled clearing looped and whirled around her.
Someone caught her shoulders,
steadied her, and she leaned against a shoulder that took her
weight effortlessly.
She needed that support—
badly—as voices swam in and out of focus. The universe
seemed to dip and swerve, curtsying like a ship in a heavy sea, and
the start of a brutal headache throbbed somewhere behind her eyes.
Gift shock, her trained mind told her through the chaos.
The strain of someone pushing a Gift far beyond its safe limits. It
had been a long time since she'd felt it, and she wandered through
seconds and minutes which stretched and contracted wierdly as
she tied to find her way through the chaos of the backlash.
It took what seemed a very long
time, but then her senses finally cleared, and she realized she was
sitting propped against Sir Jasak Olderhan himself. His arm was
about her, holding her there, while he issued a steady stream of
orders.
"—and when that's done,
Chief Sword, I want you to take one man and confirm that class
eight portal. I want to finish that, at least, whatever else we do. I
hate to give you up, but I want my best man in charge out there.
Just be damned careful. We didn't—I
didn't—mean to massacre these people, and I don't
want anyone shooting at anyone else. Is that clear?"
"Very clear, Sir."
"Good. Just tiptoe in and tiptoe
out, do whatever it takes to avoid further contact. Any questions?"
"No, Sir."
"Move out, then. The sooner you
go, the likelier you are to get there and back before anyone realizes
these people aren't coming home."
Jasak's voice went bleak and
grim on the final few words. He could only hope the other side
hadn't sent a runner ahead with a message. If they
had . . .
"Keep your eyes open, Chief
Sword, but don't dawdle. If they've dispatched a runner, I want
him—alive and unharmed."
"Yes, Sir."
Threbuch saluted and turned
away. Jasak watched him go, then noticed that Gadrial was
watching him.
"Feeling better?" he asked
quietly, moving the arm which had held her upright, and she
nodded and sat up.
"Yes. Thanks." Her voice was
hoarse, but it didn't quiver. "What we do now?"
Jasak glanced at the still-
unconscious woman and the man Gadrial had pulled back from
the brink.
"We have to get them back to the
swamp portal before we can airlift them out. We can't get a dragon
here in time. The nearest is at the coast, seven hundred miles from
our entry portal. First it'd have to get there, then fly cross-country
to meet us, and once it touched down out here—" he
pointed at the clearing "—it wouldn't be able to take off
again. Not enough wing room to get airborne fast enough to clear
the trees. A battle dragon might be different—they're
smaller, faster. They can dive, strike, and lift off again in a much
smaller space. But transport dragons need a lot of wing room."
He sounded so calm, so
controlled, Gadrial thought. Except for the fact that that calm
controlled voice of his was telling her things he knew perfectly
well she already knew.
"What about clearing a landing
zone?" she asked. "Could you burn down some of the trees with
the infantry-dragons?"
Jasak shook his head and
gestured at the scorched trunks the enemy had found shelter
among. They were smoldering, badly scorched, but mostly intact.
"Look for yourself. A dragon is
designed to burn people," he said bitterly, "not to knock down
trees. We do have some incendiary charges that could bring down
even a tree that size," he nodded towards a towering giant, six feet
thick at the base, "but not enough to clear a landing field long
enough for a dragon to take off again. We'd need ten times as
many as we've got to do that.
"We're Scouts, Magister
Kelbryan, not heavy-combat engineers. No. The only hope is to get
the wounded back to the swamp portal, or at least to someplace
with enough open space for a transport dragon to take off, as well
as land." Jasak glanced at the man Gadrial had saved. "Can he be moved? Without jeopardizing his life?"
"I don't know." She ran a weary
hand through her hair while she struggled to focus her thoughts.
"Probably. I'll know more when I touch him again. He shouldn't be
moved right away, though. We'll have to get them out of this, I
know." She motioned at the smoldering wreckage surrounding
them. "But not far—not yet. Even the little I've done so far
will have exhausted him."
Jasak nodded somberly. He'd
seen what saving the man had done to Gadrial, and the healing Gift
drew deeply upon the reserves of the injured person, as well.
"We can do that," he said. "And
he'll have at least a little while to stabilize before we can pull out.
We have a few things to do that will take some time."
He looked out across the open
ground where so many of his men—good men, among the
best in the Andaran Scouts—had died because of one man's
colossal stupidity. And because of another man's even greater
stupidity in not relieving a dangerous, incompetent fool of
command, whatever regulations and the articles of war said.
Gadrial turned her head,
following his gaze, and her eyes were dark.
"What will you do with them?"
she asked softly.
"The same thing the Chief Sword
did for Osmuna." Jasak had to clamp his jaw tighter for a moment.
"Field rites," he said then, and
looked down at her. She looked back, her expression puzzled, and
his lips tightened. "I take it you've never seen them?" he said
almost harshly.
Gadrial shook her head. The only
thing she knew about "field rites" was that military commanders
were sometimes forced by necessity to abandon their dead.
Procedures had been developed for just that sort of emergency,
but that was all she knew about it. She thought he might explain,
but he didn't. Instead, he turned to Platoon Sword Harnak, his
senior noncom now that he'd sent Otwal Threbuch away, and
indicated the other two wounded men with a gentle, curiously
vulnerable wave of his hand.
"Have someone stay with these
men until . . . until they're not
needed, Sword. No man should die alone."
Harnak nodded grimly, and Jasak
inhaled and nodded at the girl and the man Gadrial had saved.
"I want these two moved
out of this hellish pile of timber. But for pity's own sake, take care
with him. He's got to survive, Harnak."
Gadrial realized there was more
to Jasak's almost desperate insistence than any mere intelligence
value living prisoners might represent. Jasak Olderhand was a
soldier, but no murderer, Gadrial realized, and even she
recognized that these people hadn't stood a chance once his
support weapons opened fire on them. Now she felt his granite
determination to snatch at least some of them back from the jaws
of death . . . whatever it took.
"Yes, Sir." Harnak's
acknowleding salute, like his voice, was subdued. Exhausted.
Gadrial knew how the sword
felt. She watched Jasak smooth a tendril of long, dark hair away
from the unconscious woman's face. His fingertips were so gentle,
so tender, Gadrial felt tears prickle at the corners of her eyes.
"I'm sorry," she thought she
heard him whisper, but it might have been only the wind. Then he
pulled himself together and got busy organizing his surviving
troopers for the farewell they would soon bid to far too many
brave men.
And to one arrant coward, a small voice whispered deep
inside Gadrial Kelbryan. She looked at the wounded, the dying,
the dead, and knew it would be hard not to spit on Garlath's grave.
* * *
Shaylar didn't want to wake up.
She wanted to be dead. For long moments, she couldn't remember
why—she was just certain that whatever ghastly thing
waited for her was too terrible to bear living through. She
whimpered, wanting her mother. Wanting someone who could
hold her close and whisper that everything was all right. That
everything would be as it should, and not as it was, torn with
screams and flame, the sight of her beloved—
She jerked back from the
memory, but not in time. Pain—hot and terrible—
gripped her heart with savage, shredding claws.
Jathmar!
She tried to touch him through
the bond, but there was something wrong, dreadfully wrong,
inside her head. Pain throbbed relentlessly, leaving her dizzy and
sick. And, far worse, Voiceless. She couldn't Hear Jathmar, and
even though she tried, she couldn't Hear Darcel, either. There was
nothing but pain. Nothing else in the
universe . . .
Someone touched her.
She flinched violently,
whimpering again as fresh pain exploded through her. But the
touch returned, gentle, soothing her, drawing her back from the
crumbling edge of sanity. Reluctantly, she opened her eyes and
blinked in the dappled light streaming down through golden
treetops.
A woman knelt beside her. Not a
uniformed soldier—a woman, dressed much the way
Shaylar was, in sturdy and practical clothes. She was lovely, in the
delicate, porcelain way of Uromathian women, but Shaylar knew
this woman didn't come from Uromathia. Nor from anywhere else
Sharonians had ever set foot.
The stranger's dark eyes were
shadowed with grief and the lingering shock of having witnessed
something too horrible to face. There was strength in those eyes,
the strength of gentle compassion and something else Shaylar
couldn't quite define.
The not-Uromathian woman
moved slowly and carefully, as if she understood without words
that a rapid movement would send Shaylar skittering in terror. She
held up a canteen—despite its unfamiliar shape, it couldn't
be anything else—and poured carefully into a small metal
cup. A hand eased under Shaylar's head, lifted a little—
—and pain exploded
through her. A cry choked loose, and her hands dug into the
ground in spastic response. But she felt the other woman touch the
side of her head. She murmured something, so softly Shaylar
wasn't even sure she'd heard words at all, and then the pain in her
head eased a little. Shaylar opened her eyes and stared, wondering
what had just happened. She knew from experience what the touch
of a telempathic healer felt like, and this was nothing like
that.
Fear stirred uneasily once more,
despite the dampening down of the pain and nausea.
Whoever—and whatever—she was, the woman held
the cup to Shaylar's lips, and Shaylar drank deeply. The water felt
glorious to a throat made raw by screams and smoke.
Memory struck her down again.
Smoke. Flame. Jathmar burning in the center of the
fireball. She began to cry, helplessly, and the woman held her,
rocked her gently.
Shaylar's Talent roared wide
open. She couldn't hear thoughts; her wounded head throbbed
without mercy, and the language would have been wrong, in any
case. But the other woman's emotions spilled into her, hot as
peppered Ricathian whiskey, yet gentle and filled with sorrow and
compassion.
They didn't mean for this to happen.
She didn't know how she knew
it, but Shaylar knew. As certainly as if the woman had told
her, mind to mind, she knew . . . and
knew it was the truth. They hadn't meant for the fighting, the
death, to happen at all. Deep currents of someone else's emotions
washed over her: bitter regret, a sorrow so deep it ached, a sense
of helpless grief, smoldering anger at someone—a specific
person, somehow to blame for all the agony and destruction.
Shaylar felt it all, and with it came a bleak, terrible desolation all
her own.
Deep, wrenching sobs shook her,
and then the other woman was urging her to turn around. Was
speaking softly but urgently, pointing at something nearby. Shaylar
turned reluctantly, resisting the pressure, unwilling to face
whatever it was, but the not-Uromathian was gently, implacably
insistent, and Shaylar was too weak to resist.
And then her breath caught. He
lay beside her. His hair was singed; his shirt—what little
remained of it—was scorched; and her breath faltered at the
sight of the raw, oozing burns along his back. But his ribs were
lifting and falling, slowly, steadily.
"Jathmar!"
The shriek came from her soul,
and she tried to fling herself at him. But the other woman caught
her back, speaking urgently again. Her fear gradually seeped
through Shaylar's wild need to throw her arms about her husband
and protect him from further harm. The other woman had captured
Shaylar's face between her hands, was speaking in a frantic tone,
trying to make Shaylar understand something vitally important.
And then she did. Jathmar was
badly, desperately injured. He might yet die, and Shaylar stopped
struggling to reach him. The relief in the other woman was so
strong it caused the slender not-Uromathian to sag and gulp in air.
Then she released Shaylar, and watched as Shaylar ruffled
Jathmar's flame-damaged hair, brushed a fingertip across his
cheek.
Shaylar's eyes were wet. When
she looked up, so were the other woman's. They sat beside
Jathmar, both of them weeping, and somehow the worst of the
horror faded away. Whoever these people were, whatever ghastly
"mistake" had ended in such carnage, there were decent and caring
people among them.
Other sounds gradually
penetrated Shaylar's awareness. Voices—men's voices,
close by, sounding well organized, busy, and deeply grim. She
looked around, trying to find other survivors, and saw no one else
she knew. They were no longer in the clearing at all. Someone had
carried them under the trees, away from the toppled timber and the
scene of the massacre.
But some of that massacre's
slaughter had come with them. She, Jathmar, and the woman
trying to help them were surrounded by other men, men in torn
and bloody uniforms. Many of them were swathed in bandages.
Some lay motionless, faces waxen, hardly breathing. Others
moaned in pain, and Shaylar felt a sudden, shockingly vicious stab
of satisfaction as she saw the proof that her friends—her
family—had not gone easily into death.
There were two other people in
sight. Two more men in uniform, but these weren't wounded. They
stood less than two yards away, although they weren't watching
Shaylar, which both surprised and relieved her. She felt far too
fragile to be stared at by men who had, just minutes previously,
tried their best to murder.
Instead, they were staring into
the trees, their gazes sharp and alert. Sentries, Shaylar realized
abruptly, and bitterness choked her. They might as well have saved
themselves the effort standing guard. They'd already slaughtered
the only Sharonians and this universe, except Darcel Kinlafia, and
he was probably on his way back to the previous portal, taking
with him the horrifying last minutes they'd spent in linked
communication.
He probably thought she was
dead—that all of them were dead. They would be no rescue
attempt, unless she somehow found a way around the pain and the
fracture in her Talent that had left her Voiceless. Without that,
Darcel would have to believe they were dead, and Company-
Captain Halifu had too few men to risk confronting the these
people's terrible firepower just to recover a dozen dead bodies.
Her fragile self-control wavered,
threatened to break apart. She was alone, cut off from anyone who
could help her, awaiting only the gods knew what
fate . . . Then she thought of Jathmar
and his terrible injuries. He would need her even more desperately
than she would need him, she told herself fiercely, and felt fear
and the beginnings of hysteria recede. They were alive and
together, and Jathmar needed her. That was all that mattered.
She looked up dully as someone
walked across and stopped in front of her. He was tall and
ruggedly handsome, but his eyes were burnt holes, filled with the
afterimage of what he'd witnessed. There was a huge, invisible
weight on his shoulders, one she'd seen a handful of times in her
life. Most recently, it had rested on Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's
shoulders. It had been there when he decided they couldn't wait for
Jathmar. And again, when he stood up and faced armed men
without so much as a pocket knife in his hands.
He's their commander, she realized with a shock like
icewater. He was simply standing there, looking at her, and his
eyes held hers the way Ghartoun's had, pleading with her to
understand. To somehow refrain from hating him.
Jasak watched the play of
emotions across the tiny woman's face. They were as transparent
as glass, and his heart ached. He'd never felt so helpless in his
entire life, but there was literally nothing he could do to erase the
agony that lived behind her eyes. He didn't even dare to step closer;
he didn't want to see her flinch away from him.
He looked at Gadrial. She'd been
crying, but she wiped her face dry, waiting for him to say what
he'd come to tell her.
"Were ready to begin the field
rites," he said quietly. "If you'd rather not
watch . . ."
"I knew some of those men well
enough to grieve for them," she said, her own voice low but steady
as she stood.
"Field rites aren't for the faint of
heart."
"Not everyone has an Andaran
view of death." Her voice was as level as before, but it had
suddenly turned much cooler.
"No, not everyone does," he said,
holding her eyes steadily. "But there's been too much burning of
flesh already for anyone to relish witnessing more. That's what
field rites do, Gadrial. Cremation."
He'd heard the harsh burr in his
own voice, and her face changed. The cool aloofness vanished,
replaced by something almost like contrition.
"I'm sorry," she said. "I was
thoughtless and rude. They were your
men. . . . "
She looked away, but not before
he saw fresh tears glittering on her eyelashes. That nearly proved
his undoing, but she pulled herself back together and her eyes met
his once more.
"Thank you for letting me know
it was time," she said softly, and glanced down at the woman Jasak
had carried here. Then she looked back at him.
"If I were her, I'd want to know,"
she said, even more softly.
Jasak's soul flinched, but he
nodded, and Gadrial crouched beside the other woman, speaking
very softly. She urged the tiny, injured woman to her feet and
steadied her as her balance wavered. She was probably suffering
from a concussion, at the very least, Jasak thought bitterly, hoping
fervently that the blow hadn't fractured her skull.
Don't be stupid, he told himself sharply. Gadrial
wouldn't have let her stand up if there were broken bones
anywhere in her body.
Shaylar had to lean heavily on
the other woman, but she managed to take the few tottering steps
back to the open clearing. The smoke had dissipated, but the smell
lingered, and Shaylar swallowed nausea, certain she would carry
this stench to her grave. Then they reached the edge of the trees,
and her footsteps faltered. She would have fallen, if the other
woman hadn't been holding her so tightly.
She couldn't count the bodies.
They were too many of them, and the world was spinning again,
trying to drag her down into darkness. She fought off the vertigo
and the tremors, fought to regain control of her swimming senses.
Why had they brought her out here? Why did they wanted to see
the pitiful remains of the people she loved—and the foul
remains of the men who'd killed them? She wanted to scream at
them for make in her come out here and face this again.
What finally caught her attention
was the way the surviving soldiers were standing. They were
silent, helmets in hand, and then the tall man began to speak. His
voice was very quiet, and Shaylar finally realized what he was
doing. It was a eulogy—sacred rites for the dead.
And not just his own, she
noticed, forcing herself to look again. She saw the bodies of her
own companions, laid out with the same care they'd taken with
their own dead. Limbs had been straightened, hands crossed over
breasts, crossbow quarrels
removed . . .
Her crippled, frustratingly erratic
Talent was still functioning well enough to catch the emotions of
the woman she leaned against, and she winced as they flooded
through her. These people were nearly as devastated as she was,
with guilt added to the grief. They were trying to show proper
respect, according her people the same honors and rites as their
own. Someone was moving among the bodies, now, laying a small
object on each man's chest. Whatever the objects were, they were
placed with reverence and care. Rectangular and dense, they
caught the sunlight with the same odd, crystalline sheen as the
terrifying weapons which had hurled fire and lightning at them.
The last one was placed, and the
man who'd placed them returned to the edge of the clearing and
rejoined his companions. Their commander said something
further, then turned once again and looked at Shaylar, with
something terrifying and almost pleading in his eyes. He took
something from the pocket of his uniform blouse, looked at his
men, and spoke again.
His voice was harsh with
command, and every one of his men snapped to attention. Their
right hands struck their left shoulders in what was obviously a
salute, and they held it as the commander drew a quick breath, as if
for courage, and touched something on the object he taken from
his pocket.
Light flared, so bright Shaylar
had to look away, her eyes clenching shut in reflex. When she got
them open again, her entire body stiffened. The bodies laid so
carefully on the ground were burning.
She choked, tried to whirl away,
and lost her precarious balance. She was falling, dragging the
other woman with her. Someone was screaming mindlessly, and a
corner of her mind realized it was her. Strong hands caught her,
kept her from sprawling across the ground, and she fought like a
wildcat, striking out with her fists and nails, frantic to escape this
newest horror. She might as well have tried hitting a mountain.
The hands were strong, terrifyingly strong, yet strangely gentle,
and their owner was saying something in a voice filled with raw
pain.
And then her Talent betrayed her
once again.
His emotions battered her
bleeding senses with someone else's regret, so sharp it was like a
knife in her own heart. And that wasn't all. She felt his aching
desire to erase her suffering, and a bitter acknowledgment that his
attempt to show respect to her people had backfired hideously. He
would have done anything in that moment to ease her pain,
and she knew it. Knew it with the absolute certainty possible only
to a telepath.
It was the cruelest thing he could
have done to her. She needed an enemy to hate, and he gave her this—his bleeding heart and the agony of a man
whose every instinct was to protect and who knew, with a
certainty which matched her own, that he'd destroyed her very life,
instead.
Shaylar opened her eyes and
stared up into his, and then shuddered violently and went limp,
undone by that last realization.
Jasak stared helplessly at the
tiny, wounded figure slumped in his arms. He'd tried to show her
companions the same honor he'd paid his own fallen men. He'd
hoped—prayed—she could understand that there
were too many dead, too few living to carry them home again. Too
many for them to bury in earthen graves if they had any hope of
getting the wounded back to safety in time for it to do any good.
He
couldn't—wouldn't—leave any of them for the
buzzards and the carrion crows. Her companions had been as
human as his own men, and he was already beginning to suspect
that they hadn't been soldiers at all. They'd been civilians,
but they'd fought trained soldiers with a courage—and a
ferocity—any man of honor must respect. If anyone had
ever deserved proper treatment from their enemies, these men had.
But he should have realized what
those fiery bursts of light and flame would do to someone who'd
just seen all of her companions slaughtered in deadly explosions
of fire. Especially when there was no way for any of them to
explain to her what they were doing.
Jasak didn't know what to do.
No training manual, no officers' course, covered something like this, and he glanced up at Gadrial, hoping for enlightenment,
or even a simple suggestion. But he found her biting her lip, her
own face twisted with guilt and a sense of helplessness which
matched his own.
But then the slender woman he
held lifted her head. Her eyes were wet and wounded, reddened
from too many tears, but they studied him for a brief, dreadful
eternity. He was unaware he'd been holding his breath until she
turned that deadly gaze away, releasing him from the paralysis
which had gripped him, and looked out at the still fiercely blazing
funeral pyres.
She wrenched away from him
and stood watching the flames, her body swaying for balance, her
face ashen. When she started to speak, Jasak's pulse jumped in
shock. Her voice was a thin, fragile sound against the roar of
magic-induced flames. He couldn't know if she was invoking a
deity, or speaking a eulogy, or simply saying their names, but a
chill ran across his skin as he watched her face the flames and all
they meant.
Everyone else was staring at her,
as well, and several of his men shivered. Jasak wondered how
many of his men she'd killed. She'd still had a weapon in her hand
when they found her. Who was she? They didn't even know her
name, much less what she was, or why she was here, and the
totality of his ignorance appalled him.
She finished speaking at last and
closed her eyes. She stood silently for long moments, tears sliding
down her cheeks. Her face was bruised and swollen, blood had
dried in her hair, and the poignancy of her grief tore at his heart
like considers. She nearly crumpled when Gadrial wrapped an arm
around her shoulders, and Jasak started forward to capture. But
she caught herself, stiffened her knees, and stayed on her feet.
"Jathmar," she whispered
brokenly, and Jasak watched Gadrial guide her back into the trees
and help her sit down beside the man who wore the cuff that
matched hers.
Jasak watched for a moment
longer, then dragged his attention away and focused on the next
task at hand. Somehow, he had to transport his own wounded, a
woman with an obvious concussion, and a man so badly injured
he literally hovered at death's door, through almost twenty miles
of rough wilderness. And somehow, he had to figure out what
happened here, and how a handful of people had slaughtered Fifty
Garlath's command in such a tiny handful of minutes. First
Platoon had gone into the fight with fifty-six arbalestiers and
dragon gunners. Twenty-seven of them were dead, and another
nineteen were wounded, some of them critically.
With Threbuch and one other
trooper dispatched to find the other side's portal, he had fewer
uninjured men than he had wounded, even counting his six
engineers and the baggage handlers.
He didn't look forward to the
rest of the day.
Haliyar Narmayla struggled to
hold back tears as the carriage clattered through the cobbled
streets of New Ramath. The cavalry escort riding in front of her
cleared the way, giving her carriage absolute priority, and the port
master had already been alerted to expect her arrival. The dispatch
boat was undoubtedly raising steam even as the well-sprung,
rubber-tired carriage swayed and vibrated over the cobbles.
It was impossible to see much,
or would have been, if she'd had the heart to look out the window
in the first place. New Ramath was a respectable small
city—or very large town, depending on one's
standards—but it was no huge metropolis. It was also out
towards the end of the explored multiverse. In fact, it's only reason
for existence was to serve Fort Tharkoma, perched in its
mountainous aerie almost four hundred miles inland, where it
covered both the exit portal from the universe of Salym and also
the railhead from Sharona itself. Additional track was being laid
beyond Tharkoma, of course. In fact, the actual railhead
was currently no more than a few hundred miles short of Fort
Salby in the universe of Traisum.
But New Ramath was a critical
link in the chain which bound the ever expanding frontier to the
home universe. The entry portal for Salym was guarded by Fort
Losaltha, almost fourteen hundred miles from Fort Tharkoma.
The rail line could have been extended from Losaltha directly to
Tharkoma, but Losaltha was located at the Salym equivalent of
Barkesh in Teramandor, where the fist of the Narhathan Peninsula
and the Fist of Bolakin closed off the eastern end of the Mbisi Sea.
A rail line would have had to skirt the northern coast of the Mbisi
and penetrate some of the most rugged mountains to be found in
any universe. With its long experience, the Portal Authority and
the shareholders of the Trans-Temporal Express had opted to
avoid the huge construction costs and delay that would have
entailed and utilize the water route, instead.
The city of Losaltha, built on the
splendid harbor which had served Barkesh for so many thousands
of years back in Sharona, was in the process of becoming a major
industrial city. For now, however, the Express and Portal
Authority were still shipping steamships through to Salym by rail.
They arrived as pre-manufactured modules, which were assembled
at Losaltha and then put into service, closing the water gap
between Losaltha and New Ramath. In fact, it had amazed Haliyar
when she realized just how big the modules the Trans-Temporal
Express's specialized freight cars could transport really were. Of
course, most of the shipping here in Salym was still of local
manufacture—small, wooden-hulled, and mostly powered
by sail. That was the norm in the out-universes, after all.
But given the fact that New
Ramath's sole reason for being was to handle the bigger, faster
TTE freighters and passenger vessels plying back and forth
between Losaltha and the Tharkoma Portal, its dockyards and
wharves were several times the size one might have expected, with
not a few luxury hotels under construction. But it remained a
provincial city, for the most part, with few of the amenities those
closer to the heart of civilization took for granted. Which had
struck Haliyar as particularly amusing when she was first assigned
here, since Tharkoma was little more than two hundred miles from
Larakesh, the Ylani Sea seaport serving the very first portal ever
discovered, and little more than three hundred miles from Tajvana
itself. Or, rather, from the locations Larakesh and Tajvana
occupied in Sharona.
And why are you letting your mind run on like a crazed tour
guide at a moment like this?
Her mouth tightened as the
question drove through her brain, but she knew the answer. It was
to keep from thinking about the message locked in the agonized
depths of that self-same mind.
If only Josam hadn't taken ill, she thought bitterly.
But he had. Josam chan Rakail
was the Voice assigned to Fort Tharkoma, and he had the range to
reach Chenrys Hordan, in the small town of Hurkaym. Hurkaym
was actually little more than a village, built on the island which
would have been Jerekhas off the toe of the boot of the Osmarian
Peninsula to serve as a link in the Voice chain between Fort
Tharkoma and Fort Losaltha. Josam could reach Hurkaym easily,
but Haliyar's range was far more limited. That was why she'd been
assigned to serve as the New Ramath Voice and link the city to the
portal fortress. But Josam had come down with what sounded like
pneumonia, and his assistant Voice at Tharkoma had even less
maximum range than Haliyar did. Which meant all he'd been able
to do was to relay the message to her for her to pass on to
Chenrys.
And since I don't have the range to do it from here, either,
I'm going to have to get into range in the first place
, she thought.
She finally glanced out the
window. It was the middle of the night in New Ramath, and
without gas streetlamps, the city was wrapped in slumbering
darkness, sleeping peacefully. She wondered how that would
change when its inhabitants discovered the news she was about to
pass on.
Her fingertips traced the hard,
round outline of the pocket watch in the breast pocket of her
warm jacket. It was hard to believe, even for a Voice, that less
than half an hour had passed since the vicious attack on the
Chalgyn Consortium's survey crew, five universes, two
continents, and an ocean away from New Ramath. Haliyar bit her
lip, fighting back a fresh burst of tears.
She'd met Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr and her husband on their way through Salym. As a Voice
herself, although never one in Shaylar's league, she'd been unable
to avoid feeling the echoes of their mutual devotion. Their
marriage bond was so strong that no telepath—whether of
Voice caliber, or not—could spend five minutes in their
company without feeling it, whether she wanted to or not.
And that made the agony of Seeing Jathmar's horrible death before
Shaylar's very eyes, and then Seeing—and feeling—
the even more terrible moment when Shaylar's Voice went
abruptly silent, even worse. The experience had been like an ax
blow, and now it was her job to pass that dreadful, soul-
searing experience on to Chenrys in all its horrifying detail.
She wouldn't have had to do this
if Josam hadn't fallen ill. She might have managed to avoid the
unbearable immediacy of knowing exactly what had
happened to two people she had both liked and admired
deeply . . . and envied more deeply
still.
The carriage slowed, and she
drew a deep breath, preparing to climb down when the door
opened. The dispatch boat—an incredibly fast little vessel,
powered by the new steam turbines and capable of sustained
speeds of thirty knots or more—lay waiting for her, smoke
pluming from its two strongly raked funnels. It wouldn't have to
take her all the way to Hurkaym. Haliyar's range was almost three
hundred miles; getting her as far as the west coast of Osmaria
would allow her to reach Chenrys, and that would take the
dispatch boat less than four hours. Then the message—and
all its grim, horrible imagery—would go flashing further
along the transit chain literally at the speed of thought.
There were still water gaps
which couldn't be closed by convenient relay stations like
Hurkaym, Haliyar thought as the carriage came fully to a halt.
Those were going to impose delays much greater than just four
hours. Still, the message would reach Tajvana and the Portal
Authority's headquarters there in less than a week.
And what happens then, she thought as the coachman's
assistant opened the door for her, scarcely bears thinking on
.
She stood for a moment, gazing
at the dispatch boat under the bright, gas-powered lights of the
TTE wharf, and tried not to shiver.
Chapter Ten
Jasak had to send another
message. However little he might relish the thought, he had no
choice, and he strode over to Iggar Shulthan.
"Iggy, I need two more
hummers."
"Yes, Sir. I thought you would,
Sir."
The hummer handler opened a
small wire cage, made of heavy gauge mesh rather than the sort of
wires and crosspieces wealthy ladies used to house chirping
canaries or rainbow-winged near-sprites.
He moved carefully and gently,
whispering the whole time, as he retrieved one of the ten
remaining hummers from the dozen he carried everywhere First
Platoon—or whichever of Charlie Company's subunits he
was attached to at the moment—went.
Hummers were so aggressive
they required not simply soothing handling, but also carefully
controlled incantations that turned off their natural attack instinct.
The bird Shulthan had retrieved was a beautiful creature, with
iridescent green feathers and a ruby throat. And it was also five
times the size of any wild hummingbird, with a stiletto beak that
was even larger in proportion.
The Andaran Scouts, like all
other trans-universal military organizations, bred magically
augmented hummers by the hundreds of thousands. Incredibly fast
in the air—a hummer could top a hundred and fifty miles
per hour—male hummers were aggressive enough to ward
off attacks by any airborne creature smaller than a gryphon. They
formed the backbone of the Union of Arcana's long-distance
communication network, routinely flying distances of well over a
thousand miles.
The most remarkable thing about
hummers, to Jasak's thinking, was how they transported messages.
Rather than strap a message to the outside of a large, slow bird
vulnerable to gryphon attacks, the inventor of the hummer
system—an Andaran Scout, Jasak thought, with a touch of
familiar smugness even know—had found a way to embed
a message inside a smaller, faster bird. Every hummer in service
was surgically implanted with a message crystal, wafer thin yet
capable of storing complex and surprisingly long messages.
Just as Gadrial and Halathyn
used spells to store their notes and personal-crystal displays,
hummer handlers used spells to store urgent messages which
could be retrieved by the receiving hummer handler. Dragons
always gave Jasak's spirits a lift, but hummers were sheer artistry.
"Ready to record your messages,
Sir," Shulthan said. "Destination?"
"First bird to the coast," Jasak
said. "The second to Javelin Kranark at the portal."
Shulthan nodded and spoke the
proper spell to implant the first destination's coordinates, then
looked back up at Jasak.
"Begin message, Sir."
"Hundred Olderhan, second
Andarans Scouts to Five Hundred Klian, Commander, Fort
Rycharn. Urgent. First Platoon of my company has sustained
heavy combat casualties. The platoon's combat strength has been
reduced to eight—I repeat, eight—effectives after an
encounter with what I believe to have been a survey party from
another trans-temporal civilization." Even as he said the words,
they still sounded impossible, even to him. "Several of my
casualties have serious internal injuries," he continued. "They are
in critical condition and urgently require a healer's services. I am
transporting them to our base camp as quickly as possible, but I
estimate that it will require twenty-plus hours from the time chop
on this message to return."
Jasak paused, considering what
he'd said, wondering if he should say still more. But what
could he say until he got back to report in person and answer
all of the no doubt incredulous questions Five Hundred Klian was
certain to have?
He grimaced and tossed his head.
"Hundred Olderhan reporting,"
he said. "End of message."
Shulthan spoke again, locking
the message properly into the crystal. Then he stroked the hummer
gently, whispered to it, and tossed it into the air. It sped away so
rapidly Jasak couldn't follow the motion with his eyes even
though he'd been waiting for it.
He drew a deep breath, trying to
visualize the consternation that hummer was going to create when
it reached Fort Rycharn. Then he turned back to Shulthan.
"Second hummer, please," he
said.
At least he could include one
piece of good news with the message to Kranark. He could
reassure Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah that Gadrial had taken
no harm, despite the fact that Halathyn had trusted her safety to Sir
Jasak Olderhan.
He recorded the message and
tried to watch the second bird streak away through the forest. He
failed again, as always, and steeled himself to turned back to the
remnants of his shattered platoon. He'd done all he could; it
remained to be seen whether that—and Gadrial's minor Gift
for healing—would keep the wounded alive.
He hoped twenty-five hours of
travel time wouldn't turn out to have been an overly optimistic
estimate.
Andrin Calirath felt twitchy.
It was an uncomfortable
sensation, like feeling swarms of honeybees buzzing just under her
skin. It plucked at her nerve endings with a constant, jarring twang,
until it threatened to drive her mad. It had plagued her most of the
afternoon, too vague to consider a true Glimpse, yet far too
insistent to ignore.
The weather hadn't helped. The
last week had been fair and fine, like a holdover of summer, but
today had set out to remind everyone that autumn was upon them.
Like the sensations under her skin, the weather was maddeningly
neither one thing nor another, for today had been one of those
perpetually drizzling days, too wet to call a mist, too halfhearted
to call rain. Below the vast expanse of glass that served the Rose
Room as a window, the gardens were all but obscured by the
combination of misting rain and approaching evening, and her
mood matched the garden—cold, foul, and unsociable. The
cheerful chatter of her younger sisters was almost enough to drive
her from the room, ripping out handfuls of hair as she went.
Andrin bit down on the
impulse—hard. A grand princess of the Ternathian Empire
did not display public fits of temper, no matter what the
provocation. That stricture—not to mention
responsibility—weighed heavy on shoulders that had seen
only seventeen changings of the seasons, but she didn't really mind
the pressure of her birth rank. Not much, anyway. She enjoyed her
many opportunities to help people, to make a difference in their
lives. She was grateful for what she had, and for what she could
do, but she never forgot who—and what—she
was. She was a Calirath, born to a tradition of service to her
people, her family, and to herself. Everything else, including any
private dreams she might nourish, was secondary.
A coal fire burned steadily
behind her in a fireplace built when coal had been little more than
a funny sort of black rock and trees and peat had been the only fuel
on the island. The vast fire pit could have held half a mature oak
tree; instead, it held five separate coal fires, spaced evenly along
the length of the fireplace. The scent of coal dust, sharp and thick
at the back of her throat, was just one more irritant to be
weathered. Winter in Ternathia was nothing like the snow-laden
ordeal of Farnalia, and it was still only early October, but the wet,
raw day had brought an early chill to the Palace. It was more than
enough to make her grateful for the fire's heat, and she'd draped a
woolen shawl around her shoulders, as well. Its soft, warm touch
was like a soothing caress, offering at least a little comfort against
the angry honeybees.
The little clock on the mantle
chimed the hour with a sprinkling of liquid crystal notes, and the
silver-sweet bells were a reminder that yet another hour of her life
had been devoured by someone else's schedule. The honeybees
snarled louder at the thought, whittling away another few notches
of her temper, and she sighed. She loved her mother and her
sisters, but on days like this, with the Talent riding hard with
sharpened spurs, Andrin desperately needed time alone. Time to
focus inward, to ask—demand—of this inner
agitation what message lay beneath it.
Another clock chimed, farther
down the mantle, setting her teeth on edge. Her mother loved
fussy little bric-a-brac, like clocks that chimed with the sound of
real birdcalls. The Rose Room, Empress Varena's private domain,
was filled with her collection of delicate breakables. Andrin had
been terrified to move in this room for the first ten years of her
life, for graceful deportment had not come naturally to her. Unlike
her younger sisters, she'd been forced—grimly—to
learn it in the same way a fractious schoolboy might be forced to
learn his arithmetic.
I want out of here! her soul cried out. Out of
this room, this Palace, this awful sensation of
doom . . .
Andrin's Talent never made itself
felt for joyous things. That blistering injustice was the reason she
was so agitated—no, be honest, afraid, she thought
harshly—standing here beside the window, staring hard at
the garden she could barely see through the mist and the misery.
On days like this, she would have given a piece of her soul to be
an ordinary milk maid or shop clerk somewhere, untroubled by
anything more serious than helping some wealthy fribble choose
which color of ribbon looked best with a card of lace. Shop clerks
didn't have inscrutable portents buzzing like angry bees under their
skin.
Precognition was a curse of
royalty.
At least Janaki is the heir, she consoled herself.
The stiff set of her face eased a
little at that thought. Her older brother was in the Imperial
Ternathian Marines, assigned to border patrol in a newly colonized
world at the edge of Sharonian exploration. She envied him
enormously. The open sky, the freedom to gallop one's horse for
the sheer mad delight of it, the ability to actually step through
portals, not just read about them from the confines of stone walls
and garden hedges. She would have been happy just to ride her
palfrey through the streets of Estafel today, despite the drizzling
rain that had—by now—turned the capital city's
cobbled streets into slick and dangerous ribbons of stone.
She started to sigh again, but
checked the impulse before it could become audible. She didn't
want to inflict her sour mood on her mother or sisters.
The door clicked open.
Andrin turned, grateful for any
diversion, yet so anxious about what might be happening
somewhere in the many universes Sharonians now called home
that her heart stuttered until she saw that the sound was merely her
father's arrival for dinner.
She tried to summon a smile,
grateful that bad news hadn't actually arrived on their
doorstep . . . yet, at least. Her father
was a large man, as were most Ternathians. Not stocky, and
certainly not fleshy, but he was built like a bull, with the massive
shoulders and thick neck that were the hallmark of the Calirath
Dynasty. To her private dismay, and the despair of her dressmaker,
Andrin looked altogether too much like her father, and not a bit
like her mother. The Empress Varena might stand nearly five feet
eleven inches in her stockings, but she looked delicate, almost
petite, standing beside His Imperial Majesty, Zindel XXIV, Duke
of Ternath, Grand Duke of Farnalia, Warlord of the West,
Protector of the Peace, and by the gods' Grace, Emperor of
Ternathia.
The emperor who, at that
moment, wore a look which so nearly matched Andrin's own
mood that she felt herself trying not to gape open mouthed.
Zindel chan Calirath caught the
grim set of his daughter's jaw, the stiffness of her shoulders, and
knew, without a word spoken, that Andrin felt it, too. He halted in
the doorway, halfway in and halfway out, and nearly had the door
rapped into his heels. The doorkeeper had been opening and
closing the Rose Room door every day at six p.m. sharp for the
last twenty years, and not once in all that time had the Emperor
stopped dead in the middle of the doorway.
But Zindel couldn't help it. The
warning that vibrated through him when his gaze locked with his
eldest daughter's was as brutal as it was unexpected. He sucked in
a harsh breath, totally oblivious to the doorkeeper's frantic, last-
minute grab at the door handle. He never even realized how close
the door had come to slamming into him as his entire body
vibrated with the Glimpse.
Something was going to smash
her life to pieces. Soon.
Dear gods, no, not Andrin, a voice whispered inside his
head, and his eyes clenched shut for just an instant. Clenched shut
on a bewildering dazzle of half-guessed images, so fleeting, so
jumbled, they were impossible to capture. Explosions of flame.
Weeping faces. A powerful locomotive thundering along a desert
rail line, with the Royal Shurakhalian coat of arms displayed on
either side of its cab. A great whale rising from the sea in an
explosion of foam. Gunfire stabbing through darkness and rain. A
city he'd never seen yet almost recognized, a ship flaming
upon the sea, a magnificent ballroom, and his tall young daughter
weeping like a broken child. . . .
His nostrils flared under the
dreadful cascade of almost-knowledge which had been the greatest
gift and most bitter curse of his line for twice a thousand years and
more. He was no Voice, yet he could taste the same splinters of
vision ripping through Andrin, as if the proximity of their Talents
had somehow sharpened the fragmented Glimpse for both of them,
and he bit his lip as he felt her anguish.
But then he fought his eyes open
again and saw Andrin biting down on her own distress. He
understood the tension singing just beneath her skin, the shadows
in her eyes. They were echoes of his own fear, his own gnawing
worry, and his eyes held hers as the cheerful greetings from his
wife and younger daughters splashed unheard against him,
drowned out by the terrible prescience. Andrin's eyes were dark
with its heavy weight, all the more terrible because they could give
it neither shape nor name, and when she smiled anyway, it broke
his heart.
She'd grown so tall, these last
two years, too tall for mere courtly beauty. She was strong beneath
the silks and velvets of an imperial princess. She wasn't a beautiful
girl, his Andrin, not in the conventional sense. Her chin was too
strong, her nose too proud, her face too triangular, for that, but
strength lived in those unquiet eyes and the firm set of her mouth.
Her long sweep of raven hair, shot through with the golden strands
which were borne only by those of Talented Calirathian blood,
lent her an almost otherworldly grace she was entirely unaware
she possessed, and her eyes were as clear and gray as the
Ternathian Sea.
"Hello, Papa," she said, holding
out one hand.
He crossed the Rose Room
swiftly and took her into a careful embrace, denying himself the
need to crush her close, to protect her. He was careful, as well, to
hug each of his younger daughters in turn—and his
wife—in exactly the same manner, for exactly the same
amount of time. He didn't want Varena to guess his Talent was
riding him with cruel spurs. Not yet. Not until he'd Glimpsed
more of whatever terrifying thing he might yet See.
"Now, then." He smiled at
Razial, who'd just turned fifteen, and Anbessa, whose eleventh
birthday had been celebrated two months previously. "How did
your lessons go today?"
He let their youthful voices wash
across him, finding comfort and even mild humor in little
Anbessa's complaint that she saw no need to learn what Ternathia's
imperial borders had been eight hundred years previously, since
the Empire's current borders were far smaller. Then there was
Razial. His middle daughter's bubbling enthusiasm over her latest
art lesson was, Zindel knew, motivated more by the physical
attractiveness of her art tutor than it was by any real love of
watercolor painting. But he also knew the tutor's proclivities did
not include nubile young grand princesses. And since Janaki was
not only old enough to hold his own in affairs of the bedroom, but
out of the Palace and several universes removed, Zindel had no
real worry about the safety of his offspring under the roving eye of
a handsome young art instructor. Razial's current infatuation was
merely entertaining, in a gentle and soothing way that dispelled
some of the gloom after a day like today. He gave Razial another
six months, at most, before some other gloriously handsome devil
caught her eye and the tension of her raging hormones. He'd worry
about that devil when the day came.
Meanwhile . .
.
Zindel sat beside his wife,
drawing comfort from Varena's warmth at his side, while they
waited for the servants to arrive with their supper. Varena's
needlework—a new cover for their kneeling bench at
Temple—was a work of art in its own right. Varena's
designs were copied eagerly throughout the Empire, viewed as
instantaneous must-haves for anyone on the Society list, or anyone
with the aspiration to be on it, and not simply because of who she
was.
Her Imperial Majesty Varena
smiled as her husband sat beside her, but her skilled hands never
paused in their work. She drew no small pleasure from the work
she created with nimble fingers, needle, and
thread . . . and if her hands were busy
making something beautiful, no one would see them twist into the
knots of fear which came all too often for an imperial wife.
She was Talented, of course; it
was legally required for any Calirath bride. But hers wasn't a very
strong Talent, just a middling dollop of precognition. It
was nothing like the Glimpses her husband and her older children
experienced, yet it was enough to set up tremors in her abdomen
which threatened to upset the balanced poise of her busy fingers.
Something was wrong. She could feel it in her own limited way,
and she knew the signs to look for in her husband and her
daughter, but she let them think they were succeeding at hiding
their inner agitation, because it was kinder to give them that
illusion.
Neither of them wanted to add
stress to her life, so she carefully hid her own disquiet, aware that
whatever was wrong would come in its own good time. She saw
no sense in rushing to meet trouble before it arrived, unless one
had a clear enough Glimpse and sufficient time to alter what
might be coming.
Which happened all too seldom.
"Well," Zindel said to Razial at
last, "while I'm delighted to hear your art studies are coming so
well, I'm not at all sure Master Malthayr is quite prepared to pose
nude for you." He glanced down at Varena with a tender, droll
humor which was heartbreaking against the background tension
she felt quivering through him. "What do you think,
love?" he asked her.
"I think," she said
calmly, setting her needlework aside as the doors opened quietly
and supper began to arrive, "that your sense of humor requires a
sound whacking, Your Imperial Majesty."
"No!" He laid one hand on his
heart, gazing at her soulfully. "How could you possibly say such a
thing?" he demanded while Anbessa giggled and Razial looked
martyred.
"I believe it has something to do
with having been married to you for over twenty years," she said
with a smile.
He chuckled and took her hand
as she stood. But the darkness still lingered behind his eyes, and
she squeezed his strong fingers tightly for just a moment.
Awareness flickered through his expression at the silent admission
that she was only too well aware of the frightening black cloud of
tension wrapped around him and Andrin. Then she smiled again.
"And now, it's time to eat," she
said calmly.
After the gut-wrenching
cremation of the dead, Shaylar's captors stayed where they were
for over an hour, camped mercifully upwind of the remains in the
toppled timber. Despite the insight her Talent had given her into
these people and their intentions, Shaylar felt an inescapable
measure of grim satisfaction as she contemplated the heavy price
they'd paid for slaughtering her friends. They didn't have enough
unhurt men to carry all of their wounded, she thought fiercely, and
she also felt a slight, fragile stir of hope as she thought about what
that might mean.
Darcel probably thought she was
dead, but he couldn't be positive, and as far as he could know,
some of the others might have survived, even if she hadn't. Under
the circumstances, Company-Captain Halifu would almost
certainly have to be sending out a party to rescue any possible
survivors, and if these people couldn't retreat because of their own
injured men . . .
The woman who'd been trying so
hard to comfort her was moving among the wounded who lay
sprawled in the trees. She paused at each man, touching him
lightly and whispering something. She also consulted frequently
with their commander, but she obviously wasn't a soldier. Shaylar
was virtually certain of that. She'd already noticed the other
woman's lack of a uniform, but Shaylar wondered if she might be
a civilian healer assigned to this military unit. Certainly what she'd
done for Shaylar's throbbing head and her current attentiveness to
the wounded suggested that might be the case, which surprised
Shaylar on two separate levels.
Healers assigned to the
Sharonian military were full-fledged members of that military,
part of the Healers' Corps. They were also all men. Women didn't
serve in the Sharonian military. Even in Ternathia, which was
deplorably "progressive" by the standards of other Sharonian
cultures, only a tiny handful had ever been accepted for military
service, and then, inevitably, only in staff positions or as nurses
well to the rear. Officers and even enlisted men could marry, of
course, and their wives and children could travel with them to
their assigned duty posts. But those wives and children remained
in military-built and financed housing in the civilian towns which
sprang up around the portal forts. They didn't accompany their
men on missions, whether in the wilderness or to put down the
occasional outbreak of banditry in more settled country, and not
even Ternathian female nurses were ever assigned to the Healer
Corps which served units in the field.
Whoever this woman was, she
finished tending the wounded and returned to Shaylar's side. She
sat beside her, looked into Shaylar's eyes, and pointed to herself as
she spoke slowly and clearly.
"Gadrial," she said. It was an odd
name, but a name was clearly what it was.
"Jathmar?" she continued,
pointing at Jathmar and confirming Shaylar's guess.
"Yes." Shaylar nodded, wincing
at the movement of her aching head. "Jathmar."
Gadrial nodded back, then
cocked her head, waiting expectantly, and Shaylar touched her own
breastbone.
"Shaylar," she said, and a lovely
smile flickered like sunlight across Gadrial's face.
"Shaylar," she repeated, then said
something else. Shaylar tried desperately to make contact with
Gadrial's mind, hoping that this woman might be some sort of
telepath, but she could touch nothing. The place inside her own
mind where such connections were made was a throbbing mask of
blackness and pain. She was still Voiceless, and panic nibbled at
the edge of her awareness. If the damage proved
permanent . . .
Don't borrow trouble.
Her mother's voice echoed
through her memory, and grief and the fear that she would never
see her mother again were nearly Shaylar's undoing. She felt her
mouth quiver, felt fresh tears brimming in her swollen eyes, but
then Gadrial took her hand gently and pulled her back from that
brink.
"Shaylar," she said again, then
something else. She pointed to Jathmar and the others, then to the
south. Shaylar frowned, and Gadrial pantomimed walking with
two fingers on the ground, then pointed again.
Shaylar felt herself tensing
internally once more. They were leaving, walking toward
something in the south . . . which was
the direction Darcel had sent them to locate the nearest portal to
another universe.
She looked at all of the other
wounded, then back at Gadrial, cursing the whirling unsteadiness
of her own senses and thoughts. She couldn't imagine how the
remaining fit soldiers could possibly transport all of their
wounded fellows, and her heart sank as she realized Gadrial might
be referring only to her and Jathmar. If their own portal to this
universe was as close at hand as Darcel had thought, they might
want to get their prisoners safely away for future interrogation,
and that thought was terrifying.
But if they want prisoners to interrogate, they'll have to keep
us alive until they can start asking questions, a little voice
said somewhere deep inside her. And that means they'll have
to get Jathmar proper healing as quickly as possible.
Her jaw clenched as the
exquisite anguish of her plight gripped her like pincers. Every step,
every inch, toward the south would take them further and further
from any possibility of rescue. But those same steps might very
well take Jathmar towards healing and survival.
Shaylar had known the risks
when she signed up for this job, but she'd never dreamed how
devastating it would be to face a moment like this, knowing her
beloved needed medical care only their enemies could provide.
Yet in the end, that was the only chance fate was likely to put into
her trembling hands, and so she nodded, and felt as if she were
somehow sealing their doom.
And either way, it's not as if I have very much choice, she
thought grimly.
"I know you're frightened,"
Gadrial said gently to the other woman—Shaylar—
and touched her arm. "But I swear Sir Jasak will do everything he
can to save Jathmar for you."
Shaylar's mouth trembled again
briefly at the sound of her companion's name. She reached down,
touching Jathmar's forehead with heartbreaking gentleness, and
Gadrial's own heart twisted as she recognized the grief and despair
in the gesture.
Then she heard the sound of
approaching footsteps, and she and Shaylar both looked up as
Jasak went to one knee beside them. Weariness showed in the
commander of one hundred's face and the set of his shoulders. It
was obvious from the way he moved that the wound along his
ribs, especially, was causing considerable pain, but the shadows in
his eyes as he looked down at Jathmar and Shaylar had nothing to
do with his wounds.
"How's it going?" he asked.
"I've got their names," Gadrial
said. "And I think I just got her to understand and agree to walk
with us to the swamp portal."
"Gods, I hope so." His voice was
full of smoke and gravel. "She's suffered enough without us
having to drag her every step of the way."
"They're your prisoners."
Gadrial tried to keep from
speaking between clenched teeth, but it was hard. She wasn't at all
happy in her own mind about taking Shaylar and Jathmar back as
military prisoners. Surely they'd already done these people enough
hurt! The thought of what Shaylar and Jathmar might face at the
hands of government and military interrogators, on top of all
they'd already suffered, was enough to stiffen her with rage.
It must have showed, despite her
effort to control her voice, because Jasak gave her a quick, very
sharp look. Then he nodded.
"Yes, they are," he said flatly.
"And my responsibility."
Ah, yes—responsibility,
Gadrial thought. That most Andaran of all traits. Noblesse
oblige. The duty to codes of honor instilled into Andaran
children—girls, as well as boys—from the cradle
itself. She wanted to ask if that responsibility would protect these
battered people from the military hierarchy that would want to
peel their minds like apples. She had no idea what kind of magic
might be brought to bear on the mind of the prisoner of war, and,
frankly, she didn't want to find out. But if the Union of Arcana and
its military decided that extracting information from Shaylar and
Jathmar was vital to the security of the Union, there wouldn't be a
single damned thing Gadrial could do about it.
So she did the only thing she
could do. She introduced Sir Jasak Olderhan, son of the Duke
of Garth Showma, to his prisoners.
Jasak saw the worry and anger in
Gadrial as clearly as he saw the terror and exhaustion in Shaylar.
The slender girl repeated his given name with a bruised weariness
he recognized as post-battle trauma. He hated seeing it in Shaylar's
eyes as much as he hated seeing the suspicion in Gadrial's, but he
couldn't expect the magister to understand that. She was Ransaran,
raised in a culture where the formality of military duty, of
knowing one's obligations to a stratified social order, wasn't an
ingrained part of everyone's basic childhood training. She didn't
understand what Jasak's responsibility entailed. Not yet. But she
would, he promised himself, and hoped that the worry and anger
would fade from Gadrial's eyes as quickly as he hoped the terror
and shock would fade from Shaylar's.
Yet neither of those things was
going to happen quickly enough, and Gadrial's worry—and
Shaylar's exhaustion—were probably both going to get
worse before they got better. And that, too, would result from his
responsibilities. His responsibility to push everyone, including this
poor, brutalized young woman, ruthlessly, even brutally, in a
relentless effort to get Jathmar the healing he so desperately
needed.
He doubted either of the women
would understand why that was so important to him. Important to
Jasak Olderhan, not to Commander of One Hundred Olderhan.
And there was no way in this universe, or any other, that he could
hope to explain it to them in the time he had.
So he did what he could do to try
to reassure both of them. He lifted Shaylar's hand and stroked it
the way he would have stroked a frightened kitten.
"Don't be afraid," he said gently.
"No one will hurt you again. No one. I know you don't
understand, yet, but I swear that on my honor, Shaylar. And I'll do
everything I can to help you understand it."
Her hand was limp, broken
feeling, in his grip, and her dark eyes were glazed. He sighed and
turned back to Gadrial.
"We'll strike camp as soon as
you determine it's safe to move him." He nodded at Jathmar. "My
baggage handlers survived, so at least we'll be able to lift the most
critically wounded. But even so, it's not going to be a picnic stroll
through the park getting them safely back to the portal and
transport.
He glanced again at Jathmar,
wondering if the wounded man's unconsciousness was a mercy or
a bad sign.
"We'll rig a field litter for him,"
he said. "And one for her, as well, if she needs it."
"Get it ready, then," Gadrial said.
"The sooner we move him, the faster we'll getting back. As long as
his litter doesn't jostle him too much, he should be all right. I'll do
what I can for him as well as your men."
"I appreciate that. Immensely."
He smiled, the expression tight with worry and fatigue, yet
genuine. "I'll get right on it, then."
It took only minutes to break out
the collapsible field stretchers that were part of the baggage his
platoons carried in the field. Jasak couldn't imagine what battle
must have been like before the development of Gifts made it
possible to move heavy loads with spells, rather than muscle
power.
All four of his baggage handlers
had survived, along with their equipment. The most critically
wounded were placed on proper field litters, canvas slings
mounted between poles to which the handlers attached standard
spell storage boxes. They didn't have enough of the standard litters
for the less critically hurt, but Sword Harnak threw together field
expedient substitutes, using uniform tunics for slings and hastily
cut branches for poles. They looked like hell, but they ought to do
the job, and Jasak watched the baggage handlers attaching the
sarkolis crystal storage boxes.
The storage devices were all
pretty much the same size and shape. Only the markings varied,
with a color coding that told the soldier at a glance whether it
contained spells that powered infantry-dragons, spells that lifted
baggage, or spells that illuminated a landing area to guide living
dragons during night airlifts. As an added precaution, those which
carried weapon-grade spells featured carefully contoured shapes
which would fit only into the weapons they were intended to
power, but that wasn't immediately apparent at first glance.
Jasak supervised preparations
closely, speaking to wounded men in a low, reassuring voice.
Gripping shoulders where a bracing moment of support was
required to stiffen a man's weary spine. Making sure every bit of
captured equipment was secured for analysis back home. He still
didn't understand how the long, hollow tubes they'd found beside
the dead—or the smaller versions several had carried, as
well—had managed to wreak such havoc, but he intended
to find out.
When it was time to shift the
unconscious Jathmar onto one of the litters, Jasak abandoned the
captured equipment to the handlers he'd detailed to haul it out and
personally accompanied Lance Erdar Wilthy. Wilthy was the
senior, most experienced of First Platoon's baggage handlers, and
Jasak had assigned him specific responsibility for transporting
Jathmar. The lance had been doing his job for years, but Jasak
found himself hovering, unable to restrain himself from taking
personal charge of the delicate operation of getting Jathmar onto
the litter despite the fact that he knew Wilthy had far more
experience than he.
Shaylar sat beside her husband,
one hand resting gently on his scorched brown hair, when Jasak
and Wilthy approached. Her unguarded expression was full of
anguish, and Jasak crouched down beside her.
"Shaylar," he said gently. She
looked up, and he pointed to the canvas sling Wilthy was unrolling
on the ground beside Jathmar.
"We're going to put Jathmar on
this stretcher," he continued, pantomiming the act of picking
something up and setting it down again. "We won't hurt him. I
promise."
Shaylar looked at him, and then
at the litter. Since they would have to transport Jathmar face
down, the litter had to be rigid, or the sling would bend his spine
painfully in the wrong direction, not to mention the tension it
would put on the burned skin of his back. Harnak's improvised
stretchers would never have worked, Jasak thought, watching
Wilthy slide crosswise slats into place, turning the canvas sling
into a rigid platform.
When it was ready, Jasak
pantomimed their intentions to Shaylar again, and she nodded.
"Easy, now," Jasak cautioned
Wilthy. "I'll take his shoulders, Erdar. You take his feet. Gadrial,
support his waist. We only need to lift him a couple of inches off
the ground. On the count of three. One, two, three—"
They lifted him two inches and
slid him smoothly onto the canvas. Shaylar hovered, holding
Jathmar's head, biting her lips when he stirred with a sound of
pain. Gadrial whispered over him, and he subsided again, lying
quietly on the litter.
So far, so good, Jathmar thought.
"All right, attach the
accumulator and let's lift him, Erdar."
"Yes, Sir," Wilthy said, and
pulled out the box and attached it to receptacle on the litter.
Shaylar had been looking down
at Jathmar's face, but she looked up again, attracted by the lance's
movement. For just a moment, she showed no reaction, but then
her eyes flew wide and she came to her feet with a bloodcurdling
scream.
Jasak flinched in astonishment as
she leapt past him, snatched the box off the litter, and hurled it
violently away. Then she spun to face him—to face all
of them, every surviving member of First Platoon. She was a
single, tiny woman, smaller than Jasak's own twelve-year-old
sister, but he could literally feel the savagery of her fury as her
fingers curled into defensive claws. She was prepared to attack
them all, he realized. To rip out the throat of any man who
approached Jathmar with her bare teeth, and he recoiled from her
desperate defiance, trying frantically to understand its cause.
"Oh, dear God!" Gadrial cried.
"She thinks we're going to cremate him alive! They all
look alike to her—the accumulator boxes!"
Comprehension exploded
through Jathmar, and he swore with vicious self-loathing.
"Get that box, Wilthy!" he
snapped. "Fasten it to something else—anything
else. Show her what it does."
The white-faced trooper, his
expression as shaken and horrified as Jasak's own, scrambled to
retrieve the accumulator. He scrabbled it up out of the leaves
where Shaylar had thrown it and fastened it to the nearest object he
could find—a section of decaying log about three feet long
and eighteen inches in diameter. The box was equipped with
twenty small chambers, each with its own control button, and he
pressed one of them, releasing the spell inside.
The log lifted from its leafy bed.
It floated silently into the air and hovered there, effortlessly.
Shaylar watched, her eyes wide.
Then she sagged to her knees, gasping as she panted for breath, and
Gadrial knelt beside her.
"It's all right, Shaylar," she said
gently, reassuringly. "It's all right. We're not going to hurt him. It'll
just pick him up. See, it lifts the log."
She pointed, pantomiming
moving the accumulator back to Jathmar's litter, then lifting
Jathmar the same way. Shaylar trembled violently in the circle of
Gadrial' left arm, and the magister glanced over her shoulder at
Jasak.
"For the love of God, lift the
other wounded men. She's half crazed with terror!"
"Get them airborne!" Jasak
barked to the other handlers, who were watching with open
mouths. "Damn it, get them airborne now!"
Wilthy's subordinates obeyed
quickly, lifting all of the critically wounded. Shaylar watched
them, her body taut, her eyes wide. But the wildness was fading
from them, and she began to relax again, ever so slowly.
"It's all right," Gadrial told her
again and again. "Let us help him, Shaylar. Let us help Jathmar.
Please."
Jasak watched as Shaylar's
obvious terror began to ease. The furious fear for Jathmar which
had given her strength seemed to flow out of her. Her mouth went
unsteady, and her eyes overflowed. Then she crumpled, and
Gadrial caught her, held her close, rocked her like a frightened
child, stroking her hair and soothing her.
A badly shaken Jasak turned back
to Wilthy.
"Lift Jathmar's stretcher, Erdar.
But move carefully, whatever you do. She's not strong enough to
take many more shocks like that one."
"Yes, Sir. I'll be gentle as a
butterfly, Sir."
Gadrial urged Shaylar to her feet
as Wilthy slowly and carefully, pausing between each movement
to let Shaylar see every step of the process, lifted Jathmar's litter
until it floated just above waist level.
Shaylar watched, still panting,
and Gadrial wiped the other woman's cheeks dry with the corner
of her own shirt. Then the magister gave her a smile and squeezed
her hand for just a moment, before moving it to rest on Jathmar's.
Wilthy had tucked the injured man's arms down at his sides, which
was an awkward placement, but better than leaving them hanging
over the edges of the litter.
Shaylar curled her slender
fingers carefully, delicately, around her husband's. Then she drew
a deep breath. Her chin came up, and she met Jasak's gaze once
again.
"All right, People." Jasak gave
the order. "Move out."
Chapter Eleven
"What?" Company-
Captain Balkar chan Tesh stared at Petty Captain Rokam Traygan
in total disbelief. "You can't be serious!"
"I wish to all the Uromathian
hells I wasn't, Sir," Traygan said harshly. The Ricathian Voice's
face was the color of old ashes, and his hands shook visibly. He
looked away from chan Tesh and swallowed hard.
"I—" He swallowed
again. "I threw up twice receiving the message, Sir," he admitted.
"It was . . . ugly."
chan Tesh stared at the petty-
captain, then shook himself. He didn't know Traygan as well as he
might have wished, hadn't even met the man before the Voice
caught up with his column in Thermyn. But they'd traveled over a
thousand miles together on horseback since then, from the rolling
grasslands of what would have been central New Ternathia and
across the continent's deserts and rocky western spine. The
heavyset, powerfully muscled Voice hadn't struck chan Tesh as a
weakling, yet he was obviously shaken—badly
shaken—and chan Tesh was suddenly glad that he
wasn't a Voice.
"Tell me," he said quietly, almost
gently, and Traygan turned back to face him.
"Company-Captain Halifu didn't
know exactly where we were," the Voice said, "and I've never
worked with the Chalgyn Voice, Kinlafia. So instead of trying to
contact us directly, he had Kinlafia pass the report straight up the
chain with a request that Fort Mosanik relay to us. I got Kinlafia's
entire transmission."
He swallowed again and shook
his head.
"I never imagined anything like
it, Sir," he said, his voice a bit hoarse around the edges. "It
was—It was like Hell come to life. Fireballs, explosions, lightning bolts, for the gods' sake! And Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr and her husband caught right in the middle of it."
chan Tesh felt his own face turn
pale. He was Ternathian, himself, not Harkalian, but Nargra-
Kolmayr was virtually a Sharona-wide icon. The first woman to
win the battle for a place on a temporal survey crew; one of the
most powerful Voices Sharona had ever produced; daughter of
one of Sharona's most renowned cetacean ambassadors; half of
one of Sharona's storybook, larger than life romantic sagas. The
fact that she was beautiful enough to be cast to play herself in any
of the (inevitable) dramatizations of her own life had simply been
icing on the cake.
"Was she hurt?" he asked
urgently.
"Yes," Traygan half-groaned.
"She was linked with Kinlafia, and somehow she held the link to
the end. Held it even while whoever the bastards were slaughtered
her crew—even her husband!—all around
her. And then—"
His face twisted with what chan
Tesh realized was the actual physical memory of the last moments
of Nargra-Kolmayr's transmission.
"She's dead?" chan Tesh
almost whispered.
"We don't know. We think she
hit her head, so she might just be unconscious." Traygan sounded
like a man whose emotions clung desperately to what his intellect
knew was false hope, chan Tesh thought grimly.
"All right, Rokam," he said. "Tell
me exactly what you know. Take your time. Make sure you tell me
everything."
It was the news a transport pilot
least wanted to hear.
Squire Muthok Salmeer's
quarters, such as they were, were almost adjacent to the hummer
tower. The handler on watch had handed the message straight to
Salmeer, and Salmeer had run all the way from his quarters to the
CO's office to deliver the ghastly news.
"Combat casualties?
Combat with what?" Commander of Five Hundred Sarr
Klian demanded incredulously as he scanned the message
transcript the duty communications tech had pulled off the
incoming hummer's crystal. It was, Salmeer recognized, what was
known as a rhetorical question, and the pilot waited tensely for the
five hundred to finish reading.
By the time he was done, Klian
was swearing blisters into Fort Rycharn's roughly finished
wooden walls. He glared at the authorizing sigil at the foot of the
message, then shook his head, looked up, and glared at Salmeer.
"He met someone from another
universe and attacked? Has Hundred Olderhan lost his
blue-blooded mind?"
"Sir," Salmeer said, leaning
forward and jabbing a finger at the two words in the entire
message which had meant the most to him, "I don't know who
attacked who, but he says he's got heavy casualties, Sir.
Whatever his reasons, whatever's going on out there, he needs a
med team. We've got to scramble one now, Five Hundred.
My dragon's got seven hundred miles to fly just to reach
the portal."
The pilot was almost dancing in
impatience. Sarr Klian swore once more, explosively. Then, as
Salmeer opened his mouth to protest the delay, Fort Rycharn's
commander shook his head savagely.
"Yes, yes, of course! Throw a
medical team into the saddle and go," he said sharply.
Salmeer paused just long enough
to throw an abbreviated salute. The five hundred returned it with
equal brevity, and Salmeer whipped around. He was already back
up to a run by the time he hit the door, but even so, he heard Klian
muttering behind him before the door closed.
"He attacked them?
What the fuck is Olderhan doing out there?"
Twenty minutes later, Fort
Rycharn's sole permanently assigned transport dragon was
lumbering out to the flightline, loaded with an emergency medical
transport platform, several canvas bags of medical supplies, two
surgeons, four herbalists, and Sword Naf Morikan, Charlie
Company's journeyman Gifted healer, whose R&R had just
been cut brutally short.
"Sir Jasak attacked?"
Morikan demanded as he fumbled his way into the saddle on the
already-moving dragon. "Attacked what, in the gods'
names? There's nothing out there!"
Salmeer bit his tongue to keep
himself from pointing out that there obviously was
something out there, since Sir Jasak Olderhan had gotten into a
blood-and-guts fight with whatever it was. The pilot found it
impossible to believe it really had been representatives of another
trans-universal civilization. That was simply too preposterous for
him to wrap his mind around without a lot more evidence.
But he didn't have any better explanation for what it might have
been than anyone else at Fort Rycharn did, and he reminded
himself that Morikan was Olderhan's company healer. He knew
every one of the men of Fifty Garlath's platoon personally. Of
course the noncom was worried half out of his mind.
"I have no idea, Sword," he said
instead. "Be sure your safety straps are buckled tight."
"Yes, Sir," Morikan replied.
"Ready when you are, Squire," he added after a moment, and
Salmeer gave Windclaw the signal.
The dragon launched quickly, as
if he'd caught his pilot's urgency, and he probably had. Windclaw
was a fine old beast, a century old last month, and as smart as a
transport ever got. Of course, that wasn't much compared to a
battle dragon, but Windclaw was no mental midget, and his
experience made him doubly valuable in the field, particularly in
an emergency. A canny old beast like Windclaw knew every trick
in the book for coaxing extra speed during an emergency flight.
Salmeer wished bitterly that
they'd had even one more dragon available to send with Windclaw,
but this universe was at the ass-end of nowhere, almost ninety
thousand miles from Old Arcana. Worse, it was over twenty-six
thousand miles back to the nearest sliderhead at the Green Haven
portal, and almost ten thousand of those miles were over-water. A
transport dragon like Windclaw could cover prodigious
distances—up to a thousand miles, or possibly a bit more in
a single day's flight—but then he had to rest. That
meant landing on something, and the water gaps between Fort
Rycharn and Green Haven were all wider than a dragon could
manage in a single leg.
That made getting anything
all the way to the fort an unmitigated pain in the ass. But
Salmeer was used to that, just as he was used to the fact that
Transport Command promotion was slow to the point of
nonexistence. Muthok Salmeer himself had almost thirty years in,
but he was never going to be a combat pilot, and he still hadn't
been promoted as high as a fifty. Taken for granted, overworked,
underappreciated, and underpaid: that was a Transport Command
pilot's lot in life, and most of them took the same sort of perverse
pride in it that Salmeer did.
None of which made his current
problem any more palatable.
The Arcanan military—
and the UTTTA civilian infrastructure, for that matter—
were notoriously casual about extending the slide rails out into
the boondocks. It was hard to fault their sense of priorities,
Salmeer supposed in his more charitable moments. After all, even
Green Haven boasted a total population of considerably less than
eight hundred thousand. That wasn't a lot of people, spread over
the surface of an entire virgin planet the size of Arcana itself, and
it wasn't as if other portals, much closer to Arcana, couldn't
supply anything the home world really needed. Exploration and
expansion were worthwhile in their own right, of course, and there
were always homesteaders, eager to stake claims to places of their
own. But simple economic realities meant the inner portals were
far more heavily developed and populated and invariably received
a far greater proportion of the Transit Authority's maintenance
resources as a result.
And it's the poor bloody transport pilots who make it all
possible, Salmeer thought bitterly. Not that anyone ever
notices.
He supposed it was inevitable,
but every bureaucrat, whether uniformed or civilian, seemed to
assume there would always be a transport dragon around when he
needed one. The sheer range a dragon made possible was
addictive, despite the fact that even a big, powerful, fully mature
beast like Windclaw could carry only a fraction of the load a slider
car could manage. Most of the freight that needed moving on the
frontiers was relatively light, after all. But the demands placed
upon the Air Force's Transport Command were still brutal. The
Command was always short of suitable dragons, and Cloudsail,
Windclaw's partner in the two-dragon teams which were supposed
to be deployed, had torn three of the sails in his right wing
colliding with a treetop. They'd had to ship him back to the main
portal for treatment, and, of course, there'd been no
replacement in the pipeline.
All of which explained why
Windclaw was the only dragon currently assigned to Fort Rycharn
when Salmeer was desperately afraid that Sir Jasak Olderhan
might well need far more than a single beast.
He glanced back, craning around
in the saddle which ran securely around the base of Windclaw's
neck, to be sure his passengers were still with him. Straps passed
behind the dragon's forelegs, as well, to keep the saddle from
slipping sideways. It put Salmeer in the best position to see where
Windclaw was going and to communicate his orders to the
dragon. Behind the saddle, Windclaw's back supported the
emergency medical lift platform—a low-slung,
aerodynamically streamlined lozenge made of canvas, leather, and
steel tubing.
The platform was broad enough
to accommodate two people lying flat beside one another, and
deep enough to allow for a bottom shelf and top shelf for the
storage of reasonably small items of cargo. It also ran most of the
way down Windclaw's spine, which made it long enough to permit
the transport of up to twenty critically injured people on stretchers
laid end-to-end. A turtle-backed windbreak of taut canvas was
stretched over the front two thirds of the framework to keep the
slipstream off the medical casualties during transport.
Passengers who weren't
incapacitated could ride in one of three saddles strapped in front
of the lozenge, and both surgeons and the Gifted healer had opted
to do so. All three wore helmets with full-length visors to keep the
wind—and insects—out of their faces during flight.
The herbalists, the most junior members of the medical team, rode
inside the transport lozenge itself.
The terrain below them was a
morass of mud, standing water, low-growing swamp forest, and
vast stretches of reed-filled marsh. Waterbirds by the hundreds of
thousands—probably by the millions, if he'd been able to
count them—were visible below, some winging their way
above the swamps, some dotting the marshes like a variegated
carpet in shades of gray, white, brown, and pink. Still others rested
among the trees, in what Salmeer suspected were vast rookeries,
given the season in this part of this particular universe.
It was a breathtaking sight, even
for a man accustomed to piloting transport dragons through empty
universes. He loved the vast sweep of nature at its pristine best,
and vistas like this one still raised his spirits. A wry grin formed
behind the wind shield fastened to his leather-padded steel riding
helmet. Despite all of his complaining about overwork and lack of
respect, there was a reason he'd signed up for the Air Force, after
all! He always felt sorry for the soldiers who had to slog across
most universes on foot, like the Andaran Scouts did.
Shaylar walked in a daze,
stumbling forward at Jathmar's side. He lay so still she would
have been afraid he was dead if not for the faintest of flutters
under her fingertips, where his pulse beat against the skin. It was
the only way she could tell he wasn't, because she couldn't sense
him through the marriage bond at all. Black acid lay at the core of
her brain, preventing anything—even Jathmar—from
connecting.
It was terrifying, that silence.
And yet, given the agony he was in, or would be when he awoke, it
might be a mercy, as well.
Her world had shrunk to a tightly
constricted sphere around herself and Jathmar's hand. Everything
beyond was lost in a haze, out of focus and rumbling with a
strange, muted roar, like freight trains whispering in the distance.
The strongest reality was the unrelenting, raw agony inside her
own head—an ache with spiked heels, doing a raucous
Arpathian blade dance behind her temples and eyelids.
She had no idea how much time
had passed since the attack, no idea how far she would be forced
to struggle through this endless wilderness. Her awareness faded
in and out, unpredictably, with an occasional louder noise close
by. An explosive crack as a dried branch broke under someone's
foot; a murmur of voices speaking alien gibberish. The sounds
whirled around her like a slow cyclone, leaving her lost and dizzy
in the middle of nothing at all . . .
She awoke brutally, with her
face against something rough and uneven. Ground, she thought
distantly. The roughness was the ground, covered with drifts of
leaves. Confusion shook her like a terrier with a wounded rat, and
voices rose in alarm on all sides. For long, terrifying moments she
had no idea where she was, or why. Then memory slammed her
down, and she bit back the scream building in her throat. She
wanted to fall back into the delicious nothingness, couldn't find
the strength to face what had happened or was yet to happen.
Someone was sobbing
uncontrollably, and she realized slowly that it was her.
Then a voice came to her. It was
a gentle voice, the voice of a woman whose name she knew but
couldn't find in her broken memory. An equally gentle hand
touched her hair, and the whirling confusion steadied. The voice
came again, more sharply focused this time, and someone's arms
were around her. They lifted her gently, laid her on a soft surface.
Cloth, she realized. Cloth
cradling her from head to toe. She collapsed against it, sinking
into its supporting embrace, boneless with gratitude for the chance
to simply lie still and rest.
"Is she asleep?"
Gadrial glanced up. Sir Jasak
Olderhan was bent over her shoulder, peering worriedly at Shaylar,
his eyes dark.
"Very nearly," she said. "Let's get
her litter up to transport height."
She let Wilthy adjust the
levitation spell in the accumulator. Once Shaylar was floating
between waist and hip height, Wilthy passed guidance control to a
strapping soldier with a bandage on one thigh and livid bruises
across the right side of his face. The trooper's expression as he
gazed down at the slender girl was a curious blend of wonder and
apprehension, as though he expected her to mutate into a basilisk
at any moment. Given the damage Shaylar had helped inflict on the
soldier's unit, Gadrial supposed the analogy might be apt, at that.
She watched the litter float away,
then drew a deep breath and looked up at the afternoon sky visible
through occasional breaks in the leaf canopy. It was later than she
liked, for their progress had been agonizingly slow, with twelve
litters to guide through primeval wilderness and far too few able-
bodied soldiers to do the piloting. They should have been no more
than twelve hours' hike from the portal when they began their
homeward trek, but she was beginning to fear that Jasak's twenty-
five-hour estimate had been too optimistic.
"You're worried," Jasak said
quietly.
"Terrified!" she snapped, then bit
her lip. "I'm sorry. But Shaylar isn't strong. I think there's some
internal injury, something inside her skull. I'm trying to keep it
stabilized, but it takes constant attention, and I think she's slipping
away from me slowly, anyway. And Jathmar—"
She lifted both hands helplessly
in admission of a deep, unfamiliar sense of total inadequacy, and
saw Jasak's face tighten.
"If we could only get a transport
dragon in here," he murmured. His voice trailed off, but then,
suddenly, his eyes snapped to life. He, too, glanced skyward for a
moment, obviously thinking hard, then nodded sharply.
"It might just be possible," he
muttered to himself, then refocused on Gadrial. "Excuse me," he
said, almost abruptly, and wheeled away, walking straight to
Javelin Shulthan.
"Send another hummer back to
camp, Iggy," he said. "Tell Krankark to send the medical
evacuation team through the portal the instant it reaches camp.
Have them meet us at the stream where Osmuna was mur—
"
He paused, glancing at the litters
where Jathmar and Shaylar lay crumpled and broken, and the verb
he'd been about to use died in his throat.
"At the stream where Osmuna
died," he said instead, looking back at Shulthan. "A transport
dragon should have the wing room to take off if he flies down the
streambed. Tell Krankark to send a reply hummer, homed in on
these coordinates, to confirm receipt of our message. Stay here
until it returns, then catch up to us at the stream. It's less than ten
minutes from here to the portal for a hummer, so you shouldn't
have to wait too long."
"Yes, Sir!"
The hummer shot away through
the trees less than two minutes later, like a feathered crossbow
bolt. Jasak watched it disappear into the towering forest, willing it
to even greater speed, then turned to find Sword Harnak with his
eyes.
"Let's get them moving again,
Sword," he said briskly. "We're heading for the stream where
Osmuna died."
Jasak was grateful that he'd
entered the exact coordinates for the spot of Osmuna's death into
his personal navigation unit. He'd done it for the purposes of
making sure his report was complete and accurate, of course, but
now it was going to serve a second, even more important purpose.
With that for guidance, they could follow a cross-country course
directly to the same place, and they set back out, moving
steadily . . . and unbearably slowly.
Someone's litter hung up on something every few
moments, which made walking a straight line—difficult in
this kind of terrain, under any circumstances—outright
impossible. Only the coordinates in Jasak's nav unit made it
possible to follow a reliable bearing towards their destination at
all, and the terrain was actually rougher on their new heading.
Jasak winced inside every time
one of his wounded men stumbled, or cursed under his breath, or
blanched, flinching as an unexpected, leaf-hidden foot-trap jarred
his ripped and torn flesh. As a first combat experience, it—
and he—had been a dismal failure, he thought. Too many
good men were wounded or dead, and he still had no answers. He
hadn't prayed—really prayed, and meant it—in years,
but he did now. He prayed no one else would die out here; that no
one else would pay for his errors in judgment. And while he
prayed, he moved among his men as they struggled forward,
pausing to murmur an encouragement here, to jolly someone into
a painful smile there, anything to keep them on their feet and
moving forward.
He wasn't sure he'd made the
right decision now, either. But he'd made it, for good or ill, and
the sound of the stream, musical and lovely in the silence, was a
blessed sound as it guided them across the last, weary stumbling
yards to its banks several hours later.
The sun was barely a hand's
width above the treetops when they finally caught sight of the
rushing, sparkle-bright water. Jasak longed to fling himself down,
surrender at least briefly to his fatigue and the pain of his own
wounded side, give himself just a few moments of rest as a reward
for getting his survivors this far. But this late in the season, and
this far north, full darkness would be upon them quickly. The
rescue party couldn't possibly reach them before nightfall, and
probably not before dawn, and the night promised to be clear and
cold. Some of his wounded would die before sunrise without a
hot fire . . . and Jathmar would be
among them.
So Jasak didn't fling himself
down. Instead, he ordered his exhausted men to pitch camp. He put
those still capable of heavy manual labor to work cutting enough
firewood to keep half a dozen bonfires going all night, asked
Gadrial to check on his own wounded as soon as she'd tended to
Jathmar and Shaylar, and then got a work party of walking
wounded organized to assemble the tiny two-man tents they used
only during the worst rainstorms into a single tarpaulin large
enough to shelter all of the critically injured.
Lance Inkar Jaboth got busy
cobbling together a hot meal from trail rations, local wild plants,
and what Jasak had always suspected was a dollop of magic.
Something made the concoctions Jaboth whipped up for
special occasions—and emergencies—not just
edible, but actually palatable. Whatever it was, it would be
a gift from the gods themselves, under conditions like these. Jasak
wished it had been possible to detach someone to hunt game for
the pot, but he'd needed every able-bodied man he still had just to
transport the wounded. Besides, if there were soldiers close
enough to that other portal, out there, Jasak might find himself
facing counterattack tonight. Under the circumstances, he
had no arbalest bolts to waste.
He set perimeter guards and
established a sentry rotation that would take them through the
night. He put his best, most reliable troopers on the graveyard
watch, the long, cold hours between midnight and first dawn. The
men were spooked enough, as it was; he didn't want some
overwrought trooper with a bad case of vengeance on his mind
firing an infantry-dragon at shadows. Or worse, at Otwal
Threbuch, returning from the portal they'd come here to find.
By the time darkness fell, half a
dozen small bonfires crackled, driving back the pitch-black
shadows under the trees and warming the crisp night air. Jasak
worried about providing a homing beacon for a possible enemy
scouting force or counterattack, but they had to have the warmth.
So he did his best by moving his sentries as far out as he dared,
then saw to his people, pausing at each fire to speak with
exhausted soldiers, praising their courage under fire and seeing
that their wounds were properly dressed.
Those wounds horrified him.
The sheer amount of trauma
made him wonder just how much force was behind those tiny lead
lumps. None of the bland metal cylinders they'd found looked
dangerous enough to cause this kind of damage. Some of the
wounds, they'd inflicted like the one in his own stiffening,
throbbing side, were long, shallow trenches gouged out of skin
and muscle at the surface. Others were more serious. Korval, one
of his assistant dragon gunners, would never have the use of his
left hand again. Not, at least, without some very serious Gifted
healing. Korval had just unwrapped the bloodied bandages,
waiting white-faced while the water heated over the fires so the
wound could be properly washed, as Jasak crouched down to
look. The bones had shattered, and the muscles and tendons
looked as if they had literally exploded from within.
Korval looked up, met his
shocked gaze, and managed a wan smile.
"Could've been worse, Sir.
Might've been through m'balls, eh?"
"Watch your language, Soldier,"
Jasak growled. "There are ladies present." But he gave Korval's
shoulder a hard squeeze and said. "You did a damned fine job
today, keeping that dragon crewed under heavy fire. I've never seen
anyone operate an infantry-dragon one-handed. Frankly, I don't
know how you did it. I'll send Ambor to dress that properly; there
should be some herbs in his kit to help with pain, at least," he
added.
"That'd be just fine with me,
Sir," Korval said, and Jasak smiled and gave the wounded man's
shoulder another squeeze.
Then he moved on, still smiling,
while behind his expression he cursed his own decision to send his
company surgeon back to the coast with Fifty Ulthar's platoon for
R&R. Layrak Ambor was rated surgeon's assistant, but he
was only an herbalist, with neither the trained skill of a field
surgeon, nor a Gift. But he was doing his dead level best, and he
was far better than nothing. However limited his skills might be,
Jasak was thankful they had at least that much medical help to add
to Gadrial's healing Gift.
The men who'd been shot
through the body, rather than an extremity, were in serious
condition. Most were still shock-pale, and the low moans of
grievously wounded men, floating above the steady, musical tones
of rushing water, left Jasak Olderhan feeling helpless and useless.
Anything he could do for them was hopelessly inadequate, and
while cursing Garlath relieved some of his own emotional
pressure, it did nothing to ease their suffering.
He paused briefly at the
makeshift tent where Ambor worked frantically to keep their
worst casualties alive. When Jasak hunkered down beside him, the
herbalist was nearly wild-eyed, overwhelmed by the sheer number
of ghastly wounds he had to treat, and by the appalling number of
lives held in his trembling hands.
"You're doing a fine job,
Ambor," Jasak said quietly. "Under conditions like these, no one
could do better. Where can Magister Kelbryan help the most?"
A little of the wild panic left
Ambor's eyes. He swallowed, then looked around his charges,
obviously thinking hard.
"Ask her to look after Nilbor and
Urkins, if you would, Sir. They're in bad shape. Gut wounds, the
both of them, Sir. Unconscious and in shock, despite everything
I've tried, and they're getting weaker. Without the
Magister—"
He shrugged helplessly, and
Jasak nodded.
"I'll send her in immediately."
"Thank you, Sir."
Ambor looked and sounded
steadier, and the heat of the fire just outside the casualty tent was
beginning to take hold, radiating at least a fragile comfort over the
semi-conscious wounded. Jasak paused for just a moment,
looking back at the herbalist over his shoulder, then strode quickly
back out into the darkness.
He found Gadrial kneeling
beside his injured prisoners. The tender look on her face as she
stroked Jathmar's scorched hair with gentle fingertips, sounding
his pulse with her other hand, touched something deep inside
Jasak. He, too, was worried about the unconscious man. Jathmar
hadn't roused even once, although that might have been as much
Gadrial's doing as the result of his injuries.
Gadrial looked up as Jasak
approached Jathmar's litter, which someone had adjusted to float
ten inches above the ground.
"You need me for someone
else?" she asked, and he nodded, his expression unhappy at the
demands he was placing upon her.
"How are you holding up?" he
asked quietly, and her eyes widened, as though his question had
surprised her. Then a smile touched her lips.
"I'm tired, Sir Jasak, but I'll
manage. Where do you need me?"
"In the tent. We've got two men
Ambor's losing—belly wounds, both of them. They've
slipped into a coma."
She paled and bit her lower lip,
then simply nodded and rose in one graceful, fluid motion he
couldn't possibly have duplicated. He escorted her into the tent,
then stepped back outside, giving her privacy to work.
He looked around the bivouac
one last time, then inhaled deeply. He'd done everything he could
to settle everyone safely, however little it felt like to him, and
curiosity was riding him with spurs of fire. Since there wasn't
much else he could do about any of their other problems, he
decided he could at least scratch that itch, and pulled out some of
the strange equipment they'd recovered, both from the stockade
and from the massive toppled timber.
He took great care with the long,
tubular weapons every man—and women—had
carried. There seemed to be several different types or varieties of
them, and he rapidly discovered that they were intricate
mechanical marvels, far more complex than any war staff his own
people had built. Of course, war staffs—including the
infantry and field-dragons which had been developed from
them—were actually quite simple, mechanically speaking.
They merely provided a place to store battle spells, and a sarkolis-
crystal guide tube, down which the destructive spells were
channeled on their way to the target.
Jasak had no idea what
mysterious properties these tubular weapons operated upon. Nor
could he figure out what many of the parts did, but he
recognized precision engineering when he saw it.
A dragoon arbalest, like the one
Otwal Threbuch favored, used a ten-round magazine and a spell-
enhanced cocking lever. The augmented lever required a force of
no more than twenty pounds to operate, and an arbalestier could
fire all ten rounds as quickly as he could work the lever. It had
almost as much punch—albeit over a shorter
range—as the standard, single-shot infantry weapon, and a
vastly higher rate of fire, but no man ever born was strong enough
to throw the cocking lever once the enhancing spell was
exhausted. Infantry weapons were much heavier, as well as bigger,
and used a carefully designed mechanical advantage. They
might be difficult to span without enhancement, but it could be
done—which could be a decided advantage when the magic
ran out—and they were considerably longer ranged.
The workmanship which went
into a dragoon arbalest had always impressed Jasak, but the
workmanship of whoever had built these weapons matched it, at
the very least. Still, he would have liked to know what all of that
craftsmanship did. Even the parts whose basic function he
suspected he could guess raised far more questions than they
answered.
For example, the weapon he was
examining at the moment was about forty-two inches long, over
all. The tube through which those small, deadly projectiles passed
was shorter—only about twenty-four inches long—
and it carried what he recognized as at least a distant cousin of the
ring-and-post battle sights mounted on an arbalest. But the rear
sight on this weapon was set in an odd metal block
mounted on a sturdy, rectangular steel frame about one inch
across. The sides of the rectangle were no more than a thirty-
second of an inch across, as nearly as his pocket rule could
measure, and it frame could either lie flat or be flipped up into a
vertical position.
When it was flipped into the
upright position, a second rear sight, set into the same
metal block as the first, but at right angles, rotated up for the
shooter's use. But the supporting steel rectangle was notched, and
etched with tiny lines with some sort of symbols which (he
suspected) were probably numbers, and the sight could be slid up
and down the frame, locked into place at any one of those tiny,
engraved lines by a spring-loaded catch that engaged in the side's
notches.
Jasak had spent enough time on
the arbalest range to know all about elevating his point of aim to
allow for the drop in the bolt's trajectory at longer ranges. Unless
he missed his guess, that was the function of this weapon's
peculiar rear sight, as well. If so, it was an ingenious device,
which was simultaneously simple in concept and very
sophisticated in execution. But what frightened him about it was
how high the rear sight could be set and the degree of elevation
that would impose. Without a better idea of the projectiles'
velocity and trajectory, he couldn't be certain, of course, but
judging from the damage they'd inflicted, this weapon's projectiles
must move at truly terrifying velocities. Which, in turn, suggested
they would have a much flatter trajectory.
Which, assuming the
sophisticated, intelligent people who'd designed and built it hadn't
been in the habit of providing sights to shoot beyond the weapon's
effective range, suggested that it must be capable of accurate
shooting at ranges far in excess of any arbalest he'd ever
seen.
There was a long metal oval
underneath the weapon. It was obviously made to go up and down,
and he suspected that it had to be something like the cocking lever
on Threbuch's dragoon arbalest. In any case, he had absolutely no
intention of fiddling with it until they were in more secure
territory, away from potential enemy contact. And when he let the
very tip of his finger touch the curved metal spur jutting down
into the guarded space created by a curve in the metal oval, his
fingertips jerked back of their own volition. That startled him,
although only for a moment. Obviously, that curved spur was the
weapon's trigger—it even looked like the trigger on one of
his own men's arbalest's—and his meager Gift was warning
him that it was more dangerous than the cocking lever (if that is
what it was).
The metal tube itself was made
from high-grade steel, and when he peered—very
cautiously—into it, adjusting it to get a little firelight into
the hollow bore, he saw what looked like spiraling grooves cut
into the metal. Interesting. The Arcanan Army understood the
principal of spinning a crossbow bolt in flight to give it greater
stability and accuracy. He couldn't quite imagine how it might
work, but was it possible that those spiraling grooves could do the
same thing to the deadly little leaden projectiles this thing
threw?
He put that question aside and
turned his attention to the snug wooden sleeve into which the tube
had been fitted. It was held in place with three wide bands of metal
that weren't steel. They looked like bronze, perhaps. The wood
itself continued behind the tube to form a buttplate—again,
not unlike an arbalest's—so a full third of the weapon's
length was solid wood.
The long, tapering section of
wood, narrowest near the tube, widest at the weapon's base, had
been beautifully checkered by some intricate cutting process. It
was the only decoration on the weapon, and it was obviously as
much a practical design feature as pure decoration. As Jasak
handled it, he realized that the checkering would serve exactly the
same function as the fishscale pattern cut into the forestocks of
arbalests, making them easier to grip in wet weather.
Other items ranged from the
obvious—camp shovels, hatchets, backpacks—to the
completely mysterious, and he gradually realized that what
wasn't there was as interesting as what was. Although
Jasak searched diligently, he found no trace of maps or charts
anywhere in their gear. He found notebooks, with detailed
botanical drawings and startlingly accurate sketches of wildlife,
but no trace of a single chart.
The implication was clear; they'd
realized—or, feared, at least—that their position was
hopeless, so they'd destroyed the evidence of where they'd been. If
they were, indeed, a civilian version of Jasak's Scouts, working to
survey new universes and map new portals, they would have
carried detailed charts that showed the route back to their home
universe. From a military standpoint, losing those maps was a
major disaster for Arcana. From a political
standpoint . . .
Jasak thought about the reaction
news of this battle was bound to trigger—particularly in
places like rabidly xenophobic Mythal, whose politicians trusted
no one, not even themselves. Especially not themselves.
As he thought about them and their probable response, Jasak
Olderhan was abruptly glad these people had destroyed their maps,
even as the Andaran officer in him recoiled from such blatant
heresy.
He told the Andaran officer to
shut up, and that shocked him, too. Yet he couldn't help it, for a
shiver had caught him squarely between the shoulder blades, an
odd prescience quivering through him like a warning of bloodshed
and disaster.
Than a log snapped in the fire,
jolting him out of his eerie reverie, and the uncanny shiver passed,
leaving him merely chilled in the night air. He rubbed the prickled
hairs on the back of his neck, trying to smooth them down again,
and his glance was caught by a small, flat circular object lying
wedged into the box of jumbled gear at his feet. He picked it up,
and was surprised by its weight. The object was made of metal,
rolled or cast to form a strong metal casing. After fiddling with it
for a couple of moments, he determined that the top section was a
lid that unscrewed. He removed
it . . . and stared.
Inside were
two . . . machines, he decided, not
knowing what else to call them. In the lid section, there was a
glass cover that sealed off a thin metallic needle, flat and dark
against a white background. Tiny hatchmarks were spaced evenly
around the circular "face" with neat, almost military precision.
More alien symbols—letters or numbers, he was
certain—marked off eight points around the perimeter.
Someone moved beside the
casualty tent, and Jasak glanced up, automatically checking to see
if it had been Gadrial. It hadn't, and when he turned back to the
device in his hand, his gaze snapped back to the needle. He'd
moved the case with the rest of his body, but the needle—
which appeared to be floating on a post, able to spin
freely—hadn't moved with the rest of the case. Or, rather, it
had moved, swinging stubbornly around to point in the
same direction as before despite the case's movement.
The discovery startled him, so he
experimented, and found that no matter how he turned the case
around, the needle swung doggedly to point in the exact same
direction: north.
Understanding dawned like a
thunderclap. It was a navigation device. But this was no
spell-powered personal crystal that oriented its owner to the
cardinal directions, as every Arcanan compass ever built did. It
was nothing but a flat needle on a post, an incredibly simple
mechanical device, powered by nothing he could see. How the
devil did it work?
The bottom section of the metal
case was much heavier than the lid, providing most of the heft he'd
noticed when he first picked it up. Clearly, it housed something
dense, and this object, too, had a flat glass face, under which lay
another dial with hatchmarks, and another series of letters or
numbers of some kind, beside each of the twelve longest hatch
lines. There were three needles on this device: a short one
which scarcely seemed to move at all; a long one which moved
slowly; and a very thin one that moved continuously, sweeping
around the dial in endless circles.
Its purpose, too, came in a flash
of understanding as the slow, audible click-click of the long
needle reminded him of the changing numbers in his personal
crystal's digital time display. Yet this was no spell-powered
device, either. Or, he didn't think so, at any rate. He discovered a
small knob at one side which could be pulled out slightly to
change the positions of the needles, or simply turned in place.
Turning it without pulling it out resulted in a slight clicking sound
inside the device, and a gradually stiffening resistance which
increased the pressure needed to turn the knob. He stopped before
it got too stiff to turn at all, lest he damage it by trying to force it.
He laid the two halves of the
case in his lap, gazing down at them in the firelight, and frowned
in unhappy contemplation. He was no magister, but his touch of
Gift should have been enough to at least recognize the presence of
any sort of spellware. Yet he hadn't detected even the slightest
twitch of magic. He would have liked to believe that that meant
the weapons he'd examined had exhausted whatever powered
them, but he knew that wasn't the case.
Instead, what he had was a
weapon which had amply proved its deadly efficiency; a navigation
device which, for all its simplicity, looked damnably effective; and
another device which obviously kept very precise track of time,
indeed.
And none of them—not one of them—depended on spellware or a Gift. Which
meant they would work for anyone, anytime, anywhere.
The night wind blew suddenly
chill, indeed.
Chapter Twelve
The sun had disappeared into
darkness when Windclaw reached the swamp portal camp after
almost seven, arduous hours of high-speed flight. There were few
landmarks to navigate by, but the camp's scattered lights stood out
sharply against the unrelieved blackness of a world mankind had
discovered considerably less than a year earlier.
Windclaw backwinged neatly to
a landing between the base camp's tents and the portal itself. An
icy breeze blew across the camp from the portal, rustling the dead
trees that speared into the sky on the other side, rattling the reeds
on this one. The vast sweep of black-velvet heaven visible above
the trees revealed brilliant stars, in an unnerving northern
constellation pattern, vastly different from the southern
skies it was pasted across.
It didn't seem to matter how
many portals Salmeer saw or stepped through; the spine tingling
awe never changed, and he'd been flying portal hops for the better
part of thirty years.
Windclaw had barely furled his
wings when a soldier ran across the muddy ground, holding what
proved to be the transcript of another hummer message. He
climbed up the foreleg Windclaw had been trained to offer, and
Salmeer recognized him. He didn't know Javelin Kranark
especially well, but he'd always impressed Salmeer as a competent
trooper, utterly dedicated not only to the second Andaran Scouts,
but also to Hundred Olderhan.
"Thank the gods you're here,
Squire!" Kranark panted as he handed Salmeer the transcript. "The
Hundred's halted at these grid coordinates. He didn't dare keep
moving his wounded after dark. He needs you to bring the dragon
through for an emergency evacuation of the worst wounded."
Salmeer stared at Kranark in
disbelief. He hadn't taken Windclaw through the portal, but he'd
made enough deliveries to the base camp when it was daylight on
the far side to have a pretty fair grasp of the sort of
terrain—and tree cover—waiting on the other side.
"Is he out of his mind?" the pilot
demanded harshly. "He wants me to try to set a dragon
down out in the middle of those fucking woods?"
"You can't do it?" The javelin's
expression was barely visible in the darkness, but the horror in his
voice was clear, and Salmeer winced. The critically wounded men
out there were this man's brothers in arms, the closest thing he had
to a family out here.
"I've seen that canopy out there,
and it's murder," the pilot said in a marginally gentle voice,
waving one hand at the looming portal. "I haven't actually flown
over it, not in that universe, anyway. But I've seen plenty
of forests like it. That's a solid sea of trees, Kranark, stretching for
hundreds of miles. A transport dragon can't slide sideways
between branches that are damned near interwoven!"
"Is that all?" Kranark replied,
hope glittering in his voice once more. "The Hundred said he's
camped along an open stream. He says there's plenty of wing room
for a skilled dragon to get in and take off again."
"'Skilled dragon,' huh?"
Salmeer muttered, interpreting that phrase to mean there was just
enough clear space for it to be dangerous as hell, but doable. . . if
your set was big enough, and your brain small enough, to
try it.
In, of course, the opinion of a
man who wasn't—and never had been—a qualified
dragon pilot himself.
There are old pilots, and there are bold pilots, but
there are no old, bold pilots. The flight school training
mantra ran through the back of his mind, and he hovered on the
brink of refusing. After all, Windclaw was an incredibly valuable
asset out here. If Salmeer flew him into a treetop, then the
possibility of evacuating any of the wounded to Fort
Rycharn went straight out the window.
"Just how many casualties are
there?" he asked, temporizing while common sense fought against
his own sense of urgency.
Kranark's muscles seemed to
congeal. The javelin went absolutely motionless, and his voice
went wooden and hollow.
"There were twenty-one. There
are only twenty now. Hundred Olderhan took a full platoon
through the portal—sixty-seven men, counting the
supports. Twenty-five of them are dead now."
"Mother Jambakol's eyelashes!"
The filthy curse broke loose before he could stop it, and he made a
furtive sign to ward off "Mother Jambakol's" evil glance.
"Please, Sir." Krankark gripped
his arm. "Please, at least try," he begged. "All the
Hundred's got out there is an herbalist. We've got men
unconscious, and the Hundred says Ambor can't bring them out of
the coma. . . . "
Krankark's voice shook, and
Sword Morikan leaned forward behind Salmeer's shoulder.
"Their situation's desperate, Sir.
You've got to get me to those men. I can't Heal that many with
magic alone, but I can save the most critically wounded, and we've
got trained surgeons for the others. Except that unless I get there
soon—and from the sound of it, we're talking about
minutes, not hours—the death count's going to get worse.
Feel that wind blowing through the portal? Badly wounded men
won't last the night in that, even with a good hot campfire."
Salmeer swore again.
"All right. All right, I'll get you
there, Sword. I won't take Windclaw in unless I decide
there's enough room to get airborne again, but I'll lower you
through the trees on a frigging rope, if I have to."
Morikan nodded sharply, and
Salmeer looked past the healer at the two surgeons and the
herbalists.
"I need to lighten the payload,
especially if I've got wounded to haul out," he said. "You two
dismount and wait for us here."
One of the surgeons looked a
question at Morikan, who nodded again, as sharply as before.
"Go ahead, Traith," he said. "I'll
take Vormak and two of the herbalists with me; you and the other
two can set up here and be ready to work by the time the Squire
and I get back. Don't worry," he smiled grimly, "it sounds like
we're all going to have plenty to keep us occupied."
Salmeer snorted in bitter
amusement and agreements, then turned back to Krankark as two
of the herbalists and the surgeon Morikan had addressed began
unstrapping and climbing down with their equipment.
"OK, Javelin. You've convinced
me," he said. "Jump down so I can get this boy airborne." The pilot
smiled thinly. "Hell, he may just be crazy enough to actually try
landing if I ask him to!"
He took the printout the javelin
thrust into his hand, with the all-important coordinates of
Hundred Olderhan's camp. Then, the moment Krankark and the
others were clear, Salmeer patted Windclaw's neck and urged the
dragon back aloft.
Windclaw took a running start,
snapped his great wings wide, and lifted slowly, rumbling into the
air across the open campsite. Windclaw needed nearly a hundred
yards just to reach treetop height, because he was big, even for a
transport dragon. That gave him lots of lifting power, but he was
simply too large and too slow to lift off on his tail, the way some
of the smaller fighting dragons could. The fighters—
especially the ones bred to go after enemy gryphons—had
to be fast and agile, since gryphons were small, swift, and brutally
difficult to catch in midair.
Salmeer didn't usually mind
Windclaw's lack of agility. Tonight, though, it might pose a major
problem. But it might not, too, he reminded himself loyally, for he
was proud of his dragon. He and Windclaw didn't share any sort of
special bond, like the ones bred into some of the more
spectacularly expensive pets wealthy Arcanans sometimes
commissioned. No pilot or dragon did. But he'd come to know his
beast's moods and temperament. They'd come
to . . . respect one another, and
Windclaw was fond enough of him—in a dragonish sort of
way—to make their working relationship satisfying on both
sides, and tonight, Windclaw's decades of experience might just
make up for his lack of nimbleness.
Now Salmeer whistled sharply,
and the dragon made a wide circle, building speed as he flew.
Starlight and moonlight burnished his wings with a metallic
shimmer, glittering as they touched the elaborate wing patterns
that represented Windclaw's pedigree, as well as his current unit
assignment, They swept around toward the opening between
universes, gaining speed and more altitude with every wing stroke.
By the time he actually reached the portal, Windclaw was moving
at very nearly his top velocity and climbing steeply to clear the
trees on its far side.
They flashed through the portal,
with the inevitable pop of equalizing air pressure in one's inner
ear; then they were climbing through clear, cold night air.
Windclaw straightened the angle of his climb and leveled out,
cruising through a crystalline night sky ablaze with stars and a
wondrous moon which wasn't the same one they'd left behind.
Salmeer tapped his personal
crystal with the spell-powered stylus that allowed him to plug in
Hundred Olderhan's grid coordinates, even though Salmeer
himself had no Gift at all, and the crystal obediently displayed a
standard navigational grid, with the familiar compass points in a
sphere around the circle that represented Windclaw. A blinking
green arrow pointed the direction to fly, giving Salmeer a
beautifully clear, easy-to-read three-dimensional display to
follow. When they reached the target zone, a steady red circle
would appear, directly at the grid coordinates Hundred Olderhan
had sent.
But before that red circle
appeared, they had a good, swift bit of flying to
do . . . not to mention the minor
matter of figuring out how to thread the needle and land a dragon
Windclaw's size, in the middle of the night, along the banks of a
frigging stream, of all godsdamned things!
Squire Muthok Salmeer shook
his head, not quite able to believe even now that he'd agreed to
this. Then he set himself to ignore the biting chill and concentrated
instead on the warmth of the extra layer of clothes under his flying
jacket and a truly spectacular sky awash with brilliant stars.
Shaylar awoke to darkness,
confusion, and the scent of woodsmoke. For long moments, she
lay completely still, trying to figure out where she was. She
remembered the attack, the frightful cremation of the dead, the
strange device they'd used to lift Jathmar and their other wounded
on floating stretchers. She even remembered walking beside
Jathmar, holding his hand as they evacuated the contact area. But
she couldn't figure out where she was now, which suggested a
prolonged period of unconsciousness. That made sense, although
very little else did. Her head still throbbed with a fierce rhythm,
and she still couldn't hear Jathmar, but she felt more rested, which
was a mercy.
Unfortunately, she was also
beginning to feel the bruises and contusions where that last
fireball had blasted her into the fallen tree. Her face was painfully
scraped along one cheek and jaw, and the deep abrasions stung like
fire. Bruises left that whole side of her face swollen, and they
were probably a lurid shade of purple-black by now. She reached
up to touch the damage, only to abort the movement when her
entire shoulder locked up. A white-hot lance of fire shot straight
up the side of her neck, and she hissed aloud in pain.
Someone spoke practically into
her ear, and she gasped in surprise, skittered sideways—
—and promptly rolled off
the edge of whatever she'd been lying on. She bit off a scream, but
the fall to the ground was only about ten inches. Which was still
more than enough to knock the wind out of her and jar her
painfully, especially with her previous injuries.
Whoever had spoken leaned over
her almost before she landed, making worried sounds that quickly
turned soothing. Gentle hands straightened her bent limbs and
tested her pulse, and Shaylar whimpered, cursing the pain that
exploded through her with every movement.
Her eyes opened, and she looked
up.
She couldn't remember his name,
but she knew his face: the enemy commander. He was speaking
softly to her, his gaze worried and intense. She hissed aloud and
flinched back when he touched the bruises along her jaw with a
gentle finger, and his face drained white at the pain sound. What
was obviously a stuttering apology broke from him, and she
wanted to reassure him. But the unending pain and fear and the
silence in her mind left her weak, and far too susceptible to new
shocks. She was horrified to discover that all she could do was lie
on the cold ground and weep large, silent tears that stung her eyes
and clogged her nose.
He bit his lip, then very carefully
lifted her. Even through her misery, she was astonished by his
strength. She knew she wasn't a large woman, but he lifted her as
easily as if she'd been a child, and he held her as if she'd been one,
too. A part of her was bitterly ashamed of her weakness, but as he
held her close, she rested the undamaged side of her face against
his broad shoulder.
He'd been wounded himself, her
muzzy memory told her, yet there was no evidence of any
discomfort on his part as he held her. He didn't rock her, didn't
croon any lullabies, didn't even speak. He simply held her, and
despite everything, despite even the fact that he was the
commander of the men who'd massacred her entire survey team,
there was something immensely comforting about the way he did
it.
Perhaps, a small, lucid corner of
her brain thought, her Talent was still working, at least a little.
That was the only explanation she could think of for why she
should feel so safe, so . . . protected
in the arms of these murderers' commanding officer.
She was never clear afterward on
how long he held her, but, finally, her tears slowed, then stopped.
He held her a moment longer, then very carefully placed her back
onto one of the eerie, floating stretchers. When she began to
shiver, he produced something like a sleeping bag, which he
tucked around her. Then he moved her entire stretcher with a
single touch, guiding it closer to a bonfire that warmed her
deliciously within moments.
The shivers eased away, leaving
her limp and exhausted, but she didn't go back to sleep. Her mind
was strangely alert, yet wrapped in fog. It was a disquieting
sensation, but she found it easier to cope if she just relaxed and let
herself drift, rather than struggling to make everything come clear.
Thinking clearly was obviously important, perhaps even critical, in
her current predicament, but she couldn't see any sense in
struggling to do something physically impossible at the moment.
So she lay still on her strange,
floating bed, and wondered in a distant, abstracted sort of way,
how these people made their stretchers float. There was no logical
explanation for it, any more than there were logical explanations
for the other mysteries she'd already witnessed: glassy tubes that
threw fireballs with no visible source of flame. Seemingly
identical tubes that hurled lightning, instead of fire. The odd little
cubes that had somehow packed enough explosive force to
immolate an entire human body—yet did so without any
actual explosion, just a sudden and inexplicable burst of flame.
Sorcery, the back of her wounded brain whispered, and
Shaylar was so befuddled, so lost in this unending bad dream, that
she didn't even quibble with her own choice of words. Whatever
these people used for technology, it looked, sounded, and even
smelled like magic. At least, it did to her admittedly addled
senses.
As she drifted there in the
darkness, she gradually became aware of something else. The scent
of food tickled her nostrils, and despite the pounding in her head
and the lingering bite of nausea in her throat, sudden, ravening
hunger surged to life. The last food she'd eaten had been a hastily
bolted lunch, just before Falsan staggered into camp and died in
her arms. She had no idea how long ago that had been, or what
time it was now, but the stars were brilliant overhead, and the
moon was high, nearly straight overhead. It had obviously been up
for hours.
It was the middle of the night,
then, which left her puzzled by the smell of something cooking
over a fire. Most people tramping about in the wilderness did their
cooking early in the evening, at or shortly after sundown. But then
the commander returned to her, with a bowl and spoon. He smiled
and said something that sounded reassuring, and helped her sit up.
Her stretcher continued to float, rock steady despite the fact that it
was only canvas and ought to have shifted as she moved. Its
motionlessness was yet another strangeness she couldn't
understand . . . and didn't want to
think about yet.
She would much rather think
about the contents of the bowl. When he handed it to her, after
making sure she was able to grip it, she discovered a surprisingly
thick stew, with what looked and smelled like wild
carrots—thin and pale golden in the firelight—
chunks of what might have been rabbit, and other things she
couldn't readily identify. She took a tentative taste, unsure how her
uneasy stomach would react to food, and was instantly transported
to a state of near-ecstasy.
She actually moaned aloud,
wondering how any camp cook could create something this
magnificent under such primitive conditions. Then she forgot
everything else in this or any other universe and simply
ate. Flavors rich and savory with spices she couldn't
identify exploded across her tongue, and the hot food warmed her
from the inside out. Some of the pounding in her head eased as her
body responded to its first nourishment in hours, and she didn't
even mind the savage ache in her bruised jaw when she chewed.
By the time she'd ravened her
way through the entire bowl, she felt almost human again. A
battered and bedamned one, but human, nonetheless. When she
lifted her head, she found the enemy commander watching her, his
expression wavering between intense curiosity, pleasure at how
much she'd obviously enjoyed the food, deep concern, and
lingering guilt. She looked back at him for several seconds, and
his name finally floated to the surface of her memory.
"Jasak?" she asked tentatively,
and his eyes lit with pleasure.
"Jasak," he agreed, nodding. He
touched his chest and added. "Olderhan. Jasak Olderhan."
He waited expectantly, and
Shaylar considered the intricacies of Shurkhali married names.
Better to opt for simplicity, she decided.
"Shaylar Nargra," she said, and
he repeated her name carefully, then glanced at Jathmar. His
stretcher floated less than a yard from hers, close enough to the
fire to keep him warm, and someone had laid a lightweight cover
over him, so that the blistered skin and scorched clothing wasn't
visible. He was still unconscious though, which terrified her, and
her eyes burned.
"Jathmar Nargra," she said
through a suddenly constricted throat, and an expression of
profound contrition washed across Jasak Olderhan's face.
He said something, then gestured
helplessly, unable to convey what he obviously wanted to tell her.
His frustration with the insurmountable language barrier was
obvious, and he took her hand, trying to reassure her.
Shaylar stiffened in shock. The
rest or the food, or possibly the combination of both, had restored
at least a bit of her Talent. She remained Voiceless, yet his
emotions were so powerful, so strong and uncontrolled, that they
rolled through her like thunder anyway. It was all she could do not
to jerk her hand away from that sudden, roiling tide, but she didn't
dare antagonize him, and she could learn more—much
more—when he touched her. If he became aware he was
transmitting information, he would almost certainly stop doing it,
and she couldn't risk that. The understanding she might glean was
the tiniest of weapons, but it was also the only one she had.
He was speaking in low, earnest
tones, and she fought the blackness and pain in her head, soaking
in as much information as she could. He was trying to help them.
There was a sense of waiting for something or someone, with a
feeling of great importance and urgency behind the need to wait.
Someone was coming, she realized with a sense of shock.
Someone who could help.
It shouldn't have surprised her,
she realized a moment later. This universe didn't strike her as the
home of these people. Contact with Jasak Olderhan reinforced that
impression, but if they were as much strangers to this universe as
Shaylar's survey crew had been, who was coming? More soldiers,
undoubtedly—Jasak must have sent a message to another
group of his people. But how many more soldiers? And
from where?
Shaylar had no idea how his
message had gone out. Did these people have a Voice with them?
Or had Olderhan been forced to send a messenger on foot? In
either case, they needed medical help urgently, given the
seriousness of Jathmar's injuries and how many wounded
Olderhan had. Yet he was waiting here, rather than pushing on.
The help he expected must be close, then, however he'd summoned
it. She didn't know whether to feel relieved that help for Jathmar
might arrive soon, or alarmed by the threat another, probably
larger, military force posed to Darcel Kinlafia and to Company-
Captain Halifu's understrength force.
Once more, she tried desperately
to contact Darcel, but her Voice remained nothing but a black
whirlpool of pain and disorienting vertigo. The effort to establish
contact turned the whirlpool into a thundering maelstrom so
intense, so jagged with anguish, she actually cried out.
She jerked back, breaking
contact with Olderhan to clutch at her temples and bending
forward on the stretcher, hunched over with the torment in her
head. And then she felt large, capable hands cradle her face.
Fingers rubbed gently above her pounding temples, then moved
down to her neck, where her muscles had knotted painfully. They
massaged with surprising gentleness and skill, and she could sense
Olderhan's genuine horror at the sudden onslaught of her pain, as
well as his anxiousness to alleviate it.
That helped, as well, but her
strength abruptly faded away to nothing. One moment, she was
sitting up with Olderhan's fingers rubbing her neck; the next, she
lay draped bonelessly against a broad chest once more, cheek
pillowed against his shoulder yet again. She hated her own
weakness. Hated the injuries that left her reeling in confusion,
helpless to do anything.
She felt a tentative touch on her
hair. The effort to use her Voice had scrambled her ability to
sample his emotions once more, but he spoke to her, the words
low and soothing, and it felt as if he were making vows of some
sort. Promises to protect, or perhaps to defend; she couldn't grasp
the nuances with no words or shared concepts, and with her Talent
so crippled. Still, it was sufficiently reassuring to leave her limp
against his shoulder, at least for the moment.
She'd rested against him for
quite some time. She was actually drifting back towards sleep
once more, when they were abruptly interrupted. A strange sound
penetrated her awareness—a rhythmic flapping, like
someone shaking out the largest carpet ever woven. Then someone
shouted, and Olderhan responded with what sounded and felt like
intense relief. He eased her back down onto the stretcher and
hurried to the edge of the broad stream their camp had been
pitched beside.
He stood there, peering out into
the stream. But, no, she realized, that wasn't quite right. He was
peering above the stream, with his head tipped back. He
stared up at the stars, and the sound of shaken cloth was louder,
much louder. Within moments, it had changed from rhythmic
flapping to equally rhythmic thunder. A huge, black shadow
swooped suddenly between Olderhan and the stars, then an
overpressure of air blasted across the camp. The bonfires flared
wildly as sparks, ash, and scattered autumn leaves flew before the
whirlwind, and she jerked her gaze upward.
Scales, like a crocodile's
armored hide in glowing, iridescent colors like shoaling fish.
Immense wings, so thin the firelight glowed through them. Bats'
wings the size of the sails on a ninety-foot twin-masted schooner.
Claws, a foot-long and razor-sharp, glittering bronze as they
reached down to grasp boulders in the stream when it landed. A
long, sinuous neck, like a serpent twenty feet long, still as thick as
her own torso where it met the triangular, adder-shaped head.
Spikes, immense spikes, jutting out over eyes of crimson flame,
and an eagle's beak of metallic bronze, sparkling in the wildly
flaring firelight.
Its mouth opened, revealing
rows of sickle-bladed teeth, and it was looking directly at her
. Shaylar's wounded mind shrieked at her to run, even as she
sensed an alien, inhuman presence behind those fiery eyes,
malevolent and barely under control.
The nightmare apparition hissed.
The sound was an angry steam-engine shriek, and Shaylar flinched
back, drew breath to scream—
—and the man strapped to
its neck spoke sharply. He emphasized his words with a jab from
an implement that looked part-cattle prod and part-harpoon. It
would have to be sharp, she realized through waves of
unreasoning terror, to make itself—and its owner's
displeasure—felt through hide that tough.
Wings rattled angrily, like
agitated snakes, and the prod came down again, sharper and harder
than before. The beast reared skyward and let out a shriek of rage
that battered Shaylar's bleeding senses. She did scream, this time,
and cowered down with both arms over her head—not to
keep the creature's teeth off her neck, but to keep its fury out of
her mind.
She heard men's voices raised in
angry shouts and what sounded like bafflement. Someone touched
her shoulder, and she flinched, then realized it was Gadrial. The
other woman seemed as baffled as the men—baffled,
surprised, still half-asleep. But she also seemed determined to
interpose her own body between Shaylar and the enraged beast in
the streambed if that was what it took to protect her.
Gadrial cradled Shaylar in a
protective embrace, blinking in still-sleepy confusion and utterly
perplexed. She'd never personally seen an angry dragon, but that
was the only way to describe this one, and it was glaring
unnervingly straight at her. Or, rather, she amended, at Shaylar
. The injured young woman was trembling, and Gadrial spoke
quietly, soothingly, stroking her hair while she felt the tremors
rippling through that slender body. Fear had stiffened Shaylar's
muscles so tightly the tremors were like an earthquake shaking
solid stone.
She's been through too much in too little time, Gadrial
thought grimly. No wonder she's all but hysterical!
Despite the distance to
streambed's edge, Gadrial could hear Sir Jasak speaking with the
dragon's pilot. They could probably hear him back at the base
camp, she thought, and the pilot didn't look too happy at being on
the receiving end of the . . .
discussion. But then Jasak paused, hands on hips, head cocked,
and the pilot shook his head.
"I've never seen Windclaw react
like that, Sir," Muthok Salmeer said. "Never! He's an old fellow,
smart as a transport dragon gets, with plenty of lessons in good
manners. He's no war dragon, to be hissing at everyone but his
pilot. He's spent his entire life in Transport and Search and Rescue
work. It beats hell out of me, Hundred, and that's no lie. It's like he
took one look at the girl there, and went berserk."
The squire's tone sounded as
confused and upset as Jasak felt. It was obvious Salmeer was
completely and totally perplexed, but the pilot had reacted quickly
and decisively to his dragon's impossible-to-predict rage. That
fact, coupled with his obvious concern, disarmed much of Jasak's
initial fury.
The hundred made himself step
back mentally and draw a deep breath. He glanced back at his
prisoner, who sat huddled against Gadrial. Shaylar looked up, her
face ashen as she risked a glance at Windclaw, then instantly
pressed her face back against the magister, and he frowned as he
got past his immediate reaction and started considering the
implications of the dragon's behavior.
"That's . . .
interesting, Muthok," he said after a moment, turning back to the
pilot. "Damned interesting."
"You don't have any idea who
they are, Sir?" Salmeer asked. "You could've knocked me down
with a puff of air when that hummer message arrived, and that's a
fact."
"No, we don't know who they
are. But I intend to find out, and we won't do that if we lose them.
The girl's hurt—I don't know how badly—but the
man's critical. He won't last the night if we don't get him to a true
healer, and some of my own men are almost as bad."
"Then it's a good thing I brought
you one, Sir," Salmeer said with a smile. He gestured to the
passengers still strapped to the saddles on the Windclaw's back,
and Jasak's eyes followed the gesture. The dragon's reaction to
Shaylar had kept him from paying much attention to Windclaw's
other riders, but now his face lit with delight as he recognized
Sword Morikan.
"Naf!"
"Good to see you on your feet,
Sir," the healer replied. "And Muthok brought more than just me.
I've got Vormak and two good herbalists riding the evacuation
deck, and Traith and two more herbalists are waiting back at the
base camp. Muthok needed to lighten Windclaw, and I figured it
would be better to avoid doing any surgery we don't absolutely
have to do out here. It's a hell of a lot warmer on that side of the
portal, and we'll have tents to work in, as well."
"Good man!" Jasak said, nodding
hard. "Good work, both of you."
"Least we could do, Sir,"
Salmeer said. "On the other hand, this isn't exactly what I'd call a
proper landing ground you've got out here, if you'll pardon my
saying so. We can probably take out most of your critically
wounded now, but getting airborne before we run into the trees is
going to be tricky, and Windclaw's already flown a long way
today. He's going to need at least several hours rest after we get
back to camp, so we'll have to come back for the others
tomorrow." His eyes glinted. "Next time you decide to fight a
battle, Sir, try to pick a spot easier to get dragons into, eh?"
"I'll bear that in mind," Jasak
replied, with a smile he hoped didn't look forced. Then he smiled
more naturally. "And I'm more grateful than you'll ever know to
you for reaching us this quickly."
Jasak angled his head up to
watch as Morikan, the surgeon, and the herbalists started to
dismount. They hauled their gear down Windclaw's shoulder, then
stepped across from his foreleg to the stream bank, where several
of First Platoon's troopers waited to help them with their baggage.
Firelight caught the dragon's
iridescent scales and set him aglow when he rustled his wing
pinions or took a breath. He still looked agitated, and the sound of
his breathing, the deep rush of air through cavernous lungs which
no one could ever forget, once he'd heard it, was faster than usual.
It was also higher pitched, almost whistling.
It's the sound a fighting dragon makes just before battle,
Jasak realized with a sudden, shocking flash of insight. Humanity
hadn't pitted dragons against one another in almost two centuries,
and no one living had ever heard that pre-battle steam-kettle
sound. Not in earnest, at any rate. But it had been too frequently
described in the history books and the aerial training
volumes—even in those silly romances his younger sister
mooned over—for him to mistake what he was hearing
now.
Which didn't make any more
sense than all the other impossible things which had already
happened this day.
Jasak stared up at the furious
transport beast, towering over him, and wondered a little wildly
what had set off Windclaw's battle stress. Salmeer had been right
about one thing, though; he was sure of that. Shaylar Nargra was
the source of the dragon's anger. Yet what in all the myriad
universes about that terrified, injured girl could cause a dragon to
react so violently to her mere presence?
The question simmered in the
back of his brain. Intuition and logic alike argued that it was an
important one, but he had more immediately urgent problems at
the moment.
"Can you keep him under control
well enough to put her on his back?" he asked Salmeer, twitching
his head at Shaylar. "Her and the others?"
The pilot had been gazing at
Shaylar, as well, obviously asking himself the same questions
which had occurred to Jasak. Now he refocused his attention on
the hundred, and his jaw muscles bunched.
"Oh, yeah, Sir. I'll keep him in
line, all right. He might get around some greenhorn handler, but he
won't try any tricks with me. If I might make a suggestion, though,
Hundred?"
"Suggest away," Jasak said with
a sharp nod. "You know your beast—and your job—
better than I ever will."
Salmeer's eyes narrowed, as if
Jasak's tone had surprised him. Then he twitched his own head in
Shaylar's direction.
"Put her up last," he said. "He
won't try anything that would endanger his passengers once he's
got wounded aboard. He's a smart old beast, Windclaw is, Sir, and
he knows his duty. He's responsible for the safe transport of
wounded men, and he knows it. Not like a man would, you
understand, but he's smarter than any dog you'll ever own, and
dogs are smart enough to look out for those under their care."
"Yes, they are. It's a good
suggestion, Muthok, and one I appreciate. Deeply."
Salmeer ducked his head in an
abbreviated nod of acknowledgment, then gave Jasak a grim little
smile.
"I've answered the call of more
than a few commanders of one hundred, Sir, and I'll tell you
plain—you're the first who's ever given a good godsdamn
about the opinions of a transport pilot."
Jasak frowned, his gaze locking
with Salmeer's, and his nostrils flared.
"I can't say that fact makes me
very happy, Muthok. But thank you for the information. It won't
be wasted."
Salmeer blinked. Then his eyes
narrowed as he remembered whose son he was speaking to. Jasak
saw the memory in the pilot's eye and felt a flicker of harsh inner
amusement.
No, Muthok, he thought. It won't be wasted, I
assure you.
The Duke of Garth Showma,
who also happened to be Commander of Five Thousand Thankhar
Olderhan (retired), would light quite a few fires under certain
officers when that piece of intelligence hit his desk.
Officers too haughty—or stupid—to consider the
insights of specialists with experience far superior to their own
were officers who got their men killed when things went to hell.
Rather like I managed to do this afternoon, he
thought, and felt his face tighten for an instant.
Salmeer met Jasak's gaze for a
moment longer, almost as if he could hear the younger man's
thoughts, then gave him a sharp salute.
"You take care of the wounded
then, Sir. I'll start prepping the platform cocoons."
Jasak nodded, then turned as Naf
Morikan finished passing his own equipment over to Sword
Harnak and waded ashore.
Morikan was a North
Shalomarian—one of the towering variety. A big, rawboned
man, nearly six-foot-seven in his bare feet, he still managed to
move so quietly, almost noiselessly, that Jasak had sometimes
wondered if it was a part of his Gift. The healer had huge
shoulders, enormous physical strength, and a Gift for healing
which made the hulking giant one of the gentlest souls Jasak had
ever known. He'd never pursued the research necessary to earn the
formal title of magistron, the healer's equivalent of Gadrial's
magister's rank, so he was technically only a journeyman, which
also explained why he wasn't a commissioned officer in the
Healer's Corps, himself. But Jasak wasn't about to complain about
that today. Not when it meant having a healer as powerfully Gifted
as Morikan out at the sharp end when the remnants of First
Platoon needed one so desperately.
"It's good to see you, Naf," he
said quietly, clasping the sword's hand. "I've got four men in
comas, and one of them's the only male survivor from the people
we ran into out here. That girl there," he pointed at Shaylar, "was
with him."
Morikan's eyes glinted. Jasak
could almost physically feel the questions simmering under the
big noncom's skin, but the healer visibly suppressed them.
"Five Hundred Klian wants a
full briefing, Sir. I'm dying of curiosity myself, for that matter.
But that can wait, and the wounded can't. Which one is most
critical?"
Jasak led him straight to
Jathmar. Morikan knelt beside the injured man's litter, then hissed
aloud when he touched him.
"Gods, Sir! I'm a healer,
not a miracle worker! He's holding on by a thread! And it's so
frayed, it's about to snap!"
"You think I don't know that?"
Jasak snapped back. "Magister Gadrial is the only reason he still
alive at all!"
The big healer looked up, then
whistled softly.
"Magister Gadrial kept
him alive? With nothing but a minor arcana for healing?" He
glanced at Gadrial, who'd given him a demonstration of her minor
Gift when she'd first arrived in-universe. "Magister, you have my
deep respect, ma'am. I wouldn't have believed this was possible."
He gestured at Jathmar, and
Gadrial nodded to him across Shaylar's shoulder.
"Thank you," she said quietly.
"And for Rahil's sake, do whatever it takes to save him. I'm
convinced he's this girl's husband." She tightened her embrace
around Shaylar, who was watching them, her hazy eyes wide and
frightened. "She's hurt, herself, and she's in a fragile state. If she
loses him—"
The magister broke off, her
mouth tight, and Morikan nodded in comprehension.
"Their last names are the same,"
Jasak added. "I found that out when she woke up. They're either
married or brother and sister, and I'm inclined to agree with
Magister Gadrial's theory that they're married."
The big healer looked into
Shaylar's eyes, took in the ghastly bruises that had turned half her
face into a swollen, black mass of pain, and his jaw turned to
granite.
"Start getting your less critically
wounded onto the dragon, Sir Jasak," he said briskly. "I'll tend to
them once we get back to the base camp, but I don't dare wait that
long with this one."
Jasak nodded tightly and turned
away to begin giving orders, and Naf Morikan crouched down
over Jathmar's still form. He drew a deep breath, closed his eyes,
and reached out, summoning the healing trance that gave him the
power to work the occasional miracle.
Shaylar had no clear idea what
the giant leaning over her husband was doing, but it was obvious
he was the person Jasak Olderhan had been waiting for so
anxiously. The newcomer was so huge he reminded her painfully
of Fanthi chan Himidi, but the difference in his personality and
chan Himidi's was blindingly evident, even to her presently
crippled Talent. chan Himidi had been one of Shaylar's dearest
friends, yet she'd always been aware of his capacity for violence.
Trained and disciplined, it had always been firmly under control,
yet it had always been there, as well.
This man might wear the uniform of a soldier, and his
personality was certainly just as strong as chan Himidi's had ever
been, but his battles weren't the sort one fought with
weapons.
The newcomer had lifted the
blanket off Jathmar's burnt back and hissed aloud at the damage
he'd found. But he didn't appear to be doing anything else
at all. He was just kneeling there, hands extended over Jathmar's
stretcher, eyes unfocused, staring at
nothing. . . .
And then, suddenly, Jathmar
began to glow.
Shaylar gasped. Light poured
from the big man's hands, enveloping Jathmar's entire body. Then,
despite the whirling black pain in her head, the marriage bond
roared wide. Shaylar flinched violently in Gadrial's arms as
Jathmar's pain blasted through her. She sensed Gadrial's sudden
twitch of hurt as her fingers sank deep into the other woman's
upper arms, but she couldn't help it. Her back was a mass of fire,
her chest a broken heap of agony wrapped around ribs shattered
like china someone had dropped to the floor, and her insides were
bleeding.
Then she felt an odd presence,
like a tide of warm syrup flowing over her—into
her—and there was intelligence in the syrup. There were
thoughts and emotions, a sense of awe that she was alive at all,
and a determination to keep her among the living.
A soothing wave of light and
energy she could sense but couldn't see sank down into her
blistered back. The sensations were soul-shaking. She could
literally feel her skin growing as blisters popped, drained,
vanished. The damage ran deep . . .
and so did whatever was sinking into her, repairing the deep layers
of skin and tissue damaged in the hellish vortex of the enemy's
fire.
It sank deeper still, down into
her bleeding abdomen. She felt half-glued wounds knitting
themselves together as new tissue closed the gaps and fissures in
blood vessels, intestinal walls, muscles and organs. Pain flashed
through her, bright and terrible, as ribs shifted, moving on their
own, grating back into proper alignment. She writhed,
whimpering, and the pain in her chest burst free in an agonized cry.
Shaylar's sudden scream yanked
Naf Morikan straight out of healing trance. His head whipped
around, and he stared, shaken and confused, as Shaylar writhed in
Gadrial's arms. Motion under his hands jerked his attention back
to Jathmar, and his eyes went wider still as he realized Jathmar
was moving in exactly the same way.
"What the living hell is going
on?" the healer breathed in shock.
"I don't know," Gadrial Kelbryan
gasped, her own face wrung with pain from the crushing grip of
Shaylar's daggered fingers as they sank into her biceps. "I don't
know, but for pity's sake, man, finish the job! They're both
in agony!"
The magister was right, and
Morikan returned to the trance. He was shaken, intrigued, and
utterly mystified, but he forced all of that aside, out of the
forefront of his attention, and reached out to that healing flood of
power once more.
Now that Jathmar was semi-
conscious, the healer took care to stimulate the centers of the
brain and spinal cord that produced natural pain killers. The
patient's body flooded with his own internally produced pain-
fighting serum in moments, which quickly put an end to his semi-
aware thrashing about, and Morikan was dimly aware that his
wife's cries had faded as well.
By the time the job was done,
Morikan felt as if he'd spent the day slogging through a jungle
under a hundred-pound pack. But Jathmar's grievous wounds were
healed, and the healer let his hands drop into his lap.
"He's sleeping naturally," he
sighed, sitting up from his hunched position over the stretcher.
"He'll sleep for several hours, while his body replenishes its
energy, mending itself. We'll need to wake him briefly to take
some nourishment, but I'd rather wait until we've got him back to
our side of the portal before doing that."
Jasak Olderhan had returned
from overseeing the loading of his other wounded, and he arrived
in time to overhear the healer's last sentence.
"Thank you, Naf. Thank you."
He clasped the sword's hand in a firm grip. "Now let's get you
back into the saddle. And let's get Shaylar onto the dragon, too.
Magister Gadrial, I'd like you to go with us. Shaylar trusts you
more than anyone else, and she'll need you to keep her steady."
"I'll just get my pack," Gadrial
agreed, and bent her head, murmuring into Shaylar's ear.
Shaylar roused from deep
confusion and the oddest dreams of her life and realized Gadrial
was urging her to get up. She managed to obey, still supported by
the other woman's arms, and realized Jathmar's stretcher had
moved. She looked around, quick alarm cutting through her
confusion, then relaxed—slightly—as she discovered
that several men were maneuvering Jathmar and his stretcher
upwards, toward a long platform strapped to the back of the
immense animal still crouched in the stream.
At least the beast that couldn't
possibly exist—the dragon, her mind insisted,
because that fairytale label was the only one she could think
of—wasn't still staring at her. That was a massive
relief.
It had swiveled its head to watch
the men climbing up its side with an almost absurdly attentive air,
instead. The way its head was cocked, the intentness with which it
watched what was going on, reminded her of the freight master on
one of the famous Trans-Temporal Express' endless trains.
Cinches like the belly bands of
an ordinary saddle, but far larger, were drawn up tight every four
feet and buckled securely, securing the platform on its back.
Sidewalls around the top of the platform, a foot and a half high,
bore plenty of cleats for ropes or straps, and the purpose became
clear as Jathmar's stretcher was hoisted up and roped into place so
that his "bed" couldn't shift. They fastened straps to Jathmar, as
well, so that he wouldn't roll off the stretcher.
It's a mobile hospital, Shaylar marveled. Or, rather, an
aerial ambulance for evacuating wounded to the nearest real
hospital.
They didn't load all the wounded
soldiers onto it, however; only those with wounds serious enough
to prevent them from walking out on their own. There were quite
a lot of them, and she was glad of that. So fiercely glad it
frightened her that Sharonian lives hadn't been sold cheaply. She
only wished there were more dead soldiers, because
however kindly Gadrial might treat her, however gentle and
patient Jasak might be, she could not forget the slaughter they'd
perpetrated. She would never forget it. Whether or not she
could ever forgive it was a question for the future, and she
was too battered to think even a few minutes ahead, far less weeks
or months.
Then it was her turn.
Any faint hope Shaylar had
nourished that they might release her, at least, died when Jasak
himself escorted her toward the waiting dragon. She didn't want to
go near that beast. Didn't want to come within striking distance of
those lethal bronze claws, or those dagger-sized teeth. She was
three or four yards away when it angled its head back around to
glare at her. It started to hiss—
The dragon's handler spoke in a
sharp, angry voice and swatted the beast smartly between its ears
with his long, metal-tipped pole. At least, it looked like the blow
had landed between its ears; they might have been mere armored
spikes with hollow cores, but they were in the right place
for ears. A cavernous, disgruntled grumble thunder-muttered from
its sharp-toothed jaws, but it offered no further protest.
Men in uniform, balanced on the
dragon's foreleg and shoulder, reached out to steady her across,
then hauled her unceremoniously up to the low-walled platform.
She trembled violently on the way up and would have fallen
without the grip of strong hands on her wrists and hips.
At the top, she found herself
seated beside Jathmar. The cushioned pallet, several inches thick,
had been laid across the wood to form a softer surface for the
wounded men, or their stretchers, to lie on, but Shaylar scarcely
even noticed. She was too busy staring at her husband in
disbelieving wonder.
The healthy, pink skin visible
beneath his scorched shirt was a soul-deep shock. She'd felt it healing, but the very idea of such an uncanny miracle had been
so alien that she'd more than half-feared it was no more than an
illusion brought about by her own head injury. Something she'd
wanted so badly, so desperately, that she had imagined it entirely.
But she hadn't. His hair was still
a singed mess, but the terrible burns were gone, and her eyes stung
as she leaned down to press a kiss across his cheek. She wished
she could fling her arms around him and cradle him close, but the
webbing around his body made that impossible. Straps stretched
taut to either side, fastened securely to cleats that looked strong
enough to hold a full-sized plow horse in place. The other injured
men had been webbed down, as well, and lay head-to-foot along
the narrow platform, filling it for almost its entire length. The man
who'd healed Jathmar was kneeling beside another unconscious
man, whose body glowed with that same eerie light.
Then Gadrial climbed up beside
her and helped Shaylar with the unfamiliar webbing. Unlike the
wounded men, Shaylar and Gadrial sat up, able to see over the low
side walls, and the straps around her waist gave Shaylar a sense of
security, despite their height above the ground. A few moments
later, Jasak Olderhan scrambled up and helped the dragon's handler
rig a windbreak around the front of the platform. It was made of
sailcloth, and she was surprised—and grateful—that
it didn't extend above her, Gadrial, and Jasak, as well. Instead, the
dragon's handler gave each of them a set of goggles made of wood
and round panes of glass that fit snugly around the head. Then he
climbed into the oddest saddle Shaylar had ever seen.
The pommel and cantle rose high
before and behind the rider's body, creating a snug cradle that
hugged his waist. Straps from front to back held him firmly in
place, adding to his security. Iron stirrups secured his booted feet,
and a wide leather saddle skirt protected his legs from the dragon's
tough neck scales, some of which were spiked in the center. The
saddle skirt was soft, supple leather, and while it was well worn,
showing signs of extensive use, it was also ornately tooled and
bore flashes of silver where studs and roundels had been fastened
to it. Intricate patterns in a totally alien design teased Shaylar's
somewhat fuzzy eyesight.
Beneath the broad leather skirt
was a thick pad of what looked like fleece from a purple sheep.
She stared, unsure of her own senses in the uncertain, flickering
light from the bonfires, but the fleece certainly looked
purple. She wondered a little wildly if it had been died, or if
people who raised genuine dragons also produced jewel-toned
sheep.
Beneath the fleece pad, in turn,
lay a saddle blanket woven in geometric patterns, and she blinked
in surprise when she realized that the pattern in the saddle blanket
was repeated in the dragon's scaly hide. Despite the straps and the
bulky platform which hid so much of the beast, and despite the
dimness of the firelight, she could see the same intricate, ornate
swirls and chevrons in the iridescent scales along the dragon's
side. She wondered whether the blanket had been woven to match
a naturally occurring pattern, or if the beast had been decorated
somehow to match the blanket. She was still trying to see more of
the beast's hide when the man in the saddle called out a command.
The dragon crouched low,
muscles bunching in a smooth ripple. Then they catapulted
forward as the dragon's huge feet gripped tight on the stream's
boulders and its powerful legs hurled them almost straight
upward. The force of the sudden movement clacked her teeth
together with bone-jarring force, but before she could even groan,
the wide wings snapped open. The sheer breadth of the dragon's
wingspan came as a distinct shock, despite its size for that they
were even larger than she'd initially thought. They beat strongly,
far more rapidly than she would have believed possible, and she
felt the creature climbing in elevator-like bursts with each
downstroke.
They flew parallel to the stream,
barely clearing the water and the brush-filled banks to either side
at first, for more than a hundred yards. Then the creek turned
south, forcing the dragon to follow the curve of its bed. Another
hundred-yard straight stretch gave it the room it apparently needed
to get fully airborne.
Each massive sweep of its
wings, loud as thunder cracks in her ears, lifted them steadily
higher. By the time they reached the end of the second
straightaway, the immense dragon had finally cleared the treetops.
They flashed past a rustling canopy of leaves, argent and ebony in
the moonlight, then sailed into clear air above the forest.
Shaylar discovered that she'd
been holding her breath and her fingers had dug into the straps
holding her securely in place. She glanced back and saw a brilliant
spot of light in the darkness, where the bonfires in the camp they'd
left burned like jewels against velvet. Moonlight poured across the
treetops with an unearthly beauty, creating a billowing silver leaf-
sea which stretched for miles in all directions. Wind set the silver
sea in motion, with a constant ripple and swirl that was dizzying,
exhilarating, like nothing Shaylar had ever experienced before. The
windbreak shielded her from about mid-torso down, but the skin
of her face was cold, except where the goggles shielded it, in the
icy wind buffeting past its upper edge.
We're flying, she breathed silently. Actually flying!
For a time, the sheer delight of
the experience pushed everything else out of the front of her brain.
But as the novelty of it began to wear off in the cold wind, the
implications of a military force which possessed aerial
transport—and the far more frightening capacity for aerial
combat—made itself abruptly known. Given the dragon's
tough armor, not to mention its sheer size, Shaylar wondered if a
rifle shot could be effective against it. There were hunters who
took big game, of course, especially in sparsely settled universes
where elephants, rhinos, immense—and aggressive—
cape buffalo, thirty-foot crocodiles, and even vast herds of bison
were a serious danger to colonists. There were some pretty heavy
guns and cartridges for that kind of shooting, but Shaylar
wondered if even those weapons could be effective at much
greater ranges than point-blank into a dragon's belly or throat.
And what kind of weapons might
something like a dragon bring to combat? Would it do what the
legends of her home world said dragons could do? Breathe fire?
Eat maidens for breakfast? She recalled the beast's fury at her, its
rage battering her senses, the firelight glinting on claws and teeth
as it reared up, and could imagine only too clearly what it would
be like to have something like that actually attack her with lethal
intent.
I have to warn our people! she thought desperately.
She closed her eyes behind the
goggles, fought the black pain in the center of her head, and
reached frantically through the spinning vortex to contact Darcel
Kinlafia. The headache exploded behind her clenched eyelids, but
she faced its anguish, refused to surrender to it.
Darcel! she cried into the black silence. Darcel, can
you hear me? Please, Darcel!
She tried to send an image of the
beast she now rode, tried to project the memory of it rearing above
her in hissing fury, but her head spun. The whole world revolved
in dizzy swoops and plunges, a drunken ship at sea in a
typhoon. . . .
Gadrial's voice reached her,
repeating her name with some urgency. Shaylar felt the touch of
gentle hands on her temples, felt Gadrial trying to ease the pain.
But she flinched back, clinging to the effort—and the
pain—as she fought to reach Darcel, whatever the cost to
herself, and—
A massive, metal-bending
screech tore the air.
The dragon slewed sideways in
midair. It actually bucked, and Shaylar's eyes flew open as
her teeth jolted together and the whole platform creaked against
the violent motion of the beast under it. Her head jerked, and she
felt herself bounced backward against her safety straps as a raging
red fury lashed at her mind.
The dragon bellowed again,
whipped its own head violently around, and snapped at her with
huge teeth. Shaylar screamed, then clutched her head, her senses
bleeding. Someone was shouting, a voice white-hot with fury, and
the dragon's violent gyrations ceased as abruptly as they'd begun.
The rage in her mind was still there, still hot as lava, but the beast
was no longer trying to throw her off or bite her in half, and she
collapsed against Gadrial, shuddering.
"Help me," she pleaded brokenly,
fingers clutching at the other woman's clothing. "Get it out of my
mind!" she moaned. "Please. Oh,
please . . ."
Gadrial had both arms around
her, and, gradually, the pain receded and the nausea dropped away.
Shaylar's throat loosened, around the terror she'd been fighting,
and a delicious lassitude stole along her nerves. It eased her down
into a comforting darkness, a lovely darkness, one that shut out
the pain and the mortal fear of the beast in her mind.
She barely felt the cushioned pad
as her back touched it.
Gadrial eased the tiny woman
gently down, rearranging the safety straps so that Shaylar could lie
flat beside her. Once she'd secured the straps in their new
configuration, she brushed dark hair back from Shaylar's bruised
face and stared down at her.
Who are you, really? she wondered. How far did you
journey to reach us? And why should a transport dragon hate
you the way this one obviously does?
"Is she all right?" Jasak
demanded, half-shouting above the wind.
"Yes. I've helped her go to
sleep."
"Thank the gods! What in
hell just happened?"
"I don't know! Is the dragon
under control?" she counter-demanded, and he nodded.
"He is now, but it was damned
touch-and-go for a second, there." He'd twisted around to stare at
the unconscious girl beside Gadrial. "She's the source. Whatever's
going on, she's the source." Gadrial could see the intense
frustration in his expression even in the uncertain moonlight and
despite his flight goggles. "Did you see or hear anything? Anything
from her that could have triggered it?"
"No." Gadrial shook her head.
"One minute she was fine. The next she was screaming, and
Windclaw was trying to throw us off his back!" Then she frowned.
"But there was something strange, right before she lost
consciousness. She was saying something, and it felt—I
don't know. It felt like she was begging for help. Not protection, help. Something to do with the dragon and her
mind . . . "
She trailed off, wondering
abruptly how she knew that. Because she did know it;
knew it as certainly as if Shaylar had spoken aloud.
"What is it?" Jasak asked, and
she shook her head to clear it.
"I'm not sure. It's
just . . ." She stumbled, trying to put it into
words. "She was trying to tell me something, and I think I
understood her. Not the words; they made no sense at all. But I understood her, Jasak. It's eerie." She swallowed. "Scary as
hell, in fact. She was asking me to help her."
"Help her with the pain?"
"No." Gadrial shook her head
again, trying to put her bizarre, elusive certainty into words. "No.
She wanted me to help her . . . get the
dragon out of her mind?" It came out as a question, because she
knew it made no logical sense. "I don't have the faintest idea why I
know that, but I know it, Jasak. She was clutching at me,
babbling, and that's what came into my head."
Sir Jasak Olderhan, commander
of one hundred, stared at Gadrial as though she'd suddenly
sprouted wings herself. For a moment or two, she suspected that
he thought she'd gone off the deep end, but then he gave a sudden,
choppy nod.
"That's damned interesting," he
said abruptly. "Has anything like that happened before?"
She shook her head again.
"I don't think so."
"Well, pay close attention to
every impression you receive when you're talking to her, or she's
trying to communicate with you, Gadrial. Something
about her caused Windclaw to react violently, and more than once.
We don't understand anything about these people! Except that they
use weapons and equipment that are the most alien things I've ever
seen. We can't assume they're like us in any respect, which
means the door's wide open for totally inexplicable technologies,
or whatever it is she was using or doing to set off the dragon."
Gadrial nodded, feeling far
colder than the frigid night wind could account for, and wondered
what terrifying discoveries lay ahead. Shaylar looked
so . . . normal lying unconscious
beside her. Normal, lost, and frightened out of her wits.
Gadrial stroked the night-black,
windblown hair back from Shaylar's brow once more, and glanced
at Jathmar, wondering what matching discoveries lay behind his
face.
It was obvious the two of them
came from racial stock as different from each other as Jasak's pale
Andaran skin and round eyes differed from her own sandalwood
complexion and dark, oval eyes. And although she'd had little time
to study Shaylar and Jathmar's dead companions before their
cremation, even that brief examination had told her the entire
survey party had been as racially diverse as anything on Arcana.
These people obviously came from a large, mixed-heritage
society, whether it occupied only one universe or several, and she
wondered abruptly how that society's members might differ from
one another.
Did they have Gifts of their
own? Different, perhaps, from any Gadrial had ever heard of, but
equally powerful? Did different groups of them have different
Gifts? How might their Gifts compare to those of
Arcana? And what about their society's internal structure and
dynamics? Had they evolved some sort of monolithic cultural
template, or were they composed of elements as internally
diverse—even hostile—as her own Ransarans and
most Mythalans?
Jasak glanced back at Gadrial
and noted her thoughtful frown. She was obviously thinking hard,
sorting back through all of her impressions, and he nodded
mentally in satisfaction. The brain inside that lovely head of hers
was frighteningly acute. He had no doubt at all that if there were
any clues buried among those impressions, Gadrial Kelbryan
would pounce upon them as surely as any falcon taking a hare.
Satisfied that the bloodhound
was on the trail, Jasak turned around again in his own saddle. He
gazed straight ahead, but his attention wasn't focused on Salmeer's
back, nor on Windclaw's shimmering wings as they beat
powerfully in the moonlight. Not even on the glorious silver sea
of leaves speeding past below them, with the dragon's moon-
shadow racing from one bright treetop to the next in a flowing
blur.
No. What he saw was
Osmuna lying dead in a creek. A stockade filled with abandoned
tents, foot-weary donkeys, and strange equipment. And a terrifying
montage of battle images that flashed through his memory in
bright bursts, like exploding incendiary spells.
And behind them was the
frightening thought of what would happen if, by some
unimaginable means, these people had successfully gotten
a message back through the portal to their nearest base.
He couldn't imagine how they might have done it. A careful sweep around the battle site
had found no tracks leading away from all that toppled timber, and
there'd been no sign of messenger birds, like the hummers his own
platoons carried. But these people had all manner of strange,
inexplicable abilities and devices. If they had a sufficient
command of magical technology—or, he thought with a
shudder, some other sort of technology—to send
messages across long distances without any physical messenger,
Arcana could be in serious trouble already.
That thought was more than
simply worrisome. It was downright terrifying. So far, he'd found
nothing—nothing at all—in their captured gear
which resembled arcane technology. An Arcanan crew that size
would have been carrying all manner of spell-powered devices,
but he hadn't seen a trace of anything made of sarkolis, hadn't
sensed even a quiver of spellware. He couldn't even begin to
visualize how anyone could possibly build an advanced
civilization without arcane technology, but all he'd seen were
fiendishly intricate, clever, totally non-arcane machines.
Was it really possible that one of
those machines—possibly one he hadn't even found yet, one
they might have destroyed to prevent him from finding it,
as they'd destroyed their maps and charts—might have
allowed them to send a message without a runner or a hummer?
The more he thought about how
little he knew about Shaylar and her people, the more he wanted to
avoid contact with any of them until Arcana had managed to fill in
at least a few corners of the puzzle, punch at least a few holes
through the fog of total ignorance which was all he could offer his
superiors at the moment. And as he considered it, it occurred to
him that if there was, in fact, something odd about Shaylar
Nargra's mind, something which upset dragons, it was equally
clear from her reaction that Shaylar had never seen
anything remotely like Windclaw.
They don't have dragons, he realized. And if they don't
have dragons, is it possible that they don't have
anything that flies?
His frown intensified as that
possibility hovered before him. He might simply be grasping at
straws, but one thing he knew: dragons—unlike donkeys,
soldiers, or civilian surveyors—left no footprints. If
Shaylar and her companions had gotten a message back to
their people, picking up his own route from the swamp base camp
to the site of the battle and backtracking it wouldn't be particularly
difficult for even semi-competent woodsmen. But simply finding
the base camp wouldn't help them very much.
It was over seven hundred
miles from the swamp to Fort Rycharn, with no roads, no
trails, between the fort and the swamp portal. Everything at the
portal base camp had been airlifted in from Fort Rycharn, and even
Fort Rycharn was only a forward base. The actual portal into this
universe was over three thousand miles away—across
equally trackless ocean—on the island which would have
been Chalar back on Arcana.
He nodded, mouth firming with
decision. He couldn't undo what had already happened, but he
could at least buy some time, and he intended to do just that.
Pulling everyone back from the swamp portal to Fort Rycharn
wouldn't be easy with only a single transport dragon available, but
it would be one way to dig a hole and fill it in behind them.
If Shaylar's party had summoned
a rescue party, it would find only the abandoned camp. Let it hunt
through seven hundred miles of virgin, trackless swamp if it
wanted to. By the time it could find Fort Rycharn, even that wouldn't do it any good, if Jasak had his way. Not if he could
convince Five Hundred Klian to pull all the way back to the
Chalar arrival portal and put twenty-six hundred more miles of
water between any search party and the route to Arcana.
Time, he thought. That's what we need—time
. Time to get word back up the transit chain. Time for
someone who knows what the hell he's doing to get back
here and handle the next contact with these people. Time to figure out a way to somehow get a handle on this
situation before it spins totally out of control.
And the way to get that time was
to make sure that anyone from the other side couldn't find a trace
of Arcana.
Not until Arcana was good and
ready to be found.
Chapter Thirteen
Jathmar floated in the darkness
of the still, warm depths, drifting slowly and steadily toward a
sunlit surface far above him. The light grew stronger, reaching
down towards him, and something stirred in sleepy protest. He
reached out to the darkness, wrapping it about himself, like a child
burrowing deep into a goose down comforter. He didn't want to
wake up, didn't want to leave the safe, still quiet. He didn't
remember why he didn't want to wake, but his drowsy
mind knew that something waited for him. Something he didn't
want to face.
His eyes opened, and he reached
out, as automatically as breathing, for Shaylar's familiar touch.
Panic struck like a spiked
hammer.
She wasn't there. Where Shaylar
should have been, he found only a roaring, pain-filled blackness.
The shockwave of loss jolted him into full consciousness with a
sharp gasp of anguished terror, and his eyes snapped open.
Sunlight burned down over him,
hot and humid. There was no trace of the glorious autumn woods
he remembered; all he could see was a vast stretch of muddy water
and rank vegetation, heavy with the smell of rot and mold and
fecundity. The trees growing at the water's edge, some growing in
the water itself, were tropical varieties, heavy with vines, with no
trace of the colors of a northern fall. The voices of birds—
some raucous, some musical, some like those he'd never heard
before—sounded through the hot, dense stillness, huge
butterflies drifted over and among the swamp grasses, like living
jewels, and the whine of insects hung heavy on the thick, steamy
air.
He lay on something
simultaneously firm and yet soft-textured, like a folding canvas
camp cot, and his thoughts fluttered and twisted, trapped between
confusion and the strobing panic radiating from the absence where Shaylar ought to have been. He hung transfixed between
seriously broken thoughts. Then voices registered, and movement,
as well, close by. He sat up and—
He yelled and scrambled wildly
backwards on the seat of his trousers. The "camp cot" under him
never even wiggled, but he shot over its edge, sprawling onto
muddy ground a full two feet lower than whatever had been
supporting him. He panted, groping instinctively for his rifle, for
his revolver, even for his belt knife, and his scrabbling
hands found nothing but more mud.
The . . .
thing . . . turned its horror of
a head to peer down, down, down at him just as his frantically
searching hand closed on a dead branch. The improvised club
would be useless against a thing like that, but it was better than
blunt fingernails, and he came to his knees, swinging the branch
wildly up between himself and it.
The sudden flurry of shouts
behind him barely registered. He ignored them, all of his attention
fixed on the scaled monstrosity, until a uniformed man with a
crossbow stepped in front of him. The soldier shouted and pointed
his impossible weapon, but not at the horror looming over them.
He aimed it at Jathmar. Then another man appeared,
wearing the same uniform and snarling orders—or spitting
curses—in a voice of white-hot fury. The first man lowered
his crossbow and sent the second a hangdog look with something
that sounded like an unhappy apology. The second man—
the officer, Jathmar realized—said something else, his tone
considerably less sharp but still reprimanding, and the
crossbowman came to what had to be a position of attention and
saluted oddly, touching his left shoulder with his right fist.
The officer nodded dismissal,
watched a moment while the crossbowman marched off to
wherever he'd come from, then turned his own attention to
Jathmar.
Jathmar clutched his stupid stick,
panting and sweating in the supercharged swampy air, and the
officer met his gaze squarely. He held it, never taking his eyes
from Jathmar's, and issued what was clearly another order.
Another man appeared and
shouted at the beast, and Jathmar's eyes snapped back to the
towering horror. It looked down at the man who'd shouted, rustled
enormous demon's wings, and hissed, but it also moved away. The
soft ground sucked at its immense, clawed feet as it slunk off, if
anything that size could be said to
slink . . .
"Jathmar."
The sound of his own name
whipped him back around to the officer. Aside from a long knife
or short sword at his left hip, the other man wore no obvious
weapon, but Jathmar had no doubt that he faced the commander of
all the other armed men surrounding him and dared make no move
at all. Then he frowned.
"How do you know my name?"
he demanded.
The other man clearly didn't
understand his question. He held up both hands in a trans-
universal sign for "I don't have the least idea what you just said."
Despite his own panic, despite the terror pulsing through him at
the marriage bond's continued silence, Jathmar's lips quirked in
bitter amusement. But then the officer in front of him said another
word.
"Shaylar."
"Where is she?? Jathmar
snarled, any temptation towards amusement disappearing into the
suddenly refocused vortex of a panic far more terrible than he
could ever have felt for himself. The club came up again, hovered
menacingly between him and his enemy, and his lips drew back
from his teeth in an animal snarl.
And then memory struck with
such brutality he actually staggered, crying out in remembered
agony. He was on fire, caught in the withering heat of an
incandescent fireball, flesh blazing even as he fought to reach
Shaylar, but he couldn't, and—
Someone moved toward him
urgently, and the club came back up. A guttural sound clogged his
throat, hot and hungry with primeval rage and a berserker's fury.
He heard the officer saying something else, something sharp and
urgent, and he didn't care. The club came back, poised to strike,
and then it froze as his eyes focused on its target.
It wasn't another soldier; it was a
girl. A slender, lovely Uromathian girl, taller than his Shaylar, but
still small, delicate. She was saying his name, then Shaylar's name,
pointing urgently to one side.
Its a trick! his mind shrieked, but he looked anyway.
The tents registered first. There
was an entire encampment of them, in orderly rows, and more
incongruously armed soldiers swam into view, their crossbows
pointed carefully at the muddy ground. Then he saw the glassy
tubes, and sweat and terror crawled down his back as he
remembered the fireballs.
Then he saw the wounded. The
brutal carnage of gunshot wounds registered in a kaleidoscope of
torn flesh, shattered limbs, blood splashes on bandages, clothing,
and skin. Someone cried out, the sound knife-sharp and piteous, as
a wound was re-bandaged. The sights and sounds shocked him,
horrified him . . . gratified him. And
while those conflicting emotions hammered each other in his
chest, he saw her.
She was literally so close he'd
overlooked her, caught by the deeply shocking sights further
afield. He fell to his knees beside her, barely aware of his own
anguished moan, completely oblivious for the moment to the way
her strange "cot" hovered unsupported above the ground.
She was alive, breathing slowly,
steadily. But her face . . . His breath
caught. One whole side of her face was a swollen, purple mass of
damage. Bruises had nearly obliterated her left eye, and it looked
as if her nose might well be broken. Cuts and scrapes along her
swollen cheek and brow told their own story, and memory struck
again.
The fireball exploded all around
them once more, as if it had just happened. He could literally
feel himself flying into the tangle of deadwood while his skin
and hair crisped in unbearable agony. He groped for his own face,
the back of his neck, shocked all over again by a complete and
impossible absence of pain. He found no charred skin, no blisters,
no burns at all, and that was impossible. His rational mind
gibbered—he'd been burned, horribly. He knew it,
and his flesh shuddered and flinched from the memory of it. Yet
he wasn't burned now, and that simply couldn't be true.
He knelt in the mud beside his
wife and literally trembled in the face of far too many things he
couldn't comprehend. Then her eyelashes shivered, a soft
sound—half-sigh, half-whimper—ghosted from her
lips, and he dropped everything. Dropped the club he still held, his
vast confusion, even his attention for the enemy, and swept her up
in his arms. He folded her close, held her like fragile glass,
rocking on his knees, and buried his face in her singed and
scorched hair.
"Shaylar," he gasped raggedly. "
Shaylar, gods. You're still with me, love!"
The silence in her mind terrified
him. He could feel her slender weight in his arms, feel the steady
beat of her heart, hear her breathing, but when he reached with his
mind, she simply wasn't there. Fresh horror rolled through him as
the savagery of her bruised and battered face coupled with the
silence of her mind in nightmare dread. What if—
Her eyes opened. They were
hazy, at first. Blank with
confusion . . . until she saw him.
"Jathmar!"
Her arms were suddenly around
him. Jathmar was no giant. Faltharians tended to be tallish, and he
was, yet he was also whipcord thin, built more for speed and
endurance than brawn. Shaylar, on the other hand, was tiny, even
for a Shurkhali. She was a most satisfactory size for hugging, in
his opinion, but she'd always said she felt like a kitten trying to
hug a mastiff when she returned the favor. They'd laughed over it
for years, but today she clutched him so tightly he knew her
fingers were leaving fresh bruises on the miraculously undamaged
skin of his back, and it felt good. So good.
She buried her face against his
chest, weeping with shocking strength, and he brushed back her
hair, smoothed the scorched tresses and tangles which would take
shears to put right. When he could finally bear to let go of her
long enough to sit back and peer into her eyes, she touched his
face, wonderingly.
"Oh, Jath," she whispered, huge
eyes still brimming with tears. "You're a miracle, love."
"I—" He swallowed. "I
was burned. Wasn't I?"
"Yes." The single word was
barely audible, and she nodded. "Their healer came. He—"
It was her turn to swallow hard. "You were dying, Jath. I knew
you were. But he gave you back to me. He touched you, just
touched you, and the burns healed. Like the gods themselves
had reached down to make you whole again."
The swamp and even her face
wavered in his awareness. No Talent could do something like that.
Even the most Talented Healers were limited mostly to healing
minds which had been shattered, or encouraging the body to heal
itself more effectively. They could work wonders enough, but
none that came close to this.
The shiver began in his bones,
and he turned his head almost involuntarily to stare at the man
who stood watching them. Just watching. Not threatening, not
intruding. Their officer looked like an ordinary man, they
looked ordinary, and yet . . .
"I don't understand." He brought
his gaze back to Shaylar. "If they could do this for me, why haven't
they healed you? Or," he added, his voice turning harsh and bitter,
"The men we shot to pieces?"
"I don't know." She shook her
head. "None of it makes sense. But these people, Jath, they're not
like us. Not at all. I think their Healers are
more . . . more energy-limited than
ours are." It was obvious to him that she was searching for words,
trying to explain something which had puzzled her just as much as
it did him. "I don't think they encourage the body to heal; I think
they make it heal. When their Healer was working on you,
you glowed, and there was this tremendous sense of
energy, of power, coming from somewhere. I think they
can do things our Healers could never even imagine, but they can
only do so much of it before they . . .
exhaust themselves. And they only have one real Healer, so I think
they must be rationing the healing he can do, using it for the most
critical cases."
"Or the ones with valuable
information," he said bitterly before he could stop himself.
"That's probably part of it," she
said unflinchingly, "but I don't think that's all of it. They put you
first in line because you were the worst hurt of all."
Doubt flickered in his eyes, and
she shook her head.
"I mean it, Jath. The woman with
them, Gadrial, she's some kind of Healer, too, but not a very
strong one. Or not by these people's standards, anyway.
She wasn't strong enough to heal either of us,
but . . ." Shaylar bit her lip. "Without her,
you would have died before their real Healer ever got to you."
Her voice had dropped to a
terrible whisper, and his blood ran cold. Yes, his memories were
brutal enough to believe that. He didn't need the inexplicably
broken marriage bond to sense her deep anguish, the horror of her
belief that he was already dead still burning in her memory, and his
mind flinched like a frightened animal from the vision of her all
alone among their enemies.
"It's all right," he whispered
raggedly, pulling her close again. "It's all right, I'm still with you."
But even as he cradled his
shaken wife, his gaze sought and found the
girl—Gadrial—who stood a few feet from the
officer. She wasn't Uromathian, no matter what she looked like. It
took a real effort to dismiss his preconceived notions, to remind
himself that she wouldn't think like a Uromathian or hold the
same opinions, attitudes, biases, or customs. And he owed her his
life. For a Faltharian, life-debt was a serious business, entailing
obligations, formal courtesies, reciprocal bonds of protection,
none of which she would understand.
And none of which he
particularly relished.
He would owe the other,
stronger Healer, as well, he realized, wherever he or she might be.
That didn't make him any happier, he admitted. And meanwhile,
Gadrial was watching him, her expression uncertain.
When he met her gaze, she gave him a tentative smile. Very sweet,
very human. Very . . . normal.
Another shiver touched his
impossibly healed back, which, he realized for the first time, was
bare. Startled, he glanced down and discovered that his entire shirt
was missing. Momentary disorientation swept over him as he
found himself kneeling on the ground beside his wife, shirtless,
just beginning to realize that he had absolutely no idea where he
was, or how far he and Shaylar were from the site of that hideous
battle, or how much time had passed. The totality of his ignorance
appalled him, and he looked back into Shaylar's worried eyes and
frowned as something important nibbled at the edges of his
scattered thoughts. Then he had it.
"Shaylar? Where are the others?"
Her composure crumbled. She
began to cry again—helplessly, this time, softly and
hopelessly, shaking her head in mute grief—and horror sent
ice crystals through Jathmar's blood.
"No one?" he whispered.
"Nobody else? Just us?"
She nodded, still unable to
speak. Her struggle to hold herself together, to stop herself from
falling to pieces, broke Jathmar's heart again. He drew her close,
held her while she trembled, and he realized their bond wasn't
gone, so much as wounded. Too badly wounded to function
properly, but not so badly he couldn't feel her grief, her sorrow
and despair.
"I'm sorry," he groaned. "I'm
sorry I dragged you out here, into this—"
"No!" She looked up swiftly and
shook her head with startling violence. "Don't say that! It isn't
true!"
She was right, but at the
moment, that was a frail defense against his own crushing sense of
responsibility and guilt. His awareness of his complete inability to
protect her.
It was painfully evident they
were prisoners, but how did their captors treat prisoners of war?
They must have some sort of procedures to deal with captured
enemy personnel, and a further thought chilled him. Would these
people think he and Shaylar were soldiers? Even he knew
soldiers and civilians received different treatment from the
military during armed conflicts. It had been a long time since any
major Sharonian nation had gone to war, but even on Sharona
there was the occasional border dispute, the "incident" when a
patrol from one side wandered across the other side's frontier, the
"brushfire" conflict between ancient and implacable enemies. And
there'd been more than enough violent conflict in Sharona's pre-
portal history to make such procedures necessary.
But how in the multiverse could
he convince these people he and his wife were only civilians, when
they'd killed so many genuine soldiers and wounded so many
others? If Company-Captain Halifu sent real troops after them,
these people would get a taste of what Sharonian soldiers
could do, but would that help him and Shaylar? If the crossbows
he'd seen were the best individual weapons their soldiers had, if
they'd never before even seen what rifles and pistols could do,
would they believe that ordinary civilians carried such weapons,
even in the wilderness?
The memory of that frantic,
dreadful fight replayed itself once more in jagged, terrifying
flashes, but one thing was clear to him. It was only their
artillery—that terrifying, unexplainable artillery—
which had turned the tide against Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl's survey
crew. As severely outnumbered as they'd been, they'd still been
more than holding their own until the fireballs erupted among
them.
No wonder those crossbowmen
were so twitchy.
He'd already seen evidence that
the regular troopers were poised on a hairtrigger where he was
concerned, but how would their commanding officer behave
toward him and Shaylar? If anyone hurt Shaylar,
he'd . . .
Jathmar bit his lip. He couldn't
do that. Couldn't even defend his own wife. If he tried, he'd wind
up dead, and Shaylar would be at the mercy of his killers. His pain
and self-blame doubled—tripled—but wallowing in
misery accomplished nothing, so he dragged his attention back to
the present.
"Where are we? Do you know
how far we've come?"
"No. I was asleep when we came
through that."
Shaylar pointed to something
behind him, and he turned, then blinked. A portal. Gods,
he really was a scattered, distracted mess to have missed seeing or
even sensing a portal literally right behind him. It led into the
forest their survey crew had discovered just days ago, but it clearly
wasn't the one they'd used to enter that forest. This pestilential
swamp was nowhere near the cool, rainy universe on the far side
of their portal, and this portal was tiny compared to theirs.
"They took us out in the middle
of the night," Shaylar murmured. "On
a . . . dragon."
She hesitated over the word, but
Jathmar glanced at the hideous creature and grunted in agreement.
If there was a better word for that monstrous beast, he
couldn't think of it.
"They put all the most critically
wounded on its back," Shaylar continue. "They rigged up a special
platform, like an ambulance, or a hospital car. Only this hospital
car can fly. I tried to contact Darcel, but something's wrong inside
my head. I can't hear anyone—not even you. There's a
roaring blackness where my Voice should be, and I have a terrible
headache. It never stops."
"That's what I sensed when I
tried to touch the bond," he muttered. "When I first woke up, it
was all I could hear. I . . . I thought it
meant you were gone."
He met her gaze, saw the pain
burning behind her brave eyes, saw it in the furrows that never
quite smoothed out between her brows and the tension in her neck
and face, where the bruises and swelling so cruelly disfigured her.
"Why the hell haven't they healed
you?" he demanded again, much more harshly this time.
"I told you," she said, her tone
clearly an explanation, not an excuse for their captors. "Their
Healer has his hands full, Jathmar. And as decent as Gadrial and
their commander have been, I'm glad their hands are full. I
wish they were fuller."
The bitterness in her normally
gentle voice shocked Jathmar. He'd never seen such cold hatred in
his wife. He wouldn't have believed she was capable of it, and the
discovery that she was appalled him.
"I'm sorry." Her voice was sharp
as steel. "But what they did to us . . .
I may never be able to forgive them for that. I'm trying, but I just
can't."
"Who the hell wants you to?"
"I do," she whispered. "My soul
hurts, feeling this way."
His heart twisted, and the look
he turned on the enemy commander who'd ordered their massacre
could have frozen the marrow of a star.
There's not enough blood in your veins to make up for what
you've done to her, his icy eyes told the other man.
The officer looked back, meeting
that hate-filled glare squarely. Whatever else he might be, this
wasn't a weak man, Jathmar realized. His regret for what had
happened appeared to be genuine, but he met Jathmar's steely
hatred unflinchingly. They shared no words, couldn't speak one
another's language, but they didn't need to in that moment. They
looked deep into one another's enemy eyes, and Jathmar could
actually taste the other man's determination to do his duty.
Whatever that duty was;
wherever it led. Whatever the consequences for
Jathmar . . . and Shaylar.
There was no hatred behind that
determination, no viciousness. Jathmar was sure of that. But there
was also no hesitation, and so Jathmar bit down on his own
hatred. He held it in his teeth, knowing he dared not loose it, dared
not let it tempt him into even trying to strike back.
He knew it, but as he stared at
that enemy's face, he realized that the other man recognized the
depth of his own hatred.
Jasak Olderhan looked back at
the kneeling prisoner with the eyes of icy fire. He understood the
causes of that lethal glare only too well, although he doubted
Jathmar would have been prepared to accept how well
Jasak understood . . . and how deeply
he sympathized.
But understanding and sympathy
might not be enough. Unconscious, barely clinging to life,
Shaylar's husband had been an obligation, a responsibility. Jasak's
duty—both as an officer of the Union and as a member of
the Andaran military caste—had been to keep him alive, at
all costs. Everything else had been secondary.
But Shaylar's husband, awake
and conscious, was another kettle of fish entirely. And from the
look of things, a dangerous one.
"Is he a soldier?" Gadrial's
question broke into his own brooding chain of thought, and he
glanced at the slim magister. She, too, was looking at Jathmar, and
her eyes were worried.
"Why do you ask?"
"He doesn't seem to be afraid.
Not the way I'd expect a civilian to be, anyway. That look of
his . . . that's not the kind of look I'd
expect from someone who's frightened."
"No," Jasak said slowly. "It's not.
But that's because he isn't 'frightened.' He's terrified."
"He's what?" Her gaze
jerked away from Jathmar, snapping up to meet his.
"Terrified," Jasak repeated. "And
in his place, that's exactly what I'd be, too. I don't know, at this
stage, whether he's a soldier or not. I'm strongly inclined to think
he isn't, but he knows we are, and he knows we've
slaughtered his friends. That gives him a very clear notion of our
highest priority."
"That being?" she asked
uncertainly.
"Getting them safely back to
Arcana so we can learn everything we possibly can about their
people. I won't abuse them, but he can't know that. He'd probably
face the possibility of his own abuse with courage, even defiance.
But he's not alone. If I'd ever doubted that you were right about
their relationship, I wouldn't now. That's his wife, Gadrial.
You can see it in the way he's holding her, the way he looks at her,
touches her. The idea of someone abusing her, possibly even
torturing her for information, terrifies him. He already hates us for
what we did to the rest of his friends. That's bad enough. But he
also hates us for what we might do next. He knows he
couldn't stop us if we tried to hurt her, but if it comes down to it,
he'll damned well die trying, and that's something we can't
afford to forget. Ever."
Gadrial frowned, then looked
back at Jathmar and Shaylar and realized just how accurately Jasak
had read the other man.
"So how can we convince him
that we won't hurt them?" she asked, and Jasak sighed in
frustration.
"Honestly? We can't. Not until
we've learned their language, or they've learned ours. And not
until enough time's passed for us to demonstrate our good
intentions. Until then—"
His eyes narrowed, and he
glanced at Gadrial again.
"Until then, that's one damned
dangerous man," he said. "I hate to put you in the dragon's mouth,
so to speak, but I really need your help."
"Of course. What can I do?"
"I want you to be our official go-
between. If any of us," a tiny flick of the fingers indicated himself
and the men of his command, "try to talk with them, his defenses
will snap into place so strongly we couldn't possibly actually
communicate. He'll be too busy worrying about an assault on his
wife, and we'll be too busy worrying about an attempt to grab a
weapon, or a hostage, or something else desperate."
"Whereas I wouldn't threaten
him as much?"
"Exactly," he said, and she
looked him straight in the eye.
"He might try to use me
as a hostage," she pointed out, and he nodded slowly.
"It's a possibility, yes. I won't
pretend it isn't. But if he's smart enough to realize how hopelessly
outnumbered he is, and that he has no idea how far he is from their
portal, with a wounded wife and no supplies, he won't try it."
"If," she repeated dryly,
then snorted and gave him a wry smile. "Somehow, I can't imagine
Shaylar marrying anybody that stupid. Not marrying him
voluntarily, anyway," she added, realizing they knew nothing of
the marriage customs among Shaylar's people.
"And I can't imagine that lady
marrying anyone involuntarily," Jasak said even more
dryly. "Besides, it's obvious how devoted to one another they are.
So even if her people are as 'enlightened' as, say, Mythal, these two
seem to have adjusted to each other quite nicely, wouldn't you
say?"
Gadrial's eyes glinted with
amusement at his choice of examples, and her lips quirked in a
brief smile.
"Let's just agree that we
shouldn't make any assumptions about their marriage customs,"
she nodded toward Jathmar and Shaylar, "when our own are so
varied. But if you want my opinion, theirs certainly isn't an
arranged marriage. I can't imagine Shaylar doing this kind of work,
out in the wilderness, if she were simply following her husband in
the pursuit of his career, either. That doesn't make sense,
just from a practical standpoint. Everybody's got to pull their
weight and perform an important function on the team like theirs,
so there's no room for the luxury of someone's spouse tagging
along for the ride."
"I agree." Jasak nodded.
"So. What do you suggest I do
now? We can't just stand here, staring at each other."
"No," he smiled faintly, "we
can't. Do you think you could get through to Shaylar, somehow?
She trusts you, at least a little."
"I'll try. But what, exactly, do I
try to communicate? I don't know your plans, you know," she said,
her tone tart enough to put a slightly sheepish smile into his eyes.
"Sorry about that." His cheeks
actually turned a bit pink, she observed. "I've been so focused on
getting them here alive that it hadn't occurred to me to share my
plans with you. Despite the fact that you're fairly central to them."
Gadrial grinned. Sir Jasak
Olderhan was adorable when he was embarrassed, she decided.
And if she really wanted to complete his demolition, all she had to
do was tell him so.
"So tell me now," she said,
womanfully resisting the temptation. He looked decidedly grateful
and rubbed the back of his neck, clearly gathering his thoughts.
"I intend to abandon this camp,"
he said. "Withdraw completely from this portal and evacuate
everyone to the coast. There's no way anyone can track us if we
evac by air, and that's critical, because the armed confrontation has
to stop here. None of us are trained diplomats, and that's what we
need. If we get a diplomatic mission out here, there's at least a
chance we can keep anyone else from getting killed. At this point,
it doesn't matter whether Osmuna shot their man first, or whether
he shot Osmuna first. What's going to matter to them is
that we slaughtered their entire crew; what's going to matter to us are the casualties we took, and the weapons capability
they revealed inflicting them. We didn't mean for any of this to
happen, but they're going to have trouble buying that, and there's
going to be a lot of pressure on our side for a panic reaction when
people higher up the military and political food chains hear about
what's happened. Especially if the other side send in some sort of
rescue mission that leads to additional shooting."
"Which is why we need a
diplomatic mission to help convince them it was all an accident."
Gadrial nodded. "And civilian diplomats won't be
as . . . incendiary as a camp full of
soldiers. There'd be less chance of another confrontation ending in
shots fired."
"Right on all counts," he said,
and Gadrial gave him an intent look.
"At the risk of airing my own
prejudices, Sir Jasak, I have to admit that that's the last thing I
expected to hear from a professional officer. I also happen to think
it's the best idea I've heard since Garlath got his stupid self killed."
Jasak's eyes flickered, and she
snorted.
"Never mind," she said. "I know
you can't agree. Proper military discipline, stiff Andaran upper lip,
all of that." She smiled sweetly at his expression. "Since, however,
you've elected to proceed with such wisdom, how soon can we
leave? And exactly what do you want me to try to convey to them
about it?"
She nodded toward Shaylar and
her husband once more.
"I intend to put them—
and you—on the first flight I send out of here, along with
the most seriously wounded Sword Morikan hasn't been able to
heal yet."
Gadrial nodded. A Gifted healer,
even a fully trained one like Naf Morikan, could stretch his Gift
only so far before depleting his own energy. Gifts dealing directly
with living things—like healers and the other magistrons
and journeymen involved in things like the dragon breeding and
improvement programs, the hummer breeding program, and even
the agronomists who were constantly seeking to improve food
crops and sources of textiles—were quite different from
Gadrial's own major arcanas. Those Gifted in such areas required
special training, and no one had yet succeeded in figuring out how
to store a major healing spell, although Gadrial was confident that
the coveted vos Lipkin Prize waited for whoever finally did.
Actually getting the spellware
loaded into the sarkolis didn't seem to be the problem. It wasn't
one to which Gadrial had devoted a great deal of her own
attention—her major Gifts lay in other areas—but
she suspected that the difficulty lay in the inherent differences
between each illness or injury. The sort of blanket spells involved
in most pre-loaded spellware were frequently a brute force kind of
approach. That was acceptable for inanimate objects, but even
small glitches could have major—even fatal—
consequences for living things. So each healer was forced to deal
with an unending series of unique problems, each demanding its
own unique solution.
She and Magister Halathyn had
discussed the theoretical ramifications fairly often over the years,
although neither of them had enough of the healing Gift to make it
a profitable avenue of research for them. They'd come to the
conclusion that the difference between a magister, trained in the
"hard sorcery" dealing with inanimate forces and objects, and a magistron, trained in the "life sorcery" someone like Naf
Morikan practiced, was the difference between a symphonic
composer and a brilliant, sight-reading improvisationist. Neither
was really qualified to do the other's job, or even to adequately
explain the inherent differences between their specializations to
each other.
"I've still got a camp full of
wounded men who are going to need Naf's attention," Jasak
continued, "but Five Hundred Klian has his entire battalion
medical staff at Fort Rycharn. I need to get the more critical cases
off of Naf's back, and I'm worried about what you've had to say
about Shaylar. She doesn't seem to be in a life-threatening
situation, so I can't justify pulling Naf off of the men who really
need him, but I want her to get proper attention as soon as
possible."
"All right. I understand—
and, for what it's worth, I agree. I'll try to get your message across
to Shaylar. Wish me luck."
"Oh, I do."
"Thanks."
Gadrial dried damp palms on her
trousers, drew a quick breath, and started across the open ground,
dredging up the best smile she could muster.
Jathmar had never previously
considered what it could mean to be a prisoner, let alone a
prisoner of war. But as he and Shaylar sat together under their
captors' gazes, trying to eat, he was altogether too well aware of
the hostility directed at them. The soldiers who'd so brutally
slaughtered the rest of their crew obviously hated them, regardless
of what their commander felt.
You killed our friends, those hostile looks said, and
you tried to kill us. Give us an excuse to finish what we
started. Please.
He tried to tell himself he was
reading too much hatred into their stares. That he might be
projecting his own emotions onto them, whether they deserved it
or not. That it was probably as much fear of the unknown he and
Shaylar—and their firearms—represented as it was
actual hatred.
Some of that might even have
been true. But he couldn't know that. He didn't have
Shaylar's ability to read the emotions of other people, which left
him unable to trust even Gadrial the way Shaylar seemed able to
do. Nor could he relax under the cold, unwavering stares coming
their way.
He couldn't get away from them,
either. He needed even a short respite, needed to go someplace
private, where he and his wife wouldn't be the focus of such
intense hatred, or fear, or uncertainty, or whatever the hells it was.
And he couldn't. He couldn't even stand up and walk away from
camp to relieve himself! If he tried, someone would put a
crossbow quarrel through him.
It was intolerable. He and
Shaylar had come out here, exploring new universes, because they
treasured freedom. The freedom to move from one uninhabited
place to another, to savor the silence, the exhilaration of no
boundaries, no strict rules governing their every move, no limits
on where they went, or what they did.
Now they'd lost all of that, and
he had no idea when—or if—they would ever regain
it. The long vista of captivity that stretched bleakly ahead of them,
denied everything they valued in life, weighed like a mountain on
his shoulders. And unendurable as it might be for him, watching
Shaylar endure it would be still worse. Every time he
looked at her battered face, the anger tightened down afresh.
Watching her struggle to chew, struggle to put her own terror
aside and try to smile at him—and at their captors—
was a pain he could hardly bear.
The sound of alien voices
washed across him like acid, leaving him on edge. He couldn't
even ask these people what their intentions were, or read their
emotions from their body language, because he had no reference
points. Not everyone used the same gestures to mean the same
things even on Sharona, and these people were from an entirely
different universe. He had no knowledge of their
language, or their customs, or even how they gestured to indicate
nonverbal meaning.
"We have to learn their
language," Shaylar said. "Quickly."
He glanced up. Their eyes met,
and he smiled slightly, despite the snakes of anger and fear coiling
inside him, as he realized how well she truly knew him. Despite
their damaged marriage bond, she'd followed his own train of
thought perfectly.
"They certainly won't bother to
learn ours," he agreed. "Unless it's to interrogate us more
effectively."
She shivered, and he kicked
himself mentally. He couldn't unsay it, though, so he took her
hand carefully and rubbed her fingers.
"Sorry," he said. "And I'm
probably looking on the dark side. You say their commander's a
decent sort, and you've seen a lot more of him than I have.
Besides, I can't imagine they'd want to
risk . . . damaging us with barbaric
questioning methods. We're their only information source, and
they need us, not just alive, but healthy and cooperative."
He knew he was grasping at
straws, trying to reassure her, and the look in her eyes said she was
perfectly aware of it. People capable of murdering an entire
civilian survey crew were capable of anything, and torture
could be undeniably effective. No Sharonian nation had used
it—openly, at least; there were persistent grim rumors
about the current Uromathian Emperor and his secret
police—in centuries. But in Sharona's dim, grim past,
torture had been an approved and often frighteningly effective
method of extracting detailed information from captives.
"If I could just get past this
headache," Shaylar muttered, "I could concentrate on learning
their language. It wouldn't be easy without another telepath to help
with translations, but I could pass anything I learned on to you.
Verbally, if the bond's been permanently damaged."
Her voice went thin and
frightened on the last two words, and Jathmar gave her hand a
reassuring squeeze.
"Let's stay focused on what we
can do, not what we can't, let alone what we might not be
able to do. Agreed?"
"Agreed," she said in a much
firmer voice. Then her gaze sharpened. "Who's this?"
A tall, aged man with the ebony
skin of a Ricathian had emerged from one of the tents and was
approaching them. His face was open and unguarded, almost
childlike in his obvious curiosity about them. Curiosity
and—
Jathmar blinked, startled, when
he registered the other emotion in the older man's face: delight. He
and Shaylar exchanged startled glances, then both of them looked
back at the dark-skinned man again.
He gave them a curiously formal
bow, then folded his long, lean body down to sit beside them. His
voice was strangely gentle as he said something, then indicated
himself and said slowly and carefully, "Halathyn. Halathyn vos
Dulainah."
Shaylar glanced at Jathmar, then
touched her own chest.
"Shaylar," she said, then
indicated her husband. "Jathmar."
Halathyn's face blossomed in a
beatific smile. He moved his hands in an intricate fashion,
murmuring almost under his breath, and the air began to shimmer.
Shaylar gasped, and Jathmar stiffened in shock as a flower of pure
light formed in the air between the silver-haired man's palms. It
was a rose, scintillating with all the dancing colors of the
rainbow.
Halathyn moved his hand, and
the rose of light drifted toward Shaylar. The older man took her
hand, lifted her palm, and the impossible rose drifted down to rest
against her fingertips. It shimmered there, ghostlike and lovely, for
several seconds, then sparkled once and faded away.
Shaylar sat entranced for several
heartbeats, staring at her empty palm, then turned to stare at the
aged man beside them. Halathyn was grinning like a schoolboy,
and she felt herself smiling back, unable to resist. Despite the pain
in her head, she could feel the clean, gentle radiance of the black-
skinned man's soul, and it washed over her like a comforting
caress.
Then Gadrial said something in
gently chiding tones. She'd been speaking with Jasak just moments
previously, and she'd stopped at another campfire to pick up mugs
of steaming liquid and carry them over. Now she stood gazing
down at Halathyn, head cocked to one side, smiling for all the
world like a tutor—or possibly even a nanny—at her
favorite charge.
When she spoke, Halathyn
merely waved one hand in a grandly dismissive gesture that left
her laughing.
"What was that?" Shaylar
breathed in Jathmar's ear while Halathyn and Gadrial were focused
on each other.
"If there's a better word than
magic, I don't know what it is," Jathmar murmured back in
awe.
"Dragons, magical
roses . . . Do you suppose what they
used against us really was . . . magic?
Honest to goodness magic?"
Jathmar raised one palm in a
helpless "who knows" gesture.
"That doesn't make any logical
sense," he said, "but neither does that rose." He shook his head.
"There is no 'logical explanation' for that! Not any
more than there's a logical explanation for what they hit us with in
that clearing, or how they healed my burns. Until we know more,
we'll just have to reserve judgment."
Halathyn, meanwhile, had
produced a large crystal. It was clear as water, one of the most
perfect specimens of quartz Jathmar had ever seen. The old man
was fiddling with it, using a stylus to draw odd squiggles and
shapes across its surface, which struck Jathmar as a fairly
ludicrous thing to do. Ink wouldn't stick to a smooth crystal.
Besides, Halathyn wasn't even using ink, just a dry stylus.
But then Halathyn angled the
crystal so that they could see, and Jathmar leaned forward
abruptly. The crystal was glowing. Or, rather, the strange
symbols he'd drawn were glowing, squiggles and shapes
that burned steadily down in the heart of the crystal. And there was
something else strange about it, too. The crystal, large as it was,
was no bigger than Jathmar's closed fist. Logically, anything
contained inside it had to be quite small, yet those glowing
symbols were clearly visible. He couldn't read them,
because he had no idea at all what they might stand for, but when
he focused his attention on them, they grew to whatever size they
had to be for him to make them out in every detail.
"What is it?" he
wondered aloud.
Shaylar leaned closer and
"casually" rested one hand on the older man's arm as she peered
over his shoulder. A familiar abstracted look appeared on her face,
then she smiled wonderingly.
"It's a tool of some kind.
Something to . . . store things in?"
She sounded hesitant, and
Jathmar frowned.
"Store things in?" he echoed.
"That looks like writing of some kind, but how could anyone store
writing inside a rock?"
"Or light, for that matter," she
said. "And that's what it looks like—light."
"I'm the wrong person to ask."
Jathmar shook his head, baffled. "I can't begin to imagine how
something like that works."
Whatever Halathyn was doing
with the stylus, the squiggles of light shifted rapidly inside the
crystal. It certainly looked like writing of some sort, and it did,
indeed, look as if Halathyn were storing the words inside that
water-clear rock. He glanced up, eyes twinkling, then he whispered
something else, and the light faded.
He handed it to Shaylar, who
took it with a deeply dubious expression. Then he spoke one word
and tapped the crystal with his stylus, and the glowing text sprang
back to life. It glowed deep inside, scrolling past at what would
probably have been a comfortable reading speed, if they could
have read it at all.
Shaylar stared, open-mouthed,
then looked up to meet Jathmar's amazed gaze, and Halathyn
chuckled. He looked inordinately pleased with himself as he
retrieved his crystal, and the look he gave Gadrial was just short of
impish. She responded by rolling her eyes, and handed over the
mugs she carried.
They contained a beverage that
smelled like tea. Jathmar took a hesitant sip and let out a deep
sigh. It was tea, spiced with something wonderful. He
blew across the surface, sipping with pleasure while Gadrial
cradled her own cup in both hands and drank deeply. The
Uromathian-looking woman glanced at Halathyn, then turned to
Shaylar and spoke again. She pointed to Shaylar and Jathmar in
turn, then to herself and to the dragon.
"Looks to me," Jathmar
muttered, "like we're about to be taken out of here."
"Yes," Shaylar agreed. "And look
at Jasak. He's paying awfully close attention to this conversation."
Jathmar glanced up and decided
that Shaylar's comment was a distinct case of understatement.
"I'd say our friend in uniform
sent Gadrial over as his errand-boy," he said. Then he glanced at
Gadrial's figure, whose shapeliness was quite evident, despite her
bulky hiking clothes, and smiled crookedly. "Well, maybe not
errand-boy, exactly," he amended. "I find it mighty
interesting that he sent her over, rather than telling us
himself, though."
Shaylar gave him an unusually
hard look.
"He doesn't want to push you
into starting something that one of his soldiers might decide to
finish," she said sharply, and he nodded.
"You think I don't realize that?
With you in harm's way," he added gruffly, "I won't be starting
anything I'm not likely to win. But I'll admit it. If not for his
trigger-happy soldiers, I might be tempted."
Her breath caught, and terror
exploded behind her eyes. She took one hand from her mug of tea,
reaching out to grip his forearm with painful force.
"Please, Jath," she whispered,
"don't even think of trying that. I couldn't bear to lose you
again."
That shook him, and he looked
deep into her eyes, suddenly seeing that hideous fight from her
perspective. When he remembered that ghastly fireball
engulfing him, he remembered agony and terror, but they were
his agony, his terror. When she remembered it, she
remembered seeing him die.
Deep as that instant of
consummate terror and pain had been as the fire took him, the
memory which had followed his return to consciousness in this
camp, before finding Shaylar alive beside him, had been far worse.
For those few, ghastly moments, when he'd believed she
was dead, the world had been an unbearable place, darker, deeper,
and far bleaker than the far side of the moon. Yet even that,
hideous as it had been, had been far less horrifying than it would
have been to see her wrapped in the furnace heat of a
fireball, burning to death before his very eyes.
"No," he choked out, pulling her
close, burying his face in her hair. "Never. I'll never risk
anything that would leave you here alone."
Her breath shuddered unsteadily
against the side of his neck, but she held herself together, and
when she finally sat up again, her courageous smile sent an ache
of proud pain through his heart. He dried her face with gentle
hands, careful on her bruises, but before he could speak again,
they were distracted by a sudden shout.
Both of them slewed around in
time to see another dragon come winging in from the east.
Translucent leathery wings vaned and twisted, altering its
flightpath and slowing its airspeed. There seemed to be something
indefinably wrong about the way it braked, how quickly it
lost velocity, but Jathmar reminded himself that he was scarcely in
mental condition to make reliable hard and fast judgments about
mythological beasts who couldn't possibly exist anyway.
Jasak Olderhan had turned with
everyone else at the dragon's approach. Now he strode rapidly to
meet it, his face set in grim lines, and Gadrial spoke to the dark-
skinned man sitting beside them. She sounded worried, and
Halathyn shrugged, peering with obvious curiosity of his own as
the dragon backwinged with a thunderclap of its immense wings
and settled with surprising delicacy at the edge of camp.
Jathmar frowned at the
newcomer, and even more at the reactions he saw around him.
"Trouble?" he wondered aloud.
"Could be," Shaylar replied. "It's
obvious that Jasak isn't rolling out the welcome mat for whoever's
on that thing, anyway."
Chapter Fourteen
Jasak Olderhan reminded himself
not to curse out loud as he shaded his eyes with one hand, peering
up at the approaching dragon.
Muthok Salmeer had made the
condition of Cloudsail, Windclaw's assigned wing dragon,
abundantly clear. It would be weeks, at least, before Cloudsail
could return to service, which hadn't exactly filled Jasak with
happiness when he found out. The distance between the base camp
and Fort Rycharn was just long enough to prevent a single dragon
from flying a complete round-trip without pausing for rest. With
only Windclaw, that was going to limit him to at most one and a
half round-trips per day, which was going to put a decided kink
into his plan to pull back to the coastal enclave by air.
Under the circumstances, the
sight of a second operable dragon should have delighted him.
Unfortunately, since it couldn't be the injured Cloudsail, it had to
be one of the additional dragons they'd been promised for months.
Given the water gap between Fort Rycharn and Fort Wyvern, at
the entry portal into this universe, it could only have arrived by
ship. Which meant the next regularly scheduled transport from
Fort Wyvern had also arrived.
Which almost certainly
meant . . .
The dragon landed, and Jasak's
mouth tightened as a stocky man in the uniform of the Second
Andaran Scouts with the same silver-shield collar insignia Jasak
wore climbed down from the second saddle. The newcomer
turned, surveying the camp and the rows of wounded troopers
with a hard, grim frown, and Jasak snarled a mental obscenity.
He had been looking
forward to his replacement's arrival, or, at least, to going home
himself for a well-earned bit of R&R. But that had changed
the moment Shevan Garlath sent the situation crashing out of
control by killing an unarmed man. His men were shattered and
demoralized, and the thought of turning his command over
now was thoroughly unpalatable.
"Hundred Thalmayr." Jasak
saluted the newcomer.
"Hundred Olderhan." Hadrign
Thalmayr returned Jasak's salute with a flip of the hand which
which turned the ostensible courtesy into something one thin inch
short of a derisive insult. Then he reached into his tunic pocket
and extracted an official message crystal. "As per the orders of
Commander of Two Thousand mul Gurthak, I relieve you."
Jasak's jaw muscles knotted as
he saw the contempt in Thalmayr's dark eyes. The man knew
nothing about what had happened out here, but it was obvious he'd
already made up his mind about it. Jasak's temper snarled against
its leash, but he couldn't afford to release it. Not yet.
"Very well, Hundred Thalmayr,"
he said formally, instead, accepting the crystal. "I stand relieved."
"Good," Thalmayr said. "In that
case, pack your prisoners onto your transport, Hundred Olderhan.
There's nothing to delay your immediate departure.
"On the contrary," Jasak said,
more sharply than he'd intended to do. "I have men in the field, on
a reconnaissance mission. They haven't returned yet, and we can't
possibly evacuate until they do."
"Evacuate?" Thalmayr repeated
incredulously. He stared at Jasak for an instant, then curled his lip
contemptuously. "You can't possibly be serious!"
"I'm deadly serious," Jasak
snapped. "These people have devastating weapons we can't even
comprehend, Thalmayr. Less than twenty of them—
apparently civilians—killed or wounded two thirds
of a crack Scout unit. That's over eighty-five percent
casualties to First Platoon's combat element. Until we know more
about them, the last thing we can afford is another armed
confrontation. We need to make that impossible—pull back
to the coast and establish a buffer zone they can't track us across
until we get a team of trained diplomats in here."
"We wouldn't need diplomats,"
Thalmayr said icily, "if you hadn't totally botched the first contact!
I may not have been an Andaran Scout—" a not-so-faint
edge of contempt burred in the last two words "—as long as
you have, but even a straight infantry puke knows standing
orders are clear, Olderhan. In the event of discovery of any non-
Arcanan people, every precaution must be taken to insure
peaceful contact." He swept an angry gesture across the
wounded waiting for medical treatment. "Obviously, your
idea of 'peaceful' isn't exactly the same as mine, is it?"
Muscles jumped along Jasak
Olderhan's jaw. He could hardly tell this pompous oaf that Fifty
Garlath had been ordered to stand down. It would have sounded
like a lame excuse, and the last thing he was prepared to do was
sound as if he were making excuses to Hadrign Thalmayr.
Eventually, there would be a board of inquiry. The odds were at
least even that the board's conclusions would send his career into
the nearest toilet, whatever else happened, but at the
moment—
"That doesn't change the current
tactical situation," he said instead. He made his voice come out
levelly, as non-confrontationally as possible, but Thalmayr's eyes
blazed.
"Yes," he bit out, "it does.
You may want to cut and run, but your actions have made it
imperative—imperative!—that we remain
firmly in control of this portal. First, because the Union Army will
never yield an inch of Arcanan soil. Second, because it's
the smallest bottleneck in three universes, which makes it the best
possible spot to hold our ground if we have to. And third, because
your own initial report to Five Hundred Klian makes it clear that
the universe on the other side of that portal—" he
jabbed an angry gesture at the swamp portal "—is a fucking
cluster. Only the second true cluster ever discovered! We
are not going to give up access to a cluster the size of this
one. Especially not when somebody's already been stupid enough
to start a fucking war with the people we'd be giving it up to!"
Jasak knew his face had gone
white, and Thalmayr sneered at him.
"We'll get your 'diplomats' in
here, all right, Olderhan. They'll shovel the shit and clean up your
mess for you. But in the meantime, if the bastards who did
this—" the same angry hand jabbed at the rows of wounded
"—want to pick a fight, they'll get no further than that slice
of dirt." The finger jabbed again, this time at the portal. "If they
want Arcanan soil, we'll give them just enough of it to bury them
in."
Jasak stared at him, too aghast
even to feel his own white-hot rage.
"Are you out of your mind?
" he demanded. "If you invoke Andaran 'blood and honor'
now, you'll have a first-class disaster on your hands! And you'll
get more of my men killed, you—"
"My men!" Thalmayr
snarled back. "Or have you forgotten the orders in that crystal?"
Jasak started a fiery retort, then
made himself stop. He sucked in an enormous breath, promising
himself the day would come when Hadrign Thalmayr would face
him—briefly—across a field of honor. But not
today. Not here.
"Yours or mine, Hundred
Thalmayr," he said as calmly as he could, "it's unconscionable to
put these men back into the path of combat again when there's no
need, and when another violent confrontation would be the worst
political disaster we could come up with. Sitting here rattling our
sabers and daring the enemy to cross our line in the mud isn't the
way to resolve this situation without further bloodshed."
"Contact's already been
botched." Thalmayr's eyes were volcanic. "Thanks to that—
thanks to you—these people now represent a clear
and present danger to the Union of Arcana. My job is to safeguard
Arcanan territory—"
"Your job is to defend
Arcanan citizens from further danger," Jasak hissed, "not
to haggle over the ownership of a patch of mud!"
"—and I'll rattle as many
sabers as it fucking well takes to defend it!" Thalmayr snarled, as
if Jasak hadn't spoken at all. "Your job—assuming
you can do it—is to transport your passengers back
for interrogation. I suggest you get started. It's a long, long way to
Army HQ on New Arcana."
Before Jasak could open his
mouth again, Thalmayr shoved past him and strode directly toward
the campfire, where Jathmar and Shaylar had risen to their feet and
stood watching the heated exchange tautly. Jasak stalked after the
idiot, shoulders set for another confrontation. He got it when
Thalmayr reached the campfire and turned with another snarl.
"They aren't restrained!"
"No," Jasak said icily. "They
aren't. And they won't be."
"You're out of line, Soldier!
Those criminals—" the finger he was so fond of
jabbing with jerked at Jathmar and his wife "—have
slaughtered Arcanan soldiers—"
"Who butchered their
civilian companions!" Jasak discovered that he suddenly
didn't much care how Thalmayr responded to the flaming
contempt in his own voice. The man might be technically senior to
him, but he was also a complete and total idiot. A part of Jasak
actually hoped he could goad Thalmayr into taking a swing at him.
His own career was already so far into the crapper that the charge
of striking a superior—especially if the superior had struck
the first blow—could hardly do a lot more damage. And the
resultant chaos would probably force Five Hundred Klian to put
someone—anyone—else in command of
Charlie Company while he sorted it out.
"Soldiers who slaughtered their
civilian friends in a battle Shevan Garlath started against
direct orders!" he continued, glaring murderously at the other
officer. "We're in the wrong, Hundred—not them!
All they did was defend themselves with courage and honor. That
girl—" it was his turn to point at Shaylar "—that
civilian girl—is braver than any soldier I've ever
commanded! Her husband was so badly burned by our dragons he
was barely alive, she was badly injured herself, and she was all
alone in the face of the men who'd killed all of her friends, but she
faced us with courage. With courage, damn your eyes! She
even managed to hold herself together during field rites for every
friend she had in that universe. Don't you dare call these
people criminals!"
Hundred Thalmayr paled. Field
rites were enough to give even hardened soldiers nightmares. But
then the color flooded back into his face, which went brick-red
with fury.
"I'll call these bastards whatever
I fucking well want, Hundred," he said in a voice of ice
and fire. "And I am in command here now, not you! You, Sword!"
he barked to Sword Harnak. "I want field manacles on
these . . . people. Now,
Sword!"
"Stand fast, Sword Harnak!"
Jasak snapped. Thalmayr whipped back around to him with an
utterly incredulous expression. Jasak matched him glare for glare,
and the other hundred leaned towards him.
"I don't give a good godsdamn whose son you are, Olderhan," Thalmayr hissed. "You give
another order to one of my men, and I'll send you back to
Fort Rycharn in chains to face charges for mutiny in the face of
the enemy!"
"Try it," Jasak said very, very
quietly. "'These people,' as you put it, are my prisoners,
not yours."
"They—" Thalmayr began.
"Shut your brainless mouth,"
Jasak said coldly. "I was in command of the unit which took them
prisoner. The unit which disobeyed my orders and opened
fire on a civilian survey party whose leader was standing
there without a weapon in his hands trying his best to make
peaceful contact despite the previous death of one of his
people at our hands.
We . . . were . .
. in . . . the . .
. wrong," he spaced the words out with deadly
precision, "and I was in command, and they surrendered
themselves to me honorably." He locked his gaze with Thalmayr's,
his expression harder than steel. "'These people' are shardonai
, Hundred Thalmayr. My
shardonai."
Thalmayr had opened his mouth
once again. Now he closed it, glaring back at Jasak. The term "
shardon" came from Old Andaran. Literally, it meant
"shieldling," and it indicated an individual under the personal
protection of an Andaran warrior and his house. It was a concept
which stemmed from almost two thousand years of Andaran
history. There could be many reasons for the relationship, but one
of the oldest—and most sacred, under the Andaran honor
code—was the acknowledgment of responsibility for
dishonorable or illegal actions by troops under a warrior's
command.
"I don't care what else they may
be," Thalmayr said after a moment. A corner of his mind knew he
ought to drop it, but he was too furious. "They're also enemies of
the Union who have killed Army personnel, and as long as they're
on a post I command, they will be properly manacled and
restrained!"
"Try it," Jasak repeated, and this
time it came out almost in a croon. "Please try it. Violate
my shardon obligation, and you'll be dead on the ground
before you finish the order."
Thalmayr blanched, his face
suddenly bone-white as he saw the absolute sincerity in Jasak's
blazing eyes. Like Jasak, Thalmayr carried his short sword at his
hip, but the restraining strap was firmly buttoned across the
quillons, and he very carefully kept his hand well away from it as
he backed up two involuntary steps.
Silence hovered between them,
colder than ice and just as brittle. Then, finally, Thalmayr
straightened his spine and scowled.
"You may be certain,
Hundred Olderhan, that I'll be filing charges for
insubordination and threatening a superior officer."
"File and be damned," Jasak said,
still in that soft, deadly tone.
"And," Thalmayr continued, trying to ignore Jasak's
response, "I'll also be lodging a formal protest over your handling
of these people. Shardonai or not, enemy prisoners should
be restrained to prevent escape attempts."
Jason looked at him disbelieving
way, then barked a harsh laugh.
"Escape?" he repeated.
"And just where would they go, Hundred? They're in the middle of
a heavily guarded camp seven hundred miles from the nearest
coastline. Unless I miss my guess, Shaylar's suffering from a
concussion, they have no idea how far they are from the portal
they came through, and the gods alone know how many miles
beyond that portal they'd have to go to find help! With
Shaylar too badly injured to travel far, no weapons, and no
supplies, they can't run. Not together—and Jathmar won't
abandon her."
"You sound awfully
godsdamned sure of yourself for someone who's fucked up every
single command decision for the past two days by the numbers!"
Thalmayr snarled.
"Because he's right," another
voice said, and Thalmayr's head snapped around as Gadrial
Kelbryan stepped unexpectedly into the fray. He stared at her for a
moment, and she looked back with an expression which reminded
Jasak of a gryphon defending her chicks. Thalmayr started to glare
back, then turned an even darker shade of red as he suddenly
realized what sort of language he'd been using in her presence.
"Magister Kelbryan," Jasak said
formally, "May I present Commander of One Hundred Hadrign
Thalmayr. Hundred Thalmayr, Magister Gadrial Kelbryan,
Director of Theoretical Research for the Garth Showma Institute,
and special assistant to Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah."
"Hundred." Gadrial nodded, her
voice cool, and Thalmayr actually clicked his boot heels as he
swept her an elaborate bow. As his head dipped low, Gadrial
looked across him at Jasak and rolled her eyes, then wiped the
look away, replacing it with a cool, composed gaze as Thalmayr
came back upright.
"I apologize for my language,
Magister," Thalmayr said almost obsequiously. Obviously, he
knew exactly who Gadrial was . . .
and recognized just how fatal to his career it would be to make a
mortal enemy out of the second ranking member of the Garth
Showma Institute's faculty. Although she wasn't officially in the
military, Gadrial carried the equivalent grade of a commander of
ten thousand in the UTTTA's civil service.
"I've heard soldiers talking to
each other before, Hundred," she said, after a moment, and his
shoulders seemed to relax just a bit. "If seldom quite
so . . . freely," she added in that same
cool voice with perfect timing, and his shoulders tightened back
up instantly.
"Ah, yes," he replied, then stood
there for a moment, as if trying to think of something else to say.
"Ah, you were saying, Magister?" he continued finally.
"I was saying that Sir
Jasak," she said, eyes glittering as she stressed Jasak's title ever so
slightly, "is quite right in his assessment of our unexpected guests.
And of our obligations to then."
Thalmayr's eyebrows climbed,
and Jasak wondered just how much Gadrial actually knew about
the shardon relationship. He was willing to bet she didn't
begin to understand all of the deep-seated obligations of personal
and familial honor bound up in it—she was simply too
Ransaran to grasp the implications of Andara's feudal past.
Obviously Thalmayr was thinking exactly the same thing, but
whatever Jasak's opinion of the other man's basic
intelligence—or lack thereof—he was at least smart
enough not to pursue that particular basilisk.
"How so, Magister?" he asked
courteously, instead.
"I've spent a great deal of time
with Shaylar and Jathmar since their capture," Gadrial replied.
"He's utterly devoted to her, as she is to him. Think for a moment,
Hundred, how you'd feel if you were hundreds of miles
from help and—"
"They may not be that far from
their portal. It's my understanding that the cluster of portals you
and Magister Halathyn have detected are in very close proximity.
That means—"
"How dare you
interrupt a Guild magister?"
Gadrial's voice cracked like a
whip. She bristled so furiously her very hair seemed to crackle and
Thalmayr blanched and backed up—first one step, then
another—as she advanced on him.
"Are you truly the unschooled,
illiterate, brainless, unwashed barbarian you appear to
be?" Her voice was like a sword. "Or does the Andaran military
academy include courses on discourtesy as part of its standard
curriculum? Because if it does, you obviously excelled in at least
one subject!"
"Magister, I—"
"Enough!" The air sizzled
around her—literally sizzled as static charges
cracked and popped like the aura of a Mythalan firebird. "I'm tired
of musclebound idiots insulting my intelligence, my professional
competence, and my rank! Shevan Garlath was a disgrace to the
uniform he died in, and so far, Hundred Thalmayr, I'm not any
more favorably impressed by you!"
Hadrign Thalmayr swallowed
hard. For a moment, Jasak almost felt sorry for the other man,
despite his own blinding rage. The wrath of any full magister was
something few mortals cared to incur; the wrath of this
magister could destroy the career of a man with far better political
and patronage connections than Thalmayr possessed.
"Magister Kelbryan, a thousand
pardons! I beg your forgiveness for my deplorable discourtesy."
She tilted her head back, staring
down her nose at him despite the fact that he stood two full hands
taller than she did. She let him sweat for another long moment,
then gave a minute, frost-rimmed nod.
"Apology accepted," she said
coldly. Then added, "As for your objection, we know how
relatively close we are to their portal; they don't."
Thalmayr started to protest
again, then clamped his lips together and kept whatever it was
carefully behind his teeth.
"Much better, Hundred
Thalmayr." Gadrial's eyes glinted. "They don't know for the simple
reason that they were both unconscious for most of the flight here.
They have no way of knowing how far we brought them by
dragon."
"Oh. Oh, I see." Thalmayr
cleared his throat. "Well, yes. That does change the picture a bit,
doesn't it?"
Jasak carefully refrained from
snorting aloud.
"It certainly does," Gadrial
agreed coldly. "Not only do they have no idea how far they'd have
to go, but Shaylar can't bolt, and Sir Jasak is right—Jathmar
won't, not without her. Look at them, Hundred Thalmayr. I mean
that literally. Look at them."
Thalmayr's head turned like a
marionette's. Jathmar had placed himself squarely between the
hundred and Shaylar. His eyes were slitted, his posture tense. He
stood with his knees slightly bent, his hands half-fisted at his sides,
coiled like a serpent ready to strike.
"He's already close to the
breakpoint," Gadrial said in a quieter, softer voice. "Do you really
want to push him over the edge and set off of violent
confrontation that might well end in another death, Hundred? And
do you think your superiors will thank you for managing to kill
off one of the only two sources of information we currently
possess just to restrain a man who isn't going to run away
anyway?"
Hundred Thalmayr cleared his
throat again.
"You . . .
may just have a point, Magister."
"How magnanimous of
you to agree, Hundred."
He flushed under the ice-cold
irony of her voice. For just an instant Jasak thought he might
actually take up her verbal gage, but apparently even he wasn't
that stupid.
"Very well," he muttered instead,
his voice brittle. "I'll concede the point."
"Thank you. My job is hard
enough as it is, without fighting the Army every step of the way."
"Your job, Magister?"
"Yes, my job. Isn't it obvious?"
she asked, deliberately needling him. But he only blinked, clearly
not seeing where she was headed.
"I'm the only non-soldier in this
camp," she said in a deliberately patient voice. "The only person
they're likely to even halfway trust. I've also seen virtually
everything that happened out here. What I know, what I've already
seen and done, make my inclusion in whatever happens to them
imperative."
"That's the official position of
the Guild?" he asked, knowing full well that the Guild didn't know
anything about this situation as yet. Gadrial knew it, too, but she
looked him squarely in the eye.
"It is," she said flatly, and it
would be, as soon as the news broke. She'd see to that
personally, if she had to. Meanwhile, the closer she stayed to them,
the less likely it was that anyone in the Army—or in the
halls of political power, for that matter—would be able to
spirit them off under a veil of secrecy and do whatever they
deemed "necessary" to extract information. Not even politicians
and commanders of legions wanted to take on the Guild of
Sorcerers, and the Guild would certainly back her. Especially with
Magister Halathyn's guaranteed support.
Gadrial wasn't foolish enough to
think that anyone, even Magister Halathyn himself, could—
or even should—shield them from any prying. But
there were right and wrong ways of obtaining information from
them, and Gadrial was determined that the right way would
prevail.
Hundred Thalmayr obviously
wasn't made of sufficiently stern stuff to stand against her.
"Very well, Magister Kelbryan,"
he said in a conciliatory tone. Then he glanced at Jasak again. "The
prisoners are yours, Hundred. See to it," he added, his voice heavy
with warning as he turned back to Gadrial once more, "that you at
least remember whose side you're on."
Gadrial bristled again, but he'd
already turned on his heel and walked off, spitting orders as he
went. She met Jasak's gaze and found a curious blend of respect,
regret, and dark worry in his eyes.
"You'd best pack your things,"
was all he said. "Salmeer's going to be wanting to leave shortly."
"You think Thalmayr's wrong to
stay?" she asked quietly.
"Think?" He snorted. "No, I
don't think he's wrong. I know it."
"I agree with you about the need
to prevent another violent confrontation, but he's right about the
size of the portal," she pointed out unwillingly, hating to sound as
if she were siding with Thalmayr about anything. "All of
the upstream portals from here are larger. If it does come
to more shooting, isn't this the best place to try and hold them?"
"Hundred Thalmayr doesn't have
a clue what he's up against," Jasak said softly, his tone flat. "He
hasn't seen these people's weapons in action, and he doesn't know
one damned thing more than I do about how many of them
are out there, how close they are, how quickly they can follow us
back to this portal. He won't know, either, until Chief
Sword Threbuch gets back here. But instead of pulling people out,
he's going to be moving more of them in." He shook his
head. "One of my—his—platoons is all the
way back in Erthos, over four thousand miles from here. First
Platoon's been effectively destroyed, and Five Hundred Klian's
battalion's scattered around holding posts across at least three
universes. That leaves Thaylar with only two platoons—
barely a hundred and twenty more men, even with supports, since
they're both understrength. That's not going to be enough to hold
against any sort of attack in strength, but it will be big
enough to make it impossible for him to disengage and pull out
quickly if something too big to handle comes at him."
"And he's not remotely prepared
to listen to you," Gadrial worried.
"He's convinced I screwed up,
probably because I panicked. He thinks I behaved dishonorably,
and that my intention to retreat was an act of cowardice."
"Cowardice! Is he
insane? And you did not act dishonorably! Why, that
pompous, stupid—!"
"Peace, Magister." He held up
one hand, and she subsided, still fuming. "This isn't your fight," he
said gently. "And rest assured that that accusation will be raised
again.
"Any jackass who makes that
accusation will hear the truth from me," she said, eyes slitted,
"even if I have to knock them down and stand on their chests while
I shout at them!"
"My Lady," Jasak said with a
slight smile, "that's a sight I'd relish seeing. But be that as it may, I
still have to get them safely back to New Arcana. Pack for the
journey, please. I have to speak with Magister Halathyn.
Immediately."
"Halathyn," she breathed,
her face suddenly pale. "He has to go with us."
"Yes, he has to," Jasak agreed.
"And he's a cantankerous, dragon-headed, opinionated old
curmudgeon, far too accustomed to getting his own way, who
shouldn't be allowed outside the precincts of the Academy without
an armed keeper and a leash."
He half-expected her to be
insulted, but instead, her lips quirked in a slightly strained smile.
"My goodness, you do
know him rather well, don't you?"
"That I do, and he's not going to
want to get any further away from this damned portal cluster than
he absolutely has to. So, if you'll excuse me?"
He turned away, and it was clear
to Gadrial as he stalked toward Halathyn's tent that he cared for
that cantankerous, dragon-headed, opinionated old curmudgeon
almost as much as she did. And, she thought, biting her lip, he was
absolutely right about how hard it was going to be to convince
Halathyn to "abandon his post" on the cusp of uncovering the
greatest single trans-temporal discovery of all time: not simply a
portal, but another entire trans-universal civilization! Could
Jasak—or she—possibly come up with an argument
potent enough to pull that off?
Fear, cold as a Ransaran winter
wind, blew through her heart. She stood for a moment longer,
watching Jasak bend to duck under the fly of Halathyn's tent. Then
she trudged off toward her own tent, and started to pack.
"There's more trouble brewing,"
Jathmar said tersely, and Shaylar nodded.
Judging by the raised voices
coming from a nearby tent, Jasak and the elderly, dark-skinned
Halathyn who'd done such astonishing things weren't exactly in
perfect agreement about something. Halathyn sounded reasonable
and confident, if a trifle irritated, while Jasak sounded angry and
frustrated. The newcomer—the man Jasak and Gadrial had
called "Thalmayr"—strode toward the tent, and Jathmar
tensed. His maddening inability to understand what anyone said
hadn't prevented him from recognizing the fact that Thalmayr
represented a serious threat to him and
Shaylar . . . or the fury with which
Jasak had confronted the other man over it.
But Thalmayr paused, just
outside the tent flap, obviously eavesdropping. At least he didn't
intrude and make whatever was going on still worse, but Jathmar
would almost have preferred that to the man's nasty grin before he
moved on.
Whatever Jasak and Halathyn
were arguing about, Jathmar decided he'd better worry about it, if
Thalmayr was glad it was taking place. Thalmayr scared him
straight down to his socks, and he didn't mind admitting it. Not, at
any rate, as much as he hated admitting that he and Shaylar
needed Jasak and Gadrial as protection against the other man.
"Gadrial's packing her
belongings, too," Shaylar said abruptly. "Look there."
She nodded toward the tent
beside Halathyn's, where the slim, not-Uromathian woman was
visible through the open flap. She was, indeed, packing, but
nobody else was.
"Whatever's going on, they're not
evacuating the whole camp," Jathmar muttered. "They must intend
to stand their ground at this portal."
"Will Grafin order out a search
party?" Shaylar wondered.
"I don't know. That's a military
question which means it's also a political one. On the other hand,
Darcel won't rest until he locates us—or our bodies. And
Darcel can be mighty persuasive."
He smiled crookedly at Shaylar,
but his smile disappeared as she shook her head.
"He won't find any bodies, Jath,"
she said, her voice hollow, and Jathmar felt something prickle
along his scalp at her expression.
"What do you mean? Surely they
buried the dead!"
"No." She shook her head. "No,
they burned them. Cremation, I guess I should call it. All of them.
Theirs and ours with—" She swallowed convulsively. "I
don't know what it was. It burned fast, and hot. It
consumed . . . everything."
"Those sick, sadistic—"
Jathmar began savagely, but she shook her head again, harder.
"No, it wasn't like that!" Her
distress was obvious, but she felt carefully for the right words.
"They treated our people just like theirs, Jathmar. It
was . . . it was like some kind of
funeral rite. They couldn't carry the bodies out. And there weren't
enough of them left to bury all the dead. So they did the best they
could, and they gave our people just as much respect as their
own."
Jathmar stared at her, and she
managed a tremulous smile. But then her eyes closed once more,
and she leaned her forehead against him.
"I know that's what they were
doing, what they intended. I read it off Jasak. But seeing
it . . ."
She began to weep yet again, and
he held her tight, whispering to her, begging her not to cry.
"No. I need to," she said through
her tears. "Barris told me that, after Falsan died in my arms. He
told me to go ahead and cry. It was the psychic death shock, he
said, and he was right. And then I watched him. Just
watched him burn to ashes . . . "
"Oh, love," he whispered into her
hair, rocking her gently, eyes burning.
He started to say something
more, then stopped himself and closed his eyes. He hadn't been
there when Falsan died, but he knew Barris had given Shaylar the
right advice. Now, hard as it was, Jathmar had to let her do the
same thing when all he really wanted to do was comfort her until
she stopped weeping.
He concentrated on just hugging
her, and deliberately sought something else to distract him from
his desperate worry over her and his fury at the people who had
driven her to this.
He opened his eyes once more
and looked up at Gadrial once again. The other woman was almost
finished packing, it seemed, and he found himself wondering just
who Gadrial was. It was obvious that it was her intervention
which had brought the incandescent confrontation between Jasak
and Thalmayr to a screeching halt. And, ended it in Jasak's favor,
unless Jathmar was very mistaken. The tall, menacing Thalmayr
had backed down from her like a rabbit suddenly confronted by a
cougar. And she and Halathyn appeared to be the only civilians in
the entire camp. So just who were they? And how
important was Gadrial?
The confrontation continued to
rage in Halathyn's tent. Gadrial stood beside a packed duffel bag,
her head cocked to one side, her body language tense and unhappy
as she listened to it. Then she obviously came to a decision.
"Oh, my," Shaylar murmured in
his ear. She'd almost stopped crying, and she managed a damp
smile as she and Jathmar watched Gadrial march toward
Halathyn's tent. The other woman's mouth was set in a thin, hard
line, and her almond-shaped eyes flashed.
"I don't think I'd like that lady
mad at me," Shaylar added, and Jathmar produced a smile
of his own.
"I always knew you were a smart
woman, love," he replied
Gadrial disappeared into the tent.
A moment later her voice joined the fray, pleading at first, then
increasingly sharp with anger. It went on for quite a while until,
finally, she let out an inarticulate howl and stormed back out
again.
A part of Jathmar wanted to be
glad. Surely any discord in the enemy's camp had to be a good
thing from Sharona's perspective! But then he saw Gadrial's face.
Her lovely, honey-toned skin was ashy white, her lips trembled,
and tears sparkled on her eyelashes.
Shaylar saw it, too, and rose
swiftly, taking Jathmar by surprise.
"Gadrial?" Shaylar lifted a hand
toward her, part in question, part in sympathy, and Gadrial's face
crumpled. She looked back at Shaylar for a moment, then shook
her head and turned away, retreating back into her own tent and
letting the flap fall. Shaylar bit her lower lip, then sank back down
beside Jathmar.
"I hate that," she whispered
wretchedly. "I can't stand seeing her that distressed, especially after
the way she's tried to comfort me."
"It's not our affair," Jathmar said
gently. Anger sparked in her eyes, but he laid a fingertip across her
lips and shook his head.
"It isn't," he said again, gently
but firmly. "There's nothing we can do, because there's nothing
they'll let us do."
"You're right." A sigh shuddered
its way loose from her. "That doesn't make it any easier, though."
"Not for you," he acknowledged.
"Me, now, I'm just a bit less forgiving than you are. I think I could
stand quite a bit of distress on these people's part!"
"But not on Gadrial's," Shaylar
replied.
"Well, no," he admitted, not
entirely willingly. "Not on Gadrial's."
She smiled and touched the side
of his face, then both of them looked up as Halathyn's tent flap
opened again and Jasak emerged. Actually, "emerge" was too pale
a way to describe his explosive eruption, or the eloquent gesture
he made at the sky. Then he stalked away, heading toward another
tent on the opposite side of the encampment.
Halathyn's tent flap stirred again,
and the long, frail black man appeared. He called out something,
and lifted one hand in a conciliatory gesture, but Jasak refused to
listen or even glance back, and the storm in his eyes as he raged
past their campfire frightened Jathmar.
Protector or not, Jasak Olderhan
obviously wasn't a man any sane individual wanted pissed off at
him, Jathmar thought. But he'd already concluded that, watching
Jasak and Thalmayr. It wasn't fear of Jasak's temper that tightened
Jathmar's arm around Shaylar; it was the iron discipline which
held that temper in check. Angry men were dangerous—
men who could control and use their anger, instead of
being used by it, were deadly.
Jasak was one of the the latter,
Jathmar decided, and filed that information carefully away. There
were precious few weapons available to them, but knowledge was
one, and nothing he learned about these people was a waste of
effort. So he watched Jasak stalk into his own tent. Watched
Halathyn lower his hand, sigh, and shake his head regretfully.
Watched the old man reenter his tent without trying to heal the
breach again. And Jathmar watched as Jasak, too, began to throw
things into a heavy canvas duffel bag.
So both of
their . . . champions would be going
with them, wherever they were going. That was interesting, and at
least a little reassuring. As for those who stayed
behind . . .
Jathmar's eyes narrowed once
more, filled with bitter emotion. He could only hope that
Company-Captain Halifu and Darcel Kinlafia avenged
them—with interest. That shocked him, in a way, even now,
but it was true.
Jathmar Nargra-Kolmayr had
never expected to be brought face-to-face with the sort of carnage
which had destroyed his survey team. Yet he had, and he'd
discovered that he wanted his dead avenged. He wanted the people
who'd killed them repaid in full and ample measure. Part of him
was shocked by that, but all the shock in the multiverse couldn't
change that fact.
Deep inside, another wounded
part of him—a part which might one day heal, however
impossible that seemed at the moment—mourned the
passing of the man he'd been. The man who would have been
horrified by the prospect of yet more slaughter, whoever it was
visited upon. But for now, hatred was stronger than horror in his
heart, and that was precisely how he wanted it.
Chapter Fifteen
Acting Platoon-Captain Hulmok
Arthag mistrusted the shadows in this thick, towering forest. Then
again, Hulmok Arthag mistrusted most things in life, including
people. Not without reason; Arpathians learned the meaning of
prejudice the instant they set foot outside Arpathia.
The other races of Sharona made
Arpathians the butt of jokes and viewed them—some
tolerantly, some nastily—as barbarians. But no one made
jokes about Hulmok Arthag, and if he was considered an
unlettered barbarian, no one said sowithin his earshot.
He'd also learned, growing up on
the endless Arpathian plains, that no sane man put his faith in the
vagaries of wind, weather, fire, or even grass. Wind could bring
death by tornado, weather by the freezing howl of blizzards that
quick-froze everything caught in them, or the slower death of
dought. Fire could blaze out of control, driven by wind to
consume everything in its path. Grass could wither and fail,
leaving no fodder for the herds, and when the herds failed,
eventually there would be no one left to bury or burn the dead.
What Arthag did trust
were his own strong hands, his own determination, and the hearts
of those under his command. Not their minds, for no
man's—or woman's—mind could be guaranteed, let
alone trusted. But a heart could be measured, if one looked into
its depths with the sort of Talent that laid its innermost secrets
bare, and Hulmok Arthag had that Talent. He didn't misuse it, as
some might have, but when it came to assessing the men under his
command, he used it ruthlessly, indeed, and he'd come up with
many ways to get rid of any man who failed to meet his own
rigorous standards.
"Platoon-Captain."
Arthag looked up. It was Mikal
Grigthir, the trooper he'd sent forward as an advance scout.
Grigthir trotted his horse up to the small campfire where Arthgag
sat, waiting with the rest of the halted column for his report,
reined in, and saluted sharply.
"Good to see you in one piece,"
Arthag growled, returning the salute.
"Thank you, Sir." Grigthir had
been with Arthag for less than six months, only since the
Arpathian had been brevetted to his present acting rank and given
command of Second Platoon, Argent Company, of the Ninety-
Second Independent Cavalry Battalion. But he was an experienced
man, an old hand out here on the frontier, and Arthag had
complete faith in his judgment.
"What did you find?" the petty-
captain continued.
"I found their final camp, Sir. It's
been pillaged. Most of their gear was abandoned, but there's not a
weapon left in the whole stockade. Not even a single cartridge
case."
"They took the donkeys, then?"
Arthag asked with a frown.
"No, Sir. I found them
wandering loose around the camp. But the attack didn't take place
anywhere near the stockade. Voice Kinlafia was right—our
people got out in time and started hiking back toward the portal.
They got further than we'd thought, too. I found plenty of sign to
mark their trail, both their own and their pursuers'. I'd estimate
that they were followed by at least fifty men on foot."
"Fifty." Arthag swore, although
it wasn't really that much of surprise. "You say you found their
back trail," he continued after a moment. "Did you find where they
were attacked, too?"
"Yes, Sir." Grigthir swallowed.
"I did."
"And?" Arthag asked sharply,
noticing the tough, experienced cavalry trooper's expression.
"It's . . .
unnatural, Sir."
Grigthir was pale, visibly shaken,
and Arthag drew a deep breath. He looked around at the thirty-odd
men of his cavalry platoon, then nodded sharply to himself.
"All right, Mikal," he said.
"Show me."
The forest was eerie as the
platoon moved out once more in column, following Grigthir. The
woods were too silent and far too deep for Arthag's liking. He'd
grown accustomed to soldiering in any terrain, but he was a son of
the plains, born to a line of plainsmen that reached back into
dimmest antiquity. His ancient forebears had halted the eastward
Ternathian advance in its tracks. Able to live off the land, fade into
the velvet night, and strike supply trains and columns on the march
at will, the Arpathian Septs had destroyed so many Ternathian
armies that the Emperor had finally stopped sending them.
But the Septs had learned from
the violent conflict, as well, and where Ternathian armies had
failed, merchants and diplomats had succeeded. The Septs had
ceased raiding their unwanted neighbors, learning to trade with
them, instead. That had led to greater prosperity than they had ever
before known, yet no septman or septwoman had ever adopted
Ternathian ways. Sons and daughters of the plains felt smothered
and suffocated by walls and ceilings of wood or stone.
And this son of the
plains felt closed in and vulnerable in a place like this forest,
where he could see no further than a few dozen yards but hidden
enemy eyes could watch his men, waiting to strike from ambush
whenever and wherever they chose. Grigthir had estimated fifty
men in the force which had pursued and attacked the Chalgyn
Consortium survey party, but where there were fifty, there might
be a hundred, or five hundred, or more. Not a comforting thought
for a man with less than forty troopers under his command.
As he rode long, he couldn't help
wondering if Sharona's first contact with other humans would
have ended in violence if both sides had glimpsed one another at a
distance on a windswept plain, rather than stumbling unexpectedly
across one another's paths in this unholy tangle of trees?
He snorted under his breath.
Questions like that were a waste of time. However it had
happened, Sharona had met its first inter-universal neighbors in
blood under these trees, and that was all that mattered. It was his
job to find any possible survivors—and take prisoners of
his own for questioning, if he could—not to ponder the
imponderables of life.
So Arthag guided his horse with
knees and feet alone, leaving his hands free for weapons. He
carried his rifle with the safety off, the barrel laid carefully along
his horse's neck to avoid tangling the muzzle in vegetation, while
he watched his mount's ears carefully.
The Portal Authority had
adopted the Ternathian Model 10 rifle for its cavalry, as well as its
infantry. Arthag wasn't positive he agreed with the idea, but he had
to admit that if they were going to issue a compromise weapon to
cavalry and infantry alike, the Model 10 was about as good as it
was going to get. The Ternathian Bureau of Weapons had
designed the Model 10 for use by infantry, Marines, and cavalry
from the outset. It was a bolt-action, chambered in .40 caliber,
with a twelve-round box magazine. Its semi-bullpup design gave it
a twenty-six-inch barrel, but with an overall length that was short
enough to be convenient in close quarters—like small
boats, or on horseback.
It was a precision instrument in
trained hands, and Arthag's hands were definitely trained.
So was his horse. Bright Wind
was no army nag. His exalted pedigree was as long and as fine as
any Ternathian prince's, and his schooling in the art of war had
begun the day he'd begun nursing at his dam's teats.
Hulmok Arthag's people were
nomads, and Arthag was the son of a Sept chieftain—a
younger son, true, with no hope of inheriting his father's Sept
Staff, but that had never been his dream, anyway. There were
always some men—and women—who felt the call to
wander more strongly than their brothers and sisters, and Arthag
had always been one of them. In times past, men like him had led
the Septs to new lands, new pastures and trade routes. In the
shrunken, modern world, hemmed in by others' borders, those who
felt the ancient call did what Arthag had chosen to do and sought
new pastures beyond the portals. And when Arthag had left the
Sept, he'd asked only one gift of his father: Bright Wind.
Under the Portal Authority's
accords, any trooper had the right to bring his own horse with him,
if he chose and if the horse in question met the Authority's
minimum standards. Less than a third of them took advantage of
that offer, but Arthag had never met an Arpathian who hadn't, and
his own mount was the envy of many a general officer. All of
which explained why Arthag watched the stallion's reactions so
carefully. Bright Wind could be taken by surprise, of course, but
his senses were far keener than Arthag's, and both horse and rider
had learned to trust them implcitly.
They were perhaps an hour or an
hour and a half's ride from the abandoned stockade when Bright
Wind suddenly laid back his ears and halted. Arthag felt the
shudder that caught the stallion's muscles a single heartbeat before
they turned to iron. And then a slight shift in the wind brought the
scent to him, as well. Smoke: a complex, unnatural stink that
mingled foully with the ordinary scent of wood smoke and less
ordinary smell of burnt flesh. Bright Wind's golden flanks had
darkened with sweat, but the stallion wasn't afraid. Nostrils
distended, ears pinned flat, he was ready for battle.
"What in Harmana's holy name is
that stench?" Junior-Armsman Soral Hilovar muttered softly. The
Ricathian Tracer wore an expression of horror, and something
inside Arthag quivered. He didn't share Hilovar's Talent, but he
didn't need to—not with that stench blowing on the wind.
"Let's go find out," he said
quietly. He turned in the saddle, waving hand signals to the
column which had halted instantly behind him. Scouts peeled off
from the flanks, spreading out. The precaution was almost
certainly unnecessary, but Hulmok Arthag didn't care.
Once his skirmishers were in
position, he touched Bright Wind with his heels. The stallion
stepped forward, dainty yet tense, and Petty Captain Arthag rode
out from under the trees into a scene of nightmare.
It was even worse than any of
them had been expecting, particularly for Darcel Kinlafia. The
Voice really should have been left behind, with Company-Captain
Halifu, but he'd flatly refused, and he hadn't been at all shy about
it. He might be legally under Halifu's authority, despite his own
civilian status, but he hadn't really seemed to care about that.
Arthag's platoon had only been
attached to Halifu's command for a couple of months. The
Chalgyn Consortium team's rapid-fire chain of discoveries had the
Portal Authority scrambling for troops to forward to the new
frontier. Arthag's men had been among the units swept up by the
Authority broom and whisked off to an entirely new
universe—and attached to an equally new CO—with
less than a week's warning. A man got used to that in the
Authority's service.
But although Arthag scarcely
knew Halifu well, he didn't think Kinlafia would have been able to
browbeat the company-captain into acquiescence if it hadn't been
for the fact that he was the Voice who'd received Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr's final message. Unlike Arthag or any of his troopers,
Kinlafia had already seen the battlefield through Shaylar's eyes.
That meant he might be able to give Hilovar or Nolis Parcanthi,
the Tracer and Whiffer Halifu had attached to Arthag for the
rescue mission, some critical bits of information or explanation
which would let them figure out what had really happened here.
But whatever Kinlafia had seen
through Shaylar's eyes, it obviously hadn't been enough to prepare
him for what he saw through his own. He let out a low, ghastly
sound as his gaze swept across the killing field where so many of
his friends had died. It was pitifully clear that he saw something
Arthag didn't—and couldn't—and Parcanthi reached
across to grip Kinlafia's shoulder in wordless sympathy and
support.
"Standard perimeter overwatch.
Chief-Armsman chan Hathas," Arthag said briskly, pretending he
hadn't noticed the Voice's distress. "First Squad has the perimeter.
Third has the reserve. Second Squad will dismount and prepare to
assist Parcanthi and Hilovar on request, but keep them out from
underfoot until they're called for."
"Yes, Sir!" Rayl chan Hathas,
Second Platoon's senior noncom, saluted sharply and turned to
deal with Arthag's instructions. For a moment, Arthag envied him
intensely. He would far rather have buried himself in the comfort
of a familiar routine rather than face the sort of discoveries he was
afraid they were going to make.
"Soral, Nolis," he continued,
turning to the two specialists. "Do what you can to tell us what
happened here. The rest of the column will remain outside the
clearing until you're finished."
Hilovar and Parcanthi nodded,
dismounted—awakwardly, in Parcanthi's case—and
tied their reins to fallen branches. Arthag allowed no trace of
amusement to cross his expressionless nomad's face—the
Septs had their reputation to maintain, after all—but neither
the Whiffer nor Tracer were cavalry troopers. They were
technically infantry, and Parcanthi looked like a lumpy bag of
potatoes in the saddle. Hilovar wasn't a lot better, and Arthag
found the two of them about as unmilitary as anyone he'd ever
seen in uniform. Hilovar was a tall, solidly built Ricathian who'd
been a Tracer for a major civilian police department before the
fascination of the frontier drew him into the Authority's service.
Parcanthi, a bit shorter than Hilovar but even broader, was a
Farnalian with flaming red hair and a complexion which Arthag
suspected started peeling about a half-hour before sunrise. On a
rainy day.
Both of them, despite their
relatively junior noncommissioned ranks, were the sort of
critically important specialists the Authority was always eager to
get its hands on. And as critically needed specialists often did, they
had a tendency to write their own tickets—often without
actually realizing they'd even done it. Which, when it came right
down to it, was just fine with Hulmok Arthag. He suspected that
both of them would be just about useless in a firefight, but they
knew that as well as he did. If it came to it, both of them were
smart enough to stay out of the line of fire (if they could), and
that, too, suited Arthag just fine, because they were also far too
valuable to risk in a firefight. As it happened, and despite
their lack of horsemanship or military polish, he liked what he'd
seen of both of them—a lot. And if they could tell him
anything about what had happened here, he would forgive them
any military faux pas they might ever commit.
He waited until he was confident
chan Hathas had the perimeter organized, then dismounted himself
with a murmured command to Bright Wind, whose ears flicked in
acknowledgment. Until and unless he told the golden stallion it
was time to move, Bright Wind would stay exactly where he was.
Arthag patted the horse's shoulder gently, then stepped up to the
edge of the clearing, rifle ready, and settled in to wait.
There'd been no rain and little
wind, which was a gods send for Parcanthi. Even so, the residual
energy had already begun to dissipate. A sense of horror and pain
would doubtless linger for years, but raw emotion wasn't what
Parcanthi—and the rest of Sharona—sought.
The Whiffer stepped out into the
center of the toppled timber, closed his eyes, and reached out with
quivering senses to taste the surviving residual patterns, and
images flashed through him. Whiffs of what had been. Smoke. The
crash and roar of rifle fire. Screams of agony.
He turned, eyes still closed, to
face the trees where the Chalgyn Consortium's crew had sought
cover. He caught a flash of Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl standing up,
hands empty. Caught another flash of a uniformed man spinning
around, raising a crossbow, firing. Yet another flash of chan
Hagrahyl staggering back, throat pierced with steel.
Other flashes cannoned through
him. Barris Kasell dying monstrously inside a massive lightning
bolt. Men in strange uniforms falling to the broken ground, as
bullets hammered through them. Other Sharonians back in the
trees, caught by fireballs and crossbow fire.
He turned toward the standing
trees where the enemy had formed his line, and more flashes came.
Shouts in an alien tongue. Men rustling cautiously through the
trees, circling around to get at the defenders' flanks. Strange,
glassy tubes that belched flame and lightning, just as Kinlafia had
described. And bodies. Everywhere he turned, Whiffing the air,
Parcanthi saw bodies. Caught in tangled tree limbs, sprawled
across toppled tree trunks . . . lying in
neat rows.
He jerked his attention back to
that flash and tried to recapture it, to wring more detail from it. He
saw the dead laid out in careful rows, limbs arranged as if they
were only sleeping. Other men moved among them, placing
something small on each corpse. He could see Sharonian dead, as
well as those of the enemy. They'd grouped the survey crew
together, it looked like, but the images were so tenuous he
couldn't tell for sure how many Sharonians there were. He was
still trying to count when an unholy flash of light blinded him. The
bodies began to burn with unnatural brilliance—
Parcanthi let out a yell and
staggered back, gasping.
"What is it?" someone
demanded, practically in his ear. "What did you Whiff?"
Parcanthi jerked around and
found Hulmok Arthag standing at his shoulder.
"W-what?" he gulped, still more
than a little disoriented.
"What did you Whiff?" Petty
Captain Arthag asked again, and Parcanthi swallowed hard.
"They cremated the dead," he
answered, his voice hoarse. "With
something . . . unnatural."
"I'm starting to dislike that
adjective," the Arpathian officer growled. He glowered at the
clearing for a moment, jaw working as if he wanted to spit. Then
he shook himself and looked back at the Whiffer. "What else did
you get?"
Parcanthi gave himself a shake,
regathering his composure.
"Part of the battle Kinlafia
described, Sir. Just faint glimpses. The details are already fading,
dissipating. They cremated our dead, as well as their own, but the
images are so tenuous, it's hard to tell how many of our people
were burnt."
"Keep trying," Arthag said in
clipped tones. "We need to know if there were survivors."
"Yes, Sir. I know. I'll do my
best."
"Good man." Arthag put a hand
briefly on his shoulder, then nodded. "Carry on, then."
As Parcanthi got back to work,
Arthag turned toward Soral Hilovar, who was searching through
the fallen trees where the Chalgyn crew had taken shelter.
"Anything?" he asked, and the
Tracer looked up with a bitter expression.
"Whoever these bastards are,
they left damned little behind. If I could get my hands on
something of theirs, I could tell you a fair bit, but they were
fiendishly thorough scavengers. I haven't found anything they
left behind, and not a single piece of Sharonian equipment,
either,for that matter. I've found spot after spot where our people
set down packs, or what were probably ammunition boxes, but
they're gone. All I've got so far is this."
He held up a handful of spent
cartridge cases, and Arthag gazed at them through narrow eyes.
"They mean to learn all they can
from our gear," he said flatly, then inhaled and grimaced at the
Tracer. "Nolis says they cremated the dead. I know it won't be
pleasant, but try reading the ash piles."
He nodded toward the most open
portion of the clearing, where Parcanthi stood in the midst of fire
scars the length and shape of human bodies. Hilovar's jaw muscles
bunched, but he nodded with the choppiness of barely suppressed
anger. Not at Arthag, the petty-captain knew, but at what he was
going to find out there.
"Yes, Sir," he bit out. "I'll do
whatever it takes, Sir."
The normally cheerful Ricathian
stalked toward the fire scars. At least he wasn't a novice when it
came to crime scene work. His ten-year stint as a homicide Tracer
in Lubnasi, the city-state of his birth, had inured him to mere
human cruelty and suffering. He understood that people did
violence to one another, even in a world of telepaths. But
this . . .
The ash pits, while macabre,
were less horrifying to a former homicide Tracer than they would
have been to a civilian. Not that they didn't bother Hilovar anyway,
of course. But that was because he could already tell they were
tainted with something not quite right, something profoundly
disturbing. Whatever it was, he'd already encountered it when he
Traced the survey crew's actual death sites.
He put that memory out of his
mind, focusing on the immediate task as he knelt beside the first
human-sized scorch mark. There wasn't much left, not even bone.
A few twisted, melted bits of metal glinted dully in the ashes, but
there wasn't even much of that. Not enough to tell if the bits had
been buttons, or buckles, or something else entirely. Just a few
droplets, where something had melted and dripped away until it
coalesced into ugly, formless flakes and bits too small even to call
pebbles.
Simply touching the ashes and
splashes of metal sent vile prickles up his arms. Everything he
touched gave off the same feeling as the death sites had, only
worse. More concentrated. The vibrations of the energy he would
normally have sensed in a place where humans had been
incinerated—a house fire, say—had been warped by
something uncanny in these ash pits. The residues crawled along
his skin uncomfortably, like being jabbed with thousands of
microscopic pins.
When he doublechecked with
Parcanthi on the location of cremation sites that were almost
certainly Sharonian, then cross-referenced with sites which had
definitely contained the enemy's dead, he found exactly the same
residues on both, which led to an inescapable conclusion.
Whatever they'd used to cremate their own dead had been used to
burn the Sharonian dead, as well, so the odd residue wasn't a
signature given off by the enemy's bodies. And whatever it
was, they'd used something similar to kill the Chalgyn
Consortium's people in the first place, because that weapon had
left behind the same unsettling energy residue, all over the death
sites. It was exactly the same residue as whatever they'd used to
ignite the funeral pyres, and he couldn't make any sense out of it at
all.
"How were they
burned?" he muttered to himself without even realizing he'd
spoken aloud. "Whatever it was, it was damned odd."
It's certainly hadn't been any fuel
Hilovar had ever encountered. There was no wood ash, so it
couldn't have been a traditional, archaic funeral pyre. It hadn't been
kerosene, either, or some kind of flammable vegetable oil, or
anything else he could think of. Besides, each of these fire scars
was exactly the size of a single body. . . and they'd been burned out
of the surrounding leaf mold without touching off a general
conflagration. He saw the proof of that right in front of him, but
the very idea was still ridiculous. He'd never heard of any
fire intense enough to totally consume a human
body . . . not to mention one that
burned a neat hole out of drifts of dry leaves without spreading at
all!
He furrowed his brow, trying to
identify the elusive, disturbing sensation. It was more like the
energy patterns near portals than anything else he could think of,
but it wasn't the same as that, either. It
was . . . different.
He growled in frustration and
stood, looking around until he spotted Acting Platoon-Captain
Arthag and Parcanthi. They were standing together to one side, and
he strode briskly over to them. When he tried to explain his
confusing impressions, the cavalry officer looked baffled, but the
Whiffer blinked. He frowned for a few seconds, then nodded
vigorously.
"I think you're onto something,
Soral," he said. "I kept getting a Whiff of something really odd in
this clearing. It was pretty strong where our people died, but it was
even stronger over there." He pointed into the standing trees
opposite the clearing where the crew had made its fatal last stand.
"I got the strongest sense of it where I caught the flashes of those
weird, shiny tubes Kinlafia described."
"That's interesting." Arthag
rubbed his chin thoughtfully, looking from one spot to the other.
"You sensed it at the point of impact, and at the point of origin.
But not between? Shouldn't there be a parabola of residue
between them, along the trajectory?"
"You'd think so, Sir," Parcanthi
agreed with a frown. "Let me Whiff this again."
He moved slowly and carefully
across the open ground between the two spots, again and again. He
quartered the area meticulously, but when he came back, he shook
his head.
"There's not a damned thing
between them, Platoon-Captain. Nothing."
He looked perplexed, and
Arthag's frown deepened.
"That's impossible!" the officer
protested. Then grimaced. "Isn't it? I mean, how can something shoot without following a trajectory?"
"I don't have the least damned
idea, Sir, but that's what it looks like they did. There was some
kind of powerful energy discharge at the enemy's gun
emplacement." He pointed. "There was another one where the
weapon's discharge struck." He pointed again. "But I'm
telling you, Sir, that there's nothing between those two
spots. Not even the ghost of a signature. And this energy feels so
damned weird it would be impossible to mistake its
signature if it was there in the first place."
The three men exchanged grim
glances.
"Just what in hell are we dealing
with?" Hilovar asked for all of them in an uneasy tone, and Arthag
scowled.
"I intend to find that out." He
glanced at Parcanthi. "Can I send the men in to search the site yet,
or do you need to take more readings first?"
"Keep them away from our
people's death sites, if you don't mind, Sir. I do want to take more
readings there, see if I can pin down more information about who
died and who might not have. And stay clear of that area for now."
He pointed to a spot under the standing trees. "That's where they
tended their wounded before evacuating. I want to take a close
scan of that, as well. You can turn them loose anywhere else,
though."
Arthag nodded and strode across
the clearing to Chief-Armsman chan Hathas.
"Spread them out, Chief-
Armsman. I want every inch of this ground searched, from
there—" he pointed "—to there." He indicated the
two off-limit sites Parcanthi needed to scan again.
"Yes, Sir. Any special
instructions on what we ought to be looking for?" chan Hathas
asked.
"Anything the Tracer can handle,
Chief. We're looking for anything he can get a better reading off
of. As it stands, we don't have enough surviving debris to give
Hilovar a decent set of readings. Find something better for him."
"Yes, Sir." chan Hathas looked
out across the clearing, his jaw clenched, and nodded sharply. "If
it's out there, we'll find it, Sir," he promised grimly.
"Good," Arthag said, and then
turned to face the sole survivor of Chalgyn's slaughtered crew.
"Darcel." His gruff voice gentled
as he called the man's name.
"Sir?" The civilian's question
was hoarse, his expression stricken and distracted.
"Pair up with Nolis, please,"
Arthag said quietly. "Compare what you saw through Shaylar's
eyes with what he's picking up. I know that's going to be hard on
you, but we've got to know precisely how many of our
people were killed."
"Yes, Sir." The words should
have been crisp, but they came out as a shadow of sound, barely
audible, and distress burned in Darcel's eyes. He turned without
another word and headed out across the broken, fire-scorched
ground, stumbling over the rough footing.
It wasn't just the debris that was
responsible for his unsteady gait. Just being in this clearing was
agony, but he also had trouble distinguishing between what his
own eyes saw and what he'd Seen through Shaylar's eyes. The
memories kept superimposing themselves over what he was seeing
here and now. He kept trying to step over branches that weren't
there, and stumbled over ones that didn't exist in the view Shaylar
had transmitted. He blinked furiously, trying to clear his distorted
vision, and cursed himself when he couldn't. He needed to be
clearheaded, not muddled between past and present. He had to be if he was going to help spot something that would provide
clues for Parcanthi and Hilovar.
He stopped, turning in place,
looking for the exact spot where Shaylar had crouched, where the
agonizing memories in his mind had been born of fire and thunder.
There. It was somewhere in that direction, he decided, and started
forward once more, moving with grim determination through the
confusion of reality and remembrance. If he could find the spot, he
and the others might dredge up something they could use. Darcel
had little hope that anyone had survived, but he needed to
know. One way or the other, he had to know, because
anything would be better than this dreadful uncertainty. This
doubt.
He cursed the men who'd done
this, not only for the killing, but for burning the dead and stealing
everything they'd been carrying. They hadn't even marked the ash
piles in any way! What kind of barbarians didn't even mark a
grave? If they'd simply marked the sites, just indicated which piles
of ashes had held Sharonians, and which their own accursed dead,
there wouldn't have been this horrible doubt. The column would
have known how many people needed to be rescued.
And how many needed to be
avenged.
Darcel couldn't even lay
remembrance wreaths at the graves of his dearest friends because
he didn't know whose ashes were whose! It was intolerable, and
there wasn't a damned thing he could do about it, other than help
the Whiffer and Tracer wring every scrap of information they
could from this place and from his own memory, with its perfect
recall.
Shaylar's entire transmission was
still in his memory. He simply had to calm down enough to
retrieve it, and he had to remain detached enough to analyze every
fleeting second of those harrowing minutes. If Shaylar had known
where everyone was, and if she'd been aware of everyone's deaths
as they occurred, then theoretically, he knew that, too. Those were
distressingly large "ifs," but he had to start somewhere.
So did Platoon-Captain Arthag.
The officer had to know if they were on a rescue mission, or a
punitive strike. So Darcel tramped through the fallen trees,
comparing views and angles with what he saw in memory.
It took a long time, but he found
it in the end. When he finally located the spot, he stood peering
down at it for a long silent moment. Had she died here? Or
"merely" been wounded badly enough to knock her unconscious?
Most of the branches and tree
trunks in a four-foot swath around her place of concealment had
been scorched during the battle. Dead leaves had burst into flame
and burnt to white ash, some of which had fallen onto branches
below, and some of which—protected from the
wind—still clung to branches and twigs, paper-thin ghosts,
holding their shape eerily . . . until
the slightest touch of his breath caused them to crumble to
nothing.
He was tempted to crouch down
to match the views precisely, but he stayed carefully to one side.
He didn't want to contaminate the site with his own energy
residues, but even so, his boot brushed a thick clump of char that
wasn't wood.
What the devil? Darcel frowned and bent over it.
Someone from the other side had clearly looked at it after the
fight and dumped it again, leaving it as useless. That was the only
way it could have gotten to where it was, because it wasn't where
Shaylar had been crouching, and the ground directly under it
wasn't scorched. Most of the ground wasn't, actually, he realized
with another frown. It looked like the fireballs had passed
horizontally through the broken trees several inches above the
ground.
But there was one burnt
spot down there, he realized. One directly under where Shaylar's
feet had been.
This is where she burned the maps, he realized.
An icy centipede prickled down
his spine as he recognized it. He'd found the remains of her map
satchel, and the binder which had held her meticulous records.
Both of them had been made of oiled leather, to resist rain, and the
binder had been wrapped in a waterproof rubber case, as well.
None of them had burned completely, despite her frantic efforts.
She'd ripped out individual pages from the binder to burn her
notes, just as she'd burned the maps one by one, to ensure their
destruction. Then she'd tried to burn the satchel and binder, as
well.
He didn't even poke at the
charred lump with a stick. He left it for the Tracer to examine,
instead. Since both Shaylar and one of her killers had handled it,
they might get something valuable from it, so Darcel marked its
exact location and kept looking.
A moment later, his throat
constricted as he discovered why she'd lost consciousness so
abruptly. A thick branch behind the spot where she'd burned her
maps and notes was marked by dried blood and several strands of
long, dark hair. Darcel's fingers went unsteady as he reached
towards the strands, but then he made himself stop. Parcanthi and
Hilovar needed to examine everything here before he
contaminated it.
Darcel looked for the branch
where Jathmar had been flung when the fireball caught him and
spotted a few shreds of scorched cloth on the ground directly
beneath it. The branch itself, thick as Darcel's forearm, had been
seared black . . . except for a spot
exactly the width of Jathmar's body.
The Voice moved cautiously
around, staying outside the actual spot while his eyes searched
carefully. The unburnt bark of the limb into which Jathmar had
been thrown was scraped and cut where gear and buttons had dug
into it, and he peered at the ground to see if anything of Jathmar's
had fallen into the leaf litter.
If anything had, their attackers
had found it first and carried it off. Unwilling to risk stirring
things up with a closer search, Darcel called the Whiffer and
Tracer over to join him and explained what he'd found.
"You'd better go first, Nolis,"
Hilovar said, glancing at Parcanthi. "You need uncontaminated
patterns. I'll touch the evidence once you've gleaned what you
can."
Parcanthi nodded and started
with Jathmar's spot first. He closed his eyes and went very still,
and even though Darcel couldn't sense the energy patterns
Parcanthi was carefully examining, he knew enough theory to
recognize what he was doing.
Every living creature generated
its own energy field, created by that mysterious, poorly understood
force that animated a physical body. Inanimate objects had their
own strange energies, as well, and all objects vibrated at a specific
rhythm. A person sensitive to those rhythms could detect them,
focus on them, separate them from one another and wrest
information from them. Could discern what forces had worked
upon them, could draw visions—the famous "flashes" of
the Whiffer—of past events out of the energy flowing
about them.
Someone like Soral Hilovar, on
the other hand, could touch an object and trace the major events in
its history. If a living creature handled or came into contact with
an object, some of that creature's life energy remained behind. The
residue was like a static charge, except that it never entirely
dissipated. Details would fade eventually, yet for the most part,
the energy patterns left behind endured for a long time. But where
a Whiffer might use those patterns to determine what had
happened, a Tracer, like Hilovar, was sensitive to the connection
between the object and whoever had touched it. Unlike a
Whiffer, a Tracer couldn't see the general vicinity of those events,
couldn't pick up flashes of what else had happened in its
vicinity. But in many ways, what a Tracer did see was
considerably more detailed. He could frequently tell whether or
not the person involved in an event was dead or still alive. And,
somewhat like Darcel's own sensitivity to portals, a Tracer could
determine a directional bearing to the person in question.
The residue Whiffers and Tracers
worked with was even stronger when a complex living
creature—like a person—took a specific action, and
a violent action, or one steeped in powerful emotion—
terror, rage, passion—left the strongest residue of all. If
someone picked up a rock and bashed somebody else with it, a
ghostly imprint remained behind, creating a shadow copy of the
action . . . and its results. The shadow
copy didn't even need to be tied to a specific object, if the original
action had been sufficiently intense. The stronger the emotions,
the stronger the copy. Sometimes, the shadow could last for years,
particularly indoors—
Parcanthi hissed aloud and
flinched. Sweat beaded up on his brow and a cliff, trickled down
his temples.
"Oh, sweet Marnilay," he
whispered, his voice shaking. "They burned him
alive. . . . "
Darcel's mouth tightened into a
thin, harsh line. He knew exactly what the Whiffer was Seeing.
He'd already Seen it himself.
"He collapsed there," Parcanthi
said in a low voice, eyes still closed, pointing to the ground. "He
was still alive when they found him. Their emotions were strong.
Excitement. Relief?"
The last words sounded puzzled,
but a flare of hope shot through Darcel, sharp and painful.
Alive. Jathmar had been alive!
But Parcanthi was still talking,
and Darcel's heart clenched at the Whiffer's next words.
"He was burned something
ghastly. His back was burnt black, the shirt was just
gone—burned away. He was barely breathing.
Someone's crouched over him, trying to help. Gods! I can See
bone down inside the burns!"
Parcanthi shuddered, his face
twisting.
"It's too faint, curse it," he
whispered, "and there were too many people crowded into the
spot. The energy patterns are all jumbled up, imprinted on top of
one another. I can't sort them out."
His intense frustration was
obvious, and he opened his eyes and shook himself.
"That's it," he said grimly. "I'm
not going to get anything much clearer than that from here." His
jaw muscles bunched for a moment, and his nostrils flared as he
inhaled. "Let me try Shaylar. Where?"
"There."
Darcel pointed, and the red-
haired Whiffer nodded. His lean, craggy face was pale, covered
with cold sweat, but he walked across and crouched down, as
Shaylar had, surrounding and centering himself in the residue.
Bleak eyes closed again, and he gave another
shudder . . .
"She's burning everything. Maps,
notes. She's shaking, linked to Darcel. Jathmar's starting to climb
down from there—" he pointed to a spot above them,
without opening his eyes. Then his entire body flinched.
"Fire! There's fire
everywhere!"
He was slapping at his own
clothes, clawing at his hair, shaking. Then the fireball Darcel had
seen through Shaylar's eyes passed, and the Whiffer sagged in
relief. He turned, eyes still closed, toward the branch that had
knocked Shaylar unconscious.
"She crashed into that." He
pointed to the blood-crusted branch. "She's lying still. Her face is
swelling up, turning purple and black. There are cuts and scrapes."
Darcel's breath faltered. This
time, his hope was so terrible it actually hurt his lungs, his entire
body. If her face was swelling and bruising, she was alive.
Corpses didn't bruise—did they? He realized that he wasn't
sure, and the uncertainty was intolerable.
"They found her, too," Parcanthi
said. "They're shocked, horrified, that they attacked a woman."
Darcel's fists clenched at his
sides. He didn't want to think of these bastards as people who
could be shocked and horrified by what they'd done to an innocent,
lovely girl.
"They can't wake her up,"
Parcanthi said abruptly. "There's something wrong, desperately
wrong. Inside her head. They're trying. They're frantic, but
they can't wake her up, and she's badly
injured . . ."
His voice shook, frayed. Then he
groaned.
"It's fading out! The whole
godsdamned thing's wavering and fading away. They carried her
out of here, but I can't See anything beyond that. It just fades into
nothing. Or, rather, it blurs into that same mess Jathmar's did, with
all the imprints jumbled up together. I can't see anything more than
that."
"You have to!" Darcel cried,
unable to stop himself. "We have to know what happened
to her! Is she still alive?"
"I can't tell!" Parcanthi's
eyes opened, filled with anguish. "Too many people died right
here." He waved at the toppled trees around them. "And too
damned many people came through here—trying to rescue
survivors, trying to find every last piece of equipment. It all bleeds
and blurs and fades like ink in the water." He furrowed his brow,
rubbed his eyes. "Maybe if we can figure out where they took her
and Jathmar, I can tell more from there."
Darcel choked down more
frantic demands. Parcanthi couldn't do the impossible, and he
knew it. So he turned to Hilovar instead, and the Tracer glanced at
Parcanthi.
"Go on." The Whiffer nodded.
"I've got everything I'm going to get out of this spot. I'll head over
to the trees, where the enemy's lines were, try to find the spot
where they tended the wounded. Maybe I can tell more there."
Parcanthi extricated himself
from the spot where Shaylar and Jathmar had fallen. As he did so,
Hilovar met Darcel's gaze squarely.
"You have to realize," the ebony-
scanned Ricathian said in a low, cautionary tone, "that I may not
be able to tell, either. I can tell you what happened to an object and
the person or people most closely associated with it, but I may not
be able to Trace anything beyond the event itself."
"But Tracers can find missing
persons from hundreds of miles away!" Darcel protested. "I know
they can. You've done it yourself!"
"Sometimes I can," Hilovar
agreed. "That was useful in police work when I was still working
homicide. But you have to understand, Darcel. The more traces
there are at a crime scene, the harder it is to filter out just one. I
worked a case once where an entire extended family had been
killed by portal pirates. These bastards had a nasty habit of raiding
isolated mining camps, taking off with years worth of profits, and
killing all the witnesses.
"There were so many members
of the gang, so many victims, and so much violence done in such a
small space, that I couldn't get an accurate Trace on anything. It
took us over a year—and three more slaughtered
mining camps—to run the bastards down. If there'd been
only one or two victims, or fewer pirates, I could probably have
nailed them in a matter of weeks. Maybe even days."
Hilovar's eyes were dark with
remembered pain and frustration, and he sighed.
"We've got the same trouble
here. There was so much violence the event residues have
contaminated the objects caught in the middle of them. Everything
I've touched so far has so many echoes clinging to it that I can't get
accurate readings. If we had more objects to Trace from, the odds
would be better. But with so little evidence, and so many strong
residues, it's going to be tough. I'll do my dead level best, I
promise you that. And if we can find the place where they took the
wounded, if we can isolate something there that she and Jathmar
touched, the odds will go up. But even then, it's going to be dicey.
And if there's another portal nearby—"
He spread his hands, indicating
helplessness.
"I don't understand," Darcel said,
with a frown.
"Portals always screw up a
Trace." Hilovar seemed surprised by Darcel's response. "You're a
Voice—and a Portal Hound, too. Can you transmit a
message through a portal?"
"Of course not. No one can
trans—"
Darcel stopped abruptly, and
Hilovar nodded with a compassionate expression.
"The energy around a portal is
always weird stuff, damned weird. That's another reason it took us
so long to trace those damned pirates. You can't Trace anyone
through a portal any more than a Voice can send a message
through one, or a Mapper can Map through one of
them . . . and you can't just follow
someone through and pick him up again on the other side.
Stepping through a portal . . .
scrambles the residue. Those pirates would slip through a portal,
and every trace of them would literally vanish. It was like the gods
had stepped down, erased their very existence. This—" he
waved at the virgin forest surrounding them "—isn't
anyone's home universe, which means the other side came through
a portal, too. If they've taken any survivors back through it with
them, the odds of Tracing them on the other side—Well, I'd
be lying if I told you they even existed, Darcel."
Darcel cursed, then gritted his
teeth and nodded. At least Hilovar was too honest to offer false
comfort, he told himself.
"All right," he said. "I
understand. Do what you can."
The Tracer took a deep breath,
turned away, and grasped the branch Jathmar had struck. His
knuckles locked, and a ghastly sound broke from his throat. His
eyes shot wide, and his pupils dilated in shock, then shrank to
pinpoints. He shuddered, then jerked his hands loose and shook
them violently, as though flinging off drops of acid.
"Sorry," he muttered, scrubbing
sweat from his face with one forearm.
"I'll . . . try again."
He gripped the branch longer,
this time, but his entire body began to shake. The muscles of his
face quivered, veins stood out in his temples, and his voice, when
he finally spoke, was thick with pain and shock.
"Hurlbane's
balls . . . ! Bones
broken . . . bleeding inside, deep
inside . . . burns from scalp to
knees . . ."
Blood vessels popped up in
terrifying relief along the backs of Hilovar's dark hands, hands like
grey marble, carved from stone.
"He
can't . . . he can't possibly have lived.
Not with those injuries. Not more than a few
minutes . . ."
Flashes of memory—that
accursed, perfect memory of a Voice—showed
Darcel Jathmar's easy laughter. His boundless enthusiasm, his
sheer joy in the adventure that was life itself. There were hundreds
of those memories, thousands, and Darcel Kinlafia closed
his eyes as he felt his heart turn to cold steel.
Then he opened them again.
Hilovar had let go of the branch. He stood flapping his hands, as
though they, too, had been burned.
"And Shaylar?" Darcel asked
after a moment. "What about Shaylar?"
The Tracer drew a shallow
breath, as though it hurt to expand his chest more deeply. Then he
cleared his throat.
"Is there something specific here
I can Trace?" he asked, and Darcel pointed to the charred map
satchel. And to the bloody branch with the dark hair caught in its
bark. Hilovar looked at them both, then nodded.
"Only one way to find out," he
muttered, and Darcel literally held his breath as Hilovar's strong
fingers closed gently around the strands of hair and the blood-
crusted branch. Dark eyes closed once more as Hilovar gave
himself to the Traces.
"She was alive when they took
her away," he said after a moment in a strong voice, and Darcel's
hope leapt. But then Hilovar frowned. "Alive, but unconscious."
He bit his lower lip, and his voice faded to a terrible whisper.
"Blood pooling under the skull. Putting pressure on something
critical. Swelling . . ."
His hands began to shake, and he
shook his head hard, then released the branch and opened his eyes.
"I can't see anything beyond that,
Darcel. She was alive, but . . ."
The pain was even worse
because of that brief, thunderous stab of hope. But hemorrhaging
in the brain sounded at least as serious as Jathmar's more overt
injuries, and might well have been worse. Darcel looked away,
blinking burning eyes, as the anguish stabbed through him.
"Could—" He stopped,
cleared his throat. "Could she have survived something like that?"
"I don't know." The Tracer's
voice was hollow, full of bleak uncertainty and exhaustion. "I'm
no surgeon, Darcel. I can't even tell what part of her brain
was injured, only that it felt . . .
critical. If the injury wasn't in a life-threatening area, if they had a
skilled surgeon close enough . . . "
Hilovar didn't have to finish.
There were probably no more than a dozen surgeons in all of
Sharona's far-flung universes who would have been capable of
repairing the sort of damage Hilovar was sensing. What were the
odds that a pack of crossbow-armed barbarians would have a
surgeon with those skills with them out here in the middle of these
godsforsaken woods?
Hope died, messily, and what
grew in its place was colder than the frozen Arpathian hells. It cut
through him, cruel as any razor, and it hungered.
Darcel Kinlafia looked into
Soral Hilovar's eyes and caressed the butt of his revolver almost
gently.
Chapter Sixteen
Jathmar remembered his own
wistful thoughts about the joy of flight on the morning of the
nightmare attack—was it really only two days
ago?—and how he'd envied even a common sparrow's
ability to wheel and dart and soar.
Now, as the peered down at the
distant ground through the glass face shield and cold wind
whipped over him in an icy hurricane, he discovered that anything
he'd ever imagined fell far short of the truth. The sheer
exhilaration of actually streaking through the sky was so great, so
overwhelming, that it actually pushed his dread of the future
awaiting him and Shaylar out of the front of his thoughts. That
wasn't something he would have believed was possible, and a
corner of his brain wondered if he was concentrating on his
delight so hard in part to avoid thinking about that self same
future.
Maybe he was, but that didn't
change anything. The creature beneath the platform upon which he
and Shaylar were seated, carefully strapped in for safety, was
unquestionably the most powerful animal he had ever seen. The
sheer strength in every downstroke of those seemingly fragile
wings beggared every other notion of animal power he'd ever held,
and now that he'd gotten over his initial shock, he could appreciate
the creature's—the dragon's—metallic,
glittering beauty. The flashes of bronze and copper-colored
sunlight, reflected from its scales, were almost blinding, and the
ornate pattern on its wings and hide gleamed. Shaylar had to be
right, he told himself. That marvelous geometric design had
to be artificial, although he couldn't imagine how such
intricate patterns had been applied to a living animal's skin.
In fact, there was a lot
about these people that he couldn't imagine, and whatever else
befell them, he couldn't suppress his delighted grin as they raced
the wind itself. He'd come out here in search of adventure, hadn't
he? Well, when it came to unusual, unlikely experiences, riding
the back of a dragon which dwarfed any elephant and soared as
effortlessly as any eagle had to rank high on the list.
The sheer speed of the flight was
enough to leave him gasping in amazement. Not even a train
barreling down a miles-long straight track could have matched it.
He couldn't begin to fathom how a creature so massive could fly
so fast. It simply wasn't natural.
He snorted at the thought. He
and Shaylar had already seen a dozen other impossible things, and
no doubt they'd see still more. Things nobody on Sharona would
even have believed possible. Beneath the anger, the hatred, the
fear, the portion of Jathmar Nargra-Kolmayr which had drawn him
into the survey crews in the first place struggled to reassert itself.
His genuine love of new sights, odd adventures, and places no
Sharonian had ever set foot pressed tentatively against the deep
traumas of the last ninety-six hours.
He felt it stirring and wondered
what was wrong with him. How could he possibly feel anything
except fear, anxiety, hatred for the people who'd murdered his
friends, crippled his wife's Talent, almost killed him? How could
there be room for anything else?
He didn't know. The fact that he
couldn't banish his silly grin made him feel guilty, as if he were
betraying his dead friends' memories, yet there it was, and he
couldn't convince himself Ghartoun, or Barris, or Falsan would
have begrudged him the feeling. It wasn't enough to set those
darker, harsher emotions aside. Even if it had been, he wasn't
prepared to do that yet, for many complex reasons. It would be a
long time before he was prepared to even consider truly
relinquishing that darkness. Yet there was a deep, almost soothing
comfort in discovering that an important part of him, one he
valued deeply, hadn't died with his friends among the toppled
trees.
He recalled Shaylar's attempt to
comfort Gadrial's distress and wondered if she struggled with
some of the same feelings. Maybe she was simply braver than he
was. Maybe it was just that she'd already recognized the truth in
that ancient, banal cliché about life going on. Certainly
there was an undeniable edge of bad melodrama in refusing to
recognize that they had to make the best of whatever came their
way. If they wanted to do more than merely survive, wanted to
continue to be the people they'd always been before, then they had
to discover things which could still bring them joy, people they
could still care about. Perhaps Shaylar simply understood that
better than he did. Or perhaps she simply had the courage to go
ahead and admit it and reach out, risking fresh hurt because she
refused to surrender to despair.
He reached down to cover
Shaylar's hands with his own, where she'd wrapped them around
his waist, and gave her fingers a gentle squeeze. He couldn't tell
her why, not with the wind snatching sound away, but she
tightened her arms around him in a brief return gesture, then
leaned more of her weight against his back and the sturdy,
borrowed shirt he wore.
It felt strange, that shirt. It was a
uniform shirt, made of heavy cotton twill, comfortable, and
certainly rugged enough for the purpose of exploring virgin
universes, but with a cut unlike anything Jathmar had ever seen.
Sharonian shirts were simply two panels of cloth which met in
front and buttoned down the center, but this shirt had a
complicated bib-like construction, with two rows of buttons
where the left panel and right panel overlapped a third, which lay
beneath the other two.
Jasak Olderhan had shown him
how to fasten it up. It wasn't one of Olderhan's own shirts, since
Jathmar would have been lost in the taller, broader man's
garments. He suspected it had belonged to one of the men killed in
the fighting, which gave him a distinctly odd feeling. Still, he'd
needed a shirt, and clothing wasn't among the things Olderhan's
men had taken away from the survey crew's abandoned camp.
Not that they hadn't taken plenty
of other things. Several heavy cases—obviously purpose-
designed canisters specifically intended to be transported by
dragons—were strapped to the platform behind the
wounded. Those cases contained all the guns and every piece of
equipment they'd been carrying on the battle. From the looks of it,
they also contained a fair percentage of the equipment they'd
abandoned in camp, as well. Olderhan's men had even carried out
the spare ammunition boxes.
At some point, Jathmar knew,
Olderhan was going to "ask" them to demonstrate all of that
equipment's use. Including the guns. He wasn't looking forward to
that, but for the moment, streaking through the sky on a creature
out of mythology, suspended between what had happened and
what was yet to happen, he was able to set those worries aside and
simply enjoy the breathtaking experience of riding the wind.
Below them, as far as he could
see, lay miles and miles of trackless swamp. He'd discovered that
his Mapping Talent worked just fine from up here—or
would have, if not for the fact that he'd never in his life moved this
quickly. Trying to sort out everything his Talent let him See was
all but impossible simply because of the speed with which it came
at him. He was sure he could have learned to compensate with
practice, but for now he couldn't make a great deal of sense out of
what he was Seeing. Which was particularly frustrating, since he
rather doubted that his captors realized they'd given him the
opportunity to chart a perfect escape
route . . . if only he'd been up to the
challenge.
But if he couldn't See all he
would have liked to, there was more than enough he could see.
Brilliant sunlight scattered diamonds across the open patches of
water among the reeds, swampy hillocks, and patches of trees.
Vast clouds of birds rose in alarm as the dragon flashed overhead:
graceful waterbirds with snowy white wings and dove grey wings
and wings of darker hues that were doubtless herons and cranes.
They were too high to see any of
the other animals which inhabited that vast swamp, but Jathmar
had little doubt that there'd be plenty of crocodiles or alligators of
some sort down there, along with fish, water-loving mammals,
and millions upon millions of crustaceans. He wished he could
figure out where they were, though, and he couldn't. The shape of
land masses never varied from one universe to the next, but one
stretch of swamp was very like any other, and he had absolutely no
reference points to try and figure out where this one lay. If
he could look at the stars tonight, he would at least be able to tell
whether they were in the northern hemisphere, or the southern, but
he was unhappily certain that the information wouldn't do him a
great deal of good.
Although I suppose I'll at least draw a certain amount of
mental satisfaction out of putting my astronomy lessons to good
use.
They'd flown several hundred
miles, at least, when the dragon finally began to descend just as
Jathmar spotted a clearing near the beach. A fort had been built
along the edge of a sheltered bay, where a stream emptied from the
swamp into the sea in a startling plume of dark water that stained
the turquoise seawater for a surprising distance. Despite a lifetime
spent Mapping, Jathmar had never consciously thought about dark,
nutrient-rich water creating such a visible stain in much clearer
seawater, let alone how it would look from the air. It was almost
like a painting—swirls of color like the strokes of a brush
across canvas, unexpected and beautiful.
Then they were circling over the
fort itself, and he turned his attention to their destination. It was a
fairly large structure, but scarcely huge, and he nodded inside.
Everything he'd seen so far suggested that their captors were
operating at the end of an extensive line of relatively unimproved
universes, much as the Chalgyn Consortium crew had been doing
when they blundered into one another. He'd seen scores of
Sharonian forts very much like the one below him. Form followed
function, so it was probably a multiversal pattern: an outer
stockade, made of thick logs hewn from the clumps of forest
dotting the vast swamp, wrapped around a fairly large open
courtyard which held several buildings.
A sturdy, if roughly built, pier
ran out into the bay from the seward face of the fort. That, too,
was something he'd seen many times before. What he hadn't ever seen was a ship like the one lying alongside that pier, and
his eyes narrowed behind the protective glass shield as he studied
it.
It wasn't especially
huge—not more than three hundred feet, he estimated,
though it could have been a bit more than that—and its
sleek lines were unlike those of any ship he'd ever seen before. It
was slim, obviously designed for high speed, with sharply flared
clipper bows and a graceful sheer. The superstructure seemed
enormously top-heavy to Jathmar, far bigger and blockier than any
Sharonian ship he'd ever seen, but that might have been partly
because there was so little other top hamper. It had only a single
mast, whose sole function was clearly to support the lookout pod
at its top, and there was no trace of the tall funnels a Sharonian
steamer would have boasted. In fact, that was the strangest thing
of all, he realized. The ship below him had neither sails nor
funnels, so what in the names of all the Uromathian devils made it
go?
He had little time to ponder the
question before the dragon backwinged abruptly and touched
down with almost terrifying suddenness. His mind shrieked that
they were coming in much too quickly for safety, but the wide
wings braked their forward movement at the last possible instant.
Indeed, they slowed far more quickly than should have been
possible with several tons of dragon in motion, then settled in a
swirl of beach sand, flying debris from the tide line, and a solid whump. There was no doubt about the moment they touched
the ground, but the actual landing was far less jarring than he'd
feared from their approach speed. The beast's rear legs touched
first, then it settled onto its forelegs, trotted briskly forward for a
few dozen yards, and simply stopped.
Jathmar glanced back into his
wife's wide, alarmed eyes, and made himself smile.
"We made it!" He chuckled,
although his breath was a little unsteady. "And we got down in one
piece, too! I had my doubts, right there at the end."
"That
was . . . amazing." Shaylar sounded a
bit breathless herself as she uncurled her fingers from their death
grip on his waist. "Really . . . wow!"
she added.
Gadrial appeared from behind
them, smiling at their obvious reaction to the flight and landing.
She showed them how to unbuckle the complex straps, then
signaled for them to wait while the seriously wounded were
offloaded first. The men who'd come out to meet the
dragon—there were substantially fewer of them than a fort
this size should have boasted, Jathmar thought—had sorted
themselves out into two—no, three—types.
The first group guided stretchers
that floated by themselves. Stretchers, Jathmar realized abruptly,
like the "cot" upon which he'd awakened in the swamp base camp.
So that's how they transported so many wounded men out,
he thought as the stretchers floated straight up the dragon's side,
where the wounded were carefully shifted onto them.
The second sort were either an
honor guard or, more likely, a security detail charged with making
sure he and his wife didn't attempt something rash. The third,
Jathmar pegged as command-and-control types, given the
deference the others accorded them. The crossbowmen of the
security detail stood rigidly at attention and snapped out crisp
salutes as the apparent officers strode past them towards the
dragon.
Then it was the unwounded
passengers' turn to descend. The ground abruptly looked much
further away, and Jathmar exchanged a single apprehensive glance
with Shaylar, who still seemed distinctly unsteady on her feet.
"Why don't I climb down first, so
I can brace you if you lose your grip?" he suggested.
She nodded, and he drew a quick
breath, gave her a bright smile, and climbed over the edge,
hooking his feet into the crosswise strands of the web-like ladder.
The beast's hide was surprisingly
warm. He'd expected something so reptilian to be more,
well . . . reptilian. But it was
warmer than he was, even through the tough, spiky armored
scales. One of the spikes caught at the leg of Jathmar's trousers,
and he decided—a little queasily—that he really
didn't want to know what was big enough and nasty enough for a
beast this size to grow spiked armor to avoid being eaten by it.
He made it safely to the ground,
then reached up to assist Shaylar down the last several inches to
the sand. She swayed as her feet touched the ground, forehead
creased with a furrow of pain Jathmar didn't like a bit. The
distracting excitement of flying was wearing off quickly, he
thought, and slipped his arm around her to help support her
drooping weight, then turned uncertainly to look for Jasak
Olderhan, who'd climbed down ahead of them.
Olderhan was waiting with grave
patience, and when Jathmar turned, he gestured both of them
forward with a reassuring smile. They approached him obediently,
and he hesitated a moment, then offered Shaylar an arm. It was a
gallant gesture, as well as a pragmatic one, given her unsteadiness.
And it might just be Jasak's way of sending an important message
to the people waiting across the beach, Jathmar thought. He
looked down at Shaylar, nodded reluctantly, and watched her lean
against the officer's forearm. She looked up at her towering captor
and actually produced a smile, despite the bruises and swelling
that turned it into a pathetic, lopsided expression that clearly
caused her pain.
Jathmar saw a few widened eyes,
and more than one look of sudden uncertainty that bordered
on . . . guilt as Shaylar's tiny size and
brutally battered appearance registered. He blinked in surprise
when he identified that particular emotion. Then his eyes narrowed
as he realized Jasak Olderhan clearly knew what he was
doing . . . and that he appeared to be
swaying at least a few opinions. Moving slowly, every step
attentive to the bruised and battered woman he escorted, Jasak
supported Shaylar across the wide beach while Jathmar walked at
her other elbow, ready to catch her if she lost her footing in the
loose sand.
They came to a halt before a
cluster of three officers. All of them were older than
Jasak—two of them by quite a number of years—and
Jasak stopped before the eldest of them all. The older officer was a
solid, rectangular plug of a man, six inches shorter than Jasak, but
still the most imposing man on the beach. Jathmar recognized
power when he saw it, and this man, with his iron-gray hair, bull-
like neck, and arms that could have snapped Jathmar's spine
almost absentmindedly, literally exuded power. His eyes, as gray
as his hair, weren't cold so much as wary and observant. He swept
his gaze across Jathmar from top to toe, but his granite expression
gave away nothing of his thoughts. His gaze lingered considerably
longer on Shaylar, and a vertical line drove between his brows as
he studied her injured face—and everything else about
her—in minute detail.
Last of all, that cool, appraising
gaze centered itself squarely on Sir Jasak Olderhan. Jasak greeted
his superior with that curious clenched-fist salute, and the older
officer returned it—crisply enough, but with a good deal
less formality. Jasak spoke briefly, and his superior asked a
question. Jasak answered, and the older man nodded. Then,
catching Jathmar by surprise, the man who obviously commanded
this military outpost stepped back and gestured them past him and
his official entourage.
Jasak saluted again, then
solicitously escorted Shaylar—and, by extension,
Jathmar—into the enemy fortress.
Jathmar's first impression from
the air, that this fort wasn't so very different from Sharonian
ones—just as the lives of the men stationed in it couldn't be
so very different from Sharonian soldiers' lives—had been
accurate enough. He readily identified barracks, officers quarters,
and a central block which undoubtedly held the fort's command
center. There was what looked like a mess hall to one side, and a
particularly stoutly constructed building, which was probably the
armory or the brig, or might well be both.
All of that was expected enough,
but other things he saw had no Sharonian equivalents.
For one thing, there were cages
along the far side of the open courtyard. There weren't many of
them, but they were big enough to hold a really massive wolf or a
small pony, and they obviously contained something
which was violently alive. The cages were too far away to
determine what kind of creature was penned inside, but he could
see—and hear—enough to know they were unlike
anything which had ever walked Sharonian soil or flapped through
Sharonian skies.
They gave off metallic glints, for
starters, rather like the dragons did. They also produced a noise
like a steam whistle in a crowded railway station, and the breeze
carried the smell of them across the courtyard to Jathmar. He
wriggled his nose, trying to come up with something—
anything—familiar he could compare it to. Nothing came
to mind, though.
Other cages and pens were
reassuringly normal looking. He could see chickens in coops and a
pigpen with a number of live swine lolling in the mud, and he
could hear the distinctive bleating of goats. What he didn't see was any trace of horses, or any similar draft animals.
Given the dragons' size, they
certainly had to be housed outside the fort, but he hadn't seen any
sign of external corrals for more mundane transport animals as
they overflew the fort, which struck him as a little odd. All
Sharonian portal forts stocked horses and mules. They were
necessary for rapid deployment in the field against border bandits,
portal pirates, or other serious threats to civilian lives in a frontier
settlement. They were equally essential for the pursuit of armed
desperadoes, the transport of supplies and equipment, rescue work
in the face of natural disaster, or hauling supply wagons or the
field artillery held at most of the larger portal forts.
Jathmar supposed it was possible
that Jasak Olderhan's army hadn't brought horses to this particular
fort because of the unsuitable terrain. Swamps and horses didn't
get on well with one another, for multiple good reasons, and the
thought of trying to drag wagons through that muck
would have been enough to send any Sharonian quartermaster into
gibbering fits. Then, too, with dragons to haul supplies, they
probably didn't really need horses as pack animals, although
Jathmar could envision all sorts of terrain where dragons would
be useless. The dense forest in which he and his friends had first
encountered these people came forcibly to mind.
Whatever they used for pack
animals, though, one thing was clear: this fort was as well stocked
and well organized as any Portal Authority fort Jathmar had ever
seen at the end of a long transit chain, and he frowned as an earlier
thought recurred to him. He couldn't tell how many men were
housed here, but he had the distinct impression that the fort had
been designed to hold a much larger garrison.
That was
interesting . . . and worrisome. From
what he could see, Grafin Halifu probably had almost as many
men as these people did, despite the fact that his company was
understrength. But even if that were true, it was clear this fort was
intended as the base for a force much larger than Halifu's. So, was
that larger garrison simply out in the field on exercises? That was
certainly possible, and if true, it meant the enemy had sufficient
reinforcements in close proximity to easily handle anything Halifu
might throw at them.
On the other hand, if Jathmar
was right that this was an end-of-the-line installation, built
primarily to service the swamp portal, then it might very well still
be awaiting the rest of its garrison. Gods knew that was common
enough for the Portal Authority's forts! And if that were the case
here, then that gray-eyed man on the beach might just find
himself very hard pressed to hold off a prompt Sharonian strike.
Unless, of course, Jathmar reminded himself, the
reinforcements he's waiting for
are almost here already. This fort's obviously been
here for at least several months; that probably means the
rest of its assigned personnel are somewhere in the
pipeline on their way here. Grafin's first reinforcement
column certainly wasn't all that far out when we headed through
the portal.
They reached their evident
destination, and Jathmar found himself helping Shaylar into a
roughhewn building whose wooden walls and floorboards had
been roughcut from large logs. The first room was obviously an
office of some kind, where a uniformed young man saluted Jasak
and personally escorted their entire party into another, much larger
room. Jathmar had halfway expected to find jail cells; instead, they
entered an airy, breeze-filled room that was obviously an
infirmary, where rows of cots had been laid out in readiness for
the incoming wounded.
Several of the floating stretchers
were maneuvered past them, with the more seriously hurt taking
precedence over the walking wounded, including Shaylar. Men
who were obviously physicians and orderlies handled the
incoming casualties with brisk efficiency, although most of the
medical personnel seemed to lose a bit of their professional
detachment at their first sight of gunshot trauma.
A man with graying hair, slightly
stooped shoulders, and gentle eyes the color of the North Vandor
Ocean in winter gave Shaylar a kindly smile and gestured her over
to a real bed, not one of the emergency cots.
She held onto Jathmar's hand as
she sat down on the edge of the bed. The gray-haired man spoke at
length with Jasak Olderhan and Gadrial. Jathmar didn't need to
speak the language to recognize a physician at work, and he
watched the—doctor? healer?—nodding slowly and
jotting what were obviously notes into a small crystal the size of
his palm. Like Halathyn's, this man's crystal held squiggles of text
that glowed faintly. But he tucked that crystal away in a capacious
pocket and pulled out a much slimmer one, long and thin, with a
bluntly tapering point at one terminus. The new crystal's other end
was rounded, shaped to fit into his palm, and he held it out and
murmured something.
A beam of light streamed from
the end. Shaylar twitched away in astonishment, but he only smiled
reassuringly and allowed the light to play across the back of his
other hand, demonstrating its harmlessness. She looked at him just
a bit timidly, then smiled back and sat straight and still as he
peeled back her eyelids, peered carefully into her pupils, and
shined the beam of light right into her eyes to see how the pupils
reacted.
He frowned and asked Gadrial a
brief question.
Gadrial' answer was also brief,
and the man shined the light into Shaylar's ears, paying particular
attention to the one on the bruised, swollen side of her face. Then
he murmured something else in an absent tone, extinguishing the
crystal's light, and put the peculiar little device away. He stood for
a moment, then laid very gentle hands on Shaylar's battered face.
He closed his eyes, and his fingers moved slowly across her
injuries, lighter than butterfly wings as he traced the extent of the
damage. They moved around to the side of her head, then to the
back, all while his eyes remained closed.
When they opened again, he
stepped back and gave Shaylar a very reassuring smile. But
Jathmar saw the worry in his eyes, and he spoke with Gadrial
again. The questions were longer and more detailed, this time, and
he listened very carefully to her answers. Jasak asked a question of
his own, and the gray-haired man answered gravely, evidently
trying to explain his findings. Jathmar had seen plenty of
Sharonian Healers conducting examinations by touch and Talent,
but that didn't seem to be what was happening here, although he
couldn't have said precisely why it felt different.
At length, the man urged Shaylar
to lie down. Gadrial touched Jathmar's arm, then pointed from the
healer to Shaylar, folded her hands, and laid her head against them,
pantomiming sleep. Jathmar nodded slowly. He didn't much like
the idea of some strange healer putting his wife to sleep in order
to do unimaginable things to the inside of her head, but she needed
medical care badly, and this man seemed to be the best that was
available.
Dozens of questions he couldn't
possibly get across through pantomime streamed through his head,
but even if he'd been able to ask them, he probably wouldn't have
understood the answers. So he simply nodded and pointed to a
chair, trying to ask if he could sit beside his wife. The healer
hesitated. His expression was easy enough to decipher, Jathmar
thought mordantly. Jathmar was an enemy who'd killed an
unknown number of their people. The healer was afraid that he
would react—badly—if anything went wrong during
his wife's treatment.
Jathmar wished the other man
was wrong, but he wasn't positive he was. The thought of letting
this man go poking around through Shaylar's brain with whatever
strange methods he used terrified Jathmar, and he could feel his
self-control wavering under the pressure of that terror. But as with
so much else, he had no real choice. Something was badly wrong
with Shaylar's Voice. That suggested deep damage from the
concussion, and whatever this man had sensed from his
examination, it had him worried. It had Jathmar worried, too.
Head injuries were the darkest fear of most of the Talented,
whether they were willing to admit it or not. So little was known
about the human brain, even now, and without the services of a
Healer specifically trained in treating those with major Talents, the
odds of Shaylar's ever recovering her Voice were probably much
less than even.
But there was almost certainly
no one in this entire universe with that sort of training. This man
Jathmar couldn't even communicate with was the best available.
"We have to risk it," Shaylar said
softly, correctly interpreting his stricken expression.
"I know," he said, his voice low.
He started to say something else, trying to reassure her. Then he
stopped himself and simply shook his head. "I'll be right here
beside you the entire time."
"I know," she replied, and
smiled. "Whatever happens, Jathmar, I love you."
He started to speak, but his
throat tightened savagely. He had to clear it, hard, before he could
get the husky words out.
"You're my life, Shaylar." He
stroked her hair gently, smiling at her, willing his lips not to
tremble. "I'll be right here when you wake up."
He pulled the chair over, his eyes
silently daring anyone to countermand him.
After a brief moment of locked
gazes, the healer simply sighed and nodded.
Jathmar sat down and held
Shaylar's hand in his. The healer glanced at him once, then placed
his own hands carefully on her temples and began whispering.
Something was happening between his hands—an
indefinable something that shivered around Shaylar's head. It
wasn't quite a glow, so much as an odd thickening of the
light, and as it strengthened, her eyes closed.
There wasn't anything to see,
really. Jathmar was peripherally aware of activity behind him as
more wounded men were brought in, groaning and trying not to
cry out as they were transferred to beds, where other healers got to
work. The man bending over Shaylar worked with his eyes closed
and kept up a constant subvocal whispering the whole time he did
whatever it was he was doing. Shaylar lay pale and still beneath his
hands, looking broken, lost, and childlike in a bed whose frame
was designed to accommodate one of the strapping soldiers
assigned to this fortress.
Then the bruises began to fade.
Jathmar's eyes widened. Dark,
ugly bruises—purple and black and crimson—paled
to the yellows and browns of old
trauma . . . then faded completely
away. The swelling receded, as well, as some fantastic process he
could only gape at sent the pooled liquids under her skin—
blood serum and excess water—seeping back into the
tissues and blood vessels from which they had come. The man
spoke quietly, and Gadrial dampened a cloth and used it to gently
cleanse the crusted cuts and abrasions. As she rinsed away the
dried blood, Jathmar saw that the skin beneath it had completely
healed. All that remained of the ugly cuts and deep abrasions were
the faintest traces of fine white scar along her temple cheekbone
and eyebrow. Her face, so fragile against the white hospital sheet
pillowcase, bore no further traces of the desperate injuries she had
sustained.
At last the healer sat back. His
quiet whisper faded away, and the odd, thickened light around her
face faded with it. The healer spoke to Gadrial again, very
carefully, and she nodded.
He's giving her instructions of some kind, Jathmar
realized. Then the implications of that sank in. He's telling her what to do because they don't expect us to stay here very
long.
The man finished speaking to
Gadrial and rested a hand on Jathmar's shoulder. That surprised
him. The gesture was firm, reassuring, even friendly. None of the
hatred Jathmar had seen in the eyes of Jasak's men shadowed this
man's eyes, and he felt his own tension recede a notch.
"Thank you," he said slowly,
carefully.
The healer gave him a brief
smile, patted his shoulder once, and turned briskly to the wounded
men still awaiting badly needed treatment. Shaylar was still asleep,
and Jathmar wondered how long she would remain unconscious.
Then, as if she'd heard his mental question, her eyelids twitched.
They fluttered slowly open, and even before she was awake, the
marriage bond roared wide open. He felt her confusion and
wondering surprise that the pain in her head was gone. Then her
eyes focused on Jathmar, and the rush of love and relief and
gratitude that overflowed his heart poured into her senses.
She reached up and touched his
face with gentle fingers that trembled ever so slightly.
"It's back," she whispered. "The
bond . . . I can hear you
again. . . . "
"And I can hear you," he
whispered back, cupping the side of her face which was no longer
bruised and swollen, fingertips tracing the faint white lines that
remained. "The bruises are gone, the swelling—everything.
If that wasn't magic, I don't know what else it could have
been."
Her tremulous smile was
radiant. She was so beautiful his throat ached, but when she tried
to sit up, Gadrial reached down swiftly and stopped her, saying a
single word which obviously meant "No."
Shaylar looked surprised. Then
she touched her own brow, which had furrowed.
"My head feels really strange,"
she murmured, terrifying Jathmar for a moment. "Not in a bad
way," she reassured him hastily.
"Just . . . odd. When I tried to sit up,
it started buzzing like a swarm of bees. And there's an odd sort of
tingling, down deep. I hadn't noticed that before I tried to sit up,
either."
"Well, whatever he did, I think
Gadrial's right. Lying still for a while is a very good idea," Jathmar
told her.
"I don't feel like arguing the
point." Her smile was more of a grin. "Besides, it's heaven to be lying in a real bed again."
He laughed softly and smoothed
her hair again. It still needed the attention of a pair of shears and a
good stylist to repair the damage, and he found himself wondering
if these people's beauticians used magic, as well.
Behind him, Jasak Olderhan
spoke briefly to Gadrial. She didn't look especially happy about
whatever he'd said, but she nodded. Then Jasak touched Jathmar's
shoulder and gestured to him. His meaning was plain enough; he
wanted Jathmar to go somewhere with him.
Jathmar's stomach muscles
clenched. So did his teeth, but he made himself give Shaylar's hand
a gentle squeeze.
"Get some rest, love," he told
her. "You need your beauty sleep."
His light tone didn't fool her.
Their marriage bond was working at peak efficiency once more,
and she knew exactly how scared he was. But she gave him a brave
smile and touched her hair herself.
"If I can explain to Gadrial,
maybe she can even find a comb and mirror somewhere so I can
primp a bit before you get back."
He wanted to hold her close
forever, so that nothing could ever harm her again. Instead, he
gave her fingers one last squeeze, then stood up, squared his
shoulders, and faced Jasak Olderhan.
"Lead the way," he said.
Jasak discovered a deep respect
for Jathmar's courage as the other man faced him. Jathmar had
already been hit with a variety of experiences which must have
been utterly bewildering. Clearly, they'd shaken him to the core.
Over the course of the day, his face had clearly revealed that he'd
never seen anything like dragons, personal crystals, or Gifted
healers. Yet he stood quietly, facing Jasak—and whatever
Jasak had in store for him next—and if his eyes were
understandably apprehensive, and if tension sang through his
muscles, he met his captor's gaze unflinchingly.
Jasak wished there were some
way he could tell Jathmar how much he respected him. But there
wasn't, and so he simply bowed slightly and gestured for the other
man to accompany him.
Jathmar followed him quietly,
and their boots clattered hollowly across the rough boards of the
hospital floor. Then they were out in the hot sunshine, with the
breeze wandering in through Fort Rycharn's open gates. The tang
of saltwater stung the nose, and the murky, thick scent of the
swamp clogged the back of the throat, as they crossed the busy
compound. Jasak headed for the commandant's office and wished
he felt as brave as Jathmar looked. He wasn't looking forward to
the coming interview. He'd sat through many a debriefing after
firing shots in some brush with frontier bandits, but he'd never
given a genuine combat debrief.
He discovered that the prospect
became steadily more daunting as the moment approached. What
had seemed the most reasonable course at the time seemed more
and more questionable as he went over each step of the disastrous
mission, trying to organize his thoughts. Doubts plagued him.
Things he should've done, things he shouldn't, things he ought to
have seen . . . but hadn't.
Then there was no further time
to worry about it, because they were at the headquarters building.
"The Five Hundred is waiting for
you, Hundred Olderhan," the adjutant at the outer desk said with a
crisp salute, although he eyed Jathmar with open curiosity.
Commander of Five Hundred Klian looked a bit taken aback, as
well, when Jasak entered his office with Jathmar in tow.
"It's hardly standard procedure to
bring a captured prisoner to an official debriefing, Hundred
Olderhan. I trust you have a good reason?" he said after returning
Jasak's salute.
"As a matter of fact, Sir, I have
several reasons. Jathmar doesn't understand our language, so
there's no risk of a security breach. And there's nothing in this
office, Sir that could be even remotely considered classified. But
my primary concern is for Jathmar's safety."
"His safety?" Klian echoed.
"My men are badly shaken, Five
Hundred. Fifty Garlath's platoon outnumbered Jathmar's survey
crew three-to-one, but we took massive casualties. Their weapons
are devastatingly effective, and their rate of fire is considerably
higher than even a dragoon arbalest's. Quite frankly, some of my
survivors fear and hate him. They wouldn't try anything against his
wife—they were properly horrified when they found out
we'd nearly killed a woman—but I wouldn't care to leave
Jathmar in the same room with any of them. Not without an armed
guard to see that no one tried anything."
"I see. And you don't trust my
men to do their jobs, either?" Klian's tone was biting.
"That's not at all an issue, Sir.
My concern where your men are concerned rests entirely
on Jathmar's state of mind, not theirs. He's been hammered by
multiple shocks in a very short time. The slightest manifestation
of sorcery shakes him to the core, and his wife is also our
prisoner. That terrifies him, and I can't say I blame him for it. If
our roles were reversed, I'd be damned worried about the
interrogation methods my captors might intend to use."
Five Hundred Klian frowned,
but it was a thoughtful frown, not an angry one.
"Go on," he said.
"I won't go so far as to say he
trusts me, but I'm at least a somewhat known quantity, and I stood
between them and Hundred Thalmayr when the Hundred
expressed . . . dissatisfaction over my
decision not to chain them."
Klian's frown deepened, but he
said nothing, and Jasak wondered whether Fort Rycharn's CO's
displeasure was directed at Thalmayr or at Jasak's decision.
"In a fort filled with soldiers,"
Jasak continued, "I'm the only known quantity from his
viewpoint. In my considered opinion, leaving him alone under the
guard of men he has excellent reason to fear, would constitute a
serious risk. He's desperately shaken and afraid. I don't want to
take even the slightest chance of someone inadvertently pushing
him across an edge we don't want him to cross. There's been more
than enough violence already, and we need him—what he
knows, what we can learn from him that we couldn't learn from
his wife. I don't want to see us lose all of that because someone he
doesn't know accidentally pushes too hard."
Klian's expression relaxed a
couple of degrees, and he tipped back slightly in his desk chair.
"Very well, Hundred. Your
solution may be a bit unorthodox, but your reasons seem sound
enough, both militarily and politically. I would have expected no
less of an Olderhan. Now, though, would you be so good as to
explain exactly how this cluster-fuck occurred?"
Jasak drew a deep breath, looked
Sarr Klian straight in the eye, and explained it. All of it.
When he described Fifty Garlath's last action, the five hundred
swore so sharply Jasak paused. Klian clamped his jaws, cutting
himself off in mid-oath, and motioned for him to continue, and he
did, right through the thunderous disagreement between himself
and Hundred Thalmayr over the evacuation of the forward camp at
the portal.
When he'd finally finished, Five
Hundred Klian sat back, steepled his fingers, interlaced his fingers
across his hard-muscled abdomen, and exhaled a long, slow
breath.
"I appreciate your candor,
Hundred. And your thorough analysis. I'll be frank with
you—in my opinion, you were handed one hell of a mess
when we handed you Shevan Garlath. It wasn't my idea to transfer
him into your company. From what I saw of him, you showed
remarkable restraint in dealing with
his . . . inadequacies. I wish I could
say I'm surprised he shot an unarmed man who was clearly calling
for a parley of some sort, but I can't. I'm appalled, not
surprised." He shook his head. "In my crystal, Garlath's clearly at
fault. But . . . "
Yes. Jasak gave a mental sigh.
But . . .
"You realize, Olderhan, that
your career may end over this?" Klian said almost gently, and
Jasak met his eyes steadily.
"I do, Sir."
"Yes, I'm sure you do. Not all
officers would."
Frustration colored Klian's last
words. He hated to see a good officer caught in the jaws of a
dragon this nasty, and he had a sinking feeling that Arcana was
going to need good officers badly in the not-too-distant future. If
he'd been sitting at a fort commandant's desk on the other
side, and news like this had hit his desk, there'd have been hell to
pay, with interest due.
"It isn't fair to you, son," he said
quietly, "but it looks to me like we're staring a potentially ugly
war right in the face, and politicians like to blame
somebody for their wars. Military tribunals are supposed to be
above that, but the men who sit on them are fully aware of
political repercussions. Half the officers sitting on them have their
own political ambitions, too. And Garlath's dead; you're not.
They're going to want somebody they can point at, somebody they
can look in the eye and see 'It's your fault, Mister!' Once
they've got him, they can tell the politicians 'See? We found the
guilty party, and we punished the guilty party.' It's ugly, it's
brutal . . ."
He paused and looked into
Jasak's eyes.
"And you knew all of that before
you ever walked into this office, didn't you?"
"Yes, Sir." Jasak's lips twisted in
what some people might have called a smile. "I did indeed."
"I'm sorry, son." Klian leaned
forward. "I'll send my own sealed report back with you, along with
some other official dispatches. It might do some good."
"Thank you, Sir."
"A lot will depend on the
officers available for the tribunal when it's called. If you get a
good board, it could still come right."
"Yes, Sir," Jasak agreed, but his
voice was dry and not particularly hopeful. Then he sat forward.
"If I might ask, Sir, what are your intentions regarding the portal
camp?"
Klian sighed and sat back again,
pinching the bridge of his nose.
"Could they have gotten a
message out?" he said finally, glancing at Jathmar.
The prisoner said very quietly,
hazel eyes intent as he listened to the conversation he couldn't
understand and tried to glean anything he could from their faces,
their voices, their eyes. Olderhan was right, Klian thought. This
was a deeply frightened man, and a dangerous one. One Sarr Klian
wouldn't have cared to push too far without a truly urgent reason.
The five hundred met Jathmar's
eyes, then turned back to Jasak, very carefully keeping his own
expression impassive. The younger officer was pulling absently at
his lip, frowning ever so slightly.
"I don't know if they got
a message out, Sir," he said finally. "I don't think they could have,
but we know as little about them and about their capabilities as
they know about ours."
"So you're not sure?"
"No, Sir. We searched for any
sign that someone might have headed back independently of the
rest of their party, or the possibility that someone might have
made a break for their portal during the fighting. My people know
their jobs, and I had Chief Sword Threbuch available to help make
sure they did them. I'm fairly confident no one carried a message
physically back, and we didn't find anything remotely like
hummers in their gear, either. Logically, every indication says they
didn't, but there's no possible way to guarantee that."
Klian drummed lightly on his
desktop, which was basically a rough plank supported by two on-
end wooden chests that served as storage bins for data crystals,
maps, and all the miscellany of command at a fort this size.
"One would assume they took
the most direct route from their fortified camp to their portal," the
five hundred said, thinking aloud. "But we can't assume they were
traveling at their top speed. Which means a messenger could have
gone on ahead of them, possibly even bypassed the fallen timber
completely. For that matter, they could have sent someone by a
completely different indirect route. I'm sure your people did
search diligently, but suppose they thought about that possibility
ahead of time? I'm not sure I'd have been smart enough to
think of it in the middle of something like this, but the smart
thing for them to do would have been to send someone
further up the streambed, where he wouldn't have left any trail. Let
him get another four or five miles from camp, then head cross-
country by a completely different route, and you'd have needed a
special miracle to cut his trail."
"It's certainly a possibility, Sir,"
Jasak conceded. "From the look of their camp, I'm inclined to
think it didn't occur to them. I think they were thinking
almost exclusively in terms of clearing out and avoiding
additional contact with us completely. Which," he added a bit
bitterly, "I certainly managed to prevent them from doing."
"Yes, you did. Which was
exactly what you were supposed to do," Klian said. He frowned
some more. "You say their ages varied?"
"Yes, Sir. Considerably. The
youngest was probably in his early twenties; the oldest was in his
fifties, at least."
"Where they soldiers?"
Klian looked at Jasak intently,
and the younger officer paused before he answered.
"I'm almost certain they weren't,
Sir," he said. "A survey crew, obviously, but a civilian one. They
weren't in uniform, didn't even all have the same sorts of boots or
trousers. They had the kind of gear you'd expect portal surveyors
to have, but none of it was stamped or painted or embroidered
with unit insignia, or any sort of military identification marks.
And they had an awfully broad assortment of weapons, too. Most
of them carried the same sort of hand weapon, but their shoulder
arms differed a lot. I don't think any military unit would have
accepted something as unstandardized as that. Spare parts and
ammunition differences would play hell with the Quartermaster
Corps, if nothing else." He shrugged most unhappily. "When you
mix all of that together, I can only come up with one answer, Sir.
Yes, they were civilians."
And we blew them to hell, Klian thought darkly. May
your worthless soul burn in hell forever, Garlath.
"I see," he said aloud. "And I'm
tempted to agree with you. Especially given the presence of that
girl. Granted, you had Magister Kelbryan with you, but
their young lady's situation would appear to be very different from
the magister's, if she's married to one of the crewmen." He gave
Jasak another keen glance. "You're sure they're married?"
"Yes, Sir. Magister Kelbryan
concurs. In fact, she suggested it first, and everything I've seen
only strengthens that assessment."
Klian nodded again, sitting back
with pursed lips as he went over everything Jasak had said.
"It's possible they got a message
out," the five hundred said finally, slowly. "On the whole, though,
I think I agree with you that it's not likely. Magister Kelbryan's
equipment put the portal you went out to find at no more than,
what—thirty miles?"
"About that, Sir. I sent Chief
Sword Threbuch ahead to confirm that," Jasak reminded him.
"Yes. The thing is, I'm trying to
weigh risks. We don't know their protocol for handling portals. A
civilian team in an uncharted universe suggests a radically
different approach from ours, though, which leads me to wonder
whether there's likely to be any military presence of theirs
out this way."
"Is that a risk we can afford to
assume, Sir?" Jasak asked quietly.
Klian met the younger officer's
eyes. There was no challenge, no criticism, in his expression or
tone. Just quiet worry. Deep worry. Gods and thunders,
what had it taken to put that look in Jasak Olderhan's eyes? Jasak's
expression brought home to the five hundred the fact that even
having heard the description of the battle, even adding up the
admittedly shocking number of casualties, he couldn't imagine
what it had been like standing under those trees while some totally
unknown form of weaponry cut down men all around him.
"You tell me, Hundred," he said
abruptly. "You were the one who faced them out there."
Jasak sucked in air, then
straightened in his chair.
"Sir, I've already said that
remaining at that portal is a grave risk, in my opinion. Not only are
my men badly shaken, but there's no military reason to remain, and
a great many political reasons to pull out. Eventually,
someone from their side's going to come looking for that
crew. If they find an empty portal, with seven hundred miles of
swamp between them and Fort Rycharn, they can't possibly
reciprocate with a return assault. And unless something's changed
in the last four days, I'm afraid we're too short of available
manpower to reinforce Thalmayr."
He looked a question at Klian,
who shook his head with a grimace.
"I'm supposed to have a
full battalion out here already," the five hundred said sourly. "Did
you happen to notice a thousand men or so out there on the parade
ground, Hundred? No? Well, I haven't seen them either."
"So, basically, all Hundred
Thalmayr will have is Charlie Company's second and third
platoons, and what's left of First Platoon." Jasak shook his head.
"With all due respect, Sir, that's not very many men to hold a
portal three and a half miles across."
"No, it isn't. But at least the
terrain would favor him. It's mostly flat as my mother-in-law's
bread out there. He'd have the best sightlines we're going to get for
his infantry-dragons, and I've got half a dozen field-dragons I
could send forward to him by air. That's a lot of firepower,
Hundred."
"Yes, Sir, it is." Jasak's tone was
deeply respectful. Which, Klian noted, wasn't exactly the same
thing as agreement.
"There's another point to
consider," the five hundred said, even as a part of him wondered
why he was explaining himself this fully to so junior an officer.
"As you say, your company is really all that's been sent forward to
my command area right now. Oh, I've got the supports for
an entire battalion, but under normal circumstances I'd be
surprised if I saw more than another company or so any time in the
next couple of months. Under these circumstances, I'm
sure my dispatches are going to have sort of the same effect a
well-placed kick has on an ant hill, of course. Give Two Thousand
mul Gurthak a few days to react, and he's going to the reaching for
every warm body he can find and shoving them in here. But that's
going to take time, and until it happens, that swamp portal
is the only place I can hope to hold with the combat power
I've already got. I hate to say it, but Thalmayr's right about that."
"I know he is, Sir," Jasak agreed.
"I guess I'm mostly concerned by two points. First, if their
personal weapons could slaughter eighty percent of First
Platoon, then gods only know what their artillery and heavy weapons are capable of."
Klian's mouth tightened in
acknowledgment of the point, and Jasak continued.
"Second, and maybe even more
important, I'm afraid that if any additional shots are fired,
they'll cinch the certainty of open warfare. I'm talking politics, not
military protocol, Sir. We need a team of trained ambassadors, and
it's going to take time to bring them down the chain. Our next
meeting with these people has to be peaceful, Sir, or we will
be looking at war. A long, potentially disastrous, nasty war."
Five Hundred Klian winced at
the image that conjured. Still . . .
"Everything you've said is true,
Hundred," he said, fingertips drumming once more on the rough
wood planking of his desk. "The question is one of timing. You
say you saw nothing among their effects that might have paralleled
our hummer communications system, which ought to
mean the only way they could get a message back to their nearest
support would be by runner. There's at least a chance they did
exactly that, but even so, it's got to take them at least a few days to
react.
"If we could be sure they had a
military presence at the portal you were looking for, I'd
evacuate our swamp portal in a flash. Or, at least as much of it as I
could with only two dragons to pull everyone out. But even if they
do have the equivalent of Fort Rycharn sitting out there
somewhere, it's probably not all that close to their entry portal.
We're only seven hundred miles from our entry portal to
that universe, and you know as well as I do how short a hop that is
compared to most distances involved. They'd have to have either a
very heavy garrison deployed very far forward, or else a
ridiculously short distance between portals, in order to put a
powerful strike force into the field quickly."
Jasak nodded almost
unwillingly, and Klian shrugged.
"Artillery can't fire through
a portal, Hundred. If Hundred Thalmayr digs in properly, he
can dominate everything on our side of the portal by fire. They'll
need a substantial troop strength to break through that sort
of defense, and presumably they'll know it, which should
discourage adventurism on their side."
"Assuming they see things the
same way we do, Sir."
"Always assuming that," Klian
agreed. "Still, I'm inclined to leave Thalmayr where he is." He saw
the alarm in Jasak's eyes, despite the younger man's best efforts to
conceal it, and shrugged.
"I'll give him direct orders to dig
in on our side of the swamp portal and stay there," he said.
"The only way there could be another serious shooting incident
would be for the other side to try to force a crossing. I don't really
like it, but I think it's the best compromise I can come up with, at
least until mul Gurthak gets more troops in here."
"I hope you're right, Sir," Jasak
said. His voice was harsh, but that didn't bother Five Hundred
Klian. The youngster was grim as hell, unhappy about the
decision, but he recognized that the decision had been made. He might not like it—Klian didn't like it one
damned bit, himself—but this was an officer who
recognized that an order was an order.
"I hope I am, too," he sighed,
then shook himself.
"I know you'll feel better, son, if
you wait to hear Chief Sword Threbuch's report before you head
for home with Magister Kelbryan and the prisoners. I'll arrange
quarters for all four of you, apart from the rest of the men."
"Thank you, Sir. I appreciate
that." Jasak met Klian's eyes levelly once more. "In fact, for the
record, Sir, I'd like to officially inform you that Shaylar and
Jathmar are my shardonai."
Klian stiffened—not in
anger or outrage, but in dismay.
"Are you sure about that,
Hundred?" he asked very quietly.
"Yes, Sir. I am," Jasak replied
firmly, and Klian closed his mouth on what he'd been about to say.
The last thing this boy needed,
duke's son or no, was to throw himself into the sort of catfight
this was going to be. Klian didn't like to think about what was
going to happen to Shaylar and Jathmar once higher authority got
its hands on them. The military was going to be bad enough; the
politicians and the internal security forces were going to be a
nightmare. Given what was already hanging over Jasak's head, not
to mention the inevitable tribunal, throwing himself between his
prisoners and the entire Arcanan military and political
establishment would be suicidal for his career. The five hundred
couldn't conceive of any other possible consequence for his
actions.
But when he looked into Jasak
Olderhan's eyes, he knew the hundred didn't need him to
explain that.
"Very well, Hundred Olderhan,"
he said instead, his tone formal. "I accept your declaration of
shardon, and I will so attest, both in my dispatches and in your
travel orders."
"Thank you, Sir," Jasak said, very
sincerely. Klian wasn't obligated to do that, and by choosing to do
so, anyway, the five hundred was putting himself in a position to
be thoroughly splashed when the shit inevitably hit the fan. But his
attestation, especially as part of Jasak's travel orders, which would
go wherever Jasak went, would constitute a formal tripwire
against . . . overzealous superiors.
"It's the least I can do for a
young fellow who seems intent on pissing everybody off,"
the five hundred replied with a crooked smile. "And in the
meantime, I'll post an armed guard outside your quarters, just to
be sure no one gets any ideas about retaliating against
Jathmar or his wife."
The prisoner's eyes glinted with
sharp interest at hearing his name yet again. Klian looked at the
man, recognizing his intelligence as well as the discipline which
kept his inevitable anxiety in check. Knowing there was a sharp,
active brain behind those eyes made his inability to communicate
with the other man even more frustrating.
"Jathmar?" the five hundred said,
and the prisoner gave him a jerky nod.
"Sarr," Klian said, touching his
uniform blouse. "Sarr Klian." He waved his hand, indicating the
room, the compound beyond the window. "I command this fort."
He pointed to the palisade walls
visible through the window, then pointed at himself again. Jathmar
studied him through narrowed eyes for a moment, then gave a
slow nod. Clearly he'd already guessed as much.
"You," Klian said, pointing to
Jathmar, "will go with Jasak Olderhan."
He pointed to Jasak again and
pantomimed walking. Jasak regarded him suspiciously for a
moment, then nodded again. A fraction of the tension gripping him
relaxed, but his eyes remained deeply wary. Klian would've given
a great deal for the information behind those eyes. As he'd told
Jasak, he wasn't at all happy about the decision he'd made; he just
didn't see any other decision he liked better. But if more fighting
did break out, Sarr Klian was going to be the one in the
hot seat, and he was desperately short of information.
"Very well, Hundred." He
switched his attention back to Jasak. "I'll make arrangements for
those quarters immediately. Take him back to the infirmary for
now. Let him sit with his wife until your accommodations are
ready."
"Yes, Sir."
"And, Hundred Olderhan," Klian
continued, standing and offering the younger officer his hand,
"good luck. You deserve it . . . and
you're going to need it."
"Yes, Sir. Thank you."
Jasak shook the proffered hand
firmly, and Klian watched him leave with his prisoner. Then the
five hundred sat back down behind his roughhewn desk and
discovered he'd developed a raging headache.
Now there's a surprise, he thought with harsh
humor, and then he got grimly to work.
Chapter Seventeen
Darcel Kinlafia stood moodily in
the chill, rapidly falling evening under the mighty trees and tried
not to look sullen.
It wasn't easy, not even when he
knew all the reasons for the delay. Not even when his intellect
approved of most of the reasons. For that matter, not
even—or, perhaps, especially—when the
delay was at least partly his own fault for insisting upon
accompanying Acting Platoon-Captain Arthag's expedition in the
first place.
Patience, he told the hunger coiling within him.
Patience, they're here now.
And it was a damned good thing
they were, too, he reflected, watching the head of the column.
The horsemen and their mounts
looked exhausted, as well they might, given how hard they'd
pushed themselves over the past five days. Kinlafia grimaced and
walked across as Platoon-Captain Arthag looked up from his mess
kit, then stood.
The column halted, and the man
riding at its head beside the standardbearer with the dove-tailed
company guidon, embroidered with the three copper-colored
cavalry sabers which denoted its place within its parent battalion,
looked around. Kinlafia had never actually met him, but he
recognized Company-Captain chan Tesh without any trouble, and
the dark-skinned petty-captain beside him had to be Rokam
Traygan. The fact that Darcel had seen chan Tesh's face through
Traygan's eyes without ever seeing Traygan's was one of those
oddities Voices quickly became accustomed to.
chan Tesh's searching eyes found
Arthag, and the Arpathian officer waited until the company-
captain had dismounted before he saluted.
"Acting Platoon-Captain
Arthag," he said crisply.
"Company-Captain chan Tesh,"
chan Tesh replied. The newly arrived cavalry officer looked almost
Shurkhali, but he was a Ternathian, with an accent which sounded
so much like Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl that Darcel winced. chan
Tesh's voice even had the same timbre.
"I'm glad to see you, Company-
Captain," Arthag said.
chan Tesh studied his face for a
moment in the rapidly failing light. Kinlafia wondered if he was
looking for any indication that Arthag actually resented his arrival.
After all, chan Tesh's superior rank gave him command, which
also meant his name was undoubtedly the one going into
the history books. And his impending arrival had effectively nailed
Arthag's feet to the forest floor, preventing the Arpathian from
acting until chan Tesh got there. But if the Ternathian had
anticipated any resentment from Arthag, what he saw in the other
officer's expression clearly reassured him, because he smiled
wearily.
"We're glad to be here,
Platoon-Captain," he said. "Not least because our arses need the
rest!"
"I think we can provide more
than just a rest, Company-Captain," Hulmok Arthag said. "My
people have a hot meal waiting for you."
"Now that, Platoon-Captain, is
really good news," chan Tesh said. "I think my backbone's about
ready to start gnawing on my belt buckle from the back!"
It was a humorous exaggeration,
but not that much of one, chan Tesh reflected. He and his column
had been just over twenty miles from the entry portal to New
Uromath when the stunning news reached them. chan Tesh was
willing to admit privately that he hadn't been pushing the pace at
that point, since he'd expected to relieve Company-Captain Halifu
on routine garrison duty and hadn't really been looking forward to
taking over Halifu's rainsoaked portal fort. The Uromathian
company-captain's reports had made it abundantly clear just how
soggy chan Tesh's new duty post was likely to be.
But word of the mysterious
strangers who'd slaughtered the Chalgyn Consortium survey crew
had changed all of that. chan Tesh had quickly reorganized the
transport column, leaving the infantry and the majority of the
support troops, including his half-dozen field guns, with his
executive officer while chan Tesh himself took a hard core of
mounted troops ahead as quickly as he could. Over the last five
days, he and his relief force had covered almost three hundred
miles, most of it through dense, rainy forest. If it hadn't been the
worst five-day ride of Balkan chan Tesh's life, it had to come
close.
But we're here now, he thought grimly. And if
Arthag's report's as accurate as his reports've always been in the
past, the bastards on the other side of that swamp portal aren't
going to be a bit happy about that!
He looked over his shoulder as
the rest of the column came in. He was proud of those men. Tired
as they were, weary as their mounts were, there'd been no
straggling. These were mostly veterans, who didn't worry about
parade-ground precision, but the column was well ordered and
well closed up.
chan Tesh's own cavalry
company—Copper Company, First Battalion, Ninth
Regiment, Portal Authority Armed Forces—led the
column. He'd left one of his three platoons with his XO, and
Copper Company had been a bit understrength to begin with, but
he still had eighty-five experienced, hardened troopers. Then there
were the two platoons of Imperial Ternathian Marines.
Most nations' marines were
straight leg-infantry—not surprisingly, since marines were
supposed to spend most of their time in shipboard service.
Ternathian Marines were a rather special case, however. They
prided themselves on their ability to go anywhere and do anything
their orders required, and they'd been a mainstay of the Portal
Authority's multinational forces for over half a century. There
were those in the Ternathian Army who were firmly convinced
that what had really happened was that the Marines had hijacked a
lion's share of the Ternathian commitment to the Portal Authority
purely as a means of preventing the Imperial Marine Corps'
demise, and chan Tesh rather suspected that those critics had at
least a semi-valid point. Certainly there'd been an ongoing struggle
for the military budget between the Imperial Marines and Imperial
Army for as long as anyone could remember. The Navy, of
course, had always stood by and watched the squabble with a sort
of amused tolerance. No one was going to suggest
funding land troops at the expense of the Imperial Navy, after all.
But whatever the Marines'
motives might have been, they'd succeeded in carving out a special
niche in trans-universal operations. They did more of it than
anyone else, and as they were wont to point out, they also, quite
simply, did it better than anyone else. Despite his own
Army career, chan Tesh couldn't argue about that. They still
couldn't match the staying power and sheer, concentrated
offensive punch of the Ternathian Army—they were
light infantry, after all—but they had developed an
almost incredible flexibility and took a deep (and well-deserved)
pride in their adaptability. Which was why chan Tesh had left his
Army infantry behind and brought his Marines along; they were
just as competent in the saddle as they were on foot.
Unlike the cavalry troopers of
chan Tesh's own company, or Arthag's, the Marines wore their
normal Ternathian-issue battle dress. It was a comfortable
uniform, with lots of baggy, conveniently placed cargo pockets. It
was also dyed a low-visibility khaki color. Marines might be
willing to ride to work, but they were still infantry—
dragoons, at least—and they preferred to fight on foot.
Whereas a cavalryman usually found it a bit difficult to conceal
his horse, Marines were adept at using terrain and concealment.
And it's damned comforting to have them along, chan
Tesh thought frankly. Again, they were a bit under establishment.
Their nominal troop strength should have been two hundred and
sixteen men, including officers and supports. Their actual strength
was only a hundred and fifty-seven, but they more than made up
for any lost firepower with the machine-gun squad attached to
each platoon.
"I hope you'll pardon my saying
so, Sir, but it looks like you came loaded for bear."
chan Tesh turned back to Acting
Platoon-Captain Arthag as the other man spoke.
"It seemed like the thing to do,"
the company-captain said, with a mildness which fooled neither of
them.
"Can't argue with that, Sir,"
Arthag said grimly, and chan Tesh studied the man thoughtfully
again for a moment or two.
Hulmok Arthag had a high
reputation among the Portal Authority's military personnel,
despite his relatively junior rank. chan Tesh suspected that the
Arpathian would have been promoted long since if his positive
genius for small-unit operations along the frontier hadn't made
him too valuable where he was to spare. Arpathians as a group
tended to be good at that sort of thing, but Arthag was a special
case, with an absolutely fiendish ability to get inside the thinking
of portal brigands and claim-jumpers. In many ways, the
promotion he so amply merited, and which was coming his way at
last, was almost a pity. The Portal Authority was eventually going
to get a highly competent regiment-captain or brigade captain out
of it, but it was going to give up a truly brilliant platoon-captain
to get him.
"I was relieved when they told
me you were the man at the sharp end of this stick, Platoon-
Captain," chan Tesh said. Arthag's Arpathian expressionlessness
didn't even waver, of course. "I've heard good things about you. In
fact, I've wanted the chance to work with you for a while now. I'm
just sorry it had to come after something like this."
"I am, too, Sir," Arthag replied.
He looked into the falling darkness, and chan Tesh felt a slight
shiver as he followed the Arpathian's eyes and saw the tangled,
seared timber where the survey crew had been massacred.
"To be honest, Sir," Arthag
continued, turning back to his superior, "it's
been . . . lonely out here. I was
relieved when Company-Captain Halifu's dispatch reached me
with the news you were on your way."
"I only wish we'd been able to let
you know sooner," chan Tesh said, and Arthag's eyes narrowed
very slightly.
"Voice Kinlafia's been extremely
helpful to my Whiffer and Tracer, Sir," he said, very carefully not
so much as glancing in Kinlafia's direction. "His special insight
into what happened here's been invaluable in pointing
them—and, for that matter, my scouts—in the right
direction."
"I wasn't criticizing Voice
Kinlafia," chan Tesh said mildly. "If I'd been in Company-Captain
Halifu's position, I'd probably have made exactly the same
decision. It's just unfortunate that Halifu didn't have another
Voice to take up the slack. We had to get within forty miles of his
fort before my Flicker could reach him."
Arthag nodded with what might
have been the slightest possible trace of reassurance, and chan
Tesh hid a grimly amused smile. He didn't doubt for a moment
that at least some of the rear-area wonders were going to criticize
Halifu for allowing his precious Voice to accompany the rescue
force to the wrong side of this universe's entry portal. But, as he'd
just said, chan Tesh felt the Uromathian officer had made exactly
the right decision. And at least Halifu had two good Flickers of
his own. They might not be Voices, but they were capable of
teleporting—or "Flicking"—relatively small objects,
like dispatch cases, for distances of up to thirty or forty miles.
Some Flickers had managed as much as fifty miles, and they were
prized by Sharonian military organizations. They might not have
the reach or the flexibility of Voices, but they were a damned good
substitute over their effective ranges, and there were often decided
advantages to transmitting physical messages.
Junior-Armsman Tairsal chan
Synarch, chan Tesh's senior Flicker, had managed to get word to
Halifu less than twenty-four hours ago, and Petty Armsman
Bantha, Halifu's senior Flicker, had relayed that information to
Arthag, in turn. Since chan Tesh and his column had crossed over
into this universe, Traygan and Kinlafia had been in close
communication, homing chan Tesh unerringly in on Arthag's
position and bringing the company-captain fully up to date on
everything Arthag's scouts had discovered.
"I'm sorry it took us as long to
get here as it did, Platoon-Captain," chan Tesh said after a
moment. "The last twenty-five miles to your entry portal were a
copperplated bitch. Much worse than I'd anticipated, to be honest."
"I know. I've come to the
conclusion that the sun simply isn't allowed to shine in that
universe," Arthag replied, and chan Tesh snorted. Whether the
Arpathian was right about that, or not, there was no getting around
the fact that what appeared to be every creek, stream, rivulet, river,
and puddle in New Uromath was well over its banks, which hadn't
done a thing for his column's progress.
"At least I had plenty of time to
scout the enemy position," Arthag continued. Once again, it could
have been a complaint, since the peremptory order for Arthag to
stand fast until chan Tesh arrived with his reinforcements had
precluded any immediate action on Arthag's part. But it was
apparent to chan Tesh that Arthag was sincerely relieved to see the
column. The Arpathian's comment about the opportunity to scout
the enemy was also well taken, and chan Tesh nodded in forceful
agreement.
"Yes. I'm looking forward to
seeing your sketches myself."
"Of course, Sir."
Arthag made a signal to one of
his troopers, and chan Tesh watched the man in question—a
tallish, but not huge, Farnalian with the two red pips of a petty-
armsman—respond. It was a pity Arthag hadn't had a
Flicker of his own. He'd been able to receive dispatches from
Halifu, but he hadn't been able to send his own notes back. Now
the petty-armsman marched over, saluted, and produced a leather
dispatch case.
"Petty Armsman Loumas, Sir,"
Arthag said. "He's my Plotter."
"Ah." chan Tesh nodded in
understanding. Plotters were highly valued in the military. Unlike
Mappers, they could provide only limited information on terrain,
or what lay under the surface of the ground, but—also
unlike Mappers—they were sensitive to the presence and
location of living creatures. Like Mappers, they were range-
limited, and usually to much shorter ranges than a Mapper. Indeed,
it was the rare Plotter who could reach beyond four or five miles.
But they were still extremely useful as scouts, since it was
impossible for any sentry or picket within their range to conceal
himself from them.
"Loumas took our scouts right
up to the portal," Arthag continued, opening the dispatch case and
removing a carefully executed sketch map. "Chief-Armsman chan
Hathas sketched the actual maps. He's out with the advance picket,
keeping an eye on them, at the moment."
He handed the map across to
chan Tesh, who unfolded it quickly. Darkness had finished falling
while he and Arthag were talking, and there was insufficient light
to make out details. He started to walk across to one of the
campfires, but Loumas produced a bull's-eye lantern and opened
the slide, letting its light fall across the map.
"Thank you, Petty Armsman,"
chan Tesh said courteously, then bent his full attention to the
sketch.
"You didn't pick up any
sentries on our side of the portal, Petty Armsman?" the company-
captain continued as he studied the map.
"No, Sir," Loumas replied.
"Picked up quite a few deer, and even a couple of bears, but
couldn't find hide nor hair of anyone else. Proper idiots they are, if
you don't mind my saying so."
"I don't mind at all, Petty
Armsman," chan Tesh said, glancing up from the sketch map. "As
long as we all remember that these people can obviously do things
we can't. It's possible they have some way of keeping an eye on
things that we've never heard of. Maybe they didn't need
sentries."
"Yes, Sir," Loumas said just a
tiny bit stiffly. Then he grimaced. "Sorry, Company-Captain. It's
just seeing what these bastards did, knowing where they
are—"
He broke off with a shake of his
head, and chan Tesh nodded. Not necessarily in agreement, but in
understanding. He'd already seen exactly the same reaction in the
men of his own column. The news that a civilian survey crew had
been cut down like animals would have been bad enough under
any circumstances. The fact that Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had been
caught in the middle of it, and that Darcel Kinlafia hadn't been
able to pick up even a whisper of her Voice since, made it much,
much worse. His men wanted payback, and, to be completely
honest, so did chan Tesh.
The company-captain returned
his attention to the sketch and shook his head mentally as he
absorbed the details.
Maybe I was just a bit hasty there, he thought as he
studied the drawing. If this sketch is as accurate as I think it is,
then Loumas damned well has a point about what these people
use for brains!
"You say your chief-armsman
made the sketch?" he asked Arthag, never looking up from the
map.
"Yes, Sir." Something about
Arthag's voice made chan Tesh look up. The Arpathian acting
platoon-captain was actually grinning, and chan Tesh raised one
eyebrow.
"Chief-Armsman chan Hathas is
a much better sketcher than I am, Sir. When Loumas and his
scouting party got back and described what they'd seen, I decided I
needed to take a look for myself. I did, but I didn't feel my own
artistic abilities could do justice to it, so I got the Chief-Armsman
to do the job. As nearly as I can tell you from my own observation,
he got the details just about perfect."
"Vothan," chan Tesh muttered.
"Maybe they really are all idiots."
Whoever was in command on
the other side clearly wasn't very well versed in portal tactics. To
be fair, portals—even relatively small ones like the one on
the map in chan Tesh's hands—were always difficult to
defend. The bizarre physics involved made that inevitable. On the
other hand, there were intelligent ways to go about defending one,
and then there was . . . this.
The chief-armsman had sketched
the portal from both aspects, which the combination of the portal's
relatively small size and the other side's failure to picket this side
had made much simpler for him to do. And from the sketch, it
appeared that the opposing commander was either terminally
overconfident or else incredibly stupid.
Unless, chan Tesh conscientiously reminded himself,
he really does have some kind of god weapon over there.
Which, given the fireballs and
lightning bolts he'd already used on the Chalgyn Consortium crew,
certainly wasn't impossible. But
still . . .
The enemy had thrown up
fieldworks—palisades, with what were obviously firing
loopholes, protected with shallow earthen berms—to cover
both aspects of his side of the portal. Because the portal itself
separated them, he'd been forced to dig in two totally separate
forces which were hopelessly out of visual contact and support
range of one another, despite the fact that they were less than a
hundred yards "apart." That much chan Tesh could readily
understand, since every portal defender faced the same problem.
But the earthworks themselves
puzzled him. They looked like something left over from the days
of muzzleloading muskets and smoothbore cannon, he thought,
except that they seemed a bit flimsy even for that. He didn't see a
single bunker, and it was obvious from chan Hathas' sketch that
there were no dugouts, either. In fact, chan Tesh didn't see any
overhead cover.
"These ramparts of theirs don't
look very . . . substantial," he
commented. "You got a good enough look to confirm the berms
are really that shallow?"
"Yes, Sir." Arthag shrugged. "I'm
not sure, but I think Voice Kinlafia may have come up with an
explanation for why everything over there looks so insubstantial."
"Indeed?" chan Tesh looked up
from the sketch once more, turning his attention to the one man in
civilian clothing.
He hadn't ignored Kinlafia up to
this point out of discourtesy, but rather because the Voice looked
so bad. His face was tightly clenched around a mixture of anguish,
fury, and gnawing impatience which chan Tesh needed no Talent
to recognize. Kinlafia's eyes were like burnt holes in his face, and
chan Tesh wondered if the man's jaw muscles had truly relaxed
even once since the rest of his crew was butchered. chan Tesh had
no desire to intrude upon the man's obvious pain, but if Kinlafia
had a theory to help explain what chan Tesh was seeing in this
sketch, he wanted to hear it.
"You have a theory, Voice
Kinlafia?" he asked courteously, and Kinlafia nodded. It was a
jerky, almost convulsive nod, and his expression was taut as he
waved back towards the fallen timber chan Tesh hadn't actually
seen yet.
"I'm not sure what they use for
'artillery,' Company-Captain," he said, "but whatever it is, it isn't
anything like ours. I know Voice Traygan has relayed Whiffer
Parcanthi's and Tracer Hilovar's reports about the odd residues
they've picked up to you. We still don't have any sort of
explanation for what could have created them, but during the time
Voice Nargra-Kolmayr—" his voice went flat and dead for
a moment as he used Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr's formal title, chan
Tesh noted "—and I were linked, I Saw their heavy weapons
in action. They have a lot of blast effect, and
the . . . 'lightning bolts,' for want of a
better word, they throw seem to affect targets in a remarkably deep
zone. But neither of them seems to have very much in the way of
penetrative effect."
"No?" chan Tesh cocked his
head, one eyebrow raised, and Kinlafia shrugged.
"They seem to rely entirely on
the direct effect of the heat or lightning they generate. The
'fireballs,' in particular have a pronounced blast effect, but I think
it's actually secondary. And they seem
to . . . detonate the instant they
encounter any sort of target or resistance, even if it's only a tree
limb or a screen of brush."
"Obviously, none of
us—" Arthag's micrometric nod indicated the
troopers of his platoon "—actually saw the battle,
Company-Captain. But after examining the damage patterns out
there, I'd have to say I think Voice Kinlafia's onto something.
There's no sign anywhere of the sort of punch-through effect you'd
get from our own artillery. And no shell splinters or shrapnel,
either. Their artillery seems to be spectacular as hell, and it's
certainly devastating to anyone actually caught in what Voice
Kinlafia calls its 'zone of effect,' but that zone is smaller than we
originally thought, and I don't believe their 'guns' are going to be
able to punch through very much in the way of serious cover."
"So you and the Voice think the
reason their fortifications seem
so . . . spindly is that their own
weapons wouldn't be able to penetrate them and they've assumed
that since theirs wouldn't, ours can't?"
"Something along those lines,
Sir," Kinlafia said, and surprised chan Tesh with a tight smile.
"I've noticed that people—whether they're military or
civilians—tend to think in terms of the things they 'know'
are true. It's called relying on experience, and in general, it's a
pretty good idea, I suppose. But in this case, no one has
any experience. Not really."
"A very good—and
valid—point, Voice Kinlafia," chan Tesh said, impressed by
the other man's ability to think when he was so obviously on fire
with grief and fury. The company-captain nodded respectfully to
the Voice, then turned back to Arthag.
"These here," he said, tapping the
sketch with his forefinger. "These are those tube things—
the artillery—Voice Kinlafia's just been describing?"
"Yes, Sir," Arthag agreed, and
chan Tesh nodded.
There were, he conceded, a
dismayingly large number of the odd artillery pieces. Some of
them were also clearly larger than others, which to chan Tesh's
mind suggested that they were probably more powerful and longer
ranged. From the way they were positioned, he suspected they'd
been emplaced to sweep the relatively flat ground on the far side
of the portal with fire. Given their demonstrated potency, even
without the secondary fragmentation effect of Sharonian artillery,
that probably made sense. But why in the gods' names had they put
them right on top of the portal that way? And with no better cover
than they had?
"I think they're going to have a
little problem here, Platoon-Captain Arthag," chan Tesh said after
a few seconds. He looked up with a thin smile. "I've brought along
a mortar company."
Arthag's eyes narrowed.
Kinlafia's, on the other hand, began to glitter with fierce
satisfaction, and chan Tesh nodded.
"There's a spot right here, Sir,"
Arthag said, indicating a point on the sketch map. "There's a nice
little ravine on our side of the portal, deep enough to give cover to
a standing man. It doesn't have a direct line of sight to the portal,
but I think it would do just fine for mortars."
"Good." chan Tesh gave the map
another look, then folded up.
"I believe you said something
about supper, Platoon-Captain," he observed. "We're going to
need to rest the horses for at least several hours, and I don't mind
admitting that I could use a little sleep myself. Let's go find that
food, and while I eat, I'd like to talk with your Whiffer and Tracer
and Voice Kinlafia."
"Of course, Sir. Right this way."
* * *
Once the animals had been
picketed for the night, chan Tesh's weary men devoured the supper
Arthag's troopers had held ready for them, then fell into their
sleeping bags, dead to the world within minutes. chan Tesh would
desperately have liked to join them, but he had other duties to
discharge first. So he sat propped against a tree at Arthag's
campfire, finishing his second bowl of stew, and listened quietly
to the reports from Arthag, Kinlafia, Parcanthi, and Hilovar.
It wasn't a pretty story. chan Tesh
had already heard Kinlafia's report of the initial attack, relayed by
Rokam Traygan, but it was different hearing it directly from
Kinlafia himself. As the Chalgyn Consortium Voice made himself
recount every detail of the horrendous attack, chan Tesh could
literally taste the man's anguish and hatred. He wanted to reassure
Kinlafia that they would do everything in their power to track
down any survivors, but the chances of there being any
survivors didn't sound good. None of these men—himself
included, he admitted—really hoped to find anyone alive,
but they were determined to try.
And failing that, Balkar chan Tesh reflected grimly, I
want the opportunity to exact some serious vengeance.
The company-captain was
Ternathian by birth and rearing, but his family hadn't always been.
In fact, his father had immigrated to Ternathia with his own
parents as a youth. Emigrated, in fact, from Shurkhal. chan Tesh
didn't normally think of himself as Shurkhali, but he'd just
discovered, over the last five days, that the blood of his father's
people still ran in his veins. If Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had died in that blood-stained clearing over there, there wasn't a hell
deep enough for the enemy to hide in.
Watch yourself, Balkar! he chastised himself dutifully. You're not really some Shurkhali nomad out stalking another
clan for vengeance. You're also an imperial Army officer
, with a responsibility not just to the Authority,
but to His Imperial Majesty, as well. Neither of them need a
hotheaded, out-of-control junior officer at the other end of the
multiverse committing them to all-out war with another trans-
universal civilization!
All of which was true enough,
but didn't change a thing about the way he felt. Or about his
determination to seek punishment for the individual responsible
for this debacle. He was honest enough to admit that he would
prefer to squeeze the life out of the bastard himself, with his own
bare hands, but he'd settle for having the butcher's own rulers,
whoever the hell they were, hang him for the murderer he was.
And Balkar chan Tesh was grimly certain that punishment exactly
like that would be one of Sharona's demands whenever diplomatic
relations were finally established.
"The one thing that really
worries me," he said at length, having absorbed everything as well
as his weary mind was able to, "is how close they may be to
reinforcements of their own. We have no idea how far this
fortified swamp portal of theirs is from their own next entry
portal. Or of how long a transit chain they may be dangling from."
"You don't think they could be
native to that universe?" Kinlafia asked, twitching his head in the
general direction of the swamp portal.
"I suppose it's remotely
possible," chan Tesh replied. "I think it's extremely unlikely,
though. That's an exploration camp over there, Voice Kinlafia.
They—"
"Please, Company-Captain,"
Kinlafia interrupted with another of those pain-filled but genuine
smiles, "I'm not really all that fond of formal titles, and I'm a
civilian. I don't have any formal standing in your chain of
command, and I fully realize how out of my depth I am when it
comes to any sort of military operations. So it seems a little silly
to be going all formal when you talk to me. My name's Darcel."
"Of
course . . . Darcel," chan Tesh said.
"And mine's Balkar."
He smiled back at the voice for a
moment, then continued.
"As I was saying, Darcel, that's a
small, very crude camp on the other side of that portal. They're
still sleeping in tents, and that indicates they've only recently
arrived at the portal site. If that were their home world on the
other side, surely they'd already have known about the portal and
explored it long since. I realize from Platoon-Captain Arthag's
scouts' reports that this isn't a very old portal, but it didn't
just come into existence last week, either, so—"
He shrugged, and Kinlafia
nodded slowly.
"That's pretty much what I've
been thinking," he admitted.
"Which brings me back to my
original point," chan Tesh said. "How close are they to the next
node in their transit chain? For that matter, how quickly
did they get their report of what happened back to higher
authority? Do they have a relief force on its way already, the same
way we're responding to Voice Nargra-Kolmayr's cry for help?"
"I suppose that depends on
whether or not they had a Voice of their own with them," Kinlafia
said, but chan Tesh shook his head.
"It depends on a more
fundamental question that, Darcel." Kinlafia looked at him, and
the company-captain shrugged. "It depends on whether or not they
have Voices at all."
"Surely they do—they
must!" Kinlafia said, but chan Tesh only shook his head again.
"You're the one who just pointed
out to me—quite rightly—that people tend to
operate on the basis of what experience tells them is true," he said.
"Well, our experience tells us that there have to be Voices
on the other side. But do there?"
"I—" Kinlafia paused,
then grimaced. "All right, I see your point. I can't conceive of how
they couldn't have Talents, but I suppose it's possible. On the other
hand, can we risk assuming they don't?"
"Oh, no." chan Tesh shook his
head vigorously. "I intend to assume they do—I'll
be a hell of a lot happier to find out I was wrong about that than I
would be to find out I was wrong about assuming they didn't!
But how quickly they can respond is the question that worries
me the most. Well, that and the fact that they don't know any more
about us than we know about them."
Kinlafia looked puzzled, and
chan Tesh snorted. It was too harsh to be called a laugh.
"The only thing we know about
these people is that they've encountered another party scouting an
obviously virgin universe and killed or captured them all."
Kinlafia winced, but chan Tesh continued calmly. "And that's all
they know about us, too. I'll bet you my last pair of boots that
they're wondering whether or not our people got a
message out, and for a lot of the same reasons. But we're both
only groping in the dark out here, and that makes me nervous as
hell. People who don't know what's going on have a
tendency to make worst-case
assumptions . . . and then act on
them."
"I agree, Sir." Hulmok Arthag
nodded. "They're going to be nervous, too, if not downright
spooked. Our people hit these bastards hard. It's obvious from
their trail that they had a lot of wounded to transport. You
should see all the bandages at the bivouac site we found earlier
today! They've got to be wondering what's going to come after
them next—and how much worse it's going to be. The fact
that they've dug in shows they're at least taking precautions.
They're probably ready to shoot first and ask questions later. Just
like they did last time," he added bitterly.
"Exactly," chan Tesh agreed.
"And let's be honest here—so are we." He looked around
the faces in the firelight. "None of us is going to be inclined to
take any chances. And, frankly, I'm not going to be exactly
brokenhearted if these bastards give us an excuse to blow them
straight to hell. Not after what they did to our people. And
that worries me, too."
Kinlafia didn't say anything, but
the sudden tightening of his face made his reaction to chan Tesh's
last few sentences abundantly clear. The company-captain looked
at him for a moment, then leaned forward.
"I know you want revenge,
Darcel," he said quietly. "Well, so do I. And, as I say, I'm not going
to be taking any chances. But if we just charge in there shooting,
we're going to make any possibility of establishing real contact
with these people even more difficult. And—" he raised his
voice slightly as rebellion flickered in Kinlafia's eyes "—if
there are any of our people still alive over there, charging in
shooting is probably the best way to get them killed after all."
Kinlafia sat back abruptly, and
chan Tesh looked at Arthag.
"Our first responsibility is to get
any survivors back alive and unharmed. Or, at least, without their
suffering any additional harm. If there aren't any
survivors," he continued unflinchingly, "then our primary
responsibility becomes establishing contact—hopefully
without still more violence—and demanding that whoever
ordered the attack on our people be held accountable and punished
for it. I'm not going to risk any of our people if I can help it, but
I'd far rather see the son-of-a-bitch responsible for this arrested
and hanged than see this turn into some sort of general war."
Kinlafia looked at him for a
long, silent moment, then shook his head.
"I understand what you're saying.
Intellectually, I even agree with you. But my heart?" He shook his
head again. "Whatever my head says, my heart hopes to hell that
these bastards do something—anything—
else to give us the excuse to shoot every godsdamned one of
them."
He rose, and stood looking down
at chan Tesh and Arthag. His expression wasn't really challenging,
but it was definitely unyielding, and chan Tesh couldn't blame him
a bit for that.
"I'm going to try to get some
sleep," the civilian said after a moment. "Goodnight."
It was said courteously, even
pleasantly, but behind the courtesy, Balkar chan Tesh sensed the
iron portcullis of the Voice's hatred. The company-captain
watched Kinlafia walk away, and wished he didn't understand the
Voice's feelings quite as well as he did.
"Sir!"
chan Tesh reined up as one of
Arthag's troopers came cantering back towards the column. The
cavalryman reported to his own platoon commander, not chan
Tesh, exactly as he should have.
"Yes, Wirtha?" Arthag said as
the trooper saluted.
"Sir, we've found another bit
they dropped," Wirtha said, and Arthag's eyes narrowed. Then he
looked at Parcanthi and Hilovar.
"You two had better go check it
out," he said, without checking with chan Tesh. Which, chan Tesh
reflected as the Whiffer and Tracer trotted off in Wirtha's wake,
was precisely what a good subordinate was supposed to do.
The two officers, accompanied
by Darcel Kinlafia, followed the Talents at a bit more leisurely
pace. chan Tesh rather wished that Kinlafia hadn't been present.
He'd done his dead level best, tactfully, to suggest that Kinlafia
should return to Company-Captain Halifu's fort, since it was
essential that they have a Voice available to relay further up the
transit chain if something unfortunate—something else
unfortunate—happened out here.
Kinlafia, unhappily, hadn't been
interested. And, unlike Rokam Traygan, the civilian Voice wasn't
under chan Tesh's direct authority. It was obvious that the only
way the company-captain could have sent Kinlafia to the rear
would have been under armed guard, and he hadn't been able to
bring himself to do that in the face of the civilian's obvious pain.
So Traygan had been sent back, instead, and Kinlafia was still here.
Here waiting for the next, crushing blow if they confirmed Shaylar
Nargra-Kolmayr's death, and here where his brooding grief and the
white-hot smolder of his thinly-banked fury hung like a storm
cloud in the back of every mind.
But there wasn't much chan Tesh
could do about that. Even if he'd been inclined to change his own
mind about ordering Kinlafia to the rear, it was too late. Traygan
was already more than halfway back to Halifu's fort, which left
Kinlafia as the only Voice available at the sharp end.
Since there wasn't anything he
could do about that, the company-captain put it out of his
disciplined mind and concentrated on Wirtha's discovery. He
wasn't very surprised that the scouts had found another bit of
debris jettisoned by the people whose trail they were following
back to the portal. If these people did have Talents, they appeared
to be remarkably unconcerned about anything a good Whiffer or
Tracer might be able to discern from their castoffs. Although, to
be fair, given the number of wounded the other side was carrying
with them, at least some bits and pieces were bound to get away
from them.
It was a sign of how good
Arthag's people were, though, that they were searching just as
diligently this time around as they'd searched the first time they
scouted the enemy's trail back to his entry portal.
The three of them caught up just
as Hilovar and Parcanthi dismounted and walked across to the
object the scout had found. As usual, Hilovar stopped short,
allowing Parcanthi first crack at the energy residues, and the
Whiffer crouched over whatever it was.
"A soldier dropped this," he said
at length. "Not an officer, I don't think, but that's harder to be sure
of. He's wounded, staggering. I can See more wounded all around
him. Limping—cursing, it sounds like. They're carrying a
fair number of men on those strange stretchers of theirs." He
grimaced. "I still can't See how they get the damned things to
float that way," he complained almost petulantly, then opened
his eyes.
"Same as usual, Sir," he said,
standing and turning to look up at Arthag. "They were moving
slowly, but steadily. It was nearly dark when whoever dropped this
dropped it." He indicated the item with his foot, without actually
touching it, and glanced at his partner.
"Your turn, Soral."
Hilovar nodded and crouched
down in Parcanthi's place. He stared down at what had been
dropped, and his brow furrowed.
"What the hell is that?"
he muttered under his breath.
It was a small, square object,
made of something that looked almost like glass which had been
deliberately opaqued. There were markings on it, but what the
alien symbols signified was anyone's guess. Hilovar considered it
for a moment, then shrugged and picked it up—
—only to let out a startled
yelp and drop it back into the leaves on the forest floor.
"What's wrong?" chan Tesh
asked sharply, watching the Tracer shake his hand as if he'd just
burned it.
"Sorry, Sir." Hilovar looked a bit
embarrassed. "It just took me by surprise.
It's . . . unnatural."
"That fucking word
again," Arthag growled.
"Sorry, Sir," Hilovar said again,
glancing back at the scowling Arpathian. "But this thing—
it's got the same feel as those accursed ash piles, only stronger.
Much stronger. Concentrated as acid, in fact. It prickled my hand
so hard it was like being swatted by wasps."
chan Tesh winced at the image,
then sighed.
"Do what you can, Junior-
Armsman. We need anything you can dredge out of that
thing—whatever it is."
Hilovar nodded, gritted his teeth,
and picked it up again. It was obvious that just holding the thing
caused him considerable pain, but he endured grimly.
"He's shot through the shoulder,"
the Tracer said, after a heartbeat or two, in a grating, savagely
satisfied tone. "Bleeding into his bandages and hurting like a son-
of-a-bitch. Stumbling a good bit. Wishing he could ride on one of
the stretchers, it feels like. He keeps looking at them, up ahead."
Then, suddenly, Hilovar shot
upright.
"Great gods! There's a
woman with 'em!"
"Shaylar?" The name
tore from Darcel Kinlafia like a cry of pain, jerking Hilovar out of
his concentration, and the Tracer turned to meet his tortured gaze.
"No," the junior-armsman said
gently, watching the Voice's face crumple again. "I'm sorry,
Darcel. She looked Uromathian—a little thing, pretty as a
peach. She was walking beside one of the stretchers. I caught just a
tiny glimpse of her. I think the man who dropped this," he held up
the surprisingly dense object on his palm, "wanted her to help
him."
"A Healer, then?" Arthag mused.
"Sounds like it," chan Tesh
agreed, and cocked an eyebrow at Hilovar. "Can you get anything
else off of it?"
"No, Sir. Not really," the Tracer
said, obviously unhappily. "It's just more of the same. He's just
moving slowly—very slowly. And hurting like hell."
"Good!" Kinlafia
snarled, and Arthag leaned over in the saddle and gripped his
shoulder wordlessly.
"Is there anything else on the
ground here?" chan Tesh asked, and Wirtha shook his head.
"No, Sir. We looked around
pretty carefully before I reported it to the Platoon-Captain."
"In that case, may I see it,
Soral?"
Hilovar stepped over between
chan Tesh's mount and Arthag's magnificent stallion. He held his
hand up, allowing the officers to study the object on his palm.
Neither of them offered to touch it lest they contaminate it for
further Whiffing or Tracing.
"Doesn't look like much, does
it?" Arthag murmured, and chan Tesh frowned.
"It looks like glass. But it isn't, is
it?"
"It's made from the same thing as
those godsdamned 'artillery pieces' of theirs," Darcel said harshly
even as Hilovar shook his head.
"Now that's interesting," chan
Tesh mused. He glanced at Kinlafia, then back at the Tracer. "It's
heavy, isn't it?"
"Yes, Sir. Very dense," Hilovar
added. "Surprisingly so, for its size."
"Are those buttons along the
side?"
"That's what they look like, Sir,"
Hilovar agreed.
"Well, I'm damned if I'll try
pushing one of them!" chan Tesh snorted.
"If you don't mind, Sir, I'd like to
put it into an evidence bag. This thing hurts to hold. I don't
know what it's made of, or what's inside it, but it's got that same
foul, nasty—unnatural—" he added, meeting
Arthag's gaze grimly "—feel. I'm not real anxious to push
those buttons, either, Sir, and that's no lie. This thing is damned weird."
"Very well." chan Tesh nodded.
"Put it away. Carefully."
Hilovar pulled a small canvas
evidence bag out of his saddlebags and slid the dense little cube
into it, then slid both of them into a larger canvas bag slung from
his saddle horn, where he'd stored the other bits and pieces they'd
found scattered along the trail.
"All right," chan Tesh said then.
"We're getting close to that overnight bivouac of theirs, aren't
we?"
"Yes, Sir," Wirtha agreed.
"About another ten, fifteen minutes. There's quite a bit of stuff
scattered around where their fires were. Most of it's little bits and
pieces of personal gear, torn uniforms, that kind of thing. And lots
of soiled bandages," he added with grim satisfaction.
"Let's move along, then," chan
Tesh said.
"Here it is, Sir," Wirtha told chan
Tesh shortly afterward, and the company-captain drew rein one
more. The area before him, a clearer space along the bank of the
same stream which had flowed beside the slaughtered survey
crew's day-fort, showed the rings of half a dozen big bonfires and
a handful of smaller ones. Even from here, he could see that there
was a lot of debris strewn around, including a stained snowdrift of
gore-crusted bandages.
"Has anyone been out there yet?"
he asked.
"No, Sir," Wirtha replied. "We
bypassed it on the way through."
chan Tesh glanced at Arthag, and
the acting platoon-captain shrugged very slightly.
"Nolis and Soral had their hands
full with the debris we'd already found at the fallen timbers and at
the Chalgyn crew's day-fort, Sir. I'd left them behind to deal with
that while I went ahead. By the time we actually found the
campsite, we also knew we were hot on their trail, so I took the
point and pressed on in hopes we might overtake them. But they
got to their own entry portal at least several hours before we did.
By the time Nolis and Soral were ready to follow us up, we'd
received the order to hold in position and wait for your arrival. It
took a while to get a runner forward to my position to recall me to
meet you, and Nolis and Soral stayed put in the meantime, as per
their orders from Company-Captain Halifu. By the time I got back
to camp and could have ordered them forward to the bivouac area
here, you were only a couple of hours out."
"I see." chan Tesh smiled thinly.
"So that old saying about order, counter-order, disorder
came into play."
"More or less, I'm afraid,"
Arthag agreed.
"Well, it's no one's fault," chan
Tesh sighed, and looked at Parcanthi and Hilovar. "Go ahead," he
said.
The two noncoms saluted,
dismounted, and headed forward. Hilovar, as usual, waited while
Parcanthi moved into the bivouac area, sweeping from one cold
ash pit to another, following the energy residues. It took him the
better part of twenty minutes, but when he returned to the waiting
officers, his eyes glowed.
"I got some good, solid Whiffs,
Company-Captain!" he told chan Tesh. "There's a place a bit
further down the creek over there," he pointed, "where
something came in during the night."
"Something?" chan Tesh
repeated. "What sort of 'something'?"
"Gods alone know," Parcanthi
said frankly. "It was big. Dark. I could see firelight on what looked
like . . . hide, maybe. If it was hide, the creature under it was big, Sir. Really big, like
nothing I've ever seen. But it was too damned dark to get a good
look at it. They were loading stretchers onto it, whatever it was."
"Some kind of transport," Arthag
muttered. "So, that's what they did." chan Tesh glanced at him, and
the acting platoon-captain grimaced. "We knew they were
traveling a little faster when they moved on from here. Didn't
notice any particular decrease in the number of their walking
wounded, but they were definitely moving more quickly."
"Did they load all the stretchers
onto it, whatever it was, Parcanthi?" chan Tesh asked the Whiffer.
"No, Sir. It looked to me like
they might've been loading up a dozen or so, like they were taking
the most critically wounded out. Whatever it was, and however
big it was, I don't think it had enough carrying capacity to take all
of them. All I could see was something big and dark that moved
off down the creek bed. Then I lost the Whiff."
"Down the creek," Arthag
murmured with a frown which drew chan Tesh's attention back to
him.
"Something's bothering you," the
company commander observed. "What is it?"
"Just that something the size
Nolis is describing damned well ought to have left a trail. Once
you get to the other side of the creek, the terrain's just like it is on
this side. And the underbrush along the stream banks is awfully
dense. Anything much bigger than a house cat should've left
some sign of its passage when it pushed through it, and we
didn't see a thing. Or, rather, we didn't see the tracks of anything
but the men on foot we'd been following all along."
"Could it have headed along the
streambed to avoid leaving a trail?" chan Tesh asked.
"I suppose it's possible, Sir. I just
don't see any reason why it should have. If the party on foot is still
headed steadily south, then their destination must lie in that
direction. Why should their transport have headed in some
other direction?"
"I agree it doesn't make a lot of
sense," chan Tesh said. "By the same token, it has to've gone
somewhere. Parcanthi Saw it, so we know it was here. Unless
you want to suggest that it just flew away, it had to leave tracks
somewhere, too, and I know your men's reputation. They wouldn't
have missed the sign something that size had to leave behind."
"I don't—" Arthag began,
but Parcanthi interrupted, his voice a bit edged.
"I'm sorry, Sir. And I apologize
for interrupting, but I hadn't finished my report."
Arthag and chan Tesh both
turned back to him, and he waved back in the direction he'd
already pointed.
"It was dark, like I said, but I
might—I just might—have Seen one of our
people among them." Both officers—and Kinlafia—
jerked upright in the saddle, eyes narrowing, as he continued. "I
could see someone's back, climbing up onto whatever it was. I
couldn't see the face, or even get a good look at the hair, because
whoever it was, they were wearing some kind of leather hat, or
helmet. And they were out beyond the range of the firelight. But
I'm positive that they weren't in uniform."
Darcel Kinlafia sucked down air
in the sudden silence.
"Could it have been the woman
you Saw, Soral?" Arthag asked quietly. "The one you said looked
Uromathian. Was she in uniform when you Saw her?"
"She wasn't," Parcanthi said,
before Hilovar could speak. "In uniform, I mean. But this wasn't
her. I could See her clearly, standing on the bank. She couldn't
have been anyone else, not from Soral's description earlier. It
looked like she was waiting her own turn to climb up onto
whatever it was."
"How . . .
how big a person did you See?" Kinlafia whispered harshly.
"Small. Very small. Maybe this
high," Parcanthi said, measuring with his hand.
"Oh, gods!" Kinlafia's
voice was barely audible, and his throat worked convulsively. The
others stared at him as he bowed his head over his saddle bow,
eyes tight shut.
"Darcel?" Arthag said, very
quietly, after a moment, and the Arpathian's eyes widened as he
saw the Voice's face.
"It's her—
Shaylar!" Kinlafia said hoarsely. "It's got to be her!
Nobody else in the crew was remotely close to that small!"
"I didn't get a very good look at
whoever it was," Parcanthi cautioned. "It was dark as sin out there
in the brush, and they were climbing up whatever that thing was,
which means I couldn't get a good contrast reading. All I could
really see were dark shapes against the dark, black wall of hide, or
whatever it was. It was a small person, slightly built, in civilian
clothing. That much I could See. But I don't know that it was
Sharonian clothing. And," he added in the tone of someone
desperately trying not to step on the flaming hope in Kinlafia's
eyes, "we already know they had at least one other
woman—in civilian clothing—with them. If they had
one, they might have had two."
All eyes turned to Hilovar, and
the Tracer cleared his throat.
"If we can find anything Shaylar
was holding, I'll know," he said. "But that's a big if, Darcel. A
damned big if."
"I know," Kinlafia's voice was
full of grit and gravel. "But I've got reason to hope, now.
That's more than I've had ever since I lost contact with her."
"I agree," chan Tesh said, but his
own voice was heavy. "If it was Shaylar, though, and she was
conscious, up and moving, why didn't she contact you, Darcel?
She had to know you'd be waiting, that you were well within her
range. For that matter, I happen to know you've been
trying to contact her every hour on the hour since you
crossed to this side of our own portal."
Kinlafia looked at him, then
cleared his own throat.
"She struck her head on
something, remember? Hit hard enough to knock her unconscious,
at least. And Soral's already said there was damage inside her head,
serious damage. She could have been injured badly enough to be
rendered Voiceless."
"But if she's hurt that badly,
would she have been on her feet and climbing up whatever it was
Parcanthi glimpsed out there?" chan Tesh asked.
"I don't know." It came out
practically in a groan, and Kinlafia ground his teeth. "Mother
Marthea, these monsters are capable of anything! If they're willing
to force an injured girl to walk, to climb up this thing, when we know she's suffered a critical head injury, then what in the
gods' names else are they willing to do?! They
could—"
"Stop it!" chan Tesh's voice
rapped out harshly, jerking Kinlafia back around to face him.
"There's no point to this," the
company-captain growled, albeit more gently. "You're torturing
yourself with visions we have no way to prove or disprove. The
people who did this may be a complete unknown, Voice Kinlafia,
but one thing we do know; if they have got surviving
Sharonians, they're going to want them as healthy as possible."
"You're right," Kinlafia
whispered. He sounded unsteady, but he drew another deep breath
and slowly nodded. "You're right," he repeated. "I'm sorry. I'm just
about out of my mind, worrying and wondering and feeling so
gods-cursed helpless. . . . "
"I understand," chan Tesh told
him. "But none of us can afford to let anger swamp our thinking."
"Yes, Sir," Kinlafia said quietly.
"I'll bear that in mind. The last thing in this universe—or
any other—I want to do is something rash that jeopardizes
any Sharonian lives. Ours—" he nodded to the
column of mounted men "—or that of anyone they've taken
with them."
"That's good," chan Tesh said
quietly, and smacked him lightly on the shoulder before turning
back to his two Talented specialists. "Soral, I think it's your turn in
the barrel. See what you can find out."
A half-hour later, the Whiffer
and Tracer had completed their reports. They'd managed to pick up
quite a lot of additional detail about the individuals who had
bivouacked here; very little of it did much good, unfortunately.
"So what do we really know?"
chan Tesh asked, looking around the circle of faces around him.
He and Arthag had been joined by the Marine officers in command
of the two platoons he'd brought along. Hilovar and Parcanthi
were both there, too, despite their noncommissioned ranks,
available for consultation at need. And, of course, there was also
Darcel Kinlafia.
"We know their wounded were
hurt even more badly than we thought, Sir," Arthag said. "We
know they sent at least ten or twelve of their people out aboard
whatever the hells it was Nolis Saw down by the creek, and we
know it was godsdamned big."
He grimaced. Guided by the
Whiffer, some of his scouts had finally found a few footprints, in
among the rocks, gravel, and water-washed sand. Whatever the
enemy's transport animal had been, it had been huge. And
its feet had been unlike anything Hulmok Arthag had ever
seen—or imagined—in his life. It must have been
actually standing in the stream itself, which explained the dearth of
footprints, but the partial ones they'd found in the end had been
frightening to behold. Long-toed, with huge claws, and damned
near as long as Arthag was tall. Most maddening of all, they
couldn't find a single track heading toward the
bivouac . . . or heading away
from it, for that matter! It was as if the creature had simply
materialized where it was, stood around for a while, and then
dematerialized!
"I think Nolis is right that they
were getting their most seriously wounded out of here," chan Tesh
observed. "Makes sense. But they also sent out the one woman we
know was with them, and at least one more civilian, at the same
time, and both of them were at least mobile enough to climb up by
themselves. So I'd say they were pulling out the people they
thought were most valuable, as well as those who were worst
hurt. That obviously would have included any of our people who
were still alive."
"So what we've really got is just
more puzzles," Kinlafia said a bit harshly.
"Any information is always
valuable, Voice Kinlafia." An edge of formality frosted chan
Tesh's measured reply. Kinlafia looked at him, and the company-
captain looked back levelly.
"We know where their
encampment is, Darcel," he continued, "and we have it under
observation until we can get there and deal with it. In the
meantime, any evidence we can get, any information we can cull,
may be the one critical piece we need to tell us what to do
when we do get there."
Kinlafia looked rebellious for a
moment. Then his nostrils flared, and he nodded in unhappy
agreement. But it was agreement, chan Tesh noted.
"All right," he said decisively.
"I'm going to assume they do have at least one Sharonian prisoner.
I may be wrong about that, but they were obviously pulling out someone besides their own wounded. We also know where
their entry portal is, and we've got a good notion of how they've
dug in on their side of it. I think it's time we took this the rest of
the way to them."
Hunger sparkled in Kinlafia's
eyes, and chan Tesh felt more than a small flicker of it deep within
himself, as well. But he continued in that same, decisive voice.
"Given the size of the only other
civilian Parcanthi Saw, I'm also going to operate on the
assumption that Voice Nargra-Kolmayr may still be alive.
If that's true, then getting her back is our number one priority. Our
number two priority, however, is to try to put some sort of lid on
this situation before it gets even worse. Much as I'd prefer
otherwise, this isn't a punitive expedition. These aren't portal
pirates, they aren't claim-jumpers—they aren't anything
we've ever encountered before. But they are, clearly,
representatives of another trans-universal civilization. So unless
they start it, or unless we have convincing evidence that they're
holding our people and won't give them up without a fight, I don't
want any shooting."
The company-captain could
literally taste Kinlafia's disappointment. Arthag and both of the
Marine officers seemed just as unhappy, although they were too
disciplined to let it show, and chan Tesh allowed himself a small,
thin smile.
"I don't want any shooting from
our side," he reiterated. "But if it should happen that
they start the shooting—for a second time—I
intend to be very certain that we end it. Is all of that clearly
understood?"
Heads nodded all around, and he
nodded back.
"In that case, gentlemen, let's get
moving again. I want to be in position
to . . . speak to these people before
sundown."
Chapter Eighteen
Chief Sword Otwal Threbuch
hated the taste of defeat.
He couldn't begin to count of the
number of missions he'd carried out successfully over the course
of his career. He'd cheated death ten ways from hell, dragged back
commanding officers held together by little more than bandages
and stitches, and somehow—some way—always
gotten the job done.
But as he lay stretched out flat
on his belly along the tree limb, staring at the tantalizingly close
disk of the swamp portal, he tasted the most bitter failure of his
life. His worst nightmare was right under his nose, and there was
literally no way for him to warn Hundred Olderhan it was coming.
He'd done exactly what the
hundred had instructed him to do. Neither he nor Emiyet Borkaz,
the First Platoon trooper with him, had found any sign of a
messenger as they left the site of the fight at the toppled timber
behind and headed for what they hoped was the other side's entry
portal.
That entry portal had turned out
to be a monster when they finally found it. Threbuch had never
seen—never imagined—one that size. It had to be at
least thirty miles across, and as he'd gazed through it at the
rainsoaked forest on the far side, he'd mentally apologized to
Magister Halathyn and Magister Kelbryan for every doubt he'd
cherished about their newfangled portal-finding gadget. If this
wasn't a class eight portal, it could only be because it was a class
nine.
Its size had been part of the
problem. Threbuch had never before been assigned to scout
anything that size with only two men. Finding the fort from which
the survey party must have come had taken far longer than he'd
liked, but the fall of night had prevented them from following the
back trail all the way that first day. They'd been forced to bivouac
overnight, and a cold and cheerless night it had been without so
much as a palm-sized campfire.
The next day, they'd come within
a hair's breadth of being snapped up themselves by a party of what
were obviously mounted scouts. Threbuch and Borkaz had been
crossing an open space left by some long-ago fire, and they'd been
damned lucky to realize what was happening in time to
disappear into a handy thicket of brambles. Threbuch had taken the
opportunity to study the horsemen carefully, and he hadn't liked
what he'd seen one bit.
Their horses weren't much to
talk about, at least. They didn't look as if they'd been enhanced at
all, although they appeared well cared for and were clearly well-
trained. The men on their backs had been another matter entirely.
These men were obviously soldiers. They wore distinctive
uniforms, with dark gray tunics and green breeches tucked into
high cavalry boots, which blended into the forest surprisingly
well . . . and made it totally clear that
the people the Andaran Scouts had fought and defeated—slaughtered, he'd thought, forcing himself to face the
truth—had, indeed, been civilians.
He'd made himself put that
thought aside, concentrating on the job in hand, and his jaw had
set hard. There were three men, clearly the point of a larger
column, moving with an alert, competent professionalism
Threbuch had never seen bettered. He hadn't been able to see their
faces, but the set of their shoulders and their overall body
language had shouted both their focus and their fury, which had
pretty much answered the question about whether or not they
knew something had happened to the survey party. He still didn't
have a clue how they'd found out, but if that wasn't a rescue party
with blood in its eye, he'd never seen one.
They'd carried shoulder weapons
like those of the civilians the Scouts had already encountered,
although these were sheathed in saddle scabbards. They also
carried more of the smaller, belt-sized version, and the first
swords Threbuch had seen from the other side. Cavalry sabers, of
course, but the swords—like the shoulder
weapons—were saddle-carried. And unlike the shoulder
weapons, it didn't look as if they were intended to be gotten at
quickly. Small wonder. If he'd had ranged weapons as
good as theirs, he'd have sold his own sword for beer money!
The chief sword had lain beside
Borkaz, watching as the sweep men rode past. The horsemen rode
with alert eyes, obviously taking little for granted, but it was
apparent that they were far more focused on where they were
going than upon where they were. They moved steadily on,
without ever approaching the thicket in which Threbuch and
Borkaz hid.
Threbuch had stayed exactly
where he was, despite the impatience he had sensed from Borkaz,
after the trio had disappeared along the same trail he'd been
following in the other direction. Borkaz was too disciplined to
actually complain, but he'd obviously hovered on the point of
doing so when, several minutes later, the rest of the
column had come into view.
Forty men, Threbuch had
estimated, all of them with those same deadly shoulder
weapons. They'd outnumbered Hundred Olderhan's remaining
combat effectives by four-to-one, and they'd been accompanied by
pack mules. Threbuch had no idea what had been on those mules.
Rations, undoubtedly, some of it, but was that all? Or did they
have yet more of their demonic weapons—weapons a mere
civilian survey crew couldn't have matched—hidden away
in those innocent looking packs?
There'd been no way to know,
just as there'd been no possible way Threbuch and Borkaz could
have beaten those mounted men back to Hundred Olderhan. The
thought had been gall-bitter, but Sir Jasak was as
coolheaded—and smart—as any junior officer
Threbuch had ever served. He'd already be pushing to get back to
their base camp at the swamp portal as quickly as possible. The
only thing Threbuch could do was hope he made it before the
pursuing cavalry force came right up his backside.
Well, that and continue with the
mission the hundred had given him in the first place.
Once the patrol had passed, he
and Borkaz had eased back from the immediate trail and continued
far more cautiously to the north. They'd become aware of the huge
portal shortly after dawn on the second day, although it had been
mid-morning by the time they'd finally spotted the fort on the
portal's far side.
That had been an unpleasant
discovery, too.
The fort was little more than a
rough, three-quarters-finished wooden palisade around a central
courtyard. Threbuch must have seen hundreds of similar forts in
his career. But this fort was a hornet's nest of activity,
despite the rain falling steadily across it. There weren't as many
men as he might have expected in the uniformed fatigue parties
laboring on its construction, but peering through the unfinished,
open gate from the dry side of the portal, Threbuch had seen
additional buildings—barracks, obviously—going
up. No doubt the prospect of getting watertight roofs over their
own heads could have explained the workers' industry, but there'd
been far too few troops in sight for the amount of bunk space
Otwal saw going up.
"Graholis, Chief Sword!" Borkaz
had muttered beside him. "Are they expecting a godsdamned
regiment?"
"It's not that bad,"
Threbuch had replied. "It looks bigger to us because we're both
scared shitless at the moment. Actually, it's probably not much
bigger than one of our battalion forts."
"Whatever you say, Chief,"
Borkaz had said doubtfully.
They'd spent a while studying the
fort. The bad news was all that barracks space; the good news was
that, at the moment, they didn't seem to have the troops to put
into those barracks. The more they'd looked at it, the more
Threbuch had come to the conclusion that the column which had
almost snapped up him and Borkaz must have represented
virtually all the combat strength immediately available to the other
side. If that were true, and if the hundred did beat that cavalry
column through the portal, he should be in pretty good shape.
"All right," he'd said finally to
Borkaz, turning his back—not without difficulty—
on the fort and its work parties. "We've found their fort, and we
already know their cavalry is past us. Not much we can do about
that. So the next priority is figuring out just how godsdamned big
this thing—" he'd waved an arm at the rainy half-disk of
another universe looming over them "—really is. And if it
comes to it, we're going to need a better idea of the terrain on both
sides."
Borkaz had nodded, although he
hadn't looked particularly happy. Threbuch hadn't blamed him,
either. Neither of them had really anticipated a portal this size.
Doing even a cursory tactical sweep was going to take the two of
them at least a couple of days, and probably longer.
"I don't like it," Threbuch had
continued, "but I think we're going to have to split up. We'll each
take half the rations, then you'll sweep that way—" he'd
pointed southeast; this portal's axis was aligned in a generally
southeast-northwest direction "—and I'll go the other.
How's the charge on your RC?"
Borkaz had reached into his pack
and pulled out his reconnaissance crystal, which looked pretty
much like any other PC, except for the bracket designed to allow
him to affix it to the front of his helmet. He'd pressed a button on
the side of the glassy cube and studied the readout for a moment.
"I've got ninety-six hours,
Chief," he'd reported.
"Good. It looks like this fort's
about right square in the center, so even if this thing's as big as it
looks from the sky arc, it can't be much more than fifteen miles
from here to the far edge in either direction. It shouldn't take more
than a day or so for one man to travel that far, so you'll be able to
leave it on record the whole way."
"I could do it in less
than—" Borkaz had begun, but Threbuch had cut him off.
"Maybe you could, but you're
going to be operating solo, with nobody to watch your back, and
we have to get this one right. We don't fuck up this time,
understood? So you take your time, and you hole up somewhere
at night, and you don't cross over to the other side until you're at
least five miles from their fort. Is that understood?"
"Yes, Chief Sword," Borkaz had
said, rather more formally than usual.
"Good. Then get moving. I'll
meet you here tomorrow afternoon. If you don't turn up in three
days—or if I don't—then we both head back
to camp on our own. And for gods' sake, be careful!"
That had been three days ago,
and Otwal Threbuch had cursed himself long, soundly,
inventively, and viciously for that delay when he and Borkaz had
discovered what else had come through that portal while they'd
been elsewhere.
The sweep of the portal itself
had gone well. Once they'd been away from the immediate vicinity
of the other side's fort, they'd both crossed over into the
rainsoaked forest on the far side. Neither of them had enjoyed
their drenching, although they'd at least been able to withdraw
back to the dry side for occasional rests, but the recon crystals
attached to their helmets had faithfully recorded everything either
of them had seen after they'd been activated. In fact, the crystals
had undoubtedly seen things neither Threbuch nor Borkaz had
realized they were looking at. The Intelligence pukes would be
able to generate detailed topological maps of the area in the
portal's immediate vicinity and for as much as a mile or two on
either side of it, once they got their hands on those RCs.
Threbuch had very carefully
backed up each crystal into the unused memory of the other. If
something happened to him, Borkaz would have the complete
record, and vice-versa. Personally, the chief sword intended to see
to it that no one needed his backup, but a man never knew.
That thought had come back to
haunt him as he realized that the people for whom the fort's
barracks had been intended had obviously been closer than he'd
allowed himself to hope. The trail he and Borkaz had followed to
reach the portal was beginning to look like a godsdamned highway
from all the traffic passing over it. He hadn't been able to make
any sort of hard estimate from the hoof-churned leaves and mud,
but it had looked to him as if at least another couple of hundred
horsemen must have followed the original column. They couldn't
have been more than a few hours—a day, at the
outside—ahead of the chief sword and his companion, but
that had still put them between Threbuch and Hundred Olderhan.
And left Threbuch no possible
way to warn the hundred what was coming.
So he and Borkaz had done the
only thing they could do. They'd headed back through the
forest in the ground-covering lope of the Andaran Scouts, despite
their fatigue and the fact that neither of them had eaten very well
over the past several days. Threbuch was no spring chicken these
days, and that fact had been mercilessly ground home by the pain
in his legs and the fire in his lungs. Yet he'd actually managed to
set the pace for the much younger Borkaz, and—thanks to
their personal navigation crystals—they'd been able to cut
directly across country through the woods, avoiding the
considerably longer trail everyone else was following.
It had been a nightmare run, but
they'd almost won the race.
Almost, unfortunately, wasn't good enough, Threbuch
thought.
He growled yet another mental
curse, and only a lifetime of discipline prevented him from
slamming his fist into the branch on which he lay with bone-
breaking force. There had, indeed, been close to two hundred
men—maybe more—in that second
column . . . and every damned one of
them was between him and Borkaz and the portal.
What the fuck is the Hundred thinking about? he
demanded of himself. Where are the godsdamned sentries
? Where are the pickets?
It didn't make any sense at all.
The bastards out there in the woods between Threbuch and the
portal were good, no question. The chief sword had almost walked
right into one of them without even seeing him. Only the gods'
own luck had saved him, when the fellow—whose uniform
was as different from that of the cavalry troopers Threbuch had
seen as the chief sword's own—turned his head and
whistled a birdcall as good as any Threbuch might have produced
himself. Any temptation the chief sword might have felt about
picking the sentry off and slipping through the gap it would create
had vanished when replies had come back from three different
positions, all within easy sight range of the first.
But good as they might have
been, they should never have been able to get this close to the
portal, with their infantry deployed in what was obviously a well
laid out skirmish line, without being spotted. They certainly
weren't any better in the woods than the Andaran Scouts,
and Threbuch couldn't imagine what sort of idiocy could have
prevented Hundred Olderhan from posting pickets to prevent them
from doing exactly that.
Yet something obviously had
kept the hundred from taking that elementary precaution, and
getting himself or Borkaz captured or killed wouldn't do any good
at all. The sound of one of the enemy's weapons might
alert the troopers on the other side of the portal. It might not, too,
and there was no guarantee these people would be stupid enough
to use their thunder weapons. If there were enough of
them—and gods knew there were—they could take
him and Borkaz without firing a shot.
Besides, in the cold, hard
calculus of military reality, the information he and Borkaz were
bringing back was worth more than Hundred Olderhan's entire
company. That monster portal had to be reported, and the detailed
terrain scans he and Borkaz had carried out would be literally
priceless if it came to operations against the portal's defenders.
And so there was nothing he
could do but lie here, less than a thousand yards from the portal,
and pray that the earthworks he could see on the other side might
actually give the Andaran Scouts enough of an edge to survive.
Hulmok Arthag stood with
Balkar chan Tesh in the ravine he'd told the company-captain
about while two sections of the mortar company set up their heavy
weapons behind them.
There were four of the ugly,
deadly weapons in the ravine, and Platoon-Captain Morek chan
Talmarha, the company's commanding officer, was personally
overseeing their emplacement. He'd sent the two tubes of the
company's third section to set up further to the east, under Senior
Armsman Quelovak chan Sairath, his senior noncom. The terrain
was less suitable there, but the weapons had a range of over six
thousand yards, and chan Talmarha had managed to find a suitable
spot to emplace chan Sairath's weapons out of sight of anyone on
the other side. chan Tesh would have preferred not to split them
up, but he couldn't cover both aspects of the portal from a single
firing position.
Arthag had been surprised when
he saw the mortars attached to chan Tesh's column. The acting
platoon-captain had expected the three-inch weapons which were
the norm for mobile units of the PAAF; what chan Tesh had
actually brought along was the heavy four-and-a-half-inch version.
The three-inch weighed only a tad over eighty pounds in firing
position; the four-and-a-half-inch weighed almost three hundred,
and it was a pain to pack into position on mule back. Pack animals
couldn't carry as many of the far heavier rounds, either, so the
bigger weapon was more likely to be used from a fortified
position, or when it was possible to move using wheeled
transport. In fact, that was the role intended for them when they'd
been sent along with chan Tesh in the first place.
There was no question which
was the more effective weapon in action, though. Mortar rounds
were thinner-walled than conventional artillery shells, which
meant a higher percentage of their total weight could be given up
to explosive filler. The three-inch mortar's round weighed less
than seven pounds, with an explosive filler of only one and a half
pounds; the four-and-a-half-inch round weighed twenty-seven
pounds, with five and a half pounds of filler. Both were designed
to fly apart along pre-fragmented lines when they exploded, but
whereas the three-inch had a lethal radius of about twenty-five
feet, the four-and-a-half-inch's lethal radius was forty feet.
Under the circumstances, and
given the horrific effect of the other side's inexplicable weapons,
Arthag didn't blame chan Tesh a bit for his choice of support
weapons.
The mortar crews were busy
leveling the base plates, using the spirit levels built into the
weapons' bipods, while the Marines chan Tesh had detailed to
support them unloaded the mule-packed, finned, base-fused
rounds and stacked them neatly in place. Arthag watched them,
then looked up as Petty Armsman Loumas slithered down the side
of the ravine and saluted.
"You wanted me, Sir?" he said
to chan Tesh.
"Yes." chan Tesh nodded. "What
can you tell me?"
"Not much, I'm afraid, Sir,"
Loumas replied. "This close, the portal energies are playing hell
with my Talent." He grimaced. "I could probably actually give you
a better Plot from a half-mile back or so. I don't think
there's anyone out there, but what I'm Seeing is way too 'foggy' for
me to guarantee it. And," he admitted, "I may be feeling that way
because there wasn't anyone the last time I Looked."
"I'm inclined to think you're
probably right," chan Tesh said, making a mental note of the
Plotter's awareness of the danger preconception posed. It wasn't
every man, Talented or not, who could keep that in mind. And in
chan Tesh's experience, it was even less common for a man to
admit that it might be happening to him.
"If they'd been going to put
sentries out at all, they'd have already done it," chan Tesh
continued, thinking aloud.
"They did send those work
parties across this morning, Sir," Arthag pointed out, and chan
Tesh nodded in acknowledgment.
"There's not exactly very much
firewood on their side," he pointed out. "I'd be sending out wood-
cutting parties, too, in their place. But Chief-Armsman chan
Hathas kept a close eye on them, and according to his count, all of
them are back in camp. They didn't leave any of them behind on
our side."
"True enough, Sir," Arthag
conceded. "All the same, I wish they hadn't done it. I'd give half a
month's pay if chan Hathas had been able to get a better look at
whatever the hells that thing was!"
"Me, too," chan Tesh admitted.
The timing on the enemy's
wood-cutting expedition couldn't have been worse. With only a
handful of men to keep an eye on things, Chief-Armsman chan
Hathas had been forced to spread them out if he wanted to keep
both sets of fortifications under observation. The virtually
simultaneous emergence of work parties from each aspect of the
portal had forced him to pull back in obedience to his orders to
avoid contact until chan Tesh could bring up the main body. chan
Hathas had managed the maneuver flawlessly, as was only to be
expected out of a noncom of his experience, but he'd had to give
up his initial, carefully chosen vantage points. Which meant he'd
had only the most frustrating glimpses of some huge, metallic-
colored creature which had apparently both arrived and departed in
the course of no more than an hour or two. His angle of vision
through the portal had been too acute for him to see more, but it
was fairly obvious from his report that it must have been whatever
they'd already used to evacuate their more critically wounded.
There'd been no sign of it at all
since shortly after midday, and that had been enough to tighten
Darcel Kinlafia's mouth into a hard, grim line. chan Tesh
understood that, but the truth was that if the other side had decided
to send any prisoners somewhere else, they would probably have
done it long before this.
Of course, they may not have decided to move them elsewhere
at all, the company-captain mused.
Platoon-Captain Parai chan
Dersal, the senior of his two Marine platoon commanders, came
trotting down the ravine and saluted.
"We're in position on both sides,
Sir," he said.
"Good." chan Tesh smiled
slightly. "May I take it from the lack of gunfire, shouts, and
screams that you managed your deployment without anyone on the
other side noticing?"
"I believe you can take that, Sir,
yes," chan Dersal replied, absolutely deadpan, and chan Tesh heard
Arthag chuckle slightly, despite the tension hovering in the ravine.
"There is one thing, though, Sir,"
chan Dersal said. "I was talking to Chief-Armsman chan Hathas. I
wanted his advice on the best positions for my sharpshooters. In
the course of the conversation, he mentioned that one of his men
had reported seeing a civilian in the camp."
Darcel Kinlafia stirred slightly
behind chan Tesh, but the Marine officer went on before the Voice
could say anything.
"He said it was a man, definitely
not a woman, and that he seemed to be moving about freely, which
a prisoner wouldn't have been."
"That's right," Arthag said. "He
didn't get a very good look at the fellow, but whoever he was, he
definitely wasn't in uniform."
"Well, I think I got a better look
at him when I was moving my people into position," chan Dersal
said, touching the field glasses cased at his side. "He's a civilian,
all right. Looks like a Ricathian. Unlike anyone else I saw in there,
he's not armed, either, and he's old, Sir. Quite old, I'd say."
The Marine gazed at chan Tesh
expressionlessly, but the company-captain knew what the man was
really saying. They were both Imperial Ternathian officers, trained
in the same tradition, after all.
"I take your point, Platoon-
Captain," chan Tesh said, speaking a bit more formally. "And if
you saw one obvious civilian in there, there may be more we
haven't seen. I take that point, as well." He turned so that he could
look at both Arthag and chan Dersal. "Pass the word to all of our
people that there are probable civilians in that camp. No one is to
take any unnecessary chances, but we're also not out here to
butcher noncombatants."
"They did," Kinlafia
muttered in a barely audible voice, and chan Tesh looked at him
sternly.
"Perhaps they did. But we aren't them, and neither the PAAF nor the Ternathian Empire
massacres civilians." Kinlafia still looked rebellious, and chan
Tesh frowned. "I understand your point, Darcel," he said firmly,
"but I also have to point out that your people most definitely were
not unarmed. Civilians, yes, but not unarmed, and all the
evidence is that they gave at least as good as they got until the
artillery opened up. We're not going to do anyone any good if we
kill people who are neither armed nor shooting back just for the
sake of vengeance. More than that, I'm not going to let my people
turn into the very thing I'm out here hunting down. Is that clear?"
Kinlafia glowered, and chan
Tesh cocked his head to one side.
"I asked if that was clear, Darcel.
I want your word on it. If you can't give it, I'll have you disarmed
and held at the horse lines."
"It's clear," Kinlafia said, after a
moment. "And you have my word." He grimaced. "Probably a
good thing you do, really. I'd like to still like myself a few months
from now."
"I'd like for you to, too," chan
Tesh said with a little smile, but then his smile faded and he turned
his attention back to Arthag.
"You're sure you want to be the
one who does this, Hulmok?" he asked quietly.
"Sir, you're the one who said we
have to give them a chance to deal fairly with us." The Arpathian
shrugged. "I happen to agree with you, for several reasons. But if
we're going to try for a peaceful contact, it ought to be an officer,
and Bright Wind and I are the best team for it, anyway. With all
due modesty, I'm the best rider you've got, and Bright Wind is the
best horse you've got."
"All right," chan Tesh sighed. He
wasn't happy about picking anyone to take on this
particular duty, but as he'd told Arthag, it had to be done. What
had happened to the Chalgyn Consortium team could have been an
accident. That sort of thing wasn't supposed to happen with
properly trained and disciplined troops, but chan Tesh had seen
enough monumental fuck-ups in Ternathian and PAAF service to
know it could happen anyway, even to the best outfit in the
multiverse. So it was time to see what happened under more
controlled conditions, when panic couldn't be blamed for the other
side's reactions. Which, unfortunately, meant sending someone in
harm's way, and Arthag was right about the logical choice.
The company-captain looked at
Arthag and chan Dersal, then up at the sky. The sun was settling
steadily towards the western horizon, but there were at least a
couple of hours of daylight left. There was time enough, he
judged, and he couldn't count on these people to stay fat, happy,
and stupid forever.
He gave his mortar sections one
last glance. chan Talmarha gave him a pumped fist sign, indicating
readiness, and he nodded to himself.
"All right, Parai," he said. "Get
back to your platoon. Hulmok, you come with me. I think we'll
send you in from the west. At least that way they'll have the sun in
their eyes if they decide to do something outstandingly stupid."
Chapter Nineteen
"You be careful out there,
Hulmok," Darcel Kinlafia said quietly as Acting Platoon-Captain
Arthag swung gracefully back into the saddle.
"Oh, I will be," Arthag
said with a smile. Then he clicked gently, and Bright Wind stepped
daintily forward.
"Look at him!" Kinlafia
muttered to chan Tesh, watching the Arpathian officer's ramrod-
straight spine. "I'd be scared to death; he looks like he
doesn't have a care in the world!"
"He doesn't," chan Tesh said
simply. The Voice turned to stare at him, but chan Tesh, too, was
looking after the single horseman riding straight towards their
dug-in enemies.
"Hulmok Arthag," the Ternathian
officer continued softly. "Fifth son of Sept Chieftain Krithvon
Arthag." He glanced at Kinlafia finally. "I've never served with
him before, but I know his reputation. And after ten months under
Regiment-Captain Velvelig, I've learned a bit about Arpathians,
too. They've got so many hells full of demons to worry about, if
they've been stupid enough to live the way they shouldn't have,
that there's not a thing any mere mortal can do to scare them. And
if they have lived the way they ought to, why, there's
nothing here that can tempt them to stay on earth, given the
rewards waiting for the courageous in the afterworld. Hulmok's
less fatalistic about it than a lot of septmen, but it's still in there.
Which doesn't mean it takes an ounce less of guts to do what he's
about to do.
Hulmok Arthag asked Bright
Wind for an easy trot as he moved forward through the trees. The
breeze of their passage was just enough to spread the traditional
green banner of parley he carried, and he glanced up at it with a
wry snort. He didn't expect the enemy to know what a Sharonian
parley banner looked like, but it seemed likely that a lone
horseman showing up with any banner in his hand was less
likely to draw instant fire than a lone horseman without one.
Besides, as Company-Captain
chan Tesh had pointed out, if he went out under a parley banner
and they shot at him, anyway, there would be absolutely no
question about the legal justification for unlimbering everything
chan Tesh was prepared to throw at the people on the other side of
that portal. When it came to starting a war—or trying to
avoid one—such details mattered, and Arthag admired the
way chan Tesh's mind operated.
He thought about the careful
preparations the company-captain had made, and his lips twitched
in an evil grin. He didn't really want a war any more than anyone
else did, but that didn't mean he'd be particularly upset if the
bastards gave chan Tesh's people an excuse.
He approached the portal and
brought Bright Wind down to a dancing walk as he rode through
the positions of the carefully hidden Marines. The stallion worried
at the bit. The horse was aware of Arthag's battle-ready tension
and ready for a fight himself, fretting against the restrained pace to
which Arthag held him and so primed for instant combat that
sweat darkened his neck.
Arthag saw two sentries on the
far side of the portal. They should have seen him already,
he thought, but they weren't looking in his direction at the
moment. He walked Bright Wind steadily forward, waiting for
them to notice him, and grimaced in exasperation as he got within
eighty yards of the portal. Admittedly, the thick forest stretched
right up to the portal, and chan Tesh's decision to send him in
from the west meant the sentries had the blinding light of the
afternoon sun shining straight into their eyes, but
still . . . !
Close enough, he thought as the range fell to barely fifty
yards, and let out a shrill whistle.
Their heads jerked up as if he'd
poked them with a heated poker, and both of them whipped around
towards him. They saw him, sitting his horse, just outside the
treeline on his side of the portal, and one of them gave a startled
shout and started to bring up his crossbow.
"Halt!" Arthag called out
sharply, even as Bright wind screamed in warning and lifted his
front hooves off the ground. But the second sentry shouted
something urgent at his companion, and the man with the weapon
aborted the movement and stood frozen in place.
Then others began stirring
behind the sentries. Arthag couldn't make out details, since the
earthworks which had been thrown up blocked his view, but he
had the distinct impression of purposeful movement. Well, that
was to be expected, although the thought that the other side was
busy manning its inexplicable—unnatural, he
thought, smiling to himself as he used Soral Hilovar's favorite
word—artillery didn't exactly fill him with joy.
After several tense moments,
someone else turned up. A tall man, whose uniform was subtly
different from that of the sentries. The newcomer was an officer,
Arthag decided. The uniforms these people wore were too
unfamiliar for him to explain why he was sure of that, but he was.
And as he watched the other man, he suspected he was looking at
the portal camp's commanding officer.
Even from fifty yards away,
Arthag could clearly see the surprise—amounting to
shock—on the officer's face. The man looked as if he
couldn't believe his own eyes, although Arthag couldn't imagine
what he found so difficult to accept.
Commander of One Hundred
Hadrign Thalmayr stared in disbelief at the single horseman.
He was positive Commander of
Two Thousand mul Gurthak would be funneling forward every
reinforcement he could find, and every day Thalmayr remained in
possession of the portal was one more day for those
reinforcements to reach him. And after almost six days, Thalmayr
had concluded that the enemy's total inactivity indicated that the
murderous scum who'd massacred so many good Arcanan soldiers
hadn't gotten a message out before that blunderer Olderhan
managed to kill or capture all of them after all.
He'd never had much use for
those over imaginative sorts who fretted themselves into panics
over events no one could control. Indeed, he'd always prided
himself on his own levelheadedness. Yet he suddenly realized that
he'd been allowing himself to become if not complacent, at
least . . . increasingly optimistic. If
the other side didn't know what had happened, it might be
weeks—even months—before they got around to
coming looking, and he'd been settling more and more into the
belief that that was what was happening.
The appearance of the man on
that golden horse was like taking a bucket of cold water in the
face. Not only had "someone" turned up, but one look at the
someone in question told Thalmayr it wasn't another civilian.
The hundred swept the trees
behind the mounted man through narrow eyes, shading them with
his raised hand and cursing the blinding sunlight. The stranger was
more than a bit difficult to make out, in his dark tunic and
breeches, and Thalmayr was uneasily aware that he couldn't see
very much through the light glare. Still, if there'd been more of
these people around, surely his people would have seen them! The
wood-cutting parties he'd sent out that morning hadn't seen any
sign of them, so they couldn't have been here very
long . . . however many of them there
might be.
In fact, he thought slowly, it was
possible this fellow was all alone. Thalmayr had already decided
Olderhan was right about at least one thing; the people he'd
encountered had been just as surprised as Olderhan had been.
They hadn't expected to run into another trans-universal
civilization, either, so there was no reason for their superiors to
think that was what had happened to them. But they hadn't been far
from their entry portal, either, so even if they hadn't gotten a
message back—and there's no fucking way they could
have, he told himself—it was possible whoever had
sent them out had finally missed them and sent out search
parties. And in a virgin universe, those search parties would have
been thinking in terms of some sort of accident or natural disaster,
not hostile action, so it would have made sense for them to split
up their available manpower to cover as much area as possible.
A corner of Thalmayr's mind
warned him against grasping at straws, but standing here on top of
his parapet dithering wasn't going to accomplish anything, and he
started forward.
Arthag watched the enemy
officer, wondering what was running through the other man's
brain. Whatever else the fellow might be, he didn't seem to be an
extraordinarily quick thinker, the Arpathian decided with biting
amusement.
But then, finally, the other man
started forward, as if he intended to climb down from his
earthwork. Arthag didn't want that. He wanted all of these bastards
right where he could see them until he was confident they hadn't
planned some sort of ambush his own scouts simply hadn't been
able to spot.
"Stop!" he called out in a voice
trained to carry above the din of battle, lifting his hand in a
universal "halt" sign. "Stand right there!"
Thalmayr stopped as the
horseman raised his hand. The other man's voice was
authoritative, the words harsh and alien-sounding, and the hundred
felt his face darken with anger. He didn't much care for the notion
of having a single stranger giving him orders in front of
his men! Besides, who the devil did this godsdamned fellow think
he was, giving orders to an Arcanan officer!
"What do you want?" he barked
back, hands on hips. "This portal is Arcanan territory!"
Arthag watched the enemy
officer stop where he was. Then the other man shouted something
that sounded belligerent. That might simply have been the
difference in languages, he reminded himself conscientiously, but
there was still something about the other man's body language that
rubbed Arthag the wrong way.
"You've attacked my people!"
Arthag shouted back, sweeping one arm around to point toward
the distant battlefield. "And you've taken prisoners." That was still
a shot in the dark, of course, but the other man wouldn't
understand a word he was saying anyway. "I want to see Shaylar!
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr!"
Thalmayr twitched. Most of the
words the horseman had spouted were only so much more
arrogant-sounding gibberish, but not all of them. He shouldn't
really have been surprised—if this was a member of a
search party, presumably he would have known who he was
searching for, after all—but it still took him offguard.
Perhaps the name had taken him by surprise simply because it was
the only part of the other man's unintelligible speech he'd been
able to recognize.
His mind flashed back to the
confrontation with Olderhan, the tiny, beautiful woman with the
brutally bruised face standing behind the other hundred, and
remembered fury whipped through him. It stiffened his shoulders,
and his eyes flashed angrily as his head came up.
Arthag's breath hissed as the
name struck the other man with visible force.
That bastard knows Shaylar's name!
He recognized it!
There was only one possible way
for the enemy officer to have recognized Shaylar's name. She'd
survived. Survived at least long enough to tell her captors who she
was. Whether or not she still lived,
though . . .
Despite the remembered flare of
anger, Thalmayr made himself think. The
woman—Shaylar—had been the only woman
in the other party. No doubt the search parties would be especially
concerned about her, so it made sense for this fellow to mention
her name. But the fact that he was sitting out here talking strongly
suggested he had no notion there'd already been shooting. He
seemed far too calm, too unconcerned over his own safety. So if
he didn't know—or even strongly suspect—that this
Shaylar had been captured, the thing to do was to bluff, play for
time. Besides, Thalmayr couldn't have produced the woman even
if that was what the other man had demanded.
The hundred composed his
expression into one of confusion, then shook his head and raised
his hands, shoulder-high and palms uppermost in a pantomime of
helpless incomprehension.
"I'm afraid I don't understand a
single word you're saying, you stupid bastard!" he called back.
"Wrong answer," Arthag
growled under his breath as the other officer shouted back
something unintelligible. Then he raised his own voice, louder
than before.
"Shaylar! Bring me Shaylar right
now!"
Thalmayr's jaw clenched. He still
couldn't understand what the other man was saying, but the
repeated use of Shaylar's name in what certainly sounded like an
increasingly angry tone, worried him. The mounted man wasn't
asking general questions, wasn't following the sort of "take me to
your leader" approach one might have expected from a first-
contact situation. Whatever he was saying, he was being
specific—very specific. And he kept using the
woman's name.
"I can't understand you!"
Thalmayr shouted back. "I don't have any idea what you're talking
about!"
Arthag listened not to the
words—which wouldn't have meant anything to him,
anyway—but to the tone, and his eyes were narrower than
ever as he studied the other man's body language.
Whatever this bastard's saying, he's lying out his ass, the
Arpathian decided. He was fully aware that he knew nothing at all
about the other's cultural template, the gestures his people
routinely used among themselves. But Arthag's Talent was at
work. Like any Talent, it couldn't penetrate the interface of a
portal, but after so many years, so much experience of
knowing what was behind a gesture, a shift in expression, a
change in tone, he was prepared to back his own ability to read the
hearts of others across any imaginable cultural divide.
"You're lying!" he shouted. "You
know perfectly well who I'm asking for! You bring me
Shaylar—Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr—now! I
want to see her here—right here!" His left hand pointed at
the ground in front of Bright Wind. "Shaylar, now! Or we
come in there, kick your cowardly, murdering ass, and pull her out
ourselves!"
He knows, Hadrign Thalmayr realized abruptly. He knows what happened!
The other man's anger was
painfully obvious, and the jabbing of that accusatory index finger
could not be mistaken. He wasn't asking if they'd seen the
little bitch; he was demanding that they produce her.
The hundred still couldn't
imagine how anyone could have gotten word back, but they
obviously had. Yet whatever they'd gotten back must've been
garbled, or partial, he thought, his mind whizzing along at
dizzying speed.
They know something happened, he told himself,
fighting to stay calm, but if they really knew what,
they'd've come loaded for dragon, and they wouldn't have
started out asking questions. And this bastard's here all by
himself . . . probably.
Thalmayr's brain hurt as all the
possibilities and ramifications spun through it. He didn't know
that this single cavalryman really was here on his own. It
seemed possible, although it was obviously far from certain. But
even if he'd brought friends along, they were all still on the far
side of the portal. Those shoulder weapons of theirs might be able
to punch through the interface, just as arbalest bolts from
Thalmayr's own men could, but artillery would be useless, and not
even artillery could knock down his fortifications. So unless there
were hundreds of the bastards out there in the woods,
Thalmayr's positional advantage was still overwhelming.
I need more information, he told himself. And I need
to keep the other side guessing as long as possible. And
these people's weapons are supposed to be noisy as hell,
whereas our arbalests aren't, and he's well within my people's
range. So if they have split up their search parties to cover
more ground . . .
The decision made itself.
Perhaps, if he hadn't been trying to juggle so many unknowns, so
many imponderables, simultaneously, he would have thought it
through a bit more clearly, realized just how many optimistic
assumptions he was still allowing himself.
But perhaps not, either.
Arthag watched angrily as the
other man shook his head again, forcefully. Then the lying bastard
made a mistake.
He snarled something
low . . . and the sentries both
whipped up their crossbows.
* * *
"All right!" Thalmayr shouted at
the other man. "That's enough of this silly shit! You're my
prisoner, godsdamn it!"
It was his turn to point at the
ground with one hand while the other made a peremptory "get
your ass over here!" gesture.
"Get over here now! Or,
by all the gods, I'll nail you do that fucking saddle!"
"You must be as crazy as you are
stupid," Hulmok Arthag said conversationally, although there was
no way in any of the hells the other man could have heard him.
Then he raised his voice.
"I don't think so!" he shouted
back, his voice firm but calm, and shook his head.
"Fine!" Thalmayr snarled.
The horseman had obviously
understood the surrender demand, but he didn't even seem to care.
He only sat calmly in the saddle, exactly the way he had been,
ignoring the arbalests aimed at him, and Hundred Thalmayr's
simmering anger—and uncertainty—turned into
pure, distilled fury at his failure to impose his will on the
situation. And at that single, arrogant prick sitting out there as if
he didn't have a care in the world. As if Hadrign Thalmayr were a
threat too insignificant for him even to deign to notice.
"Have it your own way!" he
shouted at the other man.
"They've fired on Platoon-
Captain Arthag!" Balkar chan Tesh snapped.
He'd been peering through his
field glasses from his own position on a tree branch fifteen feet
off the ground. Now he raised his head and turned to look at the
wiry noncom sitting on the branch above his and hugging the trunk
for dear life.
"Instruct Platoon-Captain chan
Talmarha and Senior Armsman chan Sairath to open fire!"
"Yes, Sir!" Junior-Armsman
chan Synarch replied, grateful for anything to distract him from his
fear of heights. He closed his eyes for a brief instant, and one of
the small metal dispatch cases he wore at his waist, on what
looked for all the world like an outsized cartridge belt,
disappeared from its loop. An instant later, a second dispatch case
vanished as he Flicked it to Senior Armsman Quelovak chan
Sairath on the far side of the portal.
The dispatch cases reappeared
almost instantly. chan Talmarha and chan Sairath snatched them
up, opened them, and found the written orders chan Tesh had
prepared for this very contingency before ever sending Arthag out.
chan Talmarha glanced at the order, then turned to his gunners.
"Time to open the ball, boys!" he
barked.
Hadrign Thalmayr cursed as the
golden horse twisted on its tail and lunged sideways. He'd
never imagined an unenhanced animal could move that quickly.
Had he been wrong in his original assessment of it?
The question flickered behind his
eyes even as both arbalest bolts hissed past its flashing hind
quarters. They missed by scant inches as the rider dropped like a
stone and vanished behind the horse's side. He simply
vanished . . . but he hadn't hit
the ground. He was hanging off the side of his saddle, completely
hidden by his mount, as the horse took off like a fiend. It whipped
back into the trees, and Thalmayr swore again, viciously, as he saw
the rider twist himself back up into the saddle.
Godsdamn it! That's torn it wide open!
When that son-of-a-bitch gets home he'll—
The hundred looked up suddenly
as he heard a brief, abbreviated fluttering sound.
Balkar chan Tesh had his field
glasses back to his eyes. He'd breathed a huge sigh of relief as
Arthag thundered safely back into cover, but his attention was on
the murderous bastard who'd just tried to have the Arpathian
murdered.
That pretty well answers the question of whether or not the first massacre was an accident, doesn't it? chan Tesh
thought viciously.
The idiot was still standing there,
fully exposed, staring after Arthag, and chan Tesh bared his teeth
in contempt.
You're not up against civilians this time you
miserable bastard!
The fluttering sound ended in an
abrupt, thunderous explosion behind Thalmayr, and the furious
hundred's heart seemed to stop.
He'd never heard an explosion
quite like it. It wasn't the sizzling, hissing crack of an infantry-
dragon's lightning bolt, or even the thunderclap of a fireball. This
explosion was . . . different,
somehow. Deeper-throated, more hollow and yet louder. He heard
screams of pain, shock, and terror as it erupted well behind the
earthworks, and terror smoked through him.
They can shoot through a portal!
Disbelief warred with his terror
as he whipped around, staring at the fountain of fire and dirt and
the sudden crater at its foot. Even that was wrong! It was
as if the explosion had erupted underground, and that was
flatly impossible for any artillery spell!
That was his first thought. But
then he realized something else, something almost as terrifying as
the fact that these people's artillery spell's did
work across a portal interface.
That explosion had been
behind his parapet. Somehow, they'd projected it through
the parapet before it exploded!
"A little long, Sir!" a noncom
reported to Platoon-Captain chan Talmarha as he opened the
dispatch case which had suddenly appeared and pulled out the
hastily scrawled note. "Not much—about thirty yards."
"Down thirty!" chan Talmarha
barked, pointing at his number two mortar crew. An instant later,
the big weapon gave its distinctive throaty cough and the second
ranging shot went whistling off.
Hundred Thalmayr cringed as a
second explosion roared. The first had erupted well behind his
fortifications, among the neatly arrayed lines of tents. The second
exploded right in the heart of his artillery positions, and this time
the shrieks were shrill and sharp with agony. Something whined
past him, and one of the sentries, still standing beside him, as
stunned as he was, went down with a bubbling scream.
Thalmayr turned towards him
and realized yet another horror. The impossible artillery
explosions clearly weren't as powerful as a field-dragon could
have produced, although they were far more powerful than the
ones his infantry-dragons could generate. But unlike any infantry
or field-dragon Thalmayr had ever heard of, this artillery
hurled out some sort of secondary weapon, something that slashed
outward from the heart of the explosion to claw down men as
much as fifteen or twenty yards away!
"That's got it, Sir!" the noncom
reading the incoming dispatches announced jubilantly, and chan
Talmarha showed his gunners his teeth.
"Pour it on, boys!" he shouted.
"Ten rounds rapid, fire for effect!"
"Take that bastard down!"
Platoon-Captain chan Dersal barked as the mortar bombs began to
land. He and his men were within less than two hundred yards of
the portal. Woodland like this gave all the concealment a skirmish
line of Imperial Marines needed, and his people had crept
carefully, patiently, into position, waiting for the order.
Now it came, and two hundred
yards was no challenge at all to men trained by the Imperial
Marines' Pairhys Island firearms instructors.
Something smashed into Hadrign
Thalmayr's hips. It slammed him savagely to the ground, with a
scream of agony, an instant before the remaining sentry went down
without a sound. Even through his anguish, the hundred heard
sharp, vicious whip cracks of sound coming from the woods,
heard the spiteful hiss of something tiny and invisible sizzling
through the air.
He managed to heave himself up
onto his elbows, but his body was totally nonresponsive from the
hips down, and any movement was agony. He started to shout an
order. Even he had no idea what it was going to be, but it didn't
matter. Before he had his mouth fully open, the overture of the
first two explosions were replaced by a horrendous crescendo.
Balkar chan Tesh's lips skinned
back from his teeth as the heavy mortar bombs exploded. There
was nothing to protect the men behind those earthworks from the
full fury of chan Talmarha's fire. No bunkers, no overhead cover,
not even any slit trenches! The splinter-spewing explosions
marched across the enemy position in hobnailed boots of flame
and turned the fortifications which had been supposed to protect
their occupants into an abattoir.
Thalmayr eyes bulged with
horror as he watched the massacre of Charlie Company, Second
Andaran Scouts. The "protected" area behind the parapet had
become a killing ground, and his men couldn't even see
the artillery slaughtering them. It couldn't simply shoot through a
portal, or project its effect through solid objects, it was
invisible, as well!
But, unfortunately for Charlie
Company, its men refused to go down without a fight.
chan Tesh's eyes widened in
astonishment as the enemy's infantry swarmed up and over the
parapet. They'd already taken hideous casualties—he
knew they had—but they came on anyway. Armed only
with crossbows, most of them, they charged straight into the face
of concealed riflemen. Here and there he saw one of them carrying
one of those strange, glittering weapons which spat fireballs, but
his Marines had been briefed on those, and deadly accurate rifle
fire brought them down.
Then the machine-guns opened
up.
The Faraika I was a crank-
operated, twin-barreled weapon, firing the same basic .40-caliber
round as the Model 10 rifle. The barrels were mounted side-by-
side, each with its own breach mechanism. Effectively they were
two complete individual rifles, and rotating the crank chambered
and fired each of them in rapid alternation.
Firing belted ammunition, the
Faraika I had a sustained rate of fire of almost two hundred
rounds per minute. It couldn't keep it up indefinitely, of course,
without overheating, but there were five of them covering each
aspect of the portal.
"No!" Hadrign Thalmayr
screamed as an inconceivable avalanche of fire swept over the
Scouts. Blood flew in grisly sprays, and his charging men went
down as heads and chests exploded under the impossible
sledgehammer blows of the enemy's thunder weapons.
It was too terrible to call a
massacre.
"Cease-fire! Cease fire!"
chan Tesh shouted. "Tairsal, order the mortars to stand
down—now!"
The Flicker sent the order as
quickly as he could, but the big four-and-a-half-inch projectiles
continued to smash down for another several seconds.
The moment they stopped
falling, Hulmok Arthag's cavalry, as previously planned, led chan
Tesh's own company in a thundering charge through the portal to
secure the objective before the enemy could recover.
Hundred Thalmayr watched
sickly as at least a hundred mounted men erupted from the forest.
They rode straight over his own men, but even in his agony and
despair, the hundred realized they were more intent on getting
through the portal and into his camp then they were in massacring
his troopers. They completely ignored his wounded, and they
seemed almost equally willing to ignore the unwounded,
as long as no one offered resistance to their passage.
Here and there, one of the
Andaran Scouts, carried away by battle rage, or hatred—or
duty—did offer resistance. But every one of those
charging cavalrymen had one of their deadly hand thunder
weapons in his fist, and Thalmayr groaned as still more of his men
went down.
The golden stallion which had
first ridden out of the woods led all the rest. Its rider put it across
the parapet in an effortless, soaring leap, and the rest of the
horsemen followed on his heels.
There were still a few dragon
gunners on their feet, standing amid the mangled bodies of their
fellows. Thalmayr saw one of them swinging his weapon around,
saw him actually get a shot off. The fireball enveloped three of the
charging cavalry troopers, and he heard someone screaming. But
then a crackle of hand-weapon thunder cut down the gunner and
his assistant, alike.
Half the cavalry spread out,
sweeping along the parapet's inner face. The rest thundered
straight ahead, heading for the tents.
Many of the riders flung
themselves off their horses, storming into the tents, hand weapons
ready, and Thalmayr felt horror grip him by the throat. He still had
wounded men in those tents, less-critically injured and yet to be
evacuated to the coast. Men unable to defend themselves. What
if—?
Then a fresh blur of motion
caught his eye. Magister Halathyn crashed backwards through the
opening of his tent. He staggered, clutching at one visibly
wounded arm, then went heavily to his knees on the muddy
ground. An enemy trooper exploded out of the tent on his heels,
shouting at him, holding one of those ghastly hand weapons and
pointing it directly at the aged magister.
Magister Halathyn was gasping
out something, pointing frantically towards the east, then jabbing
the same hand at the tents full of wounded. The dismounted
cavalryman glared at him for an endless instant, still pointing his
weapon at the magister's head. Then he lowered it, holding it by
his side, and reached out his free hand to help the wounded
Halathyn to his feet.
Thalmayr gasped in
relief—only to scream in useless denial a heartbeat later as
a lightning bolt lashed out from his own parapet. It caught two
more of the enemy horsemen . . . and
slammed through them to catch Magister Halathyn and the man
helping him to his feet, as well.
They went down, writhing in the
actinic glare. Lightning lifted and twisted their bodies, then
slammed them down into the mud. They lay hideously still.
"Magister Halathyn! Oh,
gods . . . "
It took Hadrign Thalmayr a
moment to realize the voice was his own. And then, finally, the
merciful darkness pulled him under.
Chapter Twenty
Jasak Olderhan was torn between
impatience to get underway, frustration, fury, and fear.
Otwal Threbuch was overdue. A
soldier of his ability and experience should've made the hike to the
class seven portal and back to the base camp by now. But his
walking wounded had reported back two days ago, according to
Hundred Thalmayr's hummer report to Five Hundred Klian, and
still there was no sign of Threbuch or Emiyet Borkaz.
That was worrisome. Had
Threbuch run into more of Shaylar's people? Even if he had, that
didn't necessarily mean anything dire had happened. For one thing,
it simply took longer to move without being seen or heard by an
enemy than it did to hike through unoccupied territory. And, Jasak
reminded himself, he really had no idea how big the portal he'd
sent the chief sword to recon might be. If Gadrial and Magister
Halathyn were right about it, its sheer size might well have
delayed Threbuch—especially given the chief sword's idea
of what constituted an adequate reconnaissance. For that matter,
Gadrial herself had said her new portal-sniffer was experimental.
It could have given a false reading on the portal's size, or on the
distance to it.
In short, there were any number
of non-disastrous reasons the chief sword might have been
delayed. Unfortunately, given what had already happened, Jasak
found it difficult to feel optimistic.
The fact that Therman Ulthar and
his Third Platoon had been ferried forward by dragon to support
Thalmayr's asinine forward defense of Arcana's "sacred soil" only
added to Jasak's worry . . . and anger.
The more Jasak considered Thalmayr's stance, the less sense it
made even from a tactical perspective. He suspected he wasn't
completely alone on that opinion, either. Five Hundred Klian
might have decided to support Thalmayr's decision, but unless
Jasak was badly mistaken, the five hundred nursed more
reservations about it than he was prepared to admit.
At least Klian had sent a request
back to Fort Wyvern for reconnaissance gryphons. In a more
perfect world, they would already have been moved forward to
Fort Rycharn, given the fact that Rycharn was the staging point for
the exploration of this universe's only known portal. But, like
everything else this far out along the frontier, recon gryphons were
in short supply, and Commander of Five Hundred Waysal Grantyl,
Fort Wyvern's CO, had only four of them. He'd decided—
for reasons best known to himself—that it was more
important to retain them under his own direct control, and he was
senior to Klian. It was true enough that the heavy forest on the far
side of the swamp portal was exactly the worst sort of terrain for
gryphon reconnaissance, which undoubtedly figured in Grantyl's
decision, but Jasak prayed nightly that he would relent in the face
of Klian's request. Suitable terrain or not, Jasak had men in harm's
way.
Of course, he reminded himself
bitterly, even if Grantyl did to change his mind, it would take over
a week for Klian's request to reach Fort Wyvern and the gryphons
to reach Fort Rycharn. And, he reminded himself even more
bitterly, they weren't "his" men anymore. Not officially, anyway.
That pompous, stiffnecked idiot Thalmayr had made that clear
enough. But that didn't mean it was true; it simply meant there was
no longer anything Jasak could do to protect them.
He'd had a brief conversation
with Fifty Ulthar before the transport dragons moved Third
Platoon back to the swamp portal. Military protocol had made it
impossible for Jasak to discuss his reservations about Ulthar's
new company commander frankly, but he and the fifty had known
one another a long time. He was confident Ulthar had read
between the lines of what propriety did allow him to say, and the
fifty was the late, unlimited Shevan Garlath's antithesis. Jasak was
confident Ulthar would do the best anyone in his position could.
The problem, of course, was that there wasn't really all that much
a platoon commander could do when his company
commander had decided to insert his head into his anal orifice.
Jasak stood glowering eastward
out the window of his assigned quarters across the beautiful
tropical sea as the sun slid toward the western horizon. It should
have been a soothing panorama, but at the moment, the softening
shadows and the water's turquoise serenity only irritated him
further. He hauled out his PC and checked the time, then snorted
in mingled amusement and frustration. It would be dinnertime in
another half-hour, which would kill at least another hour and a
half or so. After which he could probably put his head back into
Fort Rycharn's communications center, before he turned in, to see
whether or not there'd been any word from Threbuch without
seeming too anxiety ridden.
Not that he was fooling anyone,
he knew.
He turned from the window, left
his quarters, and headed across to the ones which had been
assigned to Gadrial and their prisoners. The shortcut he followed
took him past a rear corner of the armory, and his brisk stride
paused suddenly—in surprise, more than anything
else—as he heard a low, harsh voice hissing something
vicious in Mythalan.
As the Duke of Garth Showma's
son and heir, Jasak had been tutored in at least the basics of every
major Arcanan language . . .
including Mythalan. He'd made considerably less use of Mythalan
than most of the others, over the years, but he'd enjoyed the
opportunity to practice his language skills with Magister Halathyn.
The magister had been gently amused at Jasak's atrocious accent,
but at least their conversations had scoured much of the rust of
disuse from Jasak's comprehension of Mythalan.
Now the hundred's eyes
narrowed and his face darkened at what he was hearing.
"—fucking garthan! Are you really stupid enough to think that just because
you've escaped your proper station in Mythal, you can put on
grand airs out here and act like my equal?"
It took Jasak a second or two to
recognize the voice. Then he placed it. It belonged to Lance Bok
vos Hoven, a Gifted combat engineer who'd transferred into First
Platoon along with Shevan Garlath when Garlath had arrived as
Fifty Thaylar's temporary replacement. vos Hoven's job had been
to recharge the storage units for the platoon's infantry-dragons,
and Jasak had been a bit surprised to see his obviously Mythalan
name on First Platoon's roster. Shakira were rare—
very rare—among the Arcanan army's noncommissioned
ranks, aside from a relatively small number who were also
multhari, and who were then properly known as "vos and
mul," not simply "vos." The fact that vos Hoven wasn't
multhari had piqued Jasak's curiosity mildly, but the man had
kept largely to himself, and Garlath, his platoon commander, had
seemed satisfied with him. Indeed, Garlath had specifically
requested vos Hoven's transfer from his original platoon when he
himself was assigned to take over First Platoon.
Which, Jasak thought grimly now, should have been
warning enough, right there!
vos Hoven had been wounded in
the fighting, despite his position at the rear (which he'd shown
absolutely no inclination to leave). He'd been hit through one
shoulder by an obviously wild shot from one of those horrendous
thunder weapons, which had done massive damage to his shoulder
joint and explained his emergency evacuation. But from the
strength of his voice, it was obvious the fort's medical staff had
healed him quite nicely.
Unfortunately.
"Please, vos Hoven," another
voice said, and Jasak's already simmering rage boiled up
volcanically as he recognized Jugthar Sendahli's terrified, pleading
tone. Sendahli had also been badly wounded—in his case,
after crawling forward into the teeth of the enemy's fire to man
one of the infantry-dragon's whose original crew had lain in
slaughtered heaps about him while he fired. "I meant no
disrespect, Mighty Lord! I just—"
"You just what?" vos
Hoven snarled. "You just thought you'd keep the money for
yourself, did you?"
"It's my pay, Mighty Lord!" the
garthan trooper who'd distinguished himself so thoroughly
cried in a low, anguished voice. "It's all my wife and son have to
live on, and—"
Sendahli's voice broke off in the
sound of a fist striking flesh, and Sir Jasak Olderhan erupted
around the armory corner like a charging rhino.
"What the hells d'you
think you're doing, vos Hoven?"
The shakira whirled with
a guilty start, eyes wide, right fist still cocked for another blow.
Then he jumped back, releasing his left-handed grip on the front of
Sendahli's uniform. The garthan staggered, and Jasak's
fury redoubled as he saw the blood flowing from Sendahli's nose
and mouth, the bruises, and the split eyebrow. The blow Jasak had
heard land obviously hadn't been the first one, and fear flickered
across vos Hoven's face as he saw Jasak's expression. But then
something else flashed through his eyes, and a sneer replaced the
instant of fear.
"Administering discipline to the
troops, Sir," he said.
The combination of his sneer and
the scathing emphasis on the "Sir" told Jasak exactly what was
going through vos Hoven's arrogant Mythalan mind. He obviously
expected Jasak to be cashiered, and in the society from which vos
Hoven sprang, that sort of disgrace would automatically discredit
any accusations Jasak might make—especially against
someone legally entitled to put that accursed "vos" into his name.
But they weren't in Mythal. The shakira might well be
right about Jasak's career prospects, but until and unless he
was cashiered, Jasak was an officer of the Union of Arcana.
And whatever might happen to his career, he was also the son of
Thankhar and Sathmin Olderhan.
"Bullshit!" he snapped. "You
just landed your lying ass in the brig, soldier! Report
yourself under arrest to the fort master-at-arms right damned
now!"
"What?" vos Hoven's
jaw dropped. Then rage exploded behind his eyes. "How dare
you? Do you have any idea who my family is?"
"What makes you think I give a
flying fuck who your godsdamned family is?!" Jasak didn't
think he'd ever been so furious in his entire life—not even
with Shevan Garlath, and that took some doing. "You just go right
on running your mouth, soldier! There's plenty of room on the
charge sheet!"
"What charge sheet?"
vos Hoven barked a contemptuous laugh. "Are you actually stupid
enough to think my family would—"
Jasak took one long, furious
stride that brought him chest-to-chest with the shorter, more
slightly built shakira. vos Hoven's eyes widened. He
stepped hastily back for several feet, until the armory wall stopped
him, and a flare of fear stabbed abruptly through the contempt and
fury of his expression.
"I don't care who your
family is, you arrogant Mythalan prick," Jasak told him in a voice
which had gone quiet, almost calm, as his white-lipped fury
moved from the realm of fire into one of ice. "Not even a caste
lord can protect you from the Articles of War."
"Articles of War?" vos Hoven
repeated, as if they were words from a language he'd never heard.
Then he shook himself. "On what charges?" he demanded.
"We'll start with physical assault
of a fellow soldier," Jasak said coldly. "Then we'll add extortion
and coercion for financial gain, and conduct prejudicial to good
discipline. And we'll finish up—unless you want to go right
on running your mouth and dig it still deeper—with
insubordination and the defiance of an order from a commissioned
officer. And under the circumstances, the court will probably tack
'in time of war' onto the list."
vos Hoven inhaled hard.
Potentially, that last charge could put him in the dragon's
mouth—that ancient euphemism for the execution of a
soldier. At the very least, conviction would result in stockade
time, dishonorable discharge . . . and
the sort of disgrace no shakira caste lord would tolerate in
a member of his clan. He stared at Jasak for a heartbeat or two,
then straightened and shook himself.
"Sir, you misunderstand the
situation completely," he said in a suddenly reasonable voice, all
trace of defiance vanishing from his expression. "I realize how this
situation could be misinterpreted, but with all due respect, I must
protest the severity of your accusations. This trooper began by
assaulting me. I may have overreacted in defending myself,
but I never attempted to extort money from him!"
Jasak's lip curled with contempt,
and he wondered if vos Hoven actually believed he could deceive
the lie-detection spells which were part of any court-martial
proceeding. The shakira looked at him for a moment, then
shrugged and stepped away from the armory wall, moving to his
left.
"I apologize for my initial tone,"
he continued, "but once I've explained, I'm sure—"
The combat knife seemed to
materialize in his right hand even as he lunged forward.
Jasak's eyes snapped wide in
disbelief, but his left arm swept out, striking the inside of vos
Hoven's forearm to sweep the blade to one side. He twisted his
torso simultaneously out of the original line of the thrust, and his
right hand reached for the shakira. But vos Hoven fell
away from him, evading his grip and circled quickly to his own
right. Jasak's hand swept down to his own right hip, but it found
nothing. He'd left his short sword in his quarters, since he was
only headed for the dining hall, and he swore with silent, bitter
venom at the memory. The shakira recognized his
expression, and his lips drew back in a snarl, baring his teeth as he
balanced himself for a second attack. He started forward again, but
before he could move, the garthan he'd beaten lashed out.
It was the last thing vos Hoven
had expected. His attention was totally focused on Jasak when
Sendahli's right hand closed on his knife hand's wrist. The
garthan stepped into him, his hand rising and circling to the
left, pulling the shakira's wrist up and around the fulcrum
of his own forearm. vos Hoven cried out in pain as the knife was
forced up so sharply it almost punctured his own cheek, and then
his fingers opened, and he dropped the weapon with another,
harsher cry of pain, as Sendahli twisted harder, driving him to his
knees. He crouched there, leaning to the left, left hand flat on the
ground, as he tried desperately to relieve the white-hot pain in his
right arm and shoulder.
Jasak straightened, glaring down
at the immobilized shakira.
"I said there was still room on
the charge sheet," he said flatly, "so we'll just add attempted
murder of a superior officer."
The sound vos Hoven made was
trapped between a snarl of fury and a whimper of anguish, and
Jasak turned his attention to the garthan with the bleeding,
bruised face.
"Thanks, Sendahli."
The trooper nodded silently, and
his battered face was tight. Tight with fear, Jasak realized, and a
fresh spasm of fury shot through him as he took in the other man's
bruises, the eye that was already swelling shut. What he'd just
done to vos Hoven was graphic proof that he'd allowed
himself to be beaten.
"Stand him up," Jasak said, and
reached into one of his cargo pockets as Sendahli hauled vos
Hoven back to his feet. Jasak pulled out a small spell
accumulator, then stepped close behind the shakira and
yanked both the other man's hands behind him. He pressed vos
Hoven's wrists together, then put the small block of sarkolis
against them and pressed one of the several color-coded buttons
on it.
vos Hoven grunted, shoulders
twitching in fresh discomfort, which didn't bother Jasak a bit. The
spells stored in the standard army-issue utility crystal were
designed to cover a broad spectrum of possible needs, from fire-
starting to signaling a reconnaissance flight as it passed overhead.
The spell he'd selected to secure vos Hoven was intended as a
general binding spell for things like bundles of gear or firewood,
without any particular concern for how tightly it might bite. It
wouldn't do vos Hoven any permanent damage—not for the
brief time it would be needed—but it probably hurt like
hell, Jasak reflected with grim satisfaction.
He spun vos Hoven back around
to face him, then shoved the shakira's back against the
armory wall once more.
"You just stand there," he said in
a voice of ice. "You so much as move before I tell you to,
and I'll see you buried under this fort."
vos Hoven stared back at him,
mouth working, expression stunned. Jasak glared at him for a
moment, then turned his attention back to Sendahli. The
garthan winced as Jasak tilted his head gently back with a
finger under his chin to examine his injuries, and the hundred
shook his own head.
"I'm going to need your
testimony in a minute, Sendahli," he said quietly. "The moment
you've given it, though, I want you to report back to the infirmary.
And before the healers fix you up again, tell them I want record-
crystal images and a detailed written—and
witnessed—report on the damages."
"Yes, Sir." Sendahli's reply came
out in a near-whisper, and Jasak's mouth tightened as he tasted the
garthan's shame. He knew, Jasak realized. Knew his
company commander knew he'd let vos Hoven beat him.
"Jugthar." Jasak let the hand
under Sendahli's chin move to grip the trooper's shoulder. "After
we've taken your deposition and you've seen the healer, Five
Hundred Klian will be presenting you with a commendation."
"Sir?" the Scout's dark eyes were
confused and a little dazed.
"It's for bravery under fire,"
Jasak said. "What? You thought I hadn't noticed how you handled
yourself out there? I'd already recommended you for promotion
before we stumbled into combat. The way you performed after it
all hit the fan only confirms my judgment, so you keep your head
up, soldier. Despite what assholes like this may
think—" he jerked his head sideways at vos Hoven
"—you have nothing to be ashamed of, and a lot to
be proud of. Do you hear me?"
The trooper who had escaped
literal bondage in Mythal, blinked rapidly and swallowed hard.
Then he nodded and met Jasak's eyes levelly.
"Yes, Sir," he said. "Thank you,
Sir." Then he inhaled deeply. "It's been an honor serving under
you, Sir. I'll never forget it."
Jasak squeezed his shoulder
again, touched by the garthan's sincerity, then turned his
icy stare back to vos Hoven.
"And now, Lance vos Hoven,
let's go to discuss your conduct with Five Hundred Klian."
Murder flared in the shakira's
eyes, but he turned and marched towards the commandant's
office without offering further resistance. Jasak retrieved his knife
from the dirt and followed him in icy silence, with Sendahli a pace
behind him.
Jasak was bitterly certain that
this, too, was his own fault. He'd known Garlath had brought vos
Hoven with him. That should have been enough to make him look
very carefully at the shakira—closely enough, at
any rate, to recognize what the man was doing to Sendahli. On the
other hand, he thought after a moment, it was entirely possible,
even probable, that vos Hoven had waited to put the garthan "back in his place" until Jasak's departure on the furlough which
had been cut short by Magister Halathyn's detection of the class
seven portal.
Mythalans! Jasak snarled silently, his eyes hot on vos
Hoven's back. The shakira caste was enough to give all
the rest of Arcana's Gifted a bad name, but this one, at least,
would never terrorize another garthan. No wonder
Halathyn vos Dulainah had left Mythal in disgust!
Jasak had often wondered how
Magister Halathyn had escaped the shakira's ingrained and
cherished belief in their own superiority. He doubted anyone
would ever know, and it didn't really matter, in the long run.
However it had happened, the rest of Arcana had benefitted hugely
from it, he reflected as he shoved vos Hoven through the office
block' door. And, he admitted more grudgingly, as his mother had
insisted for years, it served as graphic proof that not everyone
born into the shakira caste deserved his contempt.
Not that the Duchess of Garth Showma's own contempt for the
shakira as a whole was one whit less blistering than her son's.
Five Hundred Klian's clerk's
eyes widened when he saw the bound shakira and battered
garthan . . . and the combat
knife in Jasak's hand. The astonishment in his expression blanked
abruptly at Jasak's terse explanation and request to see the
commandant.
"Of course, Hundred," he said.
"Just a moment, please."
He rose, knocked on the five
hundred's office door, and disappeared through it for a few
moments. Then he reemerged, holding the door open.
"The Five Hundred will see you
right now, Sir," he said.
Jasak thanked him, then marched
his prisoner into Klian's office.
"What's this all about, Hundred
Olderhan?" the five hundred asked in a cold a voice. Then he
glanced at the battered trooper whose commendation he'd just
signed, and his eyes went bleak.
"I'm sorry to disturb you, Sir,"
Jasak said as he laid vos Hoven's ten-inch combat knife on the
commandant's desk, "but I believe we have a small problem here."
"What sort of problem?" Klian
asked, and Jasak explained precisely what the nephew of a caste
lord—one of the hundred or so most powerful men in
Mythal—had just attempted to do with that knife. And what
he'd been doing when Jasak interrupted him.
Five Hundred Klian's expression
went from bleak to thunderous as the story came out. When Jasak
reached the end of his own account, Klian directed half a dozen
questions to Sendahli. The garthan's responses were
subdued, obviously more than a little frightened, but clear, and by
rights Klian's glare should have incinerated vos Hoven where he
stood by the time Sendahli finished.
"I see," he said coldly, and
looked back at Jasak. "I presume you wish to formally charge your
prisoner, Hundred Olderhan?"
"I do, Sir." Jasak repeated the
charges he'd already listed for vos Hoven.
"I'll certainly endorse them,"
Klian said grimly, and Jasak watched from the corner of one eye as
the shakira finally began to wilt. It was incredible, he
thought. vos Hoven had obviously thought, right up to the last
moment, that Klian would quash the charges against him simply
because of who he was.
"Since attempted murder is a
capital charge, however," the five hundred continued coldly, "it
must be heard before a formal court. I have neither the authority to
convene such a court, nor sufficient qualified officers to form
one. What I can—and will—do is endorse your
charges, have this man brigged here at Fort Rycharn, and see to it
that he is returned with you, under confinement, to Arcana to
stand trial there."
Jasak was a bit surprised by
Klian's last statement, and the commandant smiled bleakly.
"Nothing would give me greater
pleasure than to hang him right here and now, Hundred," he said
coldly. "And given what you and Trooper Sendahli have just told
me, I have no doubt the charges against him will ultimately be
sustained. However, the situation is complicated by what
happened to First Platoon while this man was attached to it.
Intelligence is going to want to talk to all of the survivors, I'm
afraid."
A slight flicker of warning
touched his icy eyes as they met Jasak's, and Jasak abruptly
understood. vos Hoven had been present at the botched contact
and massacre. Jasak was confident that Klian believed his own
account of what had happened, but both he and the five hundred
knew there was going to be a court of inquiry. There had to be
one. And if it looked as if Jasak had used a court-martial to silence
a potentially damaging witness . . .
Jasak's jaw clenched. That
thought had never occurred to him, and it ought to have. He'd
realized all along that vos Hoven would never recognize that he
merited punishment. Nor would the shakira's powerful
family—their minds simply didn't work that way. He didn't
doubt for a moment that they would use every bit of influence
they possessed, every trick, every distortion, that occurred to them
to avert the disgrace vos Hoven's conviction would spill across
them. And Sir Jasak Olderhan, as the agent of vos Hoven's
destruction, would find himself with implacably bitter—
and extraordinarily powerful—enemies. Exactly the sort of
enemies an officer already facing a court of inquiry didn't need.
"I understand, Sir," he replied
steadily, and Klian nodded with a tight, approving smile.
"Yes, I believe you do,
Hundred," he said. Then he looked past Jasak to his clerk.
"Summon the Master-at-Arms, Verayk," he said.
"Yes, Sir." The clerk
disappeared, and Jasak glanced at Jugthar Sendahli. The
garthan's eyes told him that Sendahli, too, knew what sort of
enemies this affair was going to make Jasak, and that he was
desperately sorry for adding to Jasak's troubles.
Can't be helped, Jasak thought, as philosophically as he
could. It went with the territory, if a man was going to be worthy
of the uniform he wore. Besides, Jasak's own connections were
nothing to sneeze at. He'd deal with shakira caste lords
when the time came; at the moment, he had another job to do.
He watched with grim
satisfaction as Bok vos Hoven was marched out of Klian's office
to the brig, and then personally escorted Sendahli to the infirmary.
By the time they got there, the garthan trooper's shoulders
had straightened and he was once again carrying himself like what
he was, not what vos Hoven had tried to make him.
Jasak handed him over to the
healers with a profound sense of satisfaction. If he'd accomplished
nothing else in uniform, at least he'd salvaged the career of one
damned fine soldier. Perhaps it wouldn't be the most noted epitaph
a career could have, but given the circumstances, he was afraid
they were going to need good soldiers badly.
He watched the healer examining
Sendahli for a moment, then turned away, praying he was wrong as
he headed back toward Gadrial's quarters to escort her to dinner,
wondering—again—why Otwal Threbuch was late.
Chapter Twenty-One
Anticipation crackled through
the Board room as Orem Limana, First Director of Sharona's
Portal Authority, let his gaze run across the assembled directors.
They obviously knew Something Was up, and well they should.
Whispers and speculation had been flying for weeks as coded
Voice messages came flowing in to the Authority
communications center from the frontier. Messages in code
generally meant one thing: a new portal.
Each exploration company used
its own internal, private codes, known only to its Voices and the
Authority, to register its claim to any new portal. The Authority
kept copies of each company's master codes, and any Authority
code-clerk who broke the rigid rules governing access to them
found himself—or herself—in jail faster than
thought could fly. The Portal Authority was serious about
protecting the rights of the companies and people who invested
money, sweat, and blood in the hazardous work of exploration.
Limana had spent twenty years in
the Portal Authority Director's chair, making sure everyone lived
by those rules, because he believed in them. He was both respected
and feared, and because he believed in the rules, he kept track of
which players were dirty, and which played fair. Which ones took
care of their people, and which ones found ways to cheat, denying
benefits or manufacturing excuses to fire an employee unlucky
enough to be disabled on company time. Orem Limana had shut
down two exploration companies during his tenure—shut
them down lock, stock, and barrel—for shady dealings and
egregious violations of employee protection compacts filed with
the Authority.
Knowing what he did about each
and every company in the business, Orem was utterly delighted by
the incredible good fortune which had come to the Chalgyn
Consortium over these last few months. Everyone in the Authority
knew, of course, that portal discoveries must be on the rise in the
Hayth Sector. The amounts of coded traffic coming in from the
Voices along the Hayth Chain made that painfully obvious, as did
the redeployment of the PAAF to send additional troops down the
chain. But very few people had an accurate grasp of the situation,
and Orem could hardly wait to tell them.
He caught the eye of Halidar
Kinshe, one of the few people on Sharona who already knew,
since quite a few of those coded messages had been directed to his
personal attention. The twinkle in Kinshe's eyes told Limana his
longtime friend and frequent co-conspirator was enjoying the
moment as much as he was, and the First Director conscientiously
suppressed his own smile as he picked up his mallet of office. He
tapped the silver bell beside his chair, sending a ripple of notes
shimmering across the room, and the buzz of conversation died
instantly as thirty heads swiveled toward him.
"Ladies and gentlemen, it was
good of you to come on such short notice. I know several of you
have been traveling close to three weeks by steamship and rail."
He nodded a welcome in particular to Lady Jagtha of New Farnal's
Kingdom of Limathia, since she'd made the longest journey of any
of the board members. "I asked you to come specifically to discuss
the situation that's been developing in the Hayth Transit Chain."
He'd had their attention before.
The mention of Hayth had turned it into rapt attention, and
he smiled as he pulled down a rollup map at the front of the room,
showing the beads-on-strings tracery of the forty-odd universes
Sharona had explored. Most of those beads were threaded onto
only a single string, indicating only a single entry and exit portal.
Others, like Hayth, had three portals, although only one—
Reyshar—had four. Wherever a triplet occurred, it gave its
name to the new transit chain splitting off from its second exit
portal, and Hayth—four portals, and almost fifteen
thousand miles, from Sharona—was shown as the head of
an eight-universe chain. The Hayth Chain split again at Traisum,
with the primary chain continuing through Kelsayr and Lashai
while a new secondary chain split off to Karys.
"As I'm sure you're all aware,
with the exception of the Sharona Chain itself, this is the longest
single transit chain we've explored so far. What none of you are
aware of, since the newest developments have occurred since our
last Board meeting, is just how much longer it's about to
become."
He turned from the map to watch
their faces.
"Over the past several months,
survey teams fielded by the Chalgyn Consortium have discovered
and claimed five new portals at the end of what we are now
designating the Karys Chain."
Mouths dropped open, and Irthan
Palben knocked over a water glass. He swore in sudden dismay as
it soaked his notes and suit, and Orem grinned.
"Chathee, could you find a towel
to mop up that spill?"
Chathee Haimas, his perpetually
efficient assistant, was already halfway across the room, having
apparently conjured a towel out of thin air. Sympathetic chuckles
broke the silence as she handed it solemnly to Palben.
"That's a suit you owe me,
Orem," Director Palben muttered, smiling despite the irritation in
his voice. The massive blond Farnalian ordered his suits custom-
dyed as well as custom-tailored, and silk wasn't known as a
forgiving fabric when doused with water.
"Put it on your expense account,
Irthan. I'm sure we can persuade someone to glance the other way
just this once, since I did drop that on you with a certain, ah,
relish, shall we say?"
That produced more laughter,
and Limana allowed himself a smile of his own. But he wasn't
quite done, and the laughter gradually ebbed as the men and
women assembled in that Board room realized he wasn't.
"I probably will put it on my
account," Palben said. "But before I do, suppose you drop the
other half of your little bombshell, whatever it is. Just in case the
damage gets worse."
"I doubt it could get much
worse," Limana replied, examining his colleague's sodden
state. "However, you're right. There is one other small
discovery involved."
Every eye was fixed upon him,
and the temporary relaxation of their laughter was a thing of the
past.
"In addition to the five portals
Chalgyn has fully explored, proven, and claimed," he said quietly,
"their crews have also discovered what appears to be the first true
cluster in the history of our exploration efforts. At present, it
would appear that the cluster in question consists of a minimum
of seven portals, including their entry portal, all within a
very, very short distance of one another."
Stunned silence greeted the
announcement, and Orem Limana hid a huge mental smile behind
his own solemn expression. Chalgyn Consortium was going to
make perfectly obscene amounts of money in the very near
future, and that delighted him more than he could say.
It was his job to see that
everyone had a fair and equal right to use the portals which had
already been discovered, but it was also his job to protect the
financial interests of any group which discovered a new
portal. That was true for every exploration company, but it gave
him considerably more pleasure and personal satisfaction in some
cases than in others, and this was definitely one of the former.
Chalgyn worked hard, on a shoestring budget, and it said
something important that the best and brightest field crews had
been flocking to Chalgyn's banner over the past several years
anyway.
Including, he thought smugly,
the brightest rising stars of all: Jathmar Nargra and his lovely wife.
Limana had had his doubts, at first, but Halidar Kinshe's belief in
Shaylar had been more than justified, and the risk of putting her
into the field had paid off. Not only were she and her husband
performing top-notch work, but she'd become a multiverse-wide
celebrity. And it didn't hurt a thing that she was one of the
loveliest young women he'd ever met, the First Director thought
even more smugly.
No institution as powerful as the
Portal Authority could be uniformly beloved, however rigidly
honest and scrupulously fair its management might be. And while
the Authority was supposedly above politics, no one with the
intelligence of a rock believed that. Given the realities of human
ambition, greed, and the hunger for power, it had no choice but to
pick its course through waters frequently troubled by political
tempests, and that required a constant—if subtle—
battle for public opinion and support. Its First Director had to
have the honesty of a saint, the fortitude of an Arpathian warrior-
priest, the showmanship of a patent-medicine salesman, and the
political instincts of a rattlesnake. Orem Limana had all four of
those, and he and his public relations people had jumped on the
chance Shaylar offered with both feet.
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had
become, in many ways, the human face of the Authority, and not
just for the Kingdom of Shurkhal, either. Hers was one of the
half-dozen or so most widely recognized faces in the entire
multiverse (thanks in no small part to the efforts of one Orem
Limana's PR flacks), and even Sharona's colony worlds adored
her. Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr was the best thing which had
happened to the Portal Authority since the very first portal had
popped into existence eighty years ago. She was shaking things up,
in exactly the way they needed to be shaken, and he was delighted
with her.
Then Director Ordras Breasal
surged to his feet. Breasal was a thin, hatchet-faced man,
habitually found near the back of any room in which he sat. His
chin was shaped like the sharpened point of a bearded ax and
jutted outwards, perpetually daring the world to break its fist
against that thick, pointed bone. Now he thrust that chin right at
Limana and pitched his voice in a tone designed to etch steel.
"First Director! I demand an
explanation!"
"Breasal's arse would demand an
explanation for having to let out the contents of his bowels,"
someone muttered behind Limana.
Orem Limana's cold stare had
been known to make even Arpathian septmen break into a cold
sweat. Now he turned it on the whisperer, Djoser Anzeti,
who—as it happened—was an Arpathian
septman. Anzeti didn't break into a sweat, but he did have the
grace to flush red, although it was a pity to censure him, since
Limana was in complete agreement with his sentiment. Director
Breasal was the largest pain in Orem Limana's professional
life . . . and that took some doing.
He gazed at Anzeti for a
heartbeat or two, then turned his attention back to Breasal, who
represented Isseth, one of the independent kingdoms sandwiched
between the jagged mountains northwest of Harkala and south of
Arpathia's wide and arid western plains.
"What, precisely, did you wish
explained, Director Breasal?" he asked through teeth which were
carefully not clenched, and Breasal drew himself up, basking in
the attention he so seldom received—and even less
frequently deserved—from his fellow board members.
"How is it that this Portal
Authority has spent eighty years exploring new universes, finding
new ones at the steady rate of one every two years or so, yet this
upstart, brash little fly-by-night Chalgyn Consortium is about to
lay claim to twelve—twelve, curse them!—
in less than six months? Chalgyn's gotten away with its dirty work
long enough, slipping teams into universes claimed by other
companies and cheating honest organizations, like Isseth-Liada,
out of their hard-earned profits! I demand an explanation! I
demand an audit of their corporate records! I demand an
investigation for collusion and conspiracy and fraud, and—
"
Director Anzeti slammed to his
feet and brought both hands down so hard the heavy conference
table jumped.
"How dare you? If
anyone deserves to be audited for collusion, conspiracy, and
fraud, it's Isseth-Liada! The Septentrion's exploration
teams have filed complaint after complaint about terror tactics,
intimidation, wrecked equipment, threats—"
"Enough!" Limana roared.
Silence fell like broken shards of
ice against a stone flagging. Breasal curled his lip, his eyes cold
and contemptuous, while Anzeti glared murderously.
"Director Breasal," Limana bit
out, "if you wish to make formal charges, you're free to do so. But
I will not tolerate vindictive slander from any director on the
Portal Authority's governing board. Lay your proof on the table,
Director, if you intend to make charges that serious. Prove it, or I
swear by all the gods of heaven and hell, you will never
serve as a director of this Portal Authority again. Do I make
myself clear?"
Breasal's expression changed
abruptly, and his eyes flared wide in shock. He opened his mouth,
but nothing came out—not even a squeak—and
Limana leaned forward, his own hands braced on the table.
"Do I make myself clear
, sir?"
Breasal nodded, suddenly pale.
"Good. I expect a memo on my
desk, before the close of business today, Breasal, either laying out
enough proof to warrant an investigation, or formally apologizing
to this Board and to the Chalgyn Consortium for slander. The
choice of which memo you write is entirely up to you, but you will write it. And you will also sign it, before
witnesses, and it will remain on permanent file in my office as a
legally binding document. Is that clear, as well?"
Breasal managed another jerky
nod, and Limana switched his attention back to Anzeti.
"I expect to see a written
summary of all complaints from the Septentrion's field crews on
my desk no later than eight o'clock tomorrow morning. Or an
apology to this Board and Isseth-Liada Corporation, whichever
you prefer. Is that understood?"
"Oh, yes. Thoroughly
understood, sir."
Anzeti's eyes blazed, and Limana
had little doubt that the Arpathian's memo would be extremely
enlightening. He'd heard enough grapevine rumbles to have him
itching to open a formal investigation of Isseth-Liada's practices,
but no one to date had found the courage to make a formal
complaint. He also knew why the Septentrion had remained silent.
Of all Sharona's cultures, the Septs were—by
choice—the least technologically sophisticated, which
made them the brunt of unpleasant jokes, on one hand, and victims
of outright prejudice, on the other.
Unfortunately, all too many
septmen had learned that justice sometimes went to the party with
the most money and political clout. Limana found that situation
intolerable, which was why he'd
insisted—forcefully—that a new directorship be
established to represent the Septentrion. He wished a bit bitterly
that Anzeti had trusted him enough to come forward before this,
but at least the man had spoken up at last, which meant Limana
could finally act.
Isseth-Liada's corporate officials
weren't going to thank Breasal for the outburst of spleen which
had provoked Anzeti, and that was another source of considerable
pleasure for Orem Limana. Of course, he knew very well that
those same corporate officials did nothing without the express
permission of Isseth's rulers. That made the whole ball of nails political, as well, and he expected the looming conflict to be
a nasty one. But he had, by all the gods, had enough. He was more
than ready to tackle Isseth-Liada and its political masters.
"Very well," he said in a more
normal tone. "If we're quite finished with that subject, I'll be happy
to explain precisely how the Chalgyn Consortium has located so
many portals in such a short span of time."
Across the room, Halidar Kinshe
sat back with a smile. He, too, had been itching to take Breasal
down a peg, if not three or four, and now he watched with great
satisfaction as Limana produced charts and maps showing transit
routes to the portals Chalgyn had stumbled across. The First
Director also produced projected schedules to move the enormous
amounts of materials and manpower necessary to build portal
forts to properly cover that many portals. Fortunately, the Trans-
Temporal Express's rail lines and shipping lanes had already been
fully established as far as Salym. In fact, the railhead was most of
the way to Fort Salby, in Traisum, by now. That was going to be a
huge help with the logistics, but the sheer scale of the project was
still daunting. It was going to be the biggest single surge of
expansion in the Authority's entire history, and the scramble to pay
for it was going to be . . .
challenging.
Chalgyn's stockholders didn't
know it yet, he thought cheerfully, but they were poised to become
fabulously wealthy over the next few years from portal transit fees
alone. Everybody was going to want a piece of that
cluster. After so many years of picking up other teams' scattered
crumbs, Chalgyn had hit the most spectacular paydirt anyone had
struck since the very first portal.
Kinshe wasn't financially
involved in the consortium, but Chalgyn was a Shurkhali
company, which left a warm glow in his heart as he contemplated
its achievements. It was like watching the child of his heart and
spirit finally prove his worth. Chalgyn had just shot to the very
pinnacle of a business dominated by Ternathians and Uromathians
from the outset, and the consortium had outmaneuvered
companies with far more capital and experience to do it. After
centuries in Ternathia's shadow, Shurkhal was finally shining in
her own light again, and it was a glorious feeling.
Limana was just getting to the
estimated support costs to finance this unexpected surge in
construction and staffing needs—expenses that would be
repaid through portal use fees until the loans were retired in
full—when the boardroom's door opened and Limana's
junior assistant beckoned urgently to Chathee Haimas. The junior
assistant's face was ashen as she whispered a message, and Haimas
turned white. She asked a single question, and the younger woman
shook her head, clearly hanging on the ragged edge of bursting
into tears.
Haimas closed her eyes for just
an instant. Then she turned and crossed directly to Orem Limana.
"First Director, I beg your
pardon," she said calmly. "There's an urgent message for you. It's
come in from the Voice network." She glanced directly at Kinshe
and added, "I believe Director Kinshe should be present when you
take the message, sir."
Kinshe's worry turned to ice;
Limana merely nodded.
"I'll ask the Board to be patient
for a few minutes," he said smoothly. "Perhaps the directors could
begin drawing up preliminary plans to meet our projected staffing
needs for the new forts. Director Kinshe, if you'll join me in my
office?"
"Certainly."
They had no sooner reached the
corridor and seen the boardroom door closed behind them than
Limana's junior assistant did burst into tears.
"I'm sorry, sir," she choked out.
"I wouldn't let the Head Voice interrupt the Board meeting until
he told me why, and it's—it's just dreadful. Hurry, please.
He's waiting."
Limana's office wasn't very far
from the boardroom, so Kinshe didn't have to worry in ignorance
for long. The Head Voice was waiting for them, and Kinshe went
cold to the bone after one glance at Yaf Umani's face. Umani had
been the Portal Authority's senior Voice for just short of forty
years, and he was a tough, no-nonsense executive, with one of the
strongest telepathic Talents on Sharona. His range had been
phenomenal when he was still in the field, and his personnel
decisions were legendary, displaying a second Talent, for he
invariably chose exactly the right person to fill each job, from the
Portal Authority public relations office to field Voices. He
tolerated no excuses, he backed down from no one, and he'd been
known to terrify sovereign heads of state whose opinions differed
from his regarding the proper operation of the inter-universal
Voice network.
Which made the fact that Yaf
Umani was trembling one of the most frightening things Halidar
Kinshe had ever seen.
"What in Kefkin's unholy name
has happened?" Limana asked, dashing a liberal amount of
whiskey into a tumbler and thrusting it into Umani's unsteady
hands.
The Head Voice gulped the
liquor in two swallows. His eyes were shocked, haunted by
something so dreadful Kinshe knew he didn't want to hear
it.
"I'm sorry, sir," Umani said in a
voice that was thready and hoarse. "It's—oh,
gods . . ." Tears hovered just behind his eyes,
and his lips quivered. "I can't—I don't even know how
to—"
He stopped, closed his eyes, took
several deep breaths. Then he met Limana's gaze almost steadily.
"First Director, I beg leave to
report that we're at war, sir."
For just an instant, the office
was totally silent. Then—
"What?" Limana actually
seized Umani by the shoulders, while Kinshe sucked down a
hissing breath. The First Director stared at the Head Voice, shock
warring with disbelief, until he abruptly realized he was gripping
the older man tightly enough to bruise. He closed his own eyes for
a moment, then let go, stepped back, and drew a deep breath as he
visibly struggled for control.
"One of our survey crews has
been attacked." Umani's words wavered about the edges. "By
foreigners. People, I mean, but not like us. Soldiers. Not
Sharonian. What they did to our crew—"
His voice choked off, and
Kinshe, focused on that last incomplete phrase, found himself
speaking through clenched teeth.
"Which crew?"
The Head Voice flinched, and it
was Kinshe's turn to seize his shoulder.
"Which crew?"
"Hers." The one-word answer
was a whisper.
"How—" Kinshe's voice
stumbled on the word, full of rust. Then he forced out the rest of
the question. "How badly were they hit? Is Shaylar still alive?"
Umani, already ashen, went so
deathly grey that Limana steered him hastily into the nearest chair.
When the Head Voice could speak again, he did so flat-voiced,
with his eyes closed, as though trying to shut out something too
terrible to look at again even as he relayed what he had Seen
through Shaylar's eyes.
"They ran for the portal. They
didn't make it—not even close. The soldiers—" He
stumbled over the word, drew a ragged breath. "The attackers were
back in the trees. Hard to see. Our people took shelter. Ghartoun
chan Hagrahyl tried . . ." Umani swallowed.
"He tried to talk to them. Stood up without a weapon in his
hands—and they shot him. Murdered him in cold
blood."
Umani's flattened voice was
brittle as glass.
"Our team shot back in self-
defense, and they—" He shuddered. "They opened fire with
artillery, or something like it. Flame throwers. Huge balls of
flame, three or four yards wide and hotter than any Arpathian hell.
Crisped—incinerated—everything they touched.
Mother Marthea, everything. And something else—
something that hurled lightning. Jathmar Nargra—"
Umani's voice broke again. "He was burned, horribly burned, right
in front of her eyes. He can't have survived. Then something hit Shaylar. I don't know what. I don't know if it just knocked
her unconscious, or if it killed her, but we can't get through. We
can't. Darcel's tried and
tried. . . . "
Tears trickled unheeded down
gullies in the man's cheeks which hadn't been there when Kinshe
had seen him in the corridor this morning, less than half an hour
ago. Kinshe had never seen any Voice so shaken, not even in the
midst of the most violent natural disasters.
"She stayed linked," Umani was
whispering. "Right to the end. I can't even imagine how
she did it. How she stayed linked with Darcel Kinlafia when her
entire crew—her own husband—was being
blown apart, burned alive, around her. She even burned all her
maps, the portal charts leading back to Sharona. That poor, brave
child, determined to get the warning out, to protect us at
all costs . . .
"I'll have to tell her parents."
Kinshe heard his own voice, distantly shocked that it seemed to be
speaking without his conscious control, and Limana and Umani
turned to stare at him.
"Don't you understand?" he
groaned. "We can't let a total stranger tell them. It's my fault she
was out there. I'm the one who pushed for it, and—"
"I approved it, Hal," Limana
said, cutting him off brusquely. "Don't take the blame for this on
yourself. I'm the one who had the final say-so, and it's on my head,
if it's on anyone's."
The First Director shook his
head, then inhaled sharply.
"We'll come back to Shaylar's
parents in a moment, Hal—I promise," he said. "But painful
as it is to set that aside, there's far more urgent business in front of
us."
Kinshe looked up into Limana's
worried gaze, feeling dazed and shaken, and the First Director
gripped his shoulder.
"I don't know how bad this is
going to turn out to be, Hal. First reports are always the most
terrifying ones, but this—" Limana shook his head. "I don't
see how this one is going to get any better, especially if—
forgive me—especially if it turns out Shaylar is
dead."
Kinshe jerked as if he'd been
struck, but Limana continued unflinchingly.
"We have to hope it was all
some hideous mistake. Gods know there've been enough
catastrophic border incidents no one wanted in Sharona's
history! If this was a mistake, then maybe—just
maybe—we can keep it from spinning completely out of
control. But it's happening almost a full week's Voice
range from here. We don't have any idea what's happened in the
meantime, what local military commanders—on both
sides—may have done by now. For all we know, it's
already spun out of control, and that means we have to take a
worst-case approach."
He held Kinshe's shoulder a
moment longer, gazing into his old friend's eyes until the
Shurkhali director nodded. Then Limana gave one last, gentle
squeeze, folded his hands behind him, and began to pace.
"If Yaf is right—if we
are at war—it's a job the Authority isn't designed to
handle. We've got portal forts out there, thank all the gods, but
they're designed for peacekeeping, not to resist attackers with
heavy weapons. Not even attackers with Sharonian heavy
weapons, much less whatever these people may have! And
the only thing we know about the other side right this minute is
that they apparently showed no mercy to our survey crew. Our
civilian survey crew."
He looked up from his pacing
long enough to see Kinshe nod again, then turned back to the Head
Voice.
"I assume the Voices in the
transmission chain have put a security lock on this, Yaf?" Umani
nodded in confirmation, and Limana grunted. "Good! We can't
afford to go public with it, not yet. Not until the families have
been told, at least. We . . . might have
to make a general announcement, because something this big will
get leaked if we don't act fast. We could do the 'Names will be
withheld until next of kin have been notified,' standard disaster
spiel, but we can't do even that until we've notified the
heads of state."
He stopped pacing to lean on his
desk, hands splayed flat, spine rigid. Then he nodded in sharp, crisp
decision.
"We have to call a Conclave.
Now. This afternoon."
"Conclave?" Kinshe's head spun.
"The Conclave? No one's called for a Conclave since the
Authority was formed!"
"Do you have a better idea?"
Limana demanded, raking a hand through his hair, and Kinshe
thought about it. He thought hard, then swore under his breath.
"Now that you mention it, no."
"I thought you wouldn't."
Limana actually managed a taut parody of a smile. Then his
nostrils flared. "We won't have time to assemble the heads of state
from every sovereign nation for a face-to-face meeting. It'll have
to be over the Emergency Voice Network."
"That's going to leak, First
Director," Haimas warned him. "You can't activate the EVN
without popping warning flags all over the news media."
"Can't be helped," Limana said,
and turned his attention back to Umani. "Head Voice, I'm formally
invoking a Conclave. Please activate the EVN to inform all heads
of state. Use government-bonded Voices only. First meeting to
take place via the Voicenet in—"
He thought rapidly, making
mental calculations about time zones, reactions to the message,
and the slow grinding of bureaucratic wheels. Then he gave a
mental shrug.
"The First meeting will take
place in four hours," he said crisply. The other people in the office
looked at him, and he snorted. "Yes, I said four hours—
three-thirty, our time. Let 'em piss and scream all they want; it'll
get their attention, and that's what I want. Their full, undivided
attention."
Yaf Umani drew a deep breath.
"Very well. I'll see to it
immediately, sir."
Limana watched him go, then
looked up and met Kinshe's gaze.
"That's begun, at least," he said
softly. "In the meantime, we need to take some immediate steps of
our own. We'll have to put all our portal forts on maximum alert
and move PAAF troops toward the contact zone, and we have to
get it done as quickly as possible. I can order all of that on my
authority as First Director, then let the Conclave worry about
what to do next."
Kinshe nodded, and Limana
inhaled deeply.
"We won't be able to sit on this
for long, Halidar. It's going to go public—quickly. But you
can reach Shaylar's family by nightfall if you use the ETS. I'll
authorize the transfer."
"Yes." Kinshe nodded, still
fighting the feeling of stunned disbelief, compounded now by the
shock of being given access to the ETS. "Yes, of course that's the
fastest solution. I should have thought of it." He managed a wan
smile. "It never even occurred to me. Probably because I've never
been high enough on anyone's priority list to get clearance to use
it."
The Emergency Transportation
System was normally reserved for the use of heads of state and
diplomats on time-critical missions. The ETS consisted of an
interlocked matrix of teleportation platforms, located in the
capitals of most of Sharona's nation states. The platforms
themselves were restricted to a size of not more than eight square
feet, and a maximum load no more than six or seven hundred
pounds, and the telekinetic Talent required to power the system
was rare. It could also lead to potentially fatal health
consequences for those who possessed it, if it was overstrained, so
the system was used only very sparingly.
And I was never important enough to use
it . . . until now, Kinshe
thought grimly, wishing with all his heart that the opportunity to
experience it had never come his way. He dragged both hands
through his hair, just trying to face it. Mother Marthea, how did a
man tell loving parents something like this about their
child?
"I'll red-flag your priority,"
Limana continued, and glanced at Haimas. "Chathee, I need you to
take charge of this. As soon as Yaf's alerted the EVN, have him
contact King Fyysel's personal Voice directly. Tell him Halidar's
going to need a special locomotive and car. And tell him
why—Fyysel may want to send someone with him."
Knowing his king, Kinshe could
guarantee that there would be someone accompanying him.
Several someones. King Fyysel was given to flamboyance, even
when the occasion was trivial, which this one certainly wasn't. At
least the railway lines ran all the way from the capital to the
Cetacean Institute. They wouldn't have to drive overland by
carriage—or worse, by dune-treader.
"Also tell King Fyysel's voice I
strongly recommend that he order the lines cleared the whole
damned way from the capital to the Institute," Limana continued
to his assistant. "I can keep a lid on this only so long, and the
clock's already ticking. And ask Yaf to choose a senior Voice to
go with Halidar, so he can join the Conclave en route."
"Yes, sir." Haimas stepped out
of the private office and began giving crisp, clear instructions to
Limana's staff. While she did that, the First Director turned back
to Kinshe.
"However this plays out, I'm
counting on your support. Yours is very nearly the only moderate
voice Fyysel will listen to, my friend. Given Shaylar's nationality,
Shurkhal's going to be overrun with reporters asking questions
about Shurkhali honor and blood vendetta. The last thing we can
afford is to have the King of Shurkhal throw that burning black oil
of yours on the kind of fire this will ignite."
Kinshe grimaced, able to picture
his monarch doing that only too clearly.
"I'll do my best, Orem, within the
confines of my own honor. But it may not be enough. It's worse
than just our normal sense of honor, you realize? The Shurkhali
people, from King Fyysel down to the lowest stable boy, have
invested tremendous national pride in Shaylar. Even those who
don't approve of her doing a man's job have taken pride in the fact
that a Shurkhali woman was first. The King isn't the only
Shurkhali male we'll have swearing vendetta. Trust me on that."
"You give me such cause for
hope," Orem muttered.
"It won't be pretty." Kinshe' eyes
narrowed as another thought occurred to him. "Not anywhere.
You realize Uromath will cause trouble? And what happens when
the Arpathian Septenates get word—" He shook his head.
"It'll take some fast talking to keep them from sending
every warrior above the age of fourteen through the portals for the
chance to ride in the battle against the godsless heathen."
"You think I don't know that?"
Limana growled. "Gods and demons, this is going to be an unholy
mess!" He blew out a deep breath and added, "From where I'm
standing, Ternathia looks to be our best bet. And you know how
that will play in certain quarters."
"Only too well," Kinshe said
with a wince. "I'm not even sure you'll be able to convince
Ternathia," he added, but Limana snorted harshly.
"Zindel chan Calirath's no fool,"
he said grimly. "He won't want it, but he's Ternathian. That'll tell,
if nothing else will, and I think he's smart enough to know what
our other options will be."
"You've got our whole future
mapped out," Kinshe observed with a tight smile, "and the
Conclave hasn't even been called yet."
"Care to place a friendly wager
on the ultimate outcome?" Limana responded.
"Not on your life. You're too
seldom wrong to throw my money away," Kinshe growled, and the
corner of Limana's lips twitched.
"Hah! At last you admit it!" The
flash of humor faded quickly, though. "We'll just have to do the
best we can. If you think up any bright ideas on how to contain the
rage—or at least channel it into something that won't
worsen the situation—I'm all ears."
"If I do, you'll be the first to
know."
"Good." Limana drew a deep
breath. "Don't bother going back to the Board meeting. Go home
and pack. I'll send a carriage to pick you up an hour from now,
drive you to the ETS station. A senior Voice will meet you there.
If that train isn't ready by the time you hit Sethdona, I'll have some
railway official's guts for zither strings."
"I have every confidence,"
Kinshe said, his voice as dry as the sands of his homeland. "I'll
take my leave, then." He gripped Limana's hand. "Don't let them
do anything stupid while I'm gone."
"If it looks bad, I'll have my
Voice flash yours to take your proxy vote. May the gods speed
your journey, my friend."
Kinshe strode through the Portal
Authority' imposing stone headquarters, his heels clicking against
the marble, his attention tightly focused on what would have to be
done to meet the crisis each step of the way between here and a
distant Shurkhal. One thing he already knew, though, without any
doubt whatever. It would take an act of the gods themselves to
persuade King Fyysel not to send several thousand riflemen and an
artillery division out to commit blood-vengeance genocide.
Chapter Twenty-Two
"Dear, you've hardly touched
your breakfast."
Andrin Calirath looked up at the
sound of her mother's gentle voice. Empress Varena wasn't the
sort of parent who nagged, and she wasn't nagging now, really.
That didn't keep Andrin from feeling as if she were, but the look in
her mother's eyes stopped any protest well short of her vocal
cords.
"I'm sorry, Mother," she said
instead, and managed a wan smile. "I'm afraid I'm just not very
hungry."
The Empress started to say
something else, then stopped, pressed her lips together, and gave
her head a tiny shake. Her brain had already told her there was no
point trying to get Andrin to eat. That the attempt would only
make things worse, by pointing out that she'd noticed something
her daughter was desperately trying to pretend wasn't happening.
But what her mind recognized and her heart could accept were
two different things.
She looked at her husband,
sitting at the head of the table, and he looked back with a sad smile
and eyes full of the same shadows which haunted Andrin. The
smile belonged to her husband, her daughter's father; the shadows
belonged to the Emperor of Ternathia, and not for the first time in
her life, Varena Calirath cursed the crushing load the Calirath
Dynasty had borne for so many weary centuries.
Andrin peeked up through her
eyelashes, acutely aware of her parents' exchanged looks. She
wished desperately that she could comfort her mother, but how
could she, when she couldn't even explain her terrifying Glimpses
to herself? Her father would have understood, but she
didn't need to explain to him. It was painfully evident that he was
experiencing the same Glimpses, and she refused to lay the
additional weight of her own fears, the terror curdling her bone
marrow, on top of the other weights he must already bear.
Unlike her, he had to deal with
all the crushing day-to-day burden of governing Sharona's largest,
oldest, wealthiest, and most prestigious empire despite his own
Glimpses. He didn't need a whining daughter on top of that!
She used her fork to push food
around on her plate, trying to convince herself to try at least one
more bite. There was nothing wrong with the food itself.
Breakfast had been as delicious as it always was; it was simply
that a stomach clenched into a permanent knot of tension couldn't
appreciate it.
Almost a week, she thought. A
week with the bumblebees crawling through her bones, the
nightmares which woke her and skipped away into the shadows
before she could quite grasp them. A week with visions of chaos
and destruction, the outriders of heartrending grief to come, of
loss and anguish. No wonder she couldn't eat! She knew she was
losing weight, and she'd seen the shadows under her eyes in her
morning mirror, and that didn't surprise her one bit, either.
She'd had other Glimpses in her
life, some of them terrible beyond belief. The Talent of the
Caliraths was . . . different. Unique.
Precognition wasn't actually that uncommon. It wasn't one of the
more common Talents, but it wasn't as rare as, say, the full
telempathic Healing Talent.
But precognition was limited
primarily to physical events and processes. A weather Precog
could predict sunshine and rain for a given locale with virtually
one hundred percent accuracy for a period of perhaps two weeks.
Longer-range forecasts of up to two months could also be
extremely accurate, although reliability tended to begin falling off
after the first month or so, and the level of accuracy degraded
rapidly thereafter. Other Precogs worked for forestry services,
predicting fires. And along the so-called "crown of fire" around
the Great Western Ocean, they watched for volcanic eruptions and
tsunamis. They'd saved countless lives over the centuries with
their warnings, like the one they'd issued before the island of
Juhali in the Hinorean Empire—and its analog in every
explored universe, for that matter—had blown up so
devastatingly thirty-seven years ago.
Yet those events were all the
results of physical processes. Of the movement of
unthinking masses of air and water, the random strike of lightning
bolts, the seething movement of magma and the bones of the earth.
The Glimpses of the House of Calirath dealt with people.
Quite often, they also dealt with
natural disaster, because people were trapped in them. But those
disasters would have happened whether there'd been anyone there
to witness them, or not. What Andrin and her father and their
endless ancestors before them had seen in those cases was the
human cost of the disaster. The impact on the lives of those
trapped in its path.
There had been times when a
Calirath Glimpse had been enough to divert or at least ameliorate
the consequences of cataclysm. Andrin was grateful for that. She
herself had saved possibly thousands of lives with her Glimpse of
the Kilrayen National Forest fire in Reyshar before high winds had
sent it sweeping over the town of Halthoma like a tidal bore of
flame. She'd Seen the flames leaping the firebreaks,
cutting the roads, consuming the town, burning women and
children to death. It had been that human element—the
terror and pain and despair of the people
involved—which had generated her
Glimpse . . . and her father's frantic
EVN message had warned the Reyshar government in time to
evacuate and thwart that very Glimpse. She treasured that memory,
despite the nightmares of the disaster only she had Seen, which
still came back to her some nights. And she was only too well
aware from her history lessons of how often in Ternathia's past it
had been a Glimpse, the Talent of the imperial house, which had
plucked victory from defeat, or turned mere survival into triumph.
But there were times—
like today—when all those accomplishments seemed less
than a pittance against the cost of her Talent.
If only she could make it come
clear! If only she could take it by the throat, choke it into
submission. But it didn't work that way. Glimpses could be of
events from next week, or next month, or next year. Some had
actually been of events which had not occurred until the person
who had Glimpsed them was long dead. Sometimes, they never
came to pass at all, but usually they turned out to have been
terrifyingly accurate . . . once they
were actually upon you. And one thing the Caliraths had learned
over the millennia was that the closer the event came, the stronger
the Glimpse grew.
Which was the reason her
stomach was a clenched fist and there were shadows under her
eyes. This was already the strongest Glimpse she had ever endured,
far stronger than the Halthoma Glimpse, and it was still
growing stronger. The images themselves were growing sharper,
even though she still lacked the context to place them, and she felt
as if she were a violin string, tuned far too tightly and ready to
snap.
"Andrin," her father said calmly,
"I've been thinking that this afternoon, perhaps you and I might
drop by the stables, and—"
He stopped speaking abruptly,
and his and Andrin's heads turned as one, their eyes snapping to the
breakfast parlor's door an instant before the latch turned. Andrin
felt herself go white to her lips, and her father's hand tightened
into a fist around his napkin, as the door opened and Shamir Taje
stepped through it.
"Your Imperial Majesties," the
First Councilor of the Ternathian Empire said, bowing first to
Zindel and then to Varena and the rest of the imperial family, "I
apologize for intruding on you."
Varena Calirath held her breath
as she saw Zindel's face. His entire body had gone deathly still, and
she bit her lip as she realized that whatever he—and
Andrin—had awaited appeared to be upon them.
"I'm sure you had an excellent
reason, Shamir." Her father's voice was amazingly calm, Andrin
thought, when he had to feel the same jagged lightning bolts
dancing along his nerves.
"It's an urgent message, Your
Majesty," Taje said formally, and Zindel nodded.
"Very well." He glanced down
into Varena's eyes. "I beg your pardon, my dear. Children," he
added with an apologetic smile, then glanced at Taje again. "Will I
be back shortly, Shamir?"
"I . . .
doubt it, Your Majesty."
"I see." Zindel kissed each of his
daughters in turn, beginning with little Anbessa and leaving
Andrin until last. He gripped her hands for a moment, meeting the
worry in her eyes with a steady gaze as she stood to kiss him back,
and she actually managed to summon a smile for him.
"I'll let you know what I can," he
said quietly, and she nodded.
"If you can't, I'll understand."
"Yes." He brushed a lock of hair
from his tall, straight daughter's brow. "I know."
He gave her another smile, then
turned briskly and stepped back through the door with Shamir
Taje, and she discovered her knees were trembling. She all but fell
back into her chair, not even bothering with proper deportment,
but her mother didn't scold. She just bit her lip and tried to smile
in a brave effort that didn't fool Andrin.
A moment later, the door opened
again, and Andrin's head whipped back around. Her father stood
there, pale as death, staring straight at her.
"Zindel?" the Empress' voice
sounded breathless, frightened.
"I'm sorry, dear. I didn't mean to
alarm you." His eyes met hers, held for an instant, then moved
back to his eldest daughter. "Andrin, I'm afraid you have to come
with me. It's essential that you join the Privy Council's
deliberations.
Andrin heard someone gasp and
wasn't sure if the sound had come from her mother, or from her.
She tried to rise, then paused to take a deeper breath, and made it
to her feet on the second attempt.
"What is it, Father? What's
happened?"
"It's just a precaution, Andrin,
but it's necessary. I'll brief you with the rest of the Council."
Andrin saw the flicker in his
eyes, the tiniest of speaking glances at her baby sisters, and
swallowed down a throat gone dry.
"Of course, Father." She bent to
press a kiss on her mother's suddenly cold cheek. "I'm sorry,
Mama. Will you convey my apologies to Aunt Reza for missing
my lesson this morning?"
"Of course, dearest."
Andrin followed her father into
the passage, suddenly wishing her fears could remain nameless,
vague, however terrifying. This morning, all she'd wanted was
their resolution; now she harbored a terrible suspicion that the
truth would be far worse than anything she'd yet imagined.
The walk to the Council
Chamber seemed endless, yet it was also far too short, and Andrin
drew a deep breath and straightened her spine as the doors finally
opened before them. She'd never actually been inside the Privy
Council Chamber, which wasn't as surprising as someone else
might have thought, since Hawkwing Palace, the imperial
Ternathian residence in Estafel, was the largest structure on the
entire island of Ternath. The ancient palace in Tajvana had been
substantially larger, and more opulent, just as the ancient empire
had been larger and, for its day, even richer. But Andrin had
difficulty imagining a building more immense than her birthplace,
since the palace was a small city in its own right.
Nearly five thousand people
lived and worked in Hawkwing Palace, which ambled across
twenty acres of land, including the stables, kennels, and formal
gardens. If one added the vegetable gardens and greenhouses, the
palace and its grounds ate up nearly thirty acres in the heart of
Ternathia's capital city, which boasted the most expensive real
estate on the island. Or, for that matter, in the entire sprawling
Empire as a whole. She'd never seen all of it, and probably never
would. Those who governed—or were related to those who
did—had no need to visit the vast kitchens, or the
hothouses where vegetables were grown in winter and fruit trees
were coaxed to produce fruit year round.
She'd been to the Throne Room,
of course, but the chambers where her father consulted, planned,
worried, and governed were alien territory, and she discovered that
the Privy Council Chamber made a distinct contrast to the vast and
ornate Throne Room. The Throne Room's function was to remind
visitors of the power, magnificence, and ancient lineage of the
Empire; this chamber, by comparison, was an almost cozy room,
more than large enough to hold the entire Privy Council, yet small
enough to feel almost intimate. Walls of the same grey stone used
to build the entire palace had been left bare, rather than faced with
marble, but ancient, beautifully polished woodwork lent the stone
a softening accent, and colorful banners decorated two walls,
representing the various nations and peoples who comprised the
Empire.
A third wall was devoted almost
entirely to a hearth, where a cheerful coal fire drove away the
autumn chill when she stood close to. The mantle was simple,
compared with other fireplaces in the palace, and served mostly as
a place to put clocks. At first, she thought it was an echo of her
mother's love for bric-a-brac. But then she tipped her head to
examine them more closely, and discovered one clock for each of
the time zones within the Empire.
Andrin forgot the tension of the
moment as she stared in delight at the simple but effective way to
determine at a glance what time it was in any given city of the
Empire. Each clock was labeled with the names of the major cities
within its zone, and she even found clocks at the far end of the
mantle that showed time zones in the rest of Sharona.
That discovery led her eyes to the
map hanging across the far end of the room, where she could trace
the familiar coastlines and pair them up with the mantle clocks.
The island of Ternath, itself,
shown by the mapmakers as a vibrant green jewel, was the
westernmost land bordering the rolling expanse of the North
Vandor Ocean. Just to the east of Ternath lay Bernith Island,
which stretched farther north and south than Ternath and was
wider, as well. Beyond Bernith, with its landmark white-chalk
cliffs, past the chilly waters of the Bernith Channel, lay the great
continent of Chairifon, where most of Ternathia's empire sprawled
across Sharona's northern hemisphere, two thousand and more
miles from east to west, and fifteen hundred from north to south.
Her gaze traveled from the
Bernith Channel south, to the Narhathan Penninsula, the
enormous fist of land that bordered the Strait of Bolakin from the
north. The strait itself was dominated by the Fist of Bolakin,
jutting down from Narhath, and the Hook of Ricathia, reaching up
from the south. The Fist took its name from the huge, steep-sided
rock which was its most prominent feature, and from the
Ricathian city-state of Bolakin, which had controlled the
strait—and the Fist—for centuries. Ternathia had
struck a deal with the Bolakini for possession of the Fist in a
lucrative treaty, sealed with intermarriages and trade agreements,
which included levies on all non-Ternathian shipping that pased
the Fist.
From Bolakin, she traced the
coastline that skirted the tideless Mbisi Sea, known to traders as
the Sea of Commerce or Sea of Money, depending on how one
translated the original Bolakini. Either translation was apt,
considering the money made from the commerce crossing the
Mbisi on any given day, especially since the emergence of the
Larakesh Gate and the completion of the Grand Ternathian Canal.
The long, fairly straight southern shore of the Mbisi was
controlled by various wealthy Ricathian city-states, while the
Ternathian coastline sprawled along the Mbisi's far longer and
more winding northern shore.
The only land north of the Mbisi
Sea that Ternathia didn't govern was the far northern strip
that bordered the icy Polar Ocean, surrounding the north pole. The
fjord-riddled coastline of the huge, vaguely spoon-shaped
promontory of Farnalia formed the western boundary of the
Farnalian Empire. That empire stretched from the North Vandor
Ocean, lapping and slapping its way into those deep fjords, right
across the top of the vast Chairifonian supra-continent that
stretched clear to the Scurlis Sea, five thousand miles to the east.
The Farnalian Empire was very narrow, viewed north to south, but
so long it wrapped a quarter of the way around the world. And
though it was sparsely inhabited, thanks for the most part to its
climate, the people who lived there were as impressive as their
land.
Farnalians were even taller than
Ternathians, tending towards big, robust men with blond and red
hair, and statuesque women who were as comfortable in the
saddle or behind the plow as their menfolk—and just as
capable of wielding a sword (or, these days, a rifle) in defense of
their own homes. Once upon a time, the sea rovers of Farnalia had
been noted for their fondness for axes, other people's possessions,
and their own boisterous, brawling independence. That, Andrin
supposed, might have been one reason her ancestors had
established treaties with Farnalia, rather than attempting a
more . . . energetic approach.
At one time, Ternathia had
controlled almost all of Chairifon south of Farnalia and west of
Uromath, but that had been long ago. Sometimes the sheer depth
of history behind something as simple as that map took Andrin's
breath away. It was difficult to comprehend the vast gulf of time
which had passed since Ternathia had signed its first treaties of
alliance with Farnalia, more than four thousand years previously.
Trade between the two empires had been brisk and lucrative
throughout that immense stretch of time, and the Farnalians
themselves joked about how Ternathian influence had finally
civilized their ancestors. Of course, that was partly because so
many of those ancestors had been Ternathians themselves. Along
the borders of the western half of Farnalia, intermarriage with
Ternathians was so common that it had long ago become
impossible to distinguish a person's nationality on the basis of
physical appearance.
There were those—
particularly in Uromathia—who muttered occasionally
about "mongrels," but absorption had been the true key to
Ternathia's successful expansion of its borders. Those borders had
been extended primarily because of the Empire's need to protect
its trade routes from the brigandage and unrest which always
seemed to be simmering away just on the other side. Yet as each
troubled region was acquired and pacified, the traders—and
their rulers—found themselves facing yet another new area
of unrest, where ship-based pirates and land-based brigands
harassed Ternathian merchants from the other side of the new
border. Which, inevitably, provided fresh impetus to expand
still further.
And so, the Empire had grown
ever larger. There had never really been a conscious plan to forge
an empire in the first place. At every stage, it had been primarily a
pragmatic matter of seeking border security, not fresh lands to
rule, yet the result had been the same. Ternathia had become a
spreading, irresistable tide, bringing Ternathian arts and
technology to the cultures it had engulfed, learning from those
cultures, in turn, and—always—intermarrying with
them. The Calirath Dynasty had been wise enough to bind its
subject peoples to it by making them full members in the Empire
which had overrun them, and marriage had been one of the
promises and guarantors of that equality. So had respect for local
religions. The process of absorption had worked both ways,
gradually and almost always successfully, over centuries, and one
reason it had was the fact that the Ternathian traders had brought
with them something far more valuable than gold or spices or
precious stones.
Ternathians had been the first to
harness the Talents of the mind. Legend had it that Erthain the
Great, the semi-mythical founder of the House of Calirath, had
been the very first Talent. Andrin took that with a hefty lump of
skeptical salt, but there was no question that Ternath was, indeed,
the birthplace of the Talents. The telepathy of the Voices,
Precognition, Mapping, the prescient Glimpses which were the
heritage and curse of Ternathian royalty, Telekinesis, Distance
Viewing—all of them had been developed and nurtured in
Ternath, and then bequeathed to the children of Ternathia.
Intermarriage had carried those
Talents throughout the sprawling Empire. Eventually, they had
spread far beyond Ternathia's borders, through other
intermarriages, and today their possession wove throughout all
Sharona, like a gleaming net of precious gold.
Yet the world had turned and
changed, until, eventually, the vast territory under direct
Ternathian rule could no longer be administered at an affordable
cost. Ultimately, a Ternathian emperor had made the decision to
set free those provinces the Empire could no longer afford to
govern. Andrin had always been glad Ternathia's borders had
shrunk not from the fire of rebellion, or the crumbling of internal
decay, but because her ancestors had been wise enough to return
control of its far-flung provinces to the people who lived there.
That was the reason the wealthy
Kingdom of Shurkhal and the many smaller kingdoms which
shared its cultural heritage were once again Shurkhal and her sister
states, just as the Harkalian states were once again sovereign, with
legal bonds to no one but themselves. It was better that way.
Andrin knew that. Not only because her tutors—including
her father and mother—had taught her so, but because she
could see it for herself.
It was worse than folly to grip
something one could no longer afford to keep, simply for the
perverse joy of possession. It was cruel to do so, and cruel to hold
people in bondage. Had they wanted to remain Ternathian, she
thought, they would doubtless have found a way to make it
profitable for Ternathia to keep them. But only a few kingdoms or
republics or principalities had refused their freedom when it was
offered.
Ternathia's empire had shrunk
steadily, and for the most part gracefully, and those who ruled the
Ternathian Empire had retained their humanity in the process.
Andrin Calirath was proud to be part of that lineage, proud to be
the daughter of Ternathia's current Emperor, who still ruled five
hundred and seventeen million souls, give or take a few hundred
thousand. And she was proud that even as they had taken back
their freedom, Ternathia's one-time provinces had retained much
of what Ternath had brought them. Proud of their independence
and individuality, yes, but also mindful of thousands of years of
shared history and the common heritage which continued to bind
them together, as well.
After Ternathia and Farnalia, the
next largest "empires," if the term could be used, were the
Arpathians of the Septentrion, famous for furs, amber, vast herds
of horses, and nomadic warriors, and Uromathia.
In reality, there was no such
thing as an "Arpathian Empire"—the Septs were far too
fiercely independent for anything that centralized—but the
Septentrion formed a recognizable union of cultures, religion, and
political interests. It gave all the Septs representation, enforced the
peace between them, and dominated the immense sweep of land
from the Ibral Sea to the Scurlis Sea, four thousand miles to the
east.
South of Arpathia lay the tangled
kingdoms of the Uromathian culture. Those kingdoms included
Eniath, whose fierce deserts had given rise to a people with a love
of horses and hawks that rivaled Andrin's own, as well as to
genuine empires and several smaller independent states. The larger
of the two empires was the Uromathian Empire itself, which had
given the entire culture its name and rivaled modern Ternathia in
size.
The smaller Hinorean Empire
was no welterweight, but it couldn't match its larger neighbor,
Uromathia, in size or wealth. Uromathians tended to produce
enormous population densities, far greater than Ternathia's or,
indeed, than the rest of Sharona in general. There were so many
Uromathians, in fact, that large numbers of them had migrated to
the new universes discovered beyond the portals.
Andrin had never met any
Uromathians in person, although she'd seen a handful of envoys
who'd come to Hawkwing Palace on official business. They were
an exotic people, but far smaller than most Ternathians. Andrin
had been taller than any of the male Uromathians she'd seen, which
doubtless would have made them uncomfortable had they actually
met her face-to-face.
Sweeping her gaze back toward
the west, she skipped over the triangular jut of land that was
Harkala and its sister states, once part of Ternathia but longe since
independent once more. The long Ricathian coastline led her eyes
up past Shurkhal—another former Ternathian province,
famous for its vast stretches of uninhabitable desert—and
the Grand Ternathian Canal, linking the Mbisi and the Finger Sea.
Then her gaze reached the
portion of the map north of Shurkhal, along the Mbisi's eastern
shore, where the nation of Othmaliz lay between the peoples of the
west and the peoples of the east. Like Shurkhal and Harkala,
Othmaliz had once been part of Ternathia's empire. Also like
Shurkhal and Harkala, Othmaliz had returned to native rule when
Ternathia withdrew from the eastern half of its empire.
Andrin's gaze stopped there, for
in Othmaliz, lay Tajvana.
Her skin tingled with the strange
fire of her still-undefined Glimpse as she moved her eyes past the
long, narrow, knife-like promontory known as Ibral's Blade, which
ran parallel to the incredibly long and narrow Ibral Straits. That
narrow passage of water opened up into the Sea of Ibral, which
lapped against the city's ancient shoreline, and her heart burned
with a strange passion she stared at the name on the map.
Tajvana.
The very name was magical,
imbued with a history so deep it could hardly be grasped. Capital
city of Ternathia for twenty-three centuries. Beauty beyond
imagining. Ancient power, unrivaled in the history of mankind.
Wealth almost beyond calculation, because it had been wealthy for
so many millennia. Tajvana, which could be reached from the west
only through the Ibral Straits, straddled the even narrower Ylani
Straits, beyond which lay the dark and chilly waters of the Ylani
Sea.
The Ylani was totally
landlocked, save for that one tiny outlet, through Tajvana.
Historically, whoever controlled the Ylani Straits had controlled
the rich trade routes between Ricathia and Ternathia in the west,
and Arpathia and Uromathia in the east. The importance of that
trade had begun to fade as colonization had spread from Chairifon
across the globe of Sharona, opening new markets, new sources of
raw materials and goods, but only until the Larakesh Portal had
suddenly appeared in the mountains just west of the sleepy little
Ylani Sea seaport of the same name some eighty years ago. The
only way for shipping to reach Larakesh from the rest of the world
was through the Ibral and Ylani Straits, which meant—once
again—through Tajvana. The ancient city had become, if
possible, even wealthier than before, and the Portal Authority's
decision to locate its headquarters there had restored it to the very
first rank of important cities. Yet it was still the sheer history of
the city which resonated so deeply with Andrin's very blood and
sinew. Tajvana was unique, the one city on the face of Sharona
which had known both financial and political power, virtually
without interruption, for at least five thousand years. The city was
as old as Ternathia itself, a jewel the Ternathian emperors had
voluntarily given up.
Despite Andrin's understanding
of the economic and political reasons behind Ternathia's
abandonment of Tajvana, she'd always felt that the city's loss had
diminished not merely the borders of the Empire, but its prestige
and culture, as well. To Andrin's way of thinking, at least, it was a
matter of national pride—or, more precisely, national
shame—that her ancestors had abandoned the richest and
most culturally diverse city in the world. She'd often wondered if
the people of Tajvana missed the Ternathians and the power and
prestige the Empire had brought to their city, or if they'd been glad
to see the people who'd conquered them so long ago finally return
home.
Andrin had wanted to see
Tajvana for as long as she could remember, which was unusual
for her. She didn't normally chase after ghosts, or yearn for lost
glory. But Tajvana was different. It
felt . . . wrong, somehow, to live in
this chill stone palace in cool, rainy Ternath, when whispers of
memory ran through her blood, echoes of warm wind in her hair,
the warmth of sun-heated marble beneath her hands as she leaned
against a carved balustrade, drinking down the glorious light that
washed across the city like a tide, along with the scent of exotic
flowers, or the rattle of palm fronds against a star-brushed night
sky—
Andrin blinked and focused on
the Privy Council Chamber once more. Such clear memories of a
place she'd never seen would have been disturbing, had she not
been Calirath. But the blood in her veins was the same blood
which had flowed through the veins of Tajvana's rulers for
centuries, and her family's Talent often manifested odd little
secondary Talents no one could quite explain. She had visited
Tajvana in her dreams, walked its narrow streets through the
memories carried in her blood and, quite possibly, her Talent, and
she longed to actually go to Tajvana, just to see how accurate
those whispers of memory really were.
She sighed, aware that it was
highly unlikely she would ever travel there, and yet burningly
conscious of the need. Somehow, despite the unlikeliness, she'd
always secretly believed that one day she would see
Tajvana. Yet she was an emperor's daughter. Her safety and her
duties took precedence over any urge she might have had to make
the long journey. And once she married—in what would
doubtlessly be a politically advantageous marriage, whether the
suitor was a Ternathian noble or a prince of some other
land—her duty would be to remain at home and raise
somebody's heirs. She regretted that more than any other part of
her life, yet duty came first when one was born Calirath. And at
least she could be intensely glad that Janaki would be the one to
rule Ternathia after their father.
She felt a familiar stir of relief at
that thought, but the relief was matched by a stronger prickle of
her discomfiting Talent, which brought her back to the worrisome
question of why her father had insisted on her presence at the
Privy Council meeting.
Most of the Councilors had
arrived, but there were still a few holes in the ranks. First
Councilor Taje was deep in conversation with her father, their
voices too low for her to hear, when Alazon Yanamar, Zindel's
Privy Voice, entered the chamber and made her way straight to the
Emperor. Yanamar was not a standing member of the Privy
Council, although she frequently attended its meetings, for
obvious reasons. But today, she carried a strange, disquieting aura
with her, and as Andrin watched them—her father, Taje, and
Yanamar—she tried not to shiver.
It got harder as Zindel and the
Privy Voice stepped into the farthest corner of the room, standing
alone while Yanamar delivered whatever message had pulled them
away from breakfast.
The Emperor's face drained of
color, and Andrin's palms went cold and damp against her velvet
skirt. Yanamar's trained face gave no indication of what the
message had contained, but Zindel's eyes had gone dark and
frighteningly shuttered, with a look Andrin had never seen in them.
The Privy Voice glanced once
toward Andrin, not unkindly, but without a hint of the thoughts
behind her shuttered grey eyes. Not sure what else to do,
Andrin nodded politely back to Yanamar from where she'd seated
herself in one of the chairs along the wall, rather than one of those
at the council table. Her father glanced up, as if the movement of
her head had drawn his attention, and gave a slight frown. But he
didn't speak, so she remained where she was, on the sidelines,
where she belonged. She was here to observe and learn, not
participate. At least, she didn't think she was expected to
participate. She was usually adept at reading her father's nonverbal
signals, but today she was unsure of anything except the fear that
buzzed beneath her skin, sharper now than ever.
So she watched and listened as
the remaining privy councilors hurried into the room, summoned
from whatever tasks had been interrupted by the command to
assemble. The First Councilor was by far the most composed of
the lot; Andrin couldn't remember ever having seen Shamir Taje
lose his composure. He was like a five-masted barque, she
mused—ponderous and steady, solid and dependable,
whatever the weather between him and his destination. As a child,
she'd thought him duller than the endless Ternathian rain; as a
nearly grown woman, with a better appreciation for the
requirements of statesmanship, she recognized him for what he
truly was: an utterly indispensable advisor, whose solid judgment
and unflappable resolve were precisely what the Ternathian
Empire required.
She wondered if he even
suspected how well she understood that, and decided the
likelihood was vanishingly small. That thought caused her to
smile to herself, which arrested the attention of several Privy
Councilors, who paused in the middle of speculative
conversations to wonder what their Emperor's daughter knew that
they didn't. They also wondered why she was in the chamber at all.
Most decided they would really
rather not know, since the only reasons they could drum up to
explain her presence were uniformly bad ones. Some bordered on
catastrophic, so the Councilors eyed one another and kept
conversation light in an attempt to steady jangled nerves until
everyone had arrived.
It took what seemed to Andrin to
be an agonizingly long time before the last Councilor hurried into
the room, out of breath from having run most of the way, and her
father stepped to his place at the head of the long table. The table's
ornate inlay gleamed in the lamplight, which was necessary,
because the Privy Council Chamber had no windows. The thick
oak tabletop's warm honey-gold was inlaid with darker wood,
ivory, silver, and even mother of pearl in beautiful patterns. The
ancient eight-rayed sunburst imperial crest of Ternathia took up
the entire center of the vast table, glittering with precious metals
and gemstones, and faithful representations of trees, flowers, and
fruits from all across the vast sweep of Ancient Ternathia swept
around its periphery.
The Councilors moved quickly
to claim their own assigned chairs, but remained standing while
the tall, reed-thin chaplain intoned the brief benediction which
preceded all official Imperial functions. His voice was
surprisingly deep, coming from such a frail-looking chest, as he
requested guidance from the double Triad which had watched over
the Empire for five millennia. The Emperor stood quietly,
respectfully attentive, as he prayed, but the moment the ritual was
completed, Zindel seated himself in the chair that had stood at the
head of this table for three centuries, which allowed the
councilors to sit down, as well.
Zindel XXIV's massive oak chair
was as intricately decorated as the table, with matching inlays,
including the glittering imperial crest which shone above and
behind his head and the carved image of the famous Winged
Crown of Ternathia which formed the top of its solid back. One
thing Zindel chan Calirath's ancestors had understood very well
was the power of symbolism. He was no less aware of it himself,
and knew he would have to call on all of that power to shepherd
his people through the coming crisis. He settled into the cushioned
comfort of the chair, lingering briefly on the realization that this
chair was a good deal more comfortable than many of his duties,
then spoke in a brisk tone.
"Ladies, gentlemen, thank you
for arriving so promptly. We've received an urgent message from
the Portal Authority. First Director Orem Limana has invoked a
worldwide Conclave, scheduled for this afternoon at one-thirty,
Ternathian time."
"Conclave, Your
Majesty?" Ekthar Shilvass, Treasury Councilor, repeated sharply.
"That's right, Ekthar. I've called
this session to discuss the reason for it. We don't have much time
to prepare, and I need advice, my friends—advice and
information. Unless I'm very seriously mistaken, Sharona is at
war."
A shocked babble exploded
around the table. Zindel had expected it, and he used the
momentary confusion to glance at his daughter. Andrin had jerked
bolt upright in her chair, her face white, as the import of his words
hit home . . . along with the reason
for her own presence. Then Shamir Taje rapped his knuckles
sharply against the table in a brusque signal for silence.
"Your Imperial Majesty," he
said, using the deliberate formality to remind the other Councilors
of proper protocol during an imperial crisis, "the Privy Voice gave
me only part of the message from Director Limana when she asked
me to bring you here. Perhaps you would clarify my most urgent
question."
Zindel inclined his head, positive
he already knew what the question would be.
"With whom are we at war,
Your Majesty?" Taje asked, and the Emperor met his old friend's
gaze levelly.
"That, unfortunately, is the
question of the hour. No one knows."
"But—" Captain of the
Army Thalyar chan Gristhane, the Ternathian Army's uniformed
commander, blurted out, "how can that be? If we don't know
who we're fighting, how do we know we're at war with them?"
"We don't know who
yet," Zindel said grimly, "but unless the gods themselves
intervene, we are most definitely at war, ladies and gentlemen. At
war with someone who's slaughtered one of our survey crews,
apparently to the last man." He paused, then added harshly, "And
woman."
Stunned silence held the room
for three full heartbeats. A swift glance at his daughter caught the
sudden knife-sharp grief in her eyes as his last two words
registered, and she began to weep, silently, biting her lip to keep
the sound from distracting the Council. He was fiercely proud of
her—and more frightened for her than she would
ever know.
Then he turned his attention back
to his Councilors and explained—briefly but fully—
what had happened. The Privy Voice answered question after
question, as best she could, but there was a limit to what she could
tell them. There were no answers to most of the questions, and
Zindel finally interrupted the fruitless queries.
"Rather than use precious time
speculating in the dark about people about whom we know
nothing, I would suggest turning our attention to Ternathia's role
in this afternoon's Conclave. The leaders of every nation on
Sharona and those of our largest colony worlds will meet via the
EVN, and, at that meeting, we'll have to forge some kind of plan
to meet this emergency. We've been attacked, and we must assume
we'll be attacked again, given the savagery these people have
already demonstrated."
"I agree we must prepare for the
worst, Your Majesty," Shamir Taje said. "At the same time,
however, surely the possibility that this attack was a mistake, or
that it was carried out by some rogue junior officer, must also
exist. If we assume war is inevitable, may we not make it so?"
Most people would not have
recognized the true question in the First Councilor's voice. But
that was because most people hadn't known him as long as Zindel
chan Calirath had. He recognized exactly how surprised Taje was
to hear his Emperor, of all people, sounding so ready to embrace
war and so dismissive of the chance for peace.
"Old friend," Zindel said quietly,
"I pray from the bottom of my heart that war is not
inevitable. I would give literally anything, for reasons of which
you cannot even dream at this moment, for that to be true. But,"
his expression was grim, his eyes dark, "for the last week—
since, in fact, shortly before this message was sent upon its way to
us—both Princess Andrin and I have been experiencing a
major Glimpse."
The Council Chamber was
deathly silent, for these were Ternathian Councilors.
"Nothing I've Glimpsed at this
time says war is absolutely inescapable," Zindel continued in that
same, quiet tone. "But everything I've Glimpsed shows
fighting, bloodshed, death on a scale Sharona hasn't seen in
centuries."
Andrin's face was carved from
ivory as she heard her father's deep, resonant voice putting the
nightmare imagery of her own Glimpses into words that tasted of
blood and iron.
"I've Glimpsed men with
weapons I cannot even describe to you," the Emperor told his
silent Council. "I've Glimpsed creatures out of the depths of
nightmare, and cities in flames. Not all Glimpses come to pass.
No one knows that better than someone born of my house. But it
is my duty as Emperor of Ternathia to prepare for the possibility
that this one will come to pass."
"I . . .
understand, Your Majesty," Taje said softly into the ringing
silence when he paused. "Tell us how we may serve the House of
Calirath."
"We must understand from the
beginning that the other heads of state won't have shared my
Glimpse," Zindel said. "Most of them will recognize the potential
catastrophe looming before us, but none of them will have Seen
what I've Seen, recognize just how serious a threat this has the
potential to become. Some of them will want to procrastinate and
try to dodge their responsibilities, and others will bicker about
protocol, precedence, and political advantage. Some may urge that
we do nothing to 'exacerbate' the situation, while others will
demand action, especially when the details of what happened
to our survey crew become known to them. Still others may
hope—as I do, however unlikely I feel it to be—to
find a means to defuse the crisis through diplomacy and restraint.
But whatever our views, however much we may agree or disagree
with one another, we'll still have to come to agreement on some
unified response, and Ternathia is the oldest, largest, and
wealthiest empire on Sharona. As such, we must plan to play a
leadership role in shaping that response.
"I need recommendations for
Ternathia's most effective role. I know my own thoughts on the
subject, but I want to hear yours, as well. All of them, no matter
how seemingly foolish. You may come up with something
important that I haven't considered. And I need facts, my
friends—data on Ternathia's preparedness for war. The
Empire hasn't actually fought a war in centuries. Skirmishes with
claim jumpers or pirates in new universes hardly qualify—
that sort of fighting doesn't come close to what I fear we may find
ourselves facing. We may need to mobilize every fighting man in
the Imperial forces. Indeed, we may even need to expand the size
of our military. Drastically."
"But, Your Majesty," Nanthee
Silbeth, Councilor for Education, protested, "we have the largest
Army and Navy on Sharona!"
Zindel opened his mouth, but the
First Councilor responded before the Emperor could speak.
"Yes, Nanthee, we do. But look
at the population distribution. Most of the universes we've
discovered are still virtually empty, and we've been exploring for
eighty years. If we put every fighting man from every
military organization on Sharona into the field tomorrow, shipped
them all out by rail and troop ship, we still wouldn't have the
manpower to guard all those universes, let alone mass the strength
needed to hold them in a sustained, pitched battle."
"That's true enough, Shamir,"
chan Gristhane said, "and I certainly agree that we're probably
going to need far more military manpower than anyone on
Sharona currently has. At the same time, there's not going to be
any point trying to cover all of the universes we've
explored.
"First, because unless new
portals form in critical places at exactly the wrong time, there's
not going to be any way for the other side to magically bypass the
portals we already hold. Believe me, offensive action on fronts as
restricted as those portals permit is going to be very, very
expensive, unless one side or the other holds an absolutely
crushing advantage in terms of the effectiveness of its weapons.
"Second, even if that weren't
true, if we put every single man of military age into uniform, we
still wouldn't have even a fraction of the men we would need to
garrison every universe against attack."
"You're right, Thalyar," the
Emperor said. "And it's also true that the sheer distances involved
in getting from here to the frontier, or the other way round, mean
there's not much realistic possibility of either side scoring some
sort of lightning-fast breakthrough. Not unless, as you say, it turns
out that one of us has a decisive advantage over the other when it
comes to our soldiers' weapons.
"At the same time, we don't
know yet who these people are. Worse, we don't know how
many of them there are, how many universes they hold, how
much population density to expect in their colonized
worlds. We could be facing a civilization two or three or even ten
times the size of our own." Zindel shook his head. "Shamir is
absolutely right in at least one respect. If this does turn into a real
war, it's going to be a potentially long and nasty one, and I doubt
very much that our existing military is going to be large enough
for the job."
Dead silence greeted that
assessment, until, finally, Brithum Dulan, Councilor for Internal
Affairs, cleared his throat.
"Your Majesty, may the Council
inquire as to your reasons for including Grand Princess Andrin in
this meeting?"
Andrin abruptly found herself
the focus of every worried eye. She couldn't breathe, waiting for
her father's answer, for the words she feared would seal her doom.
Even though she couldn't imagine what that doom might be, she
was terrified of it. And then, to her surprise—and the
obvious surprise of the Council, as well—her father rose
from his throne-like chair and crossed the room to take her chilled
hands in his own.
"I'm sorry, child," he said gently,
"but you are heir-secondary, and Janaki's Marines are stationed
only two universes from where our people were slaughtered.
That's why I have no choice but to include you in our policy
debates. If anything happens to
Janaki . . . "
He watched her closely as his
words sank in. Her cheeks were ice-pale, and her fingers flinched
in his grip, but she didn't indulge in histrionics. Not that he'd
expected her to. She was only a barely grown girl, not yet eighteen,
who might well have been forgiven tears or impassioned denials
that she might need to step into her brother's shoes as heir. But she
was also a Calirath. She simply gripped his hands, swallowed hard,
and nodded.
"Yes, Father." Her voice came
out low but creditably steady. "I understand. I'll do my best to be
prepared if—"
She faltered and swallowed
again.
"I'll do my best, sir." She met his
gaze levelly. "If I might suggest it, I could organize a military
widows and orphans committee. I'm afraid it may be needed." He
looked into her eyes and saw the dark shadows of his own
Glimpse. "And I could help Mama oversee the travel
arrangements," she added.
"Travel arrangements?" he
quirked one eyebrow.
"To Tajvana." She frowned at his
expression of surprise. "We are going to Tajvana, aren't we? For
the face-to-face Conclave after this preliminary one? It's
necessary, and it just feels . . . right,
holding it there. It's where the Portal Authority is headquartered,
and we can't do a proper job of meeting this emergency just
through the Voices."
She was stumbling over her
words now, as if they were as much of a surprise to her as to
anyone else. Yet there was no doubt in her tone, no question. It
was obvious to Zindel that she was trying to logically frame what
must have been a strong Glimpse. One that not only matched his,
but dovetailed with the latest message he'd received from his Privy
Voice, as well.
"No," he agreed, "we can't do
this entirely through our Voices. But before we consider sailing to
Tajvana or anywhere else, we must prepare for this
Conclave. So, you'll join the Conclave with the rest of the privy
Council. And I want you to do more than listen as we prepare for
it. Your suggestion about assisting widows and orphans is a good
one. There are undoubtedly going to be more of them than any of
us would wish, and they'll need more assistance than ordinary
pensions, before this thing is over. So if you have any
questions, or other ideas, I want to hear them. Is that clear?"
She nodded, eyes stunned.
"Good."
He led her to the table and seated
her firmly, making it clear to everyone—including
her—that she was now a formal member of the Privy
Council of the Ternathian Empire. She took her seat gingerly, as
though poised for flight, but she held herself straight and kept her
chin up. He was so proud of her it hurt.
"Now then," he said, resuming
his ornate seat, "shall we discuss our readiness to fight a multi-
universal war for survival?"
Chapter Twenty-Three
"I'm sorry, but Mr. Kavilkan is in
a meeting and can't be disturbed."
Jali Kavilkan's private secretary
spoke with more than a hint of frost, and when frost appeared in
Linar Wiltash's voice, most men cringed. Davir Perthis didn't. He
was SUNN's Chief Voice, and he was too busy resisting the
compulsion to tear out his hair with both hands to waste time
cringing. Instead, he leaned forward, planted both hands on her
desk, and thrust his jaw out.
"If you don't disturb him for
this, you'll be looking for another job by supper. Move, damn it!"
Wiltash's eyes widened. Then she
stood, spine stiff with outrage, crossed her palatial office with
obviously irritated strides, and tapped at the door of the
sanctum sanctorum of the Sharonian Universal News
Network.
"What?" The predictable
bellow rattled the door on its hinges, and Wiltash eased it open
just a crack.
"Voice Perthis says it's urgent."
"It had fucking well better be!
Get in here, Perthis!"
The Voice scooted, and he felt a
sudden spike of satisfaction as he stepped through the door. The
meeting he'd interrupted was providential, because Tarlin Bolsh,
SUNN's division chief for international news, sat across the ship-
sized desk from the executive manager of the largest news
organization on Sharona. Or, in the entire multiverse, for that
matter.
Jali Kavilkan didn't seem to feel
there was anything providential about the moment, however.
Kavilkan lacked any kind of physical grace. Short and broad, with
the square, heavy-child face, he moved as ponderously as a
Ternathian battleship, overflowed any chair Perthis had ever seen
him sit in, and somehow contrived to loom larger than men a foot
taller than him. And, at the moment, he had his patented bellicose,
take-no-prisoners glare focused directly upon one Davir Perthis.
"Well? What the hell's so
godsdamned important?" he demanded.
Perthis closed the door behind
him, pulling until the latch clicked with reassuring solidity.
Wiltash had ears in every pore of her anatomy, which she used to
keep Kavilkan informed of everything that happened in SUNN in's
headquarters. For once, though, Perthis was privy to information
she didn't have yet, and he wanted to keep it that way.
Once he was certain the door
was closed, he met Kavilkan's angry stare with a level gaze of his
own.
"Sharona's at war, sir," he said
flatly.
"What?" Kavilkan's
bellow actually lifted him to his feet, jerked up like some
immense marionette. It came out half-strangled, the oddest sound
Perthis had ever heard from him, and he half-crouched across his
desk.
"Just what the hell do you mean
by that?" he demanded an instant later.
"Exactly what I said, sir. We're at
war. One of our survey crews has been slaughtered by soldiers
from an unknown human civilization. The Portal Authority hasn't
released the official word yet, and it won't release details
until families are notified, but Darl Elivath's got confirmation
from three of his best sources."
He paused briefly, and Kavilkan
jerked a brusque nod for him to continue. Elivath was SUNN's
senior Portal Authority correspondent. His strength as a Voice
was much too limited for service in the long-range Voice
network, but his sensitivity and ability to capture nuances
was enormous. And his talent for cultivating inside sources was
legendary. No one could remember the last time Darl Elivath had
been willing to go on the record with one of his sources and been
wrong.
"According to Darl, there were
no survivors from our crew." Perthis heard the harshness, perhaps
even the denial, in his own voice as he continued. "Orem Limana
has blood in his eye, and he's already redeploying the PAAF. And
that's not all. He's ordered a full Voice Conclave on his own
authority. Every head of state on Sharona—and all of our
inner-ring colony universes—got the word maybe twenty
minutes ago. The Conclave's set for three-thirty, Tajvana time,
over the EVN."
For three solid heartbeats,
Kavilkan stood rooted in place, as if Perthis had just turned him
into stone, and Tarlin Bolsh's jaw eddied towards the floor. Then
the executive manager shook himself like a rhino heaving up out
of a dust bath somewhere on the Ricathian plains.
"Darl is sure of this?" he
demanded.
"I wouldn't be here if he
weren't," Perthis replied. "And you know Darl."
"What about confidentiality?"
Bolsh asked. Perthis looked at him, and the international news
chief grimaced. "You know what the Authority will do to us if
they think we've breached Voice confidentiality on something like
this, Davir."
"This is Darl we're
talking about, Tarlin," Perthis more than half-snapped.
"I know that," Bolsh replied. His
tone wasn't exactly placating, but there was definitely
a . . . soothing edge to it. Perthis'
defense of his Voices was proverbial. "I'm not saying he has
breached confidentiality; I'm just asking if we're in a position
to prove he hasn't if the wheels come off."
"I'm sure he'll be able to
demonstrate it for any Voice Tribunal he might have to face,"
Perthis replied, and Kavilkan nodded sharply.
"That's good enough for me," he
pronounced. Then he frowned, finally straightening his spine while
the acute brain behind his eyes spun up to full speed.
"Three-thirty, you said?"
"Yes, sir." Perthis nodded. "And
they're going to play hell getting a conclave set up that quickly,
too."
"You're telling me?" Kavilkan
snorted. "But the question's how soon we break the story."
"I think we have to be a little
cautious with this one, Jali," Bolsh said. The executive manager
looked at him, and the division chief shrugged. "If it's big enough
for Limana to call a conclave, then it's really, really big. It's not
just a question of pissing people off if we break the story sooner
than they want; it's a question of knowing what the hell we're
talking about before we a splash a report like this over the entire
planet. At the moment, all we've really got is Darl's heads-up, and
with all due respect for his normal reliability, I think the
possibility that the entire planet might find itself at war with an
entirely new trans-temporal civilization needs to be thoroughly
checked out before we go public."
Kavilkan scowled, but he didn't
jump down Bolsh's throat, either. Instead, he squinted his eyes in
deep and obvious thought for several seconds. Then he nodded to
himself and refocused his attention on Perthis.
"Tarlin's right. We've got to
doublecheck everything on this. Is there any sign anyone else's
picked up on the same story?"
"Not yet," Perthis said a bit
unwillingly. This was the biggest scoop of any newsman's career,
and the thought of sitting on it for one second longer than he had
to was almost more than he could stand. "It won't be long, if they
haven't already, though," he pointed out. "Limana's used the EVN
to set up a conclave. The fact that he activated the EVN at all is
going to become public knowledge pretty damned quickly. Once
that happens, other people are going to be digging, too."
"Granted," Kavilkan agreed.
"And I'm not saying we don't start setting up for it right this
minute."
He yanked open a file drawer and
hauled out a folder Perthis recognized as SUNN's crisis-
communications tree—the list of names of every SUNN
office on Sharona, the men and women who represented the first
tier of people they would need to contact. Each of those people, in
turn, had his or her own list of people to contact, comprising the
second tier in the system that would send a priority message
worldwide within minutes, via SUNN's own Voicenet.
"Pass the preliminary alert now,"
he instructed the Chief Voice, handing across the file. "And start
roughing voicecast copy, too. Go with two versions. Number one
assumes we have a clear scoop; number two assumes we're neck-
and-neck with at least one of the minors."
Perthis grimaced but nodded. It
wasn't like Kavilkan to play it this cautious, but by the same
token, this was the biggest news story in at least eighty years. It
wasn't too surprising that the executive manager was being a bit
careful. And, when Perthis came right down to it, none of the
other news services could compare with SUNN's coverage and
penetration. Over seventy percent of the home universe's
population—and closer to eighty-five percent of the home
universe's Talented population—were SUNN subscribers,
directly or through one of SUNN's many affiliates. Even if one of
the minor services managed to break the story first, SUNN's
massive, well-oiled organization would overwhelm the
competition in short order with the sheer depth of its own
coverage.
"Go ahead and work up both
copy sets using everything Darl has," Kavilkan continued. "If there
hasn't been any official release by three o'clock, Tajvana, then we
break the story with whatever we been able to confirm."
"Yes, sir," Perthis said, with
considerably more enthusiasm, and handed over a hastily scribbled
sheet of paper. "I've actually made a start on that already. I thought
we'd use this for the first announcement, then do a Voice patch to
the Authority HQ. Darl's standing by there now, with a reporter, in
case we want to use visuals. And I think we want a talking head
standing by, too. Maybe a retired survey crewman looking give us
an expert opinion on what's going on out there. It'll give us a good
human interest angle, too."
"Who?" Kavilkan demanded,
then answered his own question. "Gortho Sandrick," he said,
naming the man Perthis had already chosen, and switched his
forceful gaze back to Bolsh. "He's in your division, isn't he,
Tarlin? Wasn't Gortho a survey crew chief before he joined
SUNN?"
"For twelve years," Bolsh agreed
with a nod. "Before he broke both legs so badly in that landslide
and had to retire."
Kavilkan grunted in
acknowledgment, his eyes scanning Perthis' copy.
"Yes," he muttered under his
breath. "Good job, Davir." He handed back the sheet. "Put
Grandma Sholli on to conduct the interview with Gortho. This
story needs a woman's touch, and Sholli brings out the best in
human interest elements. She's everyone's favorite grandmother.
And use Nithan Dursh to anchor the main voicecast. He's got the
physical presence it takes to keep people calm."
"As calm as we can keep
people, with news like that to report," Bolsh growled, and
Kavilkan swore.
"The last thing Sharona needs is
a bunch of damned fools running around in a state of total terror.
We've got to minimize panic as best we can, and Nithan's our best
bet." He ran a hand through iron-gray hair. "Gods and thunders,
who the fuck did we run into out there? Well, don't stand
there trying to answer a question nobody can answer yet. Move it!
And Davir—"
"Sir?"
"Damned good work.
Tarlin, I'll want banner headlines on every newspaper SUNN
prints. Go ahead and start setting that up now—we're not
going to be able to get a special edition out before three, anyway,
so we might as well get to it now. But tell everyone, down to the
typesetters, that if anyone leaks a single word of this
before I personally say to, he—or she—will never
work in this business again."
"Understood," Bolsh said. And,
like everyone else, he knew Jali Kavilkan wasn't given to
hyperbole when it came to things like this.
"Drag as much information as
we can out of the Authority. Use smart speculation on what they
don't have—or won't give us—but make damned
sure we distinguish clearly between official information and
speculation. And, while you're doing that—"
Perthis didn't stay to hear the rest
of Kavilkan's instructions to Bolsh. His job was the Voicenet
well, not newsprint, and he had one hell of a job on his hands.
He rushed across the
dumbfounded secretary's office without so much as glancing at
her. He'd spent forty-three years in the news business. In that time,
nothing—not even the Juhali eruption—had
even approached this one in sheer magnitude. He was already
spinning out follow-up voicecast ideas as he ran through SUNN's
hallowed corridors, planning which SUNN Voices to put at the
disposal of reporters in imperial and national capitals to cover the
political repercussions this was bound to have.
Under other circumstances,
Perthis would have felt euphoric over the scoop they were about
to grab. Instead, his mind ran in frantic circles,
wondering—as Kavilkan had—just what it was
they'd run into "out there." Not to mention how nasty the other
side intended to get. Perthis wasn't accustomed to the hollow
feeling in his stomach, a disquieting sensation that he finally
identified as fear. Stark, raw, ugly fear. Fear of the
unknown, of a human civilization that shouldn't even exist. He
wasn't used to feeling fear, and he didn't like it. In fact, he
hated it.
He vastly preferred the outrage
simmering around the edges of that fear. Outrage that anyone
would dare to attack Sharonians. Fury that marauding soldiers had
slaughtered Sharonian civilians without a shred of pity or
human decency. Such monstrously uncivilized behavior deserved
nothing but the most hardfisted military response. Sharona needed
to throw their violence right back into their teeth. He bared his
own teeth, and his eyes were hard. Rage was an ugly emotion, but
it was far better than fear or terror. People needed to demand
justice and reprisals, not to cower in stunned panic like a pack of
quaking rabbits.
He grimaced at the thought. He
knew politicians. Knew them well enough to predict political
disaster. He couldn't believe the governments of the world would
voluntarily set aside their squabbles and do what had to be done.
The Portal Authority's First Director was determined enough, but
the Authority couldn't handle a crisis of this magnitude. It didn't
have the authority it would need to commandeer men and supplies
from every corner of the globe, every universe they currently
possessed.
Sharona needed a world
government—a strong world government. One
headed by someone with the experience to run a massive group of
diverse people. Someone with a tradition of strong military
leadership, yet with an equally strong and unshakable tradition of
justice. There was only one name on Davir Perthis' short mental
list of people qualified for that job. But there were two names
topping his list of people who would want that
job—and one of them couldn't be trusted with a child's
milk money, let alone the reins of world power.
They'll be coming to Tajvana, he told himself. They'll
hash it out amongst themselves, what to do with the
crisis, what to do about who makes the decisions when decisions
have to be made fast.
Tajvana was the logical location
for such a meeting. Almost all the international—and
interdimensional—organizations were headquartered there,
not to mention the Portal Authority itself, and Tajvana had the
infrastructure to handle a gathering of that size. And it carried the
enormous weight of precedence, as well. What other city had ever
been the capital of an empire that had covered or colonized two-
thirds of the world?
And when they came to Tajvana,
they would give Davir Perthis his golden opportunity.
It was time to rouse the public to
action, to hit the world's leaders with a deluge of demands for
prompt, forceful action and strong, unimpeachably honest
world leadership, and a cold smile touched his mouth,
displacing the grim set of his lips. As a SUNN division chief, he
had the power to make the public issue those demands,
without people even realizing he'd done it. Savvy SUNN
executives had used that power time and again over the decades.
Perthis fully intended to use it, as well—and for a far
greater and far better cause than it had ever been used before.
Then he turned the final corner
and he was back in his own domain, bellowing for his staff.
People scurried like ants, and he flung himself into the
comfortable chair behind his own desk and started jotting down
hasty, time-critical notes while other people came running toward
his office.
His pen moved with furious
speed as he focused his mind totally on the project in
hand . . . and very carefully didn't
think about his sister's only son, who was on a survey crew
somewhere "out there."
Traveling by ETS was unnerving.
One moment, Halidar Kinshe
was looking at the console where the ETS Porter sat, eyes closed
in fierce concentration as she prepared to teleport them from
Tajvana to the ETS station in Sethdona, fourteen hundred-odd
miles away. And then there was a moment of overwhelming
dizziness, wrenching nausea, and an indescribable
sensation—as if he'd slipped between the empty spaces
between one thought and the next.
And then he was swaying, dizzy
and shaken, on another platform, blinking into the eyes of a totally
different person.
"No, don't try to take a step just
yet," the young man said as he balanced Kinshe carefully on his
unsteady feet. "Wait until your equilibrium returns. Your inner ear
still thinks it's in Tajvana."
Kinshe didn't feel quite so bad
when he saw Samari Wilkon. The big, strapping Faltharian Voice
was almost a foot taller than Kinshe, and he looked decidedly
grey-faced as he leaned heavily on another attendant's shoulder.
"That was, ah, very odd," Kinshe
managed as he finally began to regain his balance and his breath,
and the attendant propping him up smiled.
"That's what most of them say,
sir," the young man assured him.
"And the ones who don't?"
"Are usually on their knees, too
busy throwing up and cursing to say anything." The
attendant's smile turned into a grin, and Kinshe surprised himself
with a genuine chuckle.
"Ready to try a few steps now?"
the younger man asked, and he nodded. The attendant guided him
carefully off the platform and down to the floor. His knees felt
rubbery, but they still worked. By the time they'd reached the other
side of the room, he felt almost normal again, and Wilkon was
right behind him, looking sheepish.
"Your wife is waiting in the
lobby, Mr. Kinshe, and there's a carriage waiting for you, as well,
just outside," the young man said, finally letting go of him to see
if he really could take a few steps on his own. He could. In fact, by
the time he reached the door, he was actually convinced he could
walk out of the ETS station unaided.
"Thank you very much," he said,
gripping the attendant's hand in thanks. "I wish I could tell you
why it was so urgent."
"These teleports usually are, sir,"
the young man said with a smile.
Kinshe nodded, but his
answering smile was more than a little forced. This pleasant
youngster would be finding out soon enough, he thought grimly,
and when he did, he would no longer be smiling, either.
"Ready, Samari?" he asked,
turning to see if the Voice had recovered.
"Yes, sir," the towering
Faltharian nodded. "Let's get this over with, sir. We may have time
to get there first, yet."
Kinshe nodded, opened the door,
and strode briskly through it into the station lobby. His wife,
Alimar, was waiting for him there, her expression anxious. Alimar
had decided not to accompany him to Tajvana this trip because her
caseload was always so heavy this time of year. With the schools
in session, Healers—even relatively minor Talents like his
wife—were in high demand.
Alimar wasn't as skilled or
powerful, in a purely physical sense, as some of the truly
outstanding telepathic Healers. But she had an adept way with the
normal bumps and scrapes that school children managed to
acquire a playground, and her sensitivity to emotional nuances
made her exceptionally valuable working with children, who were
seldom able to fully articulate their feelings. He'd sent word ahead
by Voice, asking her to accompany him today, and warning her
that her particular ability to soothe and comfort would be needed
before this day was over.
She just didn't know how
desperately it would be
needed . . . or why.
He pulled her close and held her
for a long moment, and his embrace tightened as images of
destruction and devastation flickered through his mind. The
thought of some rapacious horde of barbarians rushing through
the portal in Tathawir and the spreading out across the face the
world in a ravening mass, killing and maiming everyone within
reach, filled him with a sudden, icy fear that was all too
real—and personal—as he felt his wife in his arms.
"What is it, Hal?" she asked in a
frightened voice as she tasted his emotions, if not their cause,
through her Talent.
"Not here, love," he murmured.
"Only when we're alone."
She bit her lip, but nodded. She'd
long since been forced to accept that his work in both the Portal
Authority and the Shurkhali Parliament meant there would be
things to which he was privy that he literally could not share with
her. Not without violating his responsibilities to Shurkhal's
independence.
But that, too, was about to
change, Kinshe thought grimly. Unless he very much missed his
guess, Shurkhal would no longer be an independent nation, once
the dust settled and their world got down to the serious business
of meeting this threat. But he couldn't say that, either, so he
guided his wife across the lobby—and faltered to a halt.
Crown Prince Danith Fyysel was
standing beside the door.
"Your Highness?" Kinshe said in
surprise.
"My father felt it appropriate that
I go with you, sir," Danith said, and Kinshe drew a deep breath,
then nodded.
"Thank you, Your Highness." He
managed to smile. "I was afraid your father would insist on
sending a whole retinue us."
The Crown Prince's smile was
fleeting—not surprisingly, given the grim business which
had brought them both here—but it warmed his eyes for a
moment.
"I talked him out of it," he said.
"The Ambassador will be distressed enough, as it is, without
having to cope with a whole roomful of royal retainers fluttering
uselessly about."
"Thank you," Kinshe repeated
with another nod, then inhaled deeply. "I'm told there's a carriage
waiting?"
"Indeed. And an express train, as
well, at Fyysel Station."
Alimar Kinshe's eyes had
widened in deep surprise at sight of the Crown Prince, and they'd
grown still wider while Danith and her husband spoke.
"What is—?" she began,
then closed her lips again, blushing painfully. "Sorry. I won't ask
again."
"Let's get into that carriage,"
Kinshe said. "Once we're on the train, I'll fill you in. Both of you."
The Crown Prince inclined his
head gravely and led the way outside. There was, indeed a
carriage—one of the royal coaches, no less, with a section
of ten Household Cavalry waiting as escort.
"I've arranged to bring it with us
on a special car," he told Kinshe as they approached it, then paused
as a footman opened the door. "No, Mrs. Kinshe. After you," he
said as Alimar hesitated, waiting for the prince to enter first, as
custom decreed. "I insist."
"Thank you," she murmured, and
Kinshe handed her up.
The prince entered the coach
next, then Kinshe climbed in, and Wilkon followed last. The
moment the footman had closed the door, the coachman clucked
to the horses. The beautifully matched team of four grays
responded instantly, and the footman scrambled up onto the boot
as they sprang into motion, accompanied by the cavalry escort.
The Sethdona ETS station was
logically located, in the heart of the capital city between the Royal
Palace and the Parliament building. That placed it relatively close
to the train station, as well, and traffic was thankfully light at this
time of day. The journey was a short one, and when they reached
the station, the carriage turned down a special drive reserved for
conveyances that were to be shipped overland.
The commander of the mounted
escort had obviously been briefed ahead of time, and they
proceeded directly to the correct track, where the carriage paused
alongside a private passenger car which bore the royal coat of
arms on both sides. Three more cars were coupled behind it. One
was the special car for the carriage Danith had referred to, while
the other two were standard-looking passenger cars. The first of
them was obviously for the use of the Crown Prince's security
escort, and Kinshe suspected that the other contained a hastily
assembled support staff.
The footman opened the carriage
door, and Kinshe led the way out at the prince's gesture. He
assisted Alimar down the steps, then stood waiting until Danith
had joined them. As the Crown Prince led the way towards the
royal passenger car, Kinshe found himself gazing at the quietly
panting locomotive in something very like awe.
"It's one of the TTE's new
Paladins," Crown Prince Danith said quietly. Kinshe glanced back
at him, and the young man gave him a true aficionado's smile.
"I'm afraid I'm not as well
informed about locomotives as you, Your Highness," Kinshe
admitted. "First Director Limana is a huge fan, but I've been more
involved with personnel administration than the Authority's
freight divisions."
"Actually, the Paladin's a bit too
much engine for our purposes, but it was the best compromise
available in a short time frame."
"Too much engine, Your
Highness?"
"For four cars?" Danith
chuckled, and waved one graceful hand at the maroon-and-black
painted, steam-breathing behemoth. "This is a 4-10-4, Halidar.
Eighty-inch drivers and something like six thousand horsepower.
On reasonably flat ground—which describes a lot of
Shurkhal, when you think about it—a Paladin is capable of
sustained speeds well above a hundred miles an hour with
complete passenger trains! Assuming, of course, that the rails
are up to it."
Kinshe blinked. That did sound a
tad excessive for a mere four cars.
"Father told the line supervisors
speed was of the utmost importance," the Crown Prince continued
more soberly. "There's not a locomotive on Sharona that will get
us there more rapidly than this one."
Kinshe's jaw muscles knotted at
the reminder of why they were here, and he nodded. Then they
were climbing up into the plushest train car he'd ever seen.
Attentive rail stewards showed them to their seats and offered
refreshment while the carriage and team, along with the escort's
horses, were rapidly loaded. Within ten minutes, the mighty
Paladin gave a deep-throated "chuff" of steam, and the
special train began to move.
They maintained a decorous
speed through the city, but they began to speed up as soon as they
reached the open desert. The acceleration was smooth, yet as he
watched the eastbound rails and ties of the double-track blur
beside them, Kinshe realized that the Crown Prince's speed
estimate had been completely serious.
It was an astonishing and
exhilarating sensation to move at such speed, and he was reluctant
to pull his attention back to the business at hand. Partly, he knew,
that was a form of cowardice. He didn't want to think
about it, but Alimar needed to know why they were racing through
the desert at such enormous speed.
So he told her.
"They did what?" His
wife, normally a gentle and loving soul, stared at him with eyes of
naked fury. "They butchered an innocent girl? What kind
of monsters are these people? They must be punished!
Tracked down like jackals and punished!"
"Yes." Kinshe nodded, his
expression grim. "They must be—and they will. In fact, they
may very well already have been. Don't forget, our information is
a week old. A column has already been dispatched to confirm what
happened and rescue any of our people who may have survived,
and I imagine they've made contact with the other side by
now . . . one way or another. But you
have my word, Alimar; the people who could perpetrate this kind
of atrocity won't escape justice."
As he spoke, he met Crown
Prince Danith's eyes. The heir to the throne had not yet married,
but he had sisters. The look that passed between them was a vow
made in Shurkhal the blood-debt honor: not another Shurkhali
woman would die. Not one.
Kinshe couldn't help wondering
what King Fyysel's ultimate vote in Conclave was going to be.
The parliamentary representative knew the Crown Prince shared
many of his own political convictions, but if Sharona ended up
voting in a world government, Danith Fyysel would lose his
opportunity to wear a crown.
"My father and I have already
spoken about the most important aspect of Shurkhal's
participation in this Conclave, Representative Kinshe," the Crown
Prince said, as if he'd read Kinshe's mind, and his tone was as
formal as his choice of titles. "He specifically instructed me to
share our thoughts with you, since you are both a senior member
of Parliament and a Portal Authority director. Both of us know
Sharona must have a world government. At the same time, Father
has already sworn on blood-honor that we will never tolerate a
government run by Uromathia. His exact words were, ah, "death
before Uromathia,' I believe."
"That certainly sounds like your
father, Your Highness. Rather mild for him, actually," Kinshe
observed with a grimace, and the Crown prince's lips twitched.
"You know him well. What I
want to say, however, before this matter even comes to vote, is
that I support Father's position absolutely. I hold the survival of
Sharona far higher than any petty desire to sit on a fancy chair in
Sethdona. We can't afford that kind of nonsense."
"Your Highness," Alimar Kinshe
said softly, before her husband could speak, "you've just proven
how worthy you would have been to sit in that chair."
Danith Fyysel blinked in
surprise. Then the Crown Prince of Shurkhal actually turned red
for a second or two before he finally managed a chagrined smile.
"Thank you, Mrs. Kinshe," he
said. "That may be the greatest compliment I've ever received."
Chapter Twenty-Four
Andrin's head was throbbing by
the time her father called a much-needed break. She sat, rubbing
her temples, and watched servants carry an early luncheon into the
Privy Council Chamber. Despite her father's forceful personality
and Shamir Taje's skill as an organizer, they'd managed to
accomplish only a fraction of what they really needed to do in the
time they had. Hopefully, it was the most important
fraction, and her father was undoubtedly correct about the need
for all of them to eat before launching into a Conclave which
would undoubtedly run for many hours.
And so they ate, sitting at the
inlaid table, covered protectively with a crisp white linen cloth,
while they continued to cover critical bits and pieces of business
in side conversations. When they'd finished, the servants whisked
away the remnants, then refilled wine cups and served hot tea,
New Farnalian coffee, and steaming mugs of the New Farnalian
cocoa Andrin and several other Councilors enjoyed. They also re-
stoked the coal fire on the hearth, which Andrin appreciated. The
heat at her back was as delicious as the rich cocoa in her mug.
She listened to the side
conversations and realized how little she truly understood about
what the Councilors were saying. It quickly became clear to her
that she simply lacked the critical building blocks of known facts
to tie the other conversations together in any comprehensible
fashion. Unfortunately, she couldn't exactly break into the
discussions and request explanations and definitions—
certainly not under this sort of emergency time pressure. Yet if she
didn't ask now, how would she be able to remember the proper
questions later?
She pondered the problem for a
moment, then asked one of the servants—a girl perhaps
three years older than she was—to find her a notebook and
a pen. She also asked for a filled inkwell, in case the pen's internal
reservoir ran dry. The servant hurried back with the requested
items, and Andrin thanked her sincerely.
"That be my pleasure, Your
Grand Highness," the girl murmured, almost too low to hear as
she swept a deep curtsy that took her nearly to the floor. She
glanced up, needing Andrin's eyes for just a fleeting instant, then
looked down again, almost fearfully.
"You see," she said, speaking in
a rush as if it took all her courage for one hurried burst of words,
"it's just forever I've been wanting a chance to serve you.
If you be needing anything else, I'll be waiting just outside. Just
you open that door a crack and ask. I'll go and fetch anything you'd
be wanting."
She rose with a surprising grace
and retreated from the room. Andrin watched her go in mild
astonishment, then pulled her attention back to the ongoing
discussion, sipping cocoa, listening, and jotting down occasional
questions or ideas. At length, the mantle clock chimed the half-
hour, and her father signaled for silence and turned to Alazon
Yanamar.
The Privy Voice sat in a waiting
attitude, eyes closed, clearly Listening for the incoming message
from First Director Limana. Or, rather, from the chain of Voices
between Tajvana and the Privy Council Chamber. The
arrangements and coordination required for Voices to relay over
truly lengthy distances could be unbelievably complicated,
especially at a time like this, when individual, totally secure links
had to be maintained between the Portal Authority in Tajvana and
every national capital on Sharona. Not even the EVN
could maintain a real-time link to the various colonial
governments, since no Voice could communicate with another
through a portal. But Andrin knew that there were other chains of
Voices, stretching down the transit chains between universes, to
provide the fastest message turnaround humanly possible.
Then Yanamar's eyes opened so
suddenly Andrin actually twitched in shock.
"Your Imperial Majesty," the
Privy Voice said, in a deep, rich voice filled with subtle tones, one
so beautiful Andrin would have given all the silly baubles in her
jewel box to possess its equal. "First Director Limana has begun
the Conclave. The Portal Authority's Head Voice, Yaf Umani, is
transmitting what he sees and hears."
Her voice shifted suddenly. It
took on not simply a different timbre, but a different rhythm and
accent as she repeated the words of a man a quarter of the world
away. That was remarkable enough, but what stunned Andrin was
the projection that abruptly appeared at the far end of the room. It
was a three-dimensional image of a man standing at a podium in a
room she'd never seen. There were others present, seated between
themselves and the speaker, and a map of the newly discovered
portals hung behind him. The man at the podium was looking right
at them, even though he couldn't possibly have actually seen them.
Andrin had always known
Voices could receive and transmit detailed images of actual
events, but less than one Voice in ten thousand could actually
project those images for non-telepaths to see. Despite her birth,
she herself had seen that particular Talent used exactly once, when
the universe-famed Projective Falgayn Harwal had visited the
Imperial House of Music here in Estafel. She still shivered inside
when she remembered how Harwal and his dozen highly-trained,
powerful assistant Voices, had filled the entire Opera House with
a projection of the New Tajvana Chior's eight thousand singers
and voices.
But Harwal was unique, the sort
of Talent who arose perhaps once every two hundred years.
Although Andrin had always known there were others with the
same ability, if only on a far smaller scale, she'd never actually
seen it done. Not this closely and intimately. No wonder Alazon
Yanamar was her father's Privy Voice! Her Talent must be
indispensable to a man who governed an Empire that covered
several major islands and most of a continent.
She wondered if the Portal
Authority's Head Voice could do this, as well. Probably, she
decided. Then Yanamar's voice dragged her attention back to the
meeting underway.
"Honored heads of state of the
sovereign nations and colonies of Sharona and the various
advisory councils and board members with you. For those of you
who have never personally met me, I am Orem Limana, first
Director of the Sharonian Trans-Temporal Portal Authority. In
that capacity, I thank you for joining this Conclave. May we have a
roll call of official members of the Conclave, please?"
Yanamar' recitation didn't quite
match the movement of Limana's lips, but it was incredibly close.
It was almost uncanny watching the eerie projection and listening
to Yanamar's voice repeating the words of the man speaking in a
room three thousand miles away.
The Privy Voice repeated a
seemingly endless list of names as First Director Limana
proceeded alphabetically down the official roster of nations and
colonies. Andrin watched the map of Sharona as he spoke, trying
to fix the names of various heads of state in her mind, but she had
to give up within moments. She uncapped her pen once more and
made her first note of the Conclave: Memorize the names of
every head of state on Sharona and our colonies. She looked
down at it, and, after a moment's consideration, added, And
their heirs, if they're monarchies, and their seconds in command,
regardless of what form of government they have.
She managed not to groan as she
contemplated the size of that task, but it wasn't easy.
Once the First Director had
completed the daunting task of merely determining that everyone
was listening, he turned to the reason he'd summoned the
Conclave in the first place.
"I'll begin by reminding every
person participating in this Conclave that the news of this attack is
to be considered a level-one secret under the Portal Authority
Founding Charter, at least until such time as the family members
of those killed, wounded, or captured in it have been notified
about what's happened to their loved ones. Official Portal
Authority representatives are en route even now, taking word to
each of the survey crew's members' immediate families.
"I would further ask that this
news not be made public until such time as this Conclave has
formulated a plan to ensure Sharonian security in the Karys Chain
and its approaches. The more we can do to reassure the public at
the same time we finally break the news, the less panic is likely to
ensue. Are we agreed on that point?"
Andrin's father nodded, and the
Privy Voice transmitted his response. Again, a lengthy delay
ensued before the Portal Authority's director spoke again.
"Thank you. I deeply appreciate
your promised discretion in this matter."
He cleared his throat. It was the
first sign of nervousness—if that was what was—
he'd displayed, and Andrin was deeply impressed by his apparent sang froid.
"Very well," he said, "the
purpose of this Conclave is to meet the current emergency. The
Portal Authority will be intimately involved in that process, but
the Authority is primarily an organizational tool, one which was
never designed to handle this kind of emergency. Bearing
that in mind, I'll begin the Conclave by bringing you up to speed
on my responses and decisions to date. Once I've done that, I'll
request specific guidance from the members of the Conclave on
the best course of action until we can convene a face-to-face
Conclave.
"And before anyone protests,
please let me assure you that we will need a second
Conclave. We must devise a permanent, long-range structure of
governance to effectively mobilize, organize, and deploy Sharona's
military and civilian resources. That's going to require lengthy,
direct, pragmatic, and flexible decision-making, and we
can't do that in a meeting format like this one. I would suggest
Tajvana as the place to hold that face-to-face meeting. The Portal
Authority is headquartered here, and Tajvana has been a world
capital in the past. As such, the city is well equipped with the
infrastructure to handle large diplomatic and security delegations.
"If there are no objections to
Tajvana as the site of the second Conclave, I'll have my staff
contact each of you to arrange a date on which as many of you as
possible can attend. We'll work out the details, schedule the
meeting, and arrange appropriate meeting space—perhaps
in the old Calirath Palace—as rapidly as we can. I'll inform
you of our final arrangements, work out travel schedules, and
make Voice arrangements to give any of you who simply cannot
personally attend the best access possible. Are there any
objections?"
There were none, to Andrin's
considerable surprise, and her father glanced at her and quirked
one eyebrow.
"Well, it seems you were right,
'Drin," he said very quietly. "We will be traveling to Tajvana."
She nodded, rubbing her arms in
an effort to smooth down the prickling sensation under her gown's
sleeves, where the downy hair was trying to stand on end. She
wasn't surprised, so much as unnerved by the swiftness with which
her Glimpse had proven itself accurate.
"Once I've listed the specific
areas in which I need interim guidance," Director Limana
continued, "I will call for discussion by the members, asking that
each of you bear in mind possible answers to those specific points.
Both during my initial assessment of the current situation, and
during the open discussion, we will observe strict parliamentary
rules of order, simply to keep the discussion from becoming too
unwieldy for the Voices to transmit.
"If you want to ask questions or
share comments, ideas, or solutions—and I hope you will
have solutions for various aspects of this crisis—
please send your request through the Portal Authority's Head
Voice, Yaf Umani. He will relay it to me in the order in which it
was transmitted, so that you may speak in your turn. I realize this
may be inconvenient, given the awkwardness of holding a meeting
of this size through the Voice network. Indeed, that awkwardness
underlines the necessity of direct, face-to-face meetings. For the
moment, however, I can't think of a fairer way to handle the
discussion. Is that clear to everyone?"
Andrin's father nodded once
more, and the Privy Voice's eyes lost their focus for a moment as
she sent out the response.
"Very well," Limana said again.
"I'll begin with a review of the tactical situation and my decisions
and actions to date.
"The situation, as it now stands,
is both unclear and alarming. We've received two follow-on
messages since the initial one arrived approximately four hours
ago. Please bear in mind the extensive water gaps which have to be
covered in several of these universes. Frankly, I'm astonished that
we've received even these two messages so quickly.
"The first message was an
expansion of Company-Captain Halifu's original report. As the
commander of the nearest portal fort, here in New Uromath,"
Limana indicated the newly named universe on the map, "he
dispatched a rescue party to do what it could. Due to the large
number of portals recently discovered in this area, he—like
all of the fort commanders in the vicinity—is badly
understrength, and he was able to field only a single cavalry
platoon.
"The second message, which was
relayed to us simultaneously, was from Company-Captain chan
Tesh, in command of the reinforcing column which was already en
route to Company-Captain Halifu. He was also accompanied by a
Petty Captain Traygan, the Authority Voice assigned to Halifu,
who received a relay of the original contact report while he was
here, in Thermyn." Again, the First Director indicated the universe
in question. "chan Tesh reported that he was moving immediately
by forced march to reinforce Halifu with several platoons of
cavalry and infantry and at least some of his artillery.
"That's all the additional news
we have at this time, and it will probably be at least several days
before we hear anything else."
Limana paused again, looking up
from his notes at the faces of those physically present, then
continued.
"What we know right this
moment is simply that our survey crew was attacked and that most
or all of its members were killed. Company-Captain Halifu and
Company-Captain chan Tesh are clearly acting as quickly and
decisively as possible, given their resources, the distances
involved, and the lack of improved communications. They have
reported that they consider their immediate primary responsibility
to be the location and rescue of any survivors. Although their
messages and reports carry an undeniable undertone of great
anger, they do not appear eager to provoke a general war.
However—" Limana paused very briefly, sweeping his
visible audience with his eyes "—it's quite evident from
their dispatches that they intend to use deadly force not simply in
self-defense but to compel the other side to release any
prisoners they may have taken. By this time, they have almost
certainly already made contact, which means it would be far too
late to issue orders not to use deadly force under those
circumstances, even if we desired to do so. Which, speaking for
myself, I do not."
His voice went grim and harsh
on the final sentence. Alazon Yanamar's beautifully trained and
expressive voice transmitted his tone perfectly, and Andrin saw
cold approval on the faces of at least half of her father's Privy
Councilors.
"We're fortunate that Company-
Captain Halifu has both a qualified Whiffer and a qualified Tracer,
which will give us the best possible forensic analysis of the site of
the attack," Limana resumed after a moment. "Nonetheless, it may
be weeks or even months before we have any definite information
on the fate of our civilians.
"In the meantime, we have to be
aware of the enormous challenges Halifu and chan Tesh face. All
indications are that the Chalgyn Consortium crew's latest
discovery is an entire cluster of portals in close geographic
proximity. There's no way of knowing at this time which
portal—or portals—of that cluster have
already been explored by our opponents. In addition, the entry
portal here—" he tapped the bland circle of a still-
unnamed universe from which no less than six additional,
question-mark-tipped transit lines extended "—is
enormous. According to Chalgyn's measurements, it is thirty-
seven miles in diameter."
Andrin inhaled sharply in
surprise. That wasn't simply "enormous"—it was
stupendous!
"It would take many times the
troop strength Halifu and chan Tesh have to defend a portal that
size," Limana continued grimly. "I've sent instructions, on my own
authority as First Director, to reinforce them as quickly as
possible with all of the troops available to the PAAF in that
vicinity, but current indications are that everything available
amounts to little more than a few battalions. We certainly don't
have sufficient troop strength to hold what would amount to a
seventy-four-mile front against heavy attack.
"Moreover, the lack of rail
communications means troop movement will be slow as our
personnel approach the contact universe, so I've also contacted
Gahlreen Taymish at the TTE. He's been brought fully up to speed,
and I've activated the emergency clauses of the Trans-Temporal
Express' right-of-way agreement. As of this moment, the TTE is
under the direct control of the Portal Authority, and will remain
so until released. Director Taymish has already sent out
instructions to redeploy all available TTE construction crews to
the Hayth Chain, but it will take some weeks for him to get
additional equipment and workers into place."
Limana paused again, as if for
punctuation, then shook his head slowly.
"I'm sure most of you hope, with
me, that this tragic and, yes, brutal attack will not lead to all-out
war with another trans-universal civilization of unknown size,
power, and capabilities. Unfortunately, we dare not assume that
will be the case. Regiment-Captain Namir Velvelig commands
Fort Raylthar, covering the outbound portal from Failcham."
Limana indicated the universe in question. "Fort Raylthar is the
closest properly-manned portal fort, although even its garrison is
more than a little understrength thanks to the sudden expansion
along this chain. As you can see, Fort Raylthar is within two
universes, and about eighteen hundred miles, of the point at which
our crew was attacked. The Regiment-Captain has already sent
some reinforcements forward, and—"
The first Director's voice
disappeared into roaring chaos as sudden, wrenching terror
swamped Andrin. She jerked upright in her chair, the breath frozen
in her throat. Regiment-Captain Velvelig was Janaki's
commanding officer, and something dreadful—formless
and black and horrifying—was going to happen out there
under Velvelig's command. There was fire everywhere, men were
screaming, guns thundering, lightning stabbing and strobing
impossibly, and something ghastly was in the air, rushing down
upon them and—
Andrin bared her teeth, snarling
in defiance and fury and terror. Something had seized her, was
shaking her whole body, and she gasped and struck out with both
fists, trying to fend off the attack. Then someone truly did
seize her. Hands closed on her flailing forearms, capturing them
with huge yet gentle strength. They immobilized her, pushed her
arms down by her side, held her, and her eyes snapped abruptly
back into focus.
She stared wildly into her
father's face. The Emperor gripped her arms, holding her, and his
face was white as death, except for the large dark spot on one
cheekbone which was already beginning to bruise. She stared at
the mark, feeling the memory of the blow which had created it in
the knuckles of her own right hand, and realized she was on her
feet with no memory of when or why she'd stood up.
"Papa?" she whispered, shaken
to the bone. Then she realized she'd disrupted the entire Conclave,
distracting her father from the First Director's critical report, and
her own cheeks blazed. She wanted to crawl under the table and
die of sjame.
"Andrin," her father's voice was
low but iron command echoed in its depths, "tell me exactly what
you Saw. Everything you Saw."
"I-I don't know." She began to
tremble. "There was fire—fire everywhere. Fire in the sky.
Raining down on us. And lightning. And something huge and
black, diving down. I couldn't see what it was, where it was
coming from. Men were shooting, people were screaming,
burning . . . "
"Where?"
"I don't know! Director Limana
was talking about Regiment-Captain Velvelig sending
reinforcements, and it hit me like a runaway train." She was
shaking violently, now, no longer trembling. "I'm sorry," she
whispered, unable to dredge up anything more from the Glimpse.
"All I know is Janaki is out there, but I don't know when, or
where, or even if he'll be there, and—"
"Hush," her father said gently.
Her teeth were chattering, and he drew her close, enfolding her in
his powerful, infinitely comforting arms. He eased her back down
into her chair and dragged it closer to the fire, then knelt beside
her, chafing her icy hands.
"Send someone for brandy!" he
snapped over one shoulder.
"It's already on the way," Taje
said, just as the door crashed open. The serving girl who'd brought
Andrin the pen and notebook skidded through the doorway and
rushed forward, brandy decanter in one hand, cut-crystal tumbler
in the other. Her eyes were huge with fear.
"Here it be, Your Majesty!" she
gasped breathlessly. "I ran as fast as ever I did in my life!"
"Bless you, child," the Emperor
said, and took the decanter. He splashed brandy into the tumbler
and held the rim to Andrin's lips.
"Sip it, 'Drin. Yes, that's good.
No, don't push it away—sip it again. That's right. All of it,
dear heart. You need it."
Andrin gulped again, choking on
the liquid fire, as the dreadful shudders began to ease.
"Better?" he asked gently, and
she nodded, surprised to discover it was true.
"Yes," she managed. "Much
better."
"Thank Marnilay," he said
reverently. Then he wrapped his own coat around her shoulders
and told the hovering servant girl to fetch a blanket. As the girl ran
from the room, the Emperor turned back to his Privy Voice.
"Alazon, please send an urgent
message to Director Limana. Ask him to warn Regiment-Captain
Velvelig to expect trouble in the near future. I can't say when or
where with any precision, but Grand Princess Andrin has just
experienced a major Glimpse. Ask the First Director to relay all
the details of what she's just told us to the Regiment-Captain."
One or two Councilors looked a
bit skeptical, and Andrin's cheeks heated again. Her father noticed,
and his swift response stunned her—and his councilors.
"Let me make something
perfectly clear," he said, in a far colder voice than Andrin had ever
heard from him. "This was not a case of a girl's overactive nerves.
If any of you doubt the validity of my daughter's Talent, I advise
you to remember the Kilrayen forest fire. Moreover, I will remind
you—all of you—that Andrin is heir-
secondary. Given her youth, we have not, perhaps, made that status
sufficiently clear in the past. But should anything happen
to my son, Andrin will replace him in the line of succession. You
will accord her the respect due her rank and station. And
should any of you continue—unwisely—to cherish
any doubts about the validity of her Glimpse, let me add one
clarifying fact. I just experienced exactly the same Glimpse, but
hers was clearer and more detailed. My daughter is strongly
Talented, and a valuable asset to our war effort and this Empire.
Does anyone on this Council wish
to . . . debate that point?"
No one spoke. Those whose
glances had been skeptical now looked at her with contrition and
apology, and, quite unexpectedly, Andrin felt sorry for them. It
must be difficult for someone as highly placed as a Privy Council
to take any schoolgirl of seventeen seriously, however imperial
her blood. The thought gave her an unanticipated insight into
them, and she found herself smiling back at them. Several gave her
sheepish return smiles, which defused the tension so thoroughly
that even her father was left blinking for a moment.
Then the Privy Voice cleared her
throat.
"Your message has been sent and
acknowledged, Your Majesty. Word will be passed to Regiment-
Captain Velvelig."
"Thank you, Alazon," the
Emperor said quietly. He drew Andrin's chair back to the table,
gave her shoulder a reassuring squeeze, and resumed his own seat.
"Very well, I suggest we return
our attention to the Conclave.
Andrin was astonished to
discover that Director Limana had halted the entire Conclave to
await Ternathia's return. She was mortified by the thought that her
outburst had kept every other head of state on Sharona waiting, yet
at the same time, it gave her a major insight into the importance
the First Director placed on Ternathia's participation. Which
meant on her father's participation, which gave her
something else to mull over as Limana resumed his system report.
"As I was saying, Regiment-
Captain Velvelig is two universes away. In my opinion, sending
forward any greater numbers of reinforcements would weaken his
own command unacceptably. I believe it would be wiser to draw
the additional troops we'll need from universes further up the line.
The entire chain, from Hayth to New Uromath, is overland, with
the exception of an eleven-hundred-mile water gap here in Salym.
The rail line is well-established as far forward as Traisum, so
troop movements from universes further from the scene can be
executed fairly rapidly."
Behind Limana, a dark-haired
young woman had appeared beside the transit chain map. As
Limana began discussing specific PAAF garrisons, where they
were stationed, and how rapidly they could be moved further
forward, his assistant marked their positions on the master map.
As she did, it became painfully
evident to Andrin that the authority's multi-national military
forces were even thinner on the ground than she'd feared.
Well, of course they are, she told herself scoldingly.
The PAAF is primarily a peacekeeping force! If you hadn't known
it before, you certainly should have picked up on that from
Janaki's letters!
The thought of her brother sent a
fresh, cold serpent of fear slithering through her, but she thrust it
firmly aside. It didn't go easily, but it went, and when she looked
back up, she saw Privy Voice Yanamar cock her head in a
listening posture.
"A question from Emperor
Chava Busar of Uromathia," she said. "He says, 'We have a large
force of cavalry in the field for defense of our colony in Camryn,
which is only four universes from Traisum. We could divert a
thousand men—possibly as many as fifteen
hundred—for duty at some of the new portal forts without
leaving our colony unacceptably vulnerable. I would be honored
to make those men available in this emergency, and my General
Staff would be prepared to work with the Portal Authority in an
advisory capacity to make most effective use of them."
Shamir Taje swore aloud. Andrin
didn't believe she'd ever heard the First Councilor use profanity
before, and the sizzling intensity of the one short, pungent phrase
he permitted himself was an eye-opener. Then he glanced quickly
at her, blushed, and shook his head in mute apology before he
looked back at his older colleagues.
"I'll just bet Chava would be
willing!" he said sourly. "Give that man a foot through the door,
and he'll put an army in your bedroom!"
"Patience, Shamir," her father
said gently. "Fifteen hundred extra men that close to the danger
zone is nothing to sneeze at, whatever the source. And Orem
Limana knows how to deal with heads of state who overstep their
authority. Especially those who try to tread on his.
Besides," he gave the First Councilor a cheerful grin, "under the
provisions of the Founding Charter, no head of state may assume
direct command of the Portal Authority's military forces without
an authorizing majority vote by the rest of the Conclave's
members. Do you really think Uromathia is popular
enough to win that particular contest?"
Rather than the chuckles or
smiles Andrin had expected, the Privy Council greeted their
Emperor's droll assessment with grim scowls and mutters of
"Thank Marnilay." That was interesting. There had always been a
certain traditional wariness on Ternathia's part where Uromathia
was concerned, but the Council's reaction appeared far more
pointed than she would have expected, and she made another entry
in her growing list: Find out why Uromathia isn't trusted.
"Your offer is greatly
appreciated, Emperor Chava," First Director Limana said. "I'll put
Division-Captain Raynor in touch with your General Staff. And
that brings up precisely the point I wished to discuss next. I'm a
civilian administrator, not a military officer. Division-Captain
Raynor is currently Commandant of the PAAF, and he has plenty
of field experience, as well as a thorough familiarity with our
current troop dispositions, forts, and supplies. His appointment,
unfortunately, is due to expire in two months, at which time he
will return to the Republic of Tadewi in New Farnalia. Division-
Captain Inar Alvaru of Arpathia is scheduled to hold the
Commandant's post for the next two years. I mean no offense to
Division-Captain Alvaru, or to the Septentrion, but it seems to me
that replacing a man who is thoroughly familiar with our current
military strengths—and weaknesses—with someone
new, right in the middle of a major military crisis, would
be . . . unwise. I believe Division-
Captain Alvaru would add valuable voice to our planning, but I
strongly recommend keeping Division-Captain Raynor in place as
Commandant, at least until Division-Captain Alvaru can
familiarize himself with our current troop dispositions."
"An extremely wise suggestion,"
Andrin's father murmured. "Orem Limana's no soldier, but he
obviously understands the realities."
Captain of the Army chan
Gristhane nodded his agreement from his place, table, and
Yanamar cleared her throat once more and continued Limana's
transmission.
"And that brings up another
important point," the First Director said. "I'm not at all
comfortable making military or political decisions that may affect
the very survival of Sharonian civilization. I don't have the
training to deal with this kind of emergency. I'm an administrator.
I run portals. That's a demanding enough job as it is, and it's going
to get immeasurably tougher, trying to move enough men and war
materiel to guard our frontier across thousands upon thousands of
miles, through portals that will bottleneck our efforts, and through
universe after universe of total wilderness.
"I hate to see the Portal
Authority militarized, but there are some decisions I'm simply not
qualified to make. I need your guidance, so that we don't fumble
and open ourselves to the enemy's guns, or whatever it was they
were using to blow our people to hell. Tubes that threw fireballs
and hurled honest-to-gods lightning balls. We must decide
which portal forts to strengthen first, which universes may be
safely left unguarded, what kind of equipment to move first, what
our construction priorities should be—building railroads to
transport weapons and men, building troop transports to cross the
water gaps . . . or freighters to haul
raw materials and freight across them. Felling timber or building
cement factories to construct emergency forts. The list is endless,
and, frankly, I have no idea what we should concentrate on as our
immediate and long-range priorities.
"We need the sort of military
expertise which can identify and assign those priorities. But that's
only a portion of what we need, and this
Conclave—or the next one—must decide how to
operate the Portal Authority on a full wartime footing. Who will
have the military—and political—authority to make
the necessary decisions? Who will direct me—or whoever
ends up running the Authority—in prioritizing the
Authority's tasks? Who will give militarily and politically
appropriate orders for the defense of our people in the field?
Nothing in the Authority's existing charter or any of the enabling
treaties which created and authorized that charter gives me or any
of the Authority Board the power to exercise that sort of
authority. Yet someone is going to have to do it, so I'm
asking you to implement an emergency chain of command, as well
as to suggest long-term solutions to the problems of
command and control."
"My gods," Shamir touched
muttered, running both hands through his silvered hair, and
Andrin's father whistled softly.
"Now there's a can of
worms, if ever I saw one," the Emperor said.
"You're not just kidding," Taje
growled. He's talking about a fuc—"
The First Councilor caught
himself—this time, at least—glanced at Andrin,
turned even redder than before, and cleared his throat loudly.
Someone chuckled softly further down the conference table, but
Taje carefully didn't notice that as he returned his gaze to Zindel.
"He's calling for an honest-to-
gods world government," he said. "And who the devil is
going to head that?"
"Not Uromathia," Captain of the
Army chan Gristhane growled. "I will be dipped in sheep
sh—"
It was his turn to break off mid-
sentence and glance sheepishly at Andrin, who tried very hard not
to giggle at the harassed expression on the grizzled old warrior's
face.
"I'll go to my grave before I take
orders from the likes of Chava Busar," he said after a moment.
"And I'm not exaggerating, Your Majesty. I won't tolerate that man
giving orders to put our soldiers under his
command."
The Emperor's lips quirked.
"I rather imagine this exact same
conversation is being repeated in every throne room and
president's office in Sharona. 'Nobody but us, by the gods!'
That," he added in a voice as dry as winter static, glancing at
Andrin, "is why it's such a can of worms. As to the, ah, reluctance
to swear in front of my daughter, a lady who stands in line for
Ternathia's throne will certainly hear a good deal worse than a few
off-color remarks. We do her no favors trying to shelter her, or by
treating her as though she were delicate. It won't be easy for her,
but she's a very strong young woman. I have every confidence in
her ability to survive the
occasional . . . burst of colorful self-
expression, shall we say."
Several of the Privy Councilors chuckled of this time, and
that gave Andrin the courage to ask her first question since the
Conclave had begun.
"Thank you, Papa. But may I ask
why everyone distrusts Uromathia so intensely?"
chan Gristhane barked a
humorless laugh.
"Give me about twenty years,
Your Grand Highness, and I ought to be able to give you a fair
basis for it."
"Now, now, Thaylar," her father
said mildly, "just because Chava VII has violated every treaty he's
ever signed, attempted to confiscate Ternathian shipping while
trying to enforce illegal import duties and outrageously inflated
harbor fees, been caught red-handed trying to bribe Portal
Authority officials, and been linked repeatedly to shady business
practices by Uromathian survey crews in half the universes so far
discovered, is no reason to threaten suicide. You have my
word that Ternathia will decline to sign any treaty on
world governance if the nations of Sharona are temporarily insane
enough to elect Emperor Chava as Sharona's military or political
commander during this—or any other—crisis."
Someone snickered further down
the table. Captain of the Army chan Gristhane glowered for a
moment, then relented and gave his Emperor a sour grin.
"Oh, very well, since you put it
that way, Your Majesty." He met Andrin's wide-eyed gaze.
"Young lady, if Chava Busar ever offers you a gift, do
whatever it takes to politely decline it. His gifts have a way of
attempting to destroy their recipients."
"I see," she said faintly. "Thank
you for the warning, Captain."
chan Gristhane gave her a tight
smile, and her father leaned forward.
"I want to add one further,
important point, Andrin. For the most part, Uromathia's subjects
are honest, hard-working people who simply want to make a
decent living and give their children a good legacy. Uromathia's
banking industry has been utterly critical to the development of
new universes, and on the whole, Uromathian banks are
aboveboard and scrupulously honest. They use fair business
practices, they don't discriminate against non-Uromathians, and
they don't favor Uromathians over other clients. It's almost always
a mistake to blame a whole society for the bad decisions of its
rulers."
Andrin thought about that for a
moment. Then—
"Even the society that
slaughtered our survey crew?" she asked quietly, and her father
frowned.
"That remains to be seen.
Sharona's own past includes societies that were guilty of rabid
xenophobia, which led them to commit what we would consider
atrocities by today's standards. I regret to say that some of the
worst examples of that xenophobia occurred long after the
emergence of the Talents, too.
"We won't know what we're
dealing with out there until we learn more. I've always tried to
keep an open mind, but I have to admit things look pretty damning
at the moment. Whether they remain so is a question only time and
additional contact with them can answer."
His face tightened for just an
instant with what she knew was an echo of the Glimpses of war
and slaughter both of them had Seen. Then he inhaled deeply,
harshly.
"My personal gut reaction is to
wade into them, guns blazing in retribution." His voice was iron,
yet he shook his head at the same time. "But that's precisely why I
distrust that reaction. A ruler responsible for hundreds of millions
of lives who indulges a personal desire for revenge is a disaster.
That sort of response is a surefire recipe for killing a lot of our
own people, and squandering the lives of courageous
men—and women—selfishly, often for no good or
justifiable reason, makes you a mass murderer."
Someone down the table hissed
through his teeth.
"If, on the other hand, I believed,
really believed, Andrin, and had the hard evidence to prove
to my total satisfaction that the only way to ensure the
survival of Ternathia—or Sharona—was to wage genocide, I would do exactly that. It would rip my soul to
shreds, but I would, by all the gods, do it. Just as I would
fight to the death to stop others from committing
genocide, if I believed them to be wrong morally and politically.
That is what it means to rule. Don't ever forget it, Andrin."
His gaze was so intense she felt
as if she were on fire. She met it through sheer willpower, scared
to the bottoms of her stockings. Scared of the man inside her
father's clothes—a man she'd never met before. A man
capable of ordering the deaths of
millions . . . and implacable enough
to stand up to anything and anyone under the gods' heavens who
opposed any decision he made.
I can't fill those shoes! her mind gibbered in terror. I
don't even understand the man wearing them!
Then the blazing intensity in his
eyes gentled, and he gave her a sad smile.
"I hate frightening you, 'Drin.
But it's better for you to know the truth, however brutal, now
, not months or years down the road, when a misstep on your
part could bring catastrophe to the Empire. Janaki has already
faced the weight of the crown I wear—that one of you
will wear in the future. Would to all the gods that I could
have let you remain a child just a little longer."
The terror in her breast turned
into an ache that made breathing impossible and clogged her
throat. The tears she couldn't hold back broke free, filling her with
shame for letting them show, for her lack of
control . . . for making her father's
pain even worse. She wanted to say "I'm sorry," but her throat was
too tight, too raw. So she only nodded, hoping he would
understand, or at least stop looking at her through eyes filled with
remorse she couldn't bear. It cut like a blade, that remorse, yet it
came without a hint of apology for the necessity of what he'd said.
He couldn't have not said it and continued to be worthy of his
crown. She understood that, too . . .
and couldn't find the words to tell him that, either.
She had never felt like such a
wretched failure in her entire life.
Without a word, he pulled a
handkerchief from a coat pocket and passed it down the table. She
clutched the square of white linen as though it were a lifeline,
drying her eyes and ordering the faucet behind them to stop
leaking. Fighting her whole body, which ached with the need to
put her head down and bawl like a lost child. Instead, she stiffened
her spine, gulped several times, and got herself under control. She
very carefully did not look at the distress and sympathy in the faces
of the Privy Councilors, for her emotions were too precarious to
risk seeing it. Instead, she met her father's gaze head-on once
more, and as she did, she felt a new and special kinship with him.
He had experienced exactly this
same moment, she realized suddenly, seeing the Emperor inside
the father . . . and the boy who had
become the man so long ago. He knew exactly what he was doing
to her, what she was enduring—must
endure—because his father had done the same thing
to him, and that understanding made it infinitely worse for the
father who loved her. And as she looked into his eyes, saw that
memory and that pain merged in their depths, she loved him more
deeply than she ever had before.
"I'm sorry for disrupting the
Conclave yet again, Father," she managed to croak. "It won't
happen again."
He didn't embarrass her further
by assuring her that it was quite all right, because she knew it
wasn't. She desperately wanted her
mother . . . and knew, without hope
of regaining what she had lost, but she would never again be able
to hide her face in her mother's shoulder and pretend the world
wasn't waiting to hurt her again. In a roomful of people, she felt
more alone than she had ever felt in her life as her father nodded
and asked the Privy Voice to continue transmitting Director
Limana's address.
Chapter Twenty-Five
The train finally cleared the
congested city of Gulf Point, situated at the base of the Finger
Sea, where the Gulf of Shurkhal connected that sea with the
Harkalan Ocean. Even with the Crown Prince's prized locomotive,
the journey had required almost ten hours, and the Voice conclave
had been over for over an hour by the time they reached the city.
Halidar Kinshe felt drained and exhausted, although he'd actually
said very little during the conclave itself. Wilkon had kept him and
the Crown Prince fully informed, and, if he was going to be
honest, Kinshe had to admit that it had gone far better than he'd
feared. But the generally ugly mood of the attending heads of state
had not filled him with optimism. Worse, they'd resonated with his
own grinding sense of responsibility and blazing need for
retribution, and his mood was heavy as they approached their
destination at last.
The Gulf's busy shipping lanes
carried freighters laden with goods from around the globe, making
Gulf Point one of the busiest ports in the world. It took time to
thread their way through the jammed city, swinging around the
southwestern-most point of land to head east toward the little
town where Shaylar had gone to school. It lay only thirty miles
farther down the coast, but the sun had settled well into the west
as the special train pulled into the small local station at last and
the prince's carriage was unloaded.
It took a little longer to get the
cavalry escort's mounts off-loaded, as well, before they could set
out to be Institute, and they drew curious stares from the
townfolk, who recognized the royal crest on the carriage. Kinshe
could see excited conversations springing up in their wake as
people speculated about this unannounced royal visit, but they
rode in absolute silence as they followed the road through town
and out beyond it. The Cetacean Institute was visible now, another
three miles ahead.
Kinshe hadn't visited this part of
Shurkhal in years—decades, to be more exact. He'd stood
on this shoreline as a very junior member of Shurkhal's
Parliament, celebrating the opening of Shurkhal's own Cetacean
Institute—the Kingdom's sole cetacean translation facility.
Part embassy, but mostly research station, the Institute had been
founded by Dr. Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal. Although Shalassar
was not a native-born daughter of Shurkhal, she had built a legacy
in which the entire Kingdom could take pride.
Thanks to her work, the dolphins
had led Shurkhali divers to rich pearl beds which might have lain
undiscovered for centuries, otherwise. Shurkhali pearls fetched
excellent prices on the world market, famous for their size and
luster, and Shurkhali explorers had laid claim to those to those
same pearl beds in other universes, as well, increasing the
Kingdom's prestige while providing income to establish Shurkhali
colonies.
All of Shurkhal knew who they
truly had to thank for that, and Shurkhalis had long since come to
recognize Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal as one of their own, even
though she had been born on one of the tiny island chains scattered
across the Scurlis Ocean. The Scurlis was Sharona's largest body
of water, more than nine thousand miles long, north to south, and
nearly ten thousand miles wide along the equator. Most of its
islands were governed by the Lissian Republic, whose main
landmass was the continent-sized island that was home to some of
the strangest creatures on Sharona.
Shalassar had grown up on one
of those Lissian-governed islands. She was a tremendously
Talented telepath, whose childhood friends had been dolphins and
the great whales that roamed the Scurlis Ocean. She had come to
Shurkhal to establish the Institute as one of a worldwide chain of
embassies serving the sentient whales and dolphins.
They were close enough now to
see the large dock and the enormous area which had been roped
off around it to serve as the official embassy. A large bell hung
from a pole on the dock, with a stout cable that trailed into the
water. That bell was a necessary signaling device. Kinshe had
heard that she'd had to replace it—and the dock—
occasionally when an emissary from a new pod of whales
approached to ask for assistance and gave the cable too hard a tug
the first try. Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal simply took it all in stride,
as she had everything else in her life.
Until now, at least, he thought,
biting his lip.
No one was at home in the
house. A note on the door said: "We're at the Embassy. Come on
down, the water's fine!"
Kinshe's heart twisted as he read
the cheerful words, and he looked at his wife. She was biting
her lip now, and he took her hand as they climbed back into
the carriage and followed the road around to the cluster of
buildings at the water's edge, half a mile from the house. Outside
the carriage, the silence was glorious, broken only by the wind and
the heartbeat-rushing of the sea against the shore. Inside the
carriage, the silence was oppressive, as heavy as a storm brewing
on the horizon, broken only by the knife-sharp rattle of horses'
hooves on the graveled drive.
"Hal," Alimar murmured,
squeezing his hand. She started to say something more, then
simply closed her lips and fell silent again. She'd tried to convince
him on the train that this wasn't his fault. She'd tried
hard . . . and she would still be trying
when he lay on his deathbed.
The carriage clattered to a halt in
front of the Institute's main administration building. The footman
scrambled to open the door, and this time the Crown Prince
climbed down first and handed Alimar to the ground. Kinshe
followed, and Wilkon climbed out last.
The Institute's front door opened
and Shalassar Kolmayr-Brintal herself hurried out into the
sunlight, eyes wide with surprise as her glance flicked across the
royal crest on the carriage door.
"Your Highness!" she said,
clearly astonished to see the Crown Prince. "And Representative
Kinshe," she added, as she dropped into the deep curtsy she had
learned in the years since arriving on the shores. Shaylar was very
much a miniature of this woman, whose Lissian island heritage
showed in her honey-toned skin and the sleek black hair falling
straight as a waterfall down her back. It was tinted here and there
with strands of pure silver, but those were the only signs of age
Kinshe could detect. It was obvious that their arrival had taken her
completely by surprise, but she was trying not to show it, and her
immense natural dignity helped.
"Forgive me for not sending
word ahead to expect our visit," Danith Fyysel said gently. The
final decision had been his, although Kinshe had been in total
agreement. They could have asked Wilkon to alert her and her
husband, but they'd chosen to remain silent rather than alarm and
worry them hours in advance. Now the Crown Prince took her
hand, lifting her from the deep curtsy, and made introductions.
"You know Representative
Kinshe, I know," he said. "Allow me to present his wife, Alimar
Kinshe-Dulan, and Samari Wilkon, a senior Voice of the Portal
Authority." He finished the formalities, then inhaled deeply. "My
father asked me to accompany Representative Kinshe and Voice
Wilkon today. I must ask, is your husband home, Doctor?"
Shalassar's eyebrows rose, and
she looked back and forth between Kinshe and the Crown Prince.
"Yes, he—" she began,
then broke off abruptly. She stared into Crown Prince Danith's
eyes, and the color seemed to drain out of her face.
"Something's wrong, isn't it?"
she said tautly. "Something's happened."
Danith squared his shoulders,
but Halidar Kinshe took a small step forward before the Crown
Prince could speak. He wished profoundly that someone else
could have brought this news, but it was his job, and no one else's.
"We've brought a message,
Doctor. A very urgent and important message. We need to deliver
it to both you and your husband."
Shalassar had pressed her hands
against her cheeks. The long, slender fingers were unsteady.
"It's Shayl, isn't it? Something's
happened to my little Shayl. . . . "
Her lips trembled, and her huge,
expressive eyes were dark with shadows. It was a mark of just how
distressed she was that she'd used the pre-marriage form of her
daughter's name. She stared at Kinshe for several more seconds,
then turned away, started for the Institute, stopped, and turned
back to them.
"Come in, please," she said in a
faint voice. "Come in out of the sun. You must be frightfully hot
and thirsty from your journey. I'll have my assistant bring some
cool water, some fruit . . . "
Alimar bit her lip again and
tightened her fingers around Kinshe's as Shalassar tried
desperately to cling to the proper conventions. They followed her
into the Institute's main lobby, such as it was. The administration
building was mostly office space, with a small antechamber where
infrequent guests could wait for the two or three minutes
necessary to track down the Director.
Wide open windows caught the
sea breeze, carrying the unmistakable scent of deep ocean water
into the thick-walled room. It was pleasantly cool, despite the
fierce heat outside. Just offshore lay the floating dock and the bell.
The colorfully painted floats holding up the rope around the
dock's reserved approaches hurt his eyes as the afternoon sunlight
slanted fiercely across them. They hurt his heart, as well, as he
contemplated his reason for being here. It was monstrous to bring
such news to this beautiful place.
The promised assistant arrived
with the refreshments while Shalassar went out to fetch her
husband. She could have simply spoken to him with her mind,
since both of them were strong telepaths who shared the even
closer communication possible through their marriage bond, but
she went to find him in person. No doubt, Kinshe thought, in
hopes of regaining her shattered composure before she had to face
them once again.
He sipped water gratefully, but
he couldn't even nibble at the succulent orange slices or sweet
palm dates on the platter. His stomach rebelled at the mere
thought of food, and Wilkon didn't touch the fruit, either. The
Voice's eyes showed his own inner agitation, which was far worse
even than Kinshe's. Kinshe knew what message they were here to
deliver, but he was no telepath. Wilkon was, and the Farnalian had
actually experienced it himself already.
Then Shalassar returned with her
husband in tow. Thaminar Kolmayr-Brintal, like most full-
blooded Shurkhali, was a slender man, neither tall nor short, but
lean and tough as old leather. Despite his strong telepathic Talent,
he had chosen to remain on his family's land as a farmer and
livestock breeder, rather than seek a position as a registered Voice.
His skin was the weathered, furrowed brown of those who spent
lifetimes laboring in the fierce desert sun, and he was possessed of
all his people's personal dignity and presence. He greeted his
Crown Prince with a deep, formal bow; then met Kinshe's gaze
head-on. Muscles bunched in his jaw under his dark, close-
trimmed beard.
"Come into the office," he said,
his voice rough. "We'll talk there."
They stepped into a room which
reflected its owner's life hands much as the work done here. Island
artwork hung on the walls, reminders of Shalassar's girlhood
home, but file cabinets took up most of the wall space, their
wooden cases carefully oiled against the dry desert air. A desk in
one corner looked almost like an afterthought, a concession to the
need for orderly workspace to record the conversations with
various cetaceans, the dissertations written by various transient
students over the years, research data, published articles and
books, even—and perhaps most important—treaties
that governed Sharona's relationship with their sentient, aquatic
neighbors.
Even as that thought crossed his
mind, Kinshe saw several sleek, wet hides break the surface,
visible through the office window, punctuated by the hiss of
cetaceans surfacing to breathe. Given their size, he surmised that a
pod of dolphins had come calling, although one or two might have
been larger. It was hard for him to tell.
Then Shaylar's father closed the
door, and Kinshe turned his attention to repeating the
introductions. Thaminar Kolmayr-Brintal and his wife stood
together, arms wrapped around one another, even their free hands
gripping one another's. Two strong telepaths, fused for the
moment into one terrified personality staring at him with parents'
eyes.
"What is it?" Thaminar asked,
his voice even rougher than before. "What's gone so wrong that
the King sends his Heir and a Royal Representative to deliver the
bad news?"
"There's been an
incident—" Kinshe began, then paused, cursing his own
cowardice, and amended his phrasing. "An act of war has been
committed against Sharonian citizens. I'm desperately sorry to
bring such news. The Portal Authority Director has asked Voice
Wilkon to deliver the last message your daughter transmitted."
Shalassar's knees buckled at the
dreadful word "last." She clutched at her husband, nostrils flared,
eyes clenched shut, and he eased her into a chair. He crouched
beside her, wrapping his arm around her while she shuddered, and
lifted angry wounded eyes to meet Kinshe's.
"What you mean by that,
Kinshe? An act of war?"
"Exactly that, sir," Kinshe made
himself reply as levelly as possible. "We don't have very many
details yet, but Shaylar's team ran into an unknown human
civilization—a violently hostile one, apparently. Her first
message reported that one of their crew had been shot by an
unknown assailant. They ran for the nearest portal. They didn't
make it."
Shalassar began to weep, her
breath ragged, her wet face twisted with grief, and Kinshe steeled
himself to tell them the rest.
"Her second and final message
was sent less than two hours after the first. Because of a
transmission delay, it overtook the first, and both of them arrived
at the Authority simultaneously this morning."
He cleared his throat.
"There might be survivors. It's
not much of a hope," he added quickly, hating to crush the sudden
wild hope in her parents's eyes, "but the nearest fort has sent out a
rescue party. On the chance that somebody survived the second
attack. It's—"
He had to pause, had to swallow
hard. He wasn't a telepath himself, but even the secondhand
description had been brutal.
"It's very unlikely that anyone
lived," he said softly, levelly. "But we're going to find the people
who did this, and we're going to find out whether or not they took
prisoners. And there will be payment for it," he added in a
voice which sounded like a stranger's. "We—the Portal
Authority Director, King Fyysel and Crown Prince Danith, Alimar
and myself—we wanted you to receive your daughter's last
message before we go public with this.
"Sharona's world leaders have
already met in a Voice Conclave today, to decide how Sharona
will respond to the crisis. That will be reported on, even if we
tried to keep it quiet, and know that reporters know there's been a
Conclave, they're going to start asking why. We wanted to be
certain that you were told before that happened."
Shaylar's mother lifted her face,
and her voice was brittle.
"And how will Sharona's leaders
respond?"
Halidar Kinshe drew a deep
breath and told her. When he mentioned the high probability that
Sharona's military would be drastically expanded, Shaylar's parents
went pale again. He wasn't surprised. He knew very well that
Shaylar's military-age brothers would shortly discover a burning
reason to volunteer for combat.
"I'm sorry," he said gently. "I
could introduce legislation barring enlistment of every single son
from one family. It might well
pass . . . but even that might not deter
them from enlisting under false names."
Shaylar's father held his gaze for
long moments, then shook his head.
"No, it wouldn't," he said
gruffly. "My sons are too much like me to expect anything
different of them. But thank you for considering our fear, for
offering to help. It was a great kindness. What it would cost us if
they—"
He halted, unable to go on, and a
ghastly silence hovered until Crown Prince Danith broke it.
"My father begged me to bring
you a personal message from His Majesty. With your permission,
I'll deliver it now, not . . . after the
Voice has given you the message he carries."
Dr. Kolmayr-Brintal's throat
worked. She tightened her fingers around her husband's already
firm grip and seemed to settle even deeper into the straight backed
chair.
"Go on," she said in a voice of
gravel.
"His Majesty wants you to know
that he will never stop the search for your daughter, will never rest
until answers, at least, are found. Shurkhal is raising troops, as
agreed upon in today's Conclave. Those troops will have one
order, above and beyond all else: find Shaylar
Nargra-Kolmayr . . . or the people
who killed her."
Shaylar's mother flinched, and
his face tightened.
"I'm sorry," he said in a voice
raw with his own pain, "but we must face the likelihood that she's
gone and act accordingly."
He drew a deep breath and
continued.
"The people of our Kingdom
will feel this loss deeply, as a wound not just to our national
pride, but to our national heart. His Majesty begs you to remember
that your daughter was loved by millions—and so you shall
be, when this news is released. His Majesty knows how
desperately private your grief will be, so he has made
arrangements to send a small full-time staff to you, to handle the
response when people are told. If there's some small office,
perhaps here at the Institute, where they could work out of your
way, they'll take charge of all that, giving you the privacy you need
and dealing with the chaos for you. Is that acceptable to you?"
Shaylar's parents only stared at
him, too shellshocked to respond. Perhaps, Kinshe thought,
neither of them had fully understood until that moment how
deeply proud of their daughter all of Shurkhal had felt—and
how keenly the Kingdom would feel her loss. Even those who
hadn't approved of her taking on a "man's job" in the first
place . . . or perhaps, in their way, especially those who hadn't approved.
Her father unfroze first.
"That isn't—that
is—Do you really think this is necessary?"
"Yes, sir," Crown Prince Danith
said quietly, putting the concern he felt into every word. "I do
believe it will be necessary. So does His Majesty."
"I agree," Kinshe added quietly.
"Your family will become the focus of all Sharona's shock and
outrage. We—the King, Parliament, the entire
Kingdom—cannot leave you to face this alone, unprepared
to deal with what will come when word of this is released. What
we're offering to do, to handle the uproar for you, isn't
much—not nearly enough, compared with the magnitude of
your loss. But you will need someone who can deal with all of.
Please let us help, even in so small a way."
Shalassar nodded, her head
moving like a broken marionette's. Thaminar simply looked lost, a
strong man whose grief and anger had been punctured by
something he couldn't understand. Something he feared. His
gaze—which had gone to a place very far from this small
room with its wooden file cases, its thick walls and open window,
the scent and sight and sound of the sea—gradually pulled
itself back and focused on the King's heir.
"Very well," he said, his voice
low and hollow. "If more trouble must fall across our shoulders,
it will be restful to have someone help us carry the weight."
Kinshe sensed a gathering of strength within him, or perhaps
merely a gathering of the shreds of courage. Then he turned to the
Voice.
"You have a message from our
child?"
"I do." Wilkon's voice was thick
with pain. "I beg your forgiveness, both of you, for what I am
about to show you."
Shaylar's parents' hands gripped
tighter even than before, tight enough for knuckles to whiten and
tremble.
"Show us," Thaminar said
hoarsely.
They closed their eyes, and for an
instant—perhaps two heartbeats, certainly no
longer—nothing happened.
Then, as one person, they
flinched violently back. Kinshe couldn't even begin to describe the
sound that broke from Shaylar's mother. It was like cloth ripping,
or a whimper . . . or something soft
dying under the wheels of the train. He couldn't bear to look at
them, yet couldn't wrench his gaze away from the sweat, the
muscle-knotting agony, the—
A sudden scream ripped into his
awareness, and not from Shaylar's parents. It came from
outside—from beyond the window. From the
sea . . .
Kinshe whipped around to stare
out the window. The sea inside the floating ropes that marked the
cetacean's embassy had gone mad. The dolphins surged from the
water, fifty or sixty of them rising on their tail flukes, and the
sound that broke from them turned his blood to ice. Then a deeper
bellow broke across the chittering snarls, and a whale broached.
Larger than the Crown prince's train car, it roared out of the water,
standing for just an instant on its own tail fluke, a mountain of
glistening flesh spearing straight toward the desert sky. Sound
exploded into the air, a shockwave of sound that struck Kinshe's
bones through the open window like a fist. Water crashed outward
from its massive weight as it came down again, and the dock and
bell splintered under the impact.
A humpback, he realized through numb shock. One of
the singing whales. Only that was no whalesong bursting
from it. That was rage. Pure, distilled, and terrible rage.
Gods, Kinshe realized. Shaylar's mother was broadcasting
what she saw. She probably didn't even realize it, but the
cetaceans did, and he jerked his gaze back to her. She was
shuddering, eyes clenched tightly shut, her sounds like those of
some small, trapped animal. Then she stiffened, and her eyes flew
wide.
"Shaylar!" she screamed,
and her husband flinched so violently he nearly went to the floor.
Then Shalassar collapsed. She sagged in her chair, her head falling
forward in merciful unconsciousness.
Kinshe stared at her, his eyes
burning, and took a single step forward.
"Stay away from her!"
Thaminar snarled.
His eyes were burnt wounds in
his face, and he bent over his wife, stroking hair back from her wet
face and murmuring her name over and over. Fragile eyelids
fluttered. Opened. For long moments, there was no sense in
Shalassar's eyes at all. Then remembrance struck like a crack of
thunder, and she began to weep. She sobbed, the sound deep and
jagged, while her husband cradled her close looking utterly bereft.
Kinshe could only stand there,
feeling a tear trickle down his own cheek, wondering what to do.
What anyone could do. And then—
"You men, out," Alimar Kinshe
said firmly to her husband, her Crown Prince, and Samari Wilkon,
and it was an order, not a request. "Go. Find something to
do—I don't care what. Just go."
She didn't even look at them. She
simply marched across the tiny office, gathered Shaylar's mother
into her arms, and turned to Shaylar's father.
"Go and get some brandy, if you
have any," she commanded. "Wine, if you don't. She needs it."
To Kinshe's infinite surprise,
Thaminar rose without a sound of protest and left the office, like a
ghost walking through terrain it can no longer see or touch.
Kinshe watched him go, and then he understood.
He needed to feel useful. Needed to do something
for his wife. He just didn't know how.
Halidar Kinshe's respect for his
wife, already high, soared to dizzying heights, and he tiptoed very
softly from the room, beckoning the others to follow.
Alimar clearly understood what
needed to be done far better than he did, so he left her to do it.
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chief Sword Otwal Threbuch
moved through the darkness like a ghost.
He felt like a ghost must
feel—cold, empty inside, and incredibly ancient. He
shouldn't have been alive, and after what he'd seen, there was a
part of him which wished he wasn't. He told himself that was
exactly the kind of thinking he'd spent decades hammering out of
raw recruits who'd heard too many stupid heroic ballads, but that
did nothing to soften the pain. Or his sense of guilt.
He'd lain on that limb, watching,
helpless to intervene as the portal defenders were cut to pieces.
He'd been as surprised as anyone when the enemy artillery opened
fire through the portal, and he had no doubt that the shock
of that totally unanticipated bombardment explained how quickly
Charlie Company—his company—had been
slaughtered. But it wasn't the full explanation, and deep in his
heart of hearts, Otwal Threbuch cursed Hadrign Thalmayr even
more bitterly than he had Shevan Garlath.
He'd known what was coming
the instant that idiotic, incompetent, stupid excuse for a
hundred opened fire on someone obviously seeking a parley. He'd
recognized Thalmayr, of course, and the moment he'd seen the
other hundred, he'd also recognized the answer to his questions
about Hundred Olderhan's apparent lapse into idiocy. Not that his
relief over the fact that Sir Jasak's brain hadn't stopped working
after all had made what had happened to Threbuch's company any
less agonizing.
Every ounce of the chief sword's
body and soul had cried out for him to do something as
the debacle unfolded. But the steel-hard professionalism of his
years of service had held him precisely where he was, because
there'd been nothing he could do. Nothing that
would have made any difference at all to the men cursing,
screaming, and dying in front of him. It might have made him feel
a bit better to try, might have spared him from this crushing load
of guilt at having survived—so far, at least. But that was all
it could have accomplished, whereas the information he already
possessed might yet accomplish a great deal, if he could only
report it. Besides, as far as he knew, he was the only uncaptured
survivor from the entire company, which meant he was also the
only chance to report what had happened to Five Hundred Klian.
He clenched his jaw, eyes
burning, as he reflected on everything he had to report, including
the death of Emiyet Borkaz.
Borkaz had been unable to force
himself to sit out the fight. When the desperate survivors had
launched their hopeless charge in a despairing bid to get their own
support weapons to this side of the portal, Borkaz had left his
cover and run madly towards them, screaming and cursing. He'd
managed to get most of the way through the trees before he was
spotted, and Threbuch thought he'd managed to kill at least one of
the enemy on the way through (which was more than Threbuch
had managed), as well. And then at least three of those
hideous thunder weapons had struck him almost simultaneously.
He must have been dead before he hit the ground, Threbuch
thought grimly.
But at least the enemy could
make mistakes, too. The fact that Borkaz had obviously come
from behind them ought to have set off a search for whoever
else might be behind them, as well. On the other hand, perhaps
he was being too hard on them. Given the nature of the terrain,
they might not realize where Borkaz had come from at all. They
might think he'd come from the swamp side of the portal and
simply gotten further than any of the rest.
The chief sword froze abruptly.
Something had moved, and he stood motionless, straining his eyes
and ears. There!
The enemy sentry hadn't moved
very much at all. Probably nothing more than easing a cramped
limb. But it had been enough, and Threbuch slid silently, silently
to his right, giving the other man a wider berth.
Part of him was intensely
tempted to do something else. His arbalest would have been all
but inaudible under cover of the night wind sighing in the trees.
For that matter, he probably could have gotten close enough to slit
the other man's throat. It was something he'd done before, and the
thought of managing at least that much vengeance for Charlie
Company burned within him like a coal. But his job wasn't to kill
one, or two, or even a dozen enemies, however personally
satisfying it might have been. His job was to get home with the
most deadly weapon in any universe—information—
and if he left any dead bodies in his wake, the enemy would
know at least one Arcanan had gotten away. They'd also know
how important his report might be, and a dead sentry would set off
a relentless search he might well fail to evade.
He felt the moment of transition
as he belly-crawled across the portal threshold, moving instantly
from autumnal chill into steamy tropical heat, and he fought down
a sudden sense of release, of safety. Any soldier with an ounce of
competence—which, unfortunately, these bastards certainly
appeared to have—would have sentries on both
sides of the portal.
He kept going, easing forward,
working his way cautiously through the dense swamp grass and
mud at one edge of the portal and praying that he didn't startle
some nesting swamp bird into sudden, raucous flight.
Somehow, he managed to avoid
that, and to creep silently behind the one additional sentry he did
spot on the swamp side of the portal, silhouetted against the
moon. It took him almost three hours to cover a total distance of
little more than another eight hundred yards, but he made it. And
once the wrecked base camp was a quarter-mile behind him, he
rose to his feet at last, got out his PC, activated the search and
navigation spellware, took a careful bearing on Fort Rycharn, and
started walking. The thought of hiking seven hundred-plus miles
across snake and croc-infested swamp, without any rations at all,
was scarcely appealing, but he couldn't think of anything better to
do.
Just over an hour later, Threbuch
stiffened in astonishment. He froze instantly, listening to the night,
and looked down at his PC. The crystal's glassy heart glowed
dimly, its illumination level deliberately set low enough to keep
anyone from seeing it at a distance of more than a very few feet,
and the chief sword's eyes widened as he saw the small, sharp-
edged carat strobing at one side of the circular navigation display.
He stood very still for several
more moments, watching, but the carat was equally motionless.
After a moment, the noncom turned towards his right, rotating
until the strobing carat and the green arrowhead indicating his own
course lined up with one another. Then he moved slowly,
cautiously, forward through the currently knee-deep swamp.
The carat strobed more and more
rapidly, and then, abruptly, it stopped blinking and burned a steady,
unwinking green.
Threbuch stopped, as well,
standing in a dense, dark patch of shadow in the lee of a cluster of
scrub trees growing out of the swamp. The combination of
moonlight, shadow, and swamp grass rippling in the wind created
a wavering sea of eye-bewildering movement, and he cleared his
throat.
"Who's there?" he asked sharply.
"Chief Sword?" a hoarse
voice gasped. "Gods above, where've you been?"
"Great thundering
bollocks—Iggy?"
"Yes, Chief."
Threbuch watched in disbelief as
Iggar Shulthan crawled cautiously out of the scrub trees. The other
Scout's silhouette looked misshapen, and Threbuch's eyes went
even wider as he realized what Shulthan had strapped to his back.
"Gods!" the chief sword half-
whispered in the reverent voice of the man who'd suddenly
discovered there truly were miracles. "You've got the
hummers!"
The company's hummer handler
reached out. Threbuch extended his hand, and Shulthan gripped it
so hard the bones ached. The younger noncom's face was muddy,
and even in the uncertain moonlight, Threbuch could see the
memories of the horror Shulthan had witnessed in his eyes. Or
perhaps he couldn't, the chief sword reflected. Perhaps he simply
knew they had to be there because he knew they were in his own
eyes.
"I-I ran, Chief." Shame hovered
in the javelin's voice. "I grabbed the hummers, like Regs said, and
ran with 'em. I ran, Chief!"
Tears hovered in Shulthan's
voice, and Threbuch released his hand to grip both of the younger
man's shoulders hard.
"Son, you did exactly the
right thing," he said. "Don't you ever doubt that! Those
regulations were written for damned good reasons. You're the
Company's link with the rest of the Army. When the shit hits the
fan, and the bottom falls out, somebody's got to get word
back. The hummer handler's the only man who can do it."
"But the Hundred never gave me
the order," Shulthan whispered, blinking hard. "He went down so
fast, and they were dropping us like flies, and—"
"I know, Iggy," Threbuch said
more gently. "I was trapped on their side of the portal. I had to sit
there and watch it all, because my recon report for Five Hundred
Klian is every bit as critical as yours." Threbuch found it abruptly
necessary to swallow hard a few times. "That was the hardest thing
I've ever had to do—ever. So don't think for a
minute I don't understand exactly what you're feeling right now,
Iggy."
The younger man nodded
wordlessly, and the chief sword gave his shoulders another
squeeze before he released them, stood back, and cleared his throat
roughly.
"So, do you think anyone else
got out?"
"No, Chief." Shulthan shook his
head. "I haven't seen anyone. Not even them."
"I haven't seen any signs of
pursuit, either," Threbuch said with a nod, although that wasn't
exactly what he'd asked. He'd already known Shulthan was alone.
Unlike the hummer handler's PC, the chief sword's carried
specialized spellware which could give him the bearing to any of
his company's personnel within five hundred yards. Bringing up
the S&N spellware had automatically activated the locator
function, thank the gods! But because of that, he'd known none of
their other people were within a quarter mile of his current
location. He'd simply hoped—prayed—that Shulthan
might have seen someone else get out. Someone else who might
be hiding out here, beyond the spellware's reach, trying to make
his own way back to the coast.
"Where's Borkaz, Chief?"
Shulthan asked after moment, and Threbuch's jaw tightened.
"Didn't make it." He shook his
head and started to explain, then stopped himself. Shulthan's
anguish at having cut and run while his friends died behind him
was only too obvious. He didn't need to be told how Borkaz had
died running in the "right" direction. Not, at least, until he had
enough separation from his own actions to realize just how stupid
Borkaz's had been.
"All right," the chief sword
continued after moment. "Have you already sent back a hummer?"
"No, Chief." Shulthan shook his
head. "I've just been running and hiding," he admitted in a
shamefaced tone.
"Don't think I've been doing
anything else since it happened," Threbuch said, shaking his head.
The chief sword looked at the sky. The night was at least half over,
he reflected.
"We need to send one back now,
though," he continued. "It's going to take the rest of the night just
to reach the coast, and we need to let Five Hundred Klian know
what's happened. Come to that, we need to set up an LZ for them
to pull us out of here, too."
"Yes, Chief."
Threbuch looked down at his PC
again, trying to decide on the best spot. He didn't want a dragon
within miles of the base camp. Gods alone only knew how far
those bastards could throw whatever they'd used for artillery!
His empty stomach rumbled
painfully while he was thinking, and he glanced at Shulthan again.
"You wouldn't happen to have
anything to eat on you, would you, Iggy?" he asked, and
blinked as Shulthan actually chuckled.
"Matter of fact, Chief, I managed
to grab my whole pack. I've got a couple of blocks of emergency
rats."
"Iggy, it's too bad you're not a
woman," Threbuch said with the fervor of a man who hasn't eaten
in well over twenty-four hours. "Or maybe it isn't. If you were, I'd
have to marry you, and you're ugly as sin." The chief sword looked
back down at his PC, picked the coordinates he needed, and then
glanced back up at Shulthan. "Let's get that hummer on its way.
Then lead me to those rations and stand back."
"Is
a . . . unicorn," Shaylar said in slow,
carefully enunciated Andaran.
"Yes, exactly!" Gadrial replied in
the same language with a broad smile. She leaned closer to the
breathtakingly life-like image displayed above the gleaming crystal
on her tiny desk and indicated the booted and spurred man
standing beside the beast in an anachronistic-looking steel
breastplate. "And this?"
"Is a war-rider," Shaylar said
firmly. Gadrial nodded once more, and Shaylar smiled back at her.
Then she glanced at Jathmar, sitting beside her on the unused bed
in the quarters which had been assigned to Gadrial, and felt her
smile fade around the edges as she tasted his reaction to the
imagery Gadrial was showing them through the marriage bond.
The coal-black creature Gadrial
had just informed her was called a "unicorn" was unlike anything
either of them had ever seen before, yet it was close enough to
familiar to make it even more disturbing than something as totally
alien as a dragon. The beast was roughly horse-sized and shaped,
except for the legs, which were proportionately too long, and the
improbably powerful looking hindquarters. But no horse had ever
had those long, furry, bobcat-like ears, or that short, powerful
neck, or the long, deadly-looking tasks—like something
from some huge, wild boar—and obviously carnivorous
teeth. Or the long, ivory horn which must have been close to a
yard in length. And then there were the eyes. Huge green eyes with
purple irises and catlike slitted pupils.
Jathmar, she decided, had a
point. Compared to that bizarre, opium-dream improbability, the
half-armored cavalry trooper standing beside it with his lance and
saber looked downright homely.
"Your words?" Gadrial asked,
and Shaylar looked back at the images and shrugged.
"No word," she said, pointing at
the 'unicorn' and grimacing. Then she pointed at the man standing
beside it. "Cavalryman," she said, and watched the squiggles of
Gadrial's alphabet appear briefly under the image.
"Good. Thank you," Gadrial
said, and touched the small wand-like stylus in her hand to the
crystal-clear sphere of her "PC." The image changed obediently,
and this time it showed something Shaylar and Jathmar recognized
immediately.
"This," Gadrial said "is called an
'elephant.'"
Gadrial watched her "students"
studying the floating picture of the elephant and tried to keep her
bemusement at their rate of progress from showing.
She'd almost forgotten that she
had the language spellware package with her. It wasn't something
she'd ever used before, but it had come as a standard component of
the "academic" package an enterprising vendor had managed to
sell the Garth Showma Institute a year or so before. Gadrial had
been perfectly happy with the previous package's general
capabilities—most of the spellware she used in her own
work was the product of her own department at the Academy, or at
least so highly customized that it bore very little relationship to its
original form—but the Academy had insisted on providing
the new and improved spellware to all its faculty members. She'd
been more than mildly irritated at the time, since she probably
would never use more than twenty percent of the total applications
and the changeover had required her to become familiar with the
new package's idiosyncrasies (which were, as always, many). But
she'd long since learned not to waste energy fighting over the little
things, and it wasn't exactly as if the bundled spells providing all
the useless bells and whistles she'd never need were going to use
up a critical amount of her PC's memory.
Over the last four days, though,
she'd actually found herself deeply and profoundly grateful for the
white elephant with which the Academy's administration had
lumbered her. She'd thought she remembered something in the
manual about language and translation spellware. After their
arrival at Fort Rycharn, she'd hauled out the documentation and,
sure enough, she had a comprehensive translation spell package,
capable of both literal and figurative translations between any
Arcanan languages. More importantly, under the circumstances, it
also included what she thought of as a "Learn Ransaran in Your
Spare Time" spell platform for people who preferred to master
those other languages for themselves, rather than relying upon
magical translations. Of course, it couldn't simply magically stick
another language inside someone else's head, but it was well
designed to introduce that language to a new student in a carefully
structured format. The people who'd put it together had
assumed—not unreasonably—that their students
would speak at least one of Arcana's languages, which created
quite a few problems of its own, but it had still provided her with
an invaluable basis from which to begin teaching Shaylar and
Jathmar Andaran.
She hadn't even considered
teaching them Ransaran, for several reasons. First, even though it
sometimes irked her to admit it, Ransaran wasn't an easy language
to learn. There were those, especially in Mythal, who were wont to
refer to Ransaran as a "bastardized mongrelization," and she
couldn't really dispute the characterization. Ransaran was riddled
with irregular verb forms, homonyms, synonyms, irregular
spellings, nonstandard pronunciations, and appropriations from
every other major language. One of her friends at the Academy had
a T-shirt which proclaimed that "Ransaran doesn't borrow
from other languages. It follows other languages down dark
alleys, knocks them on the head, and goes through their pockets
for loose grammar." Over the centuries, Gadrial cheerfully
admitted, Ransaran had done precisely
that . . . which was why it was
unparalleled for concision, flexibility, and adaptiveness. Indeed,
she'd heard it argued that the notorious Ransaran flexibility and
innovativeness stemmed directly from the semantic and syntactic
responsiveness of the Ransaran language.
But it was a difficult
language to learn, even for another Arcanan.
Andaran, on the other hand, was
a very easy language to learn, although she'd always found
its tendency to create new words by compounding existing ones
rather cumbersome compared to the Ransaran practice of simply
coining new words . . . or stealing
someone else's and giving them purely Ransaran meanings. It had
virtually no irregular verbs and very few homonyms, and a
completely consistent phonetic spelling. If you could pronounce
an Andaran word, you could spell it correctly.
And it was the official language of the Arcanan Army.
Not surprisingly, she supposed, given that seventy to eighty
percent of the Arcanan military was also Andaran.
Gadrial had actually become
quite fond of Andaran during her years in Garth Showma with
Magister Halathyn. It might not be the most flexible language
imaginable it was far more flexible than the various Mythalan
dialects. Actually, Mythalan was probably the most precise of any
of the Arcanan language groups, which lent itself well to the exact
expression of nuance and meaning required by high-level arcan
research. But its very precision made it inflexible. It didn't lend
itself at all well to improvisation or adaptiveness, which Gadrial
had often thought had a lot to do with the preservation of Mythal's
reactionary, xenophobic society and its caste structure.
Andaran was much
less . . . frozen than that, and
she had to admit that it had a rolling majesty all its own, well
suited to oratory and poetry. In fact, it was quite beautiful, and
she'd become a devotee of ancient Andaran literature. There were
still plenty of things about Andara that she found the next best
thing to totally incomprehensible. The entire society was, after all,
a military aristocracy—or perhaps it would actually be
more accurate to say military autocracy—with
strict codes of honor and lines of responsibility, obligation, and
duty, while she was one of those deplorably individualistic
Ransarans. Most of the Andaran honor code continued to baffle
her, but the ancient heroic sagas often brought her to the edge of
feeling as if she ought to understand Andara.
In this instance, however, the
fact that it was the Union of Arcana's official military language
carried more weight than any other single factor. Eventually, as
she was certain Shaylar and Jathmar were well aware, the military
was going to insist on talking to them.
Despite the unanticipated
advantage the language spellware provided, Gadrial had expected
the teaching process to be clumsy and time-consuming, at least at
first. Shaylar, however, had an almost uncanny gift for languages.
Her accent was odd, lending the sonorous Arcanan words and
phrases a musical overtone that was as pleasant to the ear as it was
unusual, but her ability to pick up the language was astounding.
She was clearly much better at it than Jathmar, and although it was
still going to be some time before she started building complex
sentences and using compound verb forms, her basic ability to
communicate was growing by leaps and bounds.
In fact, Gadrial had come to the
conclusion that there was more than a mere natural ear for
language involved in the process. It had become abundantly clear
to her that Magister Halathyn had been correct in his initial
assessment that Shaylar and Jathmar's people had never even heard
of anything remotely like magic. And yet there was something
about Shaylar . . .
Gadrial hadn't forgotten that
bizarre moment on Windclaw's back, when she'd understood
beyond any possibility of doubt that Shaylar was begging her to
get the dragon "out of her head." When Gadrial added that to the
tiny woman's obvious and exquisite sensitivity to the moods and
emotions of those about her, plus Shaylar's breathtaking language
skills, the only explanation she could come up with was that
Shaylar truly did have some strange talent—almost the
equivalent of a Gift, perhaps. Gadrial wasn't prepared even to
speculate on how that "Gift" might work, and she'd kept her
suspicions about it to herself, but she'd become more and more
firmly convinced that whatever it was, it existed.
And she was taking advantage of
it for more than one purpose. Not only was she teaching Shaylar
and Jathmar Andaran, but she was simultaneously building up a
vocabulary of their language, as well. They understood
exactly what she was doing, and they clearly weren't exactly
delighted by the thought, but they equally obviously
understood—and accepted—that it was inevitable.
Somewhat to her own surprise,
Gadrial had found the language lessons a soothing distraction
while she and Jasak awaited Chief Sword Threbuch's return. What
didn't surprise her a bit was that she needed that
distraction, and not just because of Threbuch. She still couldn't
stop fretting about Magister Halathyn and his obstinate refusal to
show enough common sense to accept that he had no business at
all that close to the swamp portal under the present circumstances.
She'd told herself repeatedly that she was probably being too
alarmist, but she'd also recognized the self-convincing tone of her
own mental voice whenever she did.
"All right," she told her students,
shaking herself free of her gloomy thoughts and bringing up the
image of a slider chain and indicating the third car in it. "This is
called a 'slider car,' and it's—"
She broke off as someone tapped
on the frame of her open door. She turned towards the sound, and
her eyebrows rose as she realized it was Jasak Olderhan who had
knocked. Then she stiffened as his appearance registered. He was
standing in the doorway like a man awaiting an arbalest bolt, and
his face was bone-white, his shoulders rigid.
"Magister Kelbryan," he said in a
desperately formal voice, "Five Hundred Klian begs a few minutes
of your time."
"What's wrong?" She came to
her feet, nearly dizzy with fear, her eyes on his face as his body
language and expression sent spikes of apprehension hammering
through her, but he shook his head.
"Not here," he said, and that was
when she noticed the other men with him. The Gifted healer who'd
healed Shaylar stood behind him, and behind him was an
armed guard.
"What is it?" she
repeated, and heard her own voice go thin, almost shrill. Jasak
obviously heard it, too. She saw it in his face and eyes, and he
swallowed.
"News from the portal," he said
hoarsely. "Please, come with me," he added, making it a plea a
rather than a command. "These gentlemen will stay with Jathmar
and Shaylar."
She realized she was wiping
damp palms against her trousers. She looked at him for a moment
longer, then turned to Shaylar, who was proving the faster of the
two at absorbing her language lessons.
"I go, Shaylar," Gadrial said,
speaking carefully and slowly. "With Jasak. I'll be back soon.
Understand?"
The other woman nodded, and
her eyes were dark with concern.
"Gadrial?" She held out one
hand, touched Gadrial's arm gently in that concerned, almost
tender way that seemed habitual with her. "Is
there . . . trouble?" she asked. She
clearly had to search for a moment to come up with the second
word, and Gadrial gave a helpless shrug.
"I don't know," she admitted.
Shaylar bit her lower lip, then nodded. Jathmar was staring at the
armed guard, eyes hooded and lips thin, and Gadrial turned to the
healer . . . and the guard.
"If you don't mind, please leave
the door open. It distresses them less, to leave the door open."
Something moved in the guard's
eyes—something dark and dangerous, almost lethal. What
in Rahil's name had happened at the portal? She felt a chill chase
its way down her back as she asked herself the
question . . . and remembered who
had stayed behind.
"Please," she added, catching and
holding the guard's eye. "They're civilians." She stressed
the word deliberately. "Frightened, bewildered civilians whose
lives we—" she indicated herself and Jasak "—
smashed to pieces. Whatever's happened, none of this was their
fault."
The guard's jaw muscles
clenched, but he gave a stiff nod.
"As you wish, Magister. I'll leave
the door open." And I'll watch them like a gryphon looking for
a meal, his eyes and body language virtually shouted.
Gadrial held those hard,
dangerous eyes for a moment, then nodded and followed Jasak
into the corridor. A moment later, they were outside, where the
stiff sea breeze ruffled her hair and carried her the clean scent of
salt water while afternoon sunlight poured golden across the open
parade ground. Then she noticed the gates; they were closed. The
massive wooden locking beam had been dropped into its brackets,
and sharp-eyed sentries manned the parapet, weapons in hand,
while field-dragon gunners stood ready behind the relatively small
number of artillery pieces Five Hundred Klian had retained when
he sent the rest forward to Hundred Thalmayr.
What in hell had happened?
Jasak walked beside her in total
silence, nearly as ramrod-straight as the sword at his hip. She
studied his profile, trying to understand the complex emotions
seething just below the surface of the rigidly formal mask his face
and voice had become. There wasn't time to decipher it, though,
before they had crossed the parade ground and entered the fort's
central administrative block.
Sarr Klian's clerk practically
leapt from his chair, coming to attention with a sharply snapped
salute.
"Sir! The Five Hundred is
waiting for you, Sir!"
The one, quick look the clerk
shot at Gadrial left her insides quaking, and then Jasak rapped
sharply on the five hundred's door.
"Enter!" Klian's voice called
almost instantly, and Jasak opened the door, holding it for her as
he gestured her into the room ahead of him. She started forward,
then caught sight of Chief Sword Threbuch and the company's
hummer handler, waiting for them.
"Chief Sword!" she cried,
smiling and hurrying forward to grasp his hands in sudden delight.
"We were so worried about you! I'm so glad you made it back
safely."
The tall, powerfully built North
Shalomarian was visibly taken aback by her greeting. His normally
immaculate uniform was filthy, she realized, and his face was
heavily stubbled. It was also gaunter and thinner than she
remembered, and much older looking. The obvious signs of
weariness and privation sent a pang of sympathy through her, but
then his expression truly registered. He wore that same desperately
formal mask which had transformed Jasak's features into marble.
That was bad enough, but something flickered behind it as he
looked back at her. Something that turned Gadrial's joy at seeing
him into abruptly renewed fear.
"What's wrong?" Her voice was
sharp, urgent. "Something dreadful's happened, hasn't it?"
Pain flared deep in Threbuch's
eyes. His jaw tightened, but he didn't speak. He just turned back
toward the five hundred and waited for Fort Rycharn's
commandant to answer her terrified question.
"Magister Kelbryan," Klian said
in a heavy, almost exhausted voice. "Please sit down. Please," he
repeated.
He's afraid I'm going to collapse when he finally tells me
what's going on, she realized with a pang of icy dread.
"It's Magister Halathyn, isn't it?"
she whispered as she sank into the chair opposite the five
hundred's desk. "Something's happened to Magister Halathyn."
The officer's eyes actually
flinched. Then he drew a deep breath.
"Hundred Olderhan," he began,
"urged me to recall our forces from the swamp portal to minimize
the risk of another violent confrontation between our forces and
Shaylar and Jathmar's people." He cleared his throat. "I should
have listened, but I thought the risk was far less than it actually
was. I also hoped—assumed—that any powerful
military response on their part would take much longer to mount.
But the Chief Sword has confirmed Magister Halathyn vos
Dulainah's belief—and yours—that the portal our
prisoners came through was at least a class at seven. In fact, it's
almost certainly a class eight, judging from the Chief Sword's
reconnaissance . . . and there's an
enemy fort smack in the middle of it."
Gadrial's breath caught savagely.
"It appears to be understrength,
still under construction," Klian continued. "But the Chief Sword
watched the arrival of a relief column which had evidently moved
ahead by forced march. They had more of those weapons you and
the Hundred here, encountered. And other weapons, as well, with
tubes that were—"
He glanced at Threbuch.
"How large again, Chief?"
"They were about six feet long,
Sir," Threbuch replied. "Looked like they were probably four and a
half or five inches across, with fairly thin walls. They had four of
the damned things covering my aspect of portal, but according to
Javelin Shulthan here, there were at least two or three more
covering the other aspect. And they had something else, too. I
don't know what to call it. It was another tube, shorter and
not as big across, mounted on a tripod, almost like an infantry-
dragon. But it wasn't a dragon. It had
a . . . crank on the side, and a long
belt of those cylinder things we found at their camp went into it.
When they turned the crank—" He swallowed, his lips tight.
"It was like those shoulder weapons of theirs, Sir," he said, turning
to look directly at Jasak. "But instead of firing just one shot at a
time, it fired again and again, so fast together that it sounded like
one, long, single shot. It must've fired hundreds of times a
minute, Sir."
He stopped speaking abruptly,
and a line of sweat trickled down his brow.
He saw it used, Gadrial realized, going even colder.
"They attacked the portal." Her
voice was a thread. "Our portal—didn't they?"
"They did." Five Hundred Klian
gave her a jerky nod. Harsh, full of pain and anger. "After
asking—asking by name, mind—for
Shaylar."
Gadrial's breath hissed and she
paled as she instantly recognized what he was implying. If they'd
asked specifically for Shaylar, did that mean they somehow knew
she'd survived the initial battle? It must! But if they
did . . .
She turned to stare at Jasak.
"How? My God, how
could they have gotten a message out? Your men searched for any
sign of a runner, both at their camp and at the clearing."
"Yes," Jasak said through
clenched teeth. "We searched—damned thoroughly. No
messenger went out, unless he went up the river before he headed
for their portal. But however it happened, they got a message
through . . . somehow. And somehow
damned quick, too. According to the Chief, here, the head of their
initial scouting column passed him long before anyone could have
gotten back to their portal on foot to summon them even if they
did manage to get a runner out."
Gadrial touched her own cheek
with fingers which had gone icy chill.
"But that's—" She broke
off. Clearly, it wasn't impossible, since they'd obviously done it.
"They must have something like hummers," she said instead,
aware her intellect was grasping at straws, seeking any excuse, any
distraction, to avoid hearing the rest of the doom they were about
to pronounce.
"Something," Klian agreed. "And
we're hoping you can find out what. Shaylar, at least, seems to
trust you, to a certain degree. If you can find out how they warned
their people, you'll give us information that will save lives.
Possibly a lot of lives. We need every advantage we can possibly
get to deal with their people, Magister, because they've just
demonstrated a frankly devastating military superiority.
"Granted," he added in a harsh
voice, "we made mistakes which made it even worse. I did, for
example, when I failed to listen to Hundred Olderhan's warning,
and Hundred Thalmayr made several serious mistakes of his own
that proved costly. At least one of those was probably my fault,
too, because I'm the one who ordered him to position himself on
our side of portal. I intended that to apply only to his fortifications
and main position, not to his sentries. It's standard procedure to
picket both sides of any contested portal in a threat situation, and I
expected him to follow SOP in applying my orders. Apparently,
however, he interpreted my instructions to mean he was to do
otherwise."
Fort Rycharn's commander
paused again, his face tight and grim.
"I'm afraid, though, that however
much Thalmayr's mistakes—and mine—may have
contributed to the disaster, there was an even more terrifying
factor involved." He looked directly into her eyes, his own
appealing, almost desperate. "Somehow, these people can fire
artillery through a portal, Magister."
He stopped, and Gadrial stared at
him. No wonder he was staring at her that way, pleading with her
to explain how it might have happened. But she couldn't. No
spell could be projected through a portal interface! That had
been established two centuries ago. It was an absolute
fundamental of portal exploration, and—
Her yammering thoughts stopped
abruptly, as a truly terrifying possibility occurred to her. No, a
spell couldn't be projected through a
portal . . . but from Shaylar's reaction
to Magister Halathyn, these people didn't even know what sorcery
was! Their weapons obviously relied on totally non-arcane
principles; she and Jasak had already figured that much out. But if
that was true for their shoulder weapons, why shouldn't it be
equally true for their artillery weapons? And if their artillery fired
physical projectiles, like the ones their shoulder weapons fired,
then—
"I don't have any idea what
makes their weapons work, Five Hundred," she said frankly. "Not
yet, at least. But one thing I do know is that they don't rely on any
magical principles with which I'm familiar. Which means the
limitations we're familiar with probably don't apply, either."
She saw fresh, even worse fear in
his eyes, and shook her head quickly.
"Whatever they are, however
they work, I'm certain they have limitations of their own," she
said. "Any form of technology does. We simply have to figure out
what limitations apply to theirs. For the moment, though, I think
we're going to have to assume that instead of projecting a
spell the way our weapons do, they launch a physical projectile
which actually carries the spellware, or whatever it is they
use. If that's the case, then they can fire them anywhere any
physical object could pass. Like through a portal interface."
Klian and Jasak looked at one
another, their faces tight, and then the five hundred looked back at
her.
"However they did it, Magister,
it was devastating. I'm sure Hundred Thalmayr never expected it,
any more than I would have, and it turns our entire portal defense
doctrine on its head. We're going to have to come up with some
answer, whether it's a way to stop them from doing it, or a way of
figuring out how to do the same thing ourselves."
Gadrial nodded, and a part of her
brain truly was even then reaching out, looking for some sort of
solution. But it was only a tiny part, for most of her mind refused
to let her hide any longer from what she most dreaded.
"How badly—" She had to
stop and clear her throat. "How badly did they hit us?"
For a moment, no one spoke,
and she cringed away from their silence. Then Fort Rycharn's
commander inhaled deeply.
"The only men left from the
swamp portal detachment are in this fort, Magister." His voice was
harsh with emotion that not even years of Andaran military
discipline could disguise. "Of the men actually stationed at the
portal at the time of their attack, including the wounded we hadn't
yet evacuated, only Chief Sword Threbuch and Javelin Shulthan
made it back. All the rest are either dead or prisoners."
Gadrial felt her hands clench into
white-knuckled fists on the arms of her chair. Despite all they'd
already said, all her own efforts to prepare herself because of what
she'd seen in their eyes, the sheer scope of the disaster hit her like a
hammer. And behind that was the regret, the pity, burning
in Sarr Klian's eyes as he faced her squarely.
She couldn't speak, literally
couldn't force the words past her lips to ask the question that
would confirm what her heart and mind already knew. She tried,
but nothing happened, and then it was no longer necessary.
Chief Sword Otwal Threbuch
went to one knee in front of her chair. The man who was so
strong, so professional, in such command of his own emotions
that she'd privately concluded that he'd been chiseled from granite.
That man knelt in front of her chair and took her icy
fingers in his, and even through her pain she felt a distant sense of
surprise as his own fingers actually trembled.
"My lady," he said in a choked
voice, "I'm sorry. There wasn't anything I could do. Nothing at all.
I was trapped on the wrong side of the portal, couldn't even get to
our camp, let alone get to Magister Halathyn."
She started to cry, silently,
because she was unable to draw a deep enough breath to sob
aloud.
"How?" she whispered, the
sound thin as skeletal fingers scratching on glass, and his eyes
flinched.
"I wish to every god in heaven I
could tell you the enemy killed him, Magister. One of their
soldiers had pulled him out of his tent, was questioning him.
About Shaylar, I think, because Magister Halathyn was pointing
toward the coast, toward this fort. Then one of our field-dragon
crews—"
"No!" The word was
ripped from her. Jathmar's ghastly burns swam before her eyes,
and the picture her mind's eye painted of Halathyn, caught in a
dragon's fireball, was too horrifying to face.
"No, Magister!" Threbuch said
urgently. The chief sword reached out, caught her chin in one
hand, forced her to look into his eyes and see the truth in
their depths. "I know what you're thinking, but it wasn't a fireball!
The gods were at least that merciful. He didn't suffer, I
swear that, My Lady! The lightning caught them both, killed them
instantly—"
The sobs which had been frozen
inside her broke loose. She sensed people moving, heard their
voices, but couldn't make sense of the words. Threbuch's hands let
go of hers, then someone else crouched in front of her, tried to
hold and comfort her. But she jerked back in her chair, wanting to
hate these men for not forcing Halathyn to leave the
swamp portal with her.
"Gadrial, please." Jasak's voice
reached her at last, hoarse and filled with pain. "Let me at least
help you."
She opened her eyes, staring at
him through the blur of her tears, and even from the depths of her
own dreadful pain she saw the anguish in his ravaged face. And as
she saw it, she realized that Sir Jasak Olderhan had just lost nearly
every man of his command. Men he'd cared about, felt responsible
for, had grown to know—even love—in that
mysterious male way of soldiers: formal and distant, at times, yet
as close as brothers. But he was also Jasak Olderhan, with
all that name implied, captive to all those Andaran honor concepts
she couldn't understand. Unlike her, he couldn't weep for his loss,
for his dead. Shame stung her cheeks, punching through the wild
rush of grief, and she shook her head.
"I'm sorry," she whispered. "You
cared about him, too. About all of
them. . . . "
He merely nodded. The
movement was jerky and stiff, but that was because there were
witnesses, both men he had commanded and the man who
commanded him.
"I'm sorry," she said again,
louder, looking this time at Otwal Threbuch. "You must think I'll
hate you," she continued, trying desperately to steady her voice.
"I'm trying not to."
His eyes flinched once more, and
she bit her lip.
"I'm trying not to blame any of
you. Trying not to blame myself. He was so stubborn
—"
She broke off, gulping hard to
maintain control, and looked Threbuch squarely in the eye.
"You were on their side
of the portal, Chief Sword. I know that, and I've seen what
their weapons can do. You couldn't possibly have reached him."
Her voice was hoarse, cracking, but she forced it onward.
"Nobody could have, I know that. Not through that kind of
fighting. It's just such a terrible—"
She did break down again, then,
but this time she let Jasak put an arm around her shoulders. There
was great comfort in leaning against the strength of his broad
shoulder, in the warmth soaking into her, helping her rigid
muscles relax. She was mortified, at one level, to have broken
down so completely and deeply, having wept in front of these men
like any other helpless female. But losing Magister Halathyn for
any reason, let alone this
way . . .
"Would you like to go back to
your quarters?" Jasak asked gently.
She nodded, and he helped her
stand up, steadied her, let her lean on his forearm. She tried to say
something to Five Hundred Klian, but her throat was locked. She
turned a helpless look on Otwal Threbuch, but her throat remained
frozen, so she reached out one hand, instead, and gripped his
fingers in silence. Then Jasak was guiding her across the room. He
opened the door for her, slipped an arm around her shoulders
when they stepped outside, and steadied her carefully as her knees
went rubbery on the low wooden steps down to the parade ground.
They were almost to her quarters
when she remembered and went stiff and stumbled to a halt.
"What is it?" Jasak asked
urgently.
"Shaylar. And Jathmar. They're in
my room."
She didn't think she could face
them yet. They hadn't done anything themselves to kill
Halathyn—or the others—but her mentor, the man
who'd been her second father, was dead because soldiers from
their universe had come looking for them. Gadrial
couldn't—just couldn't—face them yet. Not while
the shock was so raw.
Jasak swore under his breath,
then changed direction and led her to his own quarters, in the
building reserved for officers, not civilian technicians. His room
was neat, tidy, and very nearly empty. The gear he'd brought back
from the field was stored in orderly fashion, and his personal
crystal sat on his desk, glowing lines of text visible where he'd
obviously been interrupted in the middle of something when Chief
Sword Threbuch had arrived with the news.
He guided her to the bed, rather
than the chair.
"Lie down and rest for a while,"
he murmured, easing her down.
The bed, like all military bunks
in frontier forts, was a simple cotton bag stuffed with whatever
the regional commissary had been stocked with: feathers, cotton
wadding, even hay. This one, like her own, had feathers inside, soft
and comforting as she curled up on her side atop the neatly
tucked-in blanket. He opened the window, letting in a cooling
breeze, then looked back down at her.
"Just stay here for a while,
Gadrial. I'll come back for you later, all right?"
His kindness in not mentioning
the names of the people he was about to remove from her room
left her blinking on salty water once more. She heard his feet cross
the bare plank floor, then the door clicked softly shut behind him
and Gadrial lay still, listening to the wind rustle through the room,
the distant sound of men's voices, the occasional cry of seabirds
high above the fort, and remembered.
She remembered a thousand
little details. Her first day at the Mythal Falls Academy, an
awestruck young girl from the windy empty plains of North
Ransar, still short of her fourteenth birthday. How she'd gaped at
the ancient stone buildings, stared in amazement at the thunderous
roar of Mythal Falls, one of the two largest waterfalls in any
universe, plunging into its deep chasm. The very air, and the
ground under her feet, had been so pregnant with latent magic that
her skin had tingled and her bones had buzzed, and yet even that
had been almost secondary beside an even greater sense of wonder.
She—Gadrial
Kelbryan—had scored so highly on the standard placement
tests that Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah himself had offered her
a place at the Academy.
It wasn't possible. She hadn't
even known her Ransaran teachers had sent her exam results to the
Academy, hadn't guessed how truly outstanding those scores had
been. Not until the message crystal had arrived with Halathyn's
personal invitation recorded in it. And then, impossibility piled on
top of impossibility, he'd personally met her that first day, taken
the unknown, timid teenaged girl from Ransar—the only
non-Mythalan student in the renowned academy's entire student
body, and one of the three youngest students ever admitted to
it—under his wing. And he'd taken her out to the Falls
themselves, shown them to her, and spoken quietly about the
reason her body had buzzed so strangely there.
"Magic," he'd said in that almost
childlike way of his, filled with wonder at the unending delights
the universes—all of them—had to offer. "Magic
gathers in places like these." He'd waved a dark-skinned, elegant
hand at the roaring cataract below their feet. "Or, rather, magic
bursts free at such places. There are other locations where the
forces we call 'magic' well up in great concentrations: all great
waterfalls, certain mountains, some deep caverns, places where
lines of force cross. But this place, where the Mythal River
plunges into this great chasm, where the entire continent is slowly
pulling apart along the Rift—this is the most potent
place in all Arcana."
Gadrial had stared at the tall,
lean, imposing man she was actually going to be permitted to
study with, if only she could overcome her own awe of him, and
blinked.
"Mythal is pulling apart?" she'd
asked. She'd felt incredibly stupid the instant the words were out
of her mouth, but he'd only chuckled gently.
"Oh, yes. That's not common
knowledge, mind you. Most people would be terrified to learn that
the ground under their feet is actually moving. It's incredibly slow,
of course—something on the order of a fraction of an inch
a year. But it's definitely moving. Have you never wondered why
the great continents, particularly Mythal and Hilmar, look like
pieces in a child's puzzle? Pieces which obviously ought to fit
together?"
"Yes, sir." She'd nodded. "I had
noticed it."
"Of course you had. You're
bright, not just Gifted, or you wouldn't be here." He'd waved at the
ancient stone buildings. "But it never occurred to you that those
continents might look like that because they'd once been one solid
piece of land?"
This time she'd simply shaken
her head, and he'd smiled.
"Well, that's hardly surprising,
either. Generally speaking, logic doesn't suggest that the ground
under you is actually moving across the face of the planet, does it?
But it is. We've confirmed it here." He'd cleared his throat. "Ahem.
That is to say, my research unit confirmed it."
Gadrial had found herself
grinning at his tone and his expression. Then she'd clamped both
hands over her mouth, horrified at her slip in manners, but he'd
just chuckled.
"Before your course of study is
complete," he'd promised, "I'll teach you to sense it yourself."
And he had. He'd opened up her
world to such wonders that she'd felt giddy most of the time,
hungry in her very soul for new knowledge, new understanding of
the world around her and the forces that only she and others with
Gifts could sense and touch and use to accomplish the things that
made Arcana's civilization possible.
Over the next three years, he'd
given her the wondrous gift of teaching her how to really use
her Gift. And then he'd stood like a fortress at her side when
the other magisters—aided and abetted by her fellow
students—had torn that precious gift of education from her
shocked hands. Had expelled her on grounds so flimsy a sharp
glance would have torn them to shreds. On the day when she'd
stood wounded and broken, like a child whose entire universe had
just been willfully, cruelly shattered.
On the day when Halathyn vos
Dulainah had laid into his most senior, most renowned colleagues
with barracks-room language in a white-hot furnace of fury which
had shocked them as deeply as it had shocked her.
"—and shove your
precious godsdamned, all-holy Academy—and your
fucking, jewel-encrusted pedigrees—up your
sanctimonious, lying, racist, hemorrhoid-ridden asses sideways!"
he'd finished his savage tirade at length, and his personal shields
had crackled and hissed about him like thinly-leashed lightning.
Sparks had quite literally danced above his head, and the
Academy's chancellor and senior department heads—
indeed, the entire Faculty Senate—had sat in stunned
disbelief, staring at him in shock.
"We're leaving, Journeywoman
Kelbryan," he'd said to her then, turning to face her squarely in the
ringing, crackling silence singing tautly in his incandescent attack's
wake.
"We?" she'd asked dully, her
throat clogged with unshed tears. "I don't understand, Magister."
For just an instant, he'd glared at
her, as if furious with her for her incomprehension. But
then the anger seething in his brown eyes had gentled, and he'd
taken both her hands in his.
"My dear child," he'd said,
ignoring the Academy's still stupefied leadership, "the day this
Academy expels the most brilliant theoretical magic adept it has
ever been my privilege to train for 'insufficient academic progress'
and 'attempts to violate the honor code by cheating' is the last day I
will ever teach here."
Someone else had made a sound,
then. The beginning of protest, she'd thought, but Magister
Halathyn had simply turned his head. The fury in his eyes had
roared up afresh, and the Chancellor had shrunk back in his chair,
silent before its heat.
"I resign from his
faculty—immediately," he'd said.
"But you can't!" she'd
cried, aghast. "You can't throw away your career over me!
I'm just one more journeywoman, Magister, and
you're . . . you're—"
He'd laid a gentle fingertip
across her lips, ignoring the men and women who had been his
colleagues and peers for so many years.
"You are anything but 'just one
more journeywoman,'" he'd told her, "and
this . . . this farce is only the
final straw. I should have done this years ago, for many reasons.
You're not to blame, except in as much as what these
sanctimonious, closed-minded, willfully ignorant, arrogant,
bigoted, power-worshiping, stupid prigs have just done to
you has finally gotten me to do what I ought to have done
so long ago. If they choose to wallow in the muck of their
precious supposed shakira superiority to all around them,
then so be it. I have better things to do than squat here
clutching handfuls of my own shit and calling it diamonds!
Besides," his sudden, delighted grin had shocked her speechless,
"I've been offered a new position."
One of the other department
heads had straightened in his chair at that, leaning forward with an
expression of mingled suspicion, chagrin, shock, and anger.
Magister Halathyn had caught the movement from the corner of
his eye, and he'd turned to face the other man and his grin's delight
had acquired a scalpel's edge.
"As a matter of fact, my dear,"
he'd continued, speaking to her but watching the other magisters'
faces like a duelist administering the coup de grace, "I've
been offered the chance of a lifetime. I'm going to set up a new
academy of theoretical magic on New Arcana, under the auspices
of the military high command. And you, Journeywoman Kelbryan,
have just become its first student."
The protest had begun then. The
shouts of outrage, the curses—the threats. But Magister
Halathyn had ignored them all, and so had Gadrial, as she'd stared
up into his eyes. Eyes so kind and so alive to the wonders of life,
so passionate to see justice done. She'd met those eyes and burst
into fresh tears, but not of despair. Not this time. Not ever again.
Until now, almost twenty years
and God along knew how many universes away from that moment.
Halathyn was gone forever.
Stupidly. Cruelly. For nothing. A reckless, crazy shot by a
dragon gunner too blinded by fear and the need to hurt the other
side to notice that the greatest magister Arcana had ever produced
was in his line of fire. Or—even worse, and just as
likely—by a gunner who hadn't cared as long as his
weapon's blast took down one of the men killing his company, as
well.
Gadrial Kelbryan turned her face
into Sir Jasak Olderhan's pillow and cried like a lost child.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
They left the fort at dawn.
Shaylar knew something terrible
had happened, but no one would tell them what. No one even
tried. Jasak had escorted her and Jathmar from Gadrial's quarters
to their own the afternoon before, but he'd barely spoken, and
Shaylar hadn't been able to touch him, so she had no idea what had
happened. Whatever it had been, it had obviously been bad,
because they'd spent the night locked in their quarters, with one
armed guard at the door, another at the window, and for all they
could tell, another on the roof.
Now they crossed the open
parade ground in total silence and found Gadrial waiting for them
at the fortress' barred water gate. Her haggard appearance shocked
Shaylar. The circles under her eyes were so dark they looked
bruised, her eyes themselves were swollen and red from prolonged
weeping, and an exhausted, defeated look clung to her. It was one
Shaylar recognized from her own recent, bitter experience.
"Who—" she started to
ask, then realized she didn't know the word for "died." Not that it
really mattered. Gadrial didn't answer her partial question, didn't
even look at her. In fact, nobody was looking at them—not
directly. People's glances sort of sidled past them, without ever
coming to rest on them, and she and Jathmar exchanged
baffled, worried looks.
The fort was built so that the
wharf extending out into the harbor was a virtual extension of its
walls. The only way onto or off of the long, narrow dock was
through the fort itself, and other people were waiting at the water
gate, as well. One of them was a tall man, with iron-gray hair. He
stood ramrod straight, staring at absolutely nothing, and Shaylar
vaguely remembered him from that first ghastly day, after the
battle at the clearing of toppled timber. She hadn't seen him since,
though, and that made her frown.
If he'd been with Jasak Olderhan
the day Jasak's men had slaughtered her crew, where had he been
in the meantime?
The likeliest answer terrified her,
because he had the tough, no-nonsense look of a professional
soldier. A good one. The sort of experienced noncom a good
officer might detach for some important independent
duty . . . like a reconnaissance
mission. Had he been to their portal? Shaylar knew
nothing about Jasak's and Gadrial's people, nothing about the
extent of their knowledge of this region. If they'd already known
about the portal cluster, then the logical thing for Jasak to have
done would have been to send someone to check the ones they
already knew about the moment his men stumbled across Shaylar's
crew, just to see if anything and changed. And if he had, that grey-
haired man would have found plenty.
Like Company-Captain Halifu's
fort. And if Company-Captain Halifu had sent someone to look
for them . . .
She glanced at Jathmar, who'd
picked up some of what she was thinking, or more precisely,
feeling, through the marriage bond.
"I think they know about our
entry portal," she said in a low voice.
"You may be right. Something
big's happened, at any rate. If I had to guess, I'd say they've tangled
with our military out there. And I don't think they'd
enjoyed the experience."
"Then Company-Captain Halifu
did send someone to look for us."
"Or to find out if anyone had
survived what you transmitted." Jathmar nodded grimly. "You said
they left most of their lightly wounded to walk the whole way
back to their swamp base camp when they flew us out. That would
have left a trail a child could follow, leading straight back to
their portal."
Shaylar nodded, but fresh worry
tightened her mouth. She had no doubt that Darcel Kinlafia would
have accompanied any rescue force Halifu might have sent out.
And if the other Voice had managed to make it to this side of the
swamp portal, he would undoubtedly have done his best to contact
her. But he hadn't succeeded, and neither had she managed to
contact him, despite making the attempt again and again,
especially at their normally scheduled contact times, since they'd
Healed her head injury. Not that she'd ever had much hope that
she'd be able to. She still didn't know exactly how fast a dragon
could fly, but she was virtually positive that the long dragon flight
from the swamp portal to their present location had taken her well
outside her own contact range from the portal, and hers was much
longer than his.
Without knowing about these
people's flying creatures, and given the way the swampy terrain
would hamper any sort of ground-based movement, Darcel
wouldn't have any reason to believe that she could have been
transported out of his range from the portal in no more than a
week. Which meant that when he'd tried to contact her and gotten
only silence—and hadn't heard anything from her,
either—he'd undoubtedly assumed that it confirmed his
worst fears.
But there was nothing she could
do about that, and so she did her best to put the thought behind
her. Instead, she considered what Jathmar had said from another
perspective.
"Gadrial's in a state of shock,"
she said very quietly into Jathmar's ear. "She's lost
someone—someone precious to her."
Jathmar glanced at her sharply,
then his nostrils flared.
"That man at the camp," he said
softly. "The one who looked Ricathian."
"The one with the words in the
crystal, and the fire rose." Shaylar nodded. "Gadrial was close to
him, emotionally. I could see it in her eyes, hear it in her voice.
They'd known each other long enough for that easy bantering
between good friends, and then she had that fight with him just
before they left. Her and Jasak both, now that I think about it. You
don't suppose . . . ?"
"I don't know," Jathmar said, still
softly. "But I'd hate to think anything happened to that fellow."
Shaylar blinked, unable to
conceal her surprise. The marriage bond made it impossible for
her to be unaware of Jathmar's feelings where all of their
captors were concerned. But that same bond made it impossible
for him to misunderstand her surprise, and he shrugged.
"It's obvious he wasn't a soldier,
any more than she is." He nodded slightly in Gadrial's direction.
"Neither of them wore uniforms. And, well, I don't know how to
say it. There was something about him . . ."
He shook his head, unable to find exactly the right words. "I hope
Grafin blew the rest of them into an Arpathian hell, but I'd be sorry
to learn that that particular man had been killed. What was his
name?" He frowned. "It started with an 'H,' didn't it?"
Shaylar glanced at the others,
then leaned even closer to her husband.
"Halathyn," she said in a half-
whisper, and he nodded.
"Yes. That was it." A regretful
sigh escaped him. "I suppose they'll tell us, eventually. Or maybe
we can ask. But not yet. I really don't think now's a good time at
all."
Shaylar glanced from Gadrial's
tear-swollen eyes to Jasak's thin-lipped, pale silence, and then at
the big, grey-haired soldier's clenched jaw and strangely disturbed
eyes.
"Right," she agreed firmly. "We
ask later. Much later."
Then the massive wooden bar at
the gate rattled and clanked as the sentries unfastened it and it
creaked ponderously open. They didn't open it all the way—
just far enough to let Jasak, Gadrial, and the soldier whose name
she didn't know pass through the opening more or less abreast. She
and Jathmar went next, followed by several other soldiers,
including one in chains.
The sight of one of Jasak's
soldiers in manacles and leg irons startled her into staring. She
hadn't noticed him while standing at the gate, but she recognized
him. Not by name, of course—she had no idea who he was,
or what his duty might have been—but she'd seen him that
first ghastly day, as well. He was dark-skinned, like Halathyn, and
to Shaylar's eyes he looked like a Ricathian. But only physically.
All resemblance to any Ricathian Shaylar had ever known ended
with the color of his skin and the look of his hair.
Despite his chains, he walked
with his spine ramrod straight, and he wore an expression of
unmistakable aristocratic disdain. His lip curled in the way she'd
seen occasional aristocrats sneer back home, particularly those
from Othmaliz, who felt they were superior to pretty much
everyone else on Sharona simply because their ancestors had
retained possession of Tajvana. She'd had to deal with one or two
of that sort, and she'd never enjoyed the experience, although not
even the most haughty Othmalizi noble had wanted to cross
swords with a fully accredited Voice of her stature.
But there was more than simple
arrogance to this man. The look the chained prisoner sent
Jasak Olderhan as Gadrial and the officer stepped past him
contained such malice, such lethal hatred, that Shaylar's breath
caught for just a moment. Then another soldier spoke sharply to
him, and he stalked through the gate in turn, as though he were
some great lord making his way through a gaggle of filthy beggars
despite the jingle of his chains.
"I wonder who he thinks
he is?" Jathmar murmured.
"Good question," Shaylar agreed.
"I'm not sure I like the idea of
sailing on the same ship he does," her husband growled under his
breath, gripping her hand tightly.
Since they didn't have most
choice in the matter, Shaylar found herself hoping that these
people had good locks on their doors. Then she shivered at the
thought, since she and Jathmar would be held behind locked
doors, as well. Gods' mercy, surely they wouldn't put her and
Jathmar in the same cell as that fellow? She shivered
again, wondering what he'd done.
The roughly built wharf looked
almost rickety, but it was reassuringly solid underfoot, and
Shaylar turned her attention to the ship tied up alongside it. Partly,
she admitted, she was interested in anything which might distract
her from the thought of being confined in the other prisoner's
company. But the ship itself was more than enough to claim her
attention in its own right, for it was, without reservation, the
oddest vessel Shaylar had ever seen, and Jathmar was staring at it
in just as much perplexity as she was.
"What on earth makes it go?
" he wondered aloud.
Shaylar could only shake her
head in bafflement. It wasn't a huge ship, although it was clearly
large enough to tackle the open ocean. It was actually a bit bigger
than she'd thought it was on the day of their arrival. Of course, she
hadn't been in very good shape for making detailed observations at
the time, not before their healers had gone to work on her.
This ship was somewhat smaller
than the standard Voyager-class ships the Trans-Temporal
Express had developed to cross the water gaps in its inter-
universal transportation system, but not by very much of. The
Voyagers were about four hundred feet long and had a beam
of about fifty-five feet, and Shaylar, like everyone who'd ever
served in a portal survey crew, was thoroughly familiar with them.
They were certainly serviceable craft, if not especially speedy, but
they'd been designed primarily as cargo vessels, and their
passenger accommodations left much to be desired. On the other
hand, in the Voyager, the TTE had produced a design
which lent itself to modular construction and mass production.
The freighters were literally shipped across intervening stretches
of dry land in pieces, carried on huge, special freight cars, and
assembled once they reached their destinations.
But if this ship was of roughly
the same dimensions, that was about all it had in common with the
TTE design.
First, it appeared to be built of
wood. That wasn't really all that surprising, in a lot of ways.
Wooden hulls were more common than steel hulls for locally
produced Sharonian shipping, after all. The TTE's modular designs
were one thing, but for most people, it was far simpler to import a
gang of shipwrights and the men needed to fell timber to build
ships than it was to import enough infrastructure to build steel-
hulled vessels in barely explored universes.
But the fact that this one was
built of wood did seem odd considering the second obvious
difference between it and the Sharonian ships with which she was
familiar, because it was a far sleeker design. Whereas a
Voyager had a straight, almost vertical stem, this ship's bow
was sharply raked, and the hull flared gracefully as it approached
deck level. Shaylar was no sailor, but she'd had the
opportunity—or misfortune, depending upon one's
viewpoint—to experience heavy weather aboard more than
one of the TTE ships, and she suspected that this vessel would
have provided much more comfortable transport under the same
circumstances. It looked far
more . . . modern, for want of a better
word, which made its wooden construction one more of the
endless anachronisms she'd observed since her capture.
The third thing she noticed was
the size of the superstructure, and the fourth was the absence of
anything remotely resembling a Sharonian ship's smokestacks. It
had only a single mast, which carried no sails, so it had to have
some sort of propulsive system, but she couldn't imagine
what it might be.
But the fifth thing she
noticed was a row of three-foot-wide ports which ran down the
entire length of the superstructure right at deck level. At the
moment, those ports were closed by hatches, but she didn't think
they were access ways for ventilation or trash chutes. There were
eight of them on the side of the ship closest to the wharf, and she
assumed there was a matching row on the ship's outboard side.
She and Jathmar followed Jasak
and Gadrial down the wharf towards the waiting ship, and she
found herself wondering uneasily how far from Jasak's home
universe they were . . . and what it
might say about these people if this universe wasn't close
to their home base. This vessel was obviously a warship, or at
least armed for self protection, and no TTE design she'd ever seen
had carried actrual weapons. It was also far too large for
any sort of coastal patrol craft. No, this was a ship designed for
blue-water combat—at need, at least—which argued
that it had been constructed by a fiercely militaristic society. Who
else would send actual warships to a raw frontier?
That thought carried her clear to
the boarding gangway, which proved to be much flimsier than
she'd expected. Jasak said something to Gadrial, speaking much
too quickly for Shaylar's very limited Andaran to follow. The
other woman looked at him, managed a wan smile, and shook her
head. Then she stepped onto the steeply inclined gangway, gripping
its rope rail firmly, and started up it to the deck towering above
them in the cool morning light. Jasak watched her for a moment,
then turned to Shaylar and surprised her by producing a wry smile,
despite the visible weight on his shoulders.
"Women go first," he said in
careful, slow Andaran, holding out his hand, and Shaylar actually
flushed, embarrassed that his courtesy had, as a surprise. Despite
all of the obvious care he'd taken to protect her and Jathmar, she'd
still allowed herself to expect a lack of consideration from him.
She hesitated for a moment,
looking at him. Part of it was surprise at the offered courtesy, but
there was more to it. She wanted—needed—to touch
him, to use her Talent to acquire any information she could. But at
the same time, she was almost afraid to. Despite his disciplined
exterior, there was too much pain behind his eyes, too much pain
waiting for her if she dared to sample it.
Gadrial had halted a few feet up
the gangway, looking back with those bruised, swollen eyes, and
Shaylar felt of fresh stab of confused shame. Despite Gadrial's
own obvious anguish, she was still capable of worrying about the
prisoners placed in her charge, capable of looking back because
she sensed Shaylar's hesitation, even if she didn't begin to
understand all the reasons for it.
That realization was enough to
galvanize Shaylar, and she opened her Talent wide and reached for
Jasak's waiting hand.
It was a mistake.
Shaylar knew that the instant she
touched Jasak. She bit down on a hiss of shock and stumbled
heavily, as if someone had just hit her in the back of the head with
a hammer. Jasak's self-control was so rigid that she'd seriously
misjudged the actual depth of his anguish, and she'd pushed her
Talent hard, prepared to strain for any detail she might have been
able to pick up.
What she got was death. Massive
amounts of violent death, coupled with a sense of desertion, a
tidal wave of helpless guilt. The fact that Jasak had been relieved
by the other officer, the one who'd wanted to hurt her and Jathmar,
had already been obvious to both of them, but that wasn't enough
to absolve Jasak of that terrible, crushing sense of guilt. Or,
perhaps, of responsibility. It didn't matter what she called it; what
mattered was the raw, bitter poison of its strength.
She felt herself falling—
falling physically, as she stumbled, and falling psychically, as she
toppled into the dreadful abyss of Jasak Olderhan's pain—
and she gasped as Jasak's powerful arms caught her before she
could tumble to the dock's splintery planking. It was all she could
do to keep from crying out as he lifted her, as if she were child,
and his genuine concern for her cut through the churning vortex of
his darker emotions.
Shaylar fought her way up and
out of the darkness, frantically shutting down her own
receptiveness, backing away from the contact she'd sought as a
means to gather information. It took her two or three heartbeats to
pull far enough back to regain her own sense of self, and even as
she did, she sensed Jasak's consternation and worry over her
reaction.
She managed to shake her head,
smile up at him with a mixture of apology for her "clumsiness"
and thanks for his quickness in catching her. And then Gadrial
reached out, as well.
The other woman's gesture was
oddly hesitant, almost halfhearted, unlike anything Shaylar had
seen from her before. It was almost as if she were fighting a war
with herself, making herself offer that token of assistance.
Warned by her experience with
Jasak, and again by Gadrial's uncharacteristic hesitation, Shaylar
braced herself for the contact shock before she reached out for the
offered hand. Instead of opening herself wide, she buttressed
herself, and even so, her nostrils flared and her face went white as
her fingers closed on Gadrial's.
Jasak's pain had been terrible
enough; Gadrial's was worse, and Halathyn's name burned so hotly
through her chaotic, grief-torn emotions that Shaylar actually
heard it. She'd never done that with a non-telepath before, and
she had to bite down hard on an impulse to fling both arms around
the other woman. Gadrial had done so much to comfort her, had
somehow kept Jathmar alive long enough to reach this fort. Now
her agony cried out to Shaylar, and the Sharonian woman felt a
desperate need to repay some of that comfort. Yet she couldn't,
not without risking the revelation of her Talent, and for now, that
must remain secret. And so she managed not to, managed to
simply take Gadrial's hand as the two of them made their way up
the steep, swaying gangway together.
They reached the ship's deck, and
Shaylar released Gadrial's hand. She stood beside the other,
grieving woman, looking back across the wharf at the land they
were leaving, and wrapped both arms around herself to hold in the
shivers while she tried to make sense of what she'd just sensed.
Halathyn was dead.
She was utterly certain of that
individual death, but there were others, too. So many others. That
was clear from Jasak's churning emotions, not to mention the way
she and Jathmar were being treated. Company-Captain Halifu
must have attacked their base camp at the swamp portal, and it was
obvious he'd blown it straight to hell when he did.
Which Shaylar found a terrifying
thought. She and Jathmar were helpless, prisoners of war in a
society that would undoubtedly see Sharonians as far more
warlike than they really were after this second violent contact.
She didn't believe Jasak would
retaliate against her and Jathmar, despite the fact that it was his
men who had just become the latest casualties. She couldn't
believe he would, not after the other things she'd already sensed
out of him. But Jasak Olderhan was only one officer, and a
relatively low ranking one, at that, unless she was seriously
mistaken. Shaylar had been around enough military units since
joining the field teams to develop a fairly good sense of the
military pecking order, and Jasak clearly wasn't at the top of his. In
fact, she suspected she was actually older than he was, given his
apparent rank and assuming that his military worked at all like the
PAAF and other Sharonian armies.
If events were escalating even
remotely as quickly as she feared they were, it was unlikely that an
officer of his junior rank would be able to protect them. Even if
he was inclined to make the effort after his own men had suffered
such brutal casualties.
The commandant of the
fort—which looked strangely small from here, silhouetted
against the endless miles of virgin swamp that stretched to the
horizon—was obviously of much higher rank than Jasak,
and considerably older, as well. He'd visited her and Jathmar in
their quarters in his fort only once, and he hadn't spoken to them at
all when he had. He'd simply looked at them for long, silent
moments—studying first Jathmar, then Shaylar. Whatever
he'd been looking for, it hadn't shown in his face. And whatever
conclusions he'd drawn would remain a mystery, because he'd
merely nodded to them once, then departed.
Shaylar would not—dared
not—assume that other officers would show equal
leniency. Especially not now. So she stood, holding in the shivers
until Jathmar joined her on the deck. He wrapped a protective arm
around her shoulders, and she turned toward him, wrapping both
her own arms around him and holding on tight while the rest of
the passengers passed them.
A half-dozen men who were
obviously members of the ship's crew sorted out the new arrivals
as they reached the deck. Like Jasak and the other soldiers, the
sailors were uniformed, although their uniforms—
composed of red jerseys for most of them, although one wore a
red tunic with gold braid, over white trousers—were quite
different from Jasak's. The one in the tunic was obviously a junior
officer or petty officer of some sort. He and Jasak exchanged
salutes, and the naval officer said something to one of his own
men, then nodded towards Shaylar and Jathmar. The sailor started
towards them, but Jasak said something, and the sailor stopped,
looking back at his own officer. Again, the conversation was too
quick for Shaylar's embryonic Andaran to follow, but it wasn't
hard to guess what was being said.
Once again, Jasak was
intervening on their behalf, asking the ship's officer to let them
remain on deck at least a little longer before they were sent below
to whatever quarters or confinement awaited them. After a
moment, the other officer nodded in agreement and turned his
attention back to more immediate duties.
The last few passengers trooped
up the gangway, and the officer gave an order to one of the sailors.
An instant later, the gangway began to rise. The sailors didn't haul
it up. They didn't use a winch or a crane to lift it. It simply rose
, detaching itself smoothly from both the side of the ship and
the wharf below, turning until it was parallel with the centerline of
the ship, and then rising still higher. It lifted until it was a good ten
feet higher than even Jasak's head, and then nestled itself neatly
into what were obviously waiting mounting brackets on the side
of the ship's superstructure, one deck level above them.
Shaylar stared at it in disbelief as
it drifted across above them, and she heard Jathmar's gasp of
surprise when its shadow fell over them.
"How in all the Uromathian hells
did they do that?" he demanded as a pair of sailors made
the gangway fast in its new position. Shaylar was as startled as he
was, but her memory flashed to that ghastly moment in the toppled
timber when they'd first lifted Jathmar's stretcher.
"It's more of that levitation of
theirs," she said wonderingly. "Remember your stretcher, or the
ones they used for their own wounded?"
"Those little glassy cubes you
were talking about?" Jathmar looked at her for a moment, then
twitched his shoulders in a half-shrug. "I suppose if you can
levitate stretchers, there's no reason you couldn't levitate
gangplanks, as well, at that," he admitted. Then he snorted with a
grimace. "Probably explains why they don't have any cargo
derricks on this ship of theirs, for that matter. Why bother with
cranes when you can just stick a little glass bead on your cargo
pallets and fly them to where you want them?"
He shook his head wonderingly,
then turned away as Jasak called his name quietly.
"Go to quarters now," Jasak said.
The quarters to which they were
led were a pleasant surprise . . . and a
far cry from the damp, dark, undoubtedly rat-infested cell Shaylar's
imagination had pictured.
The cabin to which she and
Jathmar were assigned lay one deck up in the superstructure,
above the ship's weapons ports, on the outboard side and directly
between Jasak's assigned quarters and Gadrial's. The older man
with the iron-gray hair, was given quarters on the other side of
Jasak's, and the man in chains disappeared somewhere
below—probably to the cell she and Jathmar weren't in
after all.
It was a small cabin, but that was
true of every shipboard cabin Shaylar had ever used. It might be
even a bit smaller than what they might have received aboard one
of TTE's Voyagers, but if she was right, and this was
a warship, that was probably inevitable. At any rate, she'd
always assumed accommodations would be more cramped aboard
a man-of-war than aboard a civilian-crewed vessel.
It was also heartlessly utilitarian,
but that didn't matter. It was clean, reasonably comfortable, with
white-painted bulkheads and neat built-in storage compartments
under its pair of bunks, and it had a porthole. It wasn't large
enough to wiggle through, even for Shaylar, but it allowed them a
view of the sea and—more important—it let in
daylight, which was even more welcome for its contrast with
the windowless cell she'd feared.
At night, they would even be
able to see the moon.
She held back a sigh as she
settled herself on the nearer bunk. It wasn't the softest bed she'd
ever sat on, but it was softer than a sleeping bag on the ground.
Then she looked up again at the sound of a cleared throat.
"Stay," Jasak said from the open
doorway. "I come soon."
Shaylar nodded, knowing what
came next. Then their door closed, but not before she'd caught a
glimpse of the armed guard who'd taken up his station outside. A
lock clicked, and Jathmar crossed his arms over his chest and
glared at the door.
"We're in a room on a ship that
will shortly be in the middle of the ocean," he growled. "That's a
remarkably solid looking door, and it's locked tight. And that
window isn't big enough for you to crawl through, let
alone me! Why the hells do they bother with a guard?"
Shaylar felt the worry, fear, and
frustration beating like a ragged headache under his sour mood.
She went to him, brushed her lips against his, circled his chest
with her arms, and rested her head against his heart.
"We must have hurt them badly,"
she murmured.
"I hope so!" he snarled.
"Shhh." She leaned far enough
back to gaze up into his wounded eyes. "What's done is done. We
have to live with the consequences. That means we'd better figure
out what we're going to say when they ask how we got a message
out. I'm learning their language, Jathmar, and even though it's
maddeningly slow without another telepath to help, it won't be
long before I know enough for them to ask that question—
and expect an answer."
Muscles bunched along his jaw,
but he didn't speak.
"Jathmar," she said gently, "you
have to let go of at least some of the hatred and put your energy
into figuring out ways to keep them guessing without making
them suspicious enough to treat us worse than they have so far."
She thought for a moment that
he would flare up at her, but he didn't. Instead, he bit back the
surge of anger beating through him.
"They have treated
us . . . decently," he muttered
grudgingly, reluctantly. "All things considered."
"Yes," she murmured, "they
have."
"But I can't stop hating, Shaylar.
They've smashed everything we had, everything we ever wanted.
Killed our friends, nearly killed us . . ."
He sucked down a deep breath,
fighting to bring himself under control, but it was hard. Hard.
"I don't even dare try to love
you," he whispered finally, miserably. "We don't even control the
lock on our own door, can't know when someone's going to open
it, drag us out of here! And what if you got pregnant?" He
shook his head, teeth gritted. "Before, it would've meant dropping
out of the survey crews, and that would have been bad enough.
But now, what would they do with—or to—our
child if they thought it would make us tell them things they want
to know?"
He squeezed his eyes shut,
tightened his grip on her, and buried his face in her hair. His
aching need for her burned hot as lava through the bond, shot
through with ripples and tremors of anger, fear, and despair, and
she had absolutely no answer for him. She could only hold him,
blinded by tears. They stood in the center of their comfortable
little prison, and just held on while the awareness of their total
helplessness and vulnerability burned through them.
Shaylar never knew exactly how
long they stood there. Without their confiscated watches, it was
difficult to gauge the passage of time, and so she didn't even try.
She simply leaned against Jathmar, her cheek nestled against his
chest and the strong steady beat of his heart, while she listened to
the dim sounds beyond the locked door and the even more distant
sounds drifting through the opened porthole.
Then the ship began to move,
and once again she was reminded of the yawning gap between any
previous experience and their present reality. There was no deep
rumble of machinery, no throbbing vibration from engines. There
wasn't even the flap of canvas, or the creak of masts and cordage.
In fact, there was nothing at all except steady movement as the
ship backed silently away from the wharf.
It halted once more, and she
looked out the porthole as it rotated smoothly in place, swinging
its bow away from the land. The motion swung the fort back into
the porthole's field of view, giving her a last glimpse of the land,
and tears stung Shaylar's eyes again. She gave Jathmar another
squeeze, then wiped her eyes impatiently and moved to the
window to look back at the vast sweep of marsh that ran along the
coastline.
The ship began to move again,
forward this time, still silently. Its speed built steadily, quickly,
and there was sound at last—the ripple and wash of water
and the creaking sound of wooden timbers flexing as they moved,
but still not so much as a whisper to betray whatever power sent it
slicing through the waves.
The fort where they had stayed
for such a short time grew smaller by the minute as the ship
accelerated quickly and smoothly. They were already moving
faster than any of Trans-Temporal Express' freighters. It was hard
for Shaylar to estimate, but they had to be moving at least as
quickly as any of the great high-speed passenger ships, maybe even
as fast as the new turbine-engined warships she'd heard about. Yet
still there was that eerie lack of vibration, that silence. No funnel
smoke, no noise, just this smooth, effortless sense of speed.
She pressed a hand to her lips,
staring back through the porthole. That vast marsh and that tiny
log fort looked inexpressibly lonely, kissed by the rising sun and
populated only by great clouds of water birds and a tiny handful of
people. Or perhaps it was only she who felt such unbearable
loneliness.
Then Jathmar's arms tightened
about her from behind.
"I'm here, love," he murmured.
"Whatever else, I'm here."
She pulled his arms more tightly
around herself and held onto them silently, her throat too
constricted to speak. At the moment it was hard—so very
hard—to remember that they'd come out here to see new
sights, new places. Things no other Sharonian had ever seen, or
even imagined. Tomorrow, perhaps, she would be able to
remember that, but not just yet.
For the moment, she could only
grieve . . . and hold tight to those
loving arms which were all she had left in any universe.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Balkar chan Tesh looked up as
someone tapped lightly on the small gong hanging from the peak
of his tent. He recognized the towering, youthful Marine officer
instantly, although they'd never met. The youngster looked
exhausted, as well he might after what had to have been an even
longer forced march than chan Tesh's own, but he was also the
spitting image of his father. Even if he hadn't been, the blue-gray
peregrine falcon on the far-from-regulation leather pad covering
the left shoulder of his uniform tunic would have been a powerful
clue. The bird was huge even for a peregrine—easily over
twenty inches long, with a wingspan which must have been well
over four feet—and it was neither hooded nor jessed, which
was . . . unusual, to say the very least.
Its powerful talons gripped the shoulder pad securely, but it was
obvious they were also delicately aware of—and
restraining—their own strength. Its dark eyes were bright
and alert, and they focused on the company-captain with unnerving
intensity.
It was, chan Tesh thought, quite
possibly the most magnificent predator he'd ever seen, and well it
should be, given the millennia-long breeding program which had
produced it.
"Yes, Platoon-Captain?" he said,
giving absolutely no indication that he'd recognized the
newcomer.
"Platoon-Captain chan Calirath,"
the Marine introduced himself. "Company-Captain Halifu told me
to report to you as soon as I arrived."
"I see." chan Tesh laid down his
pen and leaned back in his folding canvas chair. "In that case, I
suppose you'd better come in . . .
assuming you'll fit," he added with a small, wry smile.
"Thank you, Sir," the Marine said
politely, and chan Tesh gave a small mental nod of approval.
Platoon-Captain His Highness
Crown Prince Janaki chan Calirath, heir to the Winged Crown,
stood at least eight inches over six feet, with his dynasty's
powerful shoulders, but imposing size wasn't enough to explain
the sense of presence he projected. chan Tesh had been curious
about how the Crown Prince would introduce himself, and he was
pleased by the way Janaki had actually done it. Of course, in an
odd sort of way, that simple "Platoon-Captain chan Calirath" had
only emphasized that the young man introducing himself was
actually the future ruler of the oldest, most powerful empire in
human history.
Well, in our branch of humanity's history,
anyway, chan Tesh reminded himself.
"Wait for me, dear heart," Janaki
murmured to the falcon, and shooed her gently off his shoulder.
She launched with a soft cry, and chan Tesh watched her disappear
into the overhead foliage. The Crown Prince watched her go with
a smile, then maneuvered himself into the tent cautiously but
smoothly. It was apparent that he'd had plenty of experience
moving his substantial bulk in and out of the tents the PAAF
provided for field use. He seated himself rather gingerly in the
folding chair chan Tesh indicated, and the chair creaked alarmingly
under his weight. Fortunately, it held.
"I hope you won't take this
wrongly, Platoon-Captain," chan Tesh said, "but I could wish you
hadn't turned up for duty here at this precise moment."
"Sir—" Janaki began, but
chan Tesh's raised hand stopped him.
"Platoon-Captain," he said, "I'm
Ternathian. I know the tradition of your family, and I honor it. But
there's no point in our pretending you're just one more platoon-
captain. I don't wish to belabor the point, but you must be aware
that who you are—and, even more importantly, who you
someday will be—is going to play a part in the
thinking of any of your commanding officers."
"Yes, Sir, I know." Janaki didn't
quite sigh, but he came so close that chan Tesh was hard put not to
smile.
"And you wish it didn't," the
company-captain said, instead, as sympathetically as possible. "As
it happens, however, in this particular instance I think I'm in a
position to kill two birds with one stone. To be devastatingly
blunt, Your Highness," he used the imperial title deliberately, "any
sane CO would order you to the rear the instant he saw your face.
Especially when the situation is as riddled with uncertainties and
complete unknowns as this one is. In this case, though, the duty I
have in mind for you could have been tailormade for someone
with your experience."
"Sir?"
"We've got prisoners, Platoon-
Captain," chan Tesh said much more grimly. "Several of them
were pretty badly wounded in the fighting. Our Healers have done
what they can for them, of course, and they're all at least stabilized
now, but we need to get them transferred to the rear and better
medical facilities. Even if that weren't the case, we'd need to get
all of them—wounded and unwounded like—moved
to the rear for proper interrogation as quickly as possible. The
only officer we took alive appears to have been their
commander—he's one of the wounded I mentioned, and it
doesn't look like he'll ever walk again—but we've captured
several men who seem to have been senior noncoms. They're our
best, and only, source of information, and we need to get them
into the hands of someone who can at least start figuring out how
to talk to them. Not to mention the fact that we need to
move them further back as a security measure against escapes or
rescue attempts."
He paused, and Janaki nodded
very slightly.
"I can't spare very many men as
prisoner escort," chan Tesh continued. "I'm thinking that using
your platoon for the job would make the smallest hole by avoiding
pulling somebody out of my established units for the job. In
addition, you're not exactly a typical platoon-captain. You've
grown up in the Palace. I'm quite sure you have a better ear than
most junior officers for possibly significant political and military
details.
"What I'd like to do is to send at
least some of them all the way back to Sharona, and I'd prefer to
keep the same officer in command of the escort detail the entire
way. Some of these people appear badly shocked and demoralized
by what's happened to them; most of them, though, are obviously
prepared to resist divulging any important information. I suspect
that spending two or three months with them could help engender
a sense of familiarity which might get inside that defensive
mindset of theirs. It certainly couldn't hurt. And if that does
happen, I want the best attuned ears available to pick up anything
they might drop.
"And, to be frank, I'd like the
officer in command of the escort detail to have a certain
stature—official or unofficial—to help discourage
any of the intervening COs from poaching prisoners on the
grounds that they ought to be interrogated closer to the front. In
short, I think you'd make an excellent first filter for the
analysts . . . and that you may have
enough clout, despite your relatively junior rank, to actually get
them all the way back to those analysts."
"With all due respect, Sir,
mightn't there be some point to keeping them closer to the front,
where whatever we learn can be gotten to the sharp end quickly?"
"Of course there is," chan Tesh
agreed. "And I expect the bulk of the prisoners will be. At the
moment, I'm assuming Regiment-Captain Velvelig will hold the
majority of them—and probably all the more seriously
wounded—at Fort Raylthar. That's far enough towards the
rear to satisfy most security concerns, and big enough to have a
capable Healer Corps detachment. But it's going to be equally
important to get at least some of these people clear back to
Sharona where the government and the staff's intelligence experts
can gain a firsthand impression of them. Your job is going to be to
expedite their delivery to Tajvana."
"Yes, Sir."
"In addition," chan Tesh said
quietly, "there's the political situation back home to consider, as
well. I have no idea how that's going to sort itself out, but I do
know that some sort of unified military and political policy is
going to be necessary. I don't think the Authority can handle that
job as it's presently constituted, which means the politicians are
going to have to come up with some new mechanism. I can't
imagine that your family isn't going to be deeply involved in that
process, and having you there couldn't hurt. Especially if you've
just returned from the front, escorting the first prisoners we've
taken."
The Marine looked back at chan
Tesh without any expression at all for several seconds. The
company-captain simply sat there, waiting. He very much doubted
that anything he'd just said hadn't already occurred to the Crown
Prince. As far as chan Tesh knew, there weren't any stupid
Caliraths, and only an idiot could fail to recognize the sort of
political catfight this situation was going to make inevitable back
home. Nor could Janaki possibly be unaware of the role his
family—and he himself—was going to have to play
in that fight.
"Very well, Sir. I understand,"
the Crown Prince said, after a moment. He did not say that
he approved, chan Tesh observed, but the company-captain
was prepared to settle for that.
"In addition to all the rest of
those considerations," he said, "there's one other job I'd like you to
undertake for me."
"Sir?"
"Darcel Kinlafia—Voice
Kinlafia—is the only survivor of the Chalgyn Consortium
team." chan Tesh's expression was grim. "Frankly,
I'm . . . worried about him."
"May I ask why, Sir?"
"He was there, Platoon-
Captain. He was linked with Shaylar throughout the entire battle.
He Saw his friends being butchered all around him, and he
couldn't do a single godsdamned thing about it. He blames himself
for that. I think he may actually hate himself for it.
It's . . . poisoning him, and he's a
Voice. I'm sure it's inadvertent, but anyone with a hint of telepathy
is picking up his leakage, and it's affecting our people. I don't need
anything which might push our men towards atrocities in the name
of vengeance if it comes to more fighting. Almost equally
important, I think we need to get him away from here for his own
good, as well. He needs a little space, a little time, if he's going to
heal, and he's too close to where it all happened here."
"I see, Sir." Janaki nodded again.
His sea-colored eyes held a small but unmistakable flicker of
approval, but he also cocked his head to one side. "At the same
time, Sir, can you afford to send him back? I understand that he's a
Portal Hound, as well as a Voice."
"Yes, he is," chan Tesh agreed,
impressed by how quickly the crown prince had picked up that
particular bit of information. "But he's already been able to give
us the bearing of the nearest portal—apparently the only
other portal—in this universe. We know it's somewhere to
the northeast, probably in Esferia or New Ternath. Of course, we
don't know how far away it is, or whether or not they've got bases
closer than that. And we sure as hell don't have any idea how they
managed to get their people in and out of this godsforsaken
swamp! But we know where to start looking for their portal if it
comes to that, and that's about the best we could hope for from
any Portal Hound. Frankly, we don't need any of the
services he could still offer us, and we do need to get him out of
here."
"And away from all of the
memories," Janaki said slowly. "Somewhere he can start healing
inside."
"Exactlly," chan tesh replied.
"I'm not thinking just about Darcel, though. He was linked
with Shaylar. I'm pretty certain there are more details still locked
up in his memory than he's aware of, but
he's . . . not very supportive of efforts
to dig them out. I don't blame him for that. It must be pure hell to
go back in there and relive it over and over again, especially for
someone with a Voice's perfect recall. But I need someone who
can convince him to do just that—someone who can wring
every detail out of his experience.
"The information itself might be
of enormous military value, but, to be perfectly honest, it may not
be particularly significant, either. Not from the perspective of
future operations, that is. But I've discussed it with Petty Captain
Yar, my senior Healer. He thinks it's important for Darcel
to get it out, deal with it. Frankly, I suspect that he's a lot more
likely to open up if someone like you presses him on it than he is
if I do. And if you can convince him of the importance of his
reporting his impressions firsthand back in Tajvana, we may
actually manage to get him away from the front before I have to
place him under arrest to protect any additional prisoners from
him."
"It's that bad, Sir?" Janaki asked,
eyes widened slightly, and chan Tesh shrugged.
"I may be worrying too much.
He's a good, decent man. In fact, I think that's part of the problem.
He's not used to carrying this kind of hate around with him, and he
doesn't know what to do with it. But I'd like to keep him a
good, decent man, if we can, Your Highness."
"Point taken, Sir," Janaki said
respectfully, and chan Tesh nodded.
"In that case, Your Highness,
why don't I take you around to the POW cage?" The company-
captain smiled without any humor at all. "We'll probably find
Darcel somewhere in the vicinity."
"I think this is going to be the
most ticklish case, Sir," Petty Captain Delokahn Yar said. He
stood at Janaki's elbow at the foot of one of the cots under the
canvas tarp arranged to shade a clean, breezy open-air hospital
ward. The tall, powerfully built man on the cot lay still—
not simply motionless, but rigidly, harshly still—
staring up at the sun-patterned canvas above him.
"This was their commanding
officer?" Janaki's voice was cold.
"We believe so, Sir."
"I see."
Janaki gazed at the man in
question with cold, contemptuous eyes. Company-Captain chan
Tesh had briefed him fully on the portal
battle . . . and how it had begun.
Platoon-Captain Arthag seemed rather more philosophical about it
than chan Tesh, and Janaki supposed the septman was probably
right. It was very unlikely that these people used the same sort of
banner to indicate the desire to parley, after all. Still, the idiot had
to have recognized that Arthag wanted to talk, not fight,
and no officer worth his salt could overlook the way the sheer
incompetence of his tactics—and his own peerless
stupidity—had gotten the vast majority of his command
slaughtered.
"What appears to be the
problem?" the Crown Prince of Ternathia asked after a moment.
"The physical damage is bad
enough, Sir. He took a hit—from one of the Model 10s, I
suspect—right through the body just above and behind the
hips. It was a clean in-and-out that somehow missed the major
internal organs, but it clipped the spine on the way through. He's
paralyzed from the waist down, and there's nothing we can do
about it. On top of that, though, he's clearly suicidal."
Janaki nodded, although he
couldn't avoid the thought that perhaps, in this case, not
intervening to prevent a suicide might be the better course. Even
aside from the man's stupidity, and all the deaths it had already
caused, there was something else about him. Something Janaki
couldn't quite put a finger on . . . but
which resonated uncomfortably with the Glimpse he'd experienced
in the mountains east of Fort Brithik.
"As nearly as I can tell, Sir," Yar
went on, "none of these men even understand what Talent is.
That's fair enough, I suppose, since we don't have a clue
how in all the Arpathian hells they do some of the things we
already know they do. But because of that, none of them
understands what my corpsmen and I are trying to accomplish.
They don't know how to help us, and at least some of them are so
busy being frightened of us that they're actively blocking us,
making it a lot harder for us to do them any good. And this man
here is the worst of a lot. I think part of the problem may be that
he actually has at least a trace of Talent. He's more aware of what
I'm doing than most of the others, but he doesn't understand it any
better than they do, and his own Talent, even untrained, is
producing a lot of . . . interference
that makes even pain management really difficult."
"I see," Janaki said again. "Which
means, of course, that he's going to suffer a lot more discomfort
when we transport him."
"Which is going to tie into the
entire depression/suicidal cycle," Yar agreed. "In fact, to be
brutally honest, Sir, I doubt he'll survive trip unless we take some
fairly drastic action."
"Such as?"
"I'm afraid the only thing I can
think of to do at this point is to shut him down completely, Sir,"
the Healer said. He clearly didn't like the suggestion very much,
but he made it unflinchingly, and Jasak forced himself to step back
and consider it before he reacted.
"You really think that's
necessary?" he asked after a moment.
"Sir, my Talent's strength lies
more in repairing physical damage than emotional or
psychological damage," Yar said frankly. "That's one reason I'm
forward deployed, where physical trauma is more likely, and
usually more immediately life-threatening when it turns up. But
it's going to take someone with a lot more strength on the non
physical side to get through to this man and keep him from
simply withdrawing deeper and deeper into himself until he finally
just goes out like a light. I don't think you're going to get him to
that kind of care in time if we don't shut him down for the trip."
Janaki nodded yet again, his
expression somber. The techniques for disengaging a patient's
consciousness from his body and surroundings were fairly
straightforward, but it was a major breach of medical ethics to
apply them without the patient's informed consent. Unfortunately,
there was no way this man could even have understood the
question, far less made an informed decision. Yar's Healer's oath
required him to seek the patient's agreement, and forbade him to
apply the techniques without that agreement from a conscious
patient. Yet the same oath required him to keep his patient alive.
And there's another factor, here, Janaki thought grimly. Of all the prisoners chan Tesh took, this one
undoubtedly has the most useful information of all. We
need to keep him alive . . .
whether he makes my skin crawl or not.
"If you 'shut him down,' will we
be able to feed him and care for him properly all the way back to
Fort Raylthar?" he asked.
"That shouldn't be a problem,
Sir. Or, at least, not any more of a problem than dealing with any
other patient with his spinal injury would present."
"In that case, write up your
recommendation. I'll endorse it and ask Company-Captain chan
Tesh to approve it."
"Thank you, Sir." Yar shook his
head. "I hate to do it, but I just don't see a way to avoid it. Gods, I
wish at least one of their Healers had made it!"
"None of them did?" Janaki
frowned. "How did that happen?"
"It was just one of those
godsdamned things, Sir," Yar said heavily. "It looks like they'd set
up an emergency aid station in that pathetic redoubt of theirs, and
one of the four-point-fives landed right on top of them." The
Healer shook his head, his eyes dark. "One or two of them
survived for a while, but they were too badly wounded for us to
pull them through. I hate to lose any Healer, but I have to wonder
what would have happened if they made it. Or if even just one of
them had made it!"
"Why?" Janaki was surprised by
the Healer's obviously genuine frustration. It showed, and Yar
gave him a very crooked smile.
"Let's just say their Healers
obviously know at least a few tricks we don't, Sir."
"Such as?" Janaki quirked an
eyebrow, and Yar chuckled harshly.
"Once we'd taken their
encampment, we discovered that most of their wounded from the
previous fighting seemed to have been evacuated before this
round. Or that's what we thought at first, at least. We captured less
than half a dozen people who were still undergoing treatment, and
all of them seemed to have only minor wounds. But then Junior-
Armsman Hilovar and Petty Armsman Parcanthi went to work.
They'd managed to Trace quite a few of the enemy's most badly
wounded from Fallen Timbers, and it turned out a lot of them
were still here. The very worst hurt obviously really were
evacuated—somehow; we still haven't figured that part out.
But the next most badly hurt were still right here, and they'd
already been returned to duty. The ones still undergoing treatment
were the ones who were least badly hurt in the earlier
fighting."
"Excuse me?" Both of Janaki's
eyebrows went up this time, and Yar chuckled again.
"Believe me, Sir, you aren't any
more surprised—or confused—by that than I was
when they told me! But as nearly as we can tell, these people's
Healers can literally force healing. Some of our strongest
Healers can work what seem like miraculous cures, don't get me
wrong about that. But as nearly as I can determine from what
Hilovar and Parcanthi have been able to pick up, these people
must have some technique which promotes extraordinarily rapid
healing of physical traumas. I'm guessing that it's either very
expensive or somehow debilitating to the Healer, because it looks
to me as if they applied it first to the most badly injured—
the ones who might not have made it at all without
intervention—and then worked their way down the list
through the men with the next worst wounds. The ones who
weren't in danger, or who were injured lightly enough to recover
fairly rapidly with less drastic treatment, were the ones still in
their sick tents when we took the camp."
"You think one of
these . . . magical Healers of theirs
might have been able to repair this man's injuries?" Janaki couldn't
quite keep a hint of incredulity out of his voice, and Yar snorted.
"I doubt that, Sir. Neither
Hilovar nor Parcanthi is a Healer, of course, so they can't give me
the kind of information another Healer could, however good their
Traces or Whiffs are. From what they've told me, though, it
sounds as if what they these people were doing was forcing the
accelerated healing of wounds which would have healed anyway,
in time. I'm not saying they weren't serious, life-threatening
injuries. Don't get me wrong about that, either. But we're talking
about tissues healing and bones knitting—things that would
have happened with the passage of time, assuming the patient
survived at all. Actually . . .
regenerating something like destroyed nerve tissue, or treating
a serious brain injury—" for a moment, Yar's voice
darkened and his eyes met Janaki's grimly, dark with the memory
of who had apparently suffered a serious head injury at Fallen
Timbers "—would require an entirely different order of
ability. I'm not prepared to say it's flatly impossible, but I'd say it's
very unlikely. Unfortunately."
He was silent for a few seconds,
brooding on what might have been if the other side's Healers
had been capable of that sort of true miracle, then shook
himself and continued.
"At the same time, though, if we
had one of their Healers, we could probably get this man
as recovered from his physical injuries as he's ever going to get
before we started trying to transport him. In that case—if all we had to worry about was his mental and emotional
state—I wouldn't be anywhere near as concerned as I am
about his prognosis."
"I understand. And, like you, I
hate to lose any Healer, whoever's uniform he's wearing." Janaki
shook his head. "For that matter, to be honest, if they really do
have that sort of a healing technique, we need to figure out what it
is and learn to duplicate it as quickly as we can—for a lot
of reasons."
"Agreed, Sir," Yar sighed.
"Agreed."
The Healer stood a moment
longer, gazing down at the stone-faced, totally nonresponsive man
in the cot, then shook himself.
"Most of the rest of their
wounded are in far better shape for transport," he said more
briskly. "If you'll follow me, I'll show you what I mean, and then
we can discuss—"
He led the Crown Prince
towards the other side of the hospital tent, and Janaki followed
after one more glance at the rigid, dead-eyed man responsible for
so much suffering and death.
"Darcel Kinlafia?"
Kinlafia jerked as the unfamiliar
voice spoke from directly behind him. He whipped around, and
found himself staring at a man who was decidedly on the tall side,
even for a Ternathian, in the uniform of an Imperial Marine
platoon-captain.
Jumpy as a flea on a hot griddle, Janaki thought, reaching
up one hand to reassure Taleena as the falcon bridled on his
shoulder. Then he realized why the other man was that way. Post
combat stress burned in the haunted eyes of the sun-browned man
with shaggy hair that needed a barber's shears. Kinlafia was
probably no more than ten years or so older than Janaki himself,
but he looked far older than that at the moment.
"Yes." Kinlafia cleared his
throat, easing his elbow back from its desperate clamp on the butt
of his holstered pistol. "I'm Kinlafia. And
you're . . . ?"
"Platoon-Captain chan Calirath,"
Janaki said, and the Voice's eyes widened.
"Good gods." He swallowed.
"How can I help you, Sir? Your Highness? Your Grand
Highness?"
His face had gone red as he
stumbled over the correct form of address for a Ternathian
imperial crown prince, and Janaki grinned.
"Platoon-Captain chan Calirath
is fine. In fact, in light of how closely the two of us will be
working together on this project, you might even opt for Janaki."
Kinlafia gaped at him, and Janaki shrugged. "I don't stand on a lot
of formality out here. In fact, I hate it. And, let's face it—
I'm a pretty damned junior officer when all's said and done, after
all."
Kinlafia's jaw was still scraping
the ground, and Janaki sighed. It was always the same, although at
least the military seemed to have figured out how to take
it more or less in stride. No doubt because the military had its own
chain of command and rules of seniority, which gave it a
convenient pigeonhole marked "officer, junior, one" rather than
"ruler after the gods, future, one." Still, he'd had more than enough
experience even with fellow Marines, much less civilians, to
understand how it worked. Occasionally, though, he wished his
conversations with people he hadn't met before could be as
ordinary as everyone else's conversations seemed to be.
"Look, just think of me as the
officer assigned to escort our prisoners to the rear while
simultaneously cleverly extracting politically and militarily
critical information from them. Try to forget about the rest of it,
would you? It's a damned nuisance, frankly, having people trip
over their feet and stumble over their tongues every time I show
up somewhere or run into someone new. And bad as it is here
, it's even worse back home. I've just about made up my mind
to stay in the Corps as long as they'll let me hide out here."
Kinlafia blinked at him. Then, all
at once, he relaxed and actually managed a grin. It wasn't much of
a smile, not on that grief and anger-grooved face, but it was
genuine. And, as he saw it, Janaki also had a Glimpse of the
warmhearted, humorous man who'd once lived behind that face . .
and how important that man might prove to be. And not just to
Sharona, the prince realized as his sister's features wavered
through the same Glimpse. What in the names of all the gods,
he wondered, did this man have to do with Andrin?
But the Glimpse had vanished almost as quickly as it had come. Its
echoes hummed and quivered down inside him, with a deep,
burning sense of true urgency and buzzing about in his bones with
a familiar sense of frustration. He couldn't pin it down, couldn't
take it by the throat and make it make sense, yet he knew it
had been a true Glimpse. Something that would come to
pass, not merely something which might.
"Really?" Kinlafia said,
obviously oblivious to Janaki's Glimpse. "I guess I hadn't thought
of it that way. All right, I'll do my best to forget who you
are—and who you're related to."
"Thanks," Janaki said dryly,
suppressing any outward sign of his Glimpse with the
thoroughness of long practice. "Actually, if the Corps would let
me, I'd probably go ahead and trade on a bit of that familial fame
after all, if it would let me spend an extra day or so right here
instead of heading straight back. Trust me, even a Calirath's
imperal arse gets damned tired of a saddle after a week or
two! Unfortunately, they want these people—and
you—back up the chain as quickly as we can get you there."
"Me?" Something almost like
suspicion flared at the backs of Kinlafia's eyes.
"Of course you." Janaki snorted.
"I'm almost positive that a direct order for you to report to First
Director Limana ASAP is headed back down the Voice chain to
you right this minute. You're the closest thing we've got to an
actual eyewitness of the original attack, and you accompanied
Platoon-Captain Arthag's column all the way back here. And
you were part of the fight here at the portal; you were one of
the first men into their encampment; and you're the only
Voice—and the only observer of any sort who also
happens to have perfect recall—who was here for all of
that. You think, perhaps, the Powers That Be might be just a
little interested in your offhand impressions of those events?"
Kinlafia blinked again, and his
expression changed from one of suspicion to one of
comprehension . . . and fear.
"I don't—"
"Stop," Janaki interrupted.
"Don't say it."
"Don't say it?" Kinlafia repeated,
and Janaki shook his head.
"You were about to say that you
didn't see how your impressions could be all that important," he
said almost gently. "You were about to point out that you're not a
trained military man, that Company-Captain chan Tesh and
Platoon-Captain Arthag are much better information sources on
the actual fighting here, and on the enemy's tactics. And you're
about to say that Petty Captain Yar's had much more contact with
the prisoners, especially the wounded ones, than you have. Right?"
"Something along those lines,"
Kinlafia said slowly, and Janaki shrugged.
"All of which is beside the
point," he said. "As, I'm afraid, is how much I know it's going to
hurt to answer all the questions people have for you."
This time there was no mistaking
the gentleness in his voice. Yet it was a stern, inflexible
gentleness. One that admitted that the owner of that voice
understood how much pain even the most gentle interrogation
would inflict, yet never backed away from the necessity of
that interrogation. And one which somehow managed both to
acknowledge the pain and Kinlafia's fear without in any way
diminishing them. To sympathize with them in a way that offered
the strength to overcome them rather than simple commiseration.
Kinlafia stared at the young
officer who'd asked him to call him by his first name and realized
that whether Janaki chan Calirath recognized it or not, that endless
line of imperial ancestors stood behind him. There was, Kinlafia
realized, not an ounce of arrogance in the young man who would
one day wear the Winged Crown in the imperial throne room in
Estafel. But the blood of Erthain the Great still flowed in his
veins, and the mysterious magnetism which had led men and
women to follow the Caliraths straight into the fire—and
into the pages of legend—for over five thousand years
glowed inside him.
Balkar chan Tesh and Delokahn
Yar had been trying to get Kinlafia to face the inevitable for
almost a week now, ever since the portal attack, and they'd failed.
Now, in two short sentences, Crown Prince Janaki had succeeded.
And he's not even my Crown Prince, the Voice
thought with a strange mix of despair, amusement, and surrender.
"All right, Your Highness," he
said finally. "You're right. I know you are. But it's not going to be
easy. Not at all."
"I realize that," Janaki
acknowledged, then glanced up at the afternoon sun. "Look," he
said, "it must be about time for supper. Why don't we let this rest
until after we've eaten? If you're agreeable, we'll drop by my tent
after we eat, drag out a bottle of Bernithian whiskey, and get down
to it."
"Of course," Kinlafia said. And
to his credit, Janaki thought, he actually managed to sound as if he
thought it was a good idea.
Chapter Twenty-Nine
"I need to know everything,"
Janaki chan Calirath said.
He sat crosslegged on his
bedroll, having surrendered his single camp stool to his guest,
despite the visitor's obvious discomfort at accepting it. But that
discomfort over seating arrangements disappeared abruptly,
devoured by something far worse, as the civilian's eyes met his,
dark with memory.
"Everything?" Kinlafia asked
hoarsely, and Janaki nodded.
"Believe me, I'm not asking this
lightly. I've read Company-Captain chan Tesh's reports. I've
spoken to Company-Captain Halifu, and Voice Traygan. I know what happened out here, but I can't begin to imagine what it
must have been like to live through it, and—"
"No," Kinlafia agreed harshly.
"You can't."
"I know that. But if we're going
to protect others," Janaki said very gently, "we have to understand
these people."
"What's to understand?" The
demand was bitter, full of gritty rage, the pain feeding the white
furnace of his hate. "They blew my crew to hell without a shred of
mercy. They shot down Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl while he stood
there with his hands empty, in plain sight. They attacked an
unarmed man under a parley banner! They're butchers. You want
to protect our people? Then send in a division or six and wipe '
these people' off the face of the earth. Off every frigging earth
we find them on!"
Janaki sipped air slowly. This
man was even more bitter than he'd feared, and the prince
wondered if he'd been wise after all to wait until after supper.
Perhaps if he'd charged straight ahead earlier, before Kinlafia had
had time to anticipate this moment—to finger through his
dreadful memories and cut himself on their sharpnesses all over
again—it might not have been so painful.
But Janaki had wanted time to
chew on the strange little flash of Glimpse he'd had earlier, and so
he'd waited. He hadn't been able to refine what he'd Seen, but he
was even more convinced that it had been a true Glimpse. That
narrowed his own options considerably, and while the Voice had
every right to be bitter, he had to be made to see the larger picture,
as well. And not just because of the information he might provide.
"Voice Kinlafia," he began
again, "I understand—"
"No, you don't!"
"If you would be so good as to
let me finish speaking before assuming you know what I'm about
to say," Janaki said levelly, "we'd get through this agonizing
conversation faster."
The man seated on his camp
stool glared at him, breathing hard for a long, dangerous moment.
Then Kinlafia's shoulders slumped suddenly. He sat back with a
weary sigh and pinched the bridge of his nose.
"I'm sorry, Your Highness. That
was . . . out of line."
"Yes, it was," Janaki agreed
calmly. "What I was going to say is that I understand that you've
been through a very personal hell which no one else—
certainly no one who isn't himself a Voice and can't experience it
directly himself—will ever be able to fully comprehend. I
recognize that, and I regret the necessity of dragging you back
through it all over again. But you have to understand that
you're going to have to go back over it again and again.
Not just for me, but for all of the analysts waiting to debrief you,
to try to get some feeling about, some handle on, just what in all
the Arpathian hells we're really up against out here.
"And what that means for you, is
that somehow you've got to move forward. Not 'put it behind
you.' Not 'let go of it.' I'm neither coldhearted nor arrogant enough
to tell a grieving man something like that."
Suspicious brilliance touched
Kinlafia's eyes. Eyes which blinked rapidly while their owner
looked briefly away.
"But you do need to move
forward," Janaki continued with that same gentle implacability,
drawing Kinlafia's gaze back to him. "You have to decide what
you're going to do about it. Not what the Army or the Corps is
going to do. What you're going to do."
"What can I do?"
Kinlafia lifted his hands in a helpless, frustrated gesture. "Other
than join the Army and shoot as many of the bastards as I can line
up in my sights, that is?"
Even to himself, that carried an
edge of something that was
almost . . . childish. Petulant,
perhaps. Somehow, he felt vaguely ashamed to be sitting here in
front of the heir to the throne of Sharona's most powerful and
ancient nation whining about his own sense of helplessness. As if
the entire multiverse revolved around or depended upon his
personal exaction of vengeance for his dead.
But even as that thought crossed
his own mind, Janaki surprised him by smiling.
"You'd be wasted in the Army,
Kinlafia!"
"I beg your pardon?" Kinlafia
blinked, and Janaki shrugged.
"Think about it. What would you
accomplish, in the Army? You'd be just another soldier, and
you're a Voice. That means you'd be stuck using your Talent, not
your rifle. One more messenger, passing other people's orders
through the Voice chain. Going where you were told to go.
Shooting when you were told to
shoot . . . and not shooting
when you were ordered to hold your fire. Vothan! Voices are way
too valuable for the military to risk in combat if it can possibly be
avoided—you know that. So if you were to enlist,
your chances of actually shooting anyone would go down, not
up!"
That drew a scowl, and the
Crown Prince chuckled a bit grimly.
"I didn't think you'd thought
about that aspect of it," he said.
"No," Kinlafia muttered. "I
hadn't."
"Then there's probably another
thing you haven't thought about, either. Frankly, the last
thing we can afford to do is to repeat what Company-Captain chan
Tesh and Platoon-Captain Arthag managed to accomplish here."
"Why?" This time, the question
wasn't belligerent, just baffled.
"Because we don't know how
many of them there are, for one thing. How many universes do
they occupy? How big is their army? Their navy? What the
hells do they use for technology? Most of what we've seen
doesn't make any sense at all yet—you know that even
better than I do, because you've actually seen it. And Seen it, for
that matter."
Janaki paused, holding Kinlafia's
eyes levelly with his own, and wondered if the Voice saw the
ghosts hovering within them. A part of him hungered to tell the
Voice—tell anyone—what he'd Glimpsed that night
in the mountains. But he couldn't. The visions of death and
destruction, of flame exploding across the night, of bizarre
weapons spitting devastation . . .
those were his alone, for now at least. He was desperately afraid
that they were going to become the property of other Sharonians,
but they hadn't yet.
The thought flickered through
his mind once again that he really ought to consider sending word
to his father by Voice of what he had Glimpsed. Yet, what could
he truly tell the Emperor? That he'd Seen images of war and
slaughter? That he'd felt the foretaste of his own terror? That he
was afraid? His father's Talent was much stronger than
Janaki's—almost as strong, Janaki suspected, as his sister
Andrin's. He'd probably already Glimpsed everything Janaki had,
and even if he hadn't, the Calirath Glimpses weren't something to
be discussed through any intermediary, even that of a Voice. They
had to be discussed face-to-face, where Talent could speak directly
to Talent.
I wish my Glimpse had been clearer, just this once, at
least, he thought for a far from the first time, with familiar
frustration. But it hadn't been
clear . . . only vast, powerful, and
terrifying.
Well, at least if chan Tesh is sending me all the way home
with these people, I'll be seeing Father in person for that little chat
a lot sooner than I'd expected. That's something.
"We punched right through them
here," he continued, still holding Kinlafia's gaze captive with his
own. "Punched through so quickly and easily it wasn't even a
contest. But this time we had the advantage of surprise, since they
presumably don't understand our technology any better
than we understand theirs. And armies, unfortunately, tend to learn
more from failure than they do from success. Do we really want to
assume we're looking at an endless succession of walkovers? They
obviously didn't expect anything like Platoon-Captain chan
Talmarha's four-point-fives. What if it turns out that they've got
weapons we haven't even seen yet? Weapons that make
mortars look like damp firecrackers by comparison? Do we want
to send in 'a division or six' to wipe out every post they have in
this region, then discover they've got six hundred
divisions, with heavy weapons support, poised to wipe out every
man, woman, and child from here to Sharona?"
"No." Kinlafia bit his lip, and his
voice was low and reluctant. "No, we don't."
He sat slumped on the camp
stool, gazing at nothing and seeing something that made his eyes
go bleak, and for two long, endless minutes, he said absolutely
nothing more. But then, finally, his eyes refocused on Janaki,
deep, dark . . . and lost.
"What I never told anyone," he
said in a terrible whisper, "was how much I loved her."
Janaki didn't speak. He couldn't.
"You're not a Voice," Kinlafia
said softly. "You don't understand what it's like to communicate
with another Voice. When you're linked, deeply linked, the way we
were during that ghastly attack . . . "
His voice trailed off for another
long moment, and his hands twisted themselves together in his lap.
"You become the other
person, for a few minutes. For however long you're linked. Voices
try to avoid going that deep. No matter how voluntary the link is,
it's almost a . . . violation. It doesn't
happen with normal message relays, but when the psychic impact
is this deep, hits this hard, you fuse. Everything she felt,
everything she saw, and heard, and smelled happened to me."
A shudder rippled visibly
through him.
"For those few minutes, I
was Shaylar. I could Hear and See more than just the thoughts
and sights she was transmitting. I could taste her terror. Her love
for Jathmar. The realization that she would never see her parents
again, never have children, never leave that tangle of broken trees
alive. Yet she stayed linked with me, deeper than I've ever linked
with another Voice. And she kept shooting at them, when anyone
else would have been cowering on the ground with both arms over
his head. Hell, some of the others were doing just that! But not
her. No, not her. She heard the fire dying, knew our
friends—our family—were being killed all around
her, and she never stopped. Never quit once. She burned
all her maps, all her notes, everything, and then she
reached for her gun again, because there was no one else still up
and shooting, No one but Jathmar, and the bastards killed him
right in front of her! Gods! She was so beautiful, so
brave . . . and I couldn't get to her,
couldn't reach her, couldn't be with her, and then I felt
her go. . . . "
His voice shattered.
Janaki's own eyes burned, and
his vision blurred, but his hands were steady as he drew the cork
from a bottle of highland single malt whiskey. He'd suspected
from the beginning that it was going to be required, but even his
darkest estimate had fallen short of how badly it would be needed.
Now he poured some into a glass and thrust it into the shaken
Voice's hands.
Kinlafia wrapped himself around
the liquor and gulped at it, his hands unsteady as he struggled to
regain control. Janaki was wise enough to say nothing. He simply
refilled the glass when it emptied, then sat down on his bedroll
again and waited until Kinlafia finally mastered himself
sufficiently to meet his gaze one more.
"Thanks," the Voice said then,
hoarsely, gesturing with the empty glass in his hand. Then he
wiped wetness from his face with a brusque sleeve and cleared his
throat, roughly.
"I still hoped, you know," he
said. Janaki raised an eyebrow, and the Voice grimaced. "I still
hoped she was alive. Parcanthi and Hilovar Saw her still alive
after the fighting. Saw her being taken back to that camp of theirs.
I hoped so hard that after we hit those bastards, we'd find her. But
we didn't."
"But there were those glimpses
of some sort of transport animal," Janaki said gently. "And we
didn't find her body, either."
"Do you think I didn't think
about that?" Kinlafia demanded harshly, half-glaring at Janaki.
"But you've seen that swamp. My maximum range for reaching her
was over six hundred miles. Sur, I had to trance to do it,
but even if her own Voice had been completely shut down by
some head injury, like Hilovar described, I'd have been able to
sense her at up to four hundred, maybe even five, after linking that
closely during the fight. I'd be able to feel her presence the
same way I can feel the direction to the closest portal, and there
was nothing. What kind of 'transport animal' could have
taken her across four hundred miles of this kind of swamp in less
than thirty-six hours?"
"I don't know," Janaki admitted.
"I can't think of one."
"Neither can I. But we already
know she was critically wounded, probably dying, just from what
Hilovar and Parcanthi could tell us. So they put a dying woman on
what ever 'transport animal' they had and dragged her off
to die somewhere out there in the middle of all that mud and
water."
The Voice's jaws clenched again,
and his hands tightened around the whiskey glass.
"They were probably trying
desperately to keep her alive, you know," Janaki pointed out
quietly. Kinlafia glared at him again, and the crown prince
shrugged. "I didn't say they were doing it out of the goodness of
their hearts, Voice Kinlafia."
"No, they weren't," Kinlafia
grated. Then he drew a deep, shaky breath. "And whyever they
were doing it, they were the ones responsible for what happened to
her and all of the rest of my friends in the first place. They were
the ones who chased them down like animals, then slaughtered
them around her. The ones who did all of that to
her before she died."
He shook his head, his eyes
harder than obsidian.
"I will never, ever
forgive them for that," he said quietly. "Maybe Shaylar could have
done that. I can't. But you're right about what would happen if I
enlisted. So what can I do, really?"
"You can start by telling me
everything," Janaki replied. "Every detail you can recall, no matter
how trivial. I won't lie and tell you this won't be painful, because
it will. I intend to take you through every moment of contact
you've had with these people, both directly and through Shaylar,
over and over again."
"Why?" Dark emotion flared in
Kinlafia's shadowed eyes.
"Because you need to get back to
Sharona as quickly as possible, where what you know will do the
most of good for the people responsible for deciding how we
respond. But before you go, the people at this end of the
multiverse need the same information. I'm going to get that for
them before we pull out, and the more times you go through it,
step-by-step, the more you'll remember."
"Voices have perfect recall,"
Kinlafia objected harshly. "You said that yourself."
"Yes, they do. And at the
moment, yours is shrouded with severe emotional shock. That's
why it's imperative that we take you through it repeatedly—
now, while it's still as fresh as possible. To be honest, this should
have been done right after the initial attack, not after this long a
delay's had time to cloud details."
Kinlafia winced, and Janaki
shook his head.
"I'm sorry, but that's the way it
should have been done, and it wasn't. We can't afford to let those
experiences get any more distant. It's going to be hell going back
through them, but there's no way of knowing what tiny bit or piece
may prove to be vitally important before this is all over. Even her
emotions could give us important information, and it's all there.
Everything you Saw, Heard. Everything she touched or smelled.
Everything she did, even everything you thought while you
were linked. All the ideas, the impressions, the unconscious
judgments—they're all in there, simmering away in the back
of your mind. What we have to do is extract them, pull them out
past the barriers of emotional reaction. And, for what it's worth, I have perfect recall, too, which is one reason I get to be the
coldhearted bastard who drags you back through it all."
"Yes." Kinlafia was biting his lip
again, but he nodded slowly, manifestly unhappily. "I see your
point—all too clearly. I don't want to relive any of that, but
I don't have a choice, do I?"
"No. Not if you really want to
help us understand these people. And I don't have a choice, either,
I'm afraid. I imagine you hate my guts before we're done."
"Probably." A humorless smile
touched Kinlafia's mouth. "At the time, at least. But not
permanently. I hated my third-level teacher while she was drilling
multiplication tables into my head, when all I wanted to do was
spend the day outside with a fishing pole or a hiking trail. But I
didn't hate her for long. Not once I figured out how useful math
is."
Jasak smiled back at him.
"That's hopeful sounding. I was
rather looking forward to the chance to get better acquainted. I
don't have much opportunity to talk with civilians, let alone
Talented ones. Not just out here, either. Generally, people seem
sufficiently in awe of my title to produce conversations that are a
bit . . . stilted. If not downright
impossible."
"I can't imagine." Kinlafia gave
him a wan smile. "Be fair, Your Highness. It is a little
unnerving talking to the Crown Prince of Ternathia."
"Who occasionally puts his
socks on inside out in the dark, the same as any other man jolted
awake in the middle of the night."
Kinlafia actually grinned. Then
he sat back with a sigh.
"All right. I'll go through it all as
many times it takes, but what then? It sounded like you had
something specific in mind for me to do, beyond helping you learn
what I know."
"I have." Janaki nodded. "Tell
me, Voice Kinlafia. What are the best ways a man—or
woman—can have a really big impact on civilization?"
"Civilization?" Kinlafia echoed,
and Janaki nodded.
Rather than answer off the cuff,
the Voice took time to think about it. Janaki was glad. That was a
good sign, considering what he wanted this man to do. Finally,
Kinlafia pursed his lips.
"You can invent something
really important," he said slowly. "Like a new form of
transportation, or a new weapon or a new medicine."
Janaki nodded again.
"You can write something that
influences the way people think," Kinlafia continued. "Or you
could report the news in a way that changes how people think and
act."
"That's true, all of it," Janaki
agreed. "But tell me—who tells an army what to attack?"
"The generals."
"But who tells the generals?"
Janaki pressed. "Who sends the generals?"
"The politicians, of
cour—"
Kinlafia broke off, and his eyes
widened.
"You can't be serious! I'm not a
politician. I'm just a survey crew Voice!"
"You are not 'just a
survey crew Voice.' Not any longer," Janaki told him. "You're the
sole survivor of the crew that was wiped out by the greatest threat
our civilization has ever faced. You were there. As close
to there as any Sharonian anywhere. People will want to hear your
story, and how you tell that story will have enormous impact on
what people think about this crisis and how government leaders
respond to it."
"But—"
Janaki's raised hand halted the
automatic protest.
"If I were in your shoes," the
Crown Prince said, "I'd run for the very next seat in the House of
Talents of whatever government you call home. For that matter,
by the time you get home, there may be just one
government. The gods only know how all of this is going to play
out in the end, but if we're not alone out here in the multiverse
after all, then Sharona needs a world government, and that
government will have a House of Talents. Make no mistake about
that. And if I were you, I'd move heaven and earth and half the
Arpathian hells, if necessary, to get myself into it."
"Gods, you're serious." A fire
had kindled in Kinlafia's stunned eyes. "Do you really think I'd
have a chance to get elected to something like that?"
"I can't name anyone with a
better shot at it," Janaki said frankly. "You'd have instant name
recognition. By the time you get back to Sharona, you'll be so
famous the news media will flock to you, turn you into a major
celebrity. If you tell them you're running for office on a platform
of protecting other innocents, they'll give you so much free
coverage you won't have to buy ad space in anything—
newsprint or Voice network.
"And speaking of the Voice
network, you're one of their own. They'll adore you, Kinlafia, and
they'll champion your cause. You couldn't ask for better advocates
than the Voice Guild and the Voice News Association. Play your
cards right, and they might even bankroll your campaign. Yes, yes.
I know they can't do that directly. That's illegal in most nations."
He snorted. "The only one I know of where it isn't is
Uromathia, which is hardly the sort of example we want to be
following, I suppose. But the point is that they'll bend over
backwards to publicize your need for funds. The money
will come. Never doubt that. You may even find schoolchildren
taking up donations for you."
Darcel Kinlafia stared at him.
Then he drew in a deep breath, released it again with a sound of
perplexed astonishment, and finally found his voice once more.
"Why are you doing this, Your
Highness? Why would you tell me these things? Especially after
telling me why what I want to do to eradicate these bastards from
the face of the multiverse is a bad idea?"
"For several reasons, really,"
Janaki said.
He considered telling Kinlafia
all of them, but decided—once again—against it.
People tended to get . . . nervous
when they found out a member of the Imperial family had
experienced a Glimpse which convinced him it was absolutely
vital for them to do something. Especially when the Calirath in
question couldn't explain why it was vital, since he didn't
know yet himself. No, better to stick with all of the other perfectly
valid reasons Janaki had been able to come up with.
"First," he said, "public outrage
over this is going to be incredibly high. Sharona needs a focal
point for that outrage. Something or someone people can support
to feel like they're doing something to help.
"At the moment, you're a very
angry man. That's inevitable, given what you've experienced, and I
accept that you'll never be able to forgive what happened. But
you're also an honest, conscientious man. And, if you'll forgive
me for saying so, a compassionate one. In fact, it's that very
compassion which makes you so angry right now. I don't
know how all of that anger will work out in the end, but I do
know there are all too many unscrupulous men who are going to
try to take advantage of everyone else's anger and fear without
giving one single, solitary damn about compassion or conscience.
They're going to use it to put themselves into positions of power
for their own selfish ends. I'd far rather see public support behind
someone like you. Behind someone who genuinely
cares—who's driven by a need for justice, not a desire to
put public office into the service of personal gain.
"Don't misunderstand me. The
snakes are going to come out of the shadows whatever else
happens, whether you run for office or not. It's simply part of
human nature. But if you declare your candidacy, you'll rivet a
huge chunk of the public's attention to your campaign.
Hopefully, that will eclipse some of the other, more manipulative
campaign messages, and that would be a very good thing for
Sharona."
"I suppose that makes some
sense. But the fact that it's a good thing for Sharona won't keep it
from making some mighty powerful men hate me," Kinlafia
pointed out.
"Probably. That's all part of the
game of politics, too. But don't underestimate the power of a man
who's been wronged, appealing to the world for justice. Some of
the men—and women—whose plans you spike might
just fall under the spell themselves, and support you. Others will
try to hitch themselves to you for gain, try to find a way to use
you, and you'll want to watch out for that, too.
"Because that's really the most
important part, when you come right down to it. Exercising a
moderating effect on the rhetoric and fury of the campaign in the
first place would be worthwhile all by itself, but the real object of
the exercise is to put you into a position where you can actually
accomplish something. A position which lets you kick the arses of
the carrion eaters out to twist this entire crisis around to their own
personal advantage."
"I see."
"Actually," Janaki smiled, "I
doubt you do. Not the same way I do, anyway—not yet. But
I've had politics bred into me for five thousand years. Coming out
here," he waved one hand at the entrance to the tent, where the
chill stars of a northern autumn were beginning to prick the sky,
"was part vacation from my political education, and part necessary
political foundation for the job I'll have to do some day."
Kinlafia blinked in surprise, and
Janaki shrugged.
"A man who commands armies
and navies tends to do a better job of it if he's spent time in the army or navy in question. Not always, I'm sorry to say, but on
average. And people have greater confidence in a man who's been
at the pointy end himself, as it were. Maybe even more to the
point, someone who's had personal experience of what 'sending in
the troops' can cost the troops has a tendency to stop and think
really hard before he sends them into harm's way . . and has more
moral authority when he decides he has to do it anyway. Those are
just a few of the reasons why emperors of Ternathia are almost
always chan Calirath. We're military veterans, nearly all of
us.
"But that's beside the point I'm
trying to make. I truly believe Sharona needs the job you'll do,
Voice Kinlafia. And," he added softly, "you'll need that job, too,
won't you? Badly, I think. Not just for something to do, either.
You've got to decide exactly how you want to confront Shaylar
Nargra-Kolmayr's life . . . and death.
Is it vengeance you want, or justice, and what price are
you—and all our people—prepared to pay for
whichever they choose to purchase in the end?"
Kinlafia's tightened-down
fingers locked together. He couldn't speak at all, just gave Janaki a
jerky nod, and Janaki nodded back.
"That's all I'll say for now, then.
We'll talk about this again, if you're half as interested as I think
you are. Or will be soon. We'll be traveling together at least as far
as Fort Brithik, and I can probably teach you a fair bit—or
give you some pointers, at least—along the way. And I can
send letters of introduction ahead with you, as well. Hook you up
with people who can help you in all kinds of useful ways."
Kinlafia gazed at him very
thoughtfully for several seconds, then produced an off-center,
lopsided smile.
"If Ternathia were a democracy,
and if I were a Ternathian, I'd vote for you, Your Highness, in
every election you ran in," he said, and Janaki blinked.
"Why?"
"Because you care about the
people you'll rule one day. And you don't just care about
Ternathians. You care about Sharonians—all of us.
Hells, Your Highness, if you'll pardon my language, you even care
about me, and I'm not even one of your subjects! From
where I sit, that's pretty damned rare."
Janaki frowned in surprise. First,
because Kinlafia was surprised. And, second, because he realized
Kinlafia might just be right. Perhaps the Caliraths really were a
rarer breed than he'd actually realized and he'd simply been too
close to see it.
"Maybe you're right," he told the
Voice with a smile even more lopsided than Kinlafia's had been.
"I'll have to remember to thank my father, the next time I see him,
for pounding that into me. Trust me, it wasn't always a particularly
easy job!"
He chuckled, and Kinlafia
chuckled back. But then the Crown Prince's expression sobered
once more.
"Either way, that's probably
enough said on that subject, for now, at least," he said. "Which,
unfortunately, brings us to the more immediate reason for this
conversation. Do you want another whiskey before we begin?"
Chapter Thirty
Andrin's fashionable coiffure
streamed out behind her in a mass of flying, golden-shot black
silk, shredded and ruined by the wind, as she stood at the forward
edge of the thirty thousand-ton steamer IMS Windtreader's
promenade deck. She paid her hair's careful arrangement's
destruction no heed; she had far too much on her mind to worry
about that, although her lips twisted wryly in anticipation of her
lady-in-waiting—and protocol instructor's—
reaction. Lady Merissa was nearly three times Andrin's age and
profoundly conscious of her charge's social standing. She would
undoubtedly be properly
horrified . . . if she could bring
herself out of her seasick misery long enough to notice. Andrin
felt genuinely sorry for Merissa, even if she did find it
unfathomable how anyone could be seasick aboard such a
large vessel. Personally, she would vastly have preferred her
father's racing yacht, Peregrine, where the motion would
have been truly lively, but Lady Merissa's misery was too obvious
for anyone to doubt.
Yet sympathy or no, this
morning was far too glorious for Andrin to spend cooped up in
the cabin, holding lady Merissa's hand solicitously. And so she had
climbed out of bed the moment the rising sun sent its golden light
streaming into her cabin's scuttles. She'd thrown on an appropriate
gown and a warm woolen coat, lifted her hawk Finena from her
perch to her gauntleted arm, and headed for the cabin door with
indecorous haste. Lady Merissa was far too well-bred to protest
sharing her cabin with both a grand princess and her favorite
falcon, but Andrin knew her seasick mentor would rest easier with
Finena out of the room. So she'd carried her companion up into
the sunshine with her, which had delighted the hawk as much as it
had her.
And they'd needed that delight.
Needed it badly.
The news of the slaughter of the
Chalgyn Consortium survey crew had broken, as everyone had
known it must. And the impact on public opinion had been even
worse than anyone had feared.
The print coverage, and the
editorials were bad enough. The non-Talented majority of
Sharonians might not be able to share the Voicenet reports,
experience the events directly, but they understood what had
happened. They might not understand why it had
happened—in which, Andrin admitted, they were not so
very different from their emperors and kings and
presidents—but they knew in excruciating detail what had
happened to that survey crew. They knew because one courageous
woman had held onto her Voice link through hell itself to be
certain that they would . . . and they
knew that, too.
But for those who could See the
Voicenet reportage, it was even worse.
Andrin had forced herself to See
the SUNN Voicenet report. She had only an extremely limited
telepathic Talent, but it was more than enough to follow Voicenet
transmissions. After witnessing that report, however, she found
herself wishing passionately that she'd had no telepathic Talent at
all. Not even the nightmares she'd experienced in her own
Glimpses had been enough to prepare her for the sheer horror of
what Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr had endured before her own death.
The events themselves had been
horrible enough, but the sheer power and clarity of Shaylar's
Voice had stunned a universe. Everyone had known that she'd been
one of Sharona's top Voices, but the intensity of her link with
Darcel Kinlafia had been staggering. Every nuance of her
emotions, her suspicions, her observations—every spike of
terror, every gut-wrenching spasm of grief, every glorious, white-
fire instant of courage—had hit every telepath on Sharona
squarely between the eyes. The horror of those fiendish fireballs
and lightning bolts. The massacre of her team leader, standing
there without even a weapon in his hands when they shot him
down. The dauntless determination of one young woman, burning
her priceless records, her deadly charts, while their friends
screamed and died and burned around her.
It was all there. It had happened
to them, to their sisters, and their brothers.
They knew precisely what she had experienced, because they had
experienced it with her. And because even as they Saw it through
her eyes, they had Seen it through the Darcel Kinlafia's, as well.
He had relayed Shaylar's thoughts and emotions with agonizing
fidelity, but they'd been too deeply linked for him to separate his
own from the message when he passed it up the Voice chain. And
so, in addition to their own reactions to Shaylar's raw experiences,
they saw them through the eyes of a man who had obviously loved
her. And that added still more poignancy—and
horror—to the nightmare which had devoured her.
No single event in the entire
history of Sharona had ever hit home like this one. Andrin
knew that it worried her father deeply. Zindel chan Calirath was no
more immune to outrage and fury than anyone else, but he was
Emperor of Ternathia. He had to think beyond the outrage,
beyond the madness of the moment, and the blast furnace anger
and hatred—and fear—sweeping through his home
universe threatened to severely limit his own options and choices.
As he'd told Shamir Taje he feared before the Voice Conclave, and
as Andrin had seen in her own horrible Glimpses, the chance of
somehow evading the cataclysmic possibility of open warfare with
these people, whoever they were, was growing less and less likely
by the day.
And that was the true
reason—little though Andrin was prepared to admit it to
anyone, especially her father—that she'd felt such a need to
race up to the promenade deck and submerge herself in life and the
input of her physical senses. To at least temporarily escape the
conviction that some huge inescapable boulder was grinding down
the mountainside of history towards her, crushing everything in its
path.
And for the moment, at least, it
was working, she thought gratefully in the corner of her mind still
focused on analysis. It was a very small corner, because she was
nearly drunk on the sensations of sunlight on seawater, of wind
hammering past her face, the deep-seated vibration of
Windtreader's powerful engines underfoot, and the rhythmic
wash and rumble of water, piling away from the ship's stem in a
great, white furrow as the liner cut through the whitecaps.
Windtreader was slower than Peregrine, the imperial
yacht, but she'd been built for the trans-Vandor run between
Ternathia and New Farnal, with emphasis on speed and comfort.
She was easily capable of a sustained twenty knots, and her
furnishings rivaled those of the finest hotel ashore. Designed to
transport better than five hundred first-class passengers, four
hundred and fifty second-class, and up to six hundred third-class,
she had more than enough internal space for the huge staff which
had to go everywhere the Emperor of Ternathia went. Which was
fortunate, since this time there were several hundred important
politicians and their staffs, as well.
And while Windtreader
might be slower than oceanic greyhounds like Peregrine, it
was unlikely she'd be called upon to outrun anyone on this voyage.
Andrin looked to starboard, were
one of Windtreader's guardians plowed steadily through
the swell. IMS Prince of Ternathia was an armored
cruiser—twelve thousand tons of sickle-prowed armor
plate, with four twin nine-inch turrets, two each fore and aft, and a
broadside of fourteen six-inch guns. Her sister ship, IMS Duke
Ihtrial cruised watchfully to port of the liner, interposed
between her and any threat, and Andrin wondered just how
anxious Master-Captain Farsal chan Morthain, the escort
commander, was feeling this fine morning as she stood
here, enjoying the exuberant wind. It wasn't often, after all, that the
Emperor, the heir-secondary, the entire Privy Council, the
speakers of all three of the Ternathian Houses of Parliament, a
sizable chunk of the most senior members of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, the most senior lords justicar of the Emperor's
Bench, over seventy members of Parliament, and the
Imperial chiefs of staff were all packed aboard a single ship.
Officially, chan Morthain and his
cruisers were out there to guard Windtreader against
"pirates," but there hadn't been a single pirate operating in the
waters between Ternath Island and Tajvana in centuries. The
possibility of some lunatic in a fast boat loaded with explosives
probably figured far more prominently in chan Morthain's
thinking. Personally, Andrin felt quite certain that the cruisers
were intended much more as a precaution—and possibly a
somewhat pointed hint—designed to get the attention of
some of Ternathia's less scrupulous "allies" than as a defense
against any sort of criminals.
Finena, perched delicately on
Andrin's forearm, cocked her sleek head. She eyed the cloud of
seabirds overhead with hungry interest, and Andrin laughed as the
movement pulled her out of her own thoughts.
"Perhaps you should breakfast
up here, love," she told the falcon. "Poor Merissa would lose the
contents of her tummy—again—if you broke your
fast in the cabin."
Finena tipped her head to gaze
across at Andrin. Like Janaki's Taleena, Finena was an imperial
Ternathian peregrine, but she looked like no other hawk which had
ever broken shell in the imperial hatchery. She wasn't quite a true
albino, for her eyes were as dark as any other Ternathian falcon's,
but she showed none of the bold bluish-grey plumage of male
peregrines, nor even the browner tones of the females of the
species. Her plumage was a dazzling white, and she
showed mere shadows of gray where other peregrines' underparts
would have been marked with sharply visible black bars. And
while she wasn't a true sentient, like the dolphins and whales or
the great apes, she was an extremely smart bird—
one Andrin had hand-raised from a chick.
Now Andrin ran a feather-gentle
fingertip down Finena's strongly hooked beak. That dangerously
sharp weapon pressed back equally gently, and Andrin's lip curled
disdainfully at the thought of the Uromathian kings and princes
who would—without the slightest doubt—bring
their own falcons to the conclave. Finena wore no jesses, no hood,
and was never tethered, whether to her perch or to Andrin's
gauntleted hand. Finena stayed with—and returned
to—Andrin from love of her chosen human companion.
Andrin respected the bird's freedom, and Finena was fiercely
devoted to her. Uromathian kings and princes carried falcons as
status symbols; that much of the traditional Ternathian practice
they'd adopted. But unlike the Ternathian imperial house, they left
their birds' routine daily care to hawk handlers and were always
careful to fasten the birds securely to their wrists when they
carried them—and to hood them, whenever they weren't
actively hunting. Andrin considered that a barbaric and cruel
practice, and her lip-curl of disdain turned into a sinful smile as
she anticipated the expressions of the Uromathians when they
caught their first glimpse of a Ternathian grand princess with a white Ternathian imperial peregrine.
Finena preened on Andrin's arm
as she caught her companion's emotions. They didn't share true
telepathy, the way a cetacean or a chimpanzee shared with a
translator, but their bond was very real, nonetheless, and Andrin
felt it glowing between them as she turned and started for the
external stair—which the sailors insisted on calling a
"ladder"—from the promenade deck to the boat deck,
above.
"You're going to be the envy of
every Uromathian male in Tajvana, love," Andrin half-crooned.
"For now, though, why don't you go ahead and bring down a bird
for your breakfast? Just be a dear and eat it up there somewhere."
She pointed to the lookout's fat pod on Windtreader's
foremast. "After all, it wouldn't do to irritate Captain Ula or the
crew by scattering blood and feathers all over the deck."
The glowing white bird, whose
name meant "White Fire," let out a scolding "rehk," and
Andrin laughed.
"No, that's not an insult to your
table manners, dearest. But that deck is clean enough for a baby to
eat on, and I'd hate to make extra work for the crew. They're
nervous enough as it is, with royalty aboard."
Someone snorted at her
shoulder, and she glanced mildly back at her personal guardsman,
who followed the regulation two paces behind her.
"Laugh if you will, Lazima chan
Zindico," she said severely. "But it's true, and you know it."
"Oh, aye, that it is," chan Zindico
agreed solemnly, but a devilish glint lurked in his eyes. "I'm just
thinking how surprised they'd be to hear a grand princess of the
blood worrying about the condition of their decks."
"You could be right," she
acknowledged, then grinned. "You generally are, after all."
"Why, thank you, Your
Highness. It's nice to be appreciated."
chan Zindico's return smile was
easy, but even here, on a Ternathian ship with a loyal and
thoroughly vetted Ternathian crew, his constantly sweeping eyes
remained sharp as flaked obsidian. He was pledged to guard her
against all dangers . . . and at
any cost. It was a pledge he'd taken voluntarily on the day
of her birth, and that sometimes appalled Andrin. She might have
turned out to be a raging, spoiled brat, and still chan Zindico
would have honored that oath, thrown himself between her and
any weapon that threatened her. She couldn't keep him from doing
that, much though the thought secretly terrified her, and so she'd
worked hard, almost from the day she could walk, in an effort to
be worthy of that kind of commitment.
She was unaware that chan
Zindico and her other personal guards, who traded off the twenty-
four-hour-a-day job of keeping her alive, took a fierce pride in
their young mistress. Or that they looked with pity on the guards
who'd pledged their lives to young Anbessa. The Emperor's
youngest daughter had developed quite an imperial little
temper—one Empress Varena was grimly determined to
correct or die trying. Anbessa's guardsmen vehemently hoped their
Empress succeeded. Soon.
"Still and all," chan Zindico
continued, smiling at Andrin as they stepped off the ladder onto Windtreader's uppermost deck, "if Lady Finena wants to
scatter feathers, I'm sure the crew won't begrudge her."
The grand princess laughed and
flung her gauntleted arm aloft, launching the glowing white
falcon. Finena rocketed upward, slashing high against the
crystalline blue skies like a white flame. She circled the ship one,
twice . . . then wheeled and streaked
down through the flock of gulls like a gleaming thunderbolt.
Feathers flew as the fisted talons struck, then snatched their prey
out of the air, and chan Zindico knew his wasn't the only eye on
deck drawn to that stunning flight.
"It's the Grand Princess' falcon!"
one of the pair of lookouts on the starboard bridge wing said,
nudging his fellow, as Finena perched on the yard spreading the
foremast stays and began devouring her breakfast with typical
messiness.
"Isn't she a fine sight, now?" his
companion replied.
"The finest I ever did see, and
that's no lie. Did you see her fly, man? From a ship's deck, no less!
Triad's mercy, that's what an imperial Ternathian falcon
can do!"
"Very nicely done, indeed, Your
Highness," another voice said, and Andrin turned in surprise as a
burly man in a captain's uniform stepped out of the wheelhouse.
Captain Ula looked at her just a bit quizzically, and she found
herself blushing.
"I beg your pardon for
interrupting the routine of your crew, Captain," she apologized. "I
hadn't realized Finena would prove to be such a distraction."
"No harm done, Your Highness."
He swept her a low bow, then turned a scowl on the suddenly very
intent-looking lookouts and raised his voice into a booming roar
fit to carry through any gale. "But if I catch another man gawking
at Her Highness' bird instead of attending to his duties, I'll feed his
liver to the falcon, myself! Do I make myself clear?"
"Aye, Captain!"
The lookouts whipped back
around to their assigned sectors, and Ula scowled at their backs
for just a moment, but his eyes still twinkled. He waited another
few seconds, then turned back to Andrin.
"I'll leave you to enjoy the air
and sunshine, Your Highness," he said with another bow.
"Thank you, Captain. I know our
voyage will be a great pleasure. You have a lovely ship."
A flush of pleasure touched his
cheeks as he recognized the sincerity of her compliment. Then he
touched the brim of his hat and left her to enjoy the morning.
Andrin pulled her coat collar up
around her neck, leaned against the boat deck rail, and smiled to
herself. The view was even more spectacular from up here, and
she abandoned herself to sheer, sensual pleasure while Finena
finished eating, then launched herself once more to drift
effortlessly on the wind above the ship, staying well clear of the
smoke trailing from the liner's tall funnels.
It was too good to last
indefinitely, of course. She'd been there for perhaps a
half-hour—certainly not much longer—when a
movement on chan Zindico's part drew her attention. It wasn't
much of a movement; most people probably wouldn't even have
noticed it. But Andrin knew her guardsman well, and she
recognized the signs. Someone was about to enter potential threat
range of her.
She turned to see who it was,
and her eyes widened in astonishment so great that she had to
forcibly order her jaw not to drop.
"Marnilay preserve us," chan
Zindico murmured, just loud enough for her to hear through the
sound of wind and wave. "It's Earl Ilforth coming to pay his
respects."
Andrin had never had the
pleasure of meeting the Earl of Ilforth, Speaker of the House of
Lords, in person. Her mother tended to avoid his company, which
meant Andrin and her sisters had also avoided it, simply because
they'd always accompanied the Empress in her headlong flight
from whatever wing of the palace his presence happened to
threaten at the moment. Everyone had heard of him,
though, and she knew he was considered the epitome of the term
"court dandy."
Now she watched him coming
towards her, and her mind busily sorted out first impressions even
as she continued to dredge up everything she'd ever been told
about him.
He might have possessed a
certain wiry grace if he hadn't moved with such studied languor,
she decided, and he was also short for a Ternathian. A good head
shorter than Andrin herself, and built on narrow-shouldered,
slender lines. And he was said to be quite sensitive about his
relatively diminutive stature, among other things, she
remembered. Rumor suggested that he compensated for it with a
viperish tongue, and his biting setdowns of social inferiors
(which, in his opinion, included virtually every other Ternathian
ever born) and anyone who roused his ire were proverbial.
He was also wealthy enough to
indulge his every wardrobe whim, and reputed to be inordinately
fond of such indulgences. That much, at least, Andrin now knew
was entirely accurate, for Mancy Fornath, fifty-first Baron Fornath
and forty-fifth Earl of Ilforth, was resplendent in morning attire.
Or he would have been, if this
had been Hawkwing Palace, rather than the deck of a passenger
liner under full power.
His coif had been as elaborate as
Andrin's own when he started out, and it was in just as many
shreds as hers before he'd come halfway across the deck. The
ornate quetzal feather in his hat would never be worth its weight
in silver again, either, she judged, and his coat had so many layers
and flutters and silken tassels that it looked alive in the stiff wind.
In fact, it looked as if it were trying to devour him.
"Dear Marnilay, does he dress
that way all the time?" she demanded under her breath, and
chan Zindico snorted.
"That, Your Highness, is
conservative for Earl Ilforth."
Whatever she might have replied
to that went unspoken, for the distinctive—she couldn't
possibly call such a spectacle distinguished—personage had
reached his quarry and bowed sweepingly.
"My dear Grand Princess! How
you've grown!"
Andrin could never decide later
whether it was his patronizing tone or the ironic, languidly
malicious look he swept up her tall, admittedly sturdy figure as he
straightened his spine which did the most to leave her white-faced
with fury. Not that it really matter, she eventually concluded.
Either one would have been more than enough, and if they hadn't done it, the lazy, mocking glitter in his light-colored
eyes—the self-congratulating amusement of an adult
making clever remarks which would sail right over a mere child's
head—would have accomplished the same thing anyway.
Unlike Uromathia, Ternathia had
outlawed the custom of dueling generations ago—which,
she found herself reflecting, was a pity. Or perhaps not. chan
Zindico, who hewed to the millennia-old tradition of Calirath
guardsmen, had begun her tutoring in self-defense when she was
twelve, and seven words from the Earl of Ilforth left her with a
sudden, passionate longing to see him on the firing range with his
pasty face centered—briefly—in the sights of her
favorite Halanch and Welnahr revolver.
Which might not be precisely the best way to stay on the
House of Lords' good side, however satisfying it might be,
she admitted regretfully. On the other
hand . . .
"My dear Earl," she said, in tones
fit to freeze lava, looking down her nose at him from her towering
inches, "how nice to see someone of
your . . . imposing stature this
morning."
He blinked, and his face went
blank. She wondered whether his confusion stemmed more from
the evidence that she hadn't missed his mockery after all, or from
the sheer disbelief that any snip of a schoolgirl would dare
to cut him off at the knees.
"Ah, ahem, well—"
She turned her back on him in
mid-stammer and whistled sharply. Finena wheeled high above
her, then came hurtling down with the speed of a striking snake.
Peregrines could attain velocities of over two hundred miles per
hour in a stoop, and the smack of talon against leather as the hawk
flared her wings at the last moment sounded shockingly loud
above the wind. The white falcon turned a baleful eye on Earl
Ilforth and hissed. Andrin had never heard such a sound from
any hawk, let alone Finena, and Ilforth actually stumbled
backward a step as she turned back to survey him through icy eyes.
"You were saying, My Lord?"
"Er . . .
I . . ." He stared, apparently mesmerized, at
the hawk for several seconds before he managed to tear his eyes
away with a supreme effort. "A thousand pardons, Your Grand
Highness. I hadn't realized how large your bird is."
"Really?" Andrin narrowed her
eyes. "As a matter of fact, Finena's not particularly large for an
imperial falcon, My Lord. Was there some urgent business you
wished to discuss?"
He cleared his throat.
"I just wanted to say what an
honor it is, to share a voyage of such importance with His
Imperial Majesty and Your Grand Highness."
"I see. I was rather
looking forward to the voyage myself."
She didn't actually emphasize the
verb all that strongly, but it was enough to bring an angry scarlet
stain to his cheeks. Clearly, he was more accustomed to setting
down others then to receiving the same treatment himself, and his
eyes flashed. He started to open his mouth, but then something
else happened behind those angry eyes, and the red of his cheeks
faded abruptly into something far paler.
"Your Grand Highness, I humbly
beg your pardon." His voice was suddenly different as well.
Lower, more hurried, without the polished confidence which had
sneered through his tone before.
"I . . . seem to have made hash of this
conversation, and it was never my intention to be offensive. If I
have caused you grief in some fashion, I sincerely beg your
forgiveness."
Andrin managed to keep her own
eyes from widening, but it was hard, as she saw sweat start along
his upper lip. She'd never actually seen anyone do that before.
She'd certainly never had that effect on anyone, and she found
herself wondering a little frantically what a mere seventeen-year-
old girl could have done to so thoroughly unnerve him. Simple
surprise kept her silent, and that only made it worse.
And then, as she watched his face
lose even more color, she realized with an insight like a
thunderclap that it wasn't so much because of what she'd done or
said, as because of who she was. Who she might yet become. He
truly had expected his nasty little barbed comment to go right past
a "mere girl." He'd never anticipated that it wouldn't, and it was
the sudden realization of the truly colossal blunder he'd made
which had rattled him so thoroughly. Ridiculing the physical size
of a person who might one day occupy the imperial throne wasn't
the very wisest political move a man could make.
Part of her was childishly
delighted by his terror. She'd never before experienced anything
like this sudden, visceral understanding that she could reduce
grown men to quivering protoplasm merely by displaying her
displeasure, and it was a heady sensation. But if part of her was
delighted, the rest was quite abruptly shaken to the core. She had a
sudden vision of just what sort of disaster she could unleash if she
succumbed to the habit of using that power to gratify her own
petty emotions, and it terrified her.
One corner of her lips tried to
quirk as she contemplated this oaf's probable reaction if she
thanked him for his unwitting assistance in her imperial
education. She was sorely tempted to do just that, but decided to
settle for a slight nod, instead.
"Very well, My Lord. I accept
your apology," she said coolly, and he swept off his hat to give her
the most elaborate bow she'd ever witnessed.
"I am eternally grateful for your
mercy, Your Grand Highness."
Just when she was about to
suggest that he'd kept his forehead on the ship's deck long enough,
he rose with an elegance that was somewhat spoiled by the ship's
motion. He overbalanced and nearly landed flat on his face, but
recovered admirably, and gave her a rueful smile that was more
genuine than anything else she'd seen from him.
"I fear I haven't yet found my sea
legs, Your Highness."
"At least you're on yours, My
Lord. I fear lady Merissa is entirely too ill from seasickness to rise
from bed at all."
"I'm sorry to hear that," he said
softly. "Lady Merissa is a true jewel of the Court, and much
beloved by all. I hope she recovers quickly."
Andrin wondered why such a
simple statement left her wondering what the earl's marital status
might be, and if he had any intention of altering it. She thought she
remembered that he'd been married for several years, but she
wasn't certain. And if he was married, was he ambitious
enough to set aside his wife in favor of the mistress of protocol to
his Emperor's daughter? Such back-stair avenues to political
influence and power had been used often enough in the Empire's
past. Was Ilforth inclined in that direction? Or—her eyes
narrowed suddenly—did he have his sights set somewhat
higher?
In that moment, Andrin wished
fiercely that her mother had come on this voyage, rather than
choosing to remain for the present in Estafel with the younger
girls. That was not the kind of question she could ask her
father.
"I'll relay your well wishes to
lady Merissa when I see her again," she said after a moment.
"You're too kind, Your Grand
Highness."
Yes, I am, she thought uncharitably. Especially since
I'd rather dump you overboard and let you swim to
Tajvana. Or perhaps hand you an anchor first.
"Did you have something else to
discuss, My Lord?" she asked, determined to be polite, even as she
found herself wondering a little frantically how to extract herself
from a conversation she didn't want to continue. "Something to do
with the Conclave, perhaps?"
"Ah, yes, the Conclave."
He was fiddling with his hat
brim, gazing forlornly at the wreckage of the expensive New
Farnalian feather he'd foolishly brought out onto a wind-swept
deck where the biting wind off the North Vander Ocean came
whipping around the southern tip of Ternath Island.
"You're probably wondering
what instructions I carry from the House of Lords," he said with a
last heavy sigh for his damaged headgear.
Andrin blinked mentally. She
hadn't wondered anything of the sort, actually, but she
suddenly—and belatedly—realized that she probably
should have.
"Are you at liberty to share
them?" she asked after a moment, and he looked up from his hat at
last, his glance sly.
"Ordinarily, no, Your Grand
Highness." He gestured elaborately with one hand, apparently
attempting to convey the intricacies with which a man in his
position must deal on a daily basis. Unfortunately, he ended up
looking merely ludicrous. "However, as your position has, ah,
shifted, shall we say, due to the current crisis, I feel it would
be remiss of the Lords to endeavor to keep such an important
member of the imperial family in the dark."
She only looked at him, waiting
for something besides empty flattery, and he cleared his throat.
"Yes. Well. The Lords have
made it quite clear that under no circumstances shall we yield so
much as a fingertip's worth of Ternathian sovereignty over this
business!"
"I see." Andrin pursed her lips
thoughtfully. "I should imagine most of the other governments on
Sharona share exactly the same sentiments, shouldn't you, My
Lord? That wouldn't appear to leave a great deal of room for
progress toward a practical governing system to deal with the
crisis, would it?"
He blinked.
"I beg your pardon, Your Grand
Highness?"
"Clearly, something must be
done, administratively, to meet the crisis, or all Sharona could be
at risk of attack, My Lord. Possibly even destruction. It seems to
me that refusing to yield a fingertip's worth of anything at this
particular moment is an exceedingly poor way to handle the worst
international crisis in Sharonian history."
An odd, choking sound behind
her left shoulder distracted Andrin for a moment. She actually
turned to see if her bodyguard had been stricken ill, but though
chan Zindico's face was slightly red, he seemed unharmed.
Reassured, she returned her attention to the forty-fifth Earl of
Ilforth.
"Well, My Lord?"
"Ah, well, ahem. There may be a
great deal of merit in your argument, Your Grand Highness.
Which I must say is remarkably cogent for a girl barely out of the
schoolroom, if you'll pardon me for speaking bluntly."
She wanted to shout her
irritation to the sky, or else—preferably—hit him
over the head with something large and heavy. Instead, she favored
him with a frosty gaze.
"My schoolroom is hardly noted
for its incompetent schoolmasters," she observed, and Ilforth
reddened.
"No, of course not. I hardly
meant to imply—"
"Then perhaps you will be so
good as to consider my argument's merit, regardless of the
chronological age of its source."
She left him standing, hat in
hand, gaping after her as she stalked clear across the broad,
windswept deck to the opposite rail. She paused fractionally there,
not sure she knew where she meant to go. But a moment later, she
knew exactly what to do as the first Lord of the Privy Council
appeared on deck, sensibly attired in a practical morning suit with
nary a feather nor a geegaw in sight.
"My Lord! How delightful to see
you! Would you join me for a stroll?"
Shamir Taje stared at her for a
moment. Then he caught sight of Ilforth, still standing frozen on
the far side of the deck, and a sudden, impish grin burst forth like
sunlight.
"Your Grand Highness, I would
be delighted to accompany you."
He held out one arm gallantly,
and she laid her hand on his dark, sober sleeve and gave him a
brilliant smile.
"I can honestly say I've never
been so relieved to see you in my life," she said earnestly, and he
chuckled.
"His Lordship has been his usual
ingratiating self, I see. What diplomatic crisis has he engendered
now?"
Finena, perched on Andrin's
other forearm, let out an improbable squawk that lifted Taje's
eyebrows and left Andrin laughing.
"I think she wants to eat his
tongue for lunch," the princess said. "And, I must say, she'd make
better use of it than he does if she did!"
"Marnilay preserve us, how
badly did he offend you?" Taje asked, only half-humorously, and
her eyes flashed.
"Have you a brace of pistols
about you, My Lord?" she asked in reply, and he winced.
"That bad?"
"How in heaven's name did
he ever get to be Speaker of the House of Lords?"
To her surprise, Taje met her
gaze squarely, and his voice was completely serious.
"He's the Speaker because he's
the most senior earl in the House of Lords, and because he has
sufficient money, and therefore political influence, to sway an
unfortunate—one might almost say unholy—alliance
of extreme conservatives, status-conscious popinjays, and
ambitious men who know better but find his money exceedingly
useful. Never, ever underestimate the damage Ilforth can
do in—or from—the House of Lords. Thank
Marnilay Herself that the power of the imperial purse rests in the
Commons, Your Highness, or that blue-blooded, damnfool-
tongued disaster would be able to sit back on his undeserved
laurels and dictate to the Throne whenever he felt like it. Which
would be every minute of the day."
Andrin stared at the man who
held, on a daily basis, more power than anyone in the Empire
except her father. She'd never heard such venom from the eternally
unflappable First Councilor in her life. Nor, she realized a
moment later, had anyone—including her father—
ever given her such a crystal-clear glimpse into the machinations
of governance.
"My father has tremendous faith
in your judgment, First Councilor," she said quietly after a
moment. "I would be honored if you would teach me what you
can in the limited time you have available."
The glow in his eyes warmed her
to the soles of her feet.
"Young lady, I do believe that
may be one of the highest compliments I've ever been paid." He
cleared his throat, then continued gruffly. "I should be honored to
act as your tutor. And I pray to all the gods who watch over our
Empire that my tutelage will never be needed."
She slid her hand down his
forearm to cover his.
"Amen, My Lord," she said
softly, squeezing his fingers briefly. "No one could hope that more
than I do. But," she continued with a grim fatalism new to her own
experience, "I would far rather be prepared for something I never
face than to be caught wanting when it comes, no matter how
unpleasant the preparations may prove. Should Janaki die and
anything happened to my father—"
She couldn't even finish. The
vision was too unrelentingly horrifying for that. She'd never
forgotten the earthquake which had rocked her family when her
grandfather had been killed in a completely avoidable accident in
the middle of an utterly ordinary afternoon in the center of his
own capital city. She'd been just five years old, but that memory
would be with her until the day she died.
Shamir Taje, First Lord of the
Privy Council, didn't move at all for several long moments. He
just stared into her eyes. Then he made a tiny move with his free
hand, hesitated, and finally finished the motion anyway. He
brushed a wild strand of raven-black hair from her brow and
tucked it behind her ear.
"You are your father's daughter
in so many ways it takes the breath away," he said quietly. Then he
drew a deep breath. "Very well, Your Grand Highness. Shall we
begin with an analysis of the political situation in the House of
Lords?"
"I would be most grateful for
anything you could say to clarify that for me."
"In that case," he said, his voice
dry as desert sand, "perhaps it's fortunate I hadn't made any
specific plans for the balance of the morning."
She gulped, then gave him a
brave smile. He nodded almost absently, tucked her hand back into
his elbow, and began strolling aft in the shadow of
Windtreader's funnels as he started to the morning's lesson.
Chapter Thirty-One
It was almost sunset of the third
day of their voyage when Andrin spotted the sight she'd been
waiting for all day and discovered that her breathless anticipation
had been more than worth the wait. With Finena on her arm, her
father beside her on the left, and Shamir Taje standing on her right,
Andrin stared out at her first sight of the massive rock that
guarded the narrow Bolakini Strait.
The Fist of Bolakin was the
largest natural fortress on Sharona. It was also the longest
continuously occupied fortress, and under the provisions of an
ancient treaty, it was garrisoned jointly by Ternathia and Bolakin.
That treaty, and the others between Ternathia and Bolakin which
had been signed at the same time, were the second oldest in the
Empire's history. Only its treaties with Farnalia predated them, and
those were five thousand years old, cemented by intermarriage and
the continued mutual interest of close neighbors.
The Bolakini treaties were the
result of the shrewdest political move any of Ternathia's more
distant ancient neighbors had ever made. The Queens of Bolakin,
watching the Empire's expansion across the continent north of the
Fist had accurately predicted Ternathia's intention—its
need—to expand its naval presence into the Mbisi Sea to
secure the southern shores of its new acquisitions. Aware that
Ternathia would want control of the Fist, and that the Empire
would tolerate no piracy, the Queens of Bolakin had approached
the Emperor of Ternathia with a proposition: a joint garrison and
shared sovereignty for the Fist, duty-free passage for both
Ternathian and Bolakini vessels past the Fist, and the equal
division of all duties collected on non-allied shipping through the
Straits and bound for Ternathian or Farnalian ports of call,
coupled with an ironclad guarantee that no Bolakini shore-runner
would harass Ternathian shipping. In exchange, Bolakin offered to
open her ports to Ternathian ships, giving Ternathia access to the
vast wealth being carried north from the Ricathian interior, both
by overland caravan across the vast Sarthan Desert and by Bolakini
merchant ships plying the long western shore of Ricathia.
The Emperor had been
impressed. Certainly, the proposal had represented an excellent
deal for Bolakin, but it was also pragmatic and eminently fair to
Ternathia, as well. Not only that, but his own naval commanders
and merchants had been suggesting for some time that the Fist had
to be either neutralized or taken under imperial control. He'd
vastly preferred the treaty approach, which had the enormous
advantage of avoiding the need to maintain armed garrisons to
defend against Bolakini efforts to retake conquered
territory . . . or rebel against an
imperial oppressor.
So the treaties had been signed,
the marriages of alliance had been arranged, and four and a half
prosperous millennia later, Andrin carried a trickle of Bolakini
blood and both sides were well content with a long-standing pact.
The Fist was an immense,
crouching lion of stone, a sharply sloped mountain planted solidly
to protect the sheltered waters of Bolakin Bay, carved out of the
southeastern edge of the Narhathan Peninsula. The Fist was three
miles long and three quarters of a mile wide, connected to Narhath
by a low, sandy isthmus which had been steadily expanded over the
years behind its advancing seawalls as land was reclaimed from
the sea and used for wharves, warehouses, taverns, and—in
recent years—luxury hotels. The ancient passage duties on
shipping through the Strait were long gone these days, but Bolakin
Bay remained a vitally important service port for the traffic
sweeping in and out of the Mbisi every day, and it had also been
one of the Empire's most critical naval bases for thousands of
years. The original bronze-age forts had long since disappeared,
although archaeologists had recently exhumed one of them, and
the curtain walls and catapults and ballistae of a later age, and the
muzzle-loading smoothbore cannon which had followed them,
had disappeared in turn. Now armored gun turrets, their barbettes
and magazines blasted deep into the Fist's stony heart, boasted
rifled artillery capable of reaching entirely across the Straits to the
shore of Ricathia.
Beside that huge, ancient crag, Windtreader was a child's toy tossed into the sea. The
immovable mass of stone caught the westering sunlight with a
deep golden glow. Stark black shadows marked the locations of
the powerful batteries, their turrets protected by tons of armor
plate and reinforced concrete, capable of sending any battleship
ever built to the bottom at a distance of over twelve miles.
Two flags snapped and cracked
in the wind above that mighty fortress, representing the two
nations who shared sovereignty over it to this day. One was the
black field and golden lion of Bolakin, rippling and wavering as it
streamed out from its staff. The other was the eight-rayed golden
sunburst of Ternathia on its deep green field, and as Andrin
watched, both of them started down their staffs in perfect unison.
She couldn't have explained to
anyone why sudden tears filled her eyes. It wasn't just pride in her
people, wasn't just the honor that salute accorded to her father, her
family, and all they represented to their people. There was
something else. Through some strange alchemy, born of the eerie
light of the dying sun and the black shadows that marked those
immense guns, of the threat which pulled this ship and its
passengers towards a fateful meeting in Tajvana, that simple
salute—the dipping of two flags as the Emperor passed
by—became something more. Became a reminder of all the
ancient Empire had endured . . . and
an ominous portent of what was yet to come.
Men in Ternathian uniform were
already on their way to fight. To rescue any survivors, and to
prevent the deaths of more innocents. But Sharonians had already
died, and that simple salute brought home with painful clarity the
fact that still more would die tomorrow—for an unknown
stretch of tomorrows. She felt the weight of those deaths pressing
down on her soul, crushing her until it was a struggle simply to
breathe. The enemy had no face, beyond the indistinct images
transmitted by a woman unable to clearly see the men killing her,
yet Andrin was suffocating under the weight of the more and more
deaths to come. Her throat was locked. She wanted to promise the
memory of Shaylar Nargra Kolmayr that she would be avenged.
She wanted so badly to make that promise, to give in to
the need to strike back in an outraged demand for justice, but the
terrible weight on her chest wouldn't let her.
She could see the men on the
fortress walls, waving and cheering, and however hard she tried,
she couldn't lift her arm to respond. They would literally go to
their deaths, if ordered to do so by her
father . . . or by Andrin, if she ever
came to the throne. The terrible prescience, if that was what
gripped her, left her chilled and frightened, alone despite her father
at her side, despite Lazima chan Zindico at her back. She had never
felt smaller, less heroic or less capable, in her life than she did as
she contemplated the kinds of decisions an empress would have to
make in time of war.
She swallowed once. Twice. And
then she made a silent vow—not to Shaylar's shadow, but
to the men in that fortress, and to all the other men in uniform
scattered across the known universes.
She would do her best—
the very utmost best she could—to prepare herself to lead
them. And if the time ever came that she must, she would not risk
them lightly. She was the daughter and granddaughter and great-
great-granddaughter of emperors and empresses. Throughout the
millennia of the Empire, its rulers had sent Ternathian fighting
men out to die again and again, sometimes for good reasons, and
sometimes for bad. She knew that, just as she knew emperors and
empresses would send them out to die in the future, as well. She
knew that, too. But if those men in that fortress must die under her orders, she would spend them well. Not on a whim, not
capriciously, not to satisfy her own anger or out of her own fear.
She would spend them as if their blood were more precious than
gold, more precious than her
own . . . because it was.
The thought burned through her,
and then, without warning, Finena launched unexpectedly from
her wrist. The silver falcon arrowed skyward, drawing the eye as
white wings flashed red in the glowing sunset. She wheeled once,
high above the fortress flags, then folded her wings and dove,
streaking earthward like a meteor plunging down the sky.
She snapped her wings wide
again, fanned her tail, and whipped across the deck at more than a
hundred miles an hour. Sailors ducked out of sheer instinct, and
Andrin lifted her wrist as Finena's piercing call shrilled against the
wind. The falcon banked into a wide, sweeping turn, then floated
back down the crystal depths of air like a dream of beauty until her
talons slapped against Andrin's gauntleted wrist.
The magnificent bird perched
there for an endless, breathless moment—a living sculpture,
carved from silver and ash-pale ivory, wings spread wide, ready to
fly again and strike at a moment's notice. Fierce, proud, defiant,
protective . . . The adjectives and
emotions tumbled through Andrin, too many and too rapidly to
name them all.
Then the wings folded, the head
tilted inquiringly up to meet Andrin's shaken gaze, and Finena was
just a bird again. Only a falcon, sitting peaceably on Andrin's arm,
and no longer an avatar of fate itself.
Andrin drew a single, shallow
breath and turned her gaze from her falcon to her father. Her eyes
met his, and she recognized the look in them. It was the same look
she'd just given the soldiers in the fortress—the look of a
man who knew his word would send other men to their deaths on
a world so far away the message would travel for days, even at the
speed of thought, just to reach it. Men who would go willingly,
trusting him to send them for good reason, for a cause that was
worthy of their sacrifice. The look of the man who knew the
terrible weight of that
responsibility . . . and feared that one
day it would be transferred from his shoulders to hers.
Andrin wanted to weep. Then her
father looked into her
eyes . . . and did.
"I'm tired, Papa," Andrin
murmured, trying to hide how desperately shaken she was. "I'll say
goodnight now."
"Of course, 'Drin," he replied.
He kissed her brow, squeezed
her hand for a moment, then let her go, and she fled to her cabin,
where Lady Merissa was lying in her bunk, pale and asleep, thank
all the gods. Andrin settled Finena on her perch, pulled off her
own heavy coat and embroidered gown, and wrapped herself in the
comforting softness of a silk night dress and a thick robe woven
from Ternathian wool and exotic cashmere.
Her head ached fiercely, and she
curled up in her own bed. She started to light the lamp as the sun
sank toward the sea, but then she changed her mind. Instead, she
simply gazed out the scuttle for a long, long time while the sea
turned golden and the sun balanced on the rim of the world.
She couldn't actually see the sun
slip beneath the waves. The sunset lay astern as Windtreader forged steadily onward, deeper and deeper into the Mbisi. But
she watched the light on the water, watched the clouds overhead
turn orange and crimson and deep wine-red, then fade into soft
shades of purple. The cabin was chilly as the light finally
disappeared and the heavens came to life, glittering with thousands
upon thousands of autumn stars beyond the drifting banners of
cloud. She pulled the thick woolen blankets up around her
shoulders and leaned her aching brow against the cool glass. She
didn't want to think about what would happen in Tajvana. She
didn't want to think at all.
It was comforting to simply sit
in the darkness, watching the stars and thinking of nothing while
the ship moved beneath her and the throb of the powerful engines
enveloped her. It was past time for supper, she realized distantly,
but her stomach rebelled at the mere thought of food, and she
swallowed queasily. Her head ached, and she closed her eyes,
thinking longingly about an icepack, not food.
A quiet tap sounded at the door.
"Go away," she called, softly
enough to avoid disturbing Lady Merissa.
Silence fell once more, but then,
five minutes later, the tap sounded again. And again, five minutes
after that.
Andrin wanted to scream at
whoever was out there, interrupting her solitude. She sprang from
the bed and crossed the cabin with long, angry strides, then
snatched the door open—and closed her mouth over the
furious words on the tip of her tongue. The servant girl who'd
brought her the pen and paper in the Privy Council Chamber was
standing in the passageway, literally wringing her hands, her eyes
enormous with fright.
Andrin hadn't even realized the
girl had come aboard the ship, far less expected to find her outside
her cabin door with a covered tray of food on a serving cart. But
she was obviously supposed to be there, since Brahndys chan
Gordahl, Andrin's regular night bodyguard, was simply standing
there watching her.
"Your Grand Highness," the girl
got out in a rush, "I was ever so terrified. Are you all right, please?
Your supper's getting cold, and I was afraid you'd took ill, which
would be my fault, as it's my place to look after you on this
voyage, and—"
"I beg your pardon?" Andrin
interrupted the spate of words, staring at her in astonishment. The
girl paled, and Andrin shook her head. "I only meant I don't
understand," she said more gently. "Why is it your place to
look after me?"
The girl swallowed sharply.
"Well, it's just that Your
Highness' maid, Miss Balithar, she slipped and fell climbing up the
staircase from the kitchen with your dinner. She broke her leg,
pretty badly they say. She's with the ship's Healer now, having it
looked after. Between Miss Balithar's broken leg and Lady
Merissa ill with the seasickness, you've got no one to look after
you. To make sure you're warm and comfortable and well fed."
"Oh, poor Sathee! She must be in
agony!" Andrin's eyes widened in distress. Sathee Balithar had
been her lady's maid since her fifth birthday—she was
literally one of the family.
"When they came to fetch me,
they said the Healer had already stilled the pain, before doing
anything else. She's being looked after well, I promise you that,
Your Grand Highness."
But the girl was still wringing
her hands, and Andrin still had no idea why she was
standing in the corridor with Andrin's dinner and a serious case of
nervous distress. The princess forced herself to collect her rattled
wits, feeling stupid and slow from the headache pounding at her
temples from the inside.
"I'm glad to hear she's being
taken care of. But why are you here? Who sent you?"
She glanced at chan Gordahl, and
his eyes flicked to meet hers.
"She was thoroughly vetted,
Your Highness, before setting foot aboard ship. Ulthar brought
her up fifteen minutes ago, when she came with your dinner."
Andrin felt better immediately.
Ulthar chan Habikon was another of her sworn bodyguards. There
was no way anyone who wasn't completely above suspicion would
have gotten past both him and chan Gordahl. She drew a deep
breath, gave her guardsman a nod of thanks for the information,
then met the girl's worried gaze again.
"Who are you?" she asked
curiously. "And how—why—were you asked to take
Sathee's place?"
"When the choosing of the staff
was done, I got the chance of my whole lifetime, to help with the
fetching and the carrying between the cabins and the cooks," the
girl said. "They assigned me to you, Your Grand Highness, on
account of my already being trusted to help with the Privy
Council, which is a job not just every servant is allowed, you see.
My father, he's been a footman of the Privy Council his whole life,
and my mother, she's been maidservant to your grandmother,
which is where I learned my trade, fetching and carrying for her.
Please, Your Grand Highness, will you have some supper now?"
"I—" Andrin closed her
lips and put a hand to her brow. "I'm afraid I have a frightful
headache," she admitted. "I couldn't possibly eat a single bite."
To Andrin's astonishment, the
girl's eyes lit with obvious pleasure.
"I can help you with that, Your
Grand Highness. Honestly, I can! It's a Talent from my mother.
Just sit you down, there, and let me help."
Andrin glanced at chan Gordahl
again. The guardsman evidently knew a great deal more about this
girl than Andrin did, because he simply nodded permission. Given
her guardsmen's fierce suspicion of any possible threat to her
safety, that said a great deal. Even so, she wasn't entirely certain
about all this. Still, her head throbbed relentlessly, so fiercely even
the light in the passageway hurt. And so she gave a mental shrug,
willing to try whatever the girl had in mind, and sat down in the
chair beside her writing desk.
"What's your name?" she asked
as the girl entered the cabin timidly. She gazed at the gown Andrin
had discarded with something like awe, and stared at Finena in
open amazement.
"Relatha, Your Grand
Highness," she all but whispered, mesmerized by the white falcon.
"Relatha Kindare."
Andrin's thoughts were slower
than usual because of her headache, but she blinked as she
suddenly realized that Finena was completely at ease with the girl.
That surprised her. The falcon didn't like very many servants, and
was particular about the nobility, as well. The bird detested a fair
number of courtiers on sight—the Earl of Ilforth came to
mind—but she liked Relatha. Liked the girl enough to preen
and angle her head for a caress.
"Would you like to pet her?"
Andrin asked.
"Oooh, I wouldn't dare!" Relatha
protested, and Andrin stood and moved closer to the perch.
"She likes you. Here, give me
your hand."
Relatha's fingers trembled in
Andrin's grasp as she held the girl's hand gently in front of the bird
for a moment, then guided her to stroke Finena's silver back. The
bird arched against the touch, all but crooning with pleasure, and
Relatha gasped. Then a smile of utter enchantment lit her face.
She petted the falcon for several
delighted moments, then turned back to Andrin.
"She's just the most beautiful
thing I've ever seen, Your Grand Highness! But here, now. Your
head's still aching, and I'm standing here petting a bird, selfish as
can be! Sit you down again, now, and let me take care of that
headache."
The instant Relatha touched
Andrin's head, the princess knew she was in the hands of a master
Healer. An untrained one, perhaps, but powerfully Talented. The
headache simply drained away to nothing under the gentle
ministration of Relatha's fingertips, and Andrin leaned back, eyes
closed, and let the magic in the girl's fingers soothe her frayed
nerves. Her breathing steadied, slowed, and when Relatha finally
let her hands drop away, Andrin breathed a deep sigh and opened
her eyes.
She turned in her chair and
peered curiously up at the girl.
"Why have you never taken
formal training, Relatha? Your Talent for Healing is profound."
"Me? A Healer?"
Relatha goggled. "I'm a servant girl!"
"And what's that got to do with
anything?" Andrin frowned. "There are plenty of women Healers
from all classes of society. Talent isn't confined by social bounds.
Have you ever even been tested?"
Relatha shook her head, struck
literally dumb.
"Well, would you like to
be tested? To be trained as a Healer?"
The very notion appeared to
overwhelm Relatha.
"I—I don't
know. . . I never even thought such a thing
would be possible—"
"Well, there's no need to decide
this instant," Andrin told her. "But think about it. If you want to be
tested at the Healers' Academy, I'll arrange it."
"But—why?" Relatha
asked, obviously still shaken, and Andrin smiled.
"Why not?" she challenged in
return.
"But I'm just—"
"Don't you dare say 'just a
servant' again!" Andrin ordered tartly. "You just cured a savage
headache with a simple touch. If you can do that, when you've
never even been tested, far less trained, then you're wasted
fetching and carrying anyone's dinner, even mine. Was your
mother ever tested?"
Relatha shook her head.
"No, Your Grand Highness. She
said servants are servants, and there's an end of it. Her task is to
care for your grandmother, which is quite enough for anyone, she
says."
"Hmph!" Andrin folded her arms.
"Maybe in my grandmother's day that was so, but I'm not my
grandmother, and I positively hate the idea of seeing
someone with this kind of Talent wasted running errands between
the kitchen and anyone's cabin. Or even fetching and
carrying for the Privy Council. Think about it, Relatha. Do you
want to spend your life fetching my dishes? Or would you rather
try to earn a position as an Imperial Healer?"
The girl's mouth fell open.
"Me?" she squeaked.
"Imperial Healer? Me?" But her eyes had begun to glow.
"Do you really think—?"
She broke off, staring at Andrin
with those glowing eyes, and the princess shrugged ever so
slightly.
"We'll never know if you're
never tested," she pointed out reasonably, and Relatha swallowed
hard.
"I'll . . .
think on it, then," she whispered.
"Good! Now, about that supper
you mentioned . . ."
Relatha grinned.
"It's in the passage, Your Grand
Highness. I'll just fetch it in for you. Sit you down at the table."
Andrin wasn't sure why, but her
own Talent hummed strangely in her ears as Relatha wheeled her
supper into the room. She couldn't imagine why, but Caliraths
learned early to pay attention to "feelings" when other people
crossed the tracks of their lives.
She hoped Relatha would decide
to be tested. It was more unusual than it ought to be for a girl
from the serving classes to make that big a transition, into the
upper reaches of the Talented professions, but it was scarcely
unheard of, either. In fact, the whole reason the House of Talents
existed in the Ternathian Parliament in the first place was to make
sure girls like Relatha could improve their lives by making
full use of their gods-given abilities. The fact that no one had even
noticed the startling power of Relatha's Talent bothered Andrin,
and she decided to find a quiet moment to speak with the Speaker
of the House of Talents before they reached Tajvana.
That thought seemed to close
some switch deep in Andrin's brain. She could almost physically
feel it, and she was abruptly glad Relatha was aboard
Windtreader.
Of course, it remained to be seen
why her presence seemed so suddenly important.
Chapter Thirty-Two
Shaylar sat crosslegged in
Gadrial's cabin while the two of them—the only women
aboard the warship—enjoyed what she thought of as a quiet
"girls' day" together. She was bent over a project very dear to her.
Using a borrowed needle and thread, some shears the ship's doctor
had provided, and some cloth the captain had asked the purser to
locate in storage, she was making a dress for herself.
It wouldn't be a fancy dress, not
given the cloth she had to work with—military-issue gray
cotton twill—but it would be a dress, and it would
be hers. The only other clothing she had was what Gadrial
had given her and some navy-issue pajamas she'd contrived to
make into slacks and shirts which almost fitted her.
Gadrial was no seamstress, but
she'd admitted to some skill in fancy needlework, so she was using
the voyage time to decorate some of her own shirts and slacks.
The style and patterns were lovely, unlike anything Shaylar had
ever seen. While they worked, they talked. Not about anything
important—just easy conversation that allowed Shaylar to
practice her steadily growing command of Andaran.
Shaylar had come to realize that
the speed with which she was mastering Andaran had aroused
Gadrial and Jasak's suspicions. No Sharonian, accustomed to
telepaths' "ear" for languages, would have been surprised, but she
wasn't in Sharona any more. Unfortunately, by the time
she realized Gadrial had never seen anyone from Arcana (which
was what she and Jasak called their home universe) learn a
completely foreign language so quickly, she'd already
demonstrated her abilities. The best she'd been able to do was to
appear to slow down, to stop and obviously fumble for a word
more frequently and emphasize her 'foreign accent.' She had no
idea whether or not it had done any good. For that matter, she
wasn't even certain that trying to hide her language-learning ability
was a good thing in the first place! It was so frustrating
trying to envision what a civilization which apparently had never
heard of the Talents would
expect . . . or find frightening or
threatening.
On the other hand, the speed
with which she'd been able to acquire at least a usable command
of Andaran worked both ways, she reflected, setting small neat
stitches in the sunlight streaming through the bulkhead scuttles. It
would allow Jasak's superiors to ask pointed questions much
sooner, but by the same token, it had permitted Shaylar to probe
for additional information about Arcana before she and Jathmar
had to face those pointed questions.
Much of what she'd learned had
been frightening. Other bits and pieces, however, had seemed to
offer at least some grounds for cautious hope.
For example, she'd learned that
Jasak came from one of several Andaran kingdoms which
dominated the landmass she and Jathmar had known as New
Farnalia. Andara, it appeared, provided the bulk of the Arcanan
army, and it was a culture with a long, deep, highly developed
military tradition. However poorly Arcana might appear to have
performed in its initial encounters with Sharona, what Shaylar had
learned so far discouraged her from hoping things would stay that
way.
On the other hand, what she'd
learned about Ransar was more encouraging. As nearly as she
could tell, Gadrial's home region of Arcana corresponded to the
region of Sharona encompassed by the Kingdom of Eniath, the
Kingdom of Dusith, and the northern portions of the Empire of
Uromathia. Unlike the monarchies of the various Uromathian
states, however, Ransar was a democracy. Shaylar wasn't
particularly interested in politics, but she was trying to learn what
she could, and it was quite obvious to her already that Ransaran
notions were much less militaristic—more "humanistic,"
she was tempted to say—than those of Andara.
And then, of course, there were
the people called "Mythalans," but for some reason, neither
Gadrial nor Jasak seemed to want to talk about them.
Despite the situation in which
she and Jathmar found themselves, Shaylar was fascinated by the
bits and pieces about Arcana she'd so far been able to fit together.
It was frustrating to have so incomplete a picture, however, and
not just where politics was concerned. In fact, there was
something else which continued to puzzle her even more, and she
looked up from her sewing.
"Gadrial?"
"Hmm?"
"What moves this ship?"
Gadrial glanced up in obvious
surprise. She gazed at Shaylar for a moment, then used a word
with which Shaylar wasn't yet familiar.
"What does that word mean?"
she asked, and Gadrial laid her needlework in her lap and folded
her hands, her expression thoughtful as she clearly considered how
best to answer.
"It's what powers our whole
civilization." She spoke slowly, choosing her words. "Not
everyone can use it," she added. "You must be born with a Gift for
it."
A small thrill of astonishment
ran through Shaylar. Whatever it was, it sounded a little like
Talents, except that no Talent had ever powered a ship.
Then Gadrial stood up and retrieved a small leather case from her
luggage. She opened it and extracted a familiar crystal.
"This is my PC," Gadrial said.
"My personal crystal. You've seen me use it in our language
lessons, but I also use it to store my other work—my notes,
my calculations. Anything I need to record. It's—" she used
the unfamiliar word again "—that makes it possible."
"Gadrial, it's just a stone."
Even as Shaylar said it, she knew
she sounded foolish. Certainly Gadrial had already given more
than sufficient proof that that "just a stone" was capable of
remarkable things. It was just that the very notion continued to
offend Shaylar's concept of how the physical laws of the
multiverse worked. In fact, she realized, the real reason she'd said
it was that a part of her desperately wanted for it not to
work after all.
"Don't be silly, Shaylar," Gadrial
chided, as if she were the telepath and she'd read Shaylar's mind.
"You've seen it work before. But it won't work for just anyone. It
takes someone born with a Gift to build a PC or compile the
spellware to make its applications work. But each crystal can hold
immense amounts of data, if you know how to encode and retrieve
it, and someone with a Gift can even program it so that non-Gifted
people can use it. Here."
She began to murmur. Whatever
she was saying, it wasn't in Andaran, and despite the number of
times she'd already seen it, Shaylar's scalp prickled as the crystal
began to glow. Squiggles of light appeared within it, recognizable
as writing, although the words weren't in the same script as the
signs aboard this ship.
"Here," Gadrial repeated,
extending the crystal towards Shaylar. "This time I've powered it
up for you."
Shaylar accepted it very gingerly.
It was heavier than she'd expected. It still looked like nothing so
much as absolutely clear quartz, yet it was clearly denser than
quartz from the way it weighed in her hand. The squiggles glowing
in its depth shifted slightly as the crystal settled into her palm. The
unintelligible words moved, as if to present themselves to her for
easier reading.
"What do you mean, powered it
up for me?" she asked.
"I mean
I've . . . turned it on for you.
Activated its spellware in non-Gifted mode and released my
password so that you can enter and retrieve data if you want to."
"But how?" Shaylar
demanded in frustration. "This isn't a machine—it's just a
lump of rock!"
"Of course it's a machine,"
Gadrial replied.
"No, it isn't. It's not—"
Shaylar shook her head, searching for the Andaran word for
"mechanical." Unfortunately, that wasn't one she'd learned yet.
"There are no switches," she said instead. "Nothing to provide
power."
It was Gadrial's turn to blink in
apparent surprise. Then she shrugged.
"I provided the power,"
she said.
"But how?"
"By saying the proper words.
Here, try this." Gadrial handed Shaylar a stylus or wand which
appeared to be made out of the same transparent not-quartz as the
crystal itself. "Write something on it," she encouraged.
Shaylar looked at her for a
moment, then pressed the tip of the stylus hesitantly against the
"PC." A spark of light—a bluish-green light, quite different
from the color of the words already floating in the crystal—
glowed to life at the point where stylus and crystal made contact.
As she moved the stylus, the spark became a line, following the
stylus tip as she slowly and carefully wrote her own name. She
finished and lifted the stylus away, and her name floated instantly
to the glassy center of the crystal, displacing the words which had
been there before.
Shaylar stared at it, half-
delighted and half-terrified by the implications, then shook her
head.
"I don't understand!"
"That's because you don't have a
Gift," Gadrial explained. "A non-Gifted person can use most of
our machines if the spellware is set up that way and someone who
is Gifted charges them first. But if you don't have a Gift
yourself, you're completely dependent on someone else to write
the spellware and power the system."
They were speaking the same
language, but no communication was taking place, and Shaylar
drew a deep breath.
"You can't run a machine by just
talking to it," she said slowly and patiently, and Gadrial's brows
drew together.
"Of course I can! I told
you—I'm Gifted."
"But—" Shaylar wanted
to tug at her hair. "You keep saying that, but what does
Gifted mean? What is it you can do—that someone
without a Gift can't—that makes hunks of rock light up this
way?"
"I can tap the field," Gadrial said,
exactly as if that actually explained something.
"What field?"
Gadrial used the same word that
had started this conversation, and Shaylar let out an exasperated
howl.
"Why are you upset, Shaylar?"
Gadrial asked, starting to frown.
"Because your words make no
sense!" Shaylar pointed to the ominously glowing rock in her own
hand. "This piece of stone makes no sense. This ship
makes no sense! Nothing about you people makes any
sense!"
She realized she was breathing
hard, teetering on the edge of a genuine panic attack. She was
afraid—terribly afraid—and she didn't quite know
why. She felt as if she were standing on the edge of a cliff, and if
Gadrial kept talking, she would tip right over the edge and fall.
Gadrial reclaimed her "personal
crystal" and set it carefully on the blanket to one side. She let her
left hand rest lightly on it while she regarded Shaylar steadily, and
then she shook her head slowly.
"Your people truly don't have
anything like this, do they?" she finally said, her voice filled with
wonder and what sounded like pity.
"No," Shaylar admitted, and
Gadrial inhaled deeply.
"Magister Halathyn told me
that," she said. A flicker of pain went through her eyes as she
mentioned Magister Halathyn's name, but those eyes never left
Shaylar's face, and she continued steadily.
"I didn't really want to believe
him," she admitted. "It suggested a universe so different from ours
that I can't really wrap my mind around it. Not yet, anyway. But
everything I've seen from you since has only confirmed it, and now
this."
She shook her head again.
"No wonder you're so lost. Let
me try to explain."
She sat back, once again
obviously thinking, looking for the best way to explain something
complicated using the still limited vocabulary they had in
common.
"There is a force in the
universe," she began finally. "People with a Gift can sense it, can
touch it—use it to do certain things. Some Gifts are very
weak. People born with them can do only little things, because
they can touch only a little of that force. It's
like . . . like a field of energy. Of
sunlight. A sea of energy that lies between things."
Gadrial's frown of concentration
was deeper, more intense. Shaylar had the feeling that the other
woman was attempting to explain color to a blind person, and she
didn't like it. She was a telepath, a Voice; communication was her
speciality, what she'd been born to do, and she'd never felt blind
before. Not until now.
"Other people," Gadrial
continued, "have very strong Gifts. My Gift is a strong one, for
instance. The only person I ever knew with a stronger one was
Magister Halathyn. He taught—"
Her voice caught suddenly,
raggedly, and her eyes filled with tears.
"I'm sorry," Shaylar said softly,
touching Gadrial's hand. The other woman's emotions were a
chaotic whirl of love, grief, and empty, aching loss.
"I know you are," Gadrial said,
and her voice was a small sound in the silence of the cabin.
Shaylar could sense, as well, that
Gadrial was struggling not to blame her and Jathmar for
Halathyn's death. She wished she knew a way to comfort the other
woman's grief, but she couldn't—not given the
circumstances. And so she could only wait until Gadrial dashed
the tears from her eyes and straightened once more.
"I know you are," she said again,
her voice firmer, then cleared her throat. "Anyway, Halathyn's Gift
was profound. No one, I think, understood the field better than he
did. He taught me everything I know about it. What I've learned on
my own is built entirely on the platform he gave me."
Once more the agony in her eyes
and voice tore at Shaylar, but this time she refused to yield to
them.
"He taught me," she said more
steadily, "and he wouldn't want me to fall to pieces like this now.
So . . . This field can be tapped,
manipulated—harnessed. It's power is immense. That's
what moves the ship." She gestured. "Someone with a Gift speaks
the proper formula to tap the field, which allows them to channel
that power into the ship's storage cells. When that energy is
released, it drives the ship forward through the water. It also
powers other machines, all kinds of machines."
She dug through her luggage
again, and pulled out another case.
"This is a machine Halathyn and
I developed together. It helps us find portals. That's what we were
looking for when we stumbled across you. Looking for a portal
nearby."
She murmured to the gadget,
which began to glow. Several colored indicators came to life in
what looked like a rectangular window on the front of the device.
"Here. See these displays?" Her
index finger indicated its several small glowing arrows and
columns of light. "We'll be docking sometime tomorrow morning
at the island we call Chalar back home. That's where our next
portal is. See how the arrow points to it?"
Shaylar nodded slowly, but deep
inside she was stunned. This single small device in Gadrial's hand
was more effective—and efficient—than any Portal
Hound she'd ever heard of! If they could do this, what else
could they do? Then she realized that Gadrial was still talking.
"—still experimental, of
course. That's what we were doing that day in the forest, when
your people killed Osmuna—"
"Osmuna?" Shaylar asked. "Who
is Osmuna?"
"The soldier your people killed,"
Gadrial replied in a surprised tone.
"Our people killed?"
Shaylar demanded. "Your people killed Falsan! Gods,
Gadrial—he died right in my arms! He'd staggered for
miles with that arrow in his chest, trying to reach our
camp—"
"I didn't know he'd died in your
arms," Gadrial said quietly. "I'm sorry about that. As sorry as I can
possibly be."
"But that didn't keep your people
from killing the rest of us, did it?" Shaylar replied, more
harshly even than she'd intended to. Gadrial winced, but she
refused to look away.
"That wasn't what we wanted,"
she said. "Jasak realized what must have happened sooner than
anyone else. Two men met in the forest. Just the two of them, and
no one will ever know which one of them shot first. We
certainly didn't. We couldn't even figure out how Osmuna
had died. All we knew was that someone had killed him, and we
trailed that person back to your camp. But you'd already headed
toward the portal we'd come to find, and—"
"And then you ran us to ground
like dogs!" Shaylar jerked up off the bed, her face twisted
as the words she'd acquired—the words that finally freed
the pain so deep inside—poured out of her. "We were
terrified! Someone had murdered Falsan—that was all
we knew. And they were chasing us. We couldn't run fast
enough!"
"Of course we were." Gadrial
stared at her. "What would one of your army officers have
done if one of his men was dead? If he'd been responsible for
controlling the situation?"
"Controlling the situation?
" Shaylar barked a harsh, ugly laugh. "Is that what you call it?
You were only 'controlling the situation' when Ghartoun tried to
talk to you, without even a weapon in his hands, and you shot
him?!"
"Garlath shot him,"
Gadrial snarled, and even without touching her Shaylar realized
that the other woman was genuinely angry. No, not angry—
she was furious. And not, Shaylar realized in shock, at her.
"That stupid, cowardly, arrogant,
incompetent son-of-a—" Gadrial was abruptly using words
Shaylar hadn't heard before, but they hardly needed translating.
Whoever this Garlath was, Gadrial had despised him. Still
despised him.
"I wasn't close enough to see it
happen," Gadrial said finally. "Jasak wouldn't let me get that close.
But I heard him shouting at Garlath. Only that idiot shot
anyway, and then unholy hell broke loose. I'd never heard
anything like that."
Shaylar was trembling. Her
perfect Voice's memory replayed the shouted command she'd
heard when Ghartoun stood up. The words which had meant
nothing at the time, which she'd assumed all this time had been the
order to attack. But now she'd learned at least some Andaran, and
in her memory, she heard the voice once more. The voice she
recognized now as Jasak Olderhan's.
"Hold fire, Fifty Garlath!
"
The words rang through her
mind like a jagged lightning bolt, and she stared at Gadrial.
"Jasak ordered him not to
shoot," she said slowly, softly. "He ordered him not to
shoot."
"Yes, he did!" Gadrial's
expression was tight with remembered anguish. "I heard him say it.
Heard that crossbow's slap and twang after he'd shouted
that order. Then that horrible, thunderous roar—"
Shaylar felt nothing but truth in
Gadrial Kelbryan, and she began to weep. Silently at first. Then
she covered her face with both hands and began to sob.
They'd died for nothing. For
nothing! And Company-Captain Halifu had come looking for
them, with no way to know Jasak had never meant for anyone to
die, and more blood had been spilled. Halathyn had died,
and so had a lot of others. And all anyone in Sharona would know
was what she'd transmitted to Darcel. The images of fire
and blood. Of intentional murder and deliberate slaughter, because
that was what she'd thought—known—was
happening!
There would be a war, she
realized. She could see it as clearly as she had ever seen anything
in her life. As if she'd been a Calirath experiencing a Glimpse.
There would be a terrible, monstrous war, and more people would
die, stupidly, on both sides, because no one back home knew the
first massacre had been a mistake.
Gadrial had put both arms
around her, was making helpless sounds, trying to comfort her.
And then, suddenly, the door between the sleeping cabin and the
tiny sitting room of Gadrial's quarters crashed open and Jathmar
was there, white to the lips.
"Shaylar!"
She turned blindly toward him.
Then she was in his arms, clinging to him, weeping helplessly.
"What happened?" he demanded
raggedly. "What did she do to you?"
"Nothing." Shaylar hiccuped.
"Nothing, Jathmar. Oh, Jath—the whole thing was a terrible
mistake!"
She'd tried to tell him, although
her explanation wasn't nearly as coherent as Gadrial's had been,
and he listened to her words, to the emotions churning through the
marriage bond. When she finally got the ghastly truth Gadrial had
just revealed through to him, he sat in silence for long moments,
jaw muscles clenched tightly. Then a deep sigh shuddered out of
him.
"All right. I believe it. Because
you believe her. Gods, what a stupid, monstrous
waste!"
Shaylar just nodded, and he
tipped her chin up, smiled into her eyes, and wiped tears from her
cheek with his index finger.
"You need a handkerchief,
sweetheart, only I haven't got one."
She sniffed, then flashed a
grateful look at Gadrial when the other woman pressed a scrap of
cloth from her sewing into her hand. Shaylar dried her eyes, blew
her nose, and gave Gadrial a watery smile.
"Thank you," she said, then
realized Gadrial was watching both of them closely, her brow
furrowed in puzzlement.
"Shaylar?" she said slowly,
almost uncertainly.
"Yes?"
"How did Jathmar know you
were upset?"
Shaylar and Jathmar exchanged
mortified glances.
"Oh, hells," Shaylar said, but
Jathmar shook his head.
"My fault," he muttered in
Shurkhali (which was not the Ternathian they'd been
teaching Gadrial), rubbing the bridge of his nose. "You just scared
the daylights out of me, honey. I caught your fear, then your
emotions went so crazy I just—"
"Hush." It was Shaylar's turn to
shake her head, and then she shrugged with a crooked smile. "It
had to happen sometime. And it's no more your fault you
responded than it's my fault for having felt that way in the first
place!"
"But why did you? You
were already headed that way before she dropped that little
bombshell about what's-his-name, Garlath. That's what set off the
explosion, but you were already under a lot of pressure,
Shaylar. What in all the Arpathian hells has been going on
in here?"
"Gadrial's been explaining
something important to me, Jathmar. Something about the way
their technology works. We joked about Halathyn using magic,
but, Jathmar, I think that's exactly what it was. Magic. I
don't know what else to call it."
She drew a deep breath and tried
to explain. On the one hand, she was handicapped by the fact that
she simply didn't understand it all herself by any stretch of the
imagination. On the other hand, she had the advantage that she and
Jathmar shared a far more complete command of their
language—not to mention the marriage bond—plus
a common base of reference. It took a while to get the
fundamental concept across, and longer for Jathmar to accept it.
But then he nodded abruptly, choppily.
"You're right," he said.
"Manipulating energy with special words? Spells and
incantations? Magic rings—well, those little cube
things—to store the spells inside? It's utterly fantastic,
impossible, but how else could they be doing it?" He sighed.
"And now I've blown our cover. We've got to tell her
something."
"Yes, we do," Shaylar agreed.
"Let me think."
Her thoughts raced as she tried
to figure out how to word it without giving too much
away. Finally, she faced Gadrial, who sat watching them through
narrowed, suspicious eyes.
"I'm sorry," Shaylar sighed.
"Jathmar was very confused. He wanted to know why I was upset,
so I had to explain. Everything. He, too, is very distressed by the
mistake that was made."
"But how did he know?"
Gadrial, and Shaylar gave her a crooked little smile.
"You said you have a Gift.
Something you were born with. On Sharona, our home world, we
have . . . not the same thing. We don't
have your . . . magic." She wasn't
sure she was using Gadrial's word properly, but it was as close as
she could come at the moment. "Not anything like it. But some
people are born with something other people don't have. We call
it . . . "
She hunted for the word, only to
discover she didn't have exactly the right one in her still limited
vocabulary.
"What do you call it when a
great artist, or a great singer, has something other people don't?
The thing that lets him do what he does so much better than
anyone else can?"
"A talent?" Gadrial suggested,
and Shaylar nodded vigorously.
"Yes. A talent. Some people in
my world have special Talents. They're—" she wrinkled her
brow trying to find the way to say it. "They're in the mind." She
tapped her temple. "Jathmar and I are married. We both have a
small Talent, nothing very special, really," she said as smoothly as
she could, grateful that Gadrial was no telepath to sense her
departure from the truth. "But when two people with Talents
marry, a bond forms. A bond of the mind. The emotions. Jathmar
always knows when I'm afraid or upset. And I always know when
he's worried or angry. It's stronger when we're closer together, but
we don't have to be in the same room to feel it. Don't your people
have anything like this? A mother who just knows when
her child's been injured, for example?"
"No." Gadrial shook her head,
eyes wide, and Jathmar and Shaylar exchanged startled glances.
"Nothing like it?"
Jathmar's astonishment showed even through his slower, more
labored Andaran.
"No."
The three of them stared at one
another, thunderstruck for entirely different reasons.
"Well," Gadrial finally said, "it's
clear we come from very different people. Very different."
"Yes," Shaylar gulped. "Even
more different than we'd realized."
"Which brings up another
question." Gadrial held Shaylar's gaze. "What are
your . . . Talents?"
Shaylar had known it was
coming. It was, after all, the next logical question. She just wished
she'd thought to come up with an explanation for it before this.
Lying, even by withholding information, did not come naturally to
a Voice. For that matter, she wasn't certain exactly which
lies she should tell! Should she understate what Talents could do
in an effort to lull these people into a false sense of security?
Hope they would take Sharona and the Talented too lightly? Or
should she exaggerate the Talents? Hope she and Jathmar
could make the Arcanans nervous enough that they'd move slowly,
cautiously? Possibly create enough nervousness to buy time for
their own people to mobilize in response to the threat?
"Jathmar is a Mapper," she said
finally. "He . . . Sees the land around
him. Not very far," she added. "For a few miles in any one
direction, at most."
Gadrial's mouth had fallen open.
She stared at Jathmar for a moment, then back and Shaylar.
"And you?"
"Oh, my Talent isn't very much,"
Shaylar prevaricated. "Mostly, I sense Jathmar through the
marriage bond. It helps me know if he's in trouble, when he's out
Mapping. And I help draw the charts, too."
"We didn't find any maps,"
Gadrial said, studying them with hooded, wary eyes. Shaylar met
those eyes forthrightly and shook her head.
"No, of course you didn't. I
burned them."
"You burned them?"
"What would you have
done?" Shaylar challenged. "Would you have just handed them
over? To people you didn't know? People who'd murdered one of
your friends, who'd chased you down like animals, who were
shooting and killing the rest of your friends all around you?
Trying to kill you? Would you have let people like that get
hold of maps that showed the way to your home?"
"No," Gadrial said softly, after a
moment. "I don't suppose I would."
"Neither would I. Neither did
I."
Gadrial nodded slowly, but
another deep suspicion showed plainly in her expression. She
started to ask a question, paused, then closed her lips. Shaylar
waited, meeting her gaze levelly. It was one of the hardest things
she'd ever done, but she held that gaze steadily, as though she had
nothing further to hide.
"Shaylar," Gadrial said at last,
sounding unhappy, "we think—Jasak thinks—your
people got a message out. One that warned your people about
what had happened. Did someone on your crew get a
warning out? Using this Talent of the mind?"
Continuing to meet Gadrial's
gaze was agony, but Shaylar did it anyway.
"I don't know, Gadrial."
"Don't know? Or won't tell me?"
"What do you want of me,
Gadrial?" Shaylar's eyes filled. "We're your prisoners."
"Not my prisoners."
Gadrial shook her head, biting her lip. "You're Sir Jasak
Olderhan's prisoners."
"Don't you mean the army's?"
Jathmar asked harshly in his accented Andaran.
"No, I don't. I don't understand
all of it, because I'm not in the Army, either. And I'm not Andaran.
The Andarans are a military society, and they have a lot of
complicated rules I don't understand. But one of those rules is
about prisoners, and about responsibilities toward them. You'll
have to ask Jasak about it, if you want to know."
"I do want to know," Jathmar
said in a voice full of iron. "And I think we have a right to know.
Don't you?"
Gadrial bit her lip again, more
gently this time, looking at him levelly. Then she drew a slightly
unsteady breath.
"Yes, I do. If you'll wait here, I'll
go find him and ask him to explain. Explain to all of us,
actually. I'm caught in the middle of this thing, too, and I don't
understand it as well as I should."
"Thank you," Shaylar said softly,
and Gadrial nodded. Then she left the cabin, and Shaylar began to
tremble.
"They're going to figure it out,
Jathmar," she said, once again in Shurkhali.
"Eventually," he agreed heavily.
"Probably sooner than we'd like. And it's my fault. I should have
realized you weren't really in danger—not with Gadrial."
"Don't blame yourself." She laid
a hand against his cheek, and his lips quirked.
"There's no one else to
blame, sweetheart. It certainly isn't your fault." He captured her
hand, kissed her fingers, and tucked them against his heart. "I
know how hard that was, lying to Gadrial just now. I don't think I
could have done half as well as you did. She's half convinced you
don't know for sure if a message went out."
"Only half," Shaylar muttered,
"and Jasak Olderhan won't be so easy to fool."
"No, he won't. Still, you're right.
What else should they expect from us? If they were in our shoes,
to you think they'd have volunteered that information about magic
powering their whole civilization?"
"Probably not," Shaylar agreed
dryly. "It would be interesting to know how much information our
side's managed to gather from their prisoners." She
shivered. "I'm not sure I want to know how we're treating their
soldiers, though. We've been so
fortunate . . . "
His arm tightened around her.
He didn't need to speak; she could taste his fear for her, his fear
about what lay ahead. When Jasak came into the room to explain,
Shaylar would know he was telling the truth, if only she could
arrange to touch him. But having said as much as she had already,
he would undoubtedly be doubly suspicious if she tried anything
so obvious. Up until now, their captors had viewed her penchant
for touching people as a simple personal habit. She'd been careful
to be just as "touchy-feely" with Jathmar as she was with them,
but now—
She might never be given another
opportunity to touch them again. She faced that probability
squarely. And as she did, she also realized that lying to them now
and being caught in that lie later would not do them a great deal of
good down the road. It might well damage their circumstances,
worsen their treatment, incur all sorts of unpleasantness.
The thoughts flowed through
her, but before she could discuss them with Jathmar, it was too
late. The door opened again, and Jasak Olderhan filled the frame,
his eyes hooded as he stared down at them.
Chapter Thirty-Three
He knows, Shaylar realized with a jolt of pure terror.
He already knows. . . .
The cold anger in Jasak's eyes
was bad enough, but what lay under that anger had
Jathmar moving abruptly, thrusting her behind him, facing Jasak
with nothing in his hands but courage.
"If you hurt her," Jathmar said
softly, each word enunciated precisely, carefully, "I will do my
best to kill you."
Something lethal stirred in Jasak
Olderhan's eyes. Then he drew a long, slow breath through his
nostrils and let it out again, just as slowly. The glittering threat
left his eyes. He was still angry—deeply angry, with a cold,
controlled fury—but homicide no longer stared them in the
face. Jathmar stayed where he was, anyway.
"Gadrial," Jasak said heavily,
"please stay in the passage. I don't want you walking into this
cabin."
Shaylar wanted to tell him
Gadrial wasn't at risk, but what she felt from Jathmar held her
silent. If anything threatened her, Jathmar would use whatever was
at hand to keep Jasak away from her. Even Gadrial, the closest
thing either of them had to a friend in this entire universe. Her
breath sobbed in her throat. This was
madness. . . .
Jasak stepped fully into the cabin
and closed the door carefully behind him. He didn't lock
it—not that there was much reason to on a ship in the
middle of the ocean—but he stood with his back still
against it, staring at them for several more seconds. Then he drew
another deep breath.
"Gadrial tells me you want to
know your status as my prisoners?"
"That's right."
"Well, I'd like to know
how you sent a message to your soldiers."
Icy silence lay between them. It
lingered, chilling despite the sunlight through the scuttle.
"Do you have any idea," Jasak
asked softly, "what your people did to my men?"
"From what I've gathered, about
the same thing they did to my crew," Jathmar said in a flat
voice.
Jasak's eyes flashed. That
murderous look glittered in them again for a moment, but then his
nostrils flared.
"All right. I suppose there's a
certain justice in that view." He very carefully unknotted his
hands, then scrubbed his eyes in a gesture that combined
weariness, frustration, and almost unbearable tension in one.
"Do you remember Hadrign
Thalmayr?" he asked finally, abruptly.
"The man who replaced you?
The one who hated Shaylar and me?"
"Yes." Jasak's voice was as dry
as a Shurkhali summer wind. "He was a
very . . ." He paused, clearly searching for
words Jathmar's limited Andaran would allow him to understand.
"He thought in narrow terms. I tried to convince him to pull out,
to abandon that portal at least for a time. We'd already made one
mistake, and I didn't want anyone making another one that led to
more shooting. But he wouldn't listen. Neither would Five
Hundred Klian at Fort Rycharn. They thought it was unlikely there
was a body of your soldiers anywhere near our portal. And they
thought it was unlikely you'd gotten a message out. But they were
wrong on both counts, weren't they?"
"Where they?" Jathmar
countered.
"You tell me," Jasak said softly.
"And before you do, think about this. I've been adding things up.
Puzzling things. We've been holding you for barely two weeks, yet
you speak Andaran astonishingly well. How? Nobody
learns languages that fast—not in Arcana.
"Then there's your wife's ability
to know things about people. She's a very sensitive creature, your
wife. Always touching someone. Always concerned. Always so
understanding. She understands too much, Jathmar. It's almost like
she knows what you're thinking."
He looked past Jathmar, staring
directly into Shaylar's eyes, and her insides flinched. But she
forced herself to meet his gaze, the way she'd met Gadrial's. It was
harder—much, much harder—to simply
meet Jasak Olderhan's gaze, let alone lie to those cold-steel eyes.
When those eyes tracked back to Jathmar, she nearly sagged in
relief. It felt as if someone had turned off the blowtorch they'd
been holding on her.
"Then there's the dragon," Jasak
added softly.
"The dragon?" Jathmar echoed,
genuinely baffled this time.
"Oh, yes. The dragon. You were
still unconscious, but Shaylar remembers. Don't you?" The glance
he flicked into her eyes felt like a lance driven through her. Then
he clicked that glance back onto Jathmar. "We had to airlift you
out to save your life. When the transport dragon arrived, we
loaded you on with no trouble. But when we tried to load
Shaylar, the dragon went berserk. He hated her on sight, and I want
to know why. What did the dragon sense about her that we couldn't?
"Stranger still, the dragon's rage
seemed to hurt her. Not just terrify her; hurt her. She
clutched at her head, and she screamed. Not just once, either. Not
just the first time we tried to put her on the dragon's back. It
happened again, right after we got airborne. The dragon actually
tried to buck us off in midair, tried to reach her with his teeth. But
your wife didn't even see that, because she was clutching her head
again, screaming in pain. Gadrial had to put her to sleep, knock her
unconscious with her healing Gift, just to stop the pain she was in.
And to—how did Shaylar put it? To 'get the dragon out of
her mind.'"
This time, Shaylar flinched. She
couldn't help it. Her memory of that dreadful night was too
chaotic, to confused, for detailed recollection, even for a Voice.
But she remembered that moment. Remembered her desperate plea
to Gadrial. Yet she'd never suspected Gadrial might actually have
understood her. The deadly implications of that revelation
stabbed through her and she felt the same awareness resonating
through the marriage bond with Jathmar.
"Would you care to explain all
of that, Jathmar?" Jasak said. "If I hadn't known such things were
impossible, I'd have said she was doing something with her
mind—something that enraged our dragon, and that the
dragon's rage was somehow spilling over into her mind. But that
was impossible. Absurd. Except that it isn't impossible, after all, is
it? You people have these Talents." He spat the word out
like poison. "You do things with your minds. Just what kind of
game are the two of you playing with our minds?"
He's scared, Shaylar realized abruptly. He's scared to
death of something he doesn't understand. She knew exactly
what that felt like; she'd just gone through the same experience
herself, with Gadrial's explanation. But his fright ran much deeper
than hers had, much deeper than simple fear of something he
didn't understand.
He's terrified that we'll put thoughts into their minds, control
them somehow. What else could he think, if they don't
have anything like telepathy? And he feels responsible.
He's not just afraid for himself. It's not that simple for him. He's a
military officer, responsible for others, for making certain we
don't do something to them.
"It doesn't work that way, Jasak,"
she heard herself say.
"Shaylar!" Jathmar
twisted around to stare at her, his eyes dark with protest, but she
shook her head.
"No, Jathmar. I need to say this.
Trust me, please." She'd deliberately spoken in Andaran, and her
husband searched her eyes even as he searched her feelings
through their bond. He bit his lower lip, taut with fear for her, and
yet in the end he nodded and turned to Jasak once more.
"I'll say it again, Jasak Olderhan.
Hurt her, and I will do my best to kill you."
Their gazes locked for a long,
dangerous moment. Then Jasak let out an exasperated sigh.
"For people with 'Talents,' you
can be amazingly unobservant, Jathmar! I don't kill women. Not if
I know they're in the line of fire. And I don't hurt women,
either. When I discovered Shaylar in those
trees . . . "
The agony reflected beside the
anger in his eyes was plainly visible, and not just to Shaylar, and
she felt a little of the tension drain from her husband. Just a little,
but it was enough to take them all one step back from the killing
edge of danger. Jathmar still wouldn't let her move closer to Jasak,
not even to stand at his own side, which was where she desperately
wanted to be—held in his arms, not cowering behind his
shoulder. But there was no point in making the tension worse.
She did reach forward, needing
contact with him, even if that contact was as slight as interlacing
her fingers through his, and he reached back to squeeze her hand.
"Please open the door, Jasak,"
she said then. "I know you're afraid. You're worried Jathmar might
try to use Gadrial as a hostage, out of fear. But she needs to hear
what I have to say."
Jasak stared into her eyes for
long moments, trying to see past them into her mind. She could
feel the attempt battering at her, and wondered abruptly if perhaps
he did have at least a trace of Talent himself. But even if he did, he
didn't have the slightest idea how to use it, and so he ended up
with nothing but intense frustration and no real answers. In the
end, he finally turned and opened the door.
Gadrial's eyes were wide and
worried. She started to step forward, but Jasak lifted a hand.
"Don't come in," he cautioned.
"Not yet. But Shaylar wants you to hear this, too. It ought to
be . . . interesting."
He turned that cold-steel gaze
back onto her and waited.
"I am Talented," Shaylar said,
speaking very quietly, very steadily. "A Talent is a little bit like a
Gift. You're born with it. But we don't use Talents to control
some energy field outside ourselves. We use our minds to do
different kinds of work. We call someone with my Talent a
'Voice." I can use my mind to talk directly to another Talented
Voice. I can't do that with anyone else, not even Jathmar."
Jasak stood rigidly in the open
doorway, clearly not believing it, but Shaylar kept going, because
she didn't have any other choice. She released Jathmar's hand just
long enough to reach up and brush fingertips across her husband's
temple. Then she moved her hand from his temple to her own.
"Jathmar and I share a special
bond. When Talented people marry, there's such closeness, such
sharing, that a deep and permanent bond forms. But it isn't the
same as a full Voice. He can feel my emotions; I can feel his. And
I can feel Jathmar's mind. Not hear it, exactly, but feel
it—like I'm touching something solid. And he can feel
mine, even across a distance of several miles. We can often
guess what the other is thinking, because we know each other
so well, but I can't read his mind.
"And I can't read yours or
Gadrial's, either. I can't hear your thoughts. I can't put thoughts
into your mind. You noticed how often I touch people." Her
rueful smile startled him. "I knew one of you would, eventually,
but I didn't know who would see it first. Gadrial spends more time
with me, but you're more suspicious." She shrugged. "You're a
soldier. It's your job."
He glowered at her, but then, to
her vast relief, he seemed to unbend the tiniest bit.
"Yes. It is my job," he
said gruffly, then drew another deep breath and forced the steel
burr out of his voice.
"All right. I'll try to listen with a
little less suspicion. I need to understand this, for a lot of
important reasons. And while I'm listening," he met her gaze, "I'll
remind myself that despite what your soldiers did to my men,
despite the threat to my people they represent, neither you nor
Jathmar tried to kill my men until we fired on
you."
"No," Jathmar said stiffly. "We
didn't. We weren't stupid. We were good enough
woodsmen to notice panicked wildlife rushing ahead of a wide
line of men driving through a forest to surround us. We guessed
right then that we were outnumbered. That's why we found a
hiding place. And when we finally saw your people, it was
obvious we faced soldiers. Less than twenty civilians against
enough men to cut off our escape from every direction? We'd
have been crazy to shoot first! But that didn't help us in the end,
did it—because you had to come in shooting anyway!
Maybe Gadrial is right and you didn't order your people to shoot,
but you were in command. You were the one who pushed
it—chased us—until it was inevitable!"
His accent was more pronounced
even than usual, and he had to pause several times to find the
words he wanted. But his anger came through with perfect clarity,
and Jasak studied him for long silent moments.
"Let me tell you what I
see about that day," he said finally. "You had personal weapons
more terrifying than anything we'd ever seen—certainly
more terrifying than anything we 'soldiers' had. Something
that killed with horrifying violence, something we couldn't even
identify. And when we tracked the man who'd killed one of my
men to your camp, we discovered that you hadn't made the
sort of open encampment we 'soldiers' made when we bivouacked.
Oh, no, you'd built a palisade, well placed on commanding
ground, with good fields of fire. An obviously military
palisade. One of my men was already dead, I had no idea who you
were, where you'd come from, who'd shot first, what other
weapons you might have, how close other military forces
might have been, what your intentions were, what sort of people
you were. And when we finally did catch up with you, you were
holed up in the best military position we'd seen anywhere
on that side of our portal! Yes, you turned out to be
civilians, but how was I supposed to know that then? I
knew nothing about you—except that you'd already
killed one of my people—and every member of the Arcanan
military forces has standing orders where contact with another
human civilization is concerned. We're to make it a peaceful
contact if we possibly can. But, if there's already been
blood shed, especially by what appears to be an organized military
force, then those same standing orders required me to
control the contact. Given all of that, Jathmar, how would
you have reacted differently up until the instant fire was opened?"
It was his turn to hold Jathmar's
gaze challengingly, and he did. Yet even Jathmar could see it was a
challenge, not simple anger, and he felt his own anger
waver.
He didn't want to feel
that. The sudden realization that he
wanted—needed—to cling to his anger
shook him badly, but it was true. He didn't want to take a single
step toward understanding what Jasak had known, what Jasak's
options had been, because understanding might undermine his
hatred.
Yet he couldn't afford to clutch
that hatred to him, either. And so, finally, he shrugged.
"I don't know," he said shortly.
"I'm not a soldier. I'd like to think I wouldn't have run down a
civilian survey crew, but if I'd thought they were
soldiers?" He shrugged again. "I don't know."
"I appreciate your honesty in
coming that far," Jasak said. "But there was another side to it, as
well. Something I'd already recognized even before the shooting
started. You were trying to keep the situation under
control, too. You didn't want a bloodbath any more than I did, and
I knew it."
"How?" Shaylar asked, totally
astonished.
"You could have opened fire
without warning. I was sure you'd gone into those fallen timbers.
If you'd wanted a fight, you could have dug in in your palisade,
tried to set up an ambush when we followed your man back to
your camp. You hadn't done that; you'd run for your portal,
instead, tried to break contact. There could have been a lot of
reasons—military reasons—for that, but you
didn't open fire when we started closing in on your position out in
those fallen trees, either. You had concealment and cover—
you could have killed a lot of my men before we even knew where
to shoot back—and you didn't. Not until someone
on our side killed someone else on your side who was trying to
talk, not shoot."
He shook his head again, slowly,
heavily.
"I'm not prepared to second-
guess all my decisions that day, and we'll never know what
happened when your man—Falsan—met Osmuna.
But the bottom line is that my people shot first, whether I wanted
them to or not, in the second encounter with you.
However it happened, that was the outcome. And that means you
deserve for me to at least listen with as open a mind as I possibly
can."
Shaylar started to speak, but he
raised one hand. The gesture stopped her, and he smiled without
any humor at all.
"Don't misunderstand me. I'm
still a soldier, and my duty is still to protect my people. After what
happened at our portal—after what your soldiers did to us,
when they came looking for you—I'm very much afraid that
an ugly, brutal war is waiting for all of us." He spoke with dark
and bitter honesty. "Even if we, the four of us, could figure out a
way to stop it, it may be too late already. Military people on both
sides are obviously already beginning to react to what's happened
as the reports go up the chain of command, and the gods only
know where that's likely to go. And once the politicians
get their hooks into this, it may be impossible to stop.
"All we can do is this; try to
convince me, Shaylar. Convince me your mental Talents aren't
super weapons. That you can't use your minds to destroy Arcana at
any time you choose. Whether you believe it or not at this
moment, I am absolutely the closest thing to a friendly judge
you're going to find. If you can't convince me, you'll never
convince the Andaran High Commandery, let alone the politicians
who govern the Union of Arcana."
"I know that," she whispered.
"And that terrifies me."
"It should."
The dark thing riding his
shoulders left Shaylar trembling. She was more than afraid for
herself; she was afraid for Sharona. For every Talent alive. But
then Jasak went on.
"Whatever else you say or don't
say, before I come to a final decision about whether or not I
believe what you're telling me, answer me this. Why do
you touch people, if it isn't to read minds?"
He still sounded suspicious,
although less unbelieving, and she met his gaze unflinchingly.
"Most people, even those
without Talents, can tell a great deal about a person's emotions.
When you look at a person, Jasak, you can see emotion in him,
can't you? In his expression, his eyes, the way he stands or walks.
You learn a great deal about a person that way, don't you?"
He nodded, clearly unsure where
she was going.
"Well, I can see all that, too,
visually. But when I touch a person, I can sense their
emotions directly. Not their thoughts, just their feelings. If they're
terrified, I feel waves of terror, as though I'm terrified of
something, too. If they're angry, it's like being hit with a fist. If
they're grieving, it's like drowning in the need to weep."
She turned to look at Gadrial,
who still stood in the passage beyond Jasak.
"The day we came onto the ship,
Jathmar and I knew something terrible had happened. That was
obvious, because Gadrial had been crying. Her deep emotional
shock showed in her eyes, in her face, in her posture—
anyone could see that. But," her gaze moved back to Jathmar's
face, "when you took my hand to help steady me on the
gangway . . . "
Shaylar shut her eyes, shivering
involuntarily.
"I almost fell down, your grief
was so terrible. I know now it was for what had happened to your
men, but I didn't know that then. And I didn't even have time to
block it out. It just smashed into me like a club. It literally
knocked me off my feet. I would have fallen, if you hadn't caught
me, and then Gadrial took my hand, and that was almost
worse. It felt—"
She cast through every nuance of
that memory, trying to be as accurate as possible.
"There was terrible loss.
Personal loss, even worse than yours for your men, Jasak. Like
when a family member dies. It
felt . . . as if you'd lost a father?" she
finished uncertainly, reopening her eyes to meet Gadrial's.
"Yes." Gadrial's breath caught on
a ragged half-sob. "That's exactly what it feels like. Halathyn
was a father to me."
"I'm sorry he was killed," Shaylar
said softly. "I touched him that first day." She had to blink to clear
her eyes. "I trusted him instantly. He was very gentle inside. It felt
like he loved everything."
"Yes." Gadrial wiped away tears.
"He did. I still can't believe he's gone. That he died so
horribly . . . so stupidly."
"They all died horribly,"
Shaylar said, her voice suddenly harsh. "They all died stupidly.
There was no need for any of it! I bleed for you and
Halathyn, Gadrial—but who bleeds for us? Who
bleeds for Ghartoun, who stood up to talk to you with empty
hands? For poor, maddening Braiheri, who studied plants and
animals? For Barris Kasell, who kept me sane when Falsan died in
my arms? Who died trying to keep me alive? We had
boys with us, too. Young men, barely out of school, who took
care of our pack animals, the supplies. Boys with dreams and their
whole lives to live. And they all died horribly. Stupidly.
For nothing."
Gadrial bit her lip, and Shaylar
looked directly into Jasak Olderhan's eyes.
"That first day, that horrible first
day . . ." She didn't even try to fight the tears.
"You can't ever know how terrified I was. How deep the shock
was, even before you cremated the dead. I was badly
injured—your own Healers have confirmed that. My
husband's life hung by a thread, with burns so terrible I couldn't
even bear to look at them. And then you burned the dead."
She shuddered. Her mind wanted
desperately to shy away from that particular memory, but there
was a point she needed to make, and she couldn't do that without
facing the memory herself.
"When you burned them, I
started to fall. You caught me—just like you did on the
gangway. Do you remember that, Jasak?"
He nodded slowly.
"When you touched me—
" She paused, swallowed sharply, wrapped both arms around
herself. "My Talent was badly damaged because of my injury, but I
could still feel your regret. Your horror. It shocked me. I
didn't expect it, and I was too dizzy, too sick, to understand fully.
But I felt more than enough to realize you'd actually intended to
honor my dead."
His own memories of that
dreadful day floated like ghosts in his eyes as she stared into them.
"And under the regret there was a
sense of desperate sorrow—one I finally understood when
Gadrial told me today, in this cabin, that you'd ordered your man
not to shoot Ghartoun. I didn't want to believe it when she did, but
a Voice has perfect recall, Jasak. I can shut my eyes anytime I want
and hear you shouting not to shoot. And when I learned
that, it hurt me, terribly, to finally know for certain that my friends
had died for absolutely no reason except one scared man's
stupid mistake. But it also confirmed what I'd felt inside you
that day."
He looked down at her, his eyes
still hooded, still suspicious, and her temper snapped.
"Gods' mercy, Jasak! Why else
do you think I was able to trust you that day? To let you
touch me? To not jerk back in horror every time you even
looked at me? You've talked about how frightening our
weapons were to you—what about your weapons
to us? You'd just butchered my dearest friends—
burned them alive, curse you! My gods, I'd never seen
anything so barbaric in my life! You claim to be civilized people,
but you build weapons designed to roast an enemy alive!
"You can't possibly know what
you did to me that day! What you're still doing to me, every single
day I spend trapped in a room with guards staring at me if I even
try to look out a window. I can't go for walks in the moonlight
anymore. I can't go for walks anywhere! I can't even take a bath
by myself, without having to ask Gadrial to order some
musclebound guard not to shoot before I step outside that cabin
door without permission!"
She stood glaring at him, bosom
heaving with emotion she could barely contain. She wanted to
scream, wanted to hit him with her fists to make him see what he'd
done to them, what he was still doing to them. And buried in her
anger, making it burn even fiercer, was the knowledge that he
did know. That he understood, and deeply regretted it. That he
would have done anything to undo
it . . . and that he was still
unflinchingly determined to do whatever his "duty" required of
him. That unless she could convince him their Talents did not
present some deadly danger to his nation and the men in his army,
he would take whatever steps seemed necessary to eliminate that
danger.
"It was my Talent—the Talent you're so worried about right now—that let me
understand what you were feeling. I wanted to hate you. Gods, I
wanted to kill you! I was in deep shock, and the shocks
just kept coming and coming, and it was all your fault. I
didn't want you to touch me, not then, not ever, but you did.
"And because you did, and
because I'm Talented, I knew you hadn't wanted it to
happen. I knew how terribly you regretted it, and how determined
you were to protect me from still more harm. And when
that happened, I couldn't keep hating you. I couldn't. I'm a
Voice—I was born to understand people. I can't help understanding people. Even," she sobbed in rage, "when I don't
want to!
"I wanted to hate you, and my
Talent wouldn't let me. I'm not a weapon—I'm a Voice
. A bridge between people. A living tool to help people
communicate and understand one another. It's in my blood, my
bones, my very skin. It you would just stop holding onto
your suspicion with both fists and all your teeth, you'd see the
truth, Jasak Olderhan."
She drew a deep breath, scrubbed
the angry tears from her face, then shook her head.
"I can't prove to you that
my Talent is no danger to you," she said quietly, almost softly.
"But if it were, don't you think I'd already be using it? All I've
done is use it to learn your language. If there were
something I could do to strike back at you after all of the agony,
fear, humiliation, and helplessness your people have inflicted on
us, you can be certain that I would." She met his eyes levelly,
challengingly. "You'd deserve that, and I'm sure you'd expect it.
But there isn't, and I can't, and you're not a Voice, don't have a
scrap of telepathy. So words are all I have to convince you I'm
telling you the truth."
He continued to gaze down at
her, then turned to look at Jathmar again, and she wanted—
more than she'd ever wanted anything in her life before—to
touch him. To see what emotions were streaming through him
behind that expressionless mask of a face. But that was the last
thing she could do, and so she simply stood, waiting.
Jasak looked at the tiny woman
standing in front of him. Looked at the face of that woman's
husband and read Jathmar's desperate fear for Shaylar, and the
horrible, debilitating knowledge that there was no way he could
protect her from whatever Jasak decided to do.
And that was the crux of the
problem, wasn't it? Jasak had to decide what to do, and Shaylar
was right. He had no 'Talent" of the mind, no yardstick to measure
the truth of what she'd said, or to sense what her true
emotions might be. He had to choose whether or not to take her
unsupported word for it.
Despite all she'd just said, it was
entirely possible that she could be—and had been—
subtly influencing his judgments, his decisions, his very thoughts.
The very passion with which she'd presented her argument had
only driven home the fact that he had no way of knowing what
other hidden abilities lurked within her. Not only had she admitted
that she could sense the emotions of others, but the way she'd
described herself—as a 'Voice'—had told him
exactly how they'd gotten a message back to their own side.
And she'd forgotten to try to disguise her fluency in Andaran.
Jathmar's progress in learning Jasak's language had been
phenomenal enough, but the command of it which Shaylar had just
demonstrated was little short of terrifying.
Yet that was the entire point,
wasn't it? Should it be terrifying, or did it simply feel that
way because he didn't understand? Because it was a simple,
everyday ability of her people which simply lay so far outside his
own experience that he couldn't recognize it as such?
"Sit down, Shaylar. Please," he
said finally.
She stared at him for a few more
seconds, then stepped back behind Jathmar and settled gingerly on
the foot of Gadrial's bed. Jasak waited until she'd seated herself,
then pulled the straight-back chair back away from the small desk
in the cabin's corner and placed it for Gadrial. He waited until the
magister was seated, as well, then drew a deep breath.
"First," he said quietly, "I
acknowledge that I was in command of the troops who killed your
companions and wounded the two of you. That's a significant
point, which I'll return to in a moment."
Jathmar was watching his face
even more intently than Shaylar. Now he reached out and took his
wife's hand once more, and Jasak realized he was also clinging to
that 'marriage bond' Shaylar had mentioned. That he was using it
to help himself follow what Jasak was saying with his own, more
limited Andaran.
"Second," he continued,
"whatever concerns I might have over the threat your 'Talents'
might or might not pose to the other people on this ship, or to the
Union of Arcana as a whole, I wouldn't blame you for using them
any way you could. Indeed, I'd expect no less out of you, just as I
would expect no less out of Gadrial and her Gift under similar
circumstances.
"And, third, I believe you." He
saw both of his prisoners' taut spines relax ever so slightly, and
shook his head. "I believe what you've told me is the truth. That
doesn't mean I believe you've told me the entire truth."
They stiffened again, but he
continued calmly.
"In your places, I
certainly wouldn't tell my captors anything which would help them
against my people unless I absolutely had to. I've seen enough of
both of you by now to realize you won't, either. But you're also
both highly intelligent. That means you know that sooner or later
you're going to be very thoroughly questioned. Questioned by
professional interrogators who know how to put bits and pieces
together and learn things you never even realized you were telling
them. For the moment, however, and speaking for myself, I'm
going to operate on two assumptions. First, that what you've told
me up to this point is true. Secondly, that I have your parole."
Not even Shaylar recognized the
last word, and he smiled crookedly.
"Your 'parole' is your
word—your promise—that you won't attempt to
escape, that you won't hurt anyone else except in direct self-
defense, and that you will refrain from hostile actions so long as
you're treated humanely and with respect. And—" he
continued, looking directly into Jathmar's eyes as the Sharonian
stiffened with an expression of borning outrage "—I believe
that if you're honest with yourselves, you have no choice but to
acknowledge that you have been treated both humanely—
and with respect—by both Gadrial and myself. I can't undo
what happened that day in the forest, but I've done the very best I
could to see to it that you were treated well afterward."
Jathmar inhaled, but before he
could speak, Shaylar squeezed his hand hard. He turned and
looked into her eyes for several heartbeats, then turned back to
Jasak.
"You want us to promise to
be . . . obedient prisoners," he said in
his slower, more halting Andaran. "What about our duty to
escape?"
"Escape to where, Jathmar?"
Gadrial put in gently from her chair. He looked at her, and she
smiled sadly. "Even if you could escape custody, where could you
go? How could you ever possibly hope to get home on your
own?"
"Gadrial is right," Jasak said as
Jathmar looked at her mulishly. "Trust me, however much any of
us may regret it, you aren't going to be able to escape, no matter
what you do. Unless, of course," his smile turned even more
crooked, "your 'Talents' are quite a bit
more . . . useful than I've just agreed
to assume they are."
"If escape is so impossible, why
should we promise not to?" Jathmar challenged.
"Because it will affect the
precautions I have to take as the officer responsible for you,"
Jasak replied unflinchingly.
"But how much longer will
you be the officer 'responsible' for us?" Shaylar asked. "I said
I trust you, Jasak, and I do. As much as I'll ever be able to trust any
Arcanan, at least. But what about that other man—that
Hundred Thalmayr? What about all of the other soldiers and
officers I've seen glaring at us? Sooner or later, someone senior to
you is going to be the one 'responsible' for us. How do we trust
him? And why should any promise we make to you affect how
he treats us?"
"Because of that point I told you
I'd come back to," Jasak said. "Because I was in command when
your people were killed. That makes me responsible for
what happened to them, and for everything that's happened to you
since."
"But I know you ordered that
other officer not to shoot!" Shaylar protested.
"Yes, I did. And I doubt very
much that even with your Talent you can understand how much it
means to me that you realize that. But the officer who opened fire
was one of my subordinates. I ought to have ignored the letter of
the regulations and relieved him before we ever caught up with
your people. I didn't, and after he was killed, after the shooting had
become general and I had men down all over that clearing—
wounded, dying, dead—I assumed tactical command of the
battle. I fought that battle, not Shevan Garlath. And I'd do
it again, exactly the way I did it then, under the same
circumstances and given what I knew at the time."
He met the Sharonians' eyes
levelly.
"I had no choice at that point, but
that doesn't change the fact that it was my command which
attacked you, or that you were civilians who were simply
defending yourselves. My men destroyed your lives as surely as
they killed your companions, and that leaves me with an honor
obligation towards you."
"Honor obligation?" Jathmar
repeated carefully, and Jasak nodded.
"Among my people—
Andarans, not Arcanans as a whole—there's something
called shardon. It's the term we use to describe the act of
taking someone under your own and your family's shield. You and
Shaylar are my shardonai. As the commander of the troops
who wronged you and yours, I'm obligated to protect you as I
would a member of my own family. In fact, under Andaran law
and custom, a shardon is legally a member of the family of
his baranal."
"Which means what?" Jathmar
asked.
"Which means I'm honorbound
to refuse to surrender you into any other officer's custody,
regardless of our relative ranks. It means my family and I are
obligated to see to it that you're treated well, that no one abuses
you, and that you're assured of all the personal safeguards any
other member of our family would receive. It means that even
though you and Shaylar are Sharonian, not Arcanan, any children
born to you on Arcanan soil will be Arcanan citizens and entitled
to all of the rights and protections of citizenship. No one can take
them from you, no one can use them against you, and no one can
violate their civil rights. The sole difference between you, as my shardonai, and my sisters or my parents is that the
protections which we can extend to you continue to apply only so
long as you voluntarily remain under my protection."
"In your custody, you mean."
Jathmar's tone was more cutting than it had been as he made the
correction, and Jasak nodded.
"For all practical purposes, yes,"
he said unwaveringly. "I'm sorry, but no one can change that. Not
now."
"And how long is your
government going to be willing to leave us in your custody?"
Shaylar asked tautly.
"For as long as I, any member of
my family, or either one of you is alive," Jasak said flatly.
The two Sharonians looked at
him in obvious disbelief. Then Gadrial cleared her throat.
"I've lived among Andarans for
years," she told them. "There are a lot of things about them and
about their honor code that I still don't pretend to understand, but I
do know this much. If Jasak tells you his family will protect you,
they will protect you."
"From the entire army? Your
entire government?" Jathmar couldn't keep the incredulity out of
his voice . . . assuming that he'd tried
to.
"I think you may not fully realize
just who Jasak's family is," Gadrial said with a slightly crooked
smile. They looked at her, and she shrugged. "Jasak is Sir
Jasak Olderhan. His father is Thankhar Olderhan, who happens,
among other things, to be the Duke of Garth
Showma . . . and the planetary
governor of New Arcana. There may be one other Andaran
nobleman with as much personal political and military power as
His Grace. There couldn't possibly be two of them,
though. And under the Andaran honor code, the entire Olderhan
family and every one of its dependents and liegemen will die
before they allow anyone to harm an Olderhan shardon
."
"And the rest of your
government, of your politicians, would allow them to do that?"
Shaylar demanded as she and Jathmar looked at Jasak with
completely new expressions.
"Some of them won't like it,"
Jasak admitted. "Some of them will try to get around it, probably
especially among the Mythalans. And there may well be
some—especially among the Mythalans—who
attempt to step outside the law and justify it on the basis of
'national security.' But," he added in that same flat, inflexible,
rock-ribbed voice, "they won't succeed."
Shaylar and Jathmar looked at
one another, then back at him, and as he looked into their eyes, he
realized that at last they believed him.
"All right," Jathmar said finally.
He tried to keep his voice level,
his tone normal, but it was hard. Partly, that was because of the
enormous relief flowing through him. He'd had no idea Jasak
might come from such a prominent, powerful family, nor had it
even crossed his mind that the protection of that family might be
extended to him and Shaylar. But relieved as he was, grateful as he
might be, he couldn't forget that the price tag of that protection
amounted to a lifetime as prisoners. He told himself that they'd
have been prisoners under any circumstances, that this shardon
relationship offered them the chance to live as human beings,
anyway. He even knew it was true. But that didn't change the fact
that its protection had been extended to them by the very man who
acknowledged he was responsible for the massacre of their friends
and their own capture in the first place.
He could feel Shaylar's reaction
through the marriage bond, and knew her emotions were far
less . . . conflicted than his own. But
Shaylar was Shurkhali. She'd been brought up in that culture, that
society, and its acceptance of an honor code which had obvious
resonances with the one Jasak and Gadrial were describing. Jasak
had finally found something Shaylar understood. A rock
she could grasp, use as an anchor, and Jathmar was grateful for
that, as well. Yet he couldn't quite suppress his resentment of
that, either. Of the fact that it was Jasak, her captor—
and not her husband—who had provided her with that
almost painful sense of an understood security at last.
"All right," he said again. "We
accept that we're . . . shardonai, and that you—and your family—will protect us to
the very best of your ability. On that basis, we're willing to give you our 'parole,' but only as long as we to remain with you
and under your protection."
"Thank you," Jasak said softly.
He sat without saying anything
more for the better part of a minute, then he gave himself a shake
and looked at Shaylar intently.
"As a part of your parole,
Shaylar," he said, "I need to know how close you have to be to
another Voice for him to hear you."
Shaylar froze. Then she darted an
agonized glance at Jathmar. Her husband looked just as startled as
she felt, and she kicked herself mentally. They'd already known
Jasak was keenly intelligent. Obviously, he'd put two and two
together and come up with exactly the answer she'd hoped he
wouldn't reach, and she should have realized he would.
She started to say something. She
didn't know what, and it didn't matter, because Jasak's raised hand
cut her off before she began.
"I know you're tempted to lie,"
he said. "I don't blame you for that. And I won't try to compel you
to tell me if you refuse to. But honor obligations cut both ways, at
least in Andara. Refusing to answer is one thing; lying to your
baranal is another."
"And if she doesn't answer?"
Jathmar asked, bristling with fresh suspicion.
"If she doesn't answer, then I'll
be forced to assume the worst. In that case, my responsibility as an
officer in the Army of the Union of Arcana will be to ensure that
she isn't in communication with anyone from Sharona. Or, at least,
that she has no access to information useful to Sharona. In
accordance with the first possibility, I'll ask Gadrial and her
colleagues at the Institute to attempt to devise spellware which
will permanently shut down Shaylar's 'Voice.' Frankly, I don't
know if that would be even remotely possible, however, or how
we could test to be sure it was actually working if they did. In the
absence of that sort of guarantee, my responsibility then would
become preventing her from learning anything useful about
Arcana. I'd do so as gently as I possibly could, but the consequence
would be effectively close confinement. You would be almost
totally isolated. I would vastly prefer to avoid doing that, but the
obligations of my officer's oath would leave me no alternative."
Jathmar began a hot answer, but
Shaylar touched his shoulder.
"Wait, Jath," she said softly in
Shurkhali. He looked at her, and she grimaced. "I'm the one who
let the cat out of the bag," she said. "I didn't mean to, but he's
obviously even sharper than we were afraid he was. And, be
honest—is what he's saying really all that unreasonable? If
you had a prisoner who had the potential ability to
communicate—tracelessly, silently—with an enemy,
would you give her access to potentially useful information?"
"Well . . ." he began, and she
shook her head.
"These people don't have Voices
at all, Jath. That means they can't have anything like our Voice
Protocols to cover a situation like this. Even if I wanted to tell
them how to temporarily disable my Voice, they wouldn't have
anyone who could do it!"
"So you want to tell them the
truth? All of it?"
"They've obviously already
figured out I was the one who got word back to Darcel. That's
going to give them a minimum range figure, no matter what. But
should we try to exaggerate my range or to minimize it?"
Jathmar thought furiously, trying
to keep his expression from showing the depth of his
concentration. He wished passionately that they had longer to
think about this—or that he'd been smart enough to insist
that they think about it in advance. But they hadn't, nor did they
dare to hesitate too long before they came up with some sort of
answer now. Given what Jasak had said about the difference
between lying and simply refusing to divulge information at all,
the security offered by the shardon relationship might well
disappear if Jasak decided they were lying.
And, he thought unwillingly, Jasak's right about honor
obligations cutting both ways. If we're prepared to accept
the protection this relationship offers, then we should
damned well accept that we're duty-bound to meet our
obligations under it. Besides, if we don't, it might just go away
completely, and then what happens?
"Tell them the truth," he said
after a long moment, this time in Andaran.
"All right," Shaylar said in soft
Shurkhali, and kissed him lightly on the cheek. Then she looked at
Jasak.
"We're well outside my
maximum Voice range," she said unflinchingly, admitting that she
was the one whose warning to Darcel Kinlafia had brought the
savage counterattack down on Jasak's men. She saw his
recognition of that fact flicker in his eyes, but he only nodded, and
his voice remained calm, almost gentle.
"How great is your range?" he
asked. "And what sorts of messages can you send?"
"Range varies with the Voice,"
she replied. "My range is a bit over eight hundred miles,
but even if it were greater than that, no Voice can transmit through
a portal. As for messages—" She shrugged. "I can
send—could send, if another Voice were in
range—any message you could give me. Or, I could link
deeply enough with another Voice that he or she could literally see
through my eyes, hear through my ears. In that sort of link, the two
Voices—"
Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr sat back
on the bed in Gadrial Kelbryan's cabin, holding her husband's
hand, looking into the eyes of the man whose honor was all that
stood between her and a hostile universe's enmity, and willed for
him to recognize her honesty as the ship about her carried her
towards a lifetime of captivity.
Chapter Thirty-Four
"So, have you considered my
suggestion?"
Darcel Kinlafia turned his head
and cocked one eyebrow at the towering young man riding beside
him. He had to admit that Prince Janaki had become steadily more
impressive, not less, in the days they'd spent together. It wasn't just
the young man's magnetic personality and obvious intelligence,
either. He looked like a crown prince—improbably
tall (even for a Calirath), athletic, broad shouldered, and
handsome—and the magnificent horse under his saddle and
the hawk riding on the frame attached to it only added to that
perfection of imagery. With that new sense of awareness, that self-
image of himself as a possible political animal, Janaki's
suggestions had awakened within him, Kinlafia had come to
realize that Janaki chain Calirath was an imperial publicist's dream
come true.
Of course, the prince's horse had
never come from a standard PAAF string of mounts, the Voice
thought. No doubt the crown prince's sheer size would have made
him difficult to mount under any circumstances, but the House of
Calirath had been dealing with that particular problem for
centuries. Janaki's blue roan—one of a matched pair whose
full sibling was trotting along with the column's
remounts—was a Ternathian Shikowr, a breed that had been
carefully, lovingly developed in the lush, green paddocks and
meadows of Ternathia in a breeding program whose stud book had
been opened well over two thousand years ago.
Named after its founding
stallion—who, in turn, had been named for the ancient
Shurkhali cavalry saber the Empire had adopted for its own
mounted troops following their resounding initial defeats at the
hands of Shurkhali horsemen—and with careful infusions
of Shurkhali bloodlines, as well, the Shikowr was a large,
powerful breed. It had a characteristic stance, with the front end
thrust forward and the hindlegs straight out behind, and a
remarkably smooth gait for a horse which could reach seventeen
hands in height. In fact, the Shikowr was unique in that it had no
trotting gait at all. Instead, it had two four-beat gaits which
allowed it to cover a huge amount of ground in a short time, and
instead of trotting, it simply moved directly from its fast marching
gait into a smooth canter. The Shikowr was as tall as most heavy
draft horses, though it was less heavy, and it was renowned for its
combination of speed, intelligence, and sheer endurance.
It was even up to the formidable
task of carrying male members of the Ternathian imperial family.
All of that had made it the
Empire's first choice as a cavalry mount for centuries, although
Janaki's roan, a truly superb example of the breed, hugely
outclassed the horses which might be found in the typical cavalry
or dragoon regiment.
It was said that when the Empire
ran into the Arpathians, the most prized booty any septman raider
had been able to claim had been Shikowr stock to be incorporated
into their own world-famous breeding programs. Having seen
Platoon-Captain Arthag's Palomino alongside Prince Janaki's
Shikowr, Kinlafia believed it.
"Which suggestion was that,
Your Highness?" the Voice replied finally, gazing up at Janaki.
"The one about seeking a career
change."
"Oh." Kinlafia smiled. "That
suggestion."
"I see you're already practicing
the fine art of evading direct answers," Janaki observed. "Is that a
good sign, or a bad one?"
"That depends on a lot of things,
I imagine, Your Highness," Kinlafia said in a much more serious
tone, turning his attention back to the muddy trail before them as
it began to climb once more.
"Janaki," the crown prince
corrected yet again, but Kinlafia shook his head.
"Your Highness, I deeply
appreciate your invitation to use your first name. And perhaps one
of these days, if I do go into politics, and if my career prospers the
way you seem to feel it might, I may even take you up on the
offer—in private, at least. But I don't feel comfortable
doing it yet. For that matter, it probably wouldn't be a very good
habit for me to get into. I imagine there are quite a few sticklers,
not all of them in Ternathia, who'd hold that sort of lesse
majesty against me at the polls."
"There might be, at that," Janaki
agreed after a moment. "And the fact that you're thinking that way
suggests to me that you are indeed considering seeking a seat in
whatever new parliament comes out of this situation."
"Yes, Your Highness," Kinlafia
sighed. "I am." He shook his head, his expression rueful. "I can't
believe I am, but I am. And it's your fault."
"Guilty as charged," Janaki
conceded cheerfully. Then his smile faded. "There's a reason I've
been pressing you about it, though."
"A reason, Your Highness?"
"Yes. It's going to take us quite a
while to reach Fort Brithik with these ambulances. The going's
better after that, but we're still not going to set any speed records
through the mountains, especially if they decide to send the
wounded clear to Fort Raylthar instead of holding them at Brithik.
If you're seriously contemplating taking my advice, then I think
you should also consider going on ahead of the column. You'd
make a lot better time on your own. In fact, if you think your
backside is up to it, I have the authority to authorize you to use
remounts from the PAAF liveries along the way."
"Why?" Kinlafia looked back
across at the prince. "I mean, why is it important for me to rush
ahead that way?"
Janaki didn't reply immediately.
Instead, he turned in his saddle and looked back down the trail
behind them. For a wonder, it wasn't raining for once here in New
Uromath, not that anyone expected that to last. Fortunately,
Sharonians in general and the PAAF in particular had amassed an
enormous amount of experience in how to move people and
material through even highly unprepossessing terrain.
Each party which had passed
through on its way to Company-Captain Halifu's fort and the
portal which had acquired the so-far informal name of Hell's Gate
had done at least a little to improve the going for whoever might
come after. Company-Captain chan Tesh's main column had done
the lion's share of the work, in no small part because it had been
accompanied by freight wagons (which had to get through
somehow). No one in his right mind would call the trail a "road,"
but at least the worst of the ravines and gullies had been crudely
bridged, the worst of the unavoidable swampy bits had been
corduroyed with felled trees, and a right-of-way of sorts had been
hacked out, just wide enough for two of the standard Authority
freight wagons—or one of its ambulances—to pass
abreast.
Unlike the freight wagons, the
ambulances had broad, fat pneumatic tires, made out of the
relatively newly developed heat-treated rubber, and the best shock
absorbers and springs Sharona could design. Given the nature of
the terrain, even the best sprung vehicle was going to jolt a
wounded man agonizingly from time to time, but overall, the ride
was remarkably smooth. The ambulances were also far lighter than
the freight wagons, which, coupled with their wide tires, gave
them a much lower ground pressure and made them far easier for
their mule teams to haul.
Despite all of that, the four
ambulances attached to Janaki's POW column were undeniably
slowing it down. Kinlafia understood that perfectly. What he
didn't understand was why Janaki was worried about it.
Personally, the Voice would be just as happy if it did take him a
little longer to get back to Tajvana. He dreaded the inevitable
encounters with reporters, once he got there, almost as much as he
dreaded the visit he already knew he was going to have to pay to
Shaylar's parents.
"I don't know exactly what's
happening back home any more than you do," Janaki said finally,
turning back to him. "I do know things are going to have to move
quickly, though, and the railhead was most of the way to Fort
Salby before all of this began. Even going ahead without us, it's
going to take you at least the better part of two months to reach
Salby, which means that by the time you get there, the line will
certainly be completed. So from there, you can get all the way
home in another two or three weeks. But that's still close to three
months, Darcel. Three months for the political situation to change
and elections to be scheduled. I want you home before that
happens, if we can possibly manage it."
Kinlafia frowned ever so
slightly. He'd come to accept that Janaki truly believed that Darcel
Kinlafia actually had something to offer to his home universe's
political leadership at a time like this. And he'd also come to
realize that, despite a certain inevitable trepidation, he wanted the
job. Yet he couldn't quite shake the suspicion that there was more
than simple political calculation behind the crown prince's ardent
desire to get him elected to office. Like any Voice, Kinlafia was
acutely sensitive to the emotions of those about him, though he
would never dream of violating Janaki's privacy by deliberately
probing the prince's. But because he was sensitive to them, he
knew the other man's focus on his own possible political future
carried with it an almost physical (and highly personal) sense of
urgency.
He considered asking what lay
behind that urgency, but decided—once again—that
it would be presumptuous. So instead of worrying about the
question he couldn't answer and wouldn't ask, he focused on the
rest of Janaki's argument. And the more he thought about it, the
more he realized that Janaki, as usual, had a point.
Janaki chan Calirath watched the
thoughts moving behind Kinlafia's eyes. He was pretty certain
Kinlafia was aware that he hadn't shared all of his reasons
for urging the Voice to seek office, and he was grateful to the
other man for not pressing him on the point. If Kinlafia had asked,
Janaki would have answered, as best he could; the problem was
that he still couldn't come up with anything he would consider
even remotely satisfactory as an explanation. The Glimpse he'd
experienced several times now simply refused to clarify. That was
frustrating enough for Janaki, who'd had no choice but to grow
accustomed to the fragmentary nature of the visions his Talent
presented. It would have been far more frustrating, and probably
more than a little frightening, for Kinlafia. Especially since even
though it had refused to clarify, it had become even more urgent
feeling. And especially given the fact that while having Kinlafia
there would be good for Andrin, that didn't necessarily mean it
would also be good for Kinlafia.
Whatever it was that the Voice
was going to do for Andrin, though, it was important, and
Janaki loved his sister. Which meant Parliamentary Representative
Kinlafia was as good as elected, as far as Crown Prince Janaki was
concerned.
"All right, Your Highness,"
Kinlafia agreed finally. "I'll take you up on your offer. Both
your offers." He looked at his watch, then glanced up at the
sun sliding steadily westward overhead. "I'll stick with the column
for the rest of the day and bivouac with you tonight. Then I'll
move on ahead tomorrow."
"Good." Janaki managed to keep
his relief out of his voice as he smiled at the other man. "That'll
give me time to dash off a couple of more notes of introduction
for you before you disappear. One of them—" he smiled
wickedly at the Voice "—will be addressed to my father. He
has a little political influence of his own, you know."
Shaylar and Jathmar stood on the
Arcanan ship's foredeck as the vessel moved steadily towards
another wooden pier. This one extended out from a considerably
larger fort, built on the southeastern curve of a bay which,
according to Jathmar's Mapping Talent, was over thirty miles wide
from north to south and over sixty from east to west. Shaylar was
almost positive that it was on the southern coast of the big island
of Esferia—the same island Jasak and Gadrial called
Chalar—which dominated the New Farnal Sea and the Gulf
of New Ternathia. On Sharona, Esferia was a prosperous
transshipment point for commerce between Chairifon and New
Ternathia and New Farnal, but on Arcana Chalar was the home of
the greatest maritime empire in the planet's history.
They could see the broad arc of a
portal well inland, beyond the river that meandered down out of
the hills to the raw-looking town clustered against the fort's
eastern face. It was hard even for Jathmar to judge distances, but it
looked as if the portal was perhaps fifteen miles inland, in which
case it must have measured about ten miles across. It was easy
enough to see the portal's boundaries, though. The sky on this side
was a cloudless, scorchingly hot tropical blue; on the other side, it
was night . . . with a violent
thunderstorm raging. Even as she watched, she could see the
crackling flare of lightning lashing the stormy bellies of the clouds
on the far side, and an outrider of thunderheads thrust through the
portal to this side. Where she stood, the sun was hot and
warm, the breeze gentle; along the fringe of the portal, powerful
gusts of wind swept treetops into dancing fury on a tempest's
breath, and rain born in an entirely different universe came down
in sheets.
Shaylar shivered at the sight, but
it was one of the bizarre juxtapositionings one got used to
traveling between universes. Which didn't make the thought of
venturing into it any more pleasant.
Actually, she was much more
interested in what she could see closer to hand as their vessel slid
alongside the pilings.
This fort—Fort Wyvern,
Jasak had called it—was considerably larger than the one
they'd left behind. That didn't make it huge, by any stretch of the
imagination, but it was clearly a more substantial, longer
established structure. It had to have been here for a while, judging
by the size of the town nestled up against its inland perimeter, but
there was much less of the sense of bustle and frontier energy
which would have clung to most Sharonian settlements.
At first glance, the entire town
looked like some primitive farming village, with no sign of the
steam- or water-powered local industry which would have sprung
up in any Sharonian-explored universe. But as she and Jathmar
continued to study it, they quickly realized just how deceiving first
appearances could be.
They were close enough to get a
decent look at what was obviously the local shipyard, for example.
It wasn't very large, and there were only three vessels under
construction, but Shaylar felt her eyes opening wide as she studied
it. She'd seen enough Sharonian boatyards located in equivalent
settlements to know what to look for, but there was no sign here
of the steam or water-powered sawmills and forges she would
have found in one of them, nor did she hear or see any axes or
adzes.
Instead, she saw big timbers
levitating themselves effortlessly into the air, hovering there while
some unseen force slabbed them into neatly trimmed planks which
stacked themselves to one side. Tearing her eyes away from that
fascinating sight, she saw workmen engaged on an entire series of
equally improbable activities.
Two men were shaping what
were obviously framing timbers for the largest of the vessels
under construction, but they were doing it without any tools
Shaylar could recognize. Instead, each of them held what looked
like simple hand grips at either end of a shaft of shining crystal.
The grips were mounted at right angles to the shaft, which was
about eight feet long and an inch in diameter. It swelled into a
thicker cylinder—perhaps a foot long and seven or eight
inches across—at its central point, and the workmen were
moving that thicker cylinder carefully across the timber they were
shaping while chips and sawdust flew away from it in bizarrely
silent clouds.
Other pairs and small groups of
workmen were dealing with other jobs—jobs which would
have been accomplished with snorting steam or raw muscle in
Sharona. Here, though, they were done with more of that eerie
"magic" of Gadrial's, and the implications were frightening. There
couldn't have been more than thirty men working in that shipyard,
but the biggest of the three vessels they were constructing was
probably three hundred feet long. That was smaller than the ship
on which she and Jathmar presently stood, but it was still a
substantial hull, and unlike the smaller ships being built beside it,
it was not sail powered. Back in Sharona, the construction
crews working on a project that size would have been far bigger. If
Arcana's "magic" allowed that much greater productivity out of its
workforce . . .
"We'll be going ashore shortly,"
Jasak announced, walking up behind them. "I'll have to report to
Five Hundred Grantyl, the base commandant. I'm sure he'll want
to . . . meet both of you. I don't
imagine we'll stay long, though."
"That doesn't look very
pleasant," Shaylar offered, waving one hand at the violent storm
raging across the portal threhhold.
"No, it doesn't," he agreed. "The
other side of the portal is in what I believe you call Uromathia in
your home world. The temperature's not too bad there, but we'll
have some mountains to cross to reach the next portal. We'll have
to wait for the weather to clear before we can leave, and we'll have
to bundle up for the flight."
"Flight?" Jathmar repeated, and
Jasak nodded.
"We're going to be spending a lot
of time on dragonback," he told them. "That's one reason I hope
Windclaw's reaction to you had something to do with your head
injury, Shaylar."
"So do I," she replied, just a bit
tremulously, although she'd come to the conclusion that
Windclaw had probably reacted less to her head injury than to her
efforts to use her damaged Voice Talent to communicate with
Darcel. Those efforts had coincided with both of the transport
dragon's determined efforts to eat her, and she was just as grateful,
in a guilty sort of way, that there couldn't be anyone within her
range now.
"In case it didn't have anything to
do with the concussion, though," she offered with a wan smile,
"I'd personally vote for traveling on horseback!"
"Oh, no, you wouldn't," Gadrial
told her. Shaylar looked at the other woman, standing beside her
with the hot breeze stirring her hair, and Gadrial made a face.
"Believe me, I've already made this trip, and it's going to be a pain.
They haven't extended the slider rail beyond Green Haven, and
that's something like twenty thousand of your miles from here.
And it's sixty thousand more miles from Green Haven to
New Arcana, so even with dragons to get us as far as the sliders,
it's going to take something like four months to get to Garth
Showma. You don't even want to think about making that
trip on horseback!"
"No, I don't imagine I would,"
Shaylar replied, trying to hide her shock at what Gadrial had just
said. It was less than forty thousand miles from New
Uromath to Sharona. She and Jathmar had already realized that the
Arcanans had clearly been exploring the multiverse longer than
Sharona had, but still . . .
"Well," Jasak said as the
boarding gangway once again lifted itself out of its brackets and
settled into place between the ship's deck and the pier, "I suppose
we might as well tell the captain goodbye and get ourselves
ashore."
Division-Captain Arlos chan
Geraith broke off his conversation with Division-Captain chan
Manthau as the conference room door opened. They turned away
from the snowcapped mountains, visible along the northern
horizon outside the window, and stood respectfully silent as
Corps-Captain Fairlain chan Rowlan, commanding officer of the
Fifth Corps of the Imperial Ternathian Army came through the
open door, followed by his chief of staff and his senior logistics
officer.
chan Rowlan headed directly for
his chair at the head of the conference table. The corps-captain was
of little more than moderate height for a nativeborn Ternathian,
and he normally moved with a certain deliberation, as if to
compensate for his lack of height. There was no sign of that today,
however. His movements were quick, almost urgent, and his
expression was grim.
Which doesn't exactly come as a tremendous surprise, now
does it, Arlos? chan Geraith told himself sardonically. There
was real, if trenchant, humor in the question, but he was entirely
too well aware of his own grim worry—and anger—
simmering away beneath it.
"Good morning," chan Rowlan
said to chan Geraith and his companions. "I'm glad you were all on
the base this afternoon, but time's short. So let's get seated and get
to it."
chan Geraith crossed to the table
and took his own seat. Fifth Corps' other two
division-captains—Yarkowan chan Manthau of the Ninth
Infantry and Ustace chan Jassian of the Twenty-First—
seated themselves to his left and right respectively, and he
reflected (not for the first time) on how different the Ternathian
military was from that of its only true rival, Uromathia.
Uromathians were much more addicted to flashy uniforms, rank
insignia, and salutes—not to mention bowing and scraping
properly to one's superiors. Ternathians, by and large, preferred to
get on with the job in hand. They'd been doing it for a very long
time, after all. There weren't very many current-service units in
any army which could trace their battle honors in unbroken line of
succession for over four thousand years.
The Third Dragoons was one of
them . . . which made chan Geraith's
division substantially older than the entire Uromathian Empire.
Or, for that matter, the Uromathian language.
With that sort of history behind
them, Ternathian officers felt no particular need to emphasize
their own importance and prestige. Even division commanders
like chan Geraith, with the next best thing to nine thousand men
under his command, normally eschewed dress uniform in favor of
the comfortable, practical field uniform he wore at the moment.
And while there was no question about chains of authority and
military discipline, the Ternathian tradition was for senior officers
to discuss military problems and strategy like reasonable adults.
Unlike certain other empires whose relative youth caused
them—and their senior officers—to act like touchy
adolescents whose insecurity had them playing the bully on a
playground somewhere.
chan Geraith knew he was being
at least a little unfair to the Uromathians, but he didn't really care.
The fact was that he didn't like Uromathians. He was
always scrupulously polite in his dealings with them and in his
public comments about them, but he saw no reason to waste
fairness on them in the privacy of his own mind.
"I'm sure you're all as well aware
as I am of events in the Karys Chain," chan Rowlan said.
For just a moment, the corps-
captain's face twisted with a spasm of intense pain mingled with
something far darker and uglier. Unlike chan Geraith, who wasn't
Talented at all, chan Rowlan's wife was a Voice, and the corps-
captain had a fairly powerful telepathic Talent of his own. chan
Geraith hadn't often seen raw hatred on his corps commander's
face, but he was seeing it now, and he didn't blame chan Rowlan
one bit.
"What you don't know yet," the
corps-captain went on a moment later, with a certain forced
briskness, "is that I've just received orders from Captain-of-the-
Army chan Gristhane, placing Fifth Corps on immediate notice to
deploy forward."
chan Geraith felt his fellow
division commanders coming upright in their chairs with him as if
they'd rehearsed the choreography ahead of time.
"There are several reasons we
were selected," chan Rowlan continued. "One of them is purely
political, and not to be discussed outside this room. Specifically,
Chava Busar has already placed the better part of two cavalry
regiments at the Authority's disposal. They're being given absolute
priority for transport forward on the basis that they're the closest
non-PAAF force available. We don't want to see Chava get his
military toe any further into that door than we can avoid, hence the
offer of our own troops.
"Among the purely military
reasons, we're the closest Ternathian corps HQ to Larakesh. For
that matter, Fort Erthain is closer to Larakesh than any major
non-Ternathian—" he very carefully did not say
"Uromathian," chan Geraith noted "—military base, as well.
We can entrain and get to the portal more rapidly than anyone else,
and with a lot more combat power when we go. In addition, at the
moment the railhead hasn't quite reached Fort Salby in Traisum.
That leaves us almost four thousand miles—four thousand
unimproved miles, all of them overland—from
Hell's Gate."
He used the new, unofficial
name for the contact portal without hesitation, chan Geraith
noticed, and the division-captain raised two fingers in a request
for attention.
"Yes, Arlos?"
"Should I assume that, for my
sins, the Third gets to take point?"
"Yes, you should," chan Rowlan
replied, and chan Geraith nodded.
Fort Emperor Erthain, on the
mountain-ringed plains of Karmalia, was one of the Imperial
Ternathian Army's largest military bases. In fact, it was by most
measures the largest military base in the entire multiverse.
Well, in our part of it, anyway, he reminded himself. It
was also home to the Empire's major military proving grounds,
and the place where the Imperial Army played with its newest toys
to see what they could do.
For the last two years, Fifth
Corps in general—and the Third Dragoon Division, in
particular—had been experimenting with a radically new
approach to military logistics. The basic concept had suggested
itself following the improvements in heavy construction
equipment produced by the Trans-Temporal Express's insatiably
expanding rail net. There were those who believed the newfangled
"internal combustion engine" was going to be the powerplant of
the future because it was so much lighter and more efficient than
steam, and chan Geraith wasn't prepared to tell them they were
wrong. But those noisy, oil- and gasoline-burning contraptions
were still taking the first, hesitant steps of infancy, and out in the
field, where the TTE did most of its heavy construction work (and
where the army might be called upon to maneuver), refined oil
products might not be available. So TTE had specialized in
developing ever more efficient steam-powered excavators,
bulldozers, and tractors. Designed to burn just about any fuel
which could be shoveled into their fire boxes, they'd grown
steadily more powerful, lighter, and more reliable for over fifty
years now.
In fact, they'd grown reliable
enough for the Imperial Army to take a very close look at them.
chan Geraith was one of the general officers who continued to
nurse serious reservations about their maintainability in the field,
but he'd seen enough over the past twenty-odd months to become
convinced they were, indeed, the future of military transport.
Plans had called for the entire
Fifth Corps to be provided with the new personnel carriers and
freight haulers, but as was always the case (especially with
peacetime budgets) procurement rates had run far behind schedule.
Third Dragoons, tasked as Fifth Corps's quick-response division,
was the smallest of the three divisions (horsed units always had
lower manpower totals than infantry units), as well as the most
mobile. It was also the only one which had received anything like
its full allotted transport, even it was still a good twenty percent
below the intended establishment. On the other hand, chan
Geraith's mounted troopers wouldn't require anywhere near the
personnel lift one of the infantry divisions would have demanded.
"In order to make Arlos up to
strength," chan Rowlan went on, looking at chan Manthau and
chan Jassian, "we're going to raid you two pretty heavily. In fact,
we're going to focus on putting him as far over establishment as
possible. All of us know we're going to have maintenance
problems and breakdowns once we've got the steamers out there
under real field conditions, so we're going to have to try to
make up for lack of reliability with redundancy."
The two infantry commanders
nodded. It was obvious neither of them was happy about the
prospect, but, equally obviously, both of them understood it.
"Captain-of-the-Army chan
Gristhane has also informed me that the procurement and
development of additional steamers—and the alternate
program, looking at the gasoline-powered versions—is
about to get a brand new priority. In fact," the corps-captain
produced his first genuine smile since Seeing the Voicenet reports
from Hell's Gate, "the Navy's already been informed that it won't
be getting two of those new battleships it wanted. It seems the
Army's finally going to get first call on the Exchequer."
The smile vanished as abruptly
as it had appeared as all four commanders remembered why that
was. Then chan Rowlan cleared his throat.
"Arlos, your division is going to
move out ASAP. Dust off your mobilization plans."
chan Geraith nodded without
mentioning that he'd done that over thirty-six hours ago. Third
Dragoons had been checking equipment, shoeing horses, drawing
ammunition and supplies, and combat-loading its steamers since
dawn yesterday.
"Can you move out within
twenty-four hours?" chan Rowlan asked, which made it clear he
was well aware chan Geraith had begun his preparations long
since. "It's going to take almost that long for the railroad people to
assemble the cars you're going to require."
"I can have my lead brigade ready
to entrain in another twelve hours," chan Geraith promised. "It's
short about fifteen percent of its assigned steamers, but if we're
going to make up the shortfall from Yarkowan and Ustace, I can
strip what First Brigade needs out of Second and Third. It'll
probably slow Third down, since I'm guessing we'll get a ripple
effect into its transport when I send Second out in the next
echelon, but I suspect we can still have everybody ready to go by
the time the quartermasters can put together the trains to get all of
us on the rails, anyway."
"Good!" chan Rowlan said. Then
he straightened his shoulders and inhaled visibly.
"At this time, we don't know
what we're going to be called upon to do when we finally get to
New Uromath," he said. "Arlos, we'll do our best to keep you
informed of policy changes and strategic intentions via the Voice
chain, but the time delay is going to mean you'll have to use your
own discretion—a lot. I'll come forward to join you as
soon as we've got at least one of the infantry divisions en route
, but until then, you're going to be the man on the spot, in
more ways than one."
"Understood," chan Geraith said.
"Then understand this, too. Our
primary responsibility is the protection of Sharonian civilians and
the recovery of any of our people who may be still in enemy
hands. I know we all hope we're talking about Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr, but there are other civilians—and quite a few
military dependents—in proximity to this point of contact,
as well. Their safety is our first concern.
"Having said that, however,
Captain-of-the-Army chan Gristhane has pointed out that there's a
very important secondary consideration here. Specifically, Hell's
Gate is a cluster, and according to the Authority's best guess,
several of the portals in the Karys Chain are of relatively recent
formation. That suggests this is an unusually active chain, which
may be expanding even as we sit here talking. We cannot afford to
leave a hostile—and these bastards have certainly
demonstrated their hostility, I believe," chan Rowlan showed his
teeth in grim amusement "—in possession of that cluster.
Particularly not if it is expanding rapidly and might double
back into one of our own chains at some point."
"So my orders are to secure
control of that universe, as well?" chan Geraith wanted to be very
certain he was clear on that point, and chan Rowlan nodded.
"It may be that eventually some
sort of diplomatic solution can be arrived at. For that to happen, it
will have to include severe punishment for the people responsible
for this . . . assuming Company-
Captain chan Tesh hasn't already taken care of that in full. But at
this time, the very least we would find acceptable would be some
form of shared control of this cluster. If it takes a mailed fist to
accomplish that, then so be it. It's always possible that whatever
comes out of this new Conclave in Tajvana may change those
instructions, but I consider that highly unlikely. You'll have
formal written orders to cover as many contingencies as we can
envision, but the bottom line is that you will secure
control of that cluster and hold it."
It was chan Geraith's turn to nod
again. The thought of taking a single division of dragoons off to
face the massed fighting power of a totally unknown trans-
universal empire was daunting, to say the least. Especially in light
of the uncanny weapons the other side had already displayed since,
unlike some of his fellows, chan Geraith strongly suspected that
so far they'd seen only the surface of the other side's technological
iceberg. There were more, and nastier, surprises waiting for them,
although it seemed quite obvious that Sharona had had a few
surprises for the other side, as well. The confidence, almost
exuberance, he'd seen out of some of his junior officers as news
of chan Tesh's successful attack on the other side's portal forces
reached home worried him, and the fact that they had no idea of
what sort of logistical constraints the enemy faced—or
didn't face—was another concern.
But despite any of those worries,
chan Geraith felt confident of his ability to secure and hold the
portal cluster if he could only beat the enemy there in the first
place. At the moment, chain Tesh controlled the enemy's access
portal, and it was only a few miles across. Third Dragoons could
hold that much frontage even against an army of Arpathian
demons.
"I understand, Sir," he said.
"When you get there, that cluster will be waiting for you."
"You wanted to see me,
Gahlreen?" Olvyr Banchu said politely as the secretary opened the
office door and bowed him through it.
Gahlreen Taymish, First Director
of the Trans-Temporal Express looked up from the paperwork on
his desk and nodded sharply.
"Damned right I did," he said
briskly. He shoved his chair back and walked around his immense
desk to shake Banchu's hand, then jerked his head at the huge
window overlooking the Larakesh Portal.
Banchu took the hint. Taymish
was renowned for his wealth, his capability, his tough mindedness,
his temper, and his arrogance, yet deep inside him was the little
boy who'd grown up on a hardscrabble farm right outside
Larakesh, dreaming about the huge portal which dominated the
city and its entire universe . . . and his
own future. That little boy had never tired of the marvelous view
connecting him to the mountains over four thousand
miles—and a universe away—near the southern tip
of Ricathia. Taymish did his best thinking standing in front of that
window, looking at that view and pondering the promise of all the
other universes which lay beyond it.
"I imagine you know why you're
here," the First Director said after a moment, darting a sharp
sideways look at Banchu.
"I can think of two possible
reasons," Banchu replied. "First, I'm here so you can tell me I'm
fired for not meeting that insane schedule you gave me. Or,
second, I'm here so you can tell me that you never believed I'd
meet it anyway, and that you want to congratulate me on how well
I've actually done."
"Close, anyway," Taymish said
with a tight grin. "Yes, I never believed you'd meet the schedule.
I've discovered over the years that demanding the impossible from
someone quite often gets him to do more than he thought
was possible before he started trying to satisfy the idiot screaming
at him. And, yes, I'm more than pleased that you've done as well as
you have. However, I've got a new little task for you."
"Oh?"
Banchu regarded his superior
warily. In the fifteen years since Taymish, then the executive head
of TTE's Directorate of Construction, had lured him away from
his position in the Uromathian Ministry of Transportation, Olvyr
Banchu had learned that Taymish's idea of the proper reward for
accomplishing the impossible was almost always a demand to
accomplish something even more preposterous.
"Exactly." Taymish smiled
broadly at the Trans-Temporal Express's chief construction
engineer. It was only a brief smile, however, and it vanished
quickly. "I want you to go out to Traisum and take personal
charge."
"I see."
Banchu could hardly pretend it
was a surprise. The rail line creeping steadily down the Hayth
Chain towards Karys had been progressing satisfactorily enough
before the murderous attack on the Chalgyn Consortium survey
crew. Enormous as the task was, it had also been essentially
routine for TTE. And the fact that every planet the Authority had
opened through the portal network was a duplicate of Sharona
itself helped enormously, of course. By and large, the routes for
rail lines could be surveyed here on Sharona—or even
simply taken directly from already existing topographical maps.
Getting the men, material, and machinery forward to do the actual
construction work was more of a straightforward logistics
concern, than anything else, and the TTE building teams were the
most experienced, efficient heavy construction engineers in human
history. They'd laid well over two million miles of track across
forty universes, and along the way they'd developed the
techniques—and machinery—to take crossing an
entire planet in stride.
But what had been a more than
acceptable rate of progress in an essentially peaceful and benign
multiverse was something else entirely when there was a vicious,
murderous enemy at the far end of the transit chain.
"You want me to ginger them
up, is that it?" he asked after a moment.
"That's part of it," Taymish
agreed. "You're invaluable here in the office, but let's face it, you
were born to be a field man yourself. If anyone can get a few more
miles a day of trackage out of our people, it's you. But, frankly,
the main reason I want you out there is because of your seniority."
"Ah?" Banchu raised one
eyebrow, and Taymish chuckled. It was not an extraordinarily
pleasant sound.
"We've got heavy equipment,
rails, and work crews pouring down the Hayth Chain right this
minute. We've pulled in entire crews, from other projects all over
the net. For that matter, we've shut down operations completely in
the Salth Chain to divert everything we have into pushing the
Hayth railhead to Karys and New Uromath. That means we've got
some very senior field engineers all headed for the same spot, and
we don't have time for any stupid headbutting over who's got the
seniority on this project. With you out there on the spot,
that sort of frigging stupidity can be nipped in the bud.
"Possibly even more to the point,
we're going to have some really senior military personnel moving
into the region, as well. I want someone with equivalent seniority
from our side of the shop there to coordinate with them. Someone
who can speak authoritatively about the realities of what we can
and can't do and explain exactly what sort of priorities we need
from them."
"And the fact that I'm
Uromathian and I'll be in charge of the most critical single
infrastructure project in Sharona's history won't hurt anything,
either, will it?" Banchu said shrewdly.
"Never has yet," Taymish
admitted cheerfully. "Hells, Olvyr! I never could decide whether I
recruited you in the first place more to poke Chava in the eye by
luring you away from him or to make you my token Uromathian
to satisfy the Ternathian liberals! The fact that you turned out to
be at least marginally capable was just icing on the cake."
Banchu shook his head with a
laugh. Given Gahlreen Taymish's penchant for killing as many
birds as possible with every stone, there probably really was at
least a grain of truth in that. Not that Taymish would have hired anyone, regardless of his origins, if he hadn't been convinced
that that person was the very best available.
Still, the First Director often
showed a degree of sensitivity to human interactions and dynamics
which would have startled most of his (many) detractors. Having a
Uromathian of Banchu's seniority out there in charge of the
critical rail-building project really might gratify Emperor
Chava—or, at least, placate his pride and hunger for
prestige. And it was unfortunately true that many other
Uromathians shared their Emperor's resentment of the way
Ternathia's towering reputation as Sharona's only true
"superpower' continued to linger, despite Uromathia's population
and power. Having "one of their own" out there at the sharp end
would play well with them, as well, and the Uromathian press
would love it. And if some of the PAAF military officers in the
area happened to be Uromathian themselves, Banchu's presence
could turn out to the extremely valuable in terms of reduced
friction and amicable relations.
"All right," he said. "I've got two
more construction trains moving out tomorrow. I can assign
myself to one of them. For that matter, I may even have time to
kiss my wife goodbye!"
Chapter Thirty-Five
Tajvana stunned the senses.
Andrin was accustomed to vistas
on an imperial scale, but even the approach to the city was nothing
sort of amazing. She knew the map, of course, and she'd seen
pictures—both paintings and the new photographs, as well.
But it was a far different matter to sail down the Ibral Strait's long,
finger thin-strip of water, with the long peninsula known as the
Knife of Ibral on the left and the northwest shoulder of the ancient
kingdom of Shurkhal on the right. The thirty-eight-mile long
stretch of water was barely four miles across at its widest, and less
than one at its narrowest, yet the volume of shipping streaming
through it at any given hour, night or day, boggled the
imagination.
Buoys, lighthouses, pilot
vessels, and units of the Royal Othmaliz Customs Patrol managed
to keep things more or less under control in the rigidly policed
traffic lanes, and the fines for any violation of the Ibral Maritime
Regulations were enough to ruin most shipping lines. Andrin
knew all about that, just as she knew about the multi-tracked
railroads which had been built paralleling the Strait to relieve
some of the congestion. Yet for the last two days, they'd
seen—and passed—a steady throng of merchant
ships of every size and description making steadily for or sailing
out of the Strait. Seeing that mass of merchant shipping with her
own eyes had brought home just how vital Sharona's exploitation
of the multiverse on the far side of the Larakesh Gate truly was.
Both coastlines were visible
along the entire sword-straight length of the Strait as
Windtreader started down the narrow passage. They were
lined on either side with fortresses, many of them almost as old as
the Fist of Bolakin. They had been built and rebuilt, modernized,
or merely replaced, as weapons technology and methods of
warfare changed, and their harsh faces underscored yet again how
vitally important this stretch of water had been throughout
Sharona's history. The Ibral Straits had not been taken by force
since before the advent of gunpowder, and before the Empire's
voluntary withdrawal, no one had ever even dared to challenge
Ternathia's hold on the iron gauntlet leading to its one-time
Imperial capital.
Most of the fortresses were little
more than tourist attractions these days, but not all of them were
entirely empty, even now. The Kingdom of Othmaliz, which had
reclaimed Tajvana after Ternathia's withdrawal, kept the
approaches manned. The garrisons were small, of course, since
war hadn't broken out in earnest anywhere on Sharona for so long.
But they were manned, and Windtreader had to obtain
official clearance from the Othmalizi government before passing
them. The actual procedure had taken only seconds to accomplish
via Voice transmission to and from Alazon Yanamar, but the
seriousness behind the formality hadn't been lost on Andrin.
Nor had the consequences of
Windtreader's arrival. As the liner approached the Strait's
western terminus, the massive flow of commercial shipping had
slowed to a trickle, and then ceased completely. Andrin hadn't
understood why that was, at first—not until
Windtreader started up the long, suddenly lonely strip of
water, preceded by Prince of Ternathia and followed by Duke of Ihtrial.
The entire Strait had been cleared
of all commercial shipping.
The only vessels in sight were
Customs Patrol cutters or light warships of the Othmaliz Navy,
and as she watched, Windtreader's escorting cruisers
dipped their flags in formal salute. The two powerful Ternathian
ships undoubtedly outgunned every Othmalizi vessel she could
see, but they were the ones who rendered first honors, and she
looked up at her father.
"Wondering why we're
saluting them, 'Drin?" he asked with a slight, teasing
smile.
"Well . . .
yes," she admitted.
"Othmaliz is a small nation,
true," he said. "On a per-capita basis, it may well be the wealthiest
kingdom in the entire multiverse, but it's tiny compared to the
Empire. For that matter, it doesn't even really have a king, even if
it is technically a 'kingdom.' But this—" he pointed up at
the dipped flag flying from Windtreader's foremast, then at
the Othmalizi flags descending in a return salute "—is
important. Not because Othmaliz wants to flaunt its power, but
because it's our duty as foreign nationals to extend the same
courtesy to them that we'd expect from someone entering our
sovereign territory. And don't overlook the fact that they've
cleared the entire Strait for our passage. We're moving well above
the normal speed limit, but even so, it's going to take over three
hours for us to complete the passage. Three hours in which they've
completely shut down what's undoubtedly the busiest waterway in
the world in order to ensure our security."
Andrin nodded soberly. The
same thought had already occurred to her.
"No one believes for a moment
that Othmaliz, despite all the importance of Tajvana and the
Kingdom's control of the Straits, is the equal in wealth or power
of Ternathia," Zindel said. "But the Kingdom is just as entitled to
be treated with respect in its own territory as we are. One country
may go to war with another, but in time of peace, a wise
nation—or ruler—treats all other nations with
respect.
"Courtesy seldom costs
anything, and the willingness to extend it can be its own subtle
declaration of strength. There are times it may be taken as a sign of
weakness by some more belligerent nation or head of state, and
one has to be aware of that, as well, but the Empire's tradition has
always been to remember and recognize the acceptable protocols
and international courtesies, even to our enemies. To fail to show
courtesy is to demonstrate arrogance and contempt. In some cases
it also demonstrates envy, fear, or belligerence, but whatever it
stems from, such diplomatic slights are serious business, 'Drin.
They form the basis for anger, distrust, and dispute, and they're
seldom quickly forgotten. It's our duty as representatives of our
nation to be open, aboveboard, and courteous to our neighbors.
Violating that duty opens the door to the sort of international
discord which could lead very quickly to misunderstandings,
rancor, short tempers, or even violence."
She thought about the prevailing
opinions of Uromathia's emperor, and understood exactly what he
meant. But she had a further question.
"Don't our Voices help us avoid
that kind of misunderstanding in most cases?"
"In theory—and generally
in practice—yes. But once hostility begins to grow, simple
clarity of communication isn't enough to make it magically
disappear. If two nations have a tradition of dislike, if they treat
one another to public displays of discourtesy or petulance, if they
get into the habit of denigrating one another in efforts to sway
international diplomatic opinion to favor their side in some
dispute, misunderstandings and flares of temper can occur quickly,
particularly during times of increased stress. If they're lucky, the
diplomats and the Voices can step in to control the situation
before it spirals out of control, but that isn't always possible, and
when it isn't, the consequences can be terrible for all concerned."
"You're thinking about what
happened at Hells Gate," she said quietly, and he nodded heavily.
"Yes, I am. It's not the same
thing, of course, since in this case there were no proper
diplomatic channels or protocols available to either side, but it's
highly probable the entire incident stemmed from nothing more
sinister than surprise, fear, and lack of familiarity. I could be
wrong about that, and we may never know exactly what sparked it,
or how it happened, but we're all going to be dealing with the
consequences for a long, long time. Which, I suppose, drives
home just how important it is for us to avoid misunderstandings
here, in Sharona. Especially at a time like this."
"Yes, I can see that, Papa. Thank
you."
"It was a good question, 'Drin.
See that you go on asking more like it. That's your current
duty."
"I will, Papa."
Silence had fallen—a
quiet, thoughtful silence—and they'd stood together,
watching the coast slip by on either side, for the entire three hours
it had taken to transit the Ibral Strait and reach the sea of the same
name.
It took much longer to cross the
Ibral Sea, which stretched a hundred and seventy five miles from
northeast to southwest and was nearly fifty miles across at its
widest. Despite its small area, Andrin knew it was over four
thousand feet deep in the center, and the long lines of merchant
vessels waiting to enter the Strait Windtreader had finally
cleared stretched as far as she could see.
Andrin left the deck only long
enough to eat and endure an exhausting hour or so undergoing
Lady Merissa's ministrations. Then she returned, trailing Lazima
chan Zindico—and Lady Merissa—to resume her
place at the promenade deck rail and watch the dark waters of the
Ibral Sea flow past. The merchant shipping gave Windtreader
and her cruiser escorts ample elbow room, but there was still
plenty to see, and she didn't really care if people thought she was
gawking like a teenager. After all, she was a teenager, she
thought with a grin.
It was well into afternoon when
the city finally began to rise from the waves. A gray smudge
appeared on the horizon and thickened, grew steadily higher and
wider, until details began to emerge.
Tajvana straddled the southern
end of the nineteen mile-long Ylani Strait, and it was indisputably
the wealthiest, most culturally diverse crossroads on the face of
Sharona. History lay thick as fog on those dark waters, and so
many cities had existed along those banks that they'd piled up in
layers of silt and ancient foundations, each of them laid over even
older foundations. Walls built and rebuilt until the layers were
more than a hundred feet thick in places.
Andrin longed to explore not
only the living city, but also the ancient ruins historians had
excavated here. There were structures in Tajvana older than the
Ternathian Empire itself, which counted five full millennia. She'd
read about the ancient ruins beneath Tajvana, had seen the old
engravings of the early excavations, and the modern photographs
as more of the ancient city was progressively uncovered for study.
But not even the marvel of photography could equal the impact of
walking through the actual ruins. Andrin had already told her
father how much she longed to go, and he'd promised to arrange a
tour.
"We won't be the only sightseers
wanting to gawk at the city, after all," he'd said. "Most members of
the Conclave will want to explore at least a little. I rather doubt
that many of the Conclave's delegates have ever had the
opportunity."
"Thus proving that even an inter-
universal crisis can have some benefit," Andrin had
smiled, and her father had laughed aloud.
"Fair enough. And don't worry,
I'll be gawking right alongside you, 'Drin. Unlike you, I may have
been here before, but you're not the only Calirath intrigued by
ancient ruins and monuments."
Now her father appeared beside
her at the rail as she saw high spires rising from the temples of
two dozen or more faiths. Gilded domes caught the sunlight with
mirror brilliance, scattering diamond points of light into the sky.
And then, ahead of them, a faerie arch rose like a golden thread. It
joined a second delicate arch, then another and another, as span
after span marched across the wide Ylani Strait, and Andrin's
breath caught at the sight of that eldritch bridge, spanning an
impossibly wide gap.
"How?" she breathed softly.
"Who could build such a bridge?"
"I wish we Ternathians could
take the credit, but we can't," her father said with smile. "That
honor goes to His Crowned Eminence, the Seneschal of Othmaliz.
It's been finished for seven months, I believe."
Andrin glanced from the bridge
to her father.
"But how, Papa? Surely
a bridge that long ought to collapse under its own weight! Or as
soon as a heavy wind hits it!"
"Well," Zindel's eyes twinkled,
"some say he made a pact with the devils of the Arpathian
Hells—all eleven of them. Hells, that is," he amended. "I
don't think anyone could possibly count the number of devils
Arpathians fear. Not even the Arpathians. I gave up trying
several years ago, since they seem to invent new ones each time
the moon changes phase or the wind shifts. Others say the
Seneschal pledged his immortal soul to obtain the plans and that
he'll have to spend the rest of his life building temples, trying to
earn it back." He chuckled. "It's less colorful, perhaps, but the
simple truth is that he put out a call to the greatest engineering
geniuses on Sharona and promised a dukedom and half the
lifetime earnings from the bridge traffic to the engineer who could
design and build it."
"It's . . .
astonishing," she said, inadequately.
So it was, and the closer they
came, the more astonishing it grew. The pilings were massive
towers of concrete and stone. The spans were made of steel, but
not the solid steel she'd expected. Instead, they were made of steel
cables, which gave the bridge its gossamer appearance, like a
bridge made of thread. She frowned, trying to reason it out, as the
wind whipped past in crosswise gusts.
Then she understood.
"It really is sheer
genius!" she cried aloud in pure delight. "Using cables, not rigid
beams, means the entire structure can flex just enough to keep
from cracking!"
Her father grinned from ear to
ear.
"Bravo, 'Drin! That's precisely
why it worked. And don't forget, this part of the world is subject
to relatively frequent earthquakes. I'm sure that was another factor
in the final design." He laughed. "If you ever grow bored enough
to entertain thoughts of an ordinary career, you might consider
engineering."
Lady Merissa, who'd finally
recovered from her seasickness, gasped behind Andrin's shoulder.
"Your Majesty! What a ghastly
suggestion! Her Highness is a Calirath! Not
a . . . a tradesman!"
The guardian of Andrin's
reputation was glaring at her father, her expression scandalized,
but the Emperor turned to meet that outraged stare calmly.
"My dear Lady Merissa, I didn't
mean to shock you. But as a Calirath, if Andrin wants to build
bridges between her comportment lessons, her sessions with the
dancing master, and her studies with Shamir Taje—among
other distinguished tutors—" he said, his eyes twinkling,
"then by all means, she may build as many bridges as Ternathia has
need of, with my blessing. We Caliraths have taken up any number
of interesting occupations, just for the challenges involved.
Besides," he added smugly, "engineering isn't a trade. It's a
profession."
The distinction, alas, was lost
upon Lady Merissa, and Andrin had to clap both hands over her
lips to keep from laughing out loud at her protocolist's apoplectic
look. Lady Merissa, clearly horrified by the Emperor's answer,
turned a savagely repressive glare on
Andrin . . . whose father did
have the temerity to laugh.
"Lady Merissa," he said with a
chuckle, "you're a hopeless aristocrat."
Lady Merissa was clearly torn
between squawking in indignation and the deference due the most
powerful single human being on Sharona. While she tried to make
up her mind which to do, the human being in question turned back
to his contemplation of the Ylani Strait Bridge, and gave Andrin a
solemn wink. Zindel chan Calirath thought the whole notion of
Andrin shocking the bluebloods by taking up engineering was
wickedly funny. Yet there was a bittersweet edge to his
amusement, for Andrin's future was crushed under far too many
restrictions, and he feared that even more were coming.
She was a vibrant, intelligent
young woman whose natural enthusiasms were all too frequently
curbed by the political realities of her birth rank. For other girls,
the choice to study engineering might have surprised people,
including the engineers who taught their discipline to new
generations, but at least it would have been possible. For
Andrin, that door was almost certainly closed, and her father
deeply regretted that. He looked back down at her and brushed hair
back from her brow.
"You do understand, Andrin,
don't you?" he asked softly.
Her eyes were as gray as the
wind-chopped water of the Ibral Sea. No guile lived in those
forthright eyes, but there was a depth of reserve, a sense that they
looked steadily at a thing, measured it carefully against a host of
complex factors, and sought to understand it within its many
shifting contexts. They were eyes too old for a girl of seventeen,
yet strangely vulnerable and young.
"Yes, Papa," she said equally
softly, and the smile that touched her lips was sad. "I understand. I
have to be too many other things to think about indulging a
passing fancy."
Or even a serious one, he added silently.
"I wish it weren't so," he said
aloud. "But we can change neither the world, nor our place in it.
And that's enough said on the subject. Look," he pointed to the
left-hand bank, "isn't that the most beautiful Temple of Shalana
you've ever seen?"
Andrin looked, then let out a
long "Ohhhh!" of appreciation. A tall needle-shaped tower rose
from the top of a soaring dome. The needle was gold—
genuine gold filigree—and the dome was a patchwork of
gold and blue in a swirling, striped pattern that boiled intricately
down its curved surface. The gold portion, like the needle tower,
really was genuine gold, applied as a thin foil in layer upon
successive layer by thousands upon thousands of pilgrims, and the
blue swirls were brilliant lapis, a mosaic of thousands upon
thousands of tiles cut from the semi-precious blue stone that was
sacred to Shalana. The strips of lapis were, in turn, inlaid with
other stones—blue stones that caught the sunlight with a
fiery dazzle of light. Faceted sapphires by the thousands encrusted
the dome in a breathtaking display of the wealth controlled by
Shalana's ruling order of priestesses, and the Grand Temple's walls
were white marble, inlaid with still more lapis in an intricate
geometric pattern of sunbursts and stylized waves. The Order of
Shalana was reputed to be the most powerful religious order in the
world, with temples—and banks—in nearly every
country in Sharona, and Andrin could believe it as she gazed at
that gloriously beautiful structure.
"I've never seen anything so
lovely in my life!" Andrin breathed softly. "It's more beautiful than
any of the temples in Ternathia. Anywhere in
Ternathia."
Then she gasped and pointed to
the right hand bank.
"What's that?" she
demanded, but understanding dawned almost instantly as she
recognized the vast structure dominating the right hand bank,
rising high on a hill overlooking the Ylani Strait.
"It's the Palace!" she
squealed, and for just that moment, she sounded exactly like the
young girl she really was beneath the layers of poise, caution, and
politically necessary reserve.
It was, indeed, the Great Palace
of the ancient Ternathian Empire. And it was also still a residence,
occupied by the Seneschal of Othmaliz and his vast staff, but
not his family.
The Kingdom of Othmaliz was
not ruled by a dynastic kingship, but it was far from a democratic
republic. The title of Seneschal had originally been held by the
official who had governed the day-to-day affairs of Tajvana in the
name of the emperors of Ternathia. After the Empire had
withdrawn, the title had become a theocratic one, for Othmaliz
was ruled by a priest—an unmarried priest, as the holy laws
of Othmaliz decreed. He wasn't celibate, far from it, but he didn't
marry, and his many offspring could not inherit his title or the
wealth which went with it. Nor did they live in the Palace with
him. When a Seneschal died, the new Seneschal was chosen from
the highest ranking priests in the Order of Bergahl. More than one
Seneschal had been succeeded by a son or a grandson, but
only when the successful candidate had attained sufficient
seniority within the order to stand for election in his own right.
It had always struck Zindel as a
ridiculous waste of space to use the entire vast Great Palace to
house one man and his staff. The Palace covered fifty acres of
ground, and that was only the roofed portion; the grounds were
even larger. Now he stood beside his daughter, savoring her
delight as she beheld the ancient home of her ancestors at last.
The Great Palace's walls were a
glittering sight, inlaid with sheets of mineral mica that sent
sparkles of light cascading and shimmering across its surface. The
roof was an astonishing fairyland of glittering domes and steep-
sided slopes that were covered not with the ubiquitous tiles
prevalent throughout the region, but with imported slabs of slate.
The slate glittered golden in the brilliant sunshine, like the scales
of some fantastic fish sent as a gift by the god of the sea, for every
slab had been edged in gold leaf, so that the entire vast structure
shone with an unearthly brilliance.
The effect was stunning against
the backdrop of bone dry stone walls and sundrenched rooftops
whose homely red clay tiles had faded into a dusty, washed out
shade of pink. The light shimmering around the sparkling, mica-
flecked walls and the incandescent rooftop made the entire, fifty-
acre edifice appear to be floating above the city. The optical
illusion was so strong that Andrin kept blinking, trying to clear her
dazzled vision to see what was really there, the solid stone that
anchored the building to the hot and thirsty soil of Tajvana. It
didn't seem possible mere human hands could have built it.
She felt numb as she tried to take
in the fact that her own family, her direct ancestors, had walked its
rooms, run through its corridors, lived in it, laughed and played
and hated and loved within its walls and beneath its glittering roof.
They'd ruled half the world from that floating palace. But the
world they'd ruled was gone. It had vanished quietly down the
corridors of time, a world not so much lost as relinquished with
passing regret, and gazing at what her family had given up, Andrin
was devastated.
Yet even as those thoughts
tumbled through her mind, another thought blew through her like
a chill wind. The world Andrin lived in had changed just
as completely as the world of her ancient ancestors, and far more
abruptly. Hers was a new and frightening place, and
everything—and everyone—in it was threatened with
destruction by a faceless enemy. For one ghastly moment, she saw
the Great Palace spouting flames against a night sky, with smoke
pouring from it, and people rushing towards the inferno—
or perhaps running headlong away, trying to reach safety. She
gasped and clutched the ship's rail, unsure whether the vision had
been a true Glimpse or merely the product of an over-active
imagination giving shape and form to her fear for the only world
she knew.
She drew down a gulp of air,
trying to steady her badly shaken nerves, and glanced up at her
father. She was surprised by the thoughtful frown which had
driven a vertical slash between his brows. Whatever his thoughts
were, they were as brooding and disturbed as her own, so she
turned uneasily away and studied the harbor, instead. Or, rather,
Tajvana's harbors. There were several, split between both
banks, but the massive docks on the left-hand bank were clearly
for utilitarian commercial purposes, whereas the docks on the
right bank appeared to be equipped for the passenger trade,
handling small personal yachts and the larger passenger liners and
ferries plying the routes to some of the world's most popular
resorts and business destinations.
Captain Ula steered
Windtreader clear of the cargo wharves, thick with gantries
where cranes unloaded huge crates and pallets from the holds of
scores of ships. As they entered the Ylani Strait proper, Andrin
saw that the commercial docks swept around the perimeter of the
vast bay that led inland, curved like a golden horn that ran through
the heart of Tajvana's business district. Further up the slopes were
the villas and palaces of the wealthy, both rich merchants and the
nobility of Othmaliz, some of whose lineages were almost as long
as Andrin's own. She could see carriages and wagons in the streets,
and hundreds of sweating stevedores hauling cargo to waiting
wagons which would carry it out to dockside warehouses.
But Windtreader was
bound for the right bank as Captain Ula reduced speed and conned
his ship through clearly marked channels towards the passenger
docks under the attentive watchfulness of hovering tugboats.
Andrin could see beyond the Ylani Strait now, to the vast Ylani
Sea, whose chilly, dark waters met the placid waters of the Ibral
Sea in a turbulent, silt-laden chop. There was always a powerful
current flowing out of the Strait, and flurries of foam rose as
Windtreader's graceful stem cut through it.
Finena, riding the jeweled, white
leather gauntlet on Andrin's arm, shifted her wings a bit uneasily,
as if the sudden proximity of Tajvana after so many days alone on
the empty sea made her nervous. Andrin soothed the falcon,
stroking those glossy silver wings, and found herself reflecting
that Finena's splendid coloring was far better suited to the Great
Palace than hers was. She knew only too well that her own
appearance was rescued from hopeless, oversized coltishness only
by Lady Merissa's skill with cosmetics, hairdressing, and
wardrobe. Indeed, at the moment, she wore a close-fitting bonnet
designed to keep the wind from totally destroying the gemmed
coiffure Lady Merissa had spent more than an hour coiling around
her head after lunch, preparing her for their landing at Tajvana.
Andrin would have been lost
without such guidance, and she knew it, which helped her to
overlook Lady Merissa's sometimes tedious mannerisms and
cloying attention to social etiquette. Especially now. The one
thing Andrin wanted desperately to accomplish on this trip was to
bring credit to her father and her Empire. She would die of shame
if she brought embarrassment to her father's name, instead.
Fortunately, Lady Merissa had
taken great pains with her appearance this morning, with a great
deal of giggling help from Relatha, who had become Merissa's
indispensable right hand and Andrin's indispensable companion. Windtreader's galley had, perforce, lost one of its assistants,
but Andrin didn't feel at all guilty for the appropriation of
Relatha's talents. Among other considerations, it was a genuine
comfort just to have another girl her age aboard.
"Oh, Your Grand Highness,"
Relatha had sighed when Lady Merissa had finished buttoning her
into a gown of ivory and silver brocade, trimmed with ermine and
pearls. "You look a picture, so you do, just like your beautiful
falcon. You ought to have a portrait done, just like that!"
Lady Merissa had paused and
tipped her head to one side, considering.
"You know, Your Highness,
she's right. You should have a portrait done with that
gown and Finena on your arm. Ternathia's imperial grand princess
and her imperial peregrine, symbol of the Empire for five
millennia. Yes, I do believe we'll have to arrange that, when we
return to Hawkwing Palace."
"If you insist," Andrin had
muttered, thinking privately that her bird would outshine her.
A light cloak covered the
brocade gown at the moment, protecting it from the brisk wind,
although it was scarcely needed for warmth. It might be autumn,
but it was warmer here than back home in Estafel, and the
temperature had to be in the sixties. Palm trees grew along the
hillsides, and the wind was merely brisk and cool, not chill. The
cloak was enough to shield her elaborate gown from the
capricious breeze, and it hid her nervous movement as her free
hand smoothed the brocade unnecessarily under its cover.
She knew there was to be a
formal reception and dinner once all the Conclave's delegates had
arrived, and she had every intention of making one of Lady
Merissa's carefully crafted political statements for the occasion.
She simply didn't know yet what that statement would be. That
would be determined largely by the mood and tenor of the
preliminary—yet scarcely less formal—social
occasions which must be endured before all of the official
delegations arrived. She shivered under her cloak, not from cold,
and leaned against her father, who wrapped an arm around her and
gave her a gentle smile.
"We're nearly there, poppet," he
said softly.
"Yes," she said simply. He hadn't
called her that since her fifth birthday, and she smiled up at him,
then lapsed back into silence and watched their final approach to
Tajvana's passenger docks.
The captain rang down "Finished
with Engines," an the chuffing paddlewheel tugboats moved in,
pushing with bluff bows to ease Windtreader alongside an
ornate, marble-faced quay aflutter with official flags of every
nation on Sharona. A mob of carriages and people dressed in
elaborate finery cluttered the long pier, well back from the
longshoremen waiting for the ship's lines.
Paddlewheels churned white
froth, Windtreader quivered as her thirty thousand-ton
bulk nuzzled against the massive fenders, and steam-driven
windlasses clattered as mooring cables went over the waiting
bollards and drew snug. Crisp orders and acknowledgments went
back and forth, and more steam hissed as it vented through the
funnels.
And then, for the first time in
almost a week, the deck under Andrin's feet was motionless once
more.
Chapter Thirty-Six
Music drifted across the pier
from a surprisingly large band, as the Ternathian imperial anthem
floated to their ears in an appropriate salute to the arriving
delegation. The imperial sunburst crackled from every mast as the
longshoremen ran out the boarding gangway which would allow
them to disembark, and Andrin's father lifted his arm from her
shoulder, then offered her the crook of his elbow, instead.
"My dear, shall we greet
Tajvana?"
She gave him a brave smile and
nodded, placing her gloved hand on his coat sleeve with careful
precision. Lady Merissa removed Andrin's bonnet, so that her dark
hair, with its strands of gold, shone in the elaborate hairstyle she'd
worked so hard to perfect. Jewel-headed pins and clasps flashed in
the afternoon sunlight, like a crown of living fire, and Andrin
thanked her softly. Then the grand princess lifted her other arm,
crooking her arm and raising her glittering white gauntlet so that
Finena rode at the level of her breast as she walked at the
Emperor's side.
When they reached the gangway,
Andrin released her father's arm to manage her skirts,
concentrating carefully on the placement of her feet. The last thing
she wanted to do was to trip and fall flat on her face in front of
Tajvana's waiting dignitaries. She made it safely to the quay,
shook out her heavy skirts, and placed her hand back on her
father's waiting arm with a serene smile that belied the tremors in
her knees.
The band was swirling and
skirling its way through the fourth verse of the imperial anthem as
she and her father stepped onto a long, purple carpet that ran from
the side of their ship to the center of the quay, where an immense
crowd waited. A veritable sea of faces peered toward them,
leaving Andrin's fingers damp inside her formal gloves. When
they'd crossed the carpet, they came to a halt before a semicircle of
elegantly attired dignitaries. One of them, a short broad man in the
elaborate robes of the Order of Bergahl, was obviously the
Seneschal of Othmaliz himself.
Andrin gazed at him thoughtfully
as Finena shifted on her gauntleted wrist. The falcon opened her
beak but didn't—quite—hiss, which surprised
Andrin, given what she could could sense of her companion's
emotions. It was obvious Finena didn't much like him, but Andrin
hoped the bird's agitation would be put down to the crowd about
them, and not to her reaction to the Seneschal. It would never do
to begin their visit here by insulting Othmaliz's ruler, yet, Finena's
reaction left Andrin wondering just what it was about the man the
falcon disliked.
She knew the history of the
Order of Bergahl, although not in the sort of detail she suddenly
wished she could command. Bergahl had been the patron deity of
Tajvana before Ternathia had arrived. He was a war god, and a god
of judgment, whose followers had been pledged to the militant
pursuit of justice. The Empire, with its long history of religious
toleration, had accepted the religious beliefs of its new capital's
people, although the emperors had insisted that civil law was now
the business of the imperial justicars, and not Bergahl's
priesthood. The Empire had made no objection to the Order
retaining its position as the administrator of religious law,
however, and with Ternathia's withdrawal from Tajvana, it had
gradually reemerged as the dominant force in secular matters, as
well. That was really all she could recall, although she also
seemed to remember reading somewhere that the Order had been
none too scrupulous about how it went about regaining its
previous power in the wake of the Empire's withdrawal.
A functionary standing in front
of the Seneschal bowed low and greeted them in fluent Ternathian.
"His Crowned Eminence, the
Seneschal of Othmaliz, bids greeting to the Emperor of Ternathia
and the Grand Princess Andrin. Be graciously welcome in this
city. It has been many fine centuries since Ternathia last stood
upon its shores."
Her father's arm turned to stone
under Andrin's hand, and she heard someone gasp behind them.
She didn't know why that phrase had drawn such a violent
reaction, but it was quite obvious her father had just been
profoundly insulted, and it had to have something to do with that
last sentence. After all, this wasn't the first time the
Emperor had visited Tajvana, and everyone knew it. For that
matter, Ternathia had withdrawn from Othmaliz less than three
hundred years ago, which scarcely qualified as "many fine
centuries." So why include the phrase in a formal greeting? What
sort of point or message could the man be trying to deliver?
She didn't have any idea, but she
didn't have to understand the insult to realize one had just been
offered. Rather than go hot, her cheeks drained white, and her eyes
went cold as gray ice as she stared through the Seneschal as
though he didn't exist. Neither she nor her father spoke, and an
uneasy stir ran through the crowd behind the Seneschal. Even the
functionary, who was doubtless repeating verbatim a speech he'd
been carefully instructed to deliver, seemed to realize his
Seneschal had blundered gravely, and his face did
darken . . . with embarrassment, not
anger.
Shamir Taje stepped in front of
Andrin and her father and cast a scathing glance at the stammering
official. The functionary's face blazed red as he tried to hold the
First Councilor's gaze. He wasn't very successful.
"You're greeting is received in
the spirit in which it was given. Please tell your Seneschal," Taje's
words could have been shards of ice, and the title came out as very
nearly an insult, "that His Imperial Majesty, Zindel chan Calirath,
Emperor of Ternathia and Warlord of the West, requires
immediate conveyance to quarters appropriate to his rank and
station.
Taje's icy tone made it clear that
he seriously doubted the Seneschal was capable of producing
either. Even the Seneschal flushed. But then he lumbered forward,
a ponderous man in jeweled robes that made him look like a
decorated egg.
"A thousand pardons for my
herald's clumsy greeting! You are warmly welcome, of course, to
the city of your ancestors. Please, my own carriage is waiting to
take you and your lovely daughter to the Great Palace. Suitable
chambers have been made ready for you there."
Andrin bristled silently. She was
no more a "lovely" daughter than the Seneschal was a polite host;
but she gave him a chilly smile and a gracious nod, answering his
offer as her mother would have, had Empress Varena been there.
"Your hospitality will, I'm sure,
be admirably suited to our needs," she said in flawless Shurkhali,
the official language of Othmaliz.
The Seneschal's eyes widened.
Then his gaze was drawn almost hypnotically to Finena, and those
same eyes nearly popped. His Adam's apple bobbed with alarm
under his ornate, jeweled collar, and Andrin's smile widened as
she realized he was afraid of her bird! She found that
thought quite comforting and hoped the Seneschal's carriage was a
deliciously cozy affair that would allow him an up-close look at
the falcon during the whole drive from quayside to palace.
"May I present Finena," she said
sweetly, still speaking in fluent Shurkhali. "She's a Ternathian
imperial peregrine falcon and my devoted and constant
companion."
The Seneschal gave her a weak
smile.
"Such a handsome and unusual
creature, my dear Grand Princess." It was obvious the man would
avoid Andrin's company with all the religious fervor of his holy
office. "Ahem. My carriage is this way."
He gestured elaborately, and
Andrin inclined her head graciously. As she did, she caught her
father's eye and realized it was twinkling wickedly, which made it
a bit difficult for her to maintain her own decorous solemnity as
they set out side by side. They had to run a gauntlet of Othmalizi
dignitaries, and Andrin did her best to memorize as many as
possible of the names and faces. Any she forgot, Lady Merissa
would be sure to remember. One of Merissa's most useful
talents—it very nearly qualified as a Talent—was an
eidetic memory. Lady Merissa never forgot anything. It
made her utterly priceless as a protocol instructor for a grand
princess of the blood. Tiresome at times, but priceless.
Beyond the dignitaries waited a
sea of common folk, including a double line of reporters—
dispatched to Tajvana from every nation on Sharona, judging by
their attire. Andrin's eyes were dazzled by flash powder long
before they reached the Seneschal's ornate carriage, which proved
to be an antique closed coach, literally dripping with gold.
"Still using the Ternathian
Imperial coach, I see," someone muttered behind Andrin's
shoulder. "You'd think he could have ponied up the money for his
own carriage, at least. He's wearing enough cash to buy
several carriages."
Andrin's lips twitched as she
recognized the voice of the Earl of Ilforth. In that moment, she
very nearly adored the pompous ass. Only Mancy Fornath would
have been so crass as to comment on the Seneschal's carriage, but
his observation gave her another insight into their
host . . . and not a flattering one.
The Seneschal started to offer
Andrin his hand to assist her into the carriage, but this time Finena
did hiss. He jerked his hand back with unceremonious speed, and
Andrin bit her tongue, composing her expression as she allowed
her father to hand her up the step into the ornate carriage, instead.
The conveyance certainly
smelled as if it were several centuries old, she thought tartly.
The leather seats, while ornately tooled, should have been replaced
at least a century ago with something
less . . . musty. She was intensely
grateful for her cloak, and she was very careful to make sure it lay
between her brocaded skirts and the odiferous, ancient leather.
Another calculated insult? she wondered. Or simply a
host unwilling to spend his own money on fancy coaches when
the imperial "leavings" were still serviceable? The coach certainly
looked grand from the outside, and given the outrageous expense
of the garments he wore, he clearly believed he deserved the
grandeur he aped, regardless of whose grandeur it had
originally been. Or how musty it had grown since they'd
abandoned it.
Her father sat beside her, and the
Seneschal took the seat opposite theirs. Other carriages conveyed
the rest of their delegation, falling into line behind the one-time
Ternathian imperial carriage as they set out with a jolt through the
streets of Tajvana. Her father began to chat easily with the
Seneschal, discussing the sights they passed. Andrin listened with
half an ear, but it was the sights themselves which absorbed the
lion's share of her interest.
Tajvana, unlike its Seneschal,
was more than worthy of that absorbed interest. The main avenues
were broad, paved with stone and lined with palm trees. Narrow
gardens ran down the center of each avenue, dividing the lanes of
traffic, which had apparently been rerouted to make way for the
official procession, and spectators lined the streets. They were
probably there to gawk at the arriving Emperor of Ternathia,
Andrin thought . . . and that was
when she received the biggest shock of the day.
Roars of welcome greeted them along every city block for
miles. Children waved ribbons in the green and gold of the
Ternathian imperial flag. Women threw armfuls of flowers. The
city's wildly enthusiastic greeting overwhelmed Andrin, who
hadn't expected anything like this outpouring of visible joy. The
Seneschal remained silent, apparently unaware of the tumult, but
his eyes were hooded and dark as he watched his own people greet
a foreigner, an Emperor whose family had ruled the Seneschal's
homeland for thousands of years.
Andrin could almost feel sorry
for him.
So many people were waving in
such wild delight that she found herself waving back. It was a
purely spontaneous response, and she was astounded when her
simple gesture caused grown women to burst into tears and toss
still more flowers her way. Uniformed police, many of them
mounted, were very much in evidence, apparently to keep the
crowd's enthusiasm from spilling over into a headlong rush
toward the carriage. As she watched, however, she noticed that not
quite everyone along the route was openly delighted. Here and
there she saw young men of military age whose glances were
hostile and suspicious. She saw older men whose eyes were cold,
without the fire of youth, but equally suspicious. She even saw a
few people carrying signs whose words she couldn't read, since
other people in the crowd invariably snatched them out of the air
almost before their owners could unfurl them.
She glanced at her father, whose
keen gaze had also noticed those scattered signs of protest, and
decided her best course would be to emulate him. He, too, was
waving graciously to the crowd through the other window of the
ancient carriage. She followed his example, continuing her own
greetings, although the first thrill of the moment had faded into a
more sober consideration of the deep currents running through
Tajvana's society. She wanted very much to find someplace private
to discuss the situation with her father and Shamir Taje. Andrin
hoped the anti-Ternathian sentiments were a distinct minority, but
her eerie vision of the Great Palace in flames drew a shiver down
her back.
Surely no one would be insane
enough to burn down a palace full of innocent people?
The child in her hoped not; the
budding imperial heiress, who was beginning to understand that anything was possible when politics came into play, wasn't
so sure. She was abruptly glad that her personal
guardsmen—and her father's—rode in the carriage
directly behind theirs, less than twenty feet away, and that the
entire security retinue would be housed in the same Palace wing
they were. She wasn't accustomed to thinking that way, but she
had a sudden depressing vision of spending the rest of her life
taking such dark factors as the very real necessity for full-time
security into consideration.
Davir Perthis stood at the
window on the seventeenth floor of the Mahkris Shipping
Corporation Building and watched the procession winding its way
through the streets of Tajvana. He'd been in this building, at this
window, for the arrival of every delegation to the impending
Conclave. He'd watched all of them rolling down the city's
avenues towards the Grand Palace. Some had been greeted by
curious crowds. One or two—like Emperor Chava's
Uromathian delegation—had been greeted with near-silent,
cold-eyed suspicion. None of them had been greeted by anything
like the roaring sea of people who had turned out to welcome
Emperor Zindel back to his family's ancient capital.
Perthis smiled, just a bit smugly,
at the thought. He never doubted that thousands would have
crowded the sidewalks no matter what he or SUNN had done. But
he did doubt very much that as many thousands would
have been there, or that the welcome would have been quite so
frenzied.
His smile faded. Whether or not
he achieved his goal remained to be
seen . . . as did the interesting
question of whether or not he'd still have a job when it was all
over. No matter how Perthis looked at it, his last few weeks of
effort were a clear violation of both SUNN's internal code of
conduct and its official editorial policy against taking sides on
political issues. Jali Kavilkan had never specifically said so, yet
Perthis strongly suspected that the executive manager knew
exactly what he was up to. That probably made Kavilkan's silence
either a good thing or a very, very bad thing, but whatever
happened to his career, Perthis had no regrets.
His smile was a distant memory
now, as he allowed the horrific images of Shaylar Nargra-
Kolmayr's final Voice transmission to play through a corner of his
mind. He'd convinced Kavilkan to transmit those images raw,
without the normal process of editing out the emotions and
surface thoughts of the originating Voice. Kavilkan had wavered
back and forth for an hour or two, well aware of just how horrible
that transmission would be. In the end, he'd shown the moral
courage to authorize it anyway. Not because of its titillation
value—although SUNN was no more immune to the need
to maintain high viewership than anyone else—but because
it was important for Sharona's people to know what had really
happened out there. Not to be fed some sanitized version, but to experience the terror and the anguish—and the raw,
blazing courage—of Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr.
And so, every SUNN Voicenet
subscriber, which meant effectively every Sharonian with even a
scrap of telepathic Talent, didn't just know what had happened.
They'd been there. They knew, with absolute fidelity,
exactly what Sharona faced. And they knew exactly who had fired
first. Who had shot down an unarmed man, holding out his empty
hands in an effort to open some sort of dialogue.
The print accounts had pulled no
punches, either, and Perthis was privately prepared to admit that
the print journalists as a group had actually done a better job of
analysis. But the sheer, raw, punch-in-the-gut impact of the
Voicecast transmissions were what had truly awakened the white-
hot fury sweeping across the entire explored multiverse.
And it was also the Voicecasts
which had first emphasized the need for a planet-wide government
to meet the emergency. Not some temporary lash-up designed to
deal with the immediate crisis. Not even some international
military alliance to coordinate the forces of existing nation states.
No. What Sharona needed—required—was a
functioning government. One which could give orders to
anyone's military in its own name. One with no need to debate
strategies and accept limitations because it was forced to cajole its
"allies" into cooperating with it. One with the force of law behind
its decisions. One which could speak for all
Sharonians . . . and which could wage
deadly war in their name.
Whether or not Kavilkan had
recognized what Perthis was up to, Tarlin Bolsh certainly had. The
international news division chief had chosen his "talking heads"
well, and he'd shaped his entire division's editorial policy to point
subtly in the direction Perthis wanted to go. For example, the
guest lists for all of the various Voicenet discussion shows his
division produced had seemed to somehow feature distinguished
statesmen and foreign-policy experts who all just happened to
have very favorable views of the Ternathian Empire and its current
Emperor.
Bolsh's people had also
produced both a series of print articles and a Voice documentary
on Tajvana's millennia-long history. They'd made the direct link
between the scope of the present crisis and the innumerable crises
which had already been met, coped with, and—for the most
part—hammered into submission here in Tajvana. And in
the process—quite accidentally, of course—they had
pointed out exactly which dynasty had done the hammering.
The documentary had been a
superlative historical survey. It had also been scrupulously
accurate, which had only made it even more effective for Perthis'
purposes. By now, everyone in Tajvana had either viewed the
Voicecast version, or read the print version, and been reminded of
their city's glory days under the Caliraths.
Inevitably, there'd been some
backlash. Much of it, Perthis admitted, was completely justifiable.
Tajvana—and Othmaliz—were independent once
more. They had better than two hundred years of independence and
achievements in their own names of which to be proud. The
thought of being once more submerged into someone else's
massive embrace, losing that regained individuality as part of
some vast, corporate whole, wasn't going to find a ringing
welcome in every heart.
But against that stood the
Calirath reputation for honor and responsibility. For the
administration of impartial justice, and for fairness. And Perthis
had been quietly astonished by how many Tajvanis—and
how many people of other nations—had turned in their
moment of greatest fear and uncertainty not to their own
governments, but to the Calirath legend. The life of Emperor
Halian had been recalled from the dusty archives, and with it the
memory of of his death, personally leading his army in the defense
not of his own people, or his own Empire, but of their Bolakini
allies. He and his army had been hideously outnumbered, but they
had been all that stood between a Bolakini city and the barbarian
horde which had slaughtered its way across half of Ricathia.
The Ternathian Navy had been
waiting, just offshore, prepared to whisk Halian and his troops
safely out of the path of destruction. And Halian had refused.
Refused not simply to withdraw
his army, but to have himself taken to safety. And so three quarters
of his army had died, and him with
it . . . but the walls of that Bolakini
city still stood today, and the statue of the dead Emperor lay
before the Halian Gate, exactly where his hideously hacked and
hewn body had been found on the field of battle, surrounded by
every member of his Imperial Guard.
Halian was not the only Calirath
who'd made a similar decision. Oh, there'd been the occasional
Calirath coward, even the occasional Calirath treacher or tyrant.
At least one Emperor had clearly been insane, and there were
persistent (unproven) rumors that he'd eventually been
assassinated by his own bodyguards. But there'd been remarkably
few of those over the endless, dusty centuries of the dynasty, and
people had remembered that, too. Two hundred and thirty years of
freely granted independence had not been long enough to erase the
memory of millennia of just government and protection,
and the groundswell not just here in Tajvana, but all across
Sharona, was building steadily, exactly as Perthis had hoped.
No doubt that explained why the
Seneschal had made such an unmitigated ass out of himself,
Perthis thought with a wry grin. He'd never thought much of the
Seneschal at the best of times, and the man's current conduct had
knocked any respect Perthis might have had for him right on the
head. Obviously, he was terrified by the notion that the Caliraths
might, indeed, return to Tajvana—and not, Perthis
suspected, simply because of the power and authority he would
lose if they did. There'd been rumors for quite some time of
serious abuses of office on the current Seneschal's part. Most
probably, those rumors represented only the tip of the reality's
iceberg, and the Seneschal must be sweating bullets at the thought
of what an impartial investigation of his conduct as the Othmalizi
head of state might reveal.
It was hard to think of anything
the Seneschal could have done to improve his case, but the course
he'd adopted had done exactly the reverse. Perthis had heard about
the odd greeting the Seneschal's herald had
produced . . . and Taje's response to
it. He had no idea what that had all been about, but he fully
intended to find out.
What mattered at the moment,
however, was that everyone knew that whether they'd
understood the subtext or not, the Seneschal had offered some
deep and personal insult to the Emperor of Ternathia upon his
arrival. Zindel's response to that insult (or, perhaps, his lack of response) had only underscored the pettiness and stupidity of
the man who'd offered it. And, Perthis grin turned into a broad
smile, Grand Princess Andrin's response—like her
falcon's—had been magnificent.
Perthis had never seen the grand
princess with his own eyes before. In fact, he'd discovered that
there was remarkably little press coverage of Andrin or either of
her younger sisters. All he'd really known about her was that she
was about seventeen years old, tall, reputed to be both quiet and
intelligent, and that she had already demonstrated that she
possessed the Calirath Talent.
He hadn't been prepared for the
perfectly poised, elegantly groomed, ice-eyed young woman who
had inspected the rotund, squat, undeniably oily Seneschal
as if he were some particularly loathsome slug she'd discovered on
the sole of her sandal. She'd been
perfect—perfect—standing there like a tall,
slender statue of ivory flame, crowned in the fiery sun-glitter of
her jeweled hair, and the Seneschal's obvious terror of her falcon
had only made it better. Her father had made the Seneschal look
petty; she'd made him look ridiculous, and that was far, far
more deadly.
Perthis raised one hand in salute
to the raven-haired young woman waving from the window of the
hideously overdone, antique carriage rolling past below him. He
hadn't counted on her, but he'd already set his research staff to
work on her. She might just prove almost as effective for his
purposes as her father.
Not, Perthis' smile vanished, that
she was likely to thank him for it once she realized what he'd
actually done to her and her family.
The approach to the Great Palace
was lined with cheering crowds all the way to the ornate palace
gates, which were guarded by men in Othmalizi uniform. They
carried the same Model 10 as the Ternathian Army, something
Andrin was proud of herself for recognizing. Her father had not
allowed her to skip that portion of her education, just because she
wouldn't be serving in Ternathia's armed forces.
The officers in charge of the
guard details saluted sharply as the Seneschal's carriage passed
through the gates, and their men presented arms crisply, but there
was a taut professionalism under that military theater. Their eyes
were sharp and intense, obviously screening the passengers in each
of the carriages behind them in the long procession, as well.
Andrin found that rather reassuring as she thought of the
protesters she'd seen along the way.
The palace's drive ran down a
short avenue of palm trees, then ended in a circular space before
the glittering building's ornate main doors. Those doors, Andrin
knew, were panels of solid, burnished silver, more than twice her
father's impressive height. Her study of the Grand Palace's history
had already told her that, but nothing could have prepared her for
the reality of their mirror-bright magnificence, and she swallowed
a silent gasp of amazed delight as she finally beheld them with her
own eyes.
If the Emperor was particularly
impressed by the sight, he gave no sign of it. He simply exited the
carriage first and handed her down. Then he stepped courteously
aside for the Seneschal, and waited for their host to precede them
across the stone-paved drive to the main steps. Those steps were
of polished white marble, lined by liveried servants who bowed or
curtsied nearly to the ground as they passed.
The enormous doors swung
open as they approached. Each panel was a bas relief
masterwork, illustrating key scenes of Ternathian history that
Andrin recognized at a glance. She lifted the hem of her skirts as
she stepped across the raised threshold—a curious
architectural feature she'd never seen before—then paused
as a servant bowed low and slipped her cloak from her shoulders.
Other servants were taking the coats and cloaks of other members
of their delegation, which followed discreetly behind, and Andrin
stepped forward once again. Her footsteps clicked on the marble
floors, and she managed to keep her lips closed against a powerful
urge to gape.
It wasn't easy. The Great Palace
put Hawkwing to shame.
Andrin had never witnessed such
opulence in her life. The huge entry hall alone was stunning, a
glittering marble room filled with the finest art treasures of
Sharona. She'd seen illustrations of at least half the marble and
bronze statues they passed along the way in textbooks on art
history and the masterworks of antiquity, but she didn't have time
to admire them the way she wanted to. There was too much to do,
and too many people to see, and she forced her attention back to
the task at hand.
Othmalizi courtiers bowed low
as they passed. Great ladies in gowns as elaborate as Andrin's
curtsied, graceful as flowers and jeweled more splendidly than
most reigning kings and queens. It was a daunting experience for
any seventeen-year-old, but Andrin refuse to let anyone see that.
And it helped enormously, she discovered, that—due
entirely to Lady Merissa's efforts—she could rest secure in
the knowledge that her own attire at least matched that of the
court ladies, while Finena's silver feathers shone as brightly as any
jewels in the sunlight streaming through tall windows and
skylights.
And my great-grandmothers lived in these rooms,
she found herself thinking again and again as they passed from
one stunning chamber to another. She quickly lost track of the
rooms they'd crossed, a seemingly endless maze of corridors and
vast, echoing chambers. It seemed to go on forever, but they
finally ended their journey at last in what was clearly an audience
hall. One which was filled at the moment with a glittering array of
people whose widely varying skin and hair color—not to
mention their garments—proclaimed them to be official
delegates to the pending Conclave.
Andrin stiffened internally at the
sight and scalding anger flared through her. Their host had brought
them straight from the docks to an official function, without even
offering them the chance to rest or wash the salt from their skin,
or even the slightest warning that this reception awaited them.
Another calculated insult? Or
just gross insensitivity?
Then another thought flickered
through her anger. Had these people already been assembled here
for some other event? Or had everybody come to this room
specifically to greet her father's arrival? She didn't know of any
discreet way to find out, and there was little time to think about it
as a waiting functionary called out their names in a piercing voice.
"His Crowned Eminence, the
Seneschal of Othmaliz! His Imperial Majesty, Zindel chan
Calirath, Emperor of Ternathia! Her Imperial Highness, Grand
Princess Andrin of Ternathia!"
Polite applause greeted them,
and Andrin gave the assembled crowd a brief, decorous courtesy,
carefully balancing Finena on her arm. Her father gave an equally
brief bow, and a ripple of conversation ran through the room,
much of it focused on the falcon riding her arm. And then the
inevitable round of introductions and greetings began.
The first face Andrin saw
belonged to a Uromathian prince, several years her senior. The
young man's almond eyes had gone wide with stunned envy and
shock when he saw that Finena wore neither hood nor jesses.
Another Uromathian prince standing beside him was gasping
something to his older companion, but she wasn't close
enough—or sufficiently fluent and Uromathian,
yet—to catch what he was saying.
Unlike Finena, the falcons both
princes carried wore jeweled and tasseled hoods. Strong leather
jesses bound each bird's taloned feet to its owner's gloved wrist,
and Andrin flicked a cool glance across the bound birds and
inclined her head to the princes as she swept past on her father's
arm. Another Uromathian prince farther down the line caught her
glance and startled her by grinning and sweeping an ornate bow to
her, balancing his own falcon carefully on one wrist. He was not a
handsome young man, but his eyes sparkled with open delight as
he took in the stunned gazes of his fellow Uromathians.
Andrin committed his face to
memory, determined to find out who he was, where he came from,
and why he was so pleased by his peers' dismay. If she asked Lady
Merissa—and she fully intended to do so—her
protocol instructor would doubtless have his name, rank, family
pedigree, and net worth to the last decimal place by the time they
sat down to supper tonight.
But first they had to endure an
endless receiving line. It was rapidly apparent that at least two
thirds of the delegations had already arrived, and each member of
every single delegation was waiting with bated breath to meet the
Emperor of Ternathia and his overly tall daughter. And she
was overly tall, she thought glumly. In fact, she towered over
most of the men and all the ladies, until the Farnalian
delegation reached them, at which point she wanted to throw her
arms around the Dowager Empress of Farnalia with a gasp of pure
thanks for standing taller than she did. The elegant, silver-haired
Dowager Empress flashed a conspiratorial smile as Andrin greeted
her formally, then dropped a wink that cheered the girl immensely.
"You probably don't remember
me, my dear," the Empress said, her voice quiet but surprisingly
deep with emotion. "You were only a baby the last time I was in
Estafel, but your grandmother and I were dear friends as girls. I
stood beside her at her wedding, and she stood with me at mine.
You must come and see me at dinner this evening."
"Grandmama has spoken often
of you," Andrin replied, smiling in genuine delight. "I should
adore a chance to visit with you, at dinner or any time at all."
"You're kind to humor an old
lady. I'll see you this evening." The Empress pressed a socially
correct kiss to her cheek, but her hand was warm and strong when
she gripped Andrin's fingers.
The only other good thing to
come out of that interminable receiving line was the chance to
discover the name of the Uromathian prince with the infectious
grin. When he reached Andrin and her father, she
discovered—to her secret delight—that while he
might be Uromathian by blood, he was no subject of Emperor
Chava.
"Junni Fai Yujin, King of
Eniath, and Crown Prince Howan Fai Goutin," the Othmalizi
functionary handling the introductions intoned.
Like many of the semi-nomadic
people he ruled, Junni Fai Yujin was a large man for someone of
Uromathian blood. He was shorter than Andrin, but only by half a
head, and his shoulders were actually broader than any part of her.
That was a distinct first for any of the men she'd so far met from
the other Uromathian delegations, and he bowed over her hand
with fluid grace, despite his size. He spoke no Ternathian, and her
Uromathian wasn't up to the radically different dialect spoken in
Eniath, which shared almost as much linguistic heritage with
Arpathian as it did with Uromathian.
She curtsied deeply, indicating
her respect for his kingdom and his people—and for their
renown as falconers. To her amusement, the king was staring at
Finena more rapturously than he was at her, and she angled her
arm to bring the white-winged falcon to a better viewing angle.
"Finena," she said softly,
stroking the glossy white feathers.
"Finena," the King breathed in
response. He glanced up at her, his dark eyes filled with questions
he lacked the words to ask. Then he turned to his son and rattled
off something Andrin couldn't begin to catch. Crown Prince
Howan Fai Goutin, whose family name—like those of all
men of Uromathian dissent—was traced through the middle
name, not the last, spoke in halting Ternathian.
"Name of silver one
is . . ." he paused a moment, mentally
translating. "What for meaning?"
"What does her name mean?
"Please?" he nodded.
"White Fire," she said, and
Prince Howan's eyes glowed.
"Ahhhhh . . ."
The sound was almost reverent, and then the prince turned and
spoke formally to his father. Andrin caught three whole words of
the rapid exchange. Then King Junni ask another question, which
Howan relayed.
"Please, why Finena no corded?"
Andrin glanced at the jesses on
both the King's falcon and Prince Howan's. They were magnificent
birds, and she longed to see both of them flying unhindered
through the bright sky as free as Finena herself. Then she looked
up and met Prince Howan's gaze for a moment before she turned
and spoke directly to King Junni himself.
"Does one chain the wind?" she
asked simply. "Finena is free. She stays for love of Andrin."
Prince Howan hissed softly.
When Andrin risked a swift glance in his direction, she found not
the censure or displeasure she'd half-expected to see, but a look of
such respect it stunned her. He spoke briefly to his father, and
King Junni made a sound almost precisely like his son's. Then he
lifted Andrin's free hand and drew her fingers forward, resting
them briefly against his own heart. He turned to her father, still
holding her hand, and bowed with deep formality. Then he spoke
again, and prince Howan once again translated.
"My father says Ternathia grows
wise daughters. He must talk with you. Soon. Before Conclave."
"Ternathia is honored." Her
father bowed. "It will be my pleasure to speak with Eniath,
whenever King Junni Fai Yujin chooses."
King Junni bowed again, still
with that deep formality, and departed with great dignity. The
crown prince gave Andrin a piercing glance and an equally formal
bow, then followed his father down the receiving line, and Zindel
leaned close to stroke Finena's wings.
"Well done, indeed, 'Drin," he
murmured in a low tone, for her ears alone. "That was as nice a
piece of diplomacy as I've seen in many a year. I need Eniath's
support in Conclave, and I wasn't sure I could get it. Now there's
at least a piece of common ground—and mutual
respect—to build from."
She went nearly giddy with
pleasure and wanted to give him a radiant smile, but contented
herself with a small upturn of her lips, acutely conscious of the
crowd of people watching her every move. Controlling her face
was difficult, but she managed it, and his eyes lit with an approval
that made her feel as if her feet were floating ten inches above the
marble floor.
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Shaylar and Jathmar sat in their
quarters in Fort Wyvern, talking quietly with Gadrial, and listened
to the wind.
It was dying down at last, and
they were glad. The thunderstorms on the far side of the portal had
raged with only occasional periods of relative calm for better than
twenty-four hours after their arrival here, and the violent weather
seemed to have spread to this side. At least, that was what it had
felt like for the next two days, as rain and strong winds pummeled
Fort Wyvern. None of the transport dragon pilots had been at all
happy about the prospect of taking off under such conditions, and
Jasak had decided not to push the issue. Instead, they'd settled
down to wait out the weather on both sides of the portal
before proceeding.
It had not been a comfortable
wait. Five hundred Grantyl, Fort Wyvern's commanding officer,
was very different from Five Hundred Klian. There'd been none of
the sympathy, none of the awareness that what had happened
certainly wasn't their fault, that they'd seen in Klian. Instead,
there'd been suspicion, hostility, and more than a little fear. It had
been obvious to Shaylar that Grantyl would have been far more
comfortable locking them up in a dungeon somewhere, and
preferably losing the key.
The fact that he hadn't gone
ahead and done exactly that underscored the accuracy of what
Jasak and Gadrial had told them about the institution of
shardon. Shaylar had been too far away to catch more than a
few fragments of the "discussion" between Jasak and Grantyl, but
she hadn't needed her Talent to recognize how
disgruntled—and angry—Grantyl had been. Yet
despite his anger, and despite the fact that he outranked Jasak
substantially, the five hundred hadn't even attempted to put them
into close confinement. He'd insisted on stationing sentries
outside their quarters, but aside from that, they'd been treated
almost as guests. Not welcome guests, perhaps, but still
guests.
"You know," she said now to
Gadrial, "I don't think I'd truly realized—not deep down
inside—just how lucky we are that Jasak is basically a
decent man."
Jathmar stirred, sitting on the
bed at her side, and she reached out and took his hand. Her
husband's attitude towards Jasak remained far more ambivalent
than her own.
"I don't think this fort's
commander," Shaylar went on, "was all that happy about not
throwing us into chains the instant we got here."
"You're right, Grantyl did want
to lock you up in the brig beside vos Hoven," Gadrial said. "But
he's an Andaran himself, which didn't leave him much choice but
to accept Jasak's position. Of course," she smiled thinly, "he also
knows who Jasak's father is, which may have had a little
something to do with it."
"I'll settle for that," Jathmar said
with a slightly grim answering smile.
"So would I, in your place."
Gadrial nodded, but there was an edge of unhappiness, or concern,
perhaps, in her tone, and Shaylar arched her eyebrows.
"You don't seem entirely
satisfied about something," she observed, and Gadrial grimaced.
"It's just that I'm not too happy
about the commander of the next fort," she admitted.
"Why?" Jathmar demanded, his
eyes suddenly intent.
"Two Thousand mul Gurthak
most definitely isn't Andaran. In fact, he's a Mythalan, and
although he hasn't chosen to flaunt it, he comes from a fairly
prominent shakira clan-line. He's also a long way away
from any authority which might overrule
him . . . or punish him. Frankly, if
anyone's likely to try to violate Jasak's role as your
baranal, it's going to be a Mythalan."
"Why do you and Jasak hate
Mythalans so much?" Shaylar asked. Gadrial simply looked at her,
and Shaylar shrugged. "You said Magister Halathyn was a
Mythalan, and from what I saw and sensed about him, he was a
wonderful man. But I've never heard you or Jasak say a positive
thing about any other Mythalan, aside from Sendahli. And that
other soldier of Jasak's—that vos Hoven—almost
sets himself on fire with his own hatred every time he looks at
Jasak."
"It's a long, complicated
situation," Gadrial said slowly. "And I take the point you're trying
to make. In fact, it's probably true that the mere fact that mul
Gurthak is Mythalan would be enough to make
me . . . wary of him. But if the
question you're really asking is whether or not our opinions of
Mythal and its society are warranted, you might think about the
fact that Jasak and I come from extremely different
backgrounds . . . and neither of us
can stomach the way Mythalans think societies should work."
"Why?" Jathmar asked, and
Gadrial sighed.
"In our universe,
Mythal—what you call Ricathia—has the oldest
civilization of any of our major cultures. It's also where almost all
of the techniques for handling magic, tapping the energy field,
were first worked out. A lot of that development stemmed from
pure trial and error in the early days, but Mythalans have been
studying magic for a long time, and they began working
out the theory behind those early brute force applications well
over two thousand years ago. The true scientific method only
evolved in the last few hundred years, but most of their original
theoretical work has stood up extremely well. Even today, they
dominate in the field of theoretical sorcery. They're not as good at
devising practical applications of their own research as, say, my
own people are, but the most prestigious of all of the academies
of magic is still the Mythal Falls Academy, where Magister
Halathyn used to teach."
Pain flickered through the
magister's dark eyes. More pain than mentioning Halathyn usually
caused her, Shaylar thought. But whatever its cause, she brushed it
off quickly, almost angrily, and continued in that same level tone.
"No one—especially a
magister like me—can fail to respect the work Mythal Falls
has carried out over the centuries. But it's unfortunately true that
Mythal developed a very different society from the rest of Arcana,
one based almost entirely on whether or not the members of that
society are Gifted. In fact, I've often thought that they developed
their society as a result of their single-minded focus on the
principles of magic.
"If you're Mythalan and Gifted,
then you belong to the shakira caste, or perhaps to the
multhari caste; if you aren't Gifted, then you belong to the
garthan caste. There are some exceptions, but not very many."
"Castes?" Shaylar frowned at the
totally alien word, and Gadrial sighed.
"The best way to think of it is
that the Mythalans divide their society into three distinct groups,
what we call 'castes,' each of which have a specific place. The
relationships between castes—and what's permissible
behavior within a caste—are defined by ironbound
tradition and, in most cases, statutory law, as well. For the most
part, the caste you belong to—shakira, multhari, or
garthan—depends on whether or not you were born
Gifted, and there's nothing you can do about that.
"As I say, the shakira are
the Gifted caste. They're the small percentage of the total
population, no more than twenty percent or so, at best, who form
the tip of the social pyramid. They control the wealth and political
power of the entire society, and they think of themselves as
extremely enlightened because they practice a form of direct
democracy no other Arcanan nation practices. Of course, the only
people who get to vote are members of the shakira and
traditional multhari families. That's one reason they can
use direct democracy; they've got so few voters that the system
actually works.
"Next in power and prestige after
the shakira are the multhari, the traditional
Mythalan military caste. You might think of them as the Mythalan
equivalent of Andarans, although there are tremendous differences
between them. Not least because one of the multhari's
primary responsibilities is to keep the garthan's neck
firmly under the shakira's heel. Some of the multhari
—many of them, in fact—are also shakira, and the enlisted ranks of the Mythalan military have always
contained quite a lot of garthan, although all of its officers
are multhari.
"In Mythal, most garthan
who end up in the army are conscripts. Traditionally, the
shakira who entered the army could usually expect to attain
high rank, especially if their families were also part of the
traditional multhari hierarchy. Since the creation of the
Union, there isn't any official Mythalan Army these days, and the
integration of the multhari into the Union armed forces
hasn't always gone smoothly. They've tended to carry a lot of that
traditional shakira sense of superiority and automatic
privilege around with them, and they seem to resent the fact that
they have to compete with the non-Gifted—and non-
Mythalans—on an equal basis for promotion. Their
resentment when they don't get it has had a tendency to
be . . . fairly evident, let's say, and
that's created a lot of friction between them and, say, Andaran or
Ransaran personnel.
"For the last forty years or so,
Mythal appears to have been trying to overcome some of those
problems. More multhari have been attending the Army
Academy at Garth Showma before joining the army, which appears
to have smoothed down at least some of the rough edges. For that
matter, some of the younger shakira from outside the
multhari have actually been signing up for at least a tour or
two in the enlisted ranks. They're being encouraged to do so by
their caste-lords, on the grounds that whether their caste agrees
with the rest of us or not, they're stuck with the terms of the
Accords, and they have to learn to get along with those restrictions
if they ever want to reduce the traditional friction between their
own people and the rest of us.
"It's at least a pragmatic idea,"
Gadrial admitted a bit grudgingly, "and I suppose they may
actually be sincere. Unfortunately, their 'solution' doesn't come
without problems of its own. For example, the soldier you were
talking about, Shaylar—vos Hoven—belongs to the
shakira. That's what the 'vos' in his name indicates. But
Sendahli belongs to the garthan caste. He fled Mythal and
enlisted in the Union Army as a way to escape the limited,
second-class future which was all he could expect at home. And
the reason vos Hoven is under arrest is that Jasak caught him
brutally beating Sendahli to extort Sendahli's pay out of him."
Jathmar frowned deeply and
quickly. He opened his mouth, but before he could say anything,
Gadrial continued.
"The reason he was doing
that—and the reason Sendahli was letting him do
that, despite the fact that he could have broken vos Hoven's neck
any time he wanted to—is that under Mythalan custom and
law, garthan have no legal rights in any
dispute with a shakira. They can't even testify in court
against a shakira defendant. Up until the formation of the
Union of Arcana, garthan were legally property. They were
required to belong to someone from the shakira caste, and
they were denied the right to own property, the right to vote, or the
right to choose their own trades and professions . . or to any
income they might have earned from that trade or profession. In
many cases, they were denied even the right to choose who they
married, and even today, Gifted children of garthan parents
are taken from their birthparents by the courts and placed for
adoption by shakira families."
"That's barbaric!"
Shaylar burst out, and Gadrial nodded.
"That's exactly what it is," she
agreed grimly. "I'm Ransaran. My people believe in the
fundamental equality of all human beings. We're the dangerous,
humanistic, liberal part of the Union, and there's been a
fundamental hostility, almost a hatred, between us and the
Mythalans for as long as anyone can remember on either side.
Jasak, on the other hand, is an Andaran, and they're as different
from us as the Mythalans are. Their entire culture is bound up in
concepts of mutual obligation and duty, of responsibilities that
define who they are. They believe in the rights of the individual,
but they also believe that those rights have to be earned by meeting
all of those obligations and responsibilities, and they have no
sympathy for anyone who fails to measure up to their standards of
honor.
"Yet they despise the Mythalans
as much as we Ransarans do, because of the Mythalan attitude
towards the garthan—that the mere fact that people
like Sendahli aren't Gifted makes them less than human in the eyes
of their own rulers. It turns them into something which exists
solely for the convenience of their natural superiors, the
shakira. If an Andaran like Jasak considered the non-Gifted as
truly inferior—which he never would—his cultural
obligation would be to protect and defend them, not to abuse
them. When he came across vos Hoven beating Sendahli, he
ordered vos Hoven off . . . and vos
Hoven tried to kill him."
Jathmar shook his head in a
combination of dismay and disbelief, and Gadrial smiled
humorlessly.
"I'm sure there are people back
home in Sharona you wouldn't exactly be proud to be associated
with, Jathmar. Maybe not anyone as bad as the Mythalans, but I
can't imagine your people are that different from ours, Talent or
no. Unfortunately, we Ransarans and Andarans had no choice but
to include Mythal in the Union. Partly, because whether we like
them or not they do live on the same planet we do, which I
suppose gives them at least some inherent right to share in the
exploitation of the portals. But, frankly, mostly because when the
first portal appeared on Arcana, it sparked the most terrible war in
our history. The weapons that were developed were devastating,
so terrible we barely managed to stop short of our own complete
destruction."
Jathmar and Shaylar froze, their
faces suddenly tight with fear.
"Andara and Ransar realized the
situation was about to spin totally out of control," Gadrial
continued grimly. "We proposed the creation of the Union
as a world-government to ensure that every Arcanan nation had the
same opportunities to profit from the existence of the portals, and
the Andarans supported us strongly. It was only our united front
which forced Mythal to accept the proposal, and the
Mythalans held out for a much greater degree of local
autonomy—essentially the protection of their own social
system within their own territory—than any of the rest of us
wanted to give them. Unfortunately, they'd been the leading
researchers for the weapons which had been used in the Portal
Wars. They had more of them them, and better ones, than the rest
of us, and they refused to destroy them unless we accepted their
terms in that regard."
Shaylar's face was white as she
absorbed the implications of magical weapons capable of
destroying an entire planet's civilization. Jathmar looked equally
horrified, and Gadrial faced them squarely.
"I know what you're afraid of,
and I don't blame you. But I will tell you there are severe
limitations on even the most deadly weapon, when it's applied to
inter-universal warfare. For one thing, no spell can be cast
through a portal, so you'd still have to physically assault each
portal and establish a bridgehead on the other side before you
could deploy any sorcerous weapon. That wasn't a factor in the
Portal Wars, because they were fought entirely on Arcana, over
who'd end up with possession of the portal in the first place.
"For a second thing, those
weapons were outlawed two hundred years ago. As part of the
Union Accords, all signatories were required to destroy all
weapons of mass destruction and the spellware and research which
had supported them. Several other particularly nasty spells were
outlawed at the same time, and an inspection process was set up to
ensure that there were no holdouts and that no one was doing
fresh research in the proscribed areas."
"But if things get nasty enough,
your people could always change the law, couldn't they?"
"Yes, Jathmar, we could,"
Gadrial said very, very quietly. "And the people most likely to
push for doing just that are going to be the Mythalans. They're
xenophobic to an almost crippling degree, even with their fellow
Arcanans. I don't even want to think about how they're going to
react when they find out about your people. Especially," she
smiled wanly, "because they're going to think they're looking at an
entire worldwide civilization of Ransarans."
Shaylar and Jathmar looked at
one another, and Gadrial leaned forward in her chair to take
Shaylar's hand. Shaylar's eyes stung with tears as she realized the
other woman was deliberately giving her the opportunity to read
her emotions, her honesty.
"The Andarans and Ransarans
would never stand for the resurrection of those hideous weapons,"
she said flatly. "Not unless your people were foolish enough to
convince us that our only other alternative was our own complete
destruction. From what I've seen of the two of you, I don't think
that's ever going to happen. I can't promise that, obviously, but I
truly, truly believe it."
She
decided—again—not to mention the fact that she'd
already received specific instructions from mul Gurthak to
program all available data on the Fallen Timbers cluster into the
other three prototypes of the portal detector she and Halathyn had
come out here to field test. She could think of only one reason he
might want those, and while she had to agree, however
unwillingly, with the logic, she doubted that Shaylar or Jathmar
would find the news reassuring.
"Still, you need to be aware that
Mythalans share neither my own people's belief in the inherent
rights of the individual—especially not of non-Gifted
individuals—nor (to anyone outside their own caste, at
least) Jasak's people's ironclad belief in honor obligations and an
individual's overriding obligation to meet them. You need to be
careful—very careful—what you say to any of them,
and you have to be aware that if one of them thinks he sees an
opportunity to get around Jasak's protection, he may well try to
seize it.
"That's the bad news. The
good news is that seventy or eighty percent of the entire
Arcanan army is Andaran, just like Five Hundred Grantyl. Even if
they don't like what Jasak's done, they'll respect it, and they won't
like it one bit if some Mythalan dishonors all of Andara by
harming you in any way."
Shaylar thought about that
conversation three days later as their transport dragon circled
above yet another fortress. This one was even bigger than Fort
Wyvern, and unless she was very much mistaken, it lay in what
would have been east Farnalia back home in Sharona. Endless
ocean waves of coniferous forest spread out in every direction,
and the flight over the sharp-spined mountains between Fort
Wyvern's portal and this new fort—Fort Talon—had
been just as freezingly cold as Jasak had warned them that it
would be.
It had also required them to fly
so high that the dragon's pilot had issued each of his passengers a
small cylinder of oxygen attached by a tube to a tightfitting mask
which had covered mouth and nose. Shaylar had huddled down in
her thick, fur-lined flying garments and leaned against Jathmar's
back as the dragon carried them through the ice-cold, crystal-clear
gulfs of the heavens. Despite her protective clothing (and another
one of those unnatural seeming little spells which had actually
heated her furs), she'd never been so cold—nor felt so far
from Shurkhal's beloved, sunstruck warmth—in her entire
life, and she'd been almost prayerfully thankful when they landed
on the western side of those towering mountains.
The total flight from Fort
Wyvern had taken almost a full three days. She and Jathmar had
been rather relieved to realize there were some real physical
constraints on the Arcanans' uncanny capabilities. Dragons could
fly at preposterous speeds, but their endurance clearly wasn't
unlimited. They appeared to be capable of perhaps a thousand
miles or a bit more in a single day, but the greater exertion of
crossing those high mountains had taken its toll. Their dragon had
required additional rest after they finally landed, and Jasak and the
pilot had agreed to take an extra day at the small, bare-bones
dragonfield.
But they were here at last,
descending through a drizzling rain towards their next destination.
Their next interim destination, she reminded herself
grimly, smearing moisture away as she wiped her protective
goggles and recalled what Gadrial had said about the distance
between them and New Arcana.
Fort Talon's portal rose out of
the forests behind it. It was larger than Fort Wyvern's, and the
terrain on the other side of it looked like the flat sweep of
Jathmar's native New Ternath's midwestern plains. She could see a
small river, but it was late night on the far side, and she didn't have
much time to consider details before the dragon planed gracefully
down. She was still trying to get used to how suddenly and
abruptly the huge beasts decelerated when they landed, and her
arms tightened around Jathmar's waist as they hit the ground.
Then they were down—
once again in one piece—and she drew a huge breath of
relief.
I'm going to have to get over this fear of landing, she told
herself firmly. Of course, given how far we've got to go, I
should have plenty of time for it.
The thought made her chuckle
sourly, and then they were once again climbing down for yet
another brief stay.
Aside from her, Jathmar, Jasak,
and Gadrial, they were accompanied only by Jugthar Sendahli,
Otwal Threbuch, Javelin Shulthan, and Bok vos Hoven. That left a
lot of unused passenger space aboard the dragon, and Shaylar was
just as happy that it did. vos Hoven was a brooding, hate-filled
presence, and she was relieved that there was enough room for
him to be kept well away from her and Jathmar. Not that the
Mythalan was likely to pose much of a threat, given his manacles
and the eagle eye Threbuch kept trained upon him. Shaylar was
reasonably certain that nothing would have pleased Threbuch
more than for vos Hoven to try something which, regrettably,
ended up with the prisoner plunging several thousand feet to his
doom after a brief, desperate struggle with his guard. From vos
Hoven's attitude, he probably thought the same thing.
A uniformed reception
committee waited for them on the edge of the dragonfield hacked
out of the virgin forest which rose like green walls around it.
None of them were Mythalans, and all of them looked remarkably
young, certainly not much older than Jasak. Apparently the fort's
commander couldn't be bothered to greet the new arrivals in
person, and she saw what looked like a hint of irritation far back
in Jasak's eyes.
"Hundred Olderhan," their
baranal said, with one of his people's crisp, clenched-fist
salutes, "en route to New Arcana with Magister Kelbryan
and party."
"Commander of One Hundred
Neshok," the officer Jasak had greeted responded in a cool voice.
"You're late, Olderhan. Five Hundred Klian's hummer message
told us to expect you three days ago."
"We had a weather delay at Fort
Wyvern," Jasak replied in a level voice. "And the pilot and I agreed
that the dragon needed some extra rest after clearing the
mountains."
"I see." Neshok's tone made it
perfectly clear he did nothing of the sort, Shaylar thought, holding
Jathmar's hand tightly. The Fort Wyvern hundred gazed at them for
a second or two, then looked back at Jasak.
"The Commander of Two
Thousand will see you shortly. Follow me."
Neshok turned on his bootheel
and started toward the fort without another word.
"If there'd been any more warmth
in that greeting," Shaylar murmured to Jathmar in Shurkhali, "the
air would've frozen solid."
"I'd say that was a bit of an
understatement," Jathmar agreed. "And frankly, after what Gadrial
told us about this mul Gurthak, I find that disturbing. I hope she
was right about how hard it would be for anyone to take us out of
Jasak's custody!"
"Yes. Mother Marthea, yes,"
Shaylar replied fervently, but her attention wasn't on Neshok. She
was looking at two men who stood well back in the little crowd
beside the hard-packed dirt road leading from the dragonfield to
the fort's gates. Most of the men in that crowd were soldiers, but
not the two who'd drawn her attention. They stood out because
they weren't in uniform, and because they were also older than the
soldiers standing around them.
Jathmar followed her eyes and
frowned.
"Wonder who they are?" he
muttered under his breath.
"So do I." The edge in Shaylar's
voice surprised Jathmar. She'd wrapped both arms around herself
as though still warding off the chill of flying across the
mountains, and her reaction worried him.
He turned his attention back to
the two unknowns. Both were in their forties or fifties, at a glance,
and although Jathmar knew nothing of Arcanan fashions, their
clothing was clearly made of high-quality material. It looked
custom-tailored, too. That kind of garment wasn't what he'd
expected to see in a frontier fort, and they looked even more out
of place than he felt.
According to Jasak and Gadrial,
Arcana's exploration of virgin universes was conducted by the
military. So who were these two civilians? And what were they
doing out here among the trees, mosquitos, and swamps, wearing
tailored garments made of what looked like silk?
Government functionaries of
some kind, perhaps. Or could they be independent businessmen
intent on opening trade routes? He knew there wasn't much point
in speculating in the dark, but something about them compelled
his curiosity. There was a hardness in their eyes, or perhaps a
hooded look of speculation, that made him intensely
uncomfortable. He'd grown used to seeing fear, or at least anxiety,
as the rumors of the Sharonians' "demonic weapons" traveled up
the transit chain ahead of them. But these men weren't looking at
Shaylar and him fearfully. There was something measuring,
watchful . . . calculating about them.
He couldn't put his mental finger
on just what it was about them that bothered him any more
accurately than that, but it was enough to raise his hackles, and he
put his arm around Shaylar as they walked past the silently
watching civilians.
Neshok led them up the road
toward the new fort, and Jathmar abruptly found the two civilians
displaced from the forefront of his concerns. The landing field was
literally ringed with dragons. There were dozens—possibly
even scores—of the beasts, and their path led them directly
past half a dozen of them.
Skyfang, the dragon which had
transported them here from Fort Wyvern, had shown no sign of
Windclaw's ferociously hostile initial reaction to Shaylar. Jathmar
had concluded that she'd been right in her suspicion that it was her
attempt to use her Voice which had set the original transport
dragon off. Now, as they headed across in front of six of
them, he found himself hoping fervently that they'd both been
correct after all.
Most of the beasts ignored them
completely, but one of them raised its head abruptly. The
predominately crimson and gold beast was smaller than any of the
dragons Jathmar had previously seen, but that scarcely made it
tiny. Its head was still longer than his body, much less Shaylar's,
and the spikes protecting its throat and head were sharper looking,
and proportionately longer, than Windclaw's had been.
It cocked its head, like some
huge falcon, turning to fix its knife-sharp gaze upon Shaylar, and
its mouth opened, showing carnivore fangs the size of serving
platters and a long, shockingly red forked tongue. Then its forefeet
thrust at the rain-slick ground, shoving it half-upright, and it
hissed like a Trans-Temporal Express locomotive venting steam.
Shaylar went white. She closed
her eyes, trembling, and Jathmar felt her desperate effort to
completely close down any hint of Talent. Even the marriage bond
was abruptly muted, almost impossible to feel, and his arm
tightened around her.
The dragon's reaction hadn't
escaped Jasak or Gadrial. As if they'd been the telepaths,
the two of them moved as one, in perfect coordination, to
interpose their own bodies between the clearly agitated beast and
Shaylar. And Gadrial, Jatham realized with sudden shock was
abruptly outlined by a literal corona of light. Fire seemed to
crackle in midair, three inches from her skin, her hands rose in an
odd, intensely graceful posture which reminded him of some sort
of martial artist, and he felt a sudden, ominous, ozone-breathing
pressure radiating from her. It was like knowing he was standing
directly in the path of a lightning bolt, a corner of his mind
gibbered, and for the first time since they'd met, he was actually
afraid of her.
Neshok, on the other hand, didn't
even seem to have noticed. He'd halted, but he was staring with
obvious perplexity—and what looked like quickly growing
suspicion—back and forth between the dragon and the two
Sharonians, not at Jasik or Gadrial.
"What—?" he began, but
Jasak overrode his questions savagely.
"Get us out of here—
now!" he barked. Neshok turned his head to glare at him, and Jasak
snarled. "Now, godsdamn it! Unless you want a massacre
on your hands!"
Fury tightened the other
hundred's expression, but then he glanced at Gadrial, and his eyes
widened. He'd opened his mouth as if to say something more, but
it snapped shut as more fire began to crackle at the tips of her
fingers. That and the look on Jasak's face—and the fact that
a second dragon was beginning to rouse—seemed
to get through to him. He barked orders to the escort, and the
entire party moved into a half-run.
The agitated dragons began to
calm once more as soon as Shaylar was forty or fifty yards away.
The one who'd roused up first looked after her with one last
almost querulous hiss. Then it, too, settled back into its original
position and laid its fearsome head on its forelegs.
"It wasn't me, Jasak! It wasn't! It
couldn't have been me! I wasn't doing anything!"
Shaylar cried, and Jasak looked down at her as she hastened along
between him and Jathmar.
"I believe you," he said, laying
his own hand on her shoulder, but he also shook his head. "I just
wish I knew why those two reacted that way, when none of the
transport dragons have since Windclaw."
"What are you talking about?"
Neshok demanded harshly. He was glaring at Shaylar, his eyes
flinty, and he didn't seem to be very much happier than that with
Jasak. "What does she mean, she 'wasn't doing anything'?"
"The transport dragon that
airlifted my wounded out reacted violently to Lady Nargra-
Kolmayr's presence." Jasak's voice was level, his expression calm,
but Shaylar could sense his emotions through the hand still on her
shoulder. He wasn't at all happy about broaching this entire
subject, she realized. "We didn't have any problems with the
dragon from Fort Wyvern, though. I'd hoped it was just a fluke the
first time."
"That still doesn't answer my
question," Neshok said flatly, stopping in the road now that they
were far enough away from the dragons and glaring at Jasak.
"What did she mean about not doing anything?"
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr," Jasak
said, and Shaylar realized he was deliberately stressing the
Andaran title he'd suddenly assigned her rather than use her first
name, "has what her people call a Talent. It's an ability to
communicate with others using her mind, and we think some of
the dragons may be reacting to it."
Neshok's eyes flared wide in
sudden alarm, and Jasak shook his head quickly.
"It's very much like our Gifts,
Hundred," he said. "In fact, you could just think of it as a different
sort of Gift. It doesn't turn her into some kind of magic
mindreader, nor can she influence your thoughts or communicate
with her own people from this far away."
"And just how do you know
that?" Neshok demanded, his face dark with anger.
"I know because she told me so,"
Jasak said flatly. "And because if there'd been any way for her to
use her Talent effectively against us, she'd certainly have done so,
and she hasn't."
"Because she told you
so!" Neshok repeated in a scathing tone, completely ignoring
Jasak's second sentence. "The woman's a prisoner of war, and you
expect her to tell you the truth? Are you a complete idiot? She's going to lie with every breath she takes! I ought to
put a bolt through her right now—or throw her back to the
dragons!"
Jathmar stiffened, his hands
closing into fists. Neshok was speaking too rapidly, and too
angrily, for Jathmar to completely follow the conversation, but
he'd understood enough. He started to step in front of Shaylar, but
before he could move, Gadrial's hand—no longer limned in
fire, thank the gods!—closed on his elbow. He looked
down at her, then looked back up . . .
just in time to see Jasak step in front of his wife.
Jasak was a good three inches
taller than Neshok, and much broader across the shoulders, but it
was his expression and his body language, not his size, which
made the other hundred abruptly step back a pace.
"I'm getting tired of explaining
this to pigheaded, pea-brained, bigmouthed excuses for Andaran
officers who frigging well ought to know better," Sir Jasak
Olderhan said very, very softly. "But I'll try one more time, and I
advise you to listen to me very carefully, because I'm not going to
repeat myself again. Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband are my
shardonai. Any insult, any injury or threat, offered to
them is offered to a member of my family. Perhaps you'd care to
reconsider that last sentence of yours."
His hand hovered in the vicinity
of the short sword at his hip, and Jathmar's tension clicked up yet
another notch as Jugthar Sendahli and Otwal Threbuch quietly
stepped out on either side of Jasak, facing Neshok and his detail.
The Second Andaran Scouts, Jathmar abruptly remembered from
Gadrial's explanations, were the hereditary command of the Dukes
of Garth Showma. Apparently, he realized, that relationship
extended rather further than he'd assumed it did.
None of them actually touched a
weapon. But none of them had to, either.
"Very well," a white-lipped
Neshok grated after a moment. "I withdraw the last sentence. But
shardonai or not, how can you be so sure they're telling
you the truth? For that matter, how can you be sure you didn't
decide to make them shardonai in the first place because
she somehow influenced your mind?"
"Because she was three-quarters
unconscious with a concussion when I made my decision," Jasak
said almost contemptuously. "And because after three weeks in
their company, I've discovered that unlike certain Arcanans I could
mention, these are both people of honor who understand the
mutual obligations of a baranal and his shardonai.
They may not volunteer information, and they may even refuse to
answer questions, but they won't lie to me, Hundred."
Neshok's angry, frightened
expression didn't change. He was obviously not convinced, but
equally obviously he couldn't think of a way to continue the
argument without edging back into potentially dangerous waters.
That was when Gadrial spoke up unexpectedly.
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr is as
clear as glass, Hundred Neshok. It's not in her nature to lie! God
above, man—all you have to do is look at her to
know that!"
Gadrial's outburst had drawn
Neshok's angry eyes back to her. Now those eyes softened with an
expression of pity.
"Magister Kelbryan, your work
with Magister Halathyn vos Dulainah is renowned, even out here
on the frontier. I can't imagine the grief and shock you must have
experienced after his murder by these—" his glance flicked
once more toward Shaylar and Jathmar, hardening again "—
barbarians."
White-hot fury exploded
suddenly inside Shaylar made even worse by the lingering echoes
of the terror she'd felt when the dragons began to hiss, and she
jerked free of Jathmar's arm. She took a long, angry stride towards
Neshok, stepping around Jasak. The Fort Wyvern officer towered
above her, but the mantle of her anger made her a giant.
"Barbarians?" she hissed
in his face. "Don't you dare call us barbarians! Don't you dare
use the word 'murder' after what your soldiers did to us!
We were civilians, damn you—civilians! And if
you don't believe that, look what happened when your soldiers
finally had to face ours. You kill civilians—use
weapons that burn civilians alive!—but you call me a barbarian?
"My country is four thousand
years old—four thousand years of civilization, art,
science, and literature! Sharonian civilization is over five
thousand years old. Five thousand years of recorded
history—how many do you have?"
Neshok looked like a man who'd
picked up his boot and suddenly discovered a cobra in it.
"We're not the ones who've acted
like barbarians, but don't think for a moment that we don't know
how to respond to barbarians! My mother is a Shurkhali ambassador! Do you think she, or any of our countries, will
ever forgive you for what you've done? They think—she
thinks—that I'm dead, curse you!"
She stood there in a puddle of
utter silence, glaring up at Neshok, and naked shock had detonated
behind his eyes. Even Jasak seemed stunned.
"Your mother is an
ambassador?" he asked hoarsely, and she turned on him with
flaming eyes, too shaken by the encounter with the dragons to
contain the pain and rage Neshok had roused.
"Yes! What? You thought our
people were too primitive, too violent for something that
civilized?"
"No, Shaylar," he said,
deliberately taking both her hands in his so that she would
know. "I never thought that. Any civilization that could
produce you is worthy of respect. But your mother's status makes
this whole situation even more difficult, more complicated."
Shaylar bit down on a hysterical
laugh as it tried to break loose in her throat.
"You don't have the slightest
idea how much more," she told him. "You don't have any
concept of how the Shurkhali honor code is going to react to
what's happened."
"No, but I'm trying to
understand, for your sake, as well as because it's my duty. And it's
also," he flicked a cold glance at Neshok, "just one more reason to
treat Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband with courtesy."
His eyes locked with Neshok's,
and a muscle jumped in the other man's jaw.
"The Two Thousand is waiting,"
he half-snapped after a moment and turned on his heel one more to
march toward the fort.
Some people, Shaylar thought,
couldn't be forced to see reason, even at gunpoint. But Neshok's
reaction to Halathyn's death—not to mention his instant,
unthinking attitude towards her and Jathmar—only
underscored how dark the future had become.
She could scarcely imagine how
Sharona must have reacted to the belief that she was dead. She'd
never been a vain person, but she'd been embarrassedly aware for
years of the way the Portal Authority had used her face, her image,
in its public relations campaigns. She knew how all of Shurkhal,
even the men who'd harbored the most reservations about her
choice of career, had taken a fierce and possessive pride in her
accomplishments. If Darcel had relayed everything she'd
transmitted over their link before she was injured, then all of
Sharona had probably been swept by a fury it hadn't seen in
centuries, if not longer. As for how Shurkal must have
reacted—!
Now Neshok's attitude gave her
some idea of how Arcana was going to react to news of
Magister Halathyn's death. And the fact that he'd been killed by an
Arcanan soldier, not by Sharona, wasn't going to matter a bit.
Her shoulders slumped as an
abrupt, crushing weariness crashed down across her. She wanted
to curl up someplace sheltered and private, someplace she could
hide. Someplace where men like Neshok didn't exist, where
monstrous weapons didn't threaten Sharonian lives, and where no
unnatural creatures could crawl inside her mind.
"We'll settle you into your
quarters and let you rest," Jasak promised her quietly. "I can see
how shaken you are. Jathmar will help you, all right? It shouldn't
be too far now."
She just nodded, and he released
her hands. Jathmar slid his arm back around her, taking some of
her weight, and met Jasak's gaze levelly.
"When we leave this place," he
said in a low voice, "would it be too much to ask to have those
murderous beasts moved someplace else?"
"That's a very reasonable
request," Jasak said, and turned a cool glance on Neshok. "And a
damned good idea from a security standpoint. Not only is it my
duty to protect my shardonai, but I somehow doubt the
Commandery would appreciate losing Lady Nargra-Kolmayr to
dragon attack."
"They'll be moved," Neshok
snapped without even turning his head. "Satisfied?"
"For now," Jasak said coldly. "In
the meantime, if you'll escort us to our assigned quarters, I'll see
my shardonai—" he emphasized the noun
deliberately "—settled in, and then pay my compliments to
the Two Thousand. Will he want to debrief Magister Kelbryan or
Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband?"
"If he does, he'll send for them.
This way."
If anyone thought the
confrontation between Neshok and Jasak was over, they were
speedily disabused of the notion when they reached the fort and
Neshok tried to lock Shaylar and Jathmar into the cell beside vos
Hoven's.
It was not a wise decision on his
part. The exchange between him and Jasak was short, ice cold, and
bitter, with Neshok taking spiteful refuge in the instructions he'd
received from Two Thousand mul Gurthak. He insisted that he
was merely following mul Gurthak's explicit orders—
orders he lacked the authority to countermand.
"Two Thousand mul Gurthak
doesn't have the authority to order the arbitrary incarceration of
any civilian member of my family without specific charges under
Arcanan law," Jasak told him savagely. Neshok started to open his
mouth again, but this time Gadrial interposed before the situation
could get totally out of hand.
"Fine!" she snapped, glaring up
at Neshok as furiously as Shaylar had. "If those are your orders,
obey them. Lock them up in your filthy jail. But you'll do it with
me locked in the same cell with them!"
"Magister Kelbryan, you can't be
serious!" Neshok protested.
"I've never been more serious in
my life," she told him icily, and her lip curled. "I wouldn't want to
suggest that they might have some sort
of . . . accident locked up here in
your jail, Hundred. But I think we'd all feel better with a senior
magister who's fully trained in combat magics—who's
taught combat magics at the Garth Showma Institute for the
last ten years—between them and any unfortunate little
episode. Don't you agree, Hundred Neshok?"
Neshok's troopers, Jathmar
noticed, seemed to stiffen into statues at the phrase "combat
magics." After what he'd seen down by the dragonfield, he found
he could understand their attitude perfectly.
Shaylar, on the other hand, was
watching Neshok, and the sudden, dark flush which spread down
his neck told her everything she needed to know about the
intentions of this fort's commander. Or—just as
possible—about Neshok's intentions. A man who
extracted information from recalcitrant prisoners for his superiors
might just find it easier to climb the rank ladder. And if he
succeeded in getting information, it was unlikely anyone would
quibble too strenuously with his methods,
however . . . unpleasant they might
have been for the prisoners in question. She shivered in Jathmar's
arms at the thought.
"Very well," Neshok bit out. "I'll
escort you to other quarters."
The room the Sharonians ended
up in was small and utilitarian, and Jasak made a point of
assigning Jugthar Sendahli to deal with any of their needs. Neshok
flushed angrily again at Jasak's none-too-subtle provision of a
guard he knew he could rely upon. More than that, their room was
next to Gadrial's, and the guard Neshok posted at their door was
fully cognizant of Gadrial's open door.
"I will hear any attempt you make to have them removed by
force," that door said, without a word spoken aloud. "And
if anyone tries it, they'll wish they had never been
born . . . briefly."
Neshok looked as if he wanted
to chew live snakes, but he choked it down raw and accepted the
situation. That satisfied Jasak, who saw them settled in before he
disappeared in the direction of the commanding officer's office.
Shaylar sank down onto the bed
and simply looked at her husband.
"He intended to hurt us," she
said, and Jathmar nodded silently.
"It's going to get worse," she said
even more quietly, and her husband nodded once more.
"I'm scared, Jath," she whispered,
and he wrapped his arms about her and held her very, very tightly.
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Commander of Two Thousand
Nith mul Gurthak sat his chair like the throne. He was one of the
small but growing number of Gifted Mythalan officers who'd
chosen a career as a line officer rather than to serve in one of the
specialist slots most Gifted soldiers—Mythalan or
otherwise—usually preferred. Jasak didn't know how
strong mul Gurthak's Gift might be, although the fact that the two
thousand chose to go by "mul Gurthak" rather than the "vos and
mul Gurthak" which a shakira officer was entitled to
claim could be an indication that it wasn't extraordinarily
powerful.
That was only one of the things
Jasak didn't know about mul Gurthak, for they'd never met before.
The Mythalan officer had been away from Fort Talon on an
inspection trip when Jasak had passed through on his way to
Mahritha and Five Hundred Klian's command. He hadn't met
Rithmar Skirvon or Uthik Dastiri before, either, although he'd
noticed the two civilians down by the dragonfield. The chestnut-
haired, green-eyed Skirvon was obviously of Andaran descent,
although the last name sounded more Hilmarian. Dastiri, younger,
darker, almond-eyed, much shorter, and slimmer, with an evident
abundance of nervous energy, was obviously Ransaran.
"We just arrived last night,
ourselves," Skirvon told Jasak as the hundred settled into the chair
at which mul Gurthak had rather brusquely gestured. Neshok
stood just inside the office door, a brooding, still angry presence,
and Otwal Threbuch stood behind Jasak's shoulder with his hands
clasped behind him in a stand-easy position. "We came in response
to the hummer message Commander Five Hundred Klian sent
out."
"Master Skirvon and Master
Dastiri are field representatives of the Union Arbitration
Commission," mul Gurthak put in. "We were fortunate they were
in Ilmariya on another matter when Five Hundred Klian's hummer
message arrived. They arrived by transport flight at about two
o'clock this morning."
Jasak nodded with an undeniable
edge of relief. The UAC reported directly to the Union Senate. It
was a quasi-diplomatic organization charged with resolving inter-
universal disputes between both local governing entities and
private individuals. Skirvon and Dastiri might not be formally
accredited as Union ambassadors to extra-universal civilizations,
but they were certainly the closest anyone was going to be able to
come to that, and at least they did have diplomatic training.
"I'm very glad to see you,
gentlemen," he said. "And I've learned something else today which
may be of interest to you. Lady Nargra-Kolmayr is the daughter of
a Sharonian ambassador."
Skirvon and Dastiri twitched in
visible surprise. They looked at one another, then back at Jathmar.
"I heard there'd been
some . . . disturbance down at the
dragonfield," mul Gurthak said after a moment. "Something about
the female prisoner." His eyes flickered briefly toward Neshok,
and he grimaced in obvious distaste. "I understand she made quite
a scene."
"I suppose someone might put it
that way, Sir," Jasak said just a bit coolly, never even glancing at
Neshok. "For myself, I believe that almost being attacked by a
battle dragon and then treated with obvious contempt by her escort
would probably constitute justification for losing her temper."
mul Gurthak's lips tightened.
"I've read Five Hundred Klian's
dispatch, and I know all about your decision to declare them
shardonai, Hundred," he said frostily, and something ugly
glowed in his eyes for just an instant. But then he drew a deep
breath and shook his head slightly.
"That's part of your people's
culture, not mine," he continued in a somewhat less chilly voice.
"I don't say I agree with your decision, but I understand its
implications. At the same time, however, both you and your
shardonai need to understand that they are
prisoners—prisoners of war—and the
only intelligence resource we currently possess. If they continue to
refuse to cooperate with us, it's going to place everyone in a
very . . . difficult position."
"Refuse to cooperate, Sir?"
Jasak arched one eyebrow. "I fail to understand how anyone could
accuse them of refusing to cooperate. Obviously, as you've just
observed, they're the prisoners of people who killed all of their
companions, and they aren't going to voluntarily disgorge
information which might help us kill more of their people. But
they've been working as hard as anyone could possibly ask in their
efforts to learn to communicate with us. In fact, Lady Nargra-
Kolmayr has learned to speak fluent Andaran in less than two
weeks, and she's been able to teach her husband how to speak it
amazingly well. And—"
"Excuse me, Hundred, but did
you say they're fluent in Andaran?" Skirvon interrupted.
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr is,
certainly," Jasak confirmed. "Frankly, the speed at which she's
mastered it is astonishing."
"And has she reciprocated?" mul
Gurthak asked, his brows furrowed in an expression that
practically shouted mistrust.
"Taught us Sharonian, you mean,
Sir?" Jasak asked. mul Gurthak nodded, and Jasak gave a tiny
shrug.
"Like us, Sharona has many
languages, Sir. Between themselves, they normally speak one
called Shurkhali. That's Lady Nargra-Kolmayr's native language,
but not her husband's. Just as Magister Kelbryan has concentrated
on teaching them a single one of our
languages—Andaran—we've been learning one they
call Ternathian. According to Lady Nargra-Kolmayr, it's the
language of Sharona's most powerful nation."
"You say you've been learning
it?" Skirvon pressed.
"Not nearly so quickly as they've
been learning Andaran," Jasak assured him with a wry smile. "But
Magister Kelbryan has been working with them using the
translation spellware programmed into her PC. Every time she
taught them a word in Andaran, they gave her the equivalent word
in Ternathian. Magister Kelbryan's spellware stores the words both
in written phonetic form and in audio, and it's been analyzing and
deriving the Ternathian rules of grammar, as well. For all intents
and purposes, it's produced a primer for Ternathian, and its
capable of running audio translation, as well. I'm sure there are
still holes in what we've got, and I'm equally sure that it wouldn't
give one of our people anywhere near the fluency Lady Nargra-
Kolmayr has attained in Andaran, but it's a very substantial
beginning.
He reached into the breast of his
uniform tunic and extracted a sheaf of neatly printed pages.
"Magister Kelbryan generated
this from her PC last night," he said, and handed the pages to
Dastiri, the nearer of the two diplomats.
"Incredible," Dastiri muttered,
flipping through the pages. He shook his head and handed it to
Skirvon, who was senior to him in the UAC.
"Very impressive," Skirvon
agreed. "Could you arrange for Magister Kelbryan to download
copy of this to our PCs? And of her translation spellware. The
UAC would find it of incalculable value."
"And I'll want a copy, as well,
Hundred," mul Gurthak said.
That was fine with Jasak. As the
senior military officer at this end of the transit chain, mul Gurthak
was definitely in a need-to-know position. Indeed, the more
Ternathian-fluent officers they could produce, the better. There
was going to be additional contact with the other side, no matter
what happened, and having some means of communication besides
shooting at one another struck Jasak as a very good idea, indeed.
"I'm sure Magister Kelbryan will
be happy to download copies for both you and Master Skirvon and
Master Dastiri, Sir," he said. "And if you'd be so kind, Master
Skirvon, you could download a copy for Five Hundred Klian's use
when you reach Fort Rycharn, as well."
"That's an excellent idea,"
Skirvon said. "We'll be sure to do that."
He looked back down at the hard
copy for a moment, then tucked it away in his briefcase and
extracted his own PC. He activated it and tapped the menu with
the stylus to switch it to audio recording mode, then leaned back
in his chair.
"We're scheduled to depart for
Fort Rycharn tomorrow," he said. "Obviously, I'm not going to
have time to acquire a great deal of fluency before we arrive there,
although this 'primer' of yours will be an enormous help. But if
we're not going to be able to indulge in complex discussions with
them at first, it's vital that we have as much background
knowledge as we can get. So what can you tell us about these
people we've encountered, Sir Jasak?"
"Quite a bit, actually, Master
Skirvon. That's one reason why I said it would be difficult to
legitimately accuse Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband of
refusing to cooperate. They've been extremely reticent about
military matters—and, frankly, I believe they truly are
civilians and probably not all that conversant with the details of
their military, in the first place—but they've been very
forthcoming about their home universe and its political and social
structure."
"Indeed?" Skirvon's eyebrows
rose.
"We've learned a great deal
about how Sharona is organized," Jasak said. "Most of the details
are recorded in Magister Kelbryan's PC, along with the notes on
the Ternathian language. I think you'll be astonished at how
ancient their civilizations are, and although they don't have the
sort of world government we do in the Union, most of their
nations appear to share an amazing degree of common values and
beliefs. According to Lady Nargra-Kolmayr, the Ternathian
Empire, their oldest state, is over five thousand years old. At one
time, it ruled more than two thirds of the then-known world, and it
apparently left its cultural imprint behind when it gradually
disengaged from its high-water mark."
Skirvon nodded, although Jasak
had the distinct impression the diplomat didn't really believe him.
Or, rather, that Skirvon suspected Shaylar had deliberately
exaggerated the antiquity and strength of her home civilization.
"You'll be able to review her
comments for yourself, Master Skirvon," Jasak said. "Personally, I
believe what she's told us is substantially accurate, but I'm sure
you'll form your own opinion."
"I'll review them very carefully,
Sir Jasak," Skirvon promised. "In the meantime, however, there's a
more immediate point I'd like to address. Five Hundred Klian's
reports state that these people's technology is very different from
our own."
"That probably ranks with the
most severe understatements I've ever heard, Master Skirvon,"
Jasak replied with a twisted smile. "We've brought the captured
equipment with us, and with your permission, Sir," he glanced at
mul Gurthak, "I'd like to leave a representative selection of
it—especially of their weapons—here with you. I'm
sure the Commandery will want us to transport most of it back to
New Arcana where it can be thoroughly examined, but as close as
you are to the point of contact, I'd like you to be able to form
some idea of its capabilities for yourself."
"An excellent idea, Hundred,"
mul Gurthak said with the first unqualified approval Jasak had
sensed from him.
"But in answer to the point
you've raised, Master Skirvon," Jasak turned his attention back to
the diplomat, "they have a great many devices and tools we don't
begin to understand yet. They're remarkably good engineers and
artisans, and their metallurgy and textiles are every bit as good as
our own, but they don't appear to have any equivalent of
our arcane technology."
"So I understood from Five
Hundred Klian's report," Skirvon said, yet he was frowning
heavily. "I find that very difficult to accept, however. Obviously, I
haven't spent as much time in these people's company as you have,
Sir Jasak. But they certainly appear to be just as human as we are,
so presumably they ought to have the same basic genetic heritage.
The same Gifts."
"I can't debate that point with
you," Jasak said. "At this point, we know too little about them for
me to be comfortable making any sweeping assumptions, even if I
had the medical or technical background to make that sort of
judgment in the first place. But I can tell you that any magic-based
technology clearly astonishes them. Anything, no matter
how simple. Magister Halathyn conjured a simple light-rose,
something any four-year-old with a decent Gift could do, so that
he could give Lady Nargra-Kolmayr a flower. When it blossomed
from his fingertips, it shook them both to the core. Both of them
reacted exactly the same way, spontaneously: with astonishment
so deep it bordered on terror."
"Terror?" Skirvon's
frown deepened. "Great gods, why? What's to be afraid
of? It's just magic!"
"Because Sharonians don't use
magic. In fact, they have nothing at all even resembling magic, let
alone our technology. They didn't even believe it was possible
until they were shown ordinary tools that use it."
"That's ridiculous," Dastiri
muttered. Then he seemed to realize he'd spoken aloud and waved
one hand. "I'm sorry, Sir Jasak, but it just sounds
too . . . bizarre for words."
"Oh, I certainly agree with you
there," Jasak said feelingly. "Nonetheless, it's true. Magister
Kelbryan and I have discussed it with them at considerable length,
and they're very emphatic. The Sharonian civilization isn't built
around the laws of magic at all."
Skirvon was sitting bolt upright
in his chair now, staring at him. So was mul Gurthak, but there
was something besides simple astonishment in the two thousand's
eyes.
"But—" the senior
diplomat sputtered. "But how in the gods' names does anyone
build a civilization without it?"
He glanced around mul
Gurthak's office, an austere frontier room which nevertheless
boasted more than a dozen magic-powered appliances, from his
own PC to the lighting to the insect-repelling spell to the quietly
turning blades of the ceiling fan, all in plain view, and doubtless
many others in storage in the various cabinets.
"I'm sorry, Sir Jasak, but Uthik is
right. It sounds . . . impossible. They'd live under appallingly crude conditions. People in a
place like that would be little better than barbarians!"
"With all due respect, Master
Skirvon, I wouldn't use that term within their earshot," Jasak said
mildly, and heard a smothered sound from behind him. mul
Gurthak looked past him and raised an eyebrow.
"You had something you wished
to add, Hundred Neshok?" he asked in a deceptively mild voice.
"I was just going to say, Sir, that
no one should say it around that girl, for sure. The little bitch has
quite a temper."
"That's quite enough, Neshok!"
The mildness had vanished from mul Gurthak's voice, and his face
was hard. "You insulted the lady and her people, and you
threatened her, and the fact that she's fluent in your own language
only made it worse. Whatever else we may think about her and her
people, it's difficult to condemn her for becoming angry in the
face of such boorishness and discourtesy. Consider yourself
fortunate that only she has reprimanded you so far."
"Yes, Sir." Neshok's voice
sounded strangled, and Jasak could almost feel the heat radiating
from his flushed face.
"Don't repeat that mistake,
Hundred."
"No, Sir."
No one, Jasak mused, enjoyed
eating crow. Neshok appeared to hate it more virulently than
most . . . which was just fine with Sir
Jasak Olderhan.
Silence lingered for several
seconds. Then Jasak cleared his throat, looked back at Skirvon,
and continued.
"I was saying that I wouldn't
assume their civilization is either crude or simple just because
their technology isn't magic-based. We manufacture mechanical
things ourselves, but there's a huge difference between an arbalest
that fires a steel bolt and one of their weapons. Jathmar field-
stripped one of their shoulder weapons—a 'rifle' he calls
it—for me at Fort Wyvern. Frankly, it's a complex
nightmare of tiny, precisely machined parts. They serve
interlocking functions, designed to load and fire the projectile, but
even the projectile has multiple parts. The most fascinating part, to
be honest, is the granular gray powder inside what he calls the
'cartridge.' It's the powder that performs the 'chemical'—
that's another one of his words we're still trying to figure
out—operations which actually fire the projectile. As
nearly as I can picture it in my own mind right now, they basically
set off something very like one of our infantry-dragon fireballs
inside the cartridge, and that expands with enormous speed
and drives the 'bullet' down the hollow barrel of the 'rifle' and
through its target."
"An arbalest sounds far more
practical and reliable," Skirvon observed with another frown.
"They're reliable enough, Sir."
Jasak almost blinked in surprise as Otwal Threbuch inserted
himself into the conversation. "And practical, too, begging your
pardon. Have you ever seen an arbalest quarrel punch clean
through a man three hundred yards away? Have you ever seen an
arbalest mow down thirty men in three seconds? A whole line
of men, forty feet across? They went down like one
man—like they'd run into an invisible wire.
"Only it wasn't a wire. The things
hitting them were blowing holes straight through them—
big holes. Big enough to put your thumb through in front and your
fist through in back. And that doesn't even begin to
describe what their artillery can do. They fired it
through the portal and dropped it behind Hundred
Thalmayr's fieldworks." The big noncom shook his head grimly.
"Believe me, Sir, an arbalest may be less complicated, but it's
definitely not more practical or reliable."
Both diplomats were ashen, and
mul Gurthak looked more than a little shaken himself. Another
brief silence fell, until Skirvon shook himself again.
"I'm not a military or a technical
man myself, Sir Jasak," he admitted. "I still find the entire concept
of a civilization without any magic at all extremely difficult to
accept, but for now, I don't think we have any choice but to accept
that your description—yours and the Chief
Sword's—is accurate.
"Still, if I'm not particularly well
versed in technological matters, I do have a bit of
experience in diplomatic affairs. You say they don't have a world
government. In that case, how do they manage their portal
exploration?"
"There's some sort of central
authority, an organization that operates their portal forts and
apparently runs the actual portals. It sounds like the equivalent of
our UTTTA, and it has some sort of authority over their survey
crews, but it's also some kind of private entity, I think. I'm not very
clear on it yet. It sounds to me as if it's some sort of government-
approved or supervised private company. But whoever sponsors it,
their 'Portal Authority' decides who's permitted to work on their
survey crews. Lady Nargra-Kolmayr says she's the first woman
ever approved to join a team; she anticipates being the last, as
well."
The diplomats exchanged
thoughtful glances. Then they looked back at Jasak.
"So it would probably be this
'Portal Authority' we'd be speaking to, not the representatives of
an actual government?" Skirvon mused aloud.
"I'd guess so." Jasak nodded.
"But let me emphasize that it would be only a guess on my part.
One thing we haven't been able to discover is how extensively the
Sharonians have explored. My distinct impression from several
things they've let drop is that they were operating on the leading
edge of a very extensive frontier when we encountered one
another. If that's so, then I'd think it would be difficult for them to
get diplomats to the front much more quickly than we could. And
that completely ignores the fact that if they don't have a world
government, the first thing they'd have to do is decide which
government should be talking to us."
"A very well taken observation,
Sir Jasak." Skirvon nodded vigorously, then cocked his head to
one side.
"I know I'm jumping around a
bit," he said, semi-apologetically, "but it's just occurred to me that
if they don't have anything like magic, then presumably they don't
have anything like our hummers, which should give us a
substantial advantage in response time."
"I wouldn't count on that if I
were you, Master Skirvon," Jasak said, a bit grimly. "No, they
don't have hummers. But that's because they don't need
them."
"Why not?" mul Gurthak asked
sharply, and Jasak grimaced.
"We only discovered after we
left Fort Rycharn that while these people don't have Gifts, they do
have what they call Talents," he said heavily.
His own reluctance to mention
the matter surprised him. It also made him realize just how
protective he truly felt where Shaylar and Jathmar were concerned.
Yet he was an officer of the Union of Arcana. It was his duty to
pass the information along, and so he told them everything Shaylar
and Jathmar had told him about their own Talents and how those
Talents had served the survey crews and Sharona in general.
"Obviously," he concluded,
several minutes later, "the military applications of
this . . . living technology are
enormous. And, frankly, the civilian applications must be equally
staggering."
His audience looked stunned.
Then mul Gurthak leaned forward over his desk, his body
language and expression angry.
"When," he asked icily, "did you
discover this little bit of information?"
"About one day out from Fort
Wyvern, Sir," Jasak said coolly. "Since we were coming through
by dragon ourselves as soon as possible, I decided not to send it by
hummer. I thought you'd probably prefer to hear about it in
person, and with as little chance for it to leak as possible."
"I see." The two thousand sat
back in his chair again, toying with a stylus, and the anger slowly
ebbed out of his expression. But he still didn't look precisely
satisfied, and he frowned at Jasak. "What prompted them to make
such a revelation? They have to know how seriously that
knowledge will compromise their side in any conflict."
"I'm not certain they are aware of
all the implications," Jasak said reluctantly. "As I say,
they're civilians, not soldiers. As to why they admitted it, partly it
was because they didn't have much choice. I confronted them over
something that had shaken Magister Kelbryan pretty badly, which
pressured them into making a partial explanation. They
volunteered the rest, though."
"But why?" Skirvon sounded as
baffled—and skeptical—as mul Gurthak.
"I think it's because they're trying
desperately to find some grounds for mutual understanding,
Master Skirvon," Jasak said slowly. "They're fully aware of how
different we are from one another—in fact, they're probably
far more aware of it than we are, since they're the ones trapped
inside our culture. I think they believe that the more we
know about them—the more completely we understand that
they aren't monsters, just different—the greater the
chance for establishing some sort of trust between us. And I also
think they have a point. When you get right down to it, the
implications of these Talents of theirs aren't a lot different from
the implications of our own Gifts. Just as we've done with our
Gifts, they seem to have concentrated their Talents through
specific family lines, and everything we've been able to learn from
Shaylar so far suggests their Talents are probably much less useful
for what Magister Kelbryan calls 'macro effects' than magic is.
That's probably why they rely so heavily on complex mechanical
devices.
"But however frightening or
threatening this capability of theirs may seem—for that
matter, however dangerous it may yet actually prove to
be—one fact remains. Sharona has also produced two
individuals from very different Sharonian nations who share
similar traits which are important to our understanding of them.
They're honorable, courageous, and—under the
circumstances—surprisingly honest and forthcoming.
One again, the diplomats
exchanged glances. Jasak wasn't at all sure he cared for their
expressions.
"Most helpful, indeed, Sir
Jasak," Skirvon said after a moment.
"There's another point I'd like to
make, as well, if I may," Jasak said. "We know Sharona has many
countries, and we also know Lady Nargra-Kolmayr and her
husband don't come from the same one. You only have to look at
them to see that they're obviously from different genetic stocks.
Yet their ideas, their values—what they believe at the
deepest core level—are remarkably similar. And when you
stop to think about it, how many Arcanans actually choose to
marry outside their birth cultures? Not very many, yet we've been
a united world, under one government, for two centuries."
The mention of cross-cultural
marriages tightened mul Gurthak's lips in visible disapproval.
Despite that, it was the two thousand who first grasped the point
Jasak was trying to make.
"What you're trying to say is that
even though they may not have a world government, their
culture—their civilization—may be much closer to
monolithic than we'd assume?"
"Exactly, Sir," Jasak said with a
nod.
"One wonders," Dastiri said
thoughtfully, "how common this marriage pattern of theirs truly
is?"
"That's certainly something to be
curious about," Skirvon agreed. "It's possible that it's not actually
very common at all, but I'm inclined to trust Sir Jasak's instincts
on this matter. He doesn't have any formal training in diplomacy, I
know, but as the heir to Garth Showma, he probably has a better
sense of political and cultural nuances than most people. Certainly
a better one than most officers of his seniority," the diplomat very
carefully did not glance in Neshok's direction, "and he's spent a
great deal of time with his prisoners. Excuse me, with his
shardonai." The diplomat smiled apologetically at Jasak, then
looked back at Dastiri. "If he believes we're dealing with a cultural
monolith, regardless of their political organization, I'm inclined to
trust that judgment."
Neshok's nostrils flared, and mul
Gurthak's eyes went a shade frostier, but only for a moment. Then
the two thousand drew a slow, deliberate breath.
"A well-taken point," he said. "It
appears we're fortunate to have your insight into these matters,
Hundred Olderhan."
He studied Jasak with opaque
eyes for several seconds, then shrugged.
"Given the role the late Shevan
Garlath played in the disaster at Fallen Timbers," he finally said,
"I'm forced to revise my first, overly hasty assessment of your
judgment as a field officer. Five Hundred Klian's evaluation of
Fifty Garlath's fitness as an officer makes it clear you were
saddled with a . . . difficult situation,
even before you made contact with these Sharonians."
He produced a wintry smile.
"One is always tempted to blame
messengers who bear unpalatable news, particularly when military
and political disasters are involved. But Chief Sword Threbuch's
report on the second encounter with these people makes it
clear—to me, at least—that you did a brilliant job of
containment."
Jasak bristled silently at the use
of the word "containment." It was accurate enough—he'd
certainly "contained" the Sharonians, at least physically—
but something about the word, or perhaps the way it had been
delivered, set him on edge. That surprised him, but he didn't have
time to ponder it now, for mul Gurthak was still speaking.
"I may never forgive Hadrign
Thalmayr," the two thousand said in a bitter tone, "for promptly
throwing away all you'd accomplished and losing the men you'd
managed to bring safely back. Not to mention losing control of the
portal."
He shook his head, leaned far
back in his chair, and steepled his fingers across his chest.
"I realize your primary concern
will be sending reports ahead as you make the return trip to New
Arcana. The Commandery has to know everything you learn as
soon as possible. The time lag is immense, as it is. Even at the
speed hummers fly, this is a long transit chain."
"Yes, Sir. I know that only too
well." The initial message that there'd been a contact with another
civilization was still winging its way—literally—
back to New Arcana. "No one even knows the Union has new
neighbors, Sir. Let alone that battles have already been fought. No
one in the Union, that is."
His eyes met mul Gurthak's, and
the two thousand nodded, his expression grim. Skirvon and
Dastiri's ears seemed to prick up, as if they realized something
they didn't understand had just been said, and mul Gurthak favored
them with a hard, thin smile.
"You gentlemen weren't
listening to the Hundred," he said. "What was it he said? They
don't need hummers, I believe."
Skirvon stared at him, then
blanched visibly.
"Gods! They already know, don't
they? They've probably known for weeks!"
"Lady Nargra-Kolmayr's
effectively confirmed that," Jasak agreed unhappily. "I don't know
exactly how long it took their message to get home, but given the
structure she described, with official Voices stationed
permanently at every single portal they've discovered, and at relays
in between, as necessary, their home world may have known
within hours. I'd bet that someone in their Portal Authority knew
by the time we airlifted out the wounded. And something she said
this afternoon confirms that her family thinks she's dead. She used
the present tense, and I don't think it was a slip of the tongue. She
knows that whatever message she was sending out when she was
knocked unconscious at Fallen Timbers has already reached her
home world."
Both diplomats had turned a
sickly shade of yellow-green.
"This is a first-class disaster,"
Skirvon groaned. "They've had time to move in whole
divisions of troops!"
"It's not quite that bad," mul
Gurthak disagreed. They looked at him incredulously, and he
shrugged. "I've been operating on the assumption that word might
have gotten back to their high command ever since I received Five
Hundred Klian's initial dispatches. The force which attacked
Hundred Thalmayr was undeniably stronger than anyone
anticipated, however it scarcely represented the kind of troop
strength I'd have expected from a major base. And we know these
people don't have dragons, or, apparently, anything else that flies.
Neither, according to the Chief Sword," he nodded at Threbuch,
"do they have enhanced cavalry mounts like our own. So what
we're probably facing is a situation in which their high command
can receive reports and dispatch new orders much more rapidly
than we can, but our forces can move much more rapidly
than theirs can."
Jasak nodded. He'd already
reached the same conclusion himself, and it should have been
reassuring to know that the senior officer in the area agreed with
his own assessment. And it was . . .
mostly. Still, there was something about mul Gurthak's
eyes . . .
"Hundred Olderhan," the
commander of two thousand continued, turning his attention back
to Jasak and smiling much more warmly than before, "I want to
thank you for a first-class briefing. I'm very impressed by the
amount of information you've been able to obtain from the
prisoners. I suppose it's another case of that old cliché
about catching more flies with sugar than with salt," he added,
giving Neshok a speaking glance.
"I also concur that it's critical
that we get our diplomatic presence as far forward as we can, as
quickly as we can. And that you continue to New Arcana
with all dispatch. Indeed, I'm coming to the conclusion, based on
what you've said here, that we could scarcely have acquired a
more valuable source of intelligence if we'd been allowed to
choose who to capture ourselves."
One again, something bristled
deep inside Jasak. It was his protective instinct, he knew. His
shardonai had become personally important to him, not just
an honor obligation, and that might not be a good thing, from the
perspective of the Union of Arcana. mul Gurthak was undoubtedly
correct about Shaylar and Jathmar's value, and Jasak ought to
place the same priority on squeezing them for every bit of
information, as long as they weren't mistreated in the process.
"I'm sure you're fatigued after so
long on dragonback, Hundred," mul Gurthak went on after a
moment. "Moreover, given the . . .
unpleasant episode down by the dragonfield, I'm certain both your
shardonai and Magister Kelbryan are rather anxious to
discover just how well this debriefing went. With that in mind, I'll
let you go find your own quarters and reassure them that no one at
Fort Talon has any intention of changing their status or attempting
to remove them from your custody."
"Thank you, Sir."
Jasak recognized his dismissal
and stood, although leaving that office at that particular moment
was the last thing he wanted to do. Unfortunately, whoever his
father might be, Jasak was only a commander of one hundred.
There was no way he could insist upon remaining for the
additional discussion he knew was about to begin.
"Chief Sword, Javelin, you're
also dismissed," the two thousand continued. "Hundred Neshok
will see to it that you're quartered."
Threbuch and Iggy Shulthan
braced briefly to attention, then turned and followed Jasak and
Neshok out of the office.
The sound of the door closing
behind them wasn't really a thunder-crack of
doom . . . it only sounded that way to
Jasak.
Chapter Thirty-Nine
The man who thought of himself
as Nith vos Gurthak only when he was totally alone,
watched the door close behind Sir Jasak Olderhan and his
noncommissioned officers, then swiveled his eyes slowly across
Rithmar Skirvon and Uthik Dastiri.
"A passionate young fellow,
Hundred Olderhan," the commander of two thousand observed
with a thin smile.
"No doubt," Skirvon said. "But
he seems to know his job. After the initial contact blew up in his
face that way, he did very well indeed, in my opinion. It's a pity he
wasn't still in command when the Sharonians hit our base camp."
"Indeed it is," mul Gurthak
agreed. And for more reasons than you can possibly know,
he added silently. "However, I'm afraid he may have allowed
himself to get a bit too close to his prisoners since then. He's
obviously very protective of them, and I'm not convinced they
aren't using that against him."
"Playing on his sympathy to
convince him of how saintly their own people are, you mean?"
"Something like that. And quite
possibly the reverse, you know." mul Gurthak tipped back in his
chair once more. "If they can convince us they have a truly unified,
militarily powerful culture when they really don't, we may end up
grossly overestimating the amount of combat power they could
commit to any shooting war. I can certainly see how they might
think that inspiring . . . excessive
caution, shall we say, on our part could be very useful to their
side."
"That's true enough, sir," Dastiri
said. "At the same time, though, aren't we effectively constrained
to assume the worst, anyway?"
"To an extent, Master Dastiri,"
mul Gurthak said. He and Skirvon exchanged a glance Dastiri
didn't notice, and the commander of two thousand continued. "The
problem is that as we all just agreed during our conversation with
Hundred Olderhan, nobody back home in New Arcana has any hint
of what's going on out here. They won't for a long time, either,
and once they do find out, it's going to take even more
time for them to get any instructions out here for our guidance.
Which means that, as the senior local commander, I have
to decide what to do about these people."
"Without instructions from
Parliament or the Commandery?" Dastiri looked horrified, and
mul Gurthak raised one hand, palm uppermost, in an eloquent
gesture of fatalism.
"We're at the pointy end of an
incredibly long transit chain," he pointed out. "The nearest
sliderhead is twenty thousand miles from here, and this chain
hasn't exactly been packed to the heavens with combat power."
mul Gurthak chuckled sourly. "If it had been, there'd be someone
far senior to a mere two thousand in command out here. Under
those circumstances, I don't have any choice but to act on my own
initiative while praying that I get comprehensive instructions as
quickly as possible."
"That's certainly true," Skirvon
said, his expression thoughtful. "Under the circumstances, as you
say, and given that there have already been at least two military
clashes, I think there's no question but that the decisionmaking
authority has to rest with you, as the senior military officer. How
can Uthik and I help?"
"Hundred Olderhan's entirely
correct in his belief that we need to get diplomats involved in this
as soon as possible," mul Gurthak replied. "Obviously, the best
solution would be a peaceful, diplomatic one, with no more
deaths on either side. Failing that, however, we need to at least
keep these people talking long enough for me to assemble what
forces are available to me."
"Excuse me, Two Thousand,"
Dastiri said, "but didn't you just say there weren't very
many forces available to you?"
The younger diplomat, mul
Gurthak reflected, had that annoying Ransaran habit of asking
questions whether or not their answers were any of his business.
Still, the man had been partnered with Skirvon for almost a year
now, which said a lot. Obviously, Dastiri wasn't too
Ransaran in his attitudes, so mul Gurthak might as well be polite.
"What I said was that the chain
hadn't been packed with combat power, Master Dastiri," he
corrected in as pleasant a tone as possible. "That doesn't mean
there aren't a lot of individual Army battalions and Air Force
combat and transport strikes scattered around it. As soon as I got
Klian's initial dispatch, I sent out orders for as many of those
scattered units as possible to report to me here, at Fort Talon, as
quickly as transport can be arranged. The first few infantry
companies have already arrived. Others are on their way, and
they're bringing more transport dragons—and cargo
pods—with them as they come in."
"I see." Skirvon studied the
commander of two thousand's expression thoughtfully. His own
professional diplomat's expression was almost impossible to read,
but, then, mul Gurthak didn't have to read it to know
exactly what was going on behind it.
"How confident do you feel
about your ability to hold against a serious attack, Two
Thousand?" the civilian asked after a moment.
"That's difficult to say." mul
Gurthak rocked his chair gently from side to side, his lips pursed
in thought. "I suppose it depends on a lot of factors. As I pointed
out to Hundred Olderhan, the other side has the advantage in terms
of communications speed, given these Voices of theirs, and any
strategist could tell you how huge an advantage that constitutes.
But we have the advantage in terms of tactical and
strategic movement speeds, and that's just as big an
advantage. Remember, gentlemen, these people not only don't
have magic—assuming our prisoners are, in fact, telling us
the truth—but they also don't have dragons. And if they
don't, then they can't begin to imagine how rapidly we can
transport military forces across even totally unimproved terrain.
"As for these weapons of theirs,
I'm entirely prepared to admit that they appear to be powerful and
dangerous. But the real reason Thalmayr managed to get himself
captured or killed, and all of Hundred Olderhan's company along
with him, was the simple fact that unlike us, they can fire artillery
through a portal. In a straight-up firefight in the open, between his
infantry and field-dragons and their artillery, I strongly suspect that
Thalmayr would have massacred them. What happened to him
was, in the final analysis, the result of a totally unanticipated
tactical advantage of the other side.
"We know, now, that they can do
that. It won't be a surprise next time—assuming, of course,
that there is a next time. They, on the other hand, have yet
to see what our weapons can really do. And if they're truly as
ignorant about magic and arcane technology as they seem, they're
in for a whole series of equally nasty surprises of their own."
"Forgive me, Two Thousand,"
Dastiri said, "but it sounds to me as if you think there will
be a next time."
"I'm a soldier, Master Dastiri,"
mul Gurthak replied, just a bit more frostily. "It's my job to think
in worst-case scenarios. And it's also my job to have the forces
under my command as advantageously positioned as possible to
meet any contingency. Obviously, no one wants a war. But if we
have one on our hands, anyway, it's my responsibility to see to it
that we win the opening engagements."
"Quite so," Skirvon murmured.
"And there's another point to consider, as well. If Magister
Kelbryan and Magister Halathyn are correct, if this really is a
genuine cluster of portals in close proximity to one another, it
would scarcely be in the Union's best interests to leave a
demonstrably hostile power in control of it. I expect they probably
feel the same way about us, too. Which means," he glanced at his
civilian subordinate, "that it's our job to convince them to see it
our way, Uthik. And if Two Thousand mul Gurthak can provide
us with a significant force advantage, it will strengthen our
bargaining position substantially."
"Precisely," mul Gurthak agreed,
nodding vigorously. "Whether we want a war or not, there are a
huge number of reasons for us to position ourselves to be ready to
fight if we have to, and no reason not to."
"Unless they decide we're
threatening them, sir," Dastiri pointed out respectfully. "Or unless
we're wrong about how quickly they can bring up forces of their
own, after all."
"There's no reason why they
should feel the least bit threatened, Master Dastiri." mul Gurthak
made himself smile again. "The logical staging point for any
deployment against this cluster would be Fort Rycharn. That's
over seven hundred miles from the swamp portal, and unlike us,
these people don't have any aerial reconnaissance capability. If we
move in enough troops and transport dragons, we'll have the
flexibility to conduct a mobile defense against any invasion
attempt they might decide to mount, or to execute a lightning
offensive of our own, if that should prove necessary. Our aerial
units could be right on top of them before they even had a clue we
were in the same universe with them."
Dastiri's eyes had widened
slightly as he listened to the two thousand. Now he looked at his
civilian colleague, and his eyes were dark with speculation. He sat
that way for a moment or two, then turned back to mul Gurthak.
"I think I understand, Two
Thousand," he said, and let his eyes drop briefly—
significantly—to the PC in Skirvon's lap, still operating in
recording mode. "You're right, of course, that no one wants this
thing to escalate any farther than it already has. I'm sure Rithmar
and I will both do our best to see to it that it doesn't. But it clearly
is your responsibility to prepare for the possibility that we'll fail."
"Exactly." mul Gurthak smiled at
Dastiri yet again—rather more warmly, this time—
then glanced at the digital time display on the corner of his desk.
"I see it's approaching time for
supper, gentlemen, and I still have a few administrative chores to
deal with this evening," he observed. "I suggest we adjourn this
meeting until after everyone's eaten."
"Of course." Skirvon nodded and
deactivated his PC.
Dastiri stood, then paused as he
realized Skirvon had made no move to climb out of his
chair. He glanced back and forth between his civilian superior and
the military officer still sitting behind the desk, and, for just a
moment, he seemed to hover on the edge of saying something
more. But then he gave his head a little shake, bestowed a half-
bow upon mul Gurthak, and smiled at Skirvon.
"I have a couple of minor
errands of my own I need to deal with before supper, Rithmar," he
said easily. "I'll see you then, shall I?"
"Of course, Uthik," Skirvon said,
and watched the other man walk out of mul Gurthak's office and
close the door behind him.
"So, what do you really think of
Olderhan?" mul Gurthak asked the diplomat as soon as the latch
clicked.
"An ardent and reasonably
intelligent young officer," Skirvon replied. "I'm not prepared to
evaluate his military capability, beyond what I've already
said—I'll defer to your judgment, in that area—but
he's obviously observant, and he's done surprisingly well not just
in extracting information from these people, but in developing
insights into them, as well. Into how they organize themselves,
how they think."
"But—?" mul Gurthak
prompted when the diplomat paused.
"As you say, 'but'." Skirvon sat
back in his chair and rested his elbows on the armrests. "He'll
probably make a good Andaran duke, one day, but he really doesn't
understand diplomacy."
The two men smiled thinly at
one another. Skirvon might be of Andaran descent, but his family
had been Hilmaran for centuries, and there was still that lingering
tradition of hostility between Hilmarans and the northern
kingdoms which had once conquered and ruled so much of their
continent. The diplomat didn't much care for any Andarans, and
particularly not for the Duke of Garth Showma, the most
powerful of them all. Most people didn't realize that, largely
because Skirvon was of Andaran descent himself, on his
mother's side. But mul Gurthak and
his . . . associates had been aware of
the man's true leanings for quite some time.
Then Skirvon's expression
sobered.
"Quite aside from any other
considerations," he said, "young Olderhan doesn't seem to realize
that there's only a vanishingly small chance of averting war with
these Sharonians. I suppose he has a powerful motivation to find
one before still more people get killed, but there honestly wasn't
much hope of that even before his own discovery about the things
they can do with their minds. Given what we know about them
now, about what they are, I'd say the chances of avoiding war are
virtually nonexistent. As a Mythalan, you'll appreciate better than
many how this news will play at home."
"An entire universe filled with
people—non-Gifted people—who read
minds and turn thoughts into weapons?" mul Gurthak snorted.
"The shakira lords will froth."
"Precisely." Their eyes met, and
then Skirvon shrugged. "It's clear Olderhan believes his prisoners
are honest and decent people. And they may very well be. On a
person-to-person basis, justice and fair play and equality with
others are concepts most of us value, after all, particularly as
applied to ourselves."
His smile was so tart it could
have soured milk, and mul Gurthak snorted a chuckle. "Fair play"
and "equality with others" were nasty habits indulged in by
dangerously unstable and degenerate societies. Societies whose
chaotic habits were a serious threat to the properly regulated,
orderly political and religious structure that kept the world in its
proper alignment. Not to mention keeping the shakira
lords precisely where they belonged: in charge, at the top of a very
steep and very narrow ladder of power.
It was so very fortunate that
Rithmar Skirvon had been the closest senior diplomat available
when this entire catastrophe began to unravel. Of course, there'd
been a reason mul Gurthak had requested Skirvon for the
arbitration assignment with which he'd been dealing when Klian's
first reports arrived. Men who understood the realities of
diplomacy—and also where their own best interests
lay—were always useful.
"How . . .
pragmatic do you think your young friend Dastiri is going to be
about this?" the two thousand asked after a moment.
"Well, he is Ransaran,"
Skirvon observed with a slight grimace. "On the other hand, he
prides himself on being a realist. And he's from Manisthu."
"Ah." mul Gurthak nodded.
The Kingdom of Manisthu
dominated the Manisthu Islands off the eastern coast of Ransar.
They'd retreated into a self-imposed isolation for several centuries
at one point in their history, and even today, they remained
somewhat out of step with the rest of Ransar. They were just as
irritatingly insistent on individual rights—especially their
own individual rights—but they also labored under
a sense of being looked down upon by their mainland neighbors.
Of being considered rubes, without quite the same degree of
sophistication and philosophical superiority to all those other,
more backward, irritating, non-Ransaran people the gods had
unfortunately and thoughtlessly scattered around the globe.
Perhaps as a result, Manisthuans had a pre-Union historical
tradition of practicing garsulthan, a Manisthuan word
which translated roughly as "real politics." On more than one
occasion, they'd proven as pragmatic—and at least as
ruthless—in international affairs as any Andaran warlord or
Mythalan caste-lord.
mul Gurthak and Skirvon gazed
at one another for several moments, while the two thousand
considered the implications of what the diplomat had just said.
Then Skirvon cocked his head to one side.
"How do you really want us to
play this?" he asked, getting down to serious business at last.
"That's the difficult question,
isn't it?" mul Gurthak frowned thoughtfully, toying with an
antique dagger he used as a paperweight. Not many people would
have recognized it as a Mythalan rankadi knife. More
modern rankadi knives were far simpler and more
utilitarian. "There's no way the shakira lords are going to
support some sort of 'peaceful coexistence' with these people,
whatever those lunatic Ransarans want. I'm not sure where the
Andarans are going to come down, though. If it weren't for the
fact that Garth Showma's son is right in the middle of this, I'd
expect them to be closer to agreement with us, for a change. As it
is, I think it's going to depend on how the story plays out in public
opinion back home.
"For the moment, we really do
need to keep a lid on this situation, at least until we can
completely redeploy our own forces. And we also need someone
who's a bit older and wiser—maybe even a bit more
cynical—" he smiled quickly at Skirvon, "to make a
firsthand analysis of the other side. Someone not quite so blinded
by the . . . intricacies of the Andaran honor
code."
"I've always been considered a
pretty fair analyst," Skirvon observed.
"Yes, I've heard that about you."
mul Gurthak smiled again, but his eyes were very serious as he
continued. "Still, don't forget that you're dealing with a complete
unknown here. These prisoners of Hundred Olderhan can insist all
they want to that their people don't know anything at all about
magic. I'm not going to take that as a given without some
additional, independent confirmation."
"And if it turns out that they
really don't know anything about magic?" Skirvon asked
delicately.
"Why, in that eventuality," the
two thousand half-drew the dagger, turning it to let the light gleam
wickedly on its razor-sharp edge, "our menu of choices would
change quite radically, wouldn't it?"
mul Gurthak leaned back in his
chair again, once more alone in his office, and grimaced at the
ceiling.
Rithmar Skirvon was almost as
smart as he thought he was, the two thousand reflected. But only
almost. He'd been perfectly happy to enter into certain subsidiary
business arrangements with various Mythalan financiers and
banks, and he'd always held up his end of any arrangements. But by
and large, he seemed to think money and personal power
were all that were at stake. He knew he was involved with
shakira, but he thought they were acting as individuals, in
their own self-interest. He didn't have a clue about the bigger
picture . . . which was fortunate for
him. Men who knew too much about the Council of Twelve and
its plans inevitably had accidents.
Which didn't do a thing to
simplify mul Gurthak's present nasty situation.
The two thousand sighed. As
he'd said to Skirvon, he couldn't begin to forecast how the
Andarans were going to react to this. The Ransarans—aside
from Dastiri's Manisthuans, perhaps—were far easier to
predict. They'd want to understand these Sharonians,
because Ransarans, for reasons only they could fully comprehend,
wanted to understand everything and everyone. It was the second
most maddening thing about them, after their obnoxious
conviction that everyone else should agree with their mad notions
about the total equality of everybody everywhere with everyone.
mul Gurthak managed not to
shudder at the thought only because he'd spent so many years
dissembling. Ransaran democracies were just short of mentally
aberrant, and their citizens—who were usually as vocal
about their absurd beliefs as they were lunatic—frequently
left him feeling queasy. He hadn't been at all distressed to learn
that Magister Kelbryan had chosen to stay with the prisoners in
order to reassure them.
That choice of hers told mul
Gurthak everything he needed to know about Kelbryan's views on
Jasak Olderhan's precious shardonai. It was scarcely a
surprising position for her to take, given her pedigree and history,
and if she wanted to spend time with them, so much the better. The
woman represented one of the greatest public relations disasters in
the history of Mythal, after all, not to mention a staggering affront
to anything approaching decent behavior. And at least this way, he
wouldn't have to clench his teeth against nausea while listening to
her expound her thoughts about these Sharonians. If it should
happen that she developed any genuine insights, they'd
undoubtedly show up in Olderhan's reports, anyway, so he wasn't
overly concerned about depriving himself of critical military
intelligence.
The problem was that, aside
from the regrettable power of her Gift, Kelbryan was typical
of Ransarans, and there were a lot of them. An appalling
number of them, as a matter of fact, when it came to seats in the
Union Parliament. Unlike Mythal, which was experiencing a
steady decline in population, thanks to the current massive
garthan exodus (which had the caste-lords howling in outrage
and threatening to impose emigration quotas—as if the
Accords would have permitted them to do any such thing), the
Ransaran population on Arcana Prime was growing steadily. Not
just in absolute terms, but as a percentage of the total planetary
population, as well.
Despite their much vaunted
individualism and the depressing technological advantages it had
given them, however, Ransarans as a group tended not to relocate
as much as other Arcanans. In part, that was simply because they
preferred the creature comforts of home. Given the almost
universally high standard of living amongst Ransarans, higher than
that of any other group in the Union, outside a few dozen
shakira ruling families, Ransarans simply preferred to stay
home.
Roughing it in a cabin in the
wilderness, with no hospitals, no universities, no theaters or
museums, no banks or stock exchanges, and no shopping emporia
stuffed with luxury goods from every Arcanan universe, was
simply too crude for most self-respecting Ransarans. That was one
Ransaran attitude mul Gurthak understood perfectly. He
missed the comforts of home, as well. Bitterly, at times.
But sacrifices had to be made.
That was a concept he'd embraced long ago, although it clearly
continued to elude most Ransarans. Of course, one of these fine
days, those same Ransarans would wake up to discover that a few
changes had been made. Nith mul Gurthak took great
personal satisfaction in being part of the mechanism which would
make that moment inevitable.
The world would be a far
safer—and vastly more stable—place when that day
finally came, but that wasn't something he could discuss even with
Skirvon. He had allies, to be sure, and the diplomat was one of
them. But Skirvon wasn't part of the inner circle, and never would
be, for the simple reason that however useful he might be,
he wasn't Mythalan.
mul Gurthak grimaced again at
that thought, then pushed his chair back and stood, reviewing the
string of unutterably bad news he'd received over the past few
weeks. One hand clenched itself around his belt dagger's hilt, and
he managed—somehow—not to swear. This whole
nasty business had thrown a serious spanner into a very delicate
piece of machinery, and he had so many piles of pieces to pick up
that he hardly knew where to start. He could perceive—
imperfectly, as yet, but perceive—certain strands of
opportunity running through the chaos which had engulfed so
many years of effort. But even the best of those opportunities
were problematical, and it had taken all of his formidable self-
control not to curse out loud during the past few hours.
Dissembling was a game which
had long since palled. He'd grown weary of presenting a calm and
measured face to the world, hiding his true opinions in order to
accomplish his mission. But it had never been as difficult as it had
while he listened to Olderhan—Olderhan, of all
people—spouting his goodness-and-light interpretation of
the current situation. He'd needed to curse someone,
starting with the incomparably incompetent Shevan Garlath and
ending with the next problem on his list.
He glowered out his office
window at the rapidly settling evening and reached a decision.
Then he turned his back on the dusk and his eyes hardened as he
looked down at the antique rankadi knife on his desk.
That problem he could safely vent spleen on to his heart's
content, he decided. And by all the gods of his grandfathers'
fathers, the stupid little bastard had earned every ounce of spleen
mul Gurthak intended to vent.
He opened his office door and
looked at his clerk.
"Send someone to the brig. I
want to see Bok vos Hoven."
"Yes, Sir." The clerk snapped a
salute and stepped out to arrange for the brig's sole occupant to be
escorted to the commandant's office. Eight minutes later, there
was a tap at mul Gurthak's door.
"Come!" he called, and the door
opened six inches.
"The prisoner and escort have
arrived, Sir."
"Good. Have the escort wait in
your office, but send the prisoner in."
"Yes, Sir."
The clerk disappeared again,
briefly, and Nith mul Gurthak reseated himself behind the desk
and assumed the stern guise of a thoroughly disgruntled
shakira caste-lord. A moment later, the door opened once
more to admit a single person.
Bok vos Hoven was all starch
and swagger as he entered. Clearly, he was confident mul Gurthak
would get him out of the trouble he'd gotten himself into, and the
two thousand shook his head mentally. This was what the
caste was coming to?
The clerk closed the door with a
sharp click. vos Hoven smiled and started to step closer to mul
Gurthak's desk, then paused. His smile seemed to falter as mul
Gurthak simply sat staring at him through narrow eyes and said
nothing at all. The younger shakira looked around,
uncertainly, and mul Gurthak waited until the first few beads of
sweat appeared on his forehead.
"Would you kindly explain," the
two thousand said then, suddenly, coldly, chopping the first hole
in the icy silence he'd so carefully built, "which variety of dragon
shit you use for brains?"
"Sir?" vos Hoven's eyes shot
wide in shock, and fury exploded through mul Gurthak. It was the
depth and genuineness of the swaggering jackass's confusion that
did it. Did the blundering idiot expect mul Gurthak to
congratulate him for his conduct?
Pure rage jerked the two
thousand explosively out of his chair. He snapped to his feet and
slammed both fists against his desktop.
"Imbecile!" he snarled. "How dare you risk
everything we've accomplished for your petty personal
convenience?"
The prisoner stumbled backward,
almost falling as he flinched from mul Gurthak's wrath.
"Mightiest Lord," vos Hoven
whispered in Mythalan, using the form of address the most
groveling supplicant used to address the highest caste-lord of his
birth line, "how have I erred so grievously? I thought—"
"You thought?" Mul
Gurthak hissed. He stepped around his desk and snatched vos
Hoven up onto his toes by the front of his suddenly sweat-stained
uniform blouse. "If you'd thought, you wouldn't be
chained and awaiting trial! Did you honestly think I'd lift a
fingernail to save you? When you've proven yourself to be the
stupidest fool ever born in Mythal?"
He released the fool in question
with explosive energy, shoving him away, and vos Hoven went to
his knees, shaking. Weeping. mul Gurthak glared at him, then
slapped him hard enough to send him sprawling all the way to the
floor.
"You're so proud and conceited
you can't even grovel properly!" the two thousand grated.
"A man in your shoes should be on his belly begging not to be
ordered to commit rankadi!"
The words struck home—
and finally pierced the armor of vos Hoven's inflated self-worth.
He went rigid for a long, horrified instant, then rolled onto his
belly, where he belonged, moaning and covering his head with his
chained hands to hide his shame.
"Better!" mul Gurthak hissed.
"M-may I plead with My Lord?"
vos Hoven's voice quivered with the tremors running through him.
"Plead for what? Your miserable
life?"
"N-no, Mightiest Lord. That is
yours, to end, if you demand it," vos Hoven whispered, then
gulped and waited.
"It's good to see that at least a
few basic facts continue to rattle around inside that empty skull of
yours. What do you plead for?"
"Understanding. I have failed the
caste, and I don't know how!"
There was genuine anguish in
that confused cry—the anguish of a spoiled, selfish child
taught poorly by careless, empty-headed adults. A child now
caught in the jaws of a genuinely vicious trap. If he could see and
admit that he'd erred without knowing how, there might—
just might—be some hope of salvaging something from the
ruins.
"What fool raised you?"
vos Hoven cringed under the
withering scorn of that question. There was no more profound
insult than to openly denigrate a Mythalan's family line. In the
world of the shakira, there was nothing more important
than family line. The family determined one's position in the caste,
just as the caste determined one's position in the world of men and
the realms of the gods. Without caste, a man was nothing to the
gods. Without family line, a man was nothing to the caste. To be
born of a line of fools was to serve the forces of
chaos . . . and to well deserve one's
inevitable divine destruction.
mul Gurthak listened to the
desperate weeping of the man whose place in the eternal cosmos
he'd just ripped so totally and unexpectedly into shreds. The two
thousand felt no pity at all. Mithanan's bollocks! That terrible
deity, God of cosmic destruction, would wreak vengeance on the
entire caste for the utter idiocy of this worm at his feet.
Such awe-inspiring stupidity was beyond belief.
"Please, Mightiest Lord," vos
Hoven cringed, "will you not instruct me? How have I sinned?
How have my teachers failed me and caused me to fail the caste?"
mul Gurthak paced thoughtfully
around the creature on his office floor, trying to decide how best
to go about attempting to salvage something out of it.
"Explain the purpose of the
garthan," he commanded finally, and for just a moment, vos
Hoven lifted his face off the floor, staring up at him in total
confusion.
"My Lord?" he said, and mul
Gurthak reached for patience.
"What is the purpose of the
garthan?" he repeated. "Of their entire caste?"
"To serve the shakira,"
the prisoner managed to get out as he pressed his face back where
it belonged: on the floor.
"To serve the shakira?"
mul Gurthak glowered down at the prostrate body. "How?"
"As our slaves." vos Hoven's
voice was low, tentative. Obviously he wondered why he was
being taken through this basic nursery school catechism. "To do
whatever we demand."
"Fools." mul Gurthak shook his
head almost pityingly. "Triple-cursed fools have had the raising
and teaching of you."
"B-but . . .
why are they fools?"
"Garthan exist to make it
possible for the shakira to carry out the most critical work
in the cosmos: the study and mastery of magic. To understand
magic, at all its levels, in all its nuances, is to touch the minds of
the gods themselves. To gain admittance into the Divine's sacred
presence. To bring one's yurha to a point of growth worthy
of Divine notice, as a first step toward achieving oneness with the
Divine.
"If the shakira had to
plow the ground and grow food out of it, if shakira had to
weave cloth and cook and raise the cattle that provide leather for
shoes, if shakira had to haul the freight and clean the
latrines, no one in all of Arcana would understand magic. No one
would be able to use magic. It was Mythal that tapped the Divine
spirit and won the Gifts for the human race. It was Mythal that set
down the laws of magic, mapped the dimensions of magic,
discovered what magic could do when properly harnessed. It was
Mythal that built Arcanan civilization, spell by spell, and
Mythal did it through the shakira caste's tireless efforts
across millennia of study.
"But none of that would have
been possible without the garthan. Without the magicless
masses—unwashed, untutored, unlettered, inferior in every
possible sense of the word. Yet without them, Arcana—and
the glories of Arcanan civilization—would be nothing
more than a collection of illiterate laborers and herders. That
is the purpose of the garthan. That is their sole purpose. They don't exist to polish your boots and pop the zits on
your worthless arse because you're too godsdamned lazy to do it
yourself!"
vos Hoven flinched under the
whiplash of that caustic voice, and mul Gurthak snorted harshly.
"Next question. What does caste
law say of the man who beats his children in a public place?"
"The Law Giver's holy command
is that such a man be punished by his caste-lord in kind, for the
disciplining of children is a private matter, to be carried out in the
domain of the family line, the privacy of the home. To beat
children in public shows lack of judgment, lack of patience, and
lack of sufficiently wise instruction of the young entrusted to the
family line. These things bring shame to the family line and to the
caste."
He was parroting the words by
rote, without the slightest understanding of their meaning, mul
Gurthak thought disgustedly.
"Under caste law—
true caste law, not the bastardized, compromised version
forced upon Mythal when the Union formed—what were a
family's garthan?"
"Its property."
"A narrow reading. Give me the
ancient reading of that law—its full meaning."
mul Gurthak could practically
see vos Hoven's mind searching through the texts memorized by
rote, repeated recitations spanning one's entire childhood.
"The oldest text I have heard
mentioned, although I was never shown a copy of it, Mightiest
Lord, mentioned garthan as
our . . . children. . .
."
vos Hoven's voice trailed off,
and he gulped.
"But I didn't discipline the
garthan in public!" he protested. "I was careful to do it in
private! Away from the eyes of others."
"And that is precisely why you
are a fool!" mul Gurthak hissed. "Because you understand
nothing. You can parrot back the words, but your brain is full
of sand and your yurha is as avoid of understanding as the
gulfs between the stars. The words have no meaning in your
emptiness, and so you make mistakes—stupid mistakes. Costly ones. Mithanan's balls, do you have any idea
of the cost of this mistake? Out here, outside the borders
of the homeland, we are all under scrutiny—we are all
in public, fool! Is it so impossible for you to understand that
there is no privacy?! Now, because of what you've done,
every Andaran officer will watch every shakira in uniform,
looking for evidence of garthan abuse! And what will any
evidence of the 'abuse' of garthan do? It will taint all
of us. It will cause these honorbound Andarans to watch our
every move. And what will that do to the cause you and I are here
to serve? What will that do to our mission?"
The prisoner whimpered, and
mul Gurthak sneered.
"Oh, you see it now, do you? A
shakira who's watched too closely can't function as we
need him to function, can't acquire the seniority we need. You've
jeopardized everything the Council of Twelve has spent the last thirty years putting into place. Our whole timetable must
come to a screeching halt while we try to make certain that no
one's stumbled across what we're doing because of the way
you've made all of them look so much more closely at all of
us. I'll have to send messages, you utter, cursed moron, warning
others to stop. To lie low. Messages that will put me at
risk of exposure!"
vos Hoven trembled violently,
whimpering once more. mul Gurthak was so angry he wanted to
kick the idiots ribs until something broke, but he couldn't—
not without risking even more probing questions than vos Hoven
had already set in motion. Yet his fury was too great not to do
something, so he crouched beside the other shakira, seized his
hair, jerked his head up off the floor by the long braids. Dark eyes
rolled in abject terror, and mul Gurthak leaned close to hiss into
his face.
"I've worked too hard,
swallowed too many insults from socially and spiritually inferior
louts, to attain my present position. I've gone without too many
creature comforts to see everything I've struggled to achieve come
crashing down in ruins. And why is it falling apart? Because you
used your fists to bruise a garthan for not licking the mud
off your feet! I should feed your worthless carcass to the
dragons."
vos Hoven shuddered violently.
No court in Arcana had actually ordered that court-martialed
soldiers or other prisoners be fed to dragons in the last two
centuries. But the actual law had never been repealed, and there
were a handful of shakira lords in Mythal who did
still feed the damned to their dragons. In strict and careful privacy,
of course . . .
mul Gurthak straightened, letting
let the stupid worm stew in his own juices for long, silent
moments, and the stink of vos Hoven's sweat was sharp and foul,
the smell of terror.
"I had plans for you," the two
thousand said at last, coldly. "Plans that must now be scrapped.
Why do you think I transferred you to Jasak Olderhan's company
in the first place? Or is your memory so short you've already
forgotten the private mission I assigned you to carry out?"
"Mightiest Lord, I-I tried! But I
couldn't. He never comes right out and says it, but he hates
us—hates shakira. You should have seen him
fawning over that garthan. Praising him—
recommending him for promotions. But he hated the rest of us
Mythalans, the shakira in the Company. He shunned and
loathed us. You could see it in his eyes whenever he looked at us."
"He hated shakira?" mul
Gurthak asked softly. "Even Halathyn vos Dulainah?"
"vos Dulainah," vos Hoven all
but spat the dead magister's name, "was a filthy traitor. He
abandoned his caste, even his wife and son. Yes, Olderhan doted
on the old man. And why? Precisely because vos Dulainah
had shunned and betrayed the rest of us. The rest of the shakira
."
"So you say he treated the
shakira in his company badly?" mul Gurthak glared sternly at
vos Hoven. "Be certain of your answer, fool. If you lie, I'll know,
and I do not tolerate lies from a subordinate. Not in my command,
and not in my caste."
vos Hoven gulped. For several
seconds, he kept his face pressed firmly into the floor, silent. But
then, finally, he answered in a low, reluctant voice.
"No. He didn't treat us badly. If a
shakira kowtowed and obeyed like a good little
garthan, Olderhan treated him like anyone else. It was a
double insult. First he demanded that we act like garthan,
and when we did, he treated us equally, as if he
were just as good as we."
mul Gurthak was genuinely
appalled.
"How in Mithanan's name did
someone with your awe-inspiring stupidity get chosen for
the great cause?" he demanded.
"My family line is one of the
oldest and greatest in Mythal." Pride had crept back into vos
Hoven's voice, despite his plight. "My mother's brother is a caste-
lord. My father's father is a caste-lord. That's two caste-lords in
the near-kin family!"
Nepotism. mul Gurthak wanted
to rend something—preferably Bok vos Hoven—
into very small, bleeding pieces. This fool had been sent out on a
mission that called for guile and dissimulation, the acting skills of
a professional stage player, not because he was fit for it,
but because his relatives were politically powerful!
"So you're superior to Olderhan,
are you?"
"Of course I am!"
"Did it never occur to you that
you'd joined the Army? That in an army, officers give
orders to men of lower military rank—regardless of their
respective birth ranks? That you are required to give your
commanding officer your respect, your instant obedience, be he
ever so low-born? Even if that man were a garthan from
your own family's fields, you would still be required to obey him
and show him respect!"
"Never!" vos Hoven
gasped, fiery rebellion burning in his eyes, and mul Gurthak
slapped him. Jerked his head up off the floor and slammed a
backhanded blow across his mouth.
"Silence!"
Rebellion fled. vos Hoven stared
wide-eyed at mul Gurthak, unable to believe even now that he'd
just been struck.
"You were supposed to get close
to Olderhan. To win his confidence, his trust. To learn things from
him—about his father. Things we can't find out any other
way. To become the one who could deliver him to us at the proper
time, in the proper place. You say he didn't trust you, but he doted
on vos Dulainah. Did it never occur to you that the way to win his
confidence would be to act the way vos Dulainah did? To mimic
his attitudes, his professed beliefs? No matter what you really felt
about them?
"No, it didn't, did it? And
because you were too infernally stupid to use the means at your
disposal, we've now lost all hope of getting anyone close to him.
Not just because he's going back to New Arcana, where it would
be difficult to get close to him under the best of circumstances,
but because you've made him doubly wary of us. Do think he'll
trust any Mythalan now?"
vos Hoven tried to make himself
as small as possible while mul Gurthak glared down at him, still
looking for some way to salvage something.
Garth Showma was the key, the
linchpin of Andaran political power. If Garth Showma could be
brought down, it would be far easier to pick off the other Andaran
noble houses, and that had to be done. Parliament trusted the
Andaran aristocracy to run the military for it, because Andarans
were good at it. Because they liked to do it, and everyone knew
they were sufficiently honorbound to be worthy of others' trust.
Which meant that the only way
to replace the Andaran military leaders was to destroy that faith in
them. The Council of Twelve had spent thirty-plus long, patient
years getting shakira officers into the field army, where
they could work their way up the command-grade ranks. The plan
remained some years short of fruition, but the necessary cadre of
highly ranked shakira officers, men with "Arcana's best
interests" in mind, who had distanced themselves from the
stereotypical shakira arrogance and cultural chauvinism by
choosing to serve the mainstream of Arcanan society, would be
ready when—if—the time came for them to
step into the gap left by Andara's disgrace and take charge.
But for the plan to work, Andara
had to be disgraced, starting with Garth Showma, and the
imbecile on mul Gurthak's office floor had botched one of the
most critical components of the entire plan. Jasak Olderhan had
been supposed to be the chink in his father's armor. A source for
useful information, true, but even more the tool who could be led
into the carefully prepared trap with all the exquisitely devised
"evidence" to prove to all of Arcana that the heir to the most
powerful Andaran aristocrat of them all had disgraced himself
through his gross violation of the honor code he and his fellow
aristocrats were supposed to hold so dear.
But Olderhan was out of his
reach, now. Out of Mythal's reach. It was entirely possible
he would be cashiered over this business, but mul Gurthak had
learned a great deal about the way the Andaran mind worked.
Whatever happened to Jasak's military career, his fellow
Andarans—and the critical members of Parliament—
would recognize that his performance throughout had actually
been exemplary. Klian's report already made it blindingly obvious
that if Jasak's advice had been followed, the entire portal attack
would never have happened.
That might not be enough to
prevent him from being cashiered, but it would certainly prevent
him from being disgraced. And if Jasak left the Army, he
would have to find another career worthy of Garth Showma,
which meant just one thing: politics. An Andaran might actually
turn a disaster like being cashiered, despite having done all the
right things, into a political asset, if he were clever enough. And if
Jasak Olderhan wasn't, Thankhar Olderhan certainly was.
But what if it turned out that he
hadn't done all the right things?
Nith mul Gurthak stood very
still, thinking furiously.
If future conflict with these
Sharonians was avoided, it would be obvious to almost anyone
that a great deal of the credit for it went to Hundred Olderhan.
After all, he would be the one who'd saved the lives of the two
Sharonian prisoners—made them his own shardonai—who had provided the critical insight into who and what
Sharona truly was. Not to mention the prisoners who had taught
Arcanan diplomats how to speak the Sharonians' language.
But if future conflict wasn't
avoided, then young Jasak would get no credit for preventing
it and still have to face the consequences of having started
it. And if it turned out that it had all started out of his own
incompetence or cowardice, and that he'd then falsified his report,
knowing it couldn't be challenged because every man of his
company had been killed or captured by the enemy as a direct
consequence of his incompetence while he himself was safe in
the protection of Fort Rycharn . . .
It wouldn't be easy to sell, but it
wouldn't be impossible, either. Not with the proper groundwork,
and not with the elimination of so many witnesses who might have
corroborated Olderhan's version of what had happened. There
were only three survivors from the company, beside vos Hoven
and Olderhan himself, and if they couldn't be suborned, there was
always the possibility of securing obedience by taking hostages.
That had worked often enough in the past. Or they could simply be
eliminated. Klian would have to go, too, of course. But with
all of them gone . . .
mul Gurthak drew in several
breaths, then, finally, looked back down at the chained shakira
on his office floor.
"All right, there may be one way
out of this mess you've made. Listen closely, do you
understand me? Because if you bungle this, I will personally hunt
you down, put the rankadi knife in your hands, and watch
you cut your own throat with it. Have I made myself perfectly
clear on that point?"
"Y-yes, Mightiest Lord."
"Good. See that you remember,
because you're not going to enjoy this process. I don't give a rat's
ass about that, either, do you understand me? You'll do exactly
what I tell you. You'll swallow the stigma, the shame, and the
punishments you've earned, and in the end, you may well fail
anyway. But if you succeed, I won't issue the order to commit
rankadi. That's the only bargain you'll get; is it one you can
live with, or shall I hand you the knife right now?"
vos Hoven lay trembling under
the two thousand's cold, implacable stare for a small eternity.
Then, finally, he gulped and nodded convulsively.
"Yes, Mightiest Lord," he
whispered. "I understand."
"Good!" mul Gurthak repeated.
"Now shut up, and for once in your worthless life, listen!"
Chapter Forty
Zindel chan Calirath's head
ached.
So did his back. And after twelve
murderous hours in the instrument of torture some sadistic
furniture joiner had managed to pass off as a chair, his backside
had gone from aching to screaming to numb, with occasional
needles and pins that ran down the backs of both thighs.
Whoever designed these chairs should be shot, he
groused. Or chained to one of them for a month or two.
His mood, he thought, wouldn't
have been quite so sour if his fellow world rulers hadn't been so
utterly, pigheadedly, invincibly, blissfully parochial. All
their insufferable demands, excuses, obstructionist arguments, and
refusals to simply get the job done were driving him rapidly mad.
They needed to suck down their petty personal concerns and vote
in a government—even a temporary one—so
they could get on with the urgent business of preparing Sharona
for war.
Didn't anyone see the
dire risks they all faced?
It took time to gear up for a
military campaign—especially one of this magnitude. No
Sharonian nation had ever fought a war that stretched across
multiple universes. The logistics problems alone would be the
stuff of nightmares. This Conclave needed to be thrashing through
that, not arguing over who would have the right to install traffic
signs and draw school zones in local towns and villages.
When the Limathian Prince
Regent stood up and started demanding that any planetary
governing authority must have the power to grant guarantees on
deep-sea fishing rights, something snapped inside Zindel. It jerked
him to his feet. Sent his fists crashing down upon his delegation's
table in the vast Emperor Garim Chancellery which had been
chosen as the Conclave's initial meeting site.
"Mr. Director! Ternathia lodges
a formal protest!"
The Prince Regent's mouth fell
open. Every head in the chamber swiveled, like so many
marionettes on strings, as their owners stared at him. Orrin
Limana, visibly drooping against the presiding officer's lectern
after twelve hours on his feet, straightened abruptly.
"Emperor Zindel," he said
crisply, "what is the nature of your protest?"
"Mr. Director, I protest the utter
waste of our time into which shortsighted members of this
Conclave are forcing us! This is the second day we've met. We sat
here for fourteen hours yesterday. We've been sitting here for
twelve and a half more hours today, and we've decided
exactly nothing. Not one, solitary, blessed thing! The troop
movements arranged unilaterally by Emperor Chava and myself,
with your cooperation, are the only military preparations
anyone outside the Portal Authority has managed to carry out,
even though three weeks have passed since the attack on
our survey crew."
He glowered around the huge,
marble chancellery's gorgeous precincts, as if daring any person
present to dispute what he'd just said.
"This Conclave has one purpose.
Just one. We aren't here to decide where to put traffic
signs. We aren't here to decide which school our children should
attend. While we sit here bickering over inconsequential trivia,
Sharonian men and women—Sharonian
children—are in mortal danger.
"We have colonies—not
just forts with garrisons of soldiers, but colonies—
within four transits of New Uromath, and by my conservative
count, there are no fewer than twenty-three survey crews in that
region. The Chalgyn Consortium crew was less than two days
away from a portal fort, yet every member of it was massacred.
Ternathia's Third Dragoons are en route to Fort Salby, but
they won't arrive there for more than another full month, although
Uromathia's cavalry regiments, fortunately, will reach Salby in
two weeks, and the remaining divisions of Fifth Corps will entrain
over the next several weeks.
"I'm sure we're all relieved to
know troops are moving towards the front. But those troops are all we have moving towards the threat, and it's another
five thousand miles from Salby to New Uromath," he said
grimly. "It will take them almost a month and a half just to reach
Salby, and then another two and a half months to reach the
front, and we have no idea what sort of attacks they may face
along the way. No way of knowing what numbers of troops we'll
need at the front. And still we haven't taken a
single step towards organizing our planet for the sort of war we
may face. Not
one . . . single . .
. step."
His voice echoed in a dead
silence.
"It's obvious the other side
knows about multiple universes and portals, since Company-
Captain chan Tesh found them camped right in the middle of one. I
shouldn't have to point out that we have no idea how large their
territory is, how many universes they've already occupied. How long have these people known about portals? How many
universes have they explored? How many have they colonized?
"How big are they?"
He paused again, sweeping them
with his eyes before he resumed.
"We've been exploring for eighty
years. That seems a long time, my friends, but it isn't. Not really. It
certainly hasn't been long enough for us to build a large
population base out there. Most of our colonies have been
established in the last thirty or forty years, directly from Sharona.
That leaves our out-universe populations stretched thin. We're
strung out, like beads on a broken necklace, and none of
our colonies have the manpower, out of their own resources, to
hold against a powerful attack. None of them is capable of self-
defense, yet there are far too many people living in them for
evacuation to be a practical option even if we decided to pull them
all back to Sharona.
"Our enemies might
have just discovered portals in their backyard, but it's just as likely
they've been exploring and colonizing for centuries. We
could be facing a population two, or ten, or even a hundred times our size. Yes, the point of contact is forty thousand miles
from here. Yes, the thought of someone being able to successfully
project military power along an invasion route that long boggles
the mind. But think about the troop movements rail lines and
steamships make possible. We can get troops from here to Fort
Salby, even allowing for water crossings, in less than two months.
That's how long it took Captain of the Army chan Baraeg to march
an infantry army from the Bernith Channel to the Janu
River three thousand years ago. Does anyone in this
chamber wish to suggest that we haven't fought wars—
terrible, destructive wars—over greater march distances and
despite far greater logistical challenges than that?
"With modern transport, wars can be fought at distances that great. Never think they can't! I
pray that we can avoid fighting any war at all, that diplomacy and
sanity can still stop this situation from lurching into an all out
military confrontation with someone we know nothing
about. But what if they can't? If diplomacy fails, we do
have a war to fight, and however long it might take for that
fighting to reach Sharona itself, it will sweep over our colonies
far, far sooner unless we prevent that. Are we going to sit
here, secure in the safe insulation of distance, and try to use this
Conclave to settle long-standing, purely Sharonian problems while
combat marches towards those colonies? Are the people who live
there somehow less important than where we put our traffic
signs?
"We have lives to save,
godsdamn it! Do you honestly believe the mothers in the colonies
closest to the people who've massacred an entire survey crew of
civilians give a single solitary damn about who catches
fish off the coast of Limathia? They're too busy wondering when
their children will be shot down before their eyes, or burned to
death in a fireball!"
He glared at them, and all of his
frustration, anger, and driving need to save Sharonian lives, boiled
up in a bullthroated challenge roar.
"We don't have time to
argue about the godsdamned fish!"
Somebody in a high gallery
behind him cheered. An instant later, what seemed like every
gallery in the chancellery—and at least a third of the
delegates on the chamber floor itself—had broken into
thunderous applause. The Prince Regent of Limathia had gone
crimson. Reporters were snapping photographs so fast the flash
powder half-blinded Zindel, and Orem Limana wasn't even trying
to gavel the crowd of spectators to order. He just stood there,
watching it roar its approval, while a strange half-smile flickered
across his face.
The tumult eventually wound
down, and when Limana finally raised his hands for silence, the
last of the applause died away. People settled back into their seats
at last, but Zindel remained standing. Not only could he not abide
the thought of sitting back down in that hateful chair, but he
intended to finish this business.
"Emperor Zindel," the Portal
Authority's First Director said into the restored silence, "thank you
for lodging your protest. It is well taken—very well taken,
indeed. If more Sharonian lives are lost because we fail to act
swiftly enough, their blood will be on our hands, and no one
else's."
"Will the Emperor yield?"
another voice asked, half-lost in the enormous chamber, yet firm.
Zindel turned his head until he saw the speaker, standing in the
midst of the Shurkhali delegation.
"Master Chairman," the Emperor
said to Limana, "Ternathia yields temporarily, and without
prejudice, to the Honorable Parliamentary Representative from
Shurkhal."
"Representative Kinshe, you
have the floor," Limana said, and actually managed to sound as if
he had absolutely no idea what Halidar Kinshe was about to say.
"Your Majesty, I thank you,"
Kinshe said simply, then turned to face the rest of the assembled
delegates.
"As Emperor Zindel has just
so . . . eloquently pointed out, we've
sat here today for twelve and a half hours—over twenty-six
hours, in all—listening to what amounts to no more than
opening remarks," he said into the ringing silence. "I suppose that's
inevitable, to some extent. This is the greatest gathering of heads
of state in Sharona's history. Of course every nation represented
here has some problem, some dispute, some need which it wishes
to place upon the record, and for which it wishes to seek
resolution.
"Yet the fact is, that those very
desires, and the very fact that they are so natural, so inevitable,
underscore the true nature of the challenge we all face. We are
gathered here as representatives of scores of independent nations,
yet we face a menace—a danger—to all of
our citizens. One which we cannot possibly meet unilaterally, out
of our own national resources.
"Every person in this chamber
knows of Shurkhal's loss." Kinshe's voice was suddenly harsh, his
expression bleak. "Thousands of Shurkhali men have already
flocked to the colors, already sworn themselves to blood
vengeance for Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr and her husband. Yet
Shurkhal recognizes that she cannot seek justice by herself. We
must act together, we must act as one, and above all, we must
act."
He paused, and silence hovered,
unbroken by so much as the rustle of feet or a single cough.
"My friends," he said finally, "we
need a system of world governance, and we have no time to thresh
out all the details of some new and splendid system with which we
will all be content. And since we have too little time for that task,
it seems to me most fortunate that we don't have to undertake it."
He paused once more, and this
time the silence was so intense it seemed to hurt his audience's
ears.
"We already have a working
model of governance to draw upon," he said quietly. "A model
which has endured the test of time, war, natural disaster, and
adversity of every kind. The model of a government which has
administered a region spanning half the globe. Governed diverse
peoples from dozens of different cultures and languages, and done
it justly and well. A government which has fought more
successful wars than all the other nations of Sharona combined
, and yet one which has never embraced militarism for its own
sake. One whose subjects enjoy great personal freedom, and
perhaps the highest average standard of living in the world.
"Sharona has no better model for
a world government. Indeed, Sharona cannot have a better
model. Rather than thrash around creating something new and
untested, something whose strength we cannot know and whose
stability we cannot trust, let us turn to one all of us know, most
from our own history. There is too much at stake for us to settle
for anything less. And, perhaps most important of all, its current
ruler has already demonstrated the ability to see very clearly the
most important tasks ahead of us. The nature and magnitude of the
risks we face, and what must be accomplished to meet them."
"I move that we create a united
Empire of Sharona, based on the model and institutions of the
Ternathian Empire."
Zindel's jaw tried to drop, but
before he could do more than draw breath to protest, another
voice called out.
"Farnalia seconds the motion,
provided that we also adopt the current Ternathian Emperor,
Zindel chan Calirath, as the new Emperor of Sharona!"
"The Queens of Bolakin second
the motion as amended!"
Zindel stared hard at his
longtime allies, who merely gazed back at him as if the
motion—and its amendment—were truly
spontaneous. And, despite his own sudden suspicion, he knew he
would never be able to prove they hadn't been.
But if it was a put up job, the
well-organized steamroller wasn't allowed to proceed to its
destination unchallenged.
"Uromathia protests!" Chava
Busar, Emperor of Uromathia, was on his feet, his face livid, and
another uproar swept the chamber.
It took several minutes for Orem
Limana to gavel the chaos back to order once again. He managed
it in the end, not without a bit of shouting of his own, then looked
very formally at the Uromathian ruler.
"What protest do you wish to
lodge, Emperor Chava?"
"I protest the unseemly and
improper haste with which certain parties wish to call for a vote
on two critical issues at once, without open debate or formal
nominations for each separate issue!"
"Those two issues
being—?"
"The first being the motion to
adopt the Ternathian Empire as the model for a world government,
as if Ternathia's were the only great empire in Sharonian history,"
Chava bit out. "And the second being the question of who would
head this proposed Empire of Sharona. They are separate
issues. They must be voted on separately!"
"They are not separate issues!"
the Emperor of Farnalia bellowed, surging to his feet in furious
disregard of the formal rules of parliamentary procedure. Ronnel
Karone, a bigger man even than Zindel, towered two feet and more
taller than the Emperor of Uromathia, and his expression was not
pleasant. "We're not adopting Ternathia as a model. We're
adopting Ternathia as our government, and Ternathia
has a ruler. A capable, intelligent, honest ruler."
Zindel winced; Chava went
purple; Karone didn't even pause.
"We're voting to place all of
Sharona under the rule of the Ternathian Empire, so we don't need
a separate nomination and vote, because there is no
separate issue. Ternathia has an Emperor; Sharona will
have the same one!"
"Uromathia will never tolerate
you, or anyone else, shoving an emperor we don't trust down our
throats without so much as the courtesy of open debate, let alone
open and honest nominations!" Chava bellowed back, and
pandemonium erupted once more.
Shouts and threats flew thick as
hailstones while the First Director banged his gavel again and
again, shouting for order. No one even seemed to notice for what
seemed like hours, but finally, slowly, the raucous uproar began to
wane.
"We have a motion on the floor,"
Limana announced firmly, once order had finally been restored. "It
has been seconded. We also have a serious protest on the floor. In
the interest of justice, I cannot in good conscience allow the vote
to go forward until the protest has been addressed."
"Master Chairman!"
"The Chair recognizes the
Emperor of Ternathia."
"Thank you." Zindel stood once
more and faced the other delegations, shaking his head.
"My friends, First Director
Limana has a point. Technically, I suppose, we should proceed to
debate the motion as stated and vote upon it. Any protests would,
obviously, form a part of that debate.
"But Ternathia didn't seek this
proposal, and Ternathia's Emperor has no wish to rule the people
of Sharona under a vote whose propriety is in any way
questionable. We cannot afford to create a situation in which
any nation feels it was coerced or pressured into accepting
what amounts to foreign rule. That, my friends, is the very
definition of tyranny, and I will not play the part of tyrant,
be the emergency we face ever so great.
"With all due gratitude to the
Emperor of Farnalia and the Queens of Bolakin for their
confidence in me," he bowed formally in their direction, "I must
insist that this protest be honored. It's one thing to spend twelve
hours arguing about trivia; it's quite another to ram through a vote
of this magnitude without open debate and the opportunity for
nominations from all of Sharona's sovereign rulers."
Chava's triumphant smile was
very nearly a gloating sneer. Zindel knew perfectly well that if
anyone had been mad enough to nominate Uromathia as a
government to rule all Sharona, Chava Busar would never have
insisted on a fair and open debate as to who should do the ruling.
Zindel understood that. Indeed, it had taken all of his own
determination to insist upon scrupulous honesty, and that decision
on his part might yet cost him and all of Sharona dearly.
But as he'd said, he would not
rule under what amounted to a fraudulent nomination, no matter
how attractive it might be in ensuring that Uromathia's current
Emperor didn't end up in power. Karone looked at him for a
moment, then shot a glowering look at Uromathia's gloating
ruler—a glare which said all too clearly, Every hell in
Arpathia will freeze solid before I see you on the imperial
throne of Sharona!
"Ternathia moves—
indeed, insists," Zindel said, "that the current motion and
nomination be withdrawn and replaced by two separate motions.
The first, that Sharona adopt the model and institutions of the
Ternathian Empire as the basis for a worldwide government. The
second, that nominations be opened for who shall serve as
Emperor—or Empress—of a united Sharona."
"Second both motions!" Chava
called instantly.
"Very well," Limana said. "It has
been moved, and seconded, that the current motion and
nomination be withdrawn and replaced by two new motions. First,
that Sharona adopt the Ternathian Empire as the basis for a
worldwide Empire. Second, that nominations be opened for
Emperor or Empress."
He paused just long enough for a
profoundly respectful half-bow to Zindel, then gazed back out
across the enormous chamber.
"The Chair will now entertain
debate upon the first motion," he announced.
Chapter Forty-One
"Something's bothering you,"
Gadrial said quietly.
Jasak twitched in surprise at the
sound of her voice. He hadn't noticed her walking up behind him
as he stood on Fort Talon's fighting step, weight balanced on his
crossed forearms while he leaned forward against the parapet and
gazed out into the gathering evening. It was unusual for anyone to
be able to approach him that closely without his noticing. He'd
always had a particularly well developed case of what his father
called "situational awareness" and his mother called "that damned,
nervous cat Olderhan paranoia," and he'd been paying even more
attention than usual to his built-in warning system since his
encounter with vos Hoven.
And, he thought wryly, since I started worrying as
much about my superiors as about potential enemies.
Now he turned toward the
magister, arching one eyebrow.
"What makes you think
something's bothering me?" he asked mildly.
"I'm not developing Shaylar's
'Talent,' if that's what you're afraid of," she replied with a tart
smile. "Mind you, it would probably come in handy trying to
understand you inscrutable Andarans! But the explanation is
actually a lot less exotic than that. You've been standing here
staring at the dragonfield for the better part of thirty minutes
without even moving. Which suggested to my powerful intellect
that either something was bothering you or else you'd chosen a
remarkably uncomfortable spot for an after-dinner nap."
"I see." He smiled back at her,
but there was more tension in his smile than in hers.
"It's all right, Jasak," she said
more gently. "Chief Sword Threbuch is standing in the hallway
right outside their door. And—" she studied his expression
for a moment, as if considering whether or not to tell him
something, then shrugged "—I might as well admit that I'm
not quite as trusting as I ought to be."
"Meaning?" His eyes narrowed,
and she shrugged again.
"Meaning I've tagged both of
them with magister-level security spells. If anyone whose personae
I didn't include in the original spell comes within four feet of
them, I'll know. And if anyone tries to hurt them or drag either of
them off against their will . . . Well,
let's just say whoever it is won't enjoy the experience one bit."
She studied his expression far
more anxiously than her own expression might have indicated. Sir
Jasak Olderhan was Andaran, after all, with an Andaran's faith in
the honor of the Arcanan Army and its officer corps.
"Is that legal?" he asked after a
moment.
"As long as the enforcement
aspect of the spell is nonlethal, it's not illegal," she replied.
"It's a gray area, in a lot of ways. Under the circumstances, and
given our shared commitment to see to their personal safety and
the importance of the intelligence asset they represent, I don't think
there could be any objection. Not any legitimate objection,
anyway."
"Except, of course, from the
people who try to do the dragging," he observed lightly. He
smiled, but it was a fleeting smile, and his eyes turned bleak.
"Which, Magister Kelbryan, won't bother me one tiny bit. Thank
you."
"You're welcome," she said
quietly, and laid one hand on his forearm. "I said it was 'our
commitment,' Jasak. It is. I may not understand everything about
your people's honor code, but what I do understand, I respect. I
even admire most of it, although it's all very unRansaran. But even
if I didn't, Shaylar and Jathmar have suffered enough. If anyone
wants to hurt either of them ever again, they're going to have to
come through both of us, not just you."
"Thank you," he repeated in a
much softer tone, and patted the hand on his forearm once, lightly.
She looked into those dark,
brown eyes of his and felt a twinge of surprise. She kept her
expression serene, but her pulse seemed to have speeded up
unaccountably, and she scolded herself for it. That was the last
thing either of them needed at this particular time!
"So," she said more lightly,
"what's bothering you?"
He snorted. It should have
sounded amused, but it didn't, and then he turned back to the fort
parapet and pointed at the forest-walled dragonfield with his chin.
"What do you see out there,
Gadrial?"
"What?" Gadrial blinked in
surprise, then stepped up beside him to gaze out over the same
vista for several seconds. "Just the dragonfield," she said finally.
"'Just the dragonfield,'" he
repeated softly, almost musingly.
"Obviously you're seeing
something I'm not."
"No." He shook his head. "It's
just that I know what we ought to be seeing. I know
you've spent a lot of time in Garth Showma, but you're still
basically a civilian, Gadrial. I'm not."
"So tell this poor 'civilian' what
she's missing."
"Sorry." He flashed her a grin,
acknowledging her tone's exaggerated patience. "I didn't mean to
be mysterious. It's just that there are an awful lot of dragons out
there, Gadrial. A lot."
Gadrial frowned, gazing out
over the field once more, and then nodded slowly. She'd noticed
when they arrived that the field seemed unusually crowded, but
her mind had been on other matters at the time. Now that Jasak
had called her attention to it, she realized that the number of
dragons out there actually exceeded the field's designed capacity
by a substantial margin. Each dragon was supposed to have its
own assigned nesting place, with overhead cover against the
elements, but there were too many of the huge beasts for that to be
possible. At least a quarter of those she could see were
housed—if that was the word for it—in hastily
improvised wallows the recent rain had turned muddy, giving
them a bedraggled, down-at-the-heels look she was unaccustomed
to seeing from the Air Force.
"You're right," she
acknowledged. "I hadn't noticed."
"That's not all," Jasak said
soberly, and nodded towards the flatter area to the south of the
dragonfield.
The area to the north was given
over to paddocks and holding pens filled with the imported cattle
and locally rounded up bison which provided the dragons' primary
food supply. Now that Jasak had drawn her attention to the
number of beasts actually thronging the field, she realized that the
holding pens were unusually full, as well. But he was pointing in
the opposite direction, and she felt her forehead furrowing as she
saw the neat rows of white tents.
"That's at least a two-company
bivouac," he told her. "And that's the next best thing to five
hundred men."
Gadrial nodded slowly. Once
upon a time, she knew, the Andaran rank titles which the Union's
military establishment had adopted had been literal descriptors of
the size of an officer's command. Over time, however, as armies
grew and evolved, that had changed. Jasak was a commander of
one hundred, and one hundreds had always commanded infantry
companies. But a company consisted of almost two hundred and
fifty men these days, not the hundred men it had once contained.
And Five Hundred Klian's battalion consisted (or should have,
assuming it had been at full strength) of almost eleven hundred
men, not five hundred, while a commander of two thousand's
regiment was over three thousand men strong.
None of which explained what
five hundred men were doing living in tents outside Fort Talon's
barracks.
"mul Gurthak's calling in
reinforcements," she said.
"That's exactly what he's doing,"
Jasak agreed. Then he inhaled deeply. "We shouldn't be surprised.
After all, he's the most senior officer this side of the Ucala
sliderhead, and that's still over twelve thousand miles from here.
It's his responsibility to concentrate as much combat power as he
can, just in case. It's just . . . "
His voice trailed off, and he
shook his head. Not that he needed to complete the sentence for
Gadrial's benefit.
She stood beside him, gazing at
the innocent looking white tents which housed the men mul
Gurthak couldn't squeeze into his available barracks space and at
the transport dragons ringing the field. There were at least a dozen
battle dragons, like the two which had reacted to Shaylar so
strongly, as well, and Gadrial's blood ran cold at the thought that
dragons might actually be used in battle once again.
And if we're prepared to use dragons for the first time in two
hundred years, she thought with a bone-deep shiver, recalling
a conversation with Shaylar and Jathmar, what else are
we prepared to do for the first time in two hundred years?
It was a question she couldn't
answer, and she felt like a coward for being grateful that she could
not.
"Well, gentlemen," Nith mul
Gurthak said, tipping back his chair and smiling at Rithmar
Skirvon and Uthik Dastiri, "I suppose it's time that you were on
your way."
The sun had barely risen over
Fort Talon, but the two diplomats were already packed and ready
to go. Their beautifully tailored civilian clothing had been
exchanged for utilitarian Air Force flight suits, and neither of
them looked any more enthralled by the prospect of a five
thousand-mile journey than mul Gurthak would have been in their
place.
"I'm afraid so," Skirvon agreed
with a grimace. "I wish we were eligible for flight pay!"
"Understandable, I suppose,"
mul Gurthak conceded with a slight smile. Then his expression
grew more sober. "A great deal depends upon you
gentlemen—on your judgment and your efforts. I won't
belabor that point further, since I know we're all already aware of
it. I wish there were time for us to seek formal guidance from
Parliament and the Commandery. There isn't."
"Understood, Two Thousand,"
Skirvon replied somberly. "I assure you that we'll do our best."
"I never doubted it." mul
Gurthak rose behind his desk and extended his right hand. "Good
luck, gentlemen."
"Thank you, Two Thousand,"
Skirvon said very seriously. Then mul Gurthak shook hands with
both of them and watched them walk out of his office.
"How far did you say it was to
the next portal?" Shaylar asked as she and Jathmar followed Jasak
and Gadrial towards the dragonfield.
"About nine hundred miles,"
Jasak replied. "One day's dragon flight."
"Assuming, of course," Shaylar
forced an edge of humor into her voice, "that the dragon in
question doesn't just decide to eat me and be done with it,
instead."
Jasak stopped. The rest of their
small procession—including a still obviously irked
Hundred Neshok and half a dozen soldiers from his
company—stopped as well, and Jasak turned to face her.
"That isn't going to happen,
Shaylar," he told her firmly. "We're taking Skyfang, and we haven't
had any problems with him."
"No, we haven't," Shaylar agreed.
She couldn't keep her intense relief from showing, not that she
tried particularly hard. The Fort Wyvern dragon Skyfang and his
pilot, Commander of Fifty Daris Varkal, were a well oiled team.
They'd obviously been together a long time, possibly as long as
Muthok Salmeer and Windclaw. Unlike Windclaw, however,
Skyfang—who was even larger than Windclaw—had
shown no inclination to take large, messy bites out of her. In fact,
she'd almost felt as if the dragon actually liked her,
although she wasn't about to invest any great confidence in that
possibility.
"As a matter of fact, Shaylar,"
Gadrial said with a slight smile for Jasak, "Jasak's requested that
we stick with Skyfang and Fifty Varkal as long as possible. We
may have to change dragons in Rycarh or Jylaros—we have
fairly long sea voyages crossing each of those universes, and we
may not have enough room aboard ship for Skyfang—but if
we can, we'll hang onto both of them all the way to Ucala."
"Is that likely to be possible?"
Jathmar asked.
"It depends on the available
shipping," Jasak said. "That's one reason I hadn't mentioned the
possibility to you. Not all of our ships are configured as dragon
transports, so we may not be able to. I'd say the odds were
probably slightly in our favor, but I can't guarantee it."
"Whether we can or not, I truly
appreciate the thought, Jasak," Shaylar said. "Thank you."
"I told you, Shaylar," Jasak said
quietly, taking her delicate hand in one of his and squeezing it
gently, "you and Jathmar are members of my family, now.
However deeply I may regret the circumstances which make that
so, I'm honored to have you as a sister, and I look out for all
my sisters. And—" he looked across her head at the
Jathmar "—my brothers, too. Now that I have one."
Jathmar looked back at him,
more than a little uncomfortably. Then the Sharonian grimaced.
"Like Shaylar, I appreciate the
thought," he said. "On the other hand, has anyone suggested why
some of the dragons seem to react so much more strongly to her?
Or why they don't react to me the same way?"
"As to why they react to her, the
only logical explanation is that it's something about her particular
Talent," Gadrial said. "My best guess is that a 'Voice's' abilities
produce some sort of . . . signature,
or emission, dragons are sensitive to. And, obviously, one they
don't much like."
She smiled without any humor at
all, and Jathmar snorted.
"I believe you could safely say
that," he agreed.
"As for the reason some of them
respond more strongly than others," Jasak took over as they began
walking towards the field once again, "I've got the beginnings of a
theory."
"You do?" Jathmar glanced
sideways at his Andaran "brother" as they headed down the dirt
road. He was relieved to see that all of the field's dragons had been
moved back from the roadway for a safe distance.
"Yes," Jasak said. "I want to ask
Daris a couple of questions before I say anything more, though.
And even if I'm right, it only changes the question, it doesn't really
answer it."
"We're supposed to be the ones
concealing sensitive information from you," Jathmar said
dryly, and Jasak chuckled.
"I'm not really trying to be
mysterious, Jathmar. It's just that I didn't want to get anyone's
hopes up for what may turn out to be the wrong reasons.
Besides—"
He broke off as they reached the
field itself. Fifty Varkal and Skyfang were waiting for them, and
the dragon's head rose, turning towards them, nostrils flaring. As
always, Jathmar was acutely uncomfortable when any of the huge
beasts showed an interest in Shaylar, but Skyfang gave no sign of
hostility. Indeed, something suspiciously like a deep, subterranean
purr seemed to rumble in his enormous chest.
"Good morning, Hundred.
Magister Kelbryan." Varkal greeted Jasak and Gadrial, then looked
past them. "Good morning, Master Nargra. Good morning, Lady
Nargra-Kolmayr."
"Good morning, Daris," Jasak
replied for all of them while Shaylar and Jathmar smiled at him.
Unlike most of the Arcanan officers they'd encountered, Daris
Varkal had been genuinely and naturally courteous from the
moment they met.
"We're cleared and ready to go as
soon as we're all on board, Sir," the fifty told Jasak.
"Good," Jasak replied
approvingly. Varkal reached out a hand to Gadrial, preparing to
assist her in mounting to Skyfang's back, but Jasak's raised hand
stopped him.
"Sir?"
"I've been wondering about
something, Daris. How well do you know Squire Salmeer and
Windclaw?"
"Pretty well, Sir," Varkal said
just a bit cautiously. "Muthok's a good man—one of the
best. I've learned a lot from him, and Windclaw's one of the most
experienced transports you're ever going to see."
"That was my impression of
them, as well." Jasak nodded. "What I was wondering, though, is
how much you know about Windclaw's pedigree." Varkal looked
surprised, and Jasak chuckled a bit sourly. "The first time
Windclaw met Lady Nargra-Kolmayr, he wanted to eat her," he
reminded the pilot, "but Skyfang here actually seems to like her."
"He does, Sir." Varkal seemed a
little surprised that Jasak had noticed and turned to smile at
Shaylar. "The Hundred's right about that, My Lady," he said
earnestly. "Skyfang's smart. He's not as old as Windclaw, but he's
been around, and I've had him for a long time now. I know him
pretty well, and he does like you." He shook his head, his
expression turning more than a little chagrined. "I should have told
you that already, I guess. After all, Muthok warned me about how
Windclaw reacted. I should have realized you'd be worried."
"I thought he liked her," Jasak
said with a hint of satisfaction. "That's what started me wondering
about pedigrees. I'm no Air Force officer, but I've seen quite a few
dragons over the years. I hope it won't offend you if I say that
Skyfang here looks a bit bigger
and . . . less agile than Windclaw."
"No offense taken, Sir," Varkal
said with what certainly looked like a genuine grin. "Old Skyfang's
a transport to the bone. All of his ancestors—clear back to
the first egg in Ransar, as far as I know—have been
transports." He reached higher than his head to pat his dragon's
massive foreleg with affectionate pride. "Windclaw's a fine beast,
but Skyfang can out-lift him any day. We can haul half again the
weight Muthok and Windclaw can, although, to be fair, you were
lucky you drew them for your medevac. Like you say, Windclaw's
quite a bit more agile. From your description, I don't think we
could have gotten in and out again where he and Muthok did."
"Because Windclaw's line is a
transport-battle dragon cross, isn't it?"
"Yes, Sir. I couldn't say exactly
how far back, but it's easy enough to see if you know what to look
for." Varkal shrugged. "A pure transport like Skyfang is bred for
strength, stamina, and range before anything else. He's
a . . . strategic transport, I guess you'd
say—bred for moving the maximum loads well behind the
front line. Windclaw, now, he's more of a tactical
transport, bred to support the air-mobile outfits. He can't carry as
much, but he's fast and maneuverable—for a transport. That
counts when you're trying to get troops or supplies into a hot LZ,
and a lot of mission planners like to have at least some breath
weapon capability in their frontal area tac transports."
"That's what I thought." Jasak
looked at Shaylar and Jathmar. "As nearly as I can tell, all of the
dragons who have reacted so negatively to Shaylar have been
either battle dragons or, like Windclaw, a transport-battle dragon
cross. So whatever it is about you, it would appear that it only
bothers the combat types, and we should see less and less of those
as we get further to the rear."
"That's a relief—assuming
you've got it right," Jathmar said. "On the other hand, I'd still like
to know exactly what causes the reaction in the first place."
"So would I. I'm not sure we
ever will, though. And at the moment, I'll settle for anything that
lets us keep Shaylar safely away from dragons that won't like her."
"Me, too," Shaylar said firmly.
Emboldened by Jasak's theory,
she reached out and patted Skyfang's huge, scaly, tree trunk of a
leg the same way Varkal had. The huge dragon raised his head
once more, cocking it to one side and looking down at her. Then
he lowered it—not with the quick, angry motion the other
dragons had shown, but slowly, almost gently.
Shaylar heard Jasak inhale
sharply and felt Jathmar's sudden spike of fear through the
marriage bond, but she stood her ground as that enormous head
hovered just above her. The gigantic right eye considered her
thoughtfully, reassuringly calmly, and then Skyfang's vast forked
tongue flickered out and touched her on the shoulder. The tongue
alone—narrow as a serpent's, in proportion to the
dragon—was as broad as her torso, and she felt its
enormous weight . . . and strength.
But its touch was gentle, and she smiled delightedly as she sensed
something at the very edge of her Talent.
She'd always known she had at
least a trace of her mother's Talent. She'd felt it quite often,
swimming with the dolphins at her mother's embassy, although
compared to her Voice Talent, it had been far too weak to bother
trying to train. Now she felt Skyfang, the same way she had felt
those dolphins and whales, and unlike Windclaw's angry, almost
savage aura, Skyfang was a calm, relaxed presence. Her
impression of him lacked the . . .
brightness, the sharpness, of true sentience, but it came much
closer to fully developed self-awareness than she'd expected. And
without the other dragon's fury, the big transport suddenly felt no
more threatening to her than the huge whales with which she had
swum since childhood, and she patted his leg again in simple
delight.
Jathmar exhaled explosively as
he tasted her emotions through his own bond with her, and she
smiled at him before she turned back to Jasak.
"I think you may be onto
something," she said. "I can't feel Skyfang's emotions the same
way I could a person's, but I am getting at least a little something
from him, and it's a lot different from what I felt from Windclaw."
"Good," Jasak sighed, then
grimaced. "I'm glad to hear we may not have to worry about the
way other transports react to you, Shaylar. All the same, would
you please not do things like that?" He jerked his head at
the hand she still had on Skyfang's leg. "I'm sure Jathmar would
feel better if you'd at least consult with him before you rush in to
test one of my theories, and—" he looked at Jathmar again
across her head and grinned crookedly "—I know damned
well that I would."
Chapter Forty-Two
"Now that's impressive."
Division-Captain chan Geraith
stood with his hands on his hips, watching as one of his Bisons
snorted up the loading ramp onto the massive flatcar under a
floating banner of black smoke and the careful direction of the
loadmaster. The Bison—technically, the Transport Tractor,
Mark I, Model B—was based on the same powerplant as the
next to largest of the Trans-Temporal Express's bulldozers,
although its suspension and caterpillar tracks had been
substantially modified in an effort to allow for greater speed over
even rougher terrain. It wasn't an actual transport unit itself, but
rather designed to tow a capacious wheeled or tracked trailer, and
despite its funnel, it was sleek, low-slung, and powerful looking.
It was also dwarfed by the flatcar
it was busily climbing onto. Indeed, two more Bisons were already
in place on the same car. TTE employees were tightening the tie-
down chains on the second of them even as the third clanked into
position, and there was still going to be almost enough room for a
fourth, he realized.
"You think so, Division-
Captain?"
chan Geraith turned his attention
from the flatcar to the man standing beside him. Train Master
Yakhan Chusal of TTE's Directorate of Operations was the
sprawling transportation giant's senior train master. He'd been
overseeing the loading of TTE freight trains for almost thirty
years, and his eyes were rather more critical than the soldier's.
"Yes, I do," chan Geraith said. "I
never realized you had flatcars that size. Oh, I've seen pictures of
the special, articulated cars you use to transport ship hull sections,
but I'd never realized you had standard cars this big."
"I wish we could make them
even bigger," Chusal replied with a grimace. "They're just barely
large enough for our biggest steam shovels as it is, and you can't
put a shovel on an articulated car and get it through some of the
mountains we've got to transit on this run. Some of the curves are
way too sharp, not to mention the little question of whether or not
the trestles would stand the weight. In fact, I understand
Engineering had to turn down a new shovel design because we
couldn't guarantee that we could transport it."
"You mean you need a flatcar
that size for one steam shovel?" chan Geraith demanded in
an almost shaken tone.
"That's right." Chusal shrugged.
"In fact, we have to break them down into two loads, even with
cars that size. Which, of course, means we need big damned
cranes—which we also have to ship out—to
put them back together again at the other end. When you've got to
dig your way through a godsdamned mountain range, or dig a
frigging canal, you need a really big shovel. Well, we've got
them."
chan Geraith shook his head with
a bemused sort of expression. Before his own recent experiences
with the experimental mechanization program, he probably
wouldn't have been as impressed as he was. Now, though, he'd had
far more firsthand experience with incredibly powerful and yet
sometimes frustratingly fragile heavy machinery.
"I guess we're lucky TTE's got as
much rolling stock as it does," he said after a moment, and Chusal
snorted.
"Depends on how you look at it,
Division-Captain. Our charter from the Portal Authority requires
us to maintain a fifteen percent reserve over and beyond our
normal operational and maintenance requirements. Frankly, it's
always been a pain in the ass for the bean-counters, and I've got to
admit that there have been times when I was royally pissed to have
that many cars—and engines—basically just sitting
in sheds somewhere. But there wasn't much luck to it.
And," his expression darkened, "I don't think the reserve's going to
be big enough after all."
"You don't?"
chan Geraith's eyes narrowed.
Short of TTE's Director of Operations, Chusal was undoubtedly
the most knowledgeable person, where the Trans-Temporal
Express' rails were concerned, in any of the many universes
Sharona had explored. If he thought there were going to be
bottlenecks, then chan Geraith was grimly certain that there were.
"Well," Chusal looked away,
shading his eyes against the afternoon sun with one hand while he
watched the loading activities under the sky of autumn blue, "I
can't say for certain, of course. But unless this new government
does go through, and unless it budgets one hell of a lot more
money for the line after it does, there's no way we're going to be
able to meet the transport requirements we're facing. We're
transferring engines and cars from every other trunk line to the
Hayth Chain, but just getting them where we need them is going to
be a royal pain. I've been sending them out basically empty, or
half-empty, at least, just to get them where we're going to need
them down the road."
"How bad is it, really?"
"Honestly?" Chusal looked up at
the considerably taller Ternathian officer with a thoughtful
expression, as if considering whether or not chan Geraith really
wanted to know the truth, then grimaced. "The biggest problem's
going to be the water gaps. There's a six thousand-mile voyage to
cross Haysam to get to Reyshar, and another nine hundred-mile
cruise between Reyshar and Hayth. Then there's another eleven
hundred miles of water between Jyrsalm and Salym. We're going
to have to detrain all of your people, all of your horses, all of your
equipment, at each water gap, load it onto ships and sail all of it
across the gap, then load it back onto another set of cars,
and haul it to the next water gap. Then repeat the process."
It was chan Geraith's turn to
grimace, although he wasn't really all that surprised. He could read
a map, after all.
"I can't say I'm looking forward
to the process," he said after a moment, "but surely it's one you've
had to deal with before."
"Oh, yes. Of course we have."
Chusal nodded. "We have to deal with it constantly, in fact.
Unfortunately, we've never had to deal with it on quite this
scale before, Division-Captain. Moving whole armies, not to
mention all the ammunition and other supplies they're going to
need—and all the coal our engines and steamships
are going to need, if we're going to go on moving all that other
stuff—simply devours rail capacity. And,
obviously, shipping capacity between ports.
"Haysam and Reyshar are pretty
well provided with freighters and passenger liners we can
conscript for the military's needs, since everything moving in and
out of the home universe has to pass through both of them. But
we haven't needed anything like this sort of transport capacity in
the Hayth Chain before. Sealift's going to be a real problem in the
move between Salym and Traisum, and then there's the rail ferry
across the Finger Sea in Traisum itself to consider, at least until
they get the bridge built.
"That's all bad enough, but we've
never had to assign the Hayth Chain anywhere near the rolling
stock we're going to need now on the outbound side of Hayth.
That's why I've been sending so many perfectly good engines and
freight cars out empty. And it's also why every heavylift freighter
in both Haysam and Reyshar has been withdrawn from regular
service and assigned to hauling those engines and cars across the
water gaps. Which," he added sourly, "has created a monumental
bottleneck in commercial cargo service."
"I see." chan Geraith frowned. "I
hadn't realized it would impose quite that much of a strain."
"Division-Captain, you haven't
even begun to see 'strain' yet," Chusal said grimly. "We're building
up as much capacity as we can, but basically, we're looking at at
least three totally separate rail lines, for all intents and purposes.
That's what those water gaps do to us, since we've got to have the
rolling stock we need between each of them. Worse, in
Reyshar and Salym, we've got two separate rail legs
divided by water too wide to bridge. So we can't just load you
onto one set of cars and send you all the way to the end of the line.
We can do a lot to economize if we plan our turnarounds on the
shorter legs carefully, but it's still going to be a nightmare keeping
everything moving. And so far, we're only looking at moving one
division at a time. What happens if we have to start sending entire
corps down the same transit chain simultaneously? For that
matter, the line's only double-tracked as far as Jyrsalm! We're
working on that, too, and that's another logistical consideration
we have to juggle somehow."
The train master sounded both
weary and frustrated, and chan Geraith couldn't blame him for
either emotion. On the other hand, he'd known men like Chusal
before. Yakhan Chusal hadn't become TTE's senior train master by
accident, and chan Geraith suspected that he was going to prove
much more capable of doing that logistical juggling than he
thought he was at the moment.
None of which invalidates a single thing he's said, of course
.
The division-captain shook his
head. He'd known going in that managing his logistics down a
single supply line as long as this one was going to be
a . . . challenge. No one in history had
ever before even considered attempting such a thing, far less
planned for it, and the urgent need to get his division loaded up
and moving in the right direction had kept him from giving it the
sort of attention and preplanning any peacetime maneuver would
have permitted. He'd been painfully aware of that, but he'd also
known he and his staff were going to have literally weeks in transit
to work out the details.
"Train Master," he said after
moment, "would it be possible for you to assign someone from
your operations staff to me on a temporary basis? My staff and I
are reasonably competent when it comes to planning moves
around the Empire, or across a single planet. I'm beginning to
think, though, that we need someone with a better feel for genuine
trans-universal movements. Besides, we're accustomed to simply
telling the quartermaster how much lift capacity we need. This
time around it looks like we're going to need an expert just to tell
us how much capacity there is!"
"Now that, Division-Captain, is
a very good idea," Chusal said warmly. "And, as it happens, I think
I have just the man for you." chan Geraith arched one eyebrow,
and Chusal chuckled. "I've assigned Hayrdar Sheltim as your train
master. He just happens to be one of our more experienced train
masters . . . and he also just finished
a three-month assignment to operations right here at Larakesh
Central. If you've got questions, Hayrdar can answer them as well
as anyone I can think of."
"Thank you, Train Master. I
appreciate that—a lot."
"It doesn't look like much, does
it?" Second Lord of Horse Garsal grumbled.
"Perhaps not," Lord of Horse
Jukan Darshu, Sunlord Markan replied quietly as they watched the
first of his Uromathian cavalry troopers climb down from the
passenger cars which had carried them as far as Fort Salby.
They were moving slowly,
stiffly, and the sunlord's lips quirked in a wry sympathy he would
never have admitted to feeling. The last twelve days had been a
severe jolt to their systems, he thought. The rail trip from Camryn
to Salym hadn't been all that bad, but then there'd been the move to
the hastily improvised transports in Salym for the voyage from
Barkesh to New Ramath. The horses had hated it, the heavy
weather they'd encountered en route had left half the men
miserably seasick, and at the end of it, they'd had to climb back
into the rail cars for the trip from New Ramath to Fort
Tharkoma covering the portal between Salym and Traisum.
New Ramath was only a few
hundred miles from Tharkoma, but they were mountainous,
inhospitable miles, and the slow, swaying trip along the steep
tracks which twisted like broken-backed serpents between the port
city and the fortress had been exhausting, especially for the men
who hadn't yet fully recovered from their seasickness. Yet even
that hadn't been the end of it, for the Traisum side of that portal
was located in the equivalent of the Kingdom of Shartha.
Shartha lay on the west coast of
Ricatha, which lay thousands of feet lower than—and three
thousand miles south of—the Salym side of the portal, and
it had been snowing hard in Salym. The change as their train
wheezed through the portal from sub-freezing Tharkoma to the
brutal, brilliant heat of the Shartha Plain had been stunning even
for hardened trans-universal travelers. The cold, insufficiently
heated passenger cars had gone from icebox to oven in what had
seemed mere minutes as the ice and snow which had encrusted
them turned abruptly into water. Indeed, Markan rather thought
that most of it had probably gone straight to vapor without even
bothering with the intermediate liquid stage. The shock to the
system had been profound, and the day and a half it had taken to
get from there to Salby had offered insufficient time for
men—or horses—to adjust.
"Impressive or not," Markan
continued now, "it will serve neither the need of the moment nor
the Emperor to reflect upon that fact too loudly."
He glanced levelly at his second-
in-command. The two of them stood on the front platform of the
palatial passenger car which had been assigned to Markan's senior
officers for the move, and a flicker of what might have been mere
irritation or might have been anger showed in Garsal's eyes.
Whatever it was, it was gone as quickly as it had come, however,
and he nodded.
"Point taken, Sunlord," he said.
Markan nodded back. There was
no need to do more, for several reasons. First, Jukan Darshu was a
sunlord, what a Ternathian would have called a duke, whereas
Tarnal Garsal was only a windlord, or earl. Second, despite
Garsal's fastidious, finicky dislike for frontier conditions (and his
undeniable arrogance), he truly was a highly competent officer.
And third, because Garsal was a distant relative of Chava Busar,
and knew better than to disappoint his imperial cousin.
Not to mention the minor fact that our entire
multiverse—Ternathia and Uromathia alike—is at
risk this time, Markan reflected.
It
felt . . . unnatural to think of the
Empire and the long-resented Ternathians facing a common threat.
For as long as Markan (or any other Uromathian) could
remember, Ternathia had been if not precisely the enemy,
the next closest thing available. And, he admitted, since Chava had
come to the throne, the long-standing rivalry between the two
great Sharonian empires had once again grown both more intense
and nastier.
I suppose it's a little silly of us, the sunlord reflected.
Or, at least, it was in the beginning. By now, it's taken on a life of
its own.
Markan knew he was rather more
sophisticated, in many ways, than most Uromathians, including all
too many members of the high aristocracy. Despite that, however,
deep down inside, he still suffered from that ingrained
Uromathian sense of . . . not
inferiority, really, but something close.
The truth was that Uromathia
could never quite forgive Ternathian for being almost four
millennia older than it was. Ternathia had made Tajvana its capital
thirty-three centuries ago, and the Caliraths had stayed there until
less than three centuries ago. In the interim, their empire
had lapped as far east as the Cerakondian Mountains, in the south,
and eventually as far as Lake Arau, in the north, until it finally
stopped against the Arau Mountains in far eastern Chairifon. It had
reached the Araus just under nine hundred years ago, and on the
far side of that mountain barrier, it had finally encountered
another empire almost as large as it was.
That empire had been
Uromathia, which had controlled everything beyond the
Cerakondians and the Araus as far south as Harkala. In terms of
territory, Uromathia had been the smaller of the two; in terms of
population, they'd been very nearly evenly matched. But
Uromathia had been far younger, hammered together only over the
previous three or four centuries as the various Uromathian kings
and, eventually, emperors had watched the Ternathian tide
sweeping steadily and apparently unstoppably towards them.
There hadn't really been
a Uromathia until that steadily approaching Ternathian
frontier—and example—had created it. In fact,
Markan's ancestors had been too busy fighting and slaughtering
one another in the service of their innumerable nobles and kinglets
to pay the notion of "civilization" a great deal of attention. The
threat of being ingested by Ternathia had concentrated the minds
of the more powerful Uromathian kingdoms marvelously,
however, and they'd begun cheerfully eliminating one another by
conquest in an effort to build up a powerbase sufficient to remain
uningested. Strictly, of course, out of a patriotic sense of their
mission to resist foreign occupation. Perish the thought that
personal power could have had anything to do with it!
They'd succeeded. In fact, they'd
built a very respectable empire of their own by the time Ternathia
arrived on their doorstep. They'd actually been even more
centralized, since they had deliberately constructed their imperial
bureaucracy for streamlined, military efficiency, whereas the
Ternathian bureaucracy had been the product of millennia of
gradual evolution and periodic bouts of reform. Their military
capability had been impressive, as well, and they'd already
acquired most of the Talents by intermarriage. Taken altogether, it
had been an enormous accomplishment, one of which anyone
could have been proud, and they had been.
But the thing which had stuck in
the Uromathians' collective psyche was the lingering suspicion
that Ternathia had stopped where it had not because Uromathia's
power had given the Winged Crown pause, but because Ternathia
had chosen to stop. The two great empires had sat
there—coexisting more or less peaceably, with occasional,
interspersed periods of mutual glaring—for the better part
of six hundred years. Until, in fact, the Calirath Dynasty had begun
its long, steady disengagement from the Ternathian Empire's high-
water mark borders. And in all that time, there had been only three
true wars between them . . . each of
which Ternathia had won quite handily.
Ternathia had never made any
effort to conquer Uromathia. That had never really been the
Ternathian way, as Markan was prepared to admit, at least
privately. But Uromathia had never quite been able to forgive the
Ternathians for never—not once—letting the
Uromathians beat them. The Uromathian Empire had fought its
own wars, established its own prowess, but always in the
Ternathian shadow. Never as Ternathia's equal. In fact that Chava
Busar's was the fourth dynasty to rule Uromathia while the
Caliraths were only the second dynasty and Ternathia's history
(and that they had ruled Ternathia in unbroken succession for over
four thousand years) didn't exactly help the situation,
either. Uromathia had become the perpetual younger, smaller,
weaker brother who deeply resented his older brother's
patronizing
attitude . . . even—or perhaps
especially—when that older brother didn't even mean to be
patronizing.
And that attitude lingered, even
today.
Of course, Fort Salby didn't
belong to Ternathia, the sunlord reminded himself. It was a Portal
Authority base, which—theoretically, at least—
meant it was a multinational installation, belonging to neither
empire. The fact that the Portal Authority Armed Forces had seen
fit to adopt Ternathian rank structures, weapons, tactical
doctrines, and even military tailoring might, perhaps, explain the
fact that it didn't feel that way.
But this time, we were the ones close enough to
respond when the lightning struck, Markan thought with a
certain grim satisfaction. I only wish the Emperor had seen fit
to send us more detailed instructions.
Part of Chava's vagueness was
undoubtedly due to the Emperor's suspicions of the Voice
network. Unlike Zindel of Ternathia, Chava of Uromathia was
completely unTalented, and he cherished a deep and abiding
distrust for those who were. Despite all evidence and experience
to the contrary, he was absolutely convinced that the Portal
Authority Voices would violate their sworn confidentiality any
time it suited their purposes. And, of course, their
purposes—whatever in all the Arpathian hells they
might be, Markan thought waspishly—were inevitably
hostile to Chava's own.
In this case, however, it was at
least equally probable that the Emperor's failure to provide
detailed instructions had as much to do with the totally
unprecedented nature of the threat as with his undeniable paranoia.
It was certainly enough to strain
Markan's . . . mental flexibility,
at any rate.
The sunlord wasn't especially
fond of Shurkhalis, whether as individuals or corporate entities,
like the Chalgyn Consortium. While he might sometimes feel his
Emperor took his hatred for all things Ternathian to unnecessary
extremes, the fact remained that Shurkhal had been a part of the
Ternathian Empire for almost three thousand years and that it had
stubbornly aligned its national interests and foreign policy with its
one-time imperial masters, rather than its much closer neighbor in
Uromathia, since regaining its nominal independence. As a
consequence, it was normally a bit difficult for him to work up a
great deal of sympathy for any minor misfortunes which might
befall the desert kingdom.
Then there was the fact that this
particular survey crew had included Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr.
Markan had never met the woman, and had nothing against her
personally, but her exploits had been a direct affront to his own
notions of proper female behavior, and he was scarcely alone in
that. Not in Uromathia, at least. Nor did the fact that the Portal
Authority had been using her so heavily in its own propaganda
leave him feeling much more cheerfully inclined towards her,
given how unfond of the Authority he was.
Like most Uromathians, Markan
had always resented the Portal Authority. His resentment was less
pointed than that of many Uromathian aristocrats, especially those
closest to the Emperor, but it was nonetheless real. No
Uromathian could quite forget that the Authority stemmed directly
from a Ternathian demand (although courtesy had
required that it be called only a "proposal," of course) for the
internationalization of the Larakesh portal. Nor could any
Uromathian forget that the then-Emperor of Uromathia's efforts
to assert control over the portal and the proposed international
authority had been stymied by a direct threat of Ternathian military
action. Or that it was Ternathia which had insisted that the
Authority's board of directors must represent all major nations yet
remain completely and rigorously politically independent of any of
them.
If pressed, Markan was prepared
to admit—grudgingly—that Ternathia had no more
direct control over the Authority than Uromathia did.
Unfortunately, it didn't need direct control. Not when the
"independent" Authority had fallen all over itself adopting
Ternathian models for everything from its internal organization
and exploration techniques to its military forces. Including,
probably, the way they wiped their arses.
Stop that, the sunlord told himself sharply. You're
letting your own paranoia get the better of you again!
He snorted in wry amusement,
then shook his head when Garsal looked at him inquiringly.
"Just a thought, Tarnal," he said.
"Just a thought."
He looked around for a moment
longer.
It was appropriate, he supposed,
that Fort Salby was located in what would have been Shurkhal on
Sharona. At the moment, they stood on a plateau in the rugged
Mountains of Ithal, which fringed the western coast of Shurkhal
along the Finger Sea. Back home, the location was the site of the
city of Narshalla, built around an oasis and bounded by an
extensive lava field to the east and by the arid hills of the Ithal
Mountains on the other three sides. In Traisum, where thousands
of years of human habitation hadn't completely deforested the
Shurkhali Peninsula, those hills were less arid than their Sharonian
equivalent. They weren't what Markan would have called lush or
luxuriant, even here, but they were far less forbidding and desolate
than the ones Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr must have known.
Despite any improvement in the
local climate, driving the rail lines from Traisum's entry portal on
the flat coastal Plain of Shartha to Salby had been a gargantuan
task. The straight-line distance between Fort Galsar and Fort Salby
was over fourteen hundred miles; the actual distance
imposed by the terrain was at least half again that far. To reach the
rail ferry across the southern terminus of the Finger Sea while
avoiding the rugged, tangled mountains of the Shartha Highlands,
the engineers had been forced to run their lines clear up and
around both sides of the Horn of Ricathia. The route from the
ferry's western terminus through the Ithals hadn't been any picnic,
either, he reflected, although at least they'd been able to make up
some of the lost time in the fast, fairly straightforward run along
the coastal plain at the Ithals' feet until they had to turn inland to
reach Fort Salby.
He'd been impressed, as always,
by the accomplishments of the TTE construction crews. Especially
by the fact that they'd already more than half completed the
construction of a multitrack bridge across the Strait of Tears
which connected the Finger Sea to the Gulf of Shurkhal. The
coral-encrusted Strait of Tears was shallow and
constricted—back home, it required constant blasting and
dredging to keep it open for deep-draft shipping, and the span
across the narrower, two-mile-wide eastern channel was already
complete. They were well advanced on the longer, sixteen-mile
length required to cross the western channel, as well, and work on
it was proceeding twenty-four hours a day.
No doubt, he thought sardonically, recent events
further down-chain have something to do with all the overtime
TTE is accumulating at the moment. I wonder who'll get the final
bill for that?
"I suppose you'd better look after
getting our people off the train while I go find this Regiment-
Captain chan Skrithik," he said finally.
"Better you than me," Garsal
muttered, but quietly enough Markan could pretend he hadn't
heard. Then the windlord saluted. "I'll see to it, Sir," he said much
more crisply.
"Good," Markan replied, and
climbed down from the platform.
Actually, "go find" was scarcely
the correct choice of verbs, he admitted as a tall Ternathian
officer—and aren't they all tall? Markan
thought wryly—stepped up to greet him.
"Lord of Horse," the Ternathian
said in barely accented Uromathian. "Welcome to Fort Salby. I'm
delighted to see you."
"Regiment-Captain," Markan
responded in Ternathian, offering his right hand for a Ternathian-
style handclasp. He was impressed by chan Skrithik's command of
Uromathian, which was actually better than his own Ternathian.
Nonetheless, there were appearances to maintain. A Uromathian
lord of horse—and a pedigreed sunlord, to boot—
could scarcely permit a Ternathian to be more cosmopolitan than
he was, after all, he told himself sardonically, and rather suspected
that he saw a matching flicker of amusement in chan Skrithik's
eyes.
"We got here as quickly as we
could," Markan continued. "Indeed, I was rather astonished by how
quickly the TTE was able to arrange things once our troop
movement was authorized."
"TTE's always been good at
improvised movements," chan Skrithik agreed. "And just so we get
off on the right foot, let me say that I'm as grateful as I am
delighted to see you. I realize there's always been a certain degree
of friction between Ternathia and Uromathia, and I don't imagine
your men are going to be any more immune to that tradition than
the Ternathians in my own garrison are. However, this isn't about
Ternathia or Uromathia—it's about Sharona, and
I've seen to it that everyone under my command understands that.
As one Sharonian to another, then, welcome to Fort
Salby."
"Thank you," Markan replied. He
was impressed by chan Skrithik's willingness to confront the
situation so openly. And pleased, as well. And the Ternathian had
shown considerable tact in suggesting that the "friction" existed
only between his own empire and Uromathia, he thought. Any
Arpathians and Harkalans in the Fort Salby garrison were probably
torn between welcoming Markan's troopers with open arms and
shooting them in the back at the first opportunity.
"I've stressed the same points to
my own personnel," the sunlord said, and indeed he had. "I'm sure
there are going to be at least some incidents, anyway, of course.
But my officers have been instructed that
if—when—such incidents occur, they are to be
reported first to you, as the base commander and the senior officer
in the PAAF chain of command. They've also been instructed to
warn their men that any breach of discipline will be severely
punished under our own regulations after any penalties
you may see fit to award under the Authority's."
He showed his teeth in a tight
smile.
"That's good to hear," chan
Skrithik said. "Of course, your troops' internal discipline is your
own affair. I'm sure any difficulties which arise can be dealt with
expeditiously."
"As am I," Markan said with a
slight bow.
He didn't add that he'd told chan
Skrithik about his instructions to his officers for a specific reason.
Markan's own rank was the equivalent of the Ternathian rank of
brigade-captain, which made him senior to chan Skrithik. But chan
Skrithik was the ranking PAAF officer present, and this
was a Portal Authority post. More to the point, one instruction
Emperor Chava had made crystal clear was that Markan
was not, under any circumstances, to do anything which might be
construed as attempting to undermine the Authority chain of
command. In fact, Markan had been specifically ordered to obey
chan Skrithik's orders, regardless of who might technically be
senior to whom. Clearly the Emperor wanted no unfortunate
incidents in the field while the Conclave back home was still
debating what sort of political arrangements were going to emerge
out of all this.
Markan doubted there was any
need to be more explicit with chan Skrithik. The man was
obviously intelligent, and the quality of his spoken Uromathian
suggested a certain degree of familiarity with Markan's native
culture. He would recognize Markan's message—that
Markan intended to obey the spirit, not just the letter, of the orders
subordinating him to chan Skrithik's command—without
the sunlord having to be more direct.
"In that case, Sunlord," chan
Skrithik said after a moment, "let's see about getting your people
settled in."
"I think that's an excellent
suggestion, Regiment-Captain."
"About damned time!" Hardar
Jalkanthi announced with profound satisfaction as the signal arm
swung into the upright position and the signal lamp glowed green.
"Try to be at leaitst a little
patient, Hardar," Charak Tarku grunted with a laugh. "I'm
supposed to be the impatient barbarian around here."
Jalkanthi chuckled. Tarku was
his regularly assigned senior fireman, and he knew he'd been lucky
to hang onto him under the present chaotic circumstances. The
burly, broad shouldered Arpathian was a rarity in TTE, given the
usual Arpathian attitude towards technology, and Jalkanthi was
glad to have him. He knew better than most just how sharp a brain
lurked behind the typically Arpathian façade Tarku chose to
present to the rest of the multiverse. The engineer wasn't quite
certain why Tarku had decided to play to the Arpathian stereotype,
and it often irritated Jalkanthi, but the two of them had been
together for almost four years now. That was more than long
enough to cement a solid friendship, despite their very different
backgrounds, and Tarku knew him better than just about anyone
else.
"I always thought Arpathians
were supposed to be deadly nomadic hunters, patient as the very
stones," he said now, as the two of them swung up the high steps
to the footplate of TTE's Paladin 20887.
"Nothing but a fairytale," Tarku
said, waving one hand airily. "Just another baseless exaggeration
we put about to bolster our fearsome reputation and mystique."
"Well, I think it's about time
your mystique settled down and started doing its job," Jalkanthi
told him.
"Orders, orders. Always
orders," Tarku grumbled with a grin. Then he caught hold of the
vertical handrail and leaned well out to peer back past the bulk of
20887's integral tender, the auxiliary sixteen thousand-gallon
water tender, and the second Paladin and tenders coupled in behind
20887.
"See him?" Jalkanthi asked.
"No, not—Ah! There
he is!" Tarku leaned a bit further out, waving to show Train
Master Sheltim he'd seen him. The train master waved back from
his place on the station platform, but the green flag was still
tucked firmly under his arm.
"Well?" Jalkanthi pressed.
"No point fretting at
me," Tarku told him. "Sheltim will waggle his little flag at
us when he's good and ready to."
Jalkanthi grimaced, then tapped
the glass face of the pressure gauge pointedly. Tarku only grinned,
and Jalkanthi produced an oily rag and carefully wiped the already
gleaming bronze of the burnished throttle lever. He was always
inordinately proud of his big Paladin's speed and power, but today
he had a special reason for his impatience to be off.
Jalkanthi was Ternathian, from
the city of Garouoma in the Province of Narhath, but his wife was
Shurkhali. In fact, it was almost frightening how much like a taller
version of the murdered Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr Jesmanar
Jalkanthi-Ishar looked. Jalkanthi might not have been born
Shurkhali, but he'd absorbed more than enough of his wife's
culture to feel the same fury which had swept across her native
kingdom. Worse, Jalkanthi had just enough Talent to have Seen
SUNN's Voice broadcast of Shaylar's final message. He didn't
really care what the assembled heads of state decided in their
precious Conclave. He'd been gratified by his own Emperor's
attitude, and he wasn't very happy about even the most remote
possibility of winding up with Chava of Uromathia running
things, but he didn't have time to waste worrying about either of
those things just now. He knew what he wanted to happen
to the bastards responsible for the Chalgyn Consortium crew's
massacre, and he was impatient to deliver the first installment of
Sharona's vengeance.
He'd been prepared to pull every
string in sight when he heard about the decision to send the Third
Dragoons forward to Fort Salby. He'd wanted that train,
and he'd been determined to have it. But he hadn't had to pull any
strings in the end, because Yakhan Chusal knew who TTE's best
engineer was. So at least—
"Green flag!" Tarku announced
suddenly.
"At last!" Jalkanthi replied, and
cracked the throttle.
Steam hissed, and the enormous,
powerful engine shuddered, trembling like a living creature. The
ten huge drivers, each of them almost seven feet high, began to
move—slowly, at first, with a deep, strong chuff, spinning
on the steel rails as they fought the incredible inertia of a train
over two miles long. Then, behind 20887, the second, identical
engine hissed into motion as well, drive rods stroking, and the
massive drag began to creep slowly forward. Jalkanthi propped
one elbow on the window frame as he leaned out of the cab and
felt the incredible mass of the train behind him. Thirteen
thousand tons, Train Master Sheltim had told him. Most
people would have found that hard to believe, but this was the
TTE. It routinely hauled loads that massive—or even
larger—down the ribbons of steel which stitched the
endless universes together.
The vast semicircle of the
Larakesh Portal loomed ahead of him. Beyond it, he could see the
high mountain plateau of South Ricathia and the thriving city of
Union.
He'd always thought calling it
"Union City" was more than a little silly. For one thing, Union
was really no more than an extension of the vast sprawl of
Larakesh into the universe of New Sharona. At the time it had
been founded, the newborn Portal Authority had felt it was
imperative to establish a new, independent city with its own
government beholden to no existing Sharonian government, even a
purely local municipal one.
Since then, practices had
changed—most other portals the size of Larakesh had
spawned single cities, with quite efficient unified governments,
which sprawled across their thresholds—but Union City
had been a special case on several levels. Not only had it been the
first extra-universal city Sharonians had ever established, but the
Portal Authority, at Harkala's suggestion (although it was widely
rumored that the original idea had come from Ternathia), had been
granted ownership of the massive South Ricathian gold fields. The
vast majority of the authority's operating revenues over the
ensuing eighty years had come from the exploitation of those gold
deposits—whose location, of course, had been easy to
project from Sharona's own experience—which had neatly
absolved the governments which had established it from any
requirement to provide it with long-term funding. And, Jalkanthi
knew, it had also avoided a situation in which those governments
which made disproportionate contributions to the Authority's
budget would have acquired an equally disproportionate amount
of clout with the authority Board of Directors. That was why he
tended to believe the rumors about Ternathia's behind-the-scenes
involvement in creating the arrangement in the first place.
Rather than develop and mine
those deposits itself, however, the Authority had chosen to lease
the mining rights for a percentage. Union City had been built
largely for the specific purpose of overseeing and accommodating
that exploitation.
Still, "Union City" had been a
silly choice of names, whatever the Authority's reasoning, given
the fact that the one thing exploration of the multiverse hadn't
done was to unite all of Sharona. When Jalkanthi had been
much younger, his grandfather had told him how so many people
had hoped that the abrupt appearance of the Larakesh Portal truly
would bring their own world together at last. The old man had
cherished the dream of a restored Ternathian Empire as a
worldwide bastion of freedom and just governance, both
welcomed back to the many lands it had voluntarily freed and
extended beyond them, as well, and he'd scarcely been alone in
that.
Unfortunately for those dreams,
Sharonians had been too attached to their nations and their
national identities. And, his grandfather had grudgingly admitted,
the Portal Authority had done too good a job of administering the
portals in everyone's name. There'd been no need to create
a true world government, and so "Union City" had remained no
more than a name. No more than an unfulfilled promise, in the
eyes of people like his grandfather, at least.
But maybe that's going to change at last, Grandpa. And it
looks like we may even get the Empire back, just the way you
wanted, Jalkanthi thought as the endless train of passenger
cars, freight cars, and flatcars loaded with the tools of war moved
steadily forward. Thick black smoke plumed from the funnels of
both Paladins. Steel drive wheels flashed, and the trucks of the
cars behind banged, grated, and squealed with ear-stabbing
shrillness, then began to sing as they moved faster. Buffers rattled
and banged thunderously as the double-headed train crossed the
switches, swinging onto the mainline.
Jalkanthi watched the familiar
landmarks, watched the front end of his own streamlined engine
cross the portal threshold. Unusually for portal connections,
Larakesh and Union City, although they were almost six thousand
miles "apart" in their respective universes, were in the same time
zone. Of course, what was fall in Larakesh was spring in Union
City, and the sun was at a totally different angle, whatever clocks
and watches might say. But Jalkanthi was accustomed to that. He
was more concerned with getting through the vast Union City side
of the enormous Larakesh Central yard and its innumerable
sidings—the biggest and busiest rail terminal in the entire
known multiverse, by any standard of measurement—and
out into the Ricathian countryside, where he could open 20887's
throttle wide.
Not much longer now, he told himself, caressing the
smooth bronze lever like a lover. No, not much longer.
Chapter Forty-Three
Sarr Klian tried not to swear out
loud.
It wasn't easy.
"So, Master Skirvon," he said
instead, "as I understand it, then, my instructions from Two
Thousand mul Gurthak are to defer to your judgment where any
contact with these people is concerned?"
"I suppose you could put it that
way," the senior of the two civilians who'd arrived at Klian's fort
that morning replied. "Obviously, Five Hundred, no one is going
to try to take away or undermine your military authority,"
he hastened to add, which softened Klian's frustration quite a bit.
"But, as you yourself so cogently suggested in your dispatches to
Two Thousand mul Gurthak, it's clearly essential that we get a
civilian diplomatic presence established here as quickly as
possible." He smiled. "Men in civilian suits and carrying briefcases
are much less threatening than men in military uniforms carrying
arbalests," he pointed out.
"I couldn't agree more," Klian
said. It was, after all, as Skirvon said, exactly what he himself had
asked for. But mul Gurthak's orders seemed to imply that Skirvon
did have authority, even in purely military matters. Klian
didn't like that a bit. Besides, there was something about this
Skirvon and his sidekick that . . .
bothered the five hundred. He couldn't quite put a finger on what
it was, and he couldn't help wondering if a part of it wasn't that he
resented having any of his own authority supplanted by a "mere
civilian." He hoped it wasn't, but he couldn't be certain.
And I truly don't think that's what it is, either, he thought
grimly. In fact, he looked back down at the message
crystal from mul Gurthak, I'm pretty damned sure it's at least
as much the tone of mul Gurthak's orders and dispatches as
anything about these two.
"Well, gentlemen," he said aloud
after a moment, looking back up at them, "how soon do you want
me to arrange transport forward? And how big a military escort
are you going to require?"
"I don't see any reason to be in a
blazing hurry at this point," Skirvon replied. Klian's eyebrows
rose, and the civilian shrugged. "Master Dastiri and I are still
studying this language primer Magister Kelbryan was able to put
together. Fortunately, we both have good ears for foreign
languages—frankly, his is better than mine—but
both of us could still use a few more days of study before we get
dropped into the deep end. And since there's no present contact
between our forces and theirs, it would probably make more sense
for us to do just that rather than rush forward with incomplete
preparation and risk some overly hasty contact that could have
additional unfortunate consequences."
Klian nodded. His instincts all
shouted to get the two sides talking to one another as quickly as
possible, yet Skirvon had made at least two very telling points.
"As for military escorts,"
Skirvon continued thoughtfully, "I don't know that one's going to
be required at all, at least initially. It seems to me that, so far, both
sides have been reacting militarily to immediate, perceived threats.
I don't think either side's gotten much beyond that so far, and it
occurs to me that making the next move from our side by sending
in two unarmed, civilian diplomats without any military presence
at all, might help us pour a little water on the flames."
Klian frowned. What the man
had said made sense, but the professional officer in the five
hundred wasn't at all happy with the thought of sending out an
official embassy without any military protection at all.
"You don't think that leaving
everyone behind—not taking even a token honor
guard—might be misconstrued as a sign of weakness?" he
asked.
"Not everyone is automatically
impressed by the presence of soldiers armed to the teeth," Dastiri,
the junior diplomat, said, speaking up for the first time. "And not
everyone will automatically interpret their absence as a sign of
weakness. Under the circumstances, I think it would be best all
round for us to proceed as cautiously as possible. In fact," his tone
was cool, "part of the reason the situation is as bad as it is at the
moment is that we've had military people on both sides who were
too close to things, too unwilling to give ground, to back off and
deescalate the situation."
Klian bristled. He couldn't help
it. It was possible Dastiri hadn't intended to sound
insulting—or at least dismissive—in his analysis of
the Army's actions to date. Unfortunately, it didn't sound that way.
"Contrary to what you may
assume, Master Dastiri," the five hundred said in an equally cool
tone, making no particular effort to hide the dislike in his eyes,
"not every military man wants to charge into every situation,
sword in one hand and arbalest in the other. As I indicated in my
report to Two Thousand mul Gurthak—which you and
Master Skirvon have obviously had an opportunity to
read—I concur with Hundred Olderhan's view that we
would have been far wiser to simply pull back to Fort Rycharn in
the first place. I allowed myself at the time to be convinced by
Hundred Thalmayr, which I deeply regret, given what happened to
Charlie Company when these Sharonians attacked. Or
counterattacked, or whatever. I'm in favor of anything that allows
us to—how did you put it? 'Back off and deescalate the
situation.' My only concern is how best to go about doing that."
Dastiri flushed and his almond
eyes hardened, but Skirvon laid a hand on his subordinate's
shoulder and smiled at Klian.
"I apologize if it sounded as if
either of us intended to denigrate the Army or your legitimate
concerns, Five Hundred. That certainly wasn't our intent. All the
same, I think my colleague here has a point. Two Thousand mul
Gurthak is mobilizing all available forces to support us if and as
required. We'll have quite a lot of firepower available, very
shortly, if we need it. In the meantime, however, I'd very much
prefer to keep this a completely civilian contact from our side,
initially at least. After all," he smiled again, more broadly, but
there was a faint, unmistakable tang of iron in his voice, "this is
what we do. I'd never try to tell you how to conduct a military
operation, because I wouldn't have the least idea where to begin.
But with all due respect, I believe Master Dastiri and I are
probably rather more experienced at diplomacy than you are."
"No doubt," Klian conceded, yet
deep down inside, he wasn't fully convinced. After all, the Union
of Arcana hadn't really needed diplomats for the last two
hundred years. With the emergence of the Union, traditional
international diplomacy had been replaced by what were
effectively bureaucratic administrators. Or perhaps "facilitators"
would have been a better choice of word: arbitrators, with full
authority to issue binding decisions and full access (officially, at
least) to all information on both sides of any issue which had to be
settled. There wasn't a single living "diplomat" in the entire Union
who'd ever had to sit down across a bargaining table from
a completely separate and sovereign entity, far less one about
which the "diplomat" in question knew absolutely nothing.
That's what bothers me, he realized. These two keep
talking about diplomacy and diplomatic judgments, but they don't
really seem to understand that they're dealing with something
completely outside their experience. They really do think
they understand what's going on, and I suppose it's possible they
do. But what if they don't?
"Very well," he said, standing
behind his desk to signal an end to the meeting, "please let me
know if there's anything I can do for you during your stay. And
whenever you're ready to move forward to the swamp portal, I'll
be happy to arrange transportation."
"Thank you, Five Hundred,"
Skirvon said.
He and Dastiri departed, and
Klian sat back down, toying with the message crystal from mul
Gurthak and considering the two thousand's dispatches and their
implications.
He couldn't say he was
particularly surprised by them, except, perhaps, for how quickly
the two thousand was moving. He could hardly disapprove of
that, of course, although he didn't much look forward to
finding himself superseded by someone else.
Come now, Sarr, he told himself. mul Gurthak
specifically says you'll remain in command of Fort Rycharn
whatever happens. Surely you didn't expect anything else?
No, of course he hadn't. On the
other hand, he hadn't exactly expected to find himself superseded
by Commander of Two Thousand Mayrkos Harshu, either.
Of all the officers it could have been, why did it have to be Harshu? Klian demanded of his office's silent walls.
There was nothing at all wrong
with Two Thousand Harshu's military credentials, but the man had
a reputation within the Union Army. Worse, he knew he did. In
fact, he'd deliberately cultivated it.
Harshu was a throwback, one of
those who bemoaned the fact that he'd been born into such
"boring" times. He embraced what he believed was the true
Andaran tradition, although Klian had always suspected that men
like Thankhar Olderhan were truer keepers of that tradition.
Harshu's version of it was heavily laden with the trappings of
military glory, which there'd been precious little of in the two
centuries since the Union was formed, and he seemed remarkably
oblivious to just how much that "military glory" had cost in lives,
as well as money. It might not be precisely fair to call him a
hothead, but Klian was unable to come up with a better term, and
that worried him.
Of course, he's always been a top performer in every
maneuver, too, the five hundred forced himself to concede.
However full of himself he may be, he didn't earn that
reputation by sitting around being stupid. And if he's the next
most senior officer in the area, mul Gurthak doesn't have much of
a choice
about putting him in command, unless he wants to
come forward and take the field command himself.
Which, now that I think about it, presents an interesting
question of its own, doesn't it? Why isn't mul Gurthak
moving himself closer to the point of contact, since he's
ultimately responsible for whatever happens out here?
Klian frowned. There could, of
course, be all sorts of reasons for mul Gurthak to choose to
remain in Erthos. For one thing, his lines of communication were
substantially better, and he might well feel that he needed to keep
himself available to browbeat anyone who wanted to drag his feet
when the two thousand ordered him to send all of his available
fighting strength forward. But judging from mul Gurthak's
message crystal, he was going to be sending at least the equivalent
of a full air-mobile brigade—possibly even a
division—to Fort Rycharn. With cavalry support, no less.
A brigade was a commander of
five thousand's billet, and a division was properly commanded by
a commander of ten thousand—neither of which,
unfortunately, Arcana had available at the moment. And this was
the first time in the Union of Arcana's entire history that its army
had confronted the possibility of open combat with another power.
So why was the officer with the ultimate responsibility for what
happened—not to mention the opportunity to command the
most important troop deployment in the Union's history—
staying behind and sending someone junior to him forward to
assume operational command?
Klian tipped his chair back, arms
crossed, and thought about it. And the more he thought, the less he
liked it.
You're just being paranoid because he's Mythalan, he
scolded himself. After all, he didn't say he intended to
stay behind in Erthos forever, did he? Harshu's in command of the
immediate deployment; there's no reason mul Gurthak can't come
forward and relieve him as soon as he's convinced he's got
everything running smoothly in the rear areas.
In fact, that actually made more
sense than rushing forward would have made. As long as mul
Gurthak stayed in Erthos, where he had his own command staff
well broken in (not to mention far better hummer and dragon lines
of communication than he could possibly expect from Fort
Rycharn), he was well placed to see to it that the troop movements
went as smoothly as possible. And that was at least as important
as—if potentially much less glamorous than—
actually commanding in the face of the enemy.
Maybe it's because he is Mythalan, Klian thought,
then shook his head with a wry snort. You're worried about
Harshu because he's a throwback to what he thinks were the good
old days of Andaran militancy. And you're worried about
mul Gurthak because he isn't acting like a throwback to
the good old days of Andaran militancy! Not very consistent of
you, Sarr.
He grimaced and let his chair
come back upright. Whatever might or might not be going through
mul Gurthak's head, Klian's immediate responsibilities were
unpleasantly clear.
The voyage between Fort
Rycharn and Fort Wyvern was completely unacceptable from a
logistical viewpoint. There were only two true "transports" in
Mahrithan waters, and only one of them was configured to carry
dragons. Even that ship could transport only two dragons at a
time, for that matter, and that wasn't even a fraction of the sealift
required to move or supply the troop strength mul Gurthak was
talking about.
There was a way around that, of
course, but it came with its own price. No dragon, not even one of
the long-range heavylift transports, could make the flight from
Fort Wyvern to Fort Rycharn in one hop. But any dragon—
even one of the shorter-ranged battle dragons—could make
the hop from Fort Wyvern to the long isthmus connecting the
continents of Andara and Hilmar. From there, they could proceed
southward overland, which would permit them to make it clear to
Fort Rycharn in a four-day flight rather than a five-day voyage.
They'd have to delay their flight
at least once to permit the dragons to hunt, but this universe's
Hilmar teemed with game animals which had never heard of
dragons and could be expected to be relatively unwary—for
a time, at least. And by flying the transports forward instead of
sending them by ship, mul Gurthak could send in as many of them
simultaneously as he could lay hands
on . . . and take advantage of the
beasts' airlift capacity, as well. Whereas a medium-weight
transport like Windclaw could carry perhaps half a platoon of
infantry and its personal weapons, the heavy transports could lift
much bigger loads, even before the Quartermaster Corps' spell
engineers got into the act.
With the proper levitation spells
added to the equation, a pair of heavylift transports could easily
tow a freight pod capable of transporting an entire company of
infantry, its support personnel and weapons, and enough rations
for several days of operations. Cavalry units devoured transport
volume at a much higher rate than infantry outfits, of course, but
with the cargo pods and levitation spells, even heavy cavalry could
be airlifted to within striking range of the enemy. The spells were
difficult—more because of the power levels involved than
because of their technological complexity—and they didn't
last long. The same accumulator that could power a surface ship
for a week would support levitation spells of that level for less
than twenty-four hours, although freight pods were routinely
fitted with multiple accumulators to give them more endurance.
Even with the pods, though,
transporting the numbers of men mul Gurthak's message crystal
suggested were en route was going to be a massive undertaking.
And it was going to tie up an incredible number of transport
dragons. In fact, the availability of transports was probably going
to prove at least as big a limiting factor as the availability of
manpower, when all was said and done. Which probably explained
why mul Gurthak was busy gutting the air transport network for at
least half a dozen universes rearward from Erthos—thus
neatly illustrating one of the many unpleasant costs involved in
getting significant numbers of troops forward deployed in a hurry.
It explained Klian's rapidly
approaching problems, as well, because there was no provision in
mul Gurthak's orders for all of those transport dragons to turn
around and fly back to Erthos. Instead, he wanted them held at
Fort Rycharn, available to Two Thousand Harshu in the event that
military operations became necessary, after all. That, too, made
sense, Klian supposed, but Rycharn had never been intended to
support that many men and—even more difficult—
that many dragons for any length of time.
Fortunately, dragons were quite
willing to eat fish or whale meat, and the water between Fort
Rycharn and Fort Wyvern was just as rich with life as the
continent. The entire Fort Wyvern fishing fleet—such as it
was, and what there was of it—was already on its way
forward to help feed the dragons once they arrived. And, also
fortunately, it was going to take at least four waves to get all of
mul Gurthak's earmarked troop strength forward.
According to the two thousand's
tentative movement orders—which were undoubtedly
going to suffer considerable revision as the realities of moving
that many men impinged upon them—he'd have the first
two Air Force strikes and the first battalion of infantry at Fort
Rycharn within the next week. A strike was a standing formation
which consisted of three four-dragon flights (and why,
Klian wondered, not for the first time, can't those Air Force
pukes use the same names for their formations everyone else
uses?), which meant he was going to have to figure out
how to feed twenty-four battle dragons, with their notoriously
overactive metabolisms, in addition to all of the transports
necessary to get the rest of Harshu's force forward. Worse,
according to those same orders, mul Gurthak would have an entire
three-strike Air Force talon—thirty-six battle dragons, not
twenty-four—at Fort Rycharn within a month. In fact, he
might have as much as twice that many.
Feeding seventy-two battle
dragons and their supporting ground crews would be a gargantuan
task, all by itself. Adding in the two hundred or so transports mul
Gurthak was projecting (and their ground element), plus
the reconnaissance and strike gryphons, plus the fodder for
the unicorns and heavy cavalry mounts on the movement list, not
to mention all of the men he was going to have to feed, was only
going to make things incomparably worse. And the responsibility
for managing all of those "minor" housekeeping details was going
to land squarely on Sarr Klian's shoulders.
No wonder mul Gurthak is staying safely in Erthos! he
thought with another snort. He knows damned well what kind
of nightmare he's about to dump on me.
It was the first truly amusing
thought the five hundred had entertained since Skirvon and Dastiri
turned up in his office.
He didn't expect to have a great
many more of them over the next few weeks.
Chapter Forty-Four
"You look tired,"
Regiment-Captain Namir Velvelig observed dryly, tilting back his
head to regard the enormous young officer who'd just dismounted
from the magnificent blue roan Shikowr.
"Thank you, Sir," Platoon-
Captain chan Calirath replied with exquisite politeness.
"Somehow that had escaped my notice."
Velvelig's lips twitched. For the
hard-bitten Arpathian, that constituted the equivalent of anyone
else's deep belly laugh, and Prince Janaki smiled. He'd been
attached to Velvelig's command for just over six months before
being sent forward to New Uromath when Company-Captain
Halifu appealed for help covering the vast new frontiers the
Chalgyn Consortium had been so unexpectedly opening up back in
those ancient days—all of two months ago—before
everything had gone straight to hell. During that time, he'd
developed a deep respect, even admiration, for the shorter,
squarely built regiment-captain, and in turn, Velvelig had made it
clear that he intended to treat young Platoon-Captain chan
Calirath like any other junior
officer . . . within limits, of course.
"I didn't expect to see you back
so soon, Platoon-Captain," Velvelig said now, his voice lower, as
Janaki handed his reins to an orderly and stepped up onto the
wooden veranda which fronted the administrative block of Fort
Raylthar.
No, he reminded himself, it's Fort Ghartoun
now.
He'd noticed the new name on
the signboard outside the fort's main entrance, and he wondered
whose idea it had been to rename Raylthar. From what he knew of
Velvelig, he rather suspected what the answer was. The regiment-
captain was as immune to fear and as implacably determined as
any Arpathian stereotype, but there was a warm and caring human
being down inside all that armor.
The fort itself lay on the eastern
flank of New Ternathia's Sky Blood Mountains, barely ten miles
from the deep, beautiful waters of Snow Sapphire Lake and within
twenty miles of the legendary Sky Blood Lode, probably be
biggest silver deposit in history. The discovery of this portal was
going to make the Fairnos Consortium, which had first surveyed
it, unbelievably wealthy once the railhead steadily advancing from
Fort Salby reached it. Although the portal and the fort which
covered it were located at little more than forty-five hundred feet
of altitude, the Sky Bloods' higher peaks between Ghartoun and
Snow Sapphire rose to almost ten thousand snowcapped feet.
Their lower flanks were heavily forested, although Ghartoun itself
got precious little rain or snow, even in the winter, and the lower
mountains and foothills east of the fort were drier and far less
hospitable. Still, Janaki preferred Fort Ghartoun's normal climate
to the soggier environs of Company-Captain Halifu's post. This
late in the year, the temperature was dropping close to freezing at
night, but it was no more than pleasantly cool during the day, with
just enough nip to make a boy from Estafel feel refreshed and
vigorous. For the last two weeks, Janaki had been looking forward
to spending at least a day or so out on the lake, but Velvelig's
remark reminded him of why he'd really returned to Ghartoun.
"I didn't expect to be
back so soon, Sir," he said now, his expression turning grimmer.
"Then again, a lot of things no one expected have been happening
lately, haven't they?"
"That they have, Platoon-
Captain," Velvelig agreed. He looked up at Janaki for another few
seconds, then twitched his head at the admin block door. "Come
into my office."
"Yes, Sir."
Janaki followed Velvelig into
the administration building, down the short, rough-planked
corridor to the regiment-captain's office, and through its door. He
closed it behind himself and started to brace to attention, but
Velvelig shook his head impatiently.
"Forget that nonsense," he said
briskly. "Consider yourself already reported on-post."
"Yes, Sir. Thank you."
"Don't start thanking me yet,"
Velvelig snorted. Janaki quirked an eyebrow, and the regiment-
captain seated himself in the swivel chair behind his desk with a
grimace.
"May I ask why I
shouldn't thank you, Sir?" Janaki asked after a moment.
"Because I'm pretty sure you
were hoping to spend at least a day or two resting up before
heading on up-chain to Failcham."
"Ah." Janaki nodded slowly. "I
take it that's not going to happen, Sir?"
"You take it
correctly . . . Your Highness."
Both of Janaki's eyebrows went
up at that, and Velvelig leaned back in his chair and sighed.
"I know you specifically asked
not to receive any special treatment when you reported to me eight
months ago, Janaki," he said, "and overall, I thought you were
right. Still do, in fact. I'm not Ternathian myself, of course, but
I've always thought the Ternathian tradition that the heir to the
throne ought to have military experience—real
military experience, not just a token version of it—makes a
lot of sense. That's why I went ahead and deployed you forward to
New Uromath when Halifu needed reinforcements. But I'm sure
you're aware of how things have changed out here in the last
month or so."
He paused, his head cocked
slightly to one side, and Janaki shrugged.
"Of course I am, Sir," he said
quietly. "And I also understand why I was detailed to escort these
prisoners to the rear. I don't say I like it, but I understand
it. But if you'll pardon me for saying so, you sound as if you've
got something even more specific in mind."
"I do." Velvelig turned his chair
just far enough to one side to be able to gaze out his office
window at Fort Ghartoun's parade ground. "You don't have a
Voice assigned to your platoon, do you?" he asked.
"No, Sir." Janaki was a bit
puzzled by the question. "Company-Captain chan Halifu
considered sending one along with us, given the prisoners we're
escorting. But we're short along this entire chain, especially with
all the troop movements going on. Certainly too short to start
assigning Voices to mere platoons. Besides, the company-captain
knew Darcel Kinlafia was coming with us, so we were covered.
Until he . . . went on ahead, of
course."
"I know." Velvelig chuckled
slightly. "Kinlafia came through here a week and a half ago like
his horse's tail was on fire. For that matter, he looked like a man
whose arse was on fire, too! But he didn't even state to
soak his saddle sores." The regiment-captain appeared to be
studying something on the empty parade ground with great
intensity. "Seemed to be in quite hurry, now that I think about it.
Had a note from you, too, I believe."
"Yes, Sir. I, ah, felt it was
advisable to get him home to make a firsthand report as quickly as
possible."
"You did, did you?" Velvelig
glanced back at the crown prince. "Well, maybe you were right
about that. But my point is that you've been more or less out of
communication since you left Brithik."
"Yes, Sir."
The long overland march from
Fort Brithik had taken the next best thing to three weeks. He'd
been able to make better time (until, at least, he'd hit the
mountains between Brithik and Salby) after leaving the majority
of his wounded prisoners, in no small part because there were
actual roads between Brithik and Fort Ghartoun. Several small
towns—little more than a handful of roughly constructed
buildings clustered around Portal Authority remount stations and
Voice relay posts—had been strung along those roads like
beads when Janaki and his platoon originally deployed forward
from Fort Raylthar. On the journey back, many of them had been
deserted, except for the Voices and Authority personnel still
manning the remount stations.
Although he'd left the majority
of the wounded at Brithik, he was still accompanied by half a
dozen ambulances. It was far simpler to load the prisoners onto
the vehicles rather than try to find individual mounts for
them . . . and accept the additional
security problems which would have gone with it. A single
mounted Marine with a Model 10 at the ready could guard an
entire ambulance full of prisoners quite handily, and none of them
was in the position to make an individual break for freedom. And,
because he'd had to bring the ambulances along anyway, he'd also
brought along Commander of One Hundred Thalmayr.
He hadn't wanted to do that, for
several reasons. One was the fact that he continued to hold the
idiotic Arcanan officer responsible for the massacre of Thalmayr's
own command. Janaki had had more time now to think over what
Thalmayr had done, and the more he'd thought about it, even after
allowing for the unknown nature of Company-Captain chan Tesh's
weapons, the stupider he'd realized the man had to be. But he was
honest enough to admit that the main reason was that Thalmayr
reminded him entirely too much of a zombie in his present state.
Petty Captain Yar had, indeed, "shut him down" completely, and
Janaki hadn't made sufficient allowance for
how . . . creepy he was going to find
that totally expressionless, blank-eyed face whenever he was
forced to look at it.
Unfortunately, Petty Captain
chan Rodair, the Fort Brithik Healer, had insisted that Thalmayr be
taken on to what had been been Fort Raylthar. From his own
examination of the captured Arcanan officer, chan Rodair believed
that Thalmayr's paralysis might be the result of pressure on his
spinal cord, rather than actual damage to the cord itself. If that
were the case, then surgical intervention might restore the
Arcanan's mobility, but chan Rodair wasn't trained as a surgeon.
Company-Captain Golvar Silkash, Velvelig's post Healer, was
a school-trained surgeon, and a good one. In addition,
Silkash's assistant, Petty Captain Tobis Makree, was not only a
trained surgeon in his own right, but also a powerfully Talented
Healer. Given that—and especially given Makree's unusual
combination of skills and Talent—chan Rodair had argued
that Thalmayr's best chance for an actual recovery lay at Fort
Raylthar.
Personally, Janaki had decided
that he didn't give much of a damn one way or the other whether
or not Hadrign Thalmayr ever walked again. He didn't much like
admitting that, but there was no point lying to himself about it.
And whether he cared about it or not didn't affect his duty to see to
it that the man had the best chance for recovery he could provide,
even if rank stupidity was one of the two most unforgivable sins
of which any officer could be guilty. So, rather against his will,
he'd delivered Thalmayr to the renamed Fort Ghartoun.
"I did manage to check in once,
about . . . eighteen days ago, Sir," he
said now. "May I ask why the fact that I couldn't do so more
frequently is significant?"
"Because," Velvelig said with a
crooked smile, "about twelve days ago, your father stood
up on his hind legs at the Conclave and informed the assembled
heads of state of Sharona that they were sitting there with their
thumbs up their arses while people were being shot at out here.
He, ah, suggested that they might have better things to do
than debate fishing rights on Sharona. Suggested it rather
forcefully, as a matter of fact. If you'd care to hear what he
had to say for yourself, I believe my senior Voice could replay the
Voice broadcast of the session for you."
"Oh . . .
my," Janaki said after a moment, and, Arpathian impassivity or no,
this time Velvelig laughed out loud at the crown prince's
expression.
"I'd heard rumors about the
Emperor's temper before," the regiment-captain said, shaking his
head, once he'd stopped laughing. "Apparently they actually fell
short of the reality."
"Father is one of the most
patient people in the universe . . . as
long as the people around him are at least trying to do their jobs,"
Janaki replied. "He drives himself harder than he ever drives
anyone else, too. But may the gods help anyone he thinks is
shirking his responsibilities to others."
"That's about what I'd gathered.
In this case, according to the SUNN reports we've been getting
over the Voicenet, he was more than justified. In fact, most of the
Conclave seemed to feel that way. Which explains why he's been
nominated as the first planetary emperor of Sharona."
For a moment, Janaki just
looked at the regiment-captain. He'd known from the beginning
that his father and his family were going to have a prominent part
to play in whatever decisions the Conclave ever came to, but he'd
never expected anything remotely like what Velvelig appeared to
be suggesting.
For several seconds, it simply
refused to sink in. Then it did, and his first reaction was that he
couldn't think of anyone on Sharona who could possibly do the
job better than Zindel chan Calirath. His second reaction was that
it had been extraordinarily thick with it at him not to see this
coming. And his third reaction was a stab of sheer,
unmitigated terror as he realized who would someday have to
succeed his father in that role, if it was confirmed.
Which, he thought a moment later, might just explain
why I wasn't about to let myself think about this
particular possibility!
Velvelig watched the
implications sink home in the broad-shouldered youngster sitting
across his desk from him, and he was impressed by what he saw.
Very few people would have realized what the sudden, slight
widening of Janaki chan Calirath's eyes represented. Velvelig did,
and he watched those broad shoulders come a fraction of an inch
further back as Janaki's spine straightened and he drew a deep
breath.
"That's . . .
quite a bit to take in, Sir," he said.
"Oh, it gets even better,"
Velvelig assured him. "You see, there were two candidates for the
nomination. Your father . . . and
Chava Busar."
The eyes which had widened a
moment before abruptly narrowed and went very cold, Velvelig
observed. That, too, pleased him immensely. There were very few
Arpathian septs which didn't have at least one bone to pick with
Emperor Chava, and Velvelig's sept—what was left of
it—nursed long and homicidal memories of the debt it
owed the Busar Dynasty. Which, although he'd never actually
explained it to Janaki, was one of the reasons Namir Velvelig had
been so pleased when Platoon-Captain chan Calirath reported to
him for duty.
"I can see where that could get
ugly, Sir," Janaki said after a moment. "Still, I suppose it was
inevitable. Who else could possibly put together an opposition
candidacy?"
"It wasn't much of a 'candidacy,'"
Velvelig demurred. "As nearly as I can tell from the reports we've
gotten so far—and remember, they're a week old—
your father buried him in the voting. It wasn't even close.
Unfortunately, Chava's refused to accept that the Conclave's
decision is binding upon him. Which, since the Conclave is a
purely voluntary association, is probably a not unreasonable
position," the regiment-captain conceded unwillingly.
"He's flatly refused to accept the
outcome of the vote, then?"
"No, not quite. But he's put
forward an incredible shopping list of demands which he insists
have to be met before he'll even contemplate the possibility of
'surrendering Uromathia's sacred sovereignty to a foreign crown.'"
The regiment-captain made a face. "The Conclave is considering
those demands now. Personally, I don't see any way he can
genuinely expect to get ninety-nine percent of them, but he seems
perfectly prepared to go on arguing about them forever."
"Which means he is
going to get at least some of them," Janaki said grimly. "He may be willing to go on burying his head in the sand while the
tide comes in, and he may be perfectly willing for everyone else to
drown with him rather than give in, but the rest of the Conclave
isn't going to be that capricious."
"That's my reading of the
situation, too," Velvelig agreed. "Since the only two options are to
give him at least some of what he wants or to start a second war
between Uromathia and the rest of the planet to force him to
submit, I'm guessing he'll probably end up settling for two or three
concessions. Which, I'm sure I hardly need to point out to you, are
going to be the ones he figures are best calculated to hamstring
your father's ultimate authority over him."
Janaki nodded, and Velvelig
shrugged.
"That's why you're not going to
get a rest stop here after all, Janaki," he said quietly. "I'll take the
rest of the wounded off your hands, and we'll provide you with
additional teams for your ambulances so that you can make better
time with the unwounded prisoners, but I want you back in
Sharona as quickly as I can get you there. Whatever Chava's up to,
your father doesn't need his heir universes away at a time like this.
In fact," he looked sympathetically at the younger man, "I'm afraid
your days in uniform are over. We can't afford to have anything
happen to you now."
Janaki wanted to protest. In fact,
he started to, then stopped as an echo of the Glimpse he'd had of
Kinlafia and Andrin rippled through the back of his mind. It
remained frustratingly unclear—probably because he
himself wasn't in it—but something about what Velvelig
had just said had waked that echo. He knew that much, even if he
had no idea at all what it had been. And whatever it was, Velvelig
was undoubtedly correct. What had been an acceptable risk in
peacetime for the heir to the Winged Crown was not an
acceptable risk in wartime for the man who might be about to
become heir to the crown of all Sharona.
"I understand, Sir," he said
finally, and Velvelig nodded in approval. He'd seen the protests
fluttering in the backs of Janaki's eyes, and he'd also seen the
Calirath sense of duty which kept those protests silent.
"I know you do," the regiment-
captain said quietly. "And for what it's worth—and it may
not feel like it's worth very much at this particular
moment—I think it's a damned shame. About the uniform, I
mean. There are some people who simply wear it without ever
learning what it really means. You already knew that when you
arrived. I think you would have been one of the really good ones."
"Actually, that means quite a lot
coming from you, Sir," Janaki replied. He inhaled again, then
stood. "With your permission, Sir, I'd better go and alert the
Platoon that we won't be staying over after all. At least everyone
ought to have time to get a hot bath and a sitdown meal in a
proper mess hall before we hit the road again."
"Of course." Velvelig stood as
well, then reached across the desk to offer his right hand. "Good
luck, Your Highness. And I hope you won't object if a heathen
Arpathian spends the odd night hour praying for you and your
father." He smiled crookedly as the prince clasped his hand firmly.
"After all, it could hardly hurt, could it?"
Petty Armsman Harth Loumas
sat in the hot patch of shade cast by the small canvas tarp and tried
to ignore the insects whining around his ears. He told himself that,
despite the bugs' irritation quotient, he couldn't really object to his
present duty. Or, he shouldn't, anyway; obviously he
could, because he was. All the same, he knew that most of his
fellow PAAF troopers would willingly have exchanged places
with him. For one thing, he did get to sit in the shade, which was
more than they got to do. He knew that, and in an intellectual sort
of way, he actually agreed. But that wasn't exactly the same thing
as saying that he actively enjoyed sitting here sweating.
He checked his watch, then
closed his eyes again and reached out with his Talent. Loumas had
extremely good range for a Plotter, but he was still limited to no
more than four miles, and he had to concentrate hard, at any range
beyond about two miles, if he wanted to separate human life
essences from those of other animals. It took him a good twenty
minutes to sweep the total area he could See from his present
location, and the portal itself created a huge blind spot in his
coverage. Since no Talent could operate through a portal, he had
to move physically around to its far aspect in this bug-infested
swamp if he wanted to See around it. That was why he was parked
at one end of the portal with Tairsal chan Synarch, Company-
Captain chan Tesh's senior Flicker. They were outside both the
sandbagged outer picket posts and the main defensive position
chan Tesh had thrown up on the Hell's Gate side of the portal, but
they could shift to the other aspect of the portal by simply walking
around it in this universe, which took all of fifteen minutes.
It also meant that if anything did
turn up, chan Synarch could nip around to the Hell's Gate side of
the portal and Flick a message straight back to chan Tesh and
Company-Captain Halifu in a handful of seconds.
Loumas and chan Synarch
changed positions every hour on the hour, moving around to the
far aspect, in order to maintain a three hundred sixty-degree watch.
It was, quite frankly, boring as hell, but it was also necessary. No
one had any idea where the enemy troops—the "Arcanans,"
as they called themselves—had come from. Platoon-
Captain Arthag had led sweeps a full fifteen miles out in every
direction without finding any sign of human habitation. He'd lost
one man and two horses to the local crocodiles in the process, and
Company-Captain chan Tesh had decided there was no point in
sweeping further out. No officer worth his uniform liked losing
men for no return, and if there'd been any evidence of where these
people had come from, or how they'd gotten here, some indication
of it should have turned up inside that thirty-mile circle. Besides,
he hadn't wanted Arthag and any of his men that far out from the
field fortifications he'd thrown up here at the portal itself.
Frankly, Loumas was beginning
to wonder if there might actually be anything to the wild rumors
about flying beasts. He wasn't certain where they'd started. The
Arcanan prisoners had all been sent further back, safely beyond the
possibility of any attempt to rescue them. Loumas would have
preferred for at least some of them to have been kept closer to
hand, where the local garrison might have been able to begin
learning their language and possibly conduct some useful
interrogations. On the other hand, he understood just how vital an
intelligence resource those prisoners were, and he could hardly
blame Company-Captain chan Tesh or Company-Captain Halifu
for wanting to make sure nothing happened to them.
But if none of the prisoners had
been spreading ridiculous stories about huge, winged creatures,
Loumas had no idea where they might have come from.
Probably a combination of sheer boredom
and the fact that we don't know diddily about these
people—except that they've got some fucking dangerous
weapons!
He snorted in what he wanted to
be amusement but which was tinged with something entirely too
much like fear for comfort. He reminded himself that the other
side obviously didn't know anything more about Sharona and the
capabilities of Sharonian weapons than he did about their
weapons. The way they'd tried to defend this very portal was proof
enough of that! But that didn't make him—or anyone
else—any happier about confronting the completely
unknown, and the eerie way these people had somehow managed
to establish their base camp here without anything remotely like
roads or leaving a single boat behind didn't make it any better.
Well, at least they won't be sneaking up on us, he told
himself firmly. It may be boring, but I'm damned sure
not—
His thoughts froze and he
stiffened, focusing in tightly. Then he swore aloud.
Damn!
I wish we had a decent Distance Viewer! he
thought.
His Talent would let him spot
living creatures, but what he Saw of them was
always . . . fuzzy. The creatures
themselves were clear enough, but exactly what they might be
doing, or exactly what their surroundings were, was often almost
impossible to discern. Half the time, he had to extrapolate, and
like most Plotters, he was fairly good at that. But extrapolation
depended on some sort of familiarity with what the people he was
Plotting were likely to be doing, and who the hells knew what
these people were likely to be up to? If he'd had a Distance
Viewer to team with, he'd have been able to coach the other Talent
into finding the proper distance and bearing, and the Distance
Viewer would have been able to See exactly what was happening.
Loumas closed his eyes,
concentrating hard, then punched chan Synarch's shoulder.
"Huh?" The wiry Marine snorted
awake. His head snapped up, and his eyes cleared almost instantly
as he looked a question at Loumas.
"We've got an incoming
contact," Loumas said crisply. "I think it's a small boat, headed in
from the east."
chan Synarch nodded sharply and
reached into the cargo pocket on his right thigh and extracted a pad
of paper and pencil.
"Shoot," he said tersely, pencil
poised.
"It's not as clear as I'd like,"
Loumas admitted, knowing chan Synarch would understand why
that was. "They're about four miles out. I can't get much of a feel
for the boat, but it's moving damned fast—I make it
at least twenty-five or thirty miles an hour, whatever that is in the
'knots' or whatever it is you Ternathian swabbies use."
The two of them grinned tensely
at each other, and he continued.
"There's three of them. One of
them's in some kind of uniform, but it doesn't look like anything
we saw here. I don't think he's wearing a helmet, and his tunic or
jacket is red, not the camouflage pattern they had." His hand
stabbed in the direction of the wrecked Arcanan fortifications and
camp. "I think the other two are in civilian clothes. Doesn't look
like any uniform I ever heard of, and they aren't dressed alike. I
don't See any weapons on any of them. None of those tube things,
and no crossbows anywhere I can See, either." Loumas grimaced.
"A Distance Viewer could probably tell us more, but that's all I've
got right now."
"Understood." chan Synarch had
been writing quickly and clearly in the shorthand every Flicker was
trained to use while Loumas talked. Now he read back what he'd
written, and Loumas listened carefully, then nodded.
"That's it," he agreed.
"Then I'd better get it off," chan
Synarch said. He ripped off the sheet on which he'd written, folded
it, put it into one of the metal carrier cartridges on his belt, and
trotted briskly around the edge of the portal until he crossed over
into the cool, forested depths of Hell's Gate and had a clear line of
sight to Company-Captain chan Tesh's HQ bunker. As soon as he
did, he Flicked the message cartridge directly to the company-
captain's orderly.
"Sent," he reported laconically to
Loumas as he jogged back around to the swamp side, and the
Plotter nodded. He was still tracking the incoming boat. In the
three minutes it had taken him and chan Synarch to get the
message off, the boat had covered almost another mile and a half.
It was going to be here in another three minutes—four,
tops—and—
A bugle awoke suddenly from
the far side of the portal, sounding the "Stand-To," and Loumas
exhaled the breath he hadn't realized he was holding. He watched
men double-timing towards their assigned actions stations, and his
lips skinned back from his teeth in a tight smile.
I might have missed some kind of super weapon in their
frigging boat, he thought, but they aren't going to take us
by surprise with whatever it is.
Chapter Forty-Five
Balkar chan Tesh lowered his
field glasses with a thoughtful frown. He'd gotten to Platoon-
Captain Parai chan Dersal's forward observation post from the
Hell's Gate side of the portal while the boat Loumas had detected
was still a good mile out. He'd stood beside the Marine and
watched it during its final approach, and he hoped his perplexity
was less apparent to his men than it was to him.
How the hell do they make the thing move? he wondered.
There was no sail, no oars, no paddle, and certainly no steam
launch's tall spindly funnel or plume of smoke. Yet the
boat—not more than fifteen feet long, at most—
came sliding through the deeper channels of the swamp fast
enough that its stern squatted and its bow planed across the water.
It's not natural . . . and
isn't that a silly thing to be thinking after everything that's
already happened out here?
He slowly and deliberately cased
the field glasses, then folded his arms and stood waiting while the
boat slowed abruptly as it slid the last few dozen yards to the
raised hillock before the portal.
As Loumas had reported, there
were three men in it. Two of them wore what was obviously
civilian clothing of some sort, although—not
surprisingly—chan Tesh had never seen garments cut that
way. They were much more tightly tailored, more formfitting, than
any current Sharonian fashion, and the civilian jackets were long-
tailed, with broad, cutaway lapels and outsized silver buttons.
Both jackets were dark colored—the larger, chestnut-haired
fellow in the bow, who looked to be the older of the two, wore
one that was the color of port wine, while the younger,
Uromathian-looking one on the midships thwart wore one of a
dark, rich green—but the tight trousers were light-colored,
and tucked into pointy-toed dress boots which rose to midcalf. All
in all, chan Tesh couldn't imagine a less practical outfit for wading
around in swamps.
The man sitting in the stern of
the boat and managing the simple rudder—at least I
know what that's for, chan Tesh thought
wryly—was obviously in uniform, although as Loumas had
already informed him, it didn't match anything they'd seen yet.
There was something about him which suggested a
noncommissioned officer, chan Tesh decided, and his red jersey-
like tunic reminded the company-captain vaguely of naval
uniform, for some reason. Possibly, he thought, because the man
seemed to be doing what one might expect a sailor to do.
The boat drifted gently and
silently through the reeds in the shallower water, then nosed into
the mud with a soft slosh of swamp water and a muddy slurp. Its
occupants sat very still, their hands in plain sight. Even the man at
the rudder was very careful to make no sudden moves as he
released the tiller bar and placed his open hands palm-down on his
thighs, and chan Tesh smiled humorlessly at the sight. He'd be
doing exactly the same thing if twenty Model 10 rifles and at least
one machine-gun (that he could see) was aimed at him.
The older of the two civilians
had busy eyes, chan Tesh observed. They swept back and forth
across the waiting Sharonians, and the company-captain had the
distinct impression that they weren't missing much. Then the
moving eyes seemed to narrow slightly as they settled on chan
Tesh himself.
"Hello!" the stranger said, in
oddly accented but perfectly intelligible Ternathian. "We come
talk?"
chan Tesh stiffened. Despite
everything, he was shocked to be addressed in his native tongue,
and he hoped his astonishment didn't show. Nor was he the only
one who reacted strongly. He heard someone inhale sharply behind
him, and then someone else snarled in what he obviously thought
was a whisper, "Those bastards have a live prisoner!"
The talkative civilian started to
stand up in the boat, then froze as half a dozen rifles tracked him.
He obviously knew what the weapons were, and he swallowed
hard, sweating more heavily than the swampy heat alone could
explain. But he didn't panic; chan Tesh had to give him that much.
"No shoot," he said in a
commendably level voice. "We talk, please? Much killing mistake.
You send word? Say we talk. Important."
"You think they really want to
parley, Sir?" chan Dersal said softly behind chan Tesh.
"I'd sooner parley with a fucking
cobra!" Platoon-Captain chan Talmarha half-snarled, and the
Marine grunted.
"We hit them hard, Morek," chan
Dersal pointed out to chan Tesh's mortar commander. "Twice. In
their shoes, I'd think about talking truce. Hard."
chan Tesh made a very slight
gesture with his right hand, and the two platoon-captains shut up
instantly. The company-captain gazed back at the Arcanan in
silence for several seconds. Although he'd cut off the conversation
behind him, he realized that he found himself favoring chan
Talmarha's position.
Unfortunately . . .
"Master-Armsman chan
Kormai," he said quietly.
"Yes, Sir?" his senior
noncommissioned officer replied from behind his right shoulder.
Frai chan Kormai was a typical Ternathian, unlike chan Tesh. He
was a good foot taller than the company-captain, with shoulders
broader than an icebox, and if he carried more than two ounces of
excess weight anywhere about his person, chan Tesh had never
noticed them. The master-armsman had enlisted in the Imperial
Ternathian Army when he was sixteen, and he would be
celebrating his forty-sixth birthday in two months. Over those
thirty years he'd seen just about everything, and chan Tesh found
his unflappable professionalism more comforting than he cared to
admit. Especially at this moment.
"I think we need to make certain
these . . . gentlemen aren't carrying
anything we'd prefer for them not to be carrying, Master-
Armsman."
"Understood, Sir." chan
Kormai's cool green eyes surveyed the boat. "You want it polite,
or thorough, Sir?"
"After what they've already done,
I think I can stand it if their feelings get a little bruised, Master
Armsman," chan Tesh said dryly. "Let's just try not to leave too
many physical bruises, shall we?"
"I think we can handle that, Sir."
"Good." chan Tesh looked back
at the man in the boat. "We'll talk," he said, speaking slowly and
carefully and wondering how much the other fellow actually
understood. "First, though, we're going to take a few precautions."
"'Pre-cautions?'" the civilian
repeated, obviously not understanding the word.
"First we search you," chan Tesh
told him, and pantomimed slapping his own pockets with his
hands. The civilian cocked his head to one side for a moment, then
grimaced.
"Understand," he said in less than
enthralled tones. "You—" He paused again, obviously
trying to find the word he wanted, then used one in his own
language. chan Tesh looked politely blank, and the civilian puffed
out his cheeks in apparent frustration. Then he twitched his
shoulders in an obvious shrug and said something to his
companions. chan Tesh recognized the language their prisoners
had spoken, but he hadn't had the opportunity to learn to
understand it, and so he simply waited until the civilian turned
back to him.
"Understand 'precautions,'" he
said, speaking the new word carefully.
"Good," chan Tesh said, and
nodded to chan Kormai.
The master-armsman had been
quietly picking his assistants while the company-captain explained
to the ignorant foreigner. Now he moved forward, followed by
four more men. All of them were Marines, chan Tesh noted, and
they were also older, more experienced men.
"Get out of the boat," chan
Kormai told the talkative civilian, speaking as slowly and
carefully as chan Tesh had. "Slowly. Put your hands like this."
He demonstrated lacing his
fingers together behind his head, and this time a flash of anger
showed in the civilian's eyes. That was fine with chan Tesh.
Frankly, he didn't give a damn how angry they got.
The younger civilian said
something sharp in their own language, but his superior shook his
head. Then, as chan Kormai had instructed him, he stepped slowly
and carefully ashore. His boots sank to the ankle in the mud, and
he grimaced in obvious distaste as suction tried to pull them off
his feet. He managed to reach solider ground without losing them,
then put his hands behind his head as chan Kormai had
demonstrated.
The master-armsman stepped
around behind him, and the civilian's jaw set hard as the noncom
proceeded to search him very thoroughly, indeed. chan Tesh was
impressed as the master-armsman demonstrated a previously
unsuspected talent. The company-captain had seen very few
police—civilian or military—who could have
frisked a man so competently . . . and
thoroughly. chan Kormai wasn't especially gentle about it, either,
although it was obvious to chan Tesh that he wasn't being
deliberately rougher than he had to be, and the civilian winced
once or twice. By the time the master-armsman was through,
however, it was quite obvious that the civilian couldn't have
anything hidden away outside a body cavity.
chan Tesh was tempted to insist
that those be searched, as well, given the bizarre things of
which these people appeared to be capable. There were limits to
even his paranoia, however, he decided. If these people were
equipped with some sort of super weapon so small that it could be
hidden someplace like that, then they had no need to send anyone
out to talk to them in the first place. Besides, if this really was an
effort to establish some sort of diplomatic contact, there was
probably some professional code of conduct which ought to be
followed. He didn't have a clue what it might insist that he do, but
he was pretty sure it existed and that ordering a foreign envoy to
bend over and spread his cheeks wasn't very high on the list of
approved greetings.
chan Kormai finished and stood
back. The civilian turned to face him with what struck chan Tesh
as commendable aplomb, and raised his eyebrows.
"Finished," the master-armsman
told him, and pantomimed lowering his hands.
"Are satisfied?"
"For
now . . . sir," chan Kormai replied,
and gestured for the man to move further away from the water.
Two of the master-armsman's Marines kept a careful eye on the
civilian without being particularly unobtrusive about it, and chan
Kormai turned to the second civilian.
His search was just as thorough
this time, and the younger man lacked his older companion's self-
control. His face flushed with anger, and his jaw muscles bunched
in obvious humiliation as he was searched. chan Kormai was no
rougher than he'd been with the first man, but neither was he any
gentler, and it was obvious that the ire in the younger civilian's eye
left him totally unmoved.
"Finished," he said eventually,
for the second time. The younger man wasted no effort on
conversation. He simply stamped across the damp ground to his
companion, and chan Kormai glanced at chan Tesh. There was a
slight, undeniable twinkle in the master-armsman's eyes, the
company-captain observed, and felt his own lips twitch as they
tried to smile.
The man who'd managed the
steering on the way in was calmer and more phlegmatic about it
than either of the two civilians had been. Unlike them—or,
unlike the younger of them, at least—he clearly understood
there was nothing personal about it, which suggested to chan Tesh
that his original estimate that the man was a long-term noncom
had probably been correct.
Once all three of the Arcanans
were safely ashore under the watchful eye of chan Kormai's
Marines, the master-armsman turned to the boat itself. As with his
search of the passengers, he took his time, proceeding with
methodical thoroughness.
Each of the civilians had come
equipped with what was obviously a briefcase, and chan Kormai
went through both of them carefully. He took pains not to damage
or disorder any of the indecipherable documents he found inside
them, but he examined each folder individually. Then he paused,
halfway through searching the first case, and held something up.
"Look at this, Sir," he said to
chan Tesh.
The company-captain crossed to
the boat and frowned as the master-armsman held out a rock. That
was certainly what it looked like, anyway. A big chunk of clear
quartz crystal, larger than chan Tesh's fist. For that matter, it was
larger than chan Kormai's fist, which took considerably
more doing.
"What do you make of it, Sir?"
chan Kormai asked as chan Tesh accepted it just a bit gingerly. It
wasn't quartz after all, he decided. It was too heavy, too dense, for
that. In fact—
"Well, Master-Armsman," he
said dryly after a moment, "I doubt they brought it along just to
use as a paperweight. It reminds me of the stuff those artillery
pieces of theirs are made of, which suggests at least a few
unpleasant possibilities, doesn't it?" He grimaced. "It's not the
same thing—not quite. But it's got that
same . . . feel to it."
"I think you're right, Sir.
And—" chan Kormai's eyes flicked sideways at the envoys,
if that was what they were "—they're watching you like
hawks."
"Really?" chan Tesh murmured,
never looking up from the piece of crystal as he rotated his wrist
to catch the hot sunlight on its polished surface. "Do they look
nervous, Frai?"
"Don't know as I'd call it
'nervous,' Sir," the master-armsman replied softly. "Curious,
though. And maybe a little worried. Hard to say. But I'd
say they're at least as curious about your reaction to it as we are
about what the hell it is."
chan Tesh snorted in amusement.
He wondered how the Arcanans would react if he suddenly tossed
the piece of not-rock as far out into the swamp as he could. He
was actually quite tempted to do just that, if only to see how they
responded. But he didn't. Instead, he handed it back to chan
Kormai.
"Put it back in the bag," he said.
"And I'll bet you you'll find another one in the other briefcase."
"Sorry, Sir. I don't take sucker
bets—even from officers."
As both of them had expected,
there was, indeed, a second, almost identical crystal in the other
briefcase. Those two enigmatic artifacts made chan Tesh a bit
nervous—more nervous than he wanted to let on, at any
rate—and he carefully didn't immediately return the
briefcases to their owners. Instead, he set them to one side while
chan Kormai finished with the boat.
In addition to the briefcases,
there were three canvas knapsacks which contained food and water
and what looked—and smelled—like some sort of
insect repellent. Aside from what were obviously eating utensils,
there was nothing even remotely resembling a blade or any other
recognizable weapon.
Once the boat had been emptied,
chan Kormai waved a half-dozen more troopers forward and had it
hauled completely out of the water. chan Tesh wasn't sure whether
the master-armsman was taking caution to its logical conclusion,
or whether he was simply as curious as chan Tesh himself about
how they'd made the boat move. Whatever it was, neither of them
found his question answered. There was nothing at all out of the
ordinary about the boat, aside from the fact that it was obviously
designed for a higher rate of speed than most boats its size which
chan Tesh had ever seen before. Well, nothing besides that and the
small, dense, glittering block of crystal fastened to its keel near the
stern.
Unlike the lumps of not-quartz
in the briefcases, the block clearly was made of exactly the
same material as the rod-like weapons they'd captured from the
other side and the perplexing bits and pieces Soral Hilovar and
Nolis Parcanthi had turned up. Which clearly suggested that it was
the source of the boat's motive power. It just didn't do a thing to
explain how it provided that power.
Finally, chan Kormai
straightened with a reasonably satisfied expression.
"That's it, Sir," he said. "Aside
from those rock-things, and this," he waved at the glittering block,
"I don't see anything they could be planning on using as some sort
of weapon."
"I just wish we knew whether or
not they were weapons," chan Tesh said dryly, and the
master armsman-shrugged.
"If you want, Sir, I'll see how
this block stands up to a forty-six," he said, tapping the butt of the
Halanch and Welnahr holstered at his hip.
"And would you be willing to
fire at the fuse of a twelve-inch naval shell, Master-Armsman?"
chan Tesh inquired in an interested tone.
"Depends, Sir," chan Kormai
replied with a slow grin. "Wouldn't be willing if it were a
Ternathian shell, but if it was one of those Uromathian pieces of
shit, I might take a chance."
"Well, I don't think we'll do that
this time," chan Tesh told him.
"Yes, Sir. In that case, begging
the Company-Captain's pardon, but what are we going to
do with them?"
"Now that, Master-Armsman, is
the pressing question, isn't it?"
* * *
"I'm going to get that bastard,"
Uthik Dastiri muttered, glaring at the big, red-haired Sharonian
who'd search them.
His voice was soft, but he was
unable to suppress the bitter hatred in its depths. Rithmar Skirvon
understood his reaction, although he didn't share it. After all, he'd
understood the reason for the search, as well, and he couldn't hold
it against the soldier. It hadn't been personal, merely professional,
which was obviously something Dastiri hadn't quite grasped yet.
But personal or not, it had been brutally thorough, and because
Skirvon understood Dastiri's distress he only shrugged and
refrained from reprimanding him for his anger.
"I've had warmer welcomes in
my life," he observed instead.
"Is that all you've got to say?"
Dastiri demanded, his face heating, and Skirvon patted his
shoulder.
"I understand you're a little
upset, and I can't blame you for that. But remember this—
the longer you hold onto your anger, the longer you'll spend at a
disadvantage in this situation. The angrier you are, the less clearly
you'll be able to see or think, notice important details about these
people."
"How can you be so calm about
it?" Dastiri asked, his expression wavering between contrition and
bitter hatred. "When he shoved—"
"He was doing his job, Uthik,"
Skirvon said gently but firmly. "In his boots, I'd have done exactly
the same thing, for exactly the same reasons."
The younger diplomat chewed
on that in silence for several uncomfortable moments. Then,
finally, he sighed.
"I'll try to remember that,
Rithmar. But as Torkash is my witness, I'd sooner put an arbalest
bolt between his eyes than smile at that bastard for any
reason."
"Yes," Skirvon said dryly. "I
gathered that."
The older diplomat started to say
something more, then changed his mind. There wasn't much point,
at this stage, and Dastiri had to learn someday. In the meantime, he
had other things to think about.
They'd been careful in their
approach to deny the Sharonians any additional militarily useful
information. Including, especially, any hint of the existence or
capabilities of their own dragons. It was always possible, perhaps
even probable, that the Arcanan prisoners these people had taken
had already revealed the existence of the beasts, but there was no
point in giving the other side any better feel for what they could
do. So Five Hundred Klian had ordered the transport dragon to fly
them and their boat to within forty miles of the swamp portal.
They'd made the rest of the trip the hard way, and Skirvon devoutly
hoped that the Sharonians would be thinking solely in terms of
other boats for the future.
There wasn't anything else he
could do about that at this point, so he'd concentrated on the
Sharonians' reaction to his and Dastiri's PCs. Their curiosity had
been obvious to someone with Skirvon's training, although he
wasn't prepared yet to venture a guess as to exactly what had
spawned their curiosity. It was always possible, he supposed, that
Olderhan and Kelbryan's preposterous theories about a civilization
which didn't use magic at all were accurate, but that still seemed
so—
His thought broke off in mid-
sentence as the man who was clearly these people's commanding
officer said something to the man—probably a chief sword
or something of the sort, Skirvon had decided—who'd
conducted the search. The hulking noncom said something back,
then the officer nodded, turned, and walked across to Skirvon.
"I am Company-Captain Balkar
chan Tesh," he said. "Who are you, and what do you want?"
Well, Skirvon thought. That's certainly blunt and to
the point.
"Rithmar Skirvon," he said,
speaking slowly and carefully. Then he introduced Dastiri, as well.
chan Tesh—whose name
indicated he was Ternathian, according to the information
Magister Kelbryan had assembled for them—didn't look
particularly happy to see them. His expression was controlled, but
Skirvon had been a diplomat for a long time. He didn't need any
"Talent" to recognize the anger crackling around in the back of
chan Tesh's outwardly calm eyes.
"How did you learn Ternathian?"
the company-captain demanded, as soon as the introductions were
over, and Skirvon nodded mentally. He'd been reasonably certain
that was going to be the first question, and he'd prepared his
answer carefully.
"One person live. Short time," he
said. "Bad hurt. Spoke words, recorded. Try to save, but Arcanan
healer die in fight. Long days to new healer. Many, many days. Bad
hurt. Talk words, but not live. Die before see healer," he ended
sorrowfully. "Arcanan grief. We talk?"
chan Tesh's expression never
wavered, but his eyes were cold, suspicious.
"Who was it?" he asked. "Who
survived?"
Skirvon and Dastiri had argued
repeatedly over how to address that particular point. Thanks to the
girl, Shaylar, they had a complete list of names for the dead crew,
not that he intended to admit that, even if this chan Tesh held him
over hot coals. But they did know everyone's names, and they even
knew which men she'd personally seen die. The Sharonians would
have that same list, as well, since the little bitch had sent out her
report—her visual report, no less!—right in
the middle of the fighting.
Dastiri had wanted to select a
name from the list of Sharonian men Shaylar hadn't seen die,
rather than admit that she herself had survived. Skirvon had
waffled back and forth over that choice, but he'd finally decided
that they couldn't afford to take chances, given the number of
Arcanan soldiers these people had taken prisoner. They'd had the
survivors of Olderhan's company in custody for a month now, and
if they'd had another of those damned "Voices" available to help
interrogate them, gods alone knew how much they'd managed to
learn. Shaylar had insisted she couldn't "read minds," and she
might even have been telling the truth.
However . . .
Skirvon found it disturbing that
both survivors from a crew as small as the one Olderhan
had encountered had "Talents" of the mind. They weren't even the
same Talents, for that matter, which meant there was no way to
know what else these people could do with their minds. Skirvon
wasn't quite willing to risk everything by getting himself
caught in an easily detectable lie this early in the negotiations, so
he'd decided to play the hand cautiously.
"Arcana much, much grief," he
said sadly. "Girl bad hurt. Try hard to go healer. Far, far walk. She
die," he added, and actually managed to summon a few tears.
"Shaylar?" Shock
exploded in chan Tesh's face. The man's hand dropped to the butt
of the weapon—the "pistol"—holstered at his side,
and his fingers curled around the polished wooden grip. "Shaylar
survived? And you let her die?"
The sudden violence seething in
chan Tesh's eyes was a terrifying shock, especially given the
obvious strength of the man's self-control. Nor was he alone in his
reaction. Every Sharonian soldier in sight mirrored the same
sudden, explosive rage.
"Try hard save life," Skirvon
insisted, dredging up more tears. "But bad, bad hurt. Hard talk.
Long, long walk go healer. Arcana big, big grief. Arcana, Sharona,
no shoot. Ne-go-ti-ate," he said with exaggerated care. "No
shoot."
"If she was so badly hurt," chan
Tesh demanded coldly, "how did you manage to get enough of our
language out of her to learn to talk to us?"
Skirvon saw the man's knuckles
whiten around the pistol grip and realized abruptly—
emotionally, not just intellectually—that his own life hung
by the proverbial thread. Obviously, Olderhan's estimate of
Shaylar's importance in these people's eyes had been on the mark.
In fact, Skirvon was beginning to think Olderhan had
underestimated it.
He managed (he hoped) to keep
his thoughts from racing across his expression, but it suddenly
occurred to him that his strategy of insisting Shaylar was dead
might have been a mistake. Returning her and her husband before
they'd been thoroughly interrogated back in Arcana or New Arcana
was clearly out of the question, of course. He'd figured that
insisting they were both dead—and he knew from
Olderhan's report that Shaylar had believed Jathmar was dead even
while she was busy sending her accursed report back
home—would be the simplest and neatest way of keeping
their return off the table. Now he was suddenly confronted by the
fact that because he'd claimed she was dead he couldn't put her
return onto the table even if he wanted to. Which, given
the hatred looking at him out of all those Sharonian eyes suddenly
seemed as if it might have been a very good idea, indeed.
Unfortunately, there was no
going back now.
"She hurt bad," he said instead.
"Head hurt—inside." He tapped his own temple,
where—again, thanks to Olderhan's invaluable
report—he knew the little bitch actually had been injured.
"Not . . . work right," he continued,
deliberately searching for words. "She talk. Not to us—to
her. We recorded it."
He intentionally used the
Andaran verb for "recorded," and chan Tesh glared at him right on
cue.
"That's the second time you've
used that word—'record,'" he said. "What does it
mean?"
"It mean—" Skirvon
paused and rolled his eyes in obvious frustration. "Not know
words. Can show. Please?"
He managed not to heave an
overt sigh of relief as chan Tesh's eyes narrowed. The company-
captain's anger didn't disappear, but he was obviously forcing it
back under control.
He even managed to take his
hand away from his pistol.
"Show how?" he asked
skeptically.
"Please, bag," Skirvon said,
pointing to his own briefcase. chan Tesh cocked his head for a
moment, then nodded and said something to the big chief sword.
Although Skirvon's Ternathian language skills were far better than
he was prepared to admit, they weren't good enough to follow the
rapidly spoken sentence. On the other hand, they didn't need to be,
as the noncom handed him the briefcase.
Skirvon opened it cautiously,
then withdrew his PC. To his surprise, chan Tesh tensed
obviously, and the diplomat found it less than easy to ignore the
half-dozen rifles which were suddenly pointed in his direction
once again.
"What is that?" chan Tesh asked
sharply.
"Is only personal crystal,"
Skirvon said soothingly, once again using the Andaran words and
holding the crystal up. chan Tesh looked blank.
"What does it do?" he demanded.
"Rock hold talk. It records talk."
"What?" chan Tesh blinked.
"Hold talk," Skirvon said again,
and murmured the activating incantation. The PC's glow as he
initiated the spellware was lost in the brilliant sunshine, of course,
but it was angled so that he could see its display. He
tapped the menu with the tip of his stylus, calling up the special,
limited word list they'd manufactured from Magister Kelbryan's
primer specifically for this exchange. Then he touched the
playback command.
"Shaylar," a woman's voice said.
Putting together that word list
had required days of careful work. He and Dastiri had deliberately
limited the audio recordings Magister Kelbryan had downloaded
to them, choosing individual words on the basis of how clear
Shaylar's voice had sounded when they were recorded. All of them
were recognizably her voice, but distorted by
fatigue . . . or pain. In some cases, he
knew, the pain had been purely emotional, but that didn't matter
for his purposes. What mattered was that the chosen
words sounded like someone who'd been severely injured. Like
someone who was muttering to herself, wandering through her
own injury-confused thoughts.
He'd expected a powerful
emotional reaction, but not the one he got.
chan Tesh's jaw fell. Literally.
Skirvon stared at him and
experienced a sudden epiphany. Despite everything Olderhan had
told him, despite his study of the notes Kelbryan had meticulously
recorded, despite even chan Tesh's obvious reaction when his chief
sword had found the PCs in the first place, he hadn't really
believed until that moment that Sharonians had no experience with
magic. He couldn't believe it, because no one could
possibly build a real civilization without it. He'd been absolutely
convinced that Shaylar and Jathmar had been shamming in a
successful effort to confuse and mislead their captors.
But chan Tesh wasn't shamming.
The company-captain was clearly a disciplined, confident officer,
and what his forces had done to Hadrign Thalmayr's command was
brutal evidence of his competence. Yet his astonishment at hearing
a simple recorded word played back from a completely standard
personal crystal was total. Indeed, it appeared to border on
superstitious terror, and deep inside, Rithmar Skirvon grinned like
a kid with his daddy's jar of accumulators.
Olderhan had been right.
They had no magic!
Why, they weren't nearly as
formidable as he'd first believed. If they couldn't do something this
simple, they were babes in an adult world—a mean and
nasty one. mul Gurthak had been right, too. All they had going for
them was their machines, the "guns" they'd used—used by
surprise—in both violent encounters. And, as mul Gurthak
had pointed out, it was only that surprise, that totally
unanticipated ability of theirs to throw not a spell, but a physical
projectile, through a portal which had defeated Thalmayr.
Skirvon had been convinced
these people must actually have their machines and their "Talents"
in addition to the magic which was the necessary
foundation for any advanced civilization. But they genuinely
didn't have it, and that reordered everything he'd thought
about them.
But first things first, he told himself firmly. First
things first.
He waited until chan Tesh shook
himself.
"How did you do that?" The
Sharonian's voice was ever so slightly hoarse, Skirvon noted with
carefully hidden satisfaction.
"Rock is personal
crystal," he repeated the Andaran phrase carefully. "Shaylar
talk, it record—" again he used the Andaran
"—her word. Then spellware—" yet another
Andaran word "—work words.
Make . . . list our words, your
words."
He tapped the menu again,
bringing up the Andaran and Ternathian word for "word" side by
side in the display, then angled it so that chan Tesh could see it.
The company-captain's eyes narrowed once again. Clearly, the
phonetic spelling of the Ternathian word meant no more to him
than the totally unknown characters of the Arcanan alphabet
floating decided. Equally clearly, he was intelligent enough to
realize what he was seeing. He stared into the crystal for several
seconds, then shook himself and looked back at Skirvon.
"So you say
this . . . 'personal crystal' of yours let
you capture Shaylar's words and then analyze our language?"
"Please," Skirvon said,
summoning up a pained expression, "too many words. Not have
big number."
chan Tesh scowled in evident
frustration.
"If you could do that," he
gestured at the PC," why couldn't you save Shaylar?"
"Tried. Tried hard,"
Skirvon insisted soulfully. He remembered Olderhan's account of
the prisoners' reaction to magic healing. Given these people's total
ignorance about magic, it would undoubtedly be even simpler than
he'd expected to convince them that Shaylar had died of her
injuries. Especially since she undoubtedly would have
without the Healers' intervention.
"Head hurt bad," he said once
more. "Our healer killed in fight. Tried walk to second
healer, but many, many days. She die before we reach. She very
brave," he added sadly. "Arcana much grief."
"Yes," chan Tesh said harshly,
glowering at him. "She was very brave. And my people
will demand punishment for whoever killed her."
"Please," Skirvon said again,
earnestly. "Too many words. Must learn more. But now, come talk
Sharona. No shoot, talk."
"A truce?" chan Tesh sounded
massively skeptical, but that was a distinct improvement over the
white-hot fury of a few moments before. "You want to negotiate a
truce?"
"Truce is no shoot?" Skirvon
said, and chan Tesh nodded.
"A truce is a time to talk, yes. A
time to talk, not shoot. That's what you want? To talk about not
shooting us again?"
"Sharona no shoot, Arcana no
shoot. Yes."
"I can't authorize a truce. You
understand? I must talk to someone higher than me. With more
power, more authority. Understand?"
"Yes. Send talk?"
"I'll send a message."
"Ah . . .
message." Skirvon tapped the crystal's menu again,
dutifully recording the "new" word into it. The word "message"
was already in its real vocabulary list, of course, but these
yokels would never know that.
chan Tesh watched as the word
appeared in both Andaran and phonetic spelling. Then Skirvon
looked back up at him expectantly, and the company-captain
frowned.
"You understand you can't talk
to me about a truce?" chan Tesh pressed. Skirvon only
looked at him and said nothing, and the Sharonian tried yet again.
"I'm not a diplomat. I'm a
soldier—a 'diplomat' is someone who speaks for a
government. You understand?"
Skirvon nodded sharply, busily
coding the "new" words into his crystal.
"I'll have to send for a diplomat,"
chan Tesh continued. "I'll send a message, and the diplomat will
come here."
"Ah!" Skirvon nodded again,
more enthusiastically. But then he stopped nodding and shook his
head instead. "No," he said. "Not here."
"What?" chan Tesh's eyes
narrowed once more, and Skirvon knelt in the mud with a silent
apology to his tailor as he contemplated what it was going to do to
the knees of his trousers.
"Sharona portal," he said, using a
dead twig to draw a circle in the mud. Then he drew another circle,
about two feet from the first. "Arcana portal," he said, and
indicated the portal soaring high above them.
chan Tesh scowled and opened
his mouth, but Skirvon held up one hand, gesturing for patience.
chan Tesh looked at him, then shrugged and nodded.
"Go on. Say the rest, I mean."
"Arcana, Sharona di-plo-mats
meet here."
Skirvon drew an "X" in the mud
between the two circles he'd already drawn and tapped it to
indicate the approximate spot of the slaughter. He let his face fall
into a deeply sorrowful expression which Dastiri mimicked
beautifully. Even the Navy petty officer who'd managed the boat
for them contrived to look sad.
"Great grief," Skirvon said.
"Much hurt." He touched his chest to indicate his heart, then
patted the "X" again. "Diplomats talk here." Then he pointed to the
portal overhead and said, "Sharona stay here. Arcana want Sharona
stay here." He pointed at chan Tesh's soldiers and their sandbagged
positions. "But diplomats go, talk here."
He pointed to the "X" again, and
chan Tesh cocked an eyebrow at him.
"You mean you're willing to
accept that we keep this portal? You just want your diplomats to
meet our diplomats here?" It was chan Tesh's turn to point at the
"X" in the mud.
"You stay—soldiers stay,"
Skirvon said, very carefully not answering chan Tesh's first
question directly, then indicated the "X" once more. "Diplomats
talk here. Me. Dastiri. Sharonian diplomats."
"Under a flag of truce?"
"No shoot, yes. Talk. Negotiate."
chan Tesh gazed thoughtfully at
the muddy diagram, then studied Skirvon and Dastiri carefully
before he finally spoke once more.
"I'll send a message to bring a
diplomat here." He pointed at the "X." "To Fallen Timbers."
"Fall En Tim Burr?" Skirvon
asked, this time genuinely puzzled, and chan Tesh pointed at the
massive trees behind him on the Sharonian side of the contested
portal.
"Trees," he said. "Also 'timber.'"
He pantomimed a tree with his arm, positioning his forearm
vertically with his fingers outstretched as branches. "Timber."
Then he blew hard at his hand and lowered it as if his arm were a
falling tree. "Fall. So we call the site where you murdered our
civilians 'Fallen Timbers.'"
"Ah . . .
grief place." Skirvon nodded. "We walk, negotiate Fallen
Timbers."
"Why?" chan Tesh's eyes were
cold again, the soul-deep anger back again, burning coldly in their
depths. "Why at Fallen Timbers?"
"Sharona fight hard. Arcana
grief. Arcana want see, want re-mem-ber—" Skirvon spoke
the Ternathian word carefully "—brave Sharona."
chan Tesh's eyebrows soared.
Then he frowned thoughtfully.
"You want to meet where they
were murdered? To do them honor?"
"'Honor'?" Skirvon repeated.
"If someone does a brave thing
and dies doing it, we feel respect. We feel honor. We say they were
good and brave and should be remembered with a good feeling
here." chan Tesh touched his own heart, and Skirvon nodded
emphatically.
"Yes. Meet at Fallen Timbers,
honor brave Sharona." Then he gave the soldier a concerned look.
"No bad anger, meet at Fallen Timbers?"
"Will we be so angry we won't
negotiate?" chan Tesh shrugged. "I can't say. I don't have the
authority. Meeting there to honor our murdered civilians
will help, but it won't be easy to set aside our anger. We
didn't start this."
Skirvon cocked his head and
smiled gently.
"Arcana no start," he said. "
Who start? Two men dead, no man see. Who start?"
chan Tesh blinked, then
grimaced.
"So that's your story?
You didn't start it because no one saw who killed Falsan? I find
that profoundly interesting."
He gazed at Skirvon
thoughtfully, but, to Skirvon's surprise, the uneducated rube didn't
continue. He neither badgered Skirvon in an attempt to forcibly
change his mind, nor pointed out—as they certainly could
have—that it was Arcana who had run a party of civilians to
ground and then slaughtered them. Skirvon kept smiling, gently,
and revised—just a tad—his opinion of this
particular provincial rube in uniform. At least the man was
intelligent enough to leave that chore to the diplomats.
"When meet?" Skirvon asked.
"Stay here," chan Tesh replied.
"We'll send a message. Wait here until the answer to that question
comes back."
Either chan Tesh didn't know
where the nearest diplomat was, Skirvon reflected, which was an
interesting piece of information. Or he didn't want to admit how
far away he was, which would be another interesting piece of
information.
"We'll feed you while we wait,"
chan Tesh added stiffly. "We'll give you water and loan you
blankets, if they're needed."
If they were needed? Could these thought messages,
which Skirvon still found almost impossible to credit, really
travel that fast? Or was a diplomat that near? The lack of
information was maddening, but at this stage in the negotiations,
their best was all they could do.
"We wait," Skirvon agreed.
chan Tesh nodded sharply and
turned on his heel as smartly as any Andaran aristocrat on a parade
ground. That was interesting, as well. Out in the middle of the
godsforsaken wilderness, this company-captain—the
equivalent of a mere commander of one hundred, assuming
Kelbryan's primer had gotten it correct—was as spit-and-
polish formal as some self-important, blue-blooded Andaran.
Either these people were as
virulently militant as Andara itself, or else he was putting on a
show for them, exaggerating his militancy for effect. Either
answer would present its own possibilities, once Skirvon managed
to figure out which one applied. It would, he realized with a
slowly building emotion almost akin to relish, be a very
interesting little exchange all around, wouldn't it?
The possibilities, he thought,
licking his mental chops, were boundless.
Chapter Forty-Six
Dorzon Baskay, Viscount
Simrath, had dropped the "chan" from his name for his new role. It
was possible that the Arcanan diplomats had discovered that the
word indicated military service, and Platoon-Captain Simrath
wasn't being a member of the military just now. After all, a
diplomat as young as he was wouldn't have had time to become a
military veteran, as well, so he couldn't be one, either, because
right this minute he had to be a diplomat. A very convincing diplomat.
He wasn't at all happy about that,
but he didn't have much choice. Sharona didn't have a real
diplomat within less than three months' travel, and no one was
prepared to admit that to the other side. They'd already delayed for
the better part of two days while Company-Captain chan Tesh had
conferred by Voice with Regiment-Captain Velvelig, but chan
Tesh and Velvelig had both been aware that the possibility offered
by the Arcanan contact might well be fleeting. If it wasn't seized now, it could slip away and never be offered again. Neither
of them wanted to lose any possibility of avoiding an all-out war,
and so Velvelig had finally made the decision which had led to
chan Baskay's present unhappiness.
"We don't have an official
diplomat, and we don't have time to get one," chan Tesh had told
chan Baskay bluntly. "I don't have any idea whether or not these
people are sincere. Even if they are, they've made it fairly
clear that they're at the end of a long—and slow—
communications chain. So whatever they may want
doesn't necessarily mean a damned thing about their superiors' or
their government's ultimate intentions. But I agree with Regiment-
Captain Velvelig that we can't afford to let this possibility slip
away if they are sincere. That means we don't have time to
sit around, literally for months, with our thumbs up our arses
while we wait for a 'real' diplomat—from whatever
government we finally wind up with—to get all the way out
here to Hell's Gate. Which brings us to you, Platoon-
Captain."
chan Baskay had nodded,
although he hadn't cared at all for where chan Tesh was obviously
headed. chan Baskay was no diplomat; he was a cavalry captain,
even if he had been born into the aristocracy, and a cavalry officer
was all he'd ever wanted to the. He might be the son of an earl,
with a lineage of political service to the Ternathian Empire that
could have stretched from Hell's Gate clear back to Estafel, but he'd never wanted that part of the family tradition.
He'd hoped that he'd managed to
dodge it when he'd been assigned to the PAAF. Unfortunately, it
appeared his bloodline had caught up with him after all.
"According to your personnel
file," chan Tesh had continued, "you've served in the House of
Lords. Is that right?"
"Not exactly, Sir," chan Baskay
had replied. "My father holds a seat in the Lords. As his eldest son,
I've deputized for him on a few occasions, mostly while I was still
at the Academy." He'd smiled a bit tartly. "Frankly, I think it was
his way of trying to convince me to change my mind and go into
the Foreign Service instead of the Army. It didn't work."
"I see." chan Tesh had sat back in
his camp chair, considering the young cavalry officer for several
seconds. He'd wondered why the platoon-captain went by "chan
Baskay" instead of the "Viscount Simrath" to which he was
certainly entitled.
"I suppose it's ironic—at
least—that I should wind up talking to you about this, if
you never wanted Foreign Service in the first place," he'd said
then. "At the same time, I hope you can understand why I'm glad to
have someone with your background available. Frankly, Platoon-
Captain, there's no one else out here with any background
in diplomacy or high-level politics. I suppose the ideal person for
this would have been Crown Prince Janaki, but just between you
and me, I'm delighted that he's no longer available."
"You won't get any argument for
me about that point, Sir," chan Baskay had said fervently. The
mere thought of having the heir to the throne hanging out here at
this particular moment had been enough to make the platoon-
captain shudder.
"But with him gone, you're our
next best choice," the company-captain had pointed out. "On the
other hand, I don't suppose this is something we can simply order
someone to do."
chan Tesh had paused, looking at
him with a waiting expression, and chan Baskay had heaved a deep
and mournful mental sigh. He would vastly have preferred to be
able to decline, but that was impossible, of course. For a lot of
reasons—not least that endless lineage of service to the
Winged Crown. A Ternathian noble simply did not refuse when
duty called. Not if he ever wanted to face the scrutiny of his
revoltingly dutiful ancestors. Or, chan Baskay had conceded, his
own conscience.
And at least if he had to do this,
he had the proper background for it. chan Tesh was right about
that, too. He'd imbibed a basic understanding of political realities
almost with his mother's milk, whether he'd wanted to or not. And
he'd also had those dozens of generations of blue-blooded
ancestors—not to mention his observations of several
hundred currently carnate fellow aristocrats—upon which
to draw for role models. He'd been reasonably confident he could
act the part.
What he hadn't been confident of
was whether or not he could do the job. He'd been
crushingly aware of the responsibility looming before him, and it
had terrified him. This wasn't a job for someone pretending to be a
seasoned diplomat—it was a job for the most experienced
diplomat Sharona had ever boasted. And what Sharona actually
had was . . . him.
"It's all right, Sir," he'd finally
sighed. "I understand, and I'll give it my best shot. How exactly do
you and Regiment-Captain Velvelig want me to handle it?"
Which was how he came to find
himself riding steadily through the breezy woods under a dancing
drift of blowing red and gold leaves towards his first meeting with
the representatives of another trans-universal civilization.
A civilization, he reminded himself, with which we're
effectively at war, at the moment.
Vothon, please don't let me screw this up!
At least he'd had two genuine
strokes of luck. The first was his baby sister's idiocy. Charazan
Baskay was enrolled in one of those ghastly finishing schools that
specialized in turning young ladies' brains into mush, and it
appeared to be working just fine, in her case. She'd decided, on the
basis of logic so . . . unique that chan
Baskay hadn't even tried to follow it, that it would be a good idea
to send him a dress suit and cloak to wear at "cotillions and
military balls." Exactly where she'd expected him to find either of
those out here on the bleeding edge of the frontier eluded him, and
he'd rolled his eyes heavenward and stuffed the ludicrous outfit
into the bottom of a trunk the day it arrived. He'd intended for it to
languish there until the day he finally returned to Sharona, and he
certainly hadn't realized that his batman had packed the contents of
that trunk into his duffel bags when he'd been ordered forward
with the rest of Company-Captain chan Tesh's column.
But there it was, and he was
inclined to see the hand of fate in his batman's apparent lapse into
lunacy. Thanks to that, and Charazan, he actually had the proper
civilian attire to pull off this charade. He'd blessed his harebrained
baby sister fervently when he realized that he did.
The second stroke of good
fortune was the presence of Under-Captain Trekar chan Rothag.
The dark-haired and dark-eyed chan Rothag was a Narhathan
who'd grown up almost in the shadow of the Fist of Bolakin.
Where chan Baskay had the fair hair and gray eyes so common
among the Ternathian nobility, chan Rothag's hair was so dark a
brown it was almost black, and his swarthy complexion and
powerful nose could almost as well have been Shurkhali. Unlike
chan Baskay, chan Rothag had no connection whatsoever to either
the aristocracy or the Foreign Service. What he did have
was a Talent which police agencies and military intelligence
organizations had always found extraordinarily useful.
chan Rothag was a Sifter. He
couldn't read minds, wasn't actually a telepath at all. But he knew,
instantly and infallibly, when someone lied. He couldn't
magically—chan Baskay shuddered at his own choice of
adverb, under the circumstances—divine the truth they were
lying to conceal or distort, but knowing they'd lied at all was
almost as useful. Most commanders above the platoon level in any
Sharonian army tried to get at least one Sifter assigned to them.
More often than not, they failed; Sifters were too useful for senior
officers to be willing to turn the limited supply of them loose.
Balkar chan Tesh, however, had what amounted almost to a Talent
for scrounging the personnel he wanted, which was how chan
Rothag had ended up attached to his column.
chan Rothag had also spent
several days in company with their Arcanan prisoners before
Crown Prince Janaki carted them off. As a trained interrogator,
he'd found his complete inability to communicate with them
frustrating, and chan Baskay knew that chan Tesh had been
tempted to send chan Rothag along with Janaki. But the company-
captain had decided not to in the end, because there'd been plenty
of equally well-trained interrogators further up the chain, while
chan Rothag had been the only interrogator at this end of
it. Under the circumstances, chan Baskay had decided to regard
chan Rothag's continued presence, like that of Charazan's gift, as
another example of the hand of fate in action.
"Well," he said now, his voice
low pitched as the tangle of fallen and broken trees where the
Chalgyn Consortium survey crew had died came into sight, "here
we go."
"Be brave, Viscount," chan
Rothag replied with a slight smile, using the title by which every
member of their party now addressed chan Baskay. "You'll do just
fine."
"Easy for you to say,"
chan Baskay growled back.
"Just play the part, Viscount, and
remember our signals." chan Rothag sounded revoltingly calm,
chan Baskay thought. Which might be because, unlike chan
Baskay, he was about to spend the next several hours basically
saying nothing at all. They had no proof at this time that the
Arcanan's command of Ternathian was as limited as it appeared to
be. If they were concealing a greater fluency, then trained
diplomats might well be able to recognize that chan Rothag had
about as much diplomatic expertise as a pig on roller skates. chan
Baskay had done his best to get some of the rudiments, at least,
through to the under-captain, then given up in despair.
"Just keep your mouth shut,"
he'd advised finally. "We'll work out some sort of signal system so
you can tell me whether or not they're lying. And at least we both
speak Farnalian. We'll use that, if we have to talk to each other
without—hopefully!—the other side understanding
us.
And . . . hm . .
."
He'd regarded chan Rothag
thoughtfully.
"I think you've just become
Shurkalian," he'd said finally. The Narhathan had raised one
eyebrow, and chan Baskay had shrugged. "If we can convince them
you're related to Shaylar, then we'll have an excuse for you to
break in—as emotionally as possible, in Farnalian, of
course—if we twang something sensitive and you need to
warn me about it. Right?"
"Right," chan Rothag had agreed,
not even trying to hide his relief at being denied a speaking part.
Which was what made his current breezy confidence particularly
irritating. On the other hand, it was also the best advice chan
Baskay was likely to get, and he let his mind run back over the
cover story one last time, like an actor settling his stage character
comfortably into place.
According to what chan Tesh had
told the senior Arcanan diplomat, Viscount Simrath was a middle-
ranked Ternathian diplomat, who'd been visiting his sister in the
last (carefully unnamed) civilian city in this transit chain (also
carefully unnamed), to which she'd emigrated after her
marriage. When the Chalgyn crew had been slaughtered, the
viscount had sent a Voice message back to Sharona, asking the
Emperor if he should try to reach the contact universe. On the
Emperor's subsequent orders, he'd set out immediately, reaching
Company-Captain Halifu's fort—now formally named Fort
Shaylar—almost simultaneously with the Arcanan message
requesting a truce and negotiations for a genuine cease-fire.
chan Baskay would have felt
much better if the Emperor truly had authorized his
mission—and this ruse—but there hadn't been time
for any message to reach Sharona and come back down the chain.
As a result, he didn't even have an official set of conditions
acceptable to the Emperor or the Portal Authority. He hoped chan
Tesh and Velvelig were right—that approval would
definitely be forthcoming. In fact, he was almost certain they
were right, but part of his job was going to be to keep talking
until somebody in authority sent him a real set of terms.
They reached the agreed upon
conference site, and chan Baskay felt his jaw muscles tighten. It
wasn't the first time he'd seen the lingering burn marks and other
scars left by the brief, vicious battle, and a familiar hatred kicked
him in the gut. He kicked it right back.
Your job is to put together a negotiated cease-fire and stop
something like this from ever happening again, he told
himself. Besides, you just got here after traveling down-chain.
You've never seen it before, and you're a frigging
diplomat, not a soldier. Act like one—they're
watching you.
He did allow his face to harden
slightly as he surveyed those telltale signs, then glanced at the
waiting Arcanan contingent with exactly the right edge of
aristocratic hauteur. They were, indeed, watching him closely, he
noticed, and wondered if they'd deliberately insisted on meeting at
this spot to push Sharona's diplomats into a state of rage.
On the face of it, the idea was
silly. Why ask for talks at all, if they only meant to sabotage them
by enraging the other side? On the other hand, they might have
done it in hopes of keeping the Sharonians sufficiently distracted
by anger and hatred to give them an edge in the talks. To win extra
points for themselves because the Sharonians were too busy being
furious to notice that they were giving up important concessions.
It sounded paranoid, even to
him, he realized. It sounded devious. It even sounded insane,
perhaps.
But it felt accurate.
The Arcanan negotiating party
had arrived early. As stipulated by the initial agreement, the two
men in civilian clothing—who had to be the Arcanan
diplomats, Skirvon and Dastiri—were escorted by no more
than twenty-five of their own soldiers. Company-Captain chan
Tesh had accompanied them—ostensibly as a mark of
respect; actually to make sure they didn't get up to anything of
which Sharona would have disapproved—along with Petty-
Captain Arthag and the Arpathian officer's cavalry platoon. When
the twenty men of "Viscount Simrath's escort were included, that
gave Sharona a manpower advantage of over two-to-one, and none
of those troopers were taking any chances.
My, chan Baskay thought mordantly as he watched the
various military contingents not quite fingering their weapons as
they glared at one another, isn't this a soothing
atmosphere, well suited to the dispassionate negotiation of an
inter-universal cease-fire?
Petty-Captain Arthag "honor
guard" acknowledged the arrival of Viscount Simrath's party, and
Company-Captain chan Tesh gravely and respectfully saluted one
of his more junior platoon commanders.
"Viscount," the company-captain
said formally. "Welcome to Fallen Timbers."
"Thank you, Company-Captain,"
chan Baskay replied with a pleasant, if somewhat distant, smile.
Then he allowed the smile to fade. "I could wish that none of us
had to be here," he continued, deliberately pitching his voice
loudly enough for the Arcanan diplomats to hear. "I've Seen the
reports, of course, including Shaylar's message." He shook his
head, allowing his expression to turn a bit bleaker. "The personal
messages I've received from home are as furious as anything I've
ever heard before, and the official correspondence isn't much
better."
"I don't doubt it, My Lord." chan
Tesh shook his head. "Still, according to these people, it was all
mistake."
"So I've been told." chan Baskay
glanced at the Arcanans again. "I would dearly love to find that
that's the truth, and that we can end all of this without still more
bloodshed."
"Well, My Lord, I suppose that's
largely up to you. And to these . . .
gentlemen, of course."
"True enough, Company-
Captain," chan Baskay agreed. "True enough. So I suppose we'd
best get started. Could you perform the introductions for us,
please?"
"Of course, My Lord."
chan Baskay dismounted,
handing his reins to one of Arthag's troopers. Then he and chan
Rothag accompanied chan Tesh across to the waiting Arcanans.
The Arcanans in question had set
up a conference table at which the deliberations were to take
place, and that "table" was sufficiently startling to capture chan
Baskay's attention for several seconds. It was made from several
narrow slats of wood which had been hinged together to form a
folded up bundle that could fit onto a pack saddle. When it was
unfolded, crosspieces slid into place across the bottom, stiffening
it and locking it in the open position.
That much was fairly
unremarkable, but it did have one small feature guaranteed to
arrest his attention instantly: it had no legs.
The tabletop simply floated
there, perfectly level despite the rough terrain, hovering in midair
at the ordinary height of a standard table, and chan Baskay's scalp
crawled at the sight. It wasn't natural, he thought, and the back of
his brain even whispered the word "demonic," before he squelched
it back down where it had come from.
Not demonic, he told himself. It's just different. Very different, perhaps, but only different.
He told himself that rather
firmly, and he knew—intellectually—that it was
true. That this was merely a form of technology his own people
had never seen before, assuming that anything which caused a ten-
foot-long tabletop to float thirty-six inches off the ground under a
canopy of flame-shot autumn leaves could be called "merely"
anything.
It was the obvious solution to
their need for a portable table, of course, but it was sufficiently
alien to distract chan Baskay from the business at hand. It took
him a heartbeat or two to realize it had. Then he glanced up,
swiftly and without moving his head from its "gosh-look-at-the-
table" position, and saw the faintest hint of smug satisfaction in
the Arcanans' eyes.
That satisfaction vanished
instantly when they realized he was watching them closely without
seeming to do so. Their own eyes narrowed, and they stood up
straighter, put on notice that they weren't dealing with a total
babe-in-swaddling. He noticed that, too, and gave them a polite
little smile which, he was pleased to observe, replaced their
satisfaction with an edge of speculation, instead.
chan Baskay managed to keep his
smile from growing and very carefully concealed his own flicker
of satisfaction. He'd also noticed—and ignored—
what looked remarkably like a half-dozen chairs whose legs had
been amputated. They were tucked underneath the floating
conference table, as if the Arcanans had hoped they wouldn't be
immediately spotted, and he carefully paid them no attention at all
even as he filed away their presence for future consideration.
"Viscount Simrath," chan Tesh
said formally, "this is Rithmar Skirvon and Uthik Dastiri, the
diplomatic representatives of something called the Union of
Arcana. Master Skirvon, Master Dastiri, this is Sir Dorzon Baskay,
forty-sixth Viscount Simrath, of the Ternathian Foreign Ministry,
acting in behalf of the Portal Authority and the Emperor of
Ternathia, and Lord Trekar Rothag, his associate and adviser."
Everyone bowed gravely to
everyone else, and chan Baskay raised one aristocratic eyebrow.
"I understand you gentlemen
speak our language?"
"Speak some," the older of the
two Arcanan civilians—Skirvon—said. "Learn more
with PC while talk. Can show?"
He indicated the large lump of
quartz sitting in the center of the floating table, and chan Baskay
allowed his other eyebrow to rise.
"By all means," he invited.
Skirvon bowed slightly, then
murmured something in his own language. The lump of quartz
glowed briefly, and then the floating words chan Tesh had already
described to chan Baskay appeared within it. Skirvon leaned over
it, touching it with a crystal stylus, then said something else, much
longer and considerably more involved, in his own language.
"The PC can help learn
languages," another voice said suddenly. It sounded a great deal
like Skirvon's, but not exactly, and it was coming not from the
Arcanan, but from the glowing lump of rock. "When we talk, it
listens. Learns. It will turn words in my language into your
language, and your language into my language."
The words coming from the
"PC" were much clearer, smoother, than anything Skirvon had
produced in Ternathian. Even chan Tesh, who'd already seen
multiple examples of the Arcanans' astounding technology, was
clearly taken aback, and it took all of chan Baskay's self-control
not to show his own astonishment. But he managed it somehow,
and looked at Skirvon levelly.
"So, if I speak to your rock, it
will translate whatever I say into your own language?" he said, and
heard a voice which wasn't quite his saying something in a
language he'd never spoken.
Skirvon watched the Sharonians'
response to his newest ploy and managed not to smile like a fox in
a henhouse. Despite their best efforts to conceal it, they were
clearly impressed by this fresh manifestation of magic. Of course,
they didn't know the PC had an unfair advantage. They
thought it was still learning the language as it went, and he had no
intention of suggesting otherwise. In fact, he'd loaded the same
translation spellware Magister Kelbryan had used with Shaylar
into his own crystal. It contained the complete vocabulary the
magister had acquired from her prisoner, as well, and Skirvon had
to remind himself to phrase his comments in Andaran rather more
simply then he would have normally. It would never do to
inadvertently reveal the fluency in Ternathian which he already
possessed.
On the other hand, he thought, it won't hurt a bit to
impress these yokels with how quickly the "learning spellware
"improves its grasp of Ternathian in the course of our little chats
.
"Is this acceptable?" he asked
earnestly in Andaran.
"Is this acceptable?" the crystal
on the table said in Ternathian, and chan Baskay nodded.
"Indeed. And quite convenient,
too," he said calmly.
Skirvon was impressed. This
Viscount Simrath obviously had been just as surprised as chan
Tesh and the others, but there was remarkably little evidence of it
in his expression or his voice. The man's title—forty-
sixth Viscount of Whatever?—indicated an incredibly
long aristocratic pedigree, which was entirely in keeping with the
preposterous age Shaylar had imputed to this Ternathian Empire.
That was impressive enough, but his obvious self-control and
total self-confidence was even more impressive. Clearly, the man
was an experienced diplomat, as well, despite his apparent relative
youth, and Skirvon wondered what stroke of luck had put him far
enough down the transit chain from Sharona to get him to this
place at this time.
Perhaps I'm better matched than I expected, he thought
almost cheerfully. After all, it was always more satisfying to
match wits with a fellow professional, rather than simply steal
candy from unwary babies. Not that the end result was likely to be
any different.
"In that case," he gestured
casually and spoke the word which activated the spell
accumulators on the camp chairs he'd had a member of his
military escort arrange around the conference table. The
comfortably cushioned chairs rose immediately, floating levelly at
the exactly correct height.
"Be seated, please," he invited
blandly.
This time, chan Baskay didn't
even turn a hair. He'd expected nothing less, and he simply smiled,
handed his cloak to one of Platoon-Captain Arthag's troopers, and
seated himself. The pit of his stomach felt just a bit hollow as he
parked his posterior on the unnaturally floating chair. A part of
him couldn't quite help expecting it to collapse under his weight,
but no sign of it showed in his expression, and he laid his forearms
on the conference table, folded his hands neatly, and gazed at them
with a politely attentive expression.
Like the comfortably padded
chair underneath him, the conference table didn't even quiver
under the weight of his arms. It was as rock-steady as any table
he'd ever sat at before, which his intellect had known would be the
case. It would scarcely have worked to the Arcanans' advantage for
it to be anything else, after all.
Definitely a professional, Skirvon thought ungrudgingly,
giving the Sharonian diplomat points for composure.
He glanced at Dastiri as the
junior Sharonian diplomat, Rothag, seated himself somewhat
more gingerly at Simrath's right. Then they took their own seats,
facing the Sharonians across the conference table. Skirvon opened
his mouth, but Simrath spoke before he could say anything.
"This translating rock of yours
will be most convenient," he observed. "On the other hand, words
are only tools, are they not? What truly matters are the answers to
two simple questions. Do you plan to end your acts of violence
against Sharonian civilians? And do you intend to stop attacking
soldiers attempting to negotiate under flags of truce?"
Skirvon's eyes widened. Despite
his own many years of experience, he couldn't quite conceal his
surprise at the other man's directness.
"With all respect, Viscount," he
said after a moment, "those questions are not as simple as you
suggest. You say your people were civilians. Our soldiers did not
know that, and many of them were killed in the same fight. Arcana
deeply regrets what happened, but how it came about is not at all
clear to us at this time."
"It is very clear to us,"
Simrath said with a pleasant smile. "Your soldiers attacked our
civilians. When one of our officers—Platoon-Captain
Arthag, I believe—" he gestured at one of the officers who
had accompanied the Arcanans and their escort from the swamp
portal "—attempted to approach your soldiers under a flag
of truce to inquire as to the fate of our people, he was fired upon.
From our viewpoint, it's quite clear who fired the first shot in
each of those incidents."
Skirvon ordered his expression
not to change. Clearly, Simrath intended to cut right to the heart of
things, and it was equally obvious that his plan was to place
Arcana squarely on the defensive. To some extent, that would
work out very well for Skirvon's chosen strategy, but it would
never do to allow the Sharonians to feel they were driving
the negotiations. Or, rather, to allow them an expectation of a
quick resolution to those same negotiations. He had to keep them
talking for at least a couple of weeks, and allowing this Simrath's
forcefulness to push him into premature concessions or
admissions could make that considerably more difficult. What he
needed was something that could keep them "negotiating" without
reaching any premature final agreement.
"Excuse me, Viscount," he said,
"but I am afraid you are speaking too quickly and using too many
new words for my crystal to translate them correctly. It will get
better as we continue to speak to each other, but it has not yet
learned enough words for long, complicated talk."
chan Baskay laced his fingers
together atop the conference table as he considered what the
Arcanan had just said. It made sense, he supposed. And he
certainly had no way to judge what the glowing hunk of rock's
true capabilities might be.
"So," he said with a thin smile
which would have done his most arrogant ancestor proud,
"your . . . crystal isn't up to the task
after all?"
"That is not what I said," the
crystal translated a moment later. "What I said is that it will take
time. We wish to talk, wish for there to be no more shooting, but
it is important that we understand what is said. That we are clear
when we talk. And that you understand what we think happened
while we understand what you think happened."
chan Baskay cocked his head to
one side and pursed his lips thoughtfully. He suspected that the
Arcanans' marvelous hunk of rock was doing a better job of
translating than this Skirvon wanted to admit. At the same time, he
had to concede that the man had a point. If they were going to talk
to each other at all, they had to at least listen to the other side's
view of the events which had led them to this point.
"Very well," he said after a
moment. "You asked us to meet with you. What does Arcana wish
to say? Sharona is willing to listen."
That's better, Skirvon thought. Get him tied up in
formal exchanges and we can kill lots of time without actually
saying a damned thing we don't already both know anyway.
"Arcana is grateful that Sharona
is willing to listen," he said aloud, and arranged himself into what
he thought of as "formal discourse posture" to make it clear that
what he was about to say was a formal position statement.
"Arcana is shocked by the
violence that has taken place between our people and yours," he
continued. "It caused us great grief to discover that the sole
survivor was a young woman. We do not allow women to serve in
our military, so we were not expecting to find one."
"She was not serving in the
military," Simrath said in a voice chipped from solid ice. "They
were civilians."
"Yes," Skirvon said. "We know
that now. We did not know that then, however. And we did not
expect to find a girl in the middle of such combat."
chan Baskay considered pointing
out that the Arcanans had gone into that same battle with a woman
of their own in tow, but he chose not to play that particular card
just yet. So far, the other side had given no indication that there
were any Talented Arcanans. It was difficult for him to conceive
of a human civilization in which that was true, but, then, he'd
never seriously conceived of one which routinely used magic to
float tables in midair, either. So it was entirely possible the
Arcanans were as ignorant of the possibilities open to the Talented
as Sharona was—or had been—to the possibilities of
magic. If that was the case, the less the Arcanans knew about the
capabilities of Sharonian Whiffers and Tracers, the better.
"Very well," he said instead,
after a moment. "I will accept that you were not aware our people
were civilians . . . at first, at least.
Continue."
"Thank you, Viscount," Skirvon
replied, then drew a breath.
"We were horrified to find her,"
he resumed after a moment. "We tried hard to keep her alive. But
the healer attached to our soldiers was killed in the fighting. They
had a magister with a minor arcana for healing, but nothing even
remotely close to an actual healer. So they tried to carry her to a
real healer."
chan Baskay frowned, then
unlaced his fingers and leaned back in his floating chair, tugging at
the lobe of his right ear in one of his prearranged signals to chan
Rothag. The Narhathan petty-captain didn't appear to notice, but
he sat back himself and crossed his legs.
So, chan Baskay reflected, not exactly a lie, but not
the entire truth, either. Well, that's hardly a
surprise from a diplomat, now is it?
"A moment," he said. "Your
crystal failed to translate two of the terms you just used. What is a
'magister'? And what is a 'minor arcana'? Isn't Arcana the name of
your world?"
Skirvon blinked in what certainly
looked like genuine surprise. Then he smiled.
"Ah, I see the problem. First,
Viscount, a 'magister' is someone with a Gift, an ability to use
magic." He tapped the floating table. "Like this. Some people with
Gifts can make things float or perform other similar actions.
Others—what we call 'magistrons'—are able to use
healing magic. The only magister our soldiers had with them
immediately after the fighting was not a magistron.
"Second, we use the word
'arcana' to mean a specific Gift or magical ability. The tradition
among my people is that the same word is used to mean the entire
world because the world is a gift from the gods to all men. That is
where the confusion about 'minor arcana' came from.
"What I tried to say was that the
magister who was with our soldiers had only a minor, weaker,
Gift for healing. It was not a strong, trained Gift, which could
have healed the young woman's injuries."
"I see." chan Baskay nodded,
then glanced at chan Rothag. The petty-captain's posture was
unchanged, but he rubbed the tip of his right index finger gently
across the cuff of his left sleeve. Which meant that this time, at
least, the Narhathan was confident that pretty much everything
Skirvon had just said was the truth.
"Very well," he said. "You say
you were horrified to discover a woman among your victims." He
allowed his eyes to harden slightly. "How and when did Shaylar
die?"
"She had suffered a terrible head
injury," Skirvon said. "She was burned, as well. Not as badly as
some of the others, but the burns made her other injuries worse.
We transported her as quickly as we could to our nearest base with
a fully trained healer, but we were unable to get her there in time.
She lived for six days."
chan Rothag sat up, uncrossing
his legs, and chan Baskay's nerves tightened abruptly.
"A moment, please," he said
courteously, and glanced at chan Rothag. "Look sad," he said in
Farnalian. "Then tell me what he's lying about."
"He's lying through his teeth
about the burns, and about the six days," chan Rothag replied in
the same language. He looked as if he wanted to weep. "The rest
of it is pretty much true. Do we want to call him on the part that
isn't?"
"Not yet." chan Baskay leaned
towards the other man, laying a hand on his shoulder with a
concerned, sorrowful expression. "There's no point letting them
know you can tell when they're lying," he said softly, gently.
"Besides, let's see how much rope he'll give himself."
chan Rothag nodded, still
looking stricken, and chan Baskay patted his shoulder
comfortingly, then turned back to Skirvon.
"Lord Rothag is Shurkhali," he
lied with an absolutely straight face. "The confirmation that his
countrywoman suffered such horrible wounds and lingered for so
long is very painful to him."
He watched Skirvon's expression
carefully without seeming too. Presenting such a bald-faced lie
would have been unthinkable if he'd faced other Sharonians, since
both sides knew the other one was bound to bring its own Sifters
to any negotiations. But he'd done it deliberately, as a test, and he
saw no sign Skirvon could tell that he'd just lied. Which
was something to bear in mind. Clearly, Skirvon and Dastiri came
from a totally different tradition, one which used no equivalent of
Sifters.
I'll bet they're used to being able to lie to each other, he thought. Which means they'll do it at the drop of a hat. That's something else to bear in mind.
"I am sorry to have caused him
grief," Skirvon said. "But there is great grief in Arcana, as well.
We had never met you or any of your people before. We did not
mean for the original battle to take place. The officer in charge of
the soldiers in that battle was removed from command as soon as
his superiors heard what had happened. Yet before we could learn
your language, or make any new, peaceful contact with you, you
attacked our camp without warning and killed still more soldiers."
He allowed himself a slightly aggrieved expression. "The officer
you attacked was not even the one responsible for the attack on
your civilians, but you did not attempt to learn that before you
attacked."
"When we attacked your camp
without warning?" chan Baskay repeated flatly, shaking his head. "
We did not do the attacking. Your officer may have been
'innocent' of the carnage you'd already committed, but he gave a
deliberate order to fire on a single officer who had approached
him under a flag of truce to ask for the return of our wounded.
You attacked us. Again."
He met Skirvon's eye very
levelly, his expression cold.
"It's one thing to state your
position, Skirvon. It's quite another to twist the truth out of all
recognition, and to insult our intelligence in the process."
Skirvon and Dastiri conferred
briefly in a language that wasn't Andaran and which the crystal
didn't translate into Ternathian. Then Skirvon turned back to him.
"This is very difficult," he said.
"We have one view of these things; you have another view. We are
trying to apologize for the violence, but you are so suspicious, we
cannot even finish a thought. And while we understand how angry
you must be, there is—or will be, once the news gets all the
way to our home universe—great pain and anger in our
world, as well. Not only have we lost many of our soldiers, not
only have we killed civilians, but we have lost a civilian, as well.
"The civilian killed in your
attack on our camp was one of the most important research
magisters our civilization has ever produced. Magister Halathyn
vos Dulainah was in our camp. He did not even try to fight, but he
was killed without pity. The whole of Arcana is or soon will be in
an uproar. Magister Halathyn was beloved by millions,
hundreds of millions. The shock of his death, the anger felt
over it, is very terrible."
"So now you say one of your
civilians has been killed as well?" chan Baskay frowned.
"Indeed, a most important and
very beloved one."
"Perhaps," chan Baskay said
coolly, "one as beloved as Shaylar Nargra-Kolmayr was among our people?"
Skirvon appeared to wince
slightly, and chan Baskay shook his head.
"Lord Rothag is Shurkhali," he
said, repeating his earlier . . .
misrepresentation. "A moment, please, while I discuss this with
him. I'll be . . . interested in his
perspective on our relative losses."
He turned to chan Rothag and
cocked his head.
"I think we may actually be
looking at something important here, Trekar," he said, once again
in Farnalian. "The problem is, I don't know what—or how
important it may be—and I've got the feeling he's about to
try selling me a used horse. Can you give me any guidance on how
many lies he's telling this time?"
"Actually he's telling the truth
about this fellow being killed," chan Rothag replied in the same
language. "And about how popular he was and the sort of reaction
he anticipates. But you're right that something funny's going on, as
well. I notice he's not saying anything about why this important
researcher was out here in the middle of all this nowhere. And he's
being careful not to say that we actually killed him."
"I caught that, as well," chan
Baskay replied, managing to keep his frustration out of his tone or
his expression. "I wonder what these twisty bastards are up to this
time?"
He turned back to Skirvon. The
Arcanan's expression remained attentive, leavened with exactly the
right degree of sorrow and regret, but chan Baskay saw the
curiosity in the backs of the man's eyes. Obviously, Skirvon was
simply dying to know what he and chan Rothag had just said to
one another. The thought gave chan Baskay a certain amount of
amusement, but he produced a dutifully sad frown of his own.
"Sharona grieves to learn that
another civilian has died, and especially one who was so beloved
that his death can only add to the anger and fear between our
peoples," he said, meaning every word of it. "But that only
underscores the urgent need for us to negotiate a cease-fire.
Sharona does not want any more innocents to die."
"That is exactly Arcana's
position, as well," Skirvon said earnestly. "We want an end to the
shooting while we talk with you about a permanent settlement." It
was his turn to smile sadly. "It may take a long time for us to agree
as to where guilt and innocence truly lie. And I am sure it will take
even longer for us to reach agreement on the terms of any final
settlement, and on how best to manage further contacts between
our peoples. For example, there is the question of who holds
ultimate possession of this entire universe."
"Hell's Gate is Sharonian
territory." chan Baskay's tone was flat.
"Hell's Gate?" Skirvon repeated,
and chan Baskay smiled coolly.
"Given what your soldiers did to
our civilians here, it seemed an appropriate name to us," he said.
Then he allowed his expression to soften very slightly. "And, I
suppose, given what happened to your troops, it may seem
appropriate to your people, as well."
"Indeed, it may," Skirvon agreed.
"Still, whatever we may call it, the question of who controls it must be of vital importance to both your world and mine."
chan Baskay allowed his eyes to
narrow once more, and Skirvon shrugged with an open, honest
expression.
"Surely, My Lord, your people
realize as well as my own that this—" he waved at the trees
about them and the steady drift of bright colored leaves sifting
downward whenever the breeze blew "—is what we call a
'portal cluster.' There are many portals close together, giving
access to many universes. However much we may regret the
violence which has already occurred, your Emperor and your
Portal Authority must recognize that the control of so many
portals is not something either of us will gladly give up, especially
to someone we do not fully trust because of the violence which
has already occurred.
" At the moment, each side
desires complete control of the entire cluster, if only to provide
for its own security, and neither side will be willing to concede
that to the other. In the end, some sort of agreement—
possibly some compromise, under which control is shared, or
under which certain portals are ceded to either party—
would have to be worked out if we were to have any real hope that
our natural desires and fear of one another will not push us into
additional conflict. Working out any such agreement would
certainly be difficult, and would without doubt take much time
and patience. But surely, it is always better to talk rather than to
shoot."
Beside chan Baskay, chan
Rothag crossed his legs once more, and chan Baskay sighed inside,
wishing chan Rothag could tell him exactly which parts of
what Skirvon had said this time were "mostly true."
Part of him wanted to stand up
and call Skirvon on his lies about Shaylar right then and there. In
fact, the cavalry officer in him wanted to choke the truth out of the
bland-faced Arcanan. If Shaylar hadn't died the way he said she
had, then how had she died? What had they really
done to her in their quest for information like the words stored in
their crystal? He could think of several reasons why her stored
voice might sound slurred, confused, even broken. Reasons which
had nothing at all to do with any wounds she might have suffered
here at Fallen Timbers. Had they done those things to her? Was that how she'd died—in some grim little cell
somewhere? And if so, did this smiling bastard across the table
from him know she had?
The questions burned inside him,
demanding answers, but he kept his expression under control. He
couldn't give in to the anger he felt, couldn't call them cold-
blooded murderers, even if he did know that an innocent,
courageous young woman had not died the way they'd told him
she had. And the fact was that Skirvon also had a perfectly valid
point about the question of who would hold eventual sovereignty
over the Hell's Gate Cluster. Certainly, no one in Sharona would
be at all happy about the thought of abandoning the
cluster—which the Chalgyn crew had clearly discovered
before the Arcanans ever ventured into it—to a
bloodthirsty, murderous lot of savages whose uniformed soldiers
had slaughtered its original surveyors. And whatever he thought of
Skirvon, or his unknown superiors, the man was right that Arcana
would be no happier at the thought of conceding all of those
portals to Sharona. Especially not with the spilled blood which
already lay between them.
The sovereignty issue was going
to have to be dealt with. That much was painfully obvious,
as was the fact that he must not do anything at this point to
prejudice Sharona's position on the issue. It would be another five
days before Company-Captain chan Tesh's message that the
Arcanans had asked for talks could even reach Sharona; it would
take another week after that for any response to reach Hell's Gate.
He could not allow his own emotions to erupt and sabotage any
possibility of a diplomatic solution—especially not when
he'd never actually been authorized to represent the Authority or
his own Emperor in the first place!
"Of course it's better to talk than
to shoot," he said, smiling at the lying bastard across the table
from him. "Is that your formal position?"
"We wish for there to be no
more fighting while we talk," Skirvon said, nodding vigorously,
and chan Rothag touched his left cuff once more.
Well, that's certainly something I can agree to in good
faith, chan Baskay thought with a distinct feeling of relief. And he's right, I suppose. Talking is better than
shooting. I just wish I knew what else is going on
inside that twisty brain of his. And I suppose the only way to find
out is to go ahead and talk to him.
"Very well," he said. "Sharona
will agree to talk, instead of shooting."
Chapter Forty-Seven
"I have to say that this is a
heavenly relief," Shaylar sighed, leaning back in her deck chair.
"Don't get me wrong," she cracked one eye, glancing at Gadrial as
the magister reclined in the deck chair beside hers. "I've gotten
very fond of Skyfang, and I'm delighted they were able to fit him
aboard, but dragon riding is still
pretty . . . strenuous. Especially for
Jathmar and me."
"Especially for you?" Gadrial
looked back at her.
"Well, at least you and Jasak
have more experience with the entire process."
"We've done it before, if that's
what you mean. But if you think having made the same trip on the
way out is making it any more restful to make the trip on the way
back in, I'm afraid you're mistaken." The Arcanan woman
grimaced. "Believe me, I'm not particularly enjoying all those
endless hours with the wind whistling around my ears any more
than you two are."
"I suppose not," Shaylar
conceded with a smile. "And I have to admit, it is
fascinating to watch the world rolling by underneath. Jathmar's
always had dreams about wanting to fly. I think it has something
to do with his Mapping Talent. The fact that his dreams had to
come true this way's put a pretty heavy damper on his
enjoyment, of course, but there's still a 'little kid in a fairy tale'
excitement to it. Of course, it starts to wear a little thin after the
first five or six hours in the saddle."
"Oh, you noticed that, did you?"
Shaylar grimaced at Gadrial's
teasing tone, and the magister chuckled. Then, reminded of
Jathmar by Shaylar's comments, she turned her head, glancing up
at the fat lookout pod on the ship's single mast. Jasak and Jathmar
were both up there at the moment, gazing out across the endless
blue waters of the southern Evanos Ocean. She doubted that they
were going to see anything significant from up there, but that
wasn't really the point.
Jathmar's emotions remained
much less . . . resolved than Shaylar's
where Jasak was concerned. That was undoubtedly inevitable, for
at least two reasons, Gadrial admitted unhappily.
First, Jathmar lacked Shaylar's
ability to directly sense the emotions of those around her. Shaylar
was a Voice. As she'd said, she'd been born and bred to
communicate. She couldn't help communicating, even
when she didn't want to. That meant she had a much more direct
grasp of Jasak's feelings about what had happened. And from
several things she'd said, Gadrial also suspected that the Shurkhali
honor code was probably quite a lot closer to that of Jasak's native
Andara than the one Jathmar had grown up with. Which was
particularly ironic, given that it sounded as if Jasak and Jathmar
had probably grown up within a few miles of one another on their
respective home worlds.
But, second, and possibly even
more important, Jathmar was also male. Gadrial tried not to sigh
in exasperation, but there it was. There was a zoologist's term one
of her friends at the Garth Showma Institute had explained to her.
It was "alpha male," and from the moment her friend had explained
what it meant, Gadrial had thought it was a great pity that the
Andaran military hadn't been required to take courses in zoology.
If she'd ever met an "alpha male," it was that paragon of all
Andaran virtues, Sir Jasak Olderhan. And if she'd ever met a
second "alpha male," it was Jathmar Nargra.
Which just goes to show you that truly irritating male
characteristics are inter-universal in scope, she thought
grumpily. Rahil!
What did I do to deserve two of them at a time like
this?
Jathmar knew that Jasak was
completely—one might almost say fanatically—
dedicated to protecting him and Shaylar from additional harm. But
he was also Shaylar's husband, and he loved her, which meant that
primitive male wiring of his demanded that he protect her. That he protect her. Which, of course, he couldn't do. The fact
that he was totally reliant upon Jasak (the officer whose men had
slaughtered all of his and Shaylar's friends, whatever Jasak might
have wanted to happen) to provide the protection he couldn't, only
made his own sense of frustration and failure even worse. And the
fact that Shaylar, as deeply as she loved Jathmar, was comfortable
with the notion that Jasak's honor code required him to protect
her—and that she looked to Jasak (who was not
her husband) as the protector for both of them probably
punched more than a few male jealousy buttons, as well.
Then there was the fact that
Jasak, in his own invincibly "alpha male" fashion, couldn't
conceive of any circumstances which could possibly absolve him
of his responsibility to protect his shardonai. That him
with a protective attitude not just towards Shaylar, but towards Jathmar, as well. Which, despite the fact that Jathmar's
intellect knew better, struck his raw-edged and bleeding emotions
as . . . patronizing. Not to mention
insulting, diminishing, and infuriating.
That was why Gadrial and
Shaylar had effectively packed the two of them off to the lookout
pod where they could—hopefully—spend a little
time getting over the worst of their mutual prickliness.
Of course they can, the magister thought dryly. And
the Evanos is only a little damp.
"Do you think they've said three
words to each other the whole time they've been up there?"
Shaylar asked, and Gadrial blinked as the other woman's words
broke in on her thoughts.
"What?" she asked, and Shaylar
snorted in amusement.
"I asked if you think they've said
three words to each other the whole time they'd been up there," she
repeated, waving one hand at the lookout pod.
"I'd like to think so," Gadrial
said after a moment, grinning as they both admitted what was
really going on. "I'm not holding out a lot of hope, though."
"Me either." Shaylar's slight
smile slowly faded, and she drew a deep breath. "Not that I can
really blame either of them. It's
an . . . ugly situation, isn't it?"
"Very," Gadrial agreed with a
heavy sigh of her own. "If there were any way we could
undo it, we'd—"
"Don't say it," Shaylar
interrupted. Gadrial's eyes widened, as if with an edge of hurt, and
Shaylar shook her head. "What I mean, is that you don't have
to say it. I know it's true, and so does Jathmar,
however . . . uncomfortable he may
still be around Jasak. It's just that there's not any point. Saying it
won't change anything, and there's no good reason why you should
keep beating yourself up over it, apologizing for things that
weren't your fault and that no one can change, anyway."
"I suppose not. But in that case,"
Gadrial smiled crookedly, "what can we talk about to wile
away this pleasant little ocean voyage?"
Shaylar chuckled. As nearly as
she could figure out, they were traveling from the eastern coast of
the great island-continent of Lissia across the Western Ocean to
the western coast of New Farnalia. That was almost five thousand
miles, which was going to take them around nine days, even
aboard one of the Arcanans' marvelous ships. Still, as she'd told
Gadrial, she was profoundly grateful for the break in their arduous
travels, even if every mile of seawater they crossed did remind her
of her mother's embassy back home.
"Actually," she said, after
moment, "I've been thinking about what Fifty Varkal and Jasak
had to say about the difference between Skyfang and Windclaw."
"Yes?"
"I got the distinct impression that
there are more significant differences between 'battle dragons' and
what Fifty Varkal calls 'transports' than just their size and
maneuverability." Shaylar ended on an almost questioning note
and raised both eyebrows.
"Oh, there are," Gadrial agreed.
"Mind you, I'm no magistron, and what I know about
dragons—or, for that matter, any other augmented
species—isn't much more than any other layman would be
able to tell you. Well," her lips quirked, "maybe a little
more than that, given what I do for a living, but not a lot. Still, if
you'd like, I'll tell you what I know."
"By all means, please," Shaylar
said, sitting up a bit straighter in her deck chair and rolling slightly
up on one hip as she turned to face the other woman more
squarely.
"Well," Gadrial began, "as Daris
suggested back at Fort Talon, battle dragons are deliberately
designed to be faster and more maneuverable than transport
dragons."
"'Designed'?" Shaylar repeated.
Gadrial looked surprised by the question, and Shaylar gave her
head a little shake. "I haven't had much choice but to accept that
your people can do all sorts of 'impossible' things, but I guess I'm
still just feeling a bit . . .
uncomfortable over the notion of 'designing' a living creature."
"As I said, I'm not a magistron,
so it's not remotely my area of specialization," Gadrial replied,
"but the actual techniques have been around for a long time. As
matter of fact, it's one of the few areas in which Ransar actually
led the way in both theoretical and applied research for something
like three hundred years."
"Over Mythal, you mean?"
"Exactly." Gadrial looked away,
gazing out across the endless, steady swell as the passenger ship
sliced through it with a graceful, soothing motion. "It was a
Ransaran magistron who first perfected the spells for examining
what he called the genetic map of living creatures."
"And what's a 'genetic map'?"
Shaylar inquired with an air of slightly martyred patience.
"Sorry." Gadrial looked back at
her and smiled. "The word 'genetic' is derived from the Old
Ransaran word for race or descent. And the reason
Hansara—Rayjhari Hansara, the magistron who developed
the original concept and spells—called it that was that it's
basically a symbolically congruent representation of the physical
characteristics of the creature. It's a fundamental principle of
magic that the map is the territory, and once Hansara came up with
a way to represent a living organism's characteristics in a fashion
which could be visualized and manipulated, it really did become
possible to 'design' creatures to order."
Shaylar shivered as if a sudden
icy wind had found its way up and down her spine. And, in fact,
one had, in a metaphorical way of speaking.
"And does that include
people?" she asked after moment.
"No," Gadrial said firmly.
Shaylar looked both relieved and skeptical, in almost equal
measure, and Gadrial shrugged. "There's no arcane reason it
couldn't include people," she conceded. "Human beings' codes
can be visualized just as well as those of any other creature. But
from the very beginning, any efforts to tinker with humanity were
outlawed."
"Even in Mythal?" Shaylar said,
with rather more skepticism, and Gadrial surprised her with a
harsh bark of laughter.
"Especially in Mythal!
The last thing any shakira would want to do is come up
with a way to turn garthan into shakira. Given
their religion, they'd see it as blasphemous, at the very least. And
from a practical perspective—which I personally happen to
think is even more important to them than their ludicrous
religious concepts—if they were to turn all of the
garthan into Gifted shakira, what happens to the
existing shakira's slave class? It's been my observation that
their 'religious principles' serve their more worldly ambitions
much more than the other way around."
"But what about turning
garthan into even more obedient slaves?"
"Now that probably
would be something that would appeal to the caste-lords," Gadrial
admitted with a grimace of distaste. "These days, at least. But at
the time the rules and laws which prohibit tampering with humans
were being put into place, no Mythalan garthan had any
hope of ever managing to escape or defy his overlords. There was
no need to turn them into 'more obedient slaves,' because it was
impossible for them to be disobedient under the existing
system."
"And why did everyone else feel
it should be outlawed?"
"Because, at the time, it was all a
process of trial and error," Gadrial said. "In fact, that's still the
case whenever anyone begins mapping a new species, in a lot of
ways. Hansara had found a way to producer congruent map, but
it's an incredibly complex chart, Shaylar, and initially, he had no
way of establishing the congruency between a particular section of
the map and specific characteristics of the creature it
represented. So he and his fellow magistrons not only had to come
up with techniques to modify the chart, they also had to figure out
which parts of it they needed to modify to achieve a
specific objective. Most of their initial efforts—for
decades, literally—produced creatures which couldn't
possibly survive on their own. Or, at best, which were far, far cries
from what they'd wanted to produce. No one was willing
to allow them to experiment on humans when they might as
readily produce a three-headed monster as an improvement on the
original model. And, of course, Hansara and his colleagues were
almost all Ransarans."
"Which was significant why?"
Shaylar asked, and Gadrial paused with an arrested expression.
"You know," she replied after
moment, "you speak Andaran so well that I keep forgetting how
little you actually know about Arcana. Like all of the reasons,
aside from the purely personal, of course, a Ransaran like me
would have for disliking a Mythalan."
"Should I take it that one or
more of those reasons would have a bearing on all of this?"
"Oh, I think you could probably
take it that way. You see, one of the primary causes for the
hostility between Mythal and Ransar is that we have totally
different religious beliefs. Mythalans believe in something they
call reincarnation. They believe that each individual human
soul—they call it a 'yurha'—experiences
dozens, possibly thousands, of lives, and that the purpose of those
lives is for each yurha to become more completely
realized—a 'higher being'—in each incarnation.
Ultimately, the individual yurha reaches a state of actual
divinity, in which it becomes one with the entire universe. That's
what they visualize God to be: the entire universe. He's not an
individual entity, not a creator, but a sort
of . . . confluence of all of the
magical energy bound up in all of creation. That's why the
shakira are 'obviously' the highest of the Mythalan castes.
Because they're the ones with the Gifts which allow them to
manipulate that magical energy, they're clearly much closer to
attaining the godhead than anyone else, since they as a caste
must consist solely of people with highly evolved yurhas
.
"It also justifies their treatment
of the garthan on several levels. The function of the
garthan is to do all of those dirty, demeaning, physically
exhausting jobs the shakira couldn't possibly take the time
to do, since it would draw them away from their mastery of magic
and thus separate them from the godhead. It would actually be
sinful for them to allow themselves to be diverted, since
that might cause their yurhas to move downward
through their 'great chain of being.'"
"That sounds a little bit like a
really distorted version of what some Lissians believe," Shaylar
said cautiously. "But the Lissians are among the gentlest, most
compassionate people on Sharona."
"Well, Mythalans certainly aren't
gentle or compassionate," Gadrial said tartly. Then she
sighed.
"I suppose my own experiences
with them really do color my reaction," she admitted. "But part of
the problem I have with their entire culture is that once you accept
their religious beliefs, and the mindset they've developed to go
with them, then their treatment of the garthan is perfectly
logical and reasonable. They really and truly simply don't
understand why the rest of us can't just see that and admit
that Mythal's been right all along . . .
which is one of the reasons both Ransar and Andara simply can't
stand them.
"As they see it, the whole object
of the human race, the whole reason we exist—according to
the Mythalans—is for all of us eventually to obtain
oneness. And, since they believe in reincarnation, each of us has an
effectively limitless number of lives in which our yurha
can advance. So no matter what they do to an individual
garthan—or to all garthan, as a caste—
they aren't really harming that individual, are they? After
all, this is only one brief stop in an endless journey, and eventually
all garthan—aside, of course, from the inevitably
willful or evil ones—will become shakira
themselves. In fact, some of the greatest cruelties the shakira
have traditionally practiced upon the garthan, like the
law codes which take Gifted children away from garthan
parents and give them to shakira to raise, are justified on
the basis of helping their victims attain enlightenment
sooner."
Shaylar looked at Gadrial for
several seconds, reminding herself that, by her own admission,
Gadrial hated Mythalans. But she'd also come to know Gadrial
Kelbryan. If the magister hated Mythalans, it was probably because
she despised their beliefs, rather than a case of her
despising—or distorting—their beliefs because she
hated them.
"So how do Ransaran beliefs
differ from Mythalan beliefs?" she asked finally.
"In just about every conceivable
way," Gadrial snorted. "First, every Ransaran—with the
exception of the Manisthuans—is monotheistic. That is, we
all believe there's only a single God, since God is, by definition,
infinite and since, equally by definition, there can't be two
infinite beings. All of our theologians agreed long ago that if two
beings are separate from one another, then neither can be truly
infinite, since they have to stop somewhere if there are
going to be two of them in the first place. Unfortunately, we're
Ransarans. While we may all agree that there's only one God, we
don't all agree on who He—or She—is."
The corners of her eyes crinkled
with amusement at Shaylar's expression, and she chuckled.
"In fairness to the Mythalans,"
she said, "and much as it pains me to even consider being
fair to them, I can't conceive of anyone who could possibly be
more profoundly . . . irritating to
them than Ransarans. It's almost as if God deliberately designed us
to drive them crazy. And vice-versa, of course.
"There are three major Ransaran
religions, Shaylar, and quite a few subsidiary sects floating around
the fringes. I personally belong to the Fellowship of Rahil, and we
Rahilians follow the teachings of Rahil, the Great Prophetess. By
all accounts, she was a magistron of truly phenomenal ability back
in the days before the theoretical basis for magic was at all
understood. We believe her abilities in that regard were directly
inspired by God as a sign of His favor, and her writings about God
constitute the seminal text of our religious beliefs. In the Rahilian
view, God is infinite, and as such infinitely unknowable, but a
benign and loving Creator who progressively reveals to us as
much about Him as finite mortals are capable of understanding.
Like the Mythlans, Rahilians
believe that the purpose of a physical, mortal existence is for the
individual soul to live and grow—to 'evolve' upward, to
use the Mythalan term—by making choices and acquiring
experience. But we also believe that God is separate from the
universe around us, that He extends beyond and transcends it as an
individual distinct from it, and that He seeks an individual
relationship with each of us. That was what Rahil taught, at any
rate.
"Over the centuries, the
Rahilians and the other two major Ransaran religions have spent
quite a lot of their time massacring one another over various
points of religious disagreement," Gadrial admitted. "We stopped
doing that about, oh, nine hundred years ago, I guess. Not that we
all turned into sunshine and light where our differences are
concerned, of course. But at least all of us got to the point where
we agreed that whoever was right, God would probably be fairly
irritated with His—or Her—worshipers if they
insisted on slaughtering everyone else in job lots simply for being
mistaken.
"At any rate, there are three
things that all three of our major religions have in common. First,
we believe there's an individual God, an all-powerful being who
exists outside the material universe, rather than being
bound up in it.
"Second, none of us believe in
reincarnation, although all of us do believe in the immortality of
the human soul. And we believe that each soul has a single mortal
existence in which to establish its relationship to God. There's
some disagreement among us about what happens to the souls that
don't manage to establish the right relationship with God.
In fact, that's one of the points we used to kill each other over,
back in the good old days.
"Third, we believe each
individual must have the greatest possible opportunity to become
all that he or she can become. Not simply because all of us
agree God wants us to love one another, but because it's in the
process of becoming all a person can be, that person is brought
closer to God and so to the ability to establish that 'right
relationship' we all believe in . . .
even if we're not quite in total agreement over what it ought to
be."
She stopped again, gazing at
Shaylar, and the Voice nodded slowly. Gadrial was right, she
reflected. Assuming that the magister had described the Mythalans
and Ransaran viewpoints as accurately—or, at least,
honestly—as Shaylar was confident she had, it was scarcely
surprising that the Mythalans would hate, despise, and fear
everything Ransar stood for. And she could think of nothing
someone with Gadrial's religious and philosophical values would
find more revolting and cruel than the Mythalan caste system.
Which only made the deep and obvious love which had existed
between Gadrial and Magister Halathyn even more remarkable.
"At any rate," Gadrial continued,
"given the Ransaran views on the preciousness of each individual
life, the possibility of any of our major religions—most of
which were still quite cheerfully chopping up the adherents of
their Ransaran coreligionists at the time—signing off on
the notion of trial-and-error experiments on humans
was . . . remote, shall we say. So
both the Mythalans and the Ransarans, each for their own very
different reasons, outlawed that sort of experimentation on
humans from the very beginning."
"But not on other creatures,"
Shaylar said, and managed not to grimace when Gadrial shook her
head.
The more Shaylar heard about
the Mythalans, the more she preferred the Ransarans. Yet it was
obvious to her that even the humanistic Ransarans were very, very
different from her own people. Most Sharonians would have
found it exceedingly difficult to "sign off on" that sort of
experimentation upon any creatures, not just humans.
There were exceptions, of course, as she was well aware, but the
existence of those like her mother, whose Talent allowed
communication with sentient non-human species, made them rare.
Very few Sharonians would have been prepared to suggest that a
cow, or a chicken, was intellectually or morally equivalent to a
human being. But, by the same token, very few Sharonians would
have been prepared to deny that the great apes and the
cetaceans had attained a very high level of intelligence which, if
not equal to that of human beings, certainly approached it very
closely. In some ways, that same Talent kept them from over-
anthropomorphizing the lesser animals, with whom no meaningful
contact was possible. Still, by and large, they tended to regard
themselves as the stewards of the worlds in which they lived, and
the notion of creating experimental monsters would have been
highly repugnant to them.
Not that she had any intention of
discussing that with Gadrial just now. Especially since, so far,
she'd managed to conceal the existence of that specific Talent,
despite her mother's life work.
If they ever ask me exactly who Mother's an ambassador
to, keeping that particular secret a secret is going to get sticky
, she thought. So let's not go there just now, Shaylar.
"So, how does all of this relate
to transport dragons and battle dragons?" she asked, instead.
"Well, it was Ransaran
magistrons who built the first dragons," Gadrial said, as if she
were discussing how to go about baking a cake, Shaylar thought.
"'Built' them out of what?" the Voice demanded.
"There's some dispute about
that," Gadrial admitted. "According to at least one tradition, there
were still some of the great lizards living in Ransar at the time."
She shrugged. "I've always had problems with that particular
explanation, myself, since the fossil record seems to indicate that
all of the great lizards had died out—rather abruptly, in
geological terms—long before dragons were ever
developed. Still, there are undeniable similarities.
"At any rate," she continued, as if
blithely oblivious to the way Shaylar's eyes were bugging out ever
so slightly, "the original dragons were developed in Ransar strictly
as beasts of burden. As a way to move cargo quickly from point to
point, for the most part, although there are still some wingless
dragons in Ransar, where they've been used for centuries instead
of horses or unicorns as really heavy draft animals. For the most
part, though, their military applications were limited strictly to
improving transport. Until the Mythalans got into the act, that
was."
"And why did I see that
one coming?" Shaylar demanded rhetorically.
"Because you're so clever,"
Gadrial told her with a wry chuckle.
"I've always rather suspected that
Mythalan resentment that we primitive Ransarans had produced
something they hadn't played a part in what happened," the
magister continued. "After all, to be brutally honest, most of us were pretty primitive compared to Mythal, at that particular
point. Hansara was a Tosarian, and Tosaria had evolved a much
higher level of civilization than most of the rest of us. My
ancestors, for example, were still painting themselves blue and
yellow and pickling their enemies's heads as door ornaments at the
time. As far as Mythal was concerned, though, all
Ransarans were still doing that, and yet the Tosarians had
produced not just dragons but Hansara's basic work. Given
shakira arrogance, I'm sure they felt an enormous temptation
to prove they could do it better than we had. But they weren't
interested in simply improving transportation capabilities; they
were looking for direct military applications."
Gadrial's amusement of only
moments before had vanished.
"Skyfang is a pure transport type.
As Daris says, he probably goes clear back to the first egg. Which
means he's bigger, stronger, and less maneuverable than a battle
dragon, but that he has more endurance and basic lift capability.
And, aside from his teeth and claws, he has no natural weapons."
"You mean battle dragons do
have other weapons?" Shaylar's eyes widened.
Mother Marthea! she thought shakenly. Surely the
things' fangs, claws, and horns are vicious enough! How could
even Mythalans want to add still more weapons to their
nightmare?
"They certainly do." Gadrial's
voice was as grim as if she'd actually Heard Shaylar's
thought . . . and shared it. "The
weapons Jasak's men used against your people are called 'infantry-
dragons' because they replicate the 'natural' weapons the
Mythalans built into their real dragons, Shaylar. Some battle
dragons breathe fire—or, rather, spit fireballs. Others throw
lightning bolts. And still others, despite periodic efforts to ban the
breeds in question entirely, project poisonous gases and vapors."
Shaylar gazed at her in horror,
and the magister shrugged. She was obviously sympathetic to
Shaylar's reaction, but there was something more than simple
sympathy behind that shrug, and she returned Shaylar's gaze
levelly.
"I can understand that you find
the thought frightening and unnatural, Shaylar," she said. "And I
don't disagree with you that building something like that into a
living creature is a typically Mythalan sort of thing to do. In fact,
I've always thought battle dragons are probably the most horrific
battlefield weapons—short of the mass destruction spells
which were banned when the Union was formed, at least—
that Arcana's ever deployed. But I can't believe your people are
that much different from ours when it comes to fighting wars.
You've thrown the fact that Jasak's troopers' infantry-dragons
burned your people to death into the face of every Army officer
you've confronted, and I admit that that's a horrible way to die.
But war is full of horrible ways to die, isn't it? Are you
going to tell me your people never poured flaming oil onto
someone trying to storm a castle wall? That they never blew
someone's abdomen open with those artillery pieces of
yours—those "mortars"—and left him to bleed
slowly to death on the field of battle, screaming in pain? Never
used fire as a naval weapon that gave men the choice between
burning to death or drowning when their wooden ships went up in
flame around them?"
Shaylar started to open her
mouth in a quick response, then paused and closed it once more.
Gadrial was right, she realized. When it came to the organized
slaughter of combat, there were countless horrific ways to die. No
one had a monopoly on ghastliness.
"I'm not saying you don't have
every right to regard what happened to your survey crew as an act
of barbarism," Gadrial said more gently. "If nothing else, your
people were civilians, and all you were doing was defending
yourselves. But when you think about all the horrors Arcanan
weapons could unleash against your people, you need to
remember that our people are worrying about horrors just as great
coming from your people. Both sides are terrified, and
both sides think the people on the other side are barbarians. I pray
to God every night that we're both wrong, that Master Skirvon and
Master Dastiri are going to sit down with your people and
somehow negotiate an end to all of this without one more single
person being killed.
"But if Skirvon and Dastiri don't
pull that off, then Jasak's father is one of the men who are going to
decide what happens next, how Arcana goes to war against
Sharona. You already know what Jasak's going to tell him, but it's
going to be almost as much up to us—to you, Jathmar, and
me—to convince the Duke that prosecuting the war with
every weapon at our disposal is the wrong thing to do. And if
you're going to help convince him of that, you've got to be able to
be brutally honest about just how much barbarism there really is
on both sides."
She stopped speaking, and there
was no sound except the noise of wind and water for several
seconds. Then Shaylar gave a tiny nod.
"You're right," she said. "Or
partly right, at least. I'm sure being caught in the explosion of an
artillery shell is just as terrible as being killed by one of your
lightning bolts. And, yes, my people have used flaming oil and set
their enemies' ships on fire with what we call 'Ternathian Fire.' I
suppose the only real difference is how we go about inflicting our
mutual atrocities, isn't it?"
"I'm afraid so," Gadrial agreed
sadly.
"Maybe it's only the fact that I am a civilian," Shaylar continued. "I'd never seen anyone
actually killed in front of me before, never even thought about
how horrible and terrifying and ugly that would be. And," she
managed something that was almost a smile, "something about
being on the receiving end of something like that does tend to give
you a somewhat biased opinion of just
how . . . humanitarian it is.
"But I'll try to think about what
you've said. Especially the bit about helping to convince Jasak's
father Sharona isn't simply a pit of horrors waiting to consume
Arcana."
"From what I've heard of the
Duke, he's not likely to think that, anyway," Gadrial said. "But
there are going to be others, as well, and some of them very well
may."
"I understand." Shaylar nodded.
Then she inhaled deeply and squared her shoulders.
"But you were saying about the
dragons?" she said.
"I was saying that they call the
infantry support weapons 'dragons' because of the way they
replicate dragons' natural weapons," Gadrial said. "But they aren't
anywhere near as deadly as an actual battle dragon. The artillery's
field-dragons are many times more powerful than the infantry-
dragons Jasak's men had with them that day, and much longer
ranged. But even the heaviest field-dragon is much less powerful
than the weapons built into battle dragons. All of the infantry and
artillery weapons rely on charged spell accumulators, but battle
dragons are spell accumulators. They charge
themselves from the magic field after every shot."
"I'm trying very hard to
remember what we were just saying," Shaylar told her a bit wanly.
"It's a bit difficult, though, when you tell me about something like
that."
"I never said it would be easy.
Just that we've got to do it, anyway."
"I know, I know." Shaylar shook
her head. "But are you saying that you think it's something about
the . . . magic the Mythalans used to
graft those horrible capabilities into their battle dragons that
causes them to hate me where transports like Skyfang don't?"
Shaylar asked, deliberately trying
to step back from the horrendous vision of dragons flying over
Sharona belching death and devastation.
"Probably," Gadrial said, leaning
back in her deck chair as if she, too, was grateful to back away
from the same vision. "Although, actually, I think it probably has
less to do with the weapons themselves than with the changes in
the dragons' . . . personalities, for
want of a better word, that went with it. The original Ransaran
dragon breeding lines had deliberately emphasized docility. The
breeders didn't want something that size which would
suddenly decide it ought to be eating its handlers. The Mythalans,
typically, decided to 'improve' upon that when they set out to
create dragons for combat. So they spliced in several of the
characteristics of a Mythal River crocodile." She grimaced once
more. "You might say that their personalities are just a little
more aggressive than those of a pure transport, like Skyfang."
"I see," Shaylar said slowly, and,
in fact, she rather thought she did. She'd sensed a similarity
between Skyfang and the huge whales who sought out her mother
when they needed an interface with humanity. The dragon wasn't
as intelligent as the great whales—or, at least, she certainly
didn't think he was—yet there was that undeniably familiar
"feel" to his personality. But if Skyfang was somehow similar to
whales, then the battle dragons were more akin to the great
sharks . . . or, perhaps, to barracudas.
"That's very interesting," she said
after several seconds. "It's a lot to take in, of
course . . . even without your well-
deserved little lecture." she smiled crookedly, then she yawned. It
wasn't completely feigned, and her smile turned lopsided. "In fact,
if you don't mind, I think I'm going to take advantage of the sun
until lunchtime and sleep on it."
"By all means, get as much rest
as you can," Gadrial advised her with an equally crooked smile.
"We won't be getting much of it over the next half-dozen
universes or so."
"In that
case . . . "
Shaylar settled back in her deck
chair and tucked the light blanket around her legs. Then she gave
Gadrial a smile, closed her eyes, and dreamed nightmares of
Sharonian nights filled with the ghastly pyres of dragon breath.
Chapter Forty-Eight
"So, Davir. What kind of effect
do you expect these negotiations to have?" Darl Elivath asked.
It was late as he and Davir Perth
sat sipping tea. They were in the Sharonian Universal News
Network's green room, in the wing of the Great Palace set-aside
for the press, waiting for official word that the Conclave's
Committee on Unification had finally managed to report out draft
language for the proposed amendment to the initial Act of
Unification.
"On the Conclave and the
Unification? Or on whether or not we go to war with these
people?" Perthis asked.
"Both, I suppose," Elivath said.
"It took the threat of a war to get the Conclave assembled in the
first place, after all."
"Well," SUNN's Chief Voice
scratched his chin thoughtfully. "I suppose the fact that they want
to talk at all has to be a good sign. At least it's not what you expect
out of the kind of murderous barbarians we've all assumed we
were facing. And the possibility that it was all a mistake—
that they thought our people were soldiers who'd attacked one of
their people—genuinely hadn't occurred to me."
Perthis was a bit surprised by
how unwillingly he made that admission, and he wondered
why he was so unwilling. Was it that he'd invested so much in
hating the "Arcanans" for what they'd done that he simply didn't
want to give up his hate? Or was it what he'd Seen from Shaylar's
final Voice transmission? He remembered once again Seeing
Ghartoun chan Hagrahyl stand up with his hands
empty . . . and go down again,
choking on his life's blood.
Perthis was a man who'd spent
his entire adult career in the news business. He knew, beyond any
shadow of a doubt, that what he'd Seen from Shaylar was the truth.
It was, quite literally, impossible for a Voice to lie about
something like that in such a deep linkage to another Voice. But
the professional newsman in him also recognized how even the
truth could be misread, misinterpreted. Was that what had
happened here?
It was entirely possible that it
was, he admitted. And if it was, the fact that relatively few people
on Sharona—Davir Perthis, included—had ever
seen a violent death with their own eyes had undoubtedly
contributed to it. The sheer, horrifying emotional impact of seeing
that sort of carnage with your physical eyes would have been bad
enough for someone who'd never seen it before. Going the extra
step and Seeing it with the total clarity (and emotional overtones)
which could only come from a powerful Voice trapped in the
middle of it only made it infinitely worse.
"What about what they say
happened to Shaylar?"
Elivath's question broke in on
the Chief Voice's thoughts, and Perthis looked back up at him
with a sour expression.
"They haven't really said all that
much, when you come right down to it," he pointed out. "Aside
from the fact that she wasn't killed outright—which we
already knew—all we have is their claims that they tried to
get her to one of their Healers before she died. Or that they could
have done anything for her if they'd managed to reach one in time.
We didn't get that from a Voice, either, you know. And either way,
she's still dead, and they still killed her."
"So you think they're lying?"
"I didn't say that." Perthis
realized he sounded a little defensive, and waved one hand. "All
right, I admit I thought it. I'm having a hard time getting
past my original image of them, I guess. But the fact is, Darl, that
we don't have any sort of confirmation of a single thing
they've said, and I'm just . . .
uncomfortable with the fact."
"But if they did try to save her,
and if it turns out they can prove it, don't you think it would make
a difference with public opinion?"
"If they genuinely tried
to save her life after making an honest mistake, then probably yes,"
Perthis said. "But that's a lot of ifs, Darl. They've still got a lot of
talking to do, as far as I'm concerned, to explain how what were
supposed to be a bunch of trained soldiers mistook someone
standing up and holding out empty hands as an act of aggression.
Mind you, I'm not saying mistakes like that can't happen. Gods
know they've happened in our own past. I'm just saying that after
actually Seeing the events from our crew's side, it's going to be
hard to convince a lot of our people, including me, that that's what
happened here."
He started to say something else,
then stopped himself. He didn't know exactly how much Elivath
actually knew about the rumors regarding the Voice messages to
Emperor Zindel and the Conclave. The original message from
Regiment-Captain Velvelig, informing the Emperor and the
Conclave that the Arcanans had asked for negotiations, had been
released directly to the Voice network and the general public. The
follow-on messages had not been, and neither had any of
the Conclave's—or Zindel's—responses to Velvelig.
Ostensibly, that was to avoid
further exacerbating public opinion by generating unreasonable
expectations, on the one hand, or generating additional fury when
the bobbles and stumbles which were undoubtedly inevitable in
opening negotiations with a totally alien civilization occurred, on
the other hand. Perthis supposed that the official reasoning made
sense, but he'd picked up on a few very quiet rumors that it was
because those follow-on messages from whoever was actually
talking to these people included reports that the Arcanans weren't
being completely truthful. He had no idea what they were
supposed to be lying about, but the thought that they were lying at
all was hardly reassuring.
"Well, let's assume it turns out
they really did their best to save her life," Elivath said. "And that
they really do want to settle this as peacefully as they can, given
everything that's already happened. If all that's true, what kind of
effect do you think it's going to have on the Conclave and
the unification?"
"I don't know that I expect it to
have any effect," Perthis replied. Elivath raised one
skeptical eyebrow, and the Chief Voice shrugged. "By now," he
pointed out, "the debate's taken on the life of its own. Besides,
even if we manage to put the brakes on this current confrontation,
we still know the bastards are out there, don't we? All of our
conventional political equations are going to have to take them
into account from now on."
"Do you really think so?"
Elivath grimaced and set down
his tea cup. He sat turning it on its saucer for a moment, lips
slightly pursed, while he gazed out of the green room's window at
the Great Palace's well-lit grounds under the great, midnight-blue
dome of the starstruck heavens. Then he returned his gaze to
Perthis.
"I was talking to one of the
Authority's theoreticians," the Voice correspondent said. "From
the way he was talking, this may be the only point of contact we'll
see with these people. So if we get control of it, or just seal it off,
wouldn't that be more or less the end of it?"
"Only point of contact?"
Perthis leaned back in his own
chair. To be totally honest, he'd never thought of Elivath as the
sharpest pencil in SUNN's box. He respected the strength of
Elivath's Talent, and his integrity, but he'd also always thought of
Elivath as one of his correspondents who required rather more
careful direction than many.
He knew Elivath knew
he regarded him that way—that was one of the problems
when Voices with powerful Talents worked with one
another—but he also knew that both he and Elivath had
qualities the other respected, as well. Still, he'd never really
considered Elivath an investigative reporter. The
correspondent was extraordinarily good at explaining even
complicated concepts to his audience, once he'd mastered those
concepts himself, but he usually needed them explained to him
in the first place by the investigators who'd gone out and
turned them up initially. Part of Perthis' job was to see to it that
the proper experts were found to explain things to him, and he was
unaccustomed to having Elivath go out and do the finding for
himself, especially in technical matters. But if the correspondent
had, indeed, turned up some new technical information, Perthis
wanted to know about it.
"Why should this be the only
point of contact?" the Chief Voice continued after a moment.
"Aside from the fact that we've never had one before, which might
predispose us to expect it to be the only one, that is."
"I'm not the best technical man
we've got," Elivath pointed out mildly—and, Perthis
thought, with considerable understatement. "We both know that.
But according to this fellow, the latest models for how the
multiverse works suggest that our particular universe is part of
what I guess you might call a 'cable' of universes. Sort of like
those stranded cables they used to hang the bridge across the Ylani
Strait, I guess."
He waved one hand, frowning, as
if he weren't completely satisfied with his own analogy. Not too
surprisingly, Perthis reflected. No one, as far as he was
aware, had ever come up with an analogy for the multiverse's
structure that he really liked.
"Anyway, this fellow I was
talking to says that all of the empirical and theoretical work that's
been done suggests that all of the universes in the multiverse had
the same common starting point. What caused them
to . . . separate from one another
were events that had multiple possible outcomes. Each possible
outcome happened somewhere, and that started the
separate, divergent universes."
He paused, one eyebrow raised,
and Perthis nodded to indicate that he was still following. That
part of the theory had been explained to everyone, over and
over again. There might be an Arpathian septman somewhere so
far up in the hills that they still hadn't invented fire who hadn't
heard it, but everyone else was fully aware of it.
"Well," Elivath continued, "this
guy I was talking to says that up until recently we always figured
that whenever a new universe was created, it went off in its own
unique direction. That each new universe radiated at what I guess
you could think of as right angles to the universe it split off from
because of the particular event that created it. But he says that that
theory's been challenged lately, and that the brains' best current
guess is that the universes that are most similar
lie . . . parallel to one another, for
want of a better word, instead. They're all 'headed the same
direction,' so to speak, not racing away from each other."
"I got the same briefing when
this whole thing blew up in our faces," Perthis agreed, nodding
again. "In fact, they said something about the Calirath Glimpses
proving the existence of parallel universes."
"Yeah." Elivath made a face. "I
remember. It made my head hurt, actually."
"Only if you tried to follow the
theory instead of the consequences," Perthis pointed out with a
wry grin. "Just remember that the boffins think that what a
Glimpse is is really a sort of precognitive peek across into those
parallel universes, whereas a straight precog is stuck looking
along the event line in his own universe. A Glimpse isn't true precognition, but more of
a . . . statistical process. They do have
some unique capability in their Talent which lets them follow
possible human actions and outcomes, but the unpredictability of
human nature means they can't be sure what any particular human
in any particular universe is going to do. What they can do,
apparently, is see the possible actions and outcomes of a whole
bunch of people simultaneously. The same people, living
in parallel universes. And what their Glimpses are is the most
common outcomes of all those actions."
"Like I say, it made my head
hurt. It still does."
"Mine, too, if I'm going to be
honest." Perthis grinned. "But, the main point, is that that's the
reason the Caliraths can See the consequences of human actions
when no one else can. And if the universes in question weren't
really, really close to one another—really 'parallel,' and
really similar to one another,I mean—then a Glimpse based
on what's going to happen in any other universe—or
universes, for that matter—wouldn't help when it comes to
figuring out what's going to happen in this one."
"That's probably what this fellow
was getting at when he said that the parallel universes stay 'close
together,'" Elivath said. "But he also pointed out that where the portals form is where one universe 'runs into' another one,
and since similar universes stay close together
and . . . head in the same 'direction,'
then it's the most dissimilar universes which are most
likely to collide and form portals. He says that's the best current
theory for why we've never run into humans before. As different
from us as these people obviously are, they still almost have to
come from a universe that's in our basic 'cable,' since there are
humans in it at all."
"I think I see where you're
headed with this," Perthis said slowly. In fact, he was impressed by
Elivath's analysis. Of course, he realized the Voice hadn't come up
with it on his own, but it was obvious he'd been thinking hard
about it for some time.
"So your basic point," the Chief
Voice continued, "is that since we're
all . . . traveling along in this same
direction of yours, the odds are against any of the universes in our
'cable' colliding with another universe in their 'cable.'"
"Exactly." Elivath nodded
vigorously, and it was Perthis' turn to gaze out the window into
the night while he thought.
"I'm not sure it follows," he said
finally. "Mind you, Darl, I'd like it to. Given how murderous these
bastards seem to be, I'd like it a lot, actually. But if I'm following
the logic properly, then didn't we start a fresh 'cable' at the
moment our universes made contact? What I mean is, isn't there a
new batch of universes spreading out from the point at which our
universe and their universe found the same portal cluster? And if
that's true, aren't the strands of that new 'cable' all laying out
parallel to one another . . . and at
right angles, for want of a better description, to our original
'cables'?"
"Now my head really hurts,"
Elivath said plaintively, and Perthis chuckled.
"It's not that bad. Or, at least, I
don't think it is," he said. "At the same time, it sort of
underscores our basic problem, doesn't it? You and I are hardly
multi-universal theorists, but from what I'm hearing out
of the people who are, they don't really have any idea at all what
the ultimate consequences of this contact are likely to be. We may
never find ourselves sharing another portal with these people, or
we might find ourselves running into them every time we turn
around! At any rate, I think we have to plan on the basis that we could be running into them again and again."
"And," Elivath said, cocking his
head, "you see this as an opportunity to put Ternathia in charge of
the planet, anyway."
Perthis managed not to blink,
although the shrewdness of the correspondent's observation had
taken him considerably aback. I think I've been underestimating
him, the Chief Voice thought after a moment. Either that,
or I've been an awful lot more obvious about my little
manipulations than I ever meant to be! He gazed at Elivath for
several seconds, then shrugged.
"I suppose you're right," he
conceded. "Oh, I started out feeling that way simply because of the
threat these people represented. I figured somebody had to
be in charge if we were going to respond to them the way they
obviously deserved, and Zindel was absolutely the best person I
could think of for the job." The Chief Voice's lips twitched
humorlessly. "For one thing, he's so damned levelheaded I figured
he'd probably help restrain my own murderous impulses if they
needed restraining.
"I still do think we need a world
government that can not simply take advantage of whatever we
manage to negotiate with these people this time around, but keep
an eye on them for the future. But I'll admit that I've been more
and more impressed with the possibilities of a world
government—especially one with Ternathia's traditions
behind it—for dealing with all the rest of our problems,
too."
"Somebody to make the children
behave right here on Sharona, you mean?" Elivath asked, but
Perthis shook his head.
"That's probably part of it," he
conceded, "but not all of it. Not by a long shot."
He paused briefly, trying to
decide how best to say what he was thinking. It was odd. He was a
professional newsman, yet putting his own thoughts into words in
a conversation like this one often refused to come easily for him.
"We do have some problem
children here on Sharona that need somebody to look after them
until they finish growing up," he continued seriously at last. "But
in realistic terms, and especially given the safety valve the portals
have given us, the nations whose problems are a simple lack of
maturity aren't any particular threat to the rest of us.
Unfortunately, that's not true for all of our problem
children."
"You're thinking about
Uromathia, aren't you?" Elivath challenged.
"Mostly," Perthis admitted. "But
even the current problems with Uromathia are almost all due to
Chava, when you come right down to it. I mean, Uromathians in
general sometimes seem to me to walk around with a king-sized
chip on their collective shoulder, especially where Ternathia is
concerned. But by and large, they're not really any more jingoistic
or just naturally nasty than anyone else. The fact that their current
emperor—and all three of his sons, as far as I can
tell—are certifiable lunatics, now,
though . . . that's a problem.
"On the one hand, that means
getting rid of him (and of them) would solve our presence
difficulties with Uromathia. But, on the other hand, it means the
next Chava—whether he's Uromathian or from
somewhere else entirely—will simply present his own
clutch of problems. Putting someone like Ternathia in charge of a
world government with the mechanisms in place to deal with
future Chavas as they arise will save us all an awful lot of grief
down the road. Whatever happens at Hell's Gate."
"Assuming someone like Chava
doesn't wind up in charge of it, instead," Elivath pointed out.
"That's not going to happen,"
Perthis said firmly.
Elivath looked rather more
skeptical than the Chief Voice, but he didn't disagree. He couldn't,
really, and Perthis knew it.
It had become painfully evident,
even to Chava Busar, that his own candidacy for Emperor of
Sharona had been a complete nonstarter. Only his closest
neighbors had voted for him, and they'd obviously done it more
because they were afraid of him (and how he might react if they hadn't voted for him) than because they'd thought he'd make
a good planetary Emperor. The fact that anyone outside
his own empire had voted for him, coupled with the military and
economic clout of that empire, gave him a degree of bargaining
power when it came to the terms under which Uromathia might
accept the Conclave's decision, but that was about it.
And it's enough, Perthis thought glumly.
"So you think this new
compromise the Committee on Unification is supposed to be
getting ready to report out is going to go through?" Elivath said.
"That's what Tarlin thinks,"
Perthis replied.
"He said so?"
Elivath sounded surprised, and
Perthis laughed. Tarlin Bolsh and his international news division's
analysts were notorious for covering their posteriors carefully
when it came time to prognosticate on major international events.
Without a Glimpse for guidance—and there weren't any
Caliraths working for SUNN—precognition was pretty
much useless when it came to political events, and it often seemed
to Perthis that the analysts were more concerned with not being wrong than they were with being right.
"More or
less . . . although he wasn't prepared
to admit it for public consumption," the Chief Voice said dryly,
and it was Elivath's turn to laugh.
"On the other hand," Perthis
continued, his smile fading, "I think he's probably right."
"If I were Zindel, I wouldn't want
Chava marrying into my family," Elivath said sourly.
"Neither would I," Perthis
agreed. "But, as Tarlin pointed out, Chava's picked his demands
pretty shrewdly. He's right, after all. Intermarriage has
always been part of the traditional Ternathian approach to
guaranteeing the inclusion of 'subject peoples'—although I
hate the way Chava keeps throwing around that particular
term—in the mainstream of their Empire." The Chief Voice
shrugged. "If we're going to institute a planet-wide Ternathian
Empire under the Calirath Dynasty, then demanding that the heir
to the throne has to marry someone from the Uromathian
royalty actually makes a lot of sense."
"In a perfect world," Elivath
snorted. "In this world, it's going to make Chava Busar Janaki
chan Calirath's father-in-law. Now, does that strike you as
a marriage made in heaven?"
"Not by a long shot," Perthis said
again. "But Janaki's a Calirath, and they've been making dynastic
marriages for as long as anyone can remember. For that matter, for
as far back as the oldest histories go! They haven't all worked out
very well on a personal level, of course, but Janaki's going to
understand the political necessities. And let's be fair, Darl.
Whatever we may think of Chava, Uromathia is still the second
most powerful nation on Sharona, and there are an awful lot of
Uromathians. They deserve to be fairly represented in any
world government. And if they aren't represented, what
does that say to everyone else? You and I may be confident that
Zindel chan Calirath isn't going to produce some sort of tyranny,
but if we expect countries all over the planet to surrender their
national sovereignty to him, then they need to know he's
prepared to be reasonable about inclusiveness, honesty,
fairness . . . and access to power."
"Maybe. No," Elivath grimaced,
"not 'maybe'. You're right. But I don't think Zindel's especially
happy about the prospect of sharing grandkids with Chava!"
"Given the fact that there
probably aren't two men on the face of the entire planet who
loathe each other more than he and Chava do, that's probably just a
bit of an understatement." Perthis' tone was drier than a Shurkhali
summer wind. "Of course, he knows Chava knows that, too. That's
why he's dug in his heels so hard over 'resisting' the entire
marriage proposal. Tarlin says his people figure it's Zindel's way
of telling Chava that it's the only one of Uromathia's
demands that Chava's going to get. And, frankly, I think Chava's
entirely prepared to settle for it. He knows he can't possibly put a
planetary crown on his own head; he's too hated and distrusted for
that. So the best he can realistically hope for is to put it on a
grandson's head. He'll settle for that, especially since somebody
like him will figure that, if he's patient, sooner or later a
possibility for him to . . . improve his
own position is going to present itself."
"Now there's a charming
possibility," Elivath said sourly.
"I wouldn't be very happy if it
worked out that way, myself," Perthis said more mildly. "On the
other hand, you—and Chava, for that matter—might
want to think about how long Ternathia's been playing this sort of
game."
The Chief Voice showed his
teeth in a smile that was really quite unpleasant, Elivath thought.
"Chava Busar thinks he's clever,
and in a brutal sort of way, he is," Perthis said. "And he thinks
Uromathia is an ancient empire, and that he's a ruthless sort of
fellow. Both of those are true, too. But Ternathia's one hell of a
lot more ancient, and the fact that the Caliraths have traditionally
put their subjects' best interests first doesn't mean they
aren't ruthless. In fact, Darl, if you go back and look at Ternathian
history, I think you'll discover that nobody's ever been
more ruthless than a Calirath when there was no other way to win.
And do you really think Chava is even in the same league
as Zindel chan Calirath when it comes to intelligent
ruthlessness?"
Elivath opened his mouth. Then
he stopped, looking thoughtful, and his frown turned slowly into a
smile of its own.
"Actually, when you put it that
way," he said finally, "no."
Chapter Forty-Nine
Hadrign Thalmayr lay rigidly on
his side on the white-sheeted bed in the airy, sunlit room. His eyes
were screwed tightly shut, beads of sweat stood out on his
forehead, and his fists were clenched so tightly that his nails had
cut bleeding crescents into his palms.
The breeze through the open
window moved gently, almost caressingly across him. He could
hear the distant but unmistakable sounds of a drill field: voices
shouting orders in a foreign language, whistles shrilling at
irregular intervals, the occasional clatter of weapons as troops
went through their own version of the manual of arms, and the
deep-voiced sound of drill formations counting cadence. The air
was cool, the distant background noise—deeply familiar to
any professional soldier, despite the fact that he couldn't
understand a single word of the orders he overheard—only
made the quiet around him even more soothing, and he could
almost literally physically feel the relaxing, comforting
peacefulness which had settled over this place.
It was all reassuringly calm and
normal . . . and its very normality
only made his terror and helpless rage still worse.
The man sitting in the chair
beside his bed spoke again, in that same utterly incomprehensible,
comforting voice, but Thalmayr wasn't fooled. He squeezed his
eyelids even more tightly together and bit his lip, welcoming the
pain of the bite as it helped them summon all of his resistance
while that insidious, loathsome touch slid once again
across the surface of his mind.
It took all he could do not to
moan or whimper in terror. He called up all of his hatred, all of
his fear and disgust, to bolster his defiance, but it was hard. Hard.
He never knew exactly how long
it lasted this time. Sometimes the man behind that lying, soothing
voice stayed longer; sometimes he gave up sooner, and left. But he
always came back, Thalmayr thought despairingly. And he always
would come back, again and again. Until, finally, he
managed to breach his victim's defenses at last, and the mere
thought of what would happen then filled Hadrign Thalmayr with
horror.
But eventually, finally, his
tormentor gave up . . . this time. The
commander of one hundred lay rigidly still, refusing to move or
even open his eyes until he was positive the other man had
truly left. That he wasn't just waiting, lurking above the bed like a
vulture.
He lay there for a long time, then
slowly and cautiously let his eyes slip back open. The chair beside
the bed was empty, and he heaved a tremendous sigh of relief and
finally allowed himself to relax, at least a bit.
He wanted to roll over onto his
back, but the sandbags holding him on his side prevented it.
Which, he admitted, was just as well, given the incision across his
spine.
His teeth clenched again as he
thought about that wound and all the pain their so-called "healers"
had inflicted upon him. Butchers—barbarians! He'd been
right about them all along, and he cursed Sir Jasak Olderhan in
vicious mental silence as he remembered the other hundred's
precious "shardonai."
I should've fed the pair of them to the nearest godsdamned
dragon! he thought savagely. Them and all their fucking
friends!
He'd long since figured out that
that sneaky little bitch with her bruised face and pitiful "poor me"
eyes had somehow managed to get a message out to her
butchering friends. He still didn't know how, but the way they'd
flung her name at him again and again in their questioning proved
she had . . . and the way they kept
battering at his own mind suggested several ugly possibilities as to
how she had.
The whole time that fucking idiot Olderhan was standing there
'protecting her,' she was busy telling her friends where we
were and how to come find us and kill us! It's the only way they
could've known she was still alive!
His molars ground together. It
was all her fault. She was the one who'd brought the attack
in on Thalmayr's command. It wasn't his fault. There was
no way he could possibly have known what the little bitch was
doing, that she'd managed to bring an entire godsdamned
regiment down on him! If it hadn't been for her, his
men would still be alive. Magister Halathyn would still be
alive.
And Hadrign Thalmayr wouldn't
be the half-paralyzed prisoner of the butchers who'd started all of
this by massacring that brainless incompetent Olderhan's men in
the first place. The butchers who'd somehow transported him over
what had to be hundreds, if not thousands, of miles without his
remembering a single thing about the journey. The butchers who
cut open the flesh of helpless captives in some obscene pretense of
trying to "help them," and then, when they were weakened by the
pain, tried to rape away any useful information in their minds.
Well, they might break him in
the end. Any man could be broken by enough torture,
enough cruelty, and he had no way of knowing what other, even
more horrendous powers of mental destruction they might yet be
able to bring to bear upon him. But they wouldn't find it easy. He
swore that to himself yet again, repeating it like a precious mantra
of defiance, while despair poured over him with the gentle,
soothing breeze.
"Frankly, Sir," Company-Captain
Golvar Silkash said, "I'm at a loss." The Healers' Corps officer
shook his head, his eyes unhappy. "I've done all I can, and
Tobis is still trying, but I've never had a patient with this
man's attitude. I just don't know what else we can do to get
through to him."
Namir Velvelig grunted
unhappily. It wasn't the first time Silkash had reported the same
things to him, but the regiment-captain kept hoping that somehow,
some way, something would change. But it didn't, of
course, he thought moodily, playing with the mug of tea on his
desk. Silkash had a matching mug in his left hand, but the Healer
had been ignoring it ever since he sat down.
"Is Tobis right, do you think?" he
asked.
"What? About the man having at
least a trace of Talent of his own?"
"Yes. Could that be
what's going on?"
"I suppose it could," Silkash said
with a grimace. "Tobis knows a lot more about that sort of thing
than I do, but I think even he's shooting blind on this one. We just
plain don't have any experience with people who've never even
heard of Talents!"
Velvelig grunted again, gazing
out his window, where the steadily setting sun sank slowly behind
the Sky Bloods, as if he imagined he could somehow find the
answers he needed out there in the bronze and copper glow gilding
the mountains. Company-Captain Silkash was the finest surgeon
and medical doctor with whom Namir Velvelig had ever had the
pleasure of serving. But, unlike the majority of the Healers'
Corps's commissioned officers—or Platoon-Captain Tobis
Makree, his assistant surgeon, for that matter—he had no
Talent at all. That put Silkash at a distinct disadvantage when it
came to trying to analyze the Arcanan prisoner's reaction to
Makree's Healing Talent. And, as Silkash had just pointed out,
no one had ever had to deal with a patient who didn't even
know what the Healing Talent was!
"How's chan Tergis coming with
their language, Sir?" Silkash asked, as much for a frustrated
change of subject as out of genuine curiosity, and Velvelig
grunted yet a third time. It was remarkable, the surgeon reflected,
just how expressive his CO's grunts could actually be, and he
wondered if all Arpathians were like that. Velvelig's first grunt
had expressed unhappiness; the second had expressed both
agreement and frustration; and the third had expressed frustration
and anger. Which, now that Silkash thought about it, was a logical
enough progression whenever it came to dealing with
these maddening "Arcanans," whether collectively or as
individuals.
"Not well," the regiment-captain
amplified after a moment. "We're keeping him so damned busy
relaying messages up-chain from chan Baskay and chan Tesh that
he really doesn't have a whole lot of time to devote to the project.
And even when he does, he's running into the same sort of non-
cooperation Tobis seems to be encountering with this Thalmayr
idiot."
The regiment-captain paused,
then forced himself to be fair.
"I suppose, if I'd been
captured—especially after the sort of massacre these people
got put through—I wouldn't be in any hurry to cooperate
with my jailers, either. After all, they're probably as imbued as our
own people with the idea that it's their duty to refuse to give the
enemy any useful information. And despite the total incompetence
of their commander, it's obvious these are elite troops."
"If you say so, Sir," Silkash said
dubiously. Velvelig raised an eyebrow at him, and the surgeon
shrugged. "I know I've only seen them since they got here, but they
don't exactly look like 'elite troops' to me."
"No?" Velvelig gazed at him
speculatively, then snorted. "They seem a bit demoralized to you,
do they? Sullen? Uncooperative? Silently resentful?"
"Yes, Sir. All of those." Silkash
cocked his head to one side. "Why?"
"Because that's exactly the
reaction I'd expect out of elite troops who'd suffered the sort of
pounding these men survived. Think about it, Silky. From chan
Tesh's reports, it's obvious they never even suspected we could
fire on them through a portal. Their CO—such as
he was, and what there was of him—went down in the first
volley, which decapitated their entire command structure. The
mortar rounds coming in on them must've been the most terrifying
thing they'd ever experienced. chan Tesh was massacring
them—literally—and they couldn't even shoot back.
So how did they react?"
Silkash's perplexity was obvious,
and Velvelig waved his tea mug for impatient emphasis.
"They charged, Silky.
They came out of their fortifications, got up out of their
protective holes under fire—which is harder than
hells for anyone to do, trust me—and they charged
straight into the fire that was killing them." He shook his
head. "Whatever we may think of what they did to the Chalgyn
crew, and however stupidly they may have been commanded when
chan Tesh hit them, these men were magnificent soldiers. In fact,
I'll absolutely guarantee you that that idiot Thalmayr didn't have a
thing to do with training them. Not these men. They were so much
better than he was that there's no comparison. And that's exactly
why so many of them got killed. Instead of turning around and
running away, instead of breaking, they charged in an
almost certainly spontaneous effort to get their own weapons into
action on the far side of the portal. It's probably the bloody-
minded septman in me, but I'm prepared to forgive men for a lot
when they show that kind of guts."
"I guess I hadn't thought about it
quite that way," Silkash admitted after a moment.
"No, I didn't think you had. But
it also explains a lot about their present attitude, I imagine. These
men weren't used to the idea that they could be beaten. They
expected to win. And if they were going to lose, they
never would have believed that anyone could have
simply . . . wiped them out for the
loss of barely half a dozen men on the other side. They're smart
enough to have figured out that it was because they were up
against weapons they had no experience fighting and had an idiot
for a CO, but that's an intellectual understanding, not an
emotional one. It doesn't get down inside a soldier's guts and heart
where his belief in himself lives. Defeat is one thing for an elite
unit at that level; abject, humiliating, total defeat is
something else again. So they're bitter, ashamed, and convinced
that they've failed their country, their honor, and themselves. But
instead of simply collapsing, what have they done?
"They've dug in and refused to
cooperate with us in any way, that's what they've done," Velvelig
continued, once again answering his own question. "Maybe, in
time—and especially if these negotiations actually go
somewhere—that may change. I've been trying to help that
change along; that's why I've been so insistent on our men treating
them not just correctly, but with dignity. In the meantime, though,
I'm not surprised by their attitude."
"Now that you've got me
thinking in the same direction, neither am I," Silkash conceded.
"But Tobis is probably right that their lack of familiarity with
Talented people is also a factor. First, because they don't have a
clue what chan Tergis is trying to accomplish, which sort of
automatically precludes the possibility of cooperating, even if they
wanted to. And, second, because if any of them do have a
touch of Talent of their own, they might well react the same way
Thalmayr is."
"Probably," Velvelig agreed.
"Which, I'm afraid, brings us back to Thalmayr." The Arpathian's
lips twisted briefly with all of the contempt he refused to feel for
Thalmayr's unfortunate subordinates. "Just what is his prognosis?"
"Physically?" Silkash shrugged.
"I can understand why Petty-Captain chan Rodair sent him on to
us here at Fort Ghartoun, but I really wish he hadn't. For several
reasons."
"Such as?"
"As much as I've grown to
dislike the man, Sir, I'm a Healer. My Healer's Oath requires me to
treat any patient with compassion and respect, and to offer him the
very best treatment possible. That's why chan Rodair wanted him
here at Ghartoun, because he thought the damage to Thalmayr's
spine might be amenable to surgical intervention. Well, he was
wrong. For that matter, I was wrong when I first examined
the man. I think it may have been because I wanted so badly for
chan Rodair to have been right, but that doesn't change the fact
that we were both wrong. So we subjected him to a
completely unnecessary—and useless—operation.
That's bad enough, but even worse, whatever it is that's causing
him to be so resistant to Tobis' efforts to get at his mental and
emotional traumas is also hampering our efforts at pain
management. So we've inflicted that additional suffering on him,
as well."
"That's hardly your fault,"
Velvelig said. "You were doing the best you could for him, under
very difficult circumstances."
"Oh, I know that, Sir. And so
does Tobis. The problem is, I rather doubt Thalmayr does.
And it doesn't change our responsibilities towards him, either."
"Well, we already knew the man
was an idiot," Velvelig said comforting way. "No reason he
shouldn't be an idiot about that, too, I suppose."
"I
hadn't . . . quite looked at it that way,
Sir." Silkash found that he was experiencing an unanticipated
difficulty not smiling.
"Then you should. But I noticed
that you prefaced your remarks by referring to his physical
recovery. So, how do his mental and emotional prospects shape
up?"
"It's really hard to be sure about
that when our Talented Healer can't even reach the man. Still, as
near as Tobis can tell, he's at least managed to divert Thalmayr's
drive towards suicide."
"Which even Thalmayr should
admit is a positive step!" Velvelig snorted.
"Assuming that he gives Tobis
credit for it, yes, Sir. Of course, if he doesn't understand what
Tobis is doing in the first place, he probably doesn't."
"No, I'm sure he doesn't,"
Velvelig said glumly. "You know, I really wish Prince Janaki
hadn't brought us this particular guest."
"At least dropping him off with
us helped get the Prince out of the combat zone, Sir. That's got to
be a plus, however you look at it."
"It certainly does." Velvelig
sipped more tea, gazing ruminatively out the window once more.
The sun was almost gone, he noticed, leaving the mountain
summits etched dark and black, looming against the afterglow. He
was going to have to light the lamps, he thought.
"If you don't mind my asking,
Sir," Silkash said out of the gathering dimness after a moment,
"you mentioned how busy chan Tergis is passing messages back
up-chain. How well are the negotiations going?"
"I don't mind your asking, but if I
had the answer to that, I wouldn't be a regiment-captain sitting out
here at the ass-end of nowhere," Velvelig said dryly. "I'd be
making my fortune as a Precog back home."
He drank a little more tea, set his
mug back down on the desktop, got out a box of matches. He lit
the lamps, replaced the glass chimneys and adjusted the wicks,
then tipped his chair back and folded his hands behind his head.
"chan Baskay and Rothag are
still convinced these people are lying about entirely too many
things for my peace of mind," he admitted. "What bothers me most
about it isn't that diplomats . . . shade
the truth. Gods know, they do that back home whenever they can,
and if our diplomats didn't have Talents on the other side to keep
them honest, they'd probably do a lot more of it. But if they're as
urgently interested in negotiating some sort of permanent cease-
fire as they claim to be, then I'd think they should have a lot more
incentive to be at least forthcoming, if not completely honest. But
they haven't really given us a lot more information. They seem
almost obsessed with the little stuff, the fine details about how
we're supposed to go about negotiating, rather than more
substantive questions like what we're supposed to be negotiating
about. And I don't much care for the attitude their military
escort seems to be showing. There've been a couple of potentially
ugly incidents already."
"What sort of incidents, Sir?"
"That's just it, they're the stupid
kind. People who take umbrage or even insult from innocent
remarks. Or people who insult our people, apparently by
accident. Three times now, this Skirvon of theirs has suggested
postponements in the talks themselves in order to 'let tempers
cool.' I'm not there, of course, but I'm inclined to back chan
Baskay's view. I think their troopers are actually under
orders to provoke incidents as a deliberate delaying tactic
and I've said as much in my own reports up-chain."
"But why would they be doing
that, Sir?" Silkash's puzzlement showed.
"That's what neither chan Baskay
nor I can understand," Velvelig admitted. "Logically, if all they
want to do is waste our time, then why talk to us at all?"
"So you don't have any idea why
they might be doing it?"
"Actually, chan Baskay's come
up with one possible explanation that sort of makes sense. After
all, one of the reasons we haven't pressed them
harder is the delay in message turnaround between here and
Sharona. We don't know exactly how these people communicate
over long distances, but if they don't have Talents, they obviously
don't have Voices. They may use this magic of theirs to do
the same sort of things our Voices can do, but they may also have
to physically transport messages, as well, and chan Baskay's
suggested that their communications loop may well be even
longer than ours. He thinks this Skirvon may be trying to kick grit
into the works to slow things down until he can get definite
orders—or maybe even until a more senior diplomat can
arrive at Hell's Gate with official instructions from home about
exactly what they are and aren't willing to settle for when it comes
to possession of the cluster."
"And they're bothering to talk
with us in the meantime because—?"
"I'm not sure, although I suppose
it's possible they want to make sure we don't press on with our
own exploration beyond the swamp portal. From Voice Kinlafia's
Portal Sniffing, we know their entry portal for that universe isn't
very close to the swamp portal, but that's really all we
know. They might have some particularly important installation or
colony much closer to it than that, and they might be trying to
divert us from any exploration in its direction."
Velvelig shrugged, clearly
unhappy with his own hypothesis.
"I don't say that's the only
explanation. It's just the only one I can come up with. And,
at least while we're negotiating, we're not shooting anymore. So,
in some ways, it's as much to our advantage as to theirs to just
keep right on talking. Besides," he grinned suddenly, "it gives
us some time to get a 'real diplomat' in here to relieve poor
chan Baskay!"
Commander of Two Thousand
Mayrkos Harshu looked up from the paperwork in his PC as
someone rapped gently and respectfully at the frame of his office
doorway. His dark, intense eyes focused like a hunting gryphon on
the officer standing in the open door. Then he laid his sarkolis
crystal stylus on his blotter, much the way another man might have
sheathed a sword.
"Enter," he said, and acting
Commander of Five Hundred Alivar Neshok obeyed.
"I assume you're here for the
afternoon briefing?" Harshu said, raising his eyebrows, and
Neshok nodded.
"Yes, Sir, I am. May I go ahead
and set up for it?"
"Of course you can, Five
Hundred," Harshu said testily. "Unless my memory fails, that's
why you're here, isn't it?"
The two thousand had a near-
fetish for not "wasting time." Especially with what he considered
pointless, unnecessary questions. Of course, he also had a
reputation for cutting people off at the knees if they made
mistakes because they were too stupid or too lazy to ask
questions. Which could make things
rather . . . difficult upon occasion.
"Yes, Sir," Neshok said, and
moved quickly, uncasing his own crystal and bringing it swiftly
on-line. He Felt Two Thousand Harshu's impatient eyes on him
while he made his preparations, but he found them far less
intimidating than some of his fellow officers did. He had an even
more powerful patron of his own, after all. Besides, he was far too
well aware of the opportunities of his present assignment to worry
about the two thousand's famed temper tantrums.
And that asshole Olderhan probably thought he'd spiked my
career with his godsdamned shardonai, the acting five
hundred thought with a mental sneer. Gods! He's even
stupider than Two Thousand mul Gurthak told me he was
.
Neshok hadn't enjoyed the
reaming-out mul Gurthak had given him in front of Olderhan and
the two diplomats. Nobody would have, and he'd labored under
the additional suspicion that mul Gurthak intended to leave him
swinging in the wind if Olderhan lodged any formal protests about
Neshok's behavior when he got back to Garth Showma. But he'd
wronged the two thousand. mul Gurthak had simply been covering
his own back, and Neshok's brevet promotion to his present rank
and his assignment as Two Thousand Harshu's senior intelligence
analyst was sufficient proof of mul Gurthak's continuing
confidence in him.
And if it hadn't been for Olderhan's
insistence on extending shardon to that arrogant little
bitch and her husband—and 'Magister Kelbryan's' backing
him up—the two thousand's plan would have worked,
he reflected. We didn't know she'd already managed to learn a
civilized language, but that only would've made it easier
to get her to talk. She'd damned well have told me
anything I wanted her to by the time I got through with
her.
He let the fingertips of one hand
brush the unsleeping eye insignia of the Intelligence Corps on his
collar. He'd taken that off, at mul Gurthak's instructions, before he
ever went to "greet" Olderhan and his prisoners. Aping the part of
a line officer hadn't been all that difficult, however distasteful it
might have been, and the two thousand had hoped a fellow line
officer might have found it easier to separate Olderhan from his
prisoners. And once they'd been separated and "administratively
lost" somewhere at Fort Talon, it would all have turned out to
have been a completely honest case of confused orders at a junior
officer's level. Most unfortunate, of course, but just one of those
things. Neshok had never doubted that Olderhan would have been
furious, even if he'd gotten his prisoners back with only minor
damage, but his own Intelligence superiors would have been quick
to protect him, if only behind the scenes, if he'd managed to
extract vital information first.
Well, that hadn't happened, but
mul Gurthak clearly recognized the debt he owed Neshok for
having made the attempt. That was why he'd been promoted and
assigned to his present duty, which should allow him to acquire at
least as many career points with his superiors.
And one of these days, I'll be in a position to give that
smug, sanctimonious prick Olderhan exactly what he
fucking well deserves, he thought viciously. Yet even as he
thought it, he felt a tingle of remembered fear as he recalled the
cold, fleering contempt in Sir Jasak Olderhan's dark eyes. And the
fact that Olderhan's precious Second Andaran Scouts flunkies had
actually been willing to take on his entire detachment if he'd so
much as laid a finger on that little bitch.
He pushed the thought aside
with a fresh promise of vengeance . . . and
wished he could push aside the memory of a crackling corona of
combat magic ready to strike and the steely-cold promise in
Gadrial Kelbryan's lethal almond eyes, as well.
Unfortunately . . .
Behind him, Two Thousand
Harshu cleared his throat in his patented "get on with it" style, and
Neshok shook himself free of his brooding thoughts.
"Beg pardon, Sir," he said. "I'm
ready, now."
"Good." Harshu's tone added an
unspoken "and it's about time," and Neshok ordered the office's
spellware to dim the lights. Then he tapped his PC with the stylus,
and a moving, living image glowed into being above Harshu's
desk. The fidgeting two thousand stopped fidgeting instantly, as
his fiercely intelligent eyes darted from place to place, carefully
comparing the present image to the ones he'd seen before. As
always, once the keen intellect behind those eyes had a fresh task
to engage it, most of the affected impatience and hyperactivity
disappeared quickly.
"As you can see, Sir, we're still
getting very good imagery," he began.
"Yes, we are," Harshu agreed
thoughtfully. "In fact, are we sure they don't know we are?" His
eyes darted up from the small moving images of Sharonian
soldiers to impale Neshok. "Could they possibly be setting all this
up to show us what they want us to see?"
"No, Sir," Neshok said
confidently, then snorted. "They're still pulling every boat up onto
the island and turning it keel-up before they let anyone cross over
into Hell's Gate." The Arcanans had adopted the Sharonian name
for their contact universe. After all, as the Sharonian diplomat,
Simrath, had pointed out at the time, it was grimly appropriate for
both sides. "It's obvious Master Skirvon's observation is correct.
The stupid, superstitious barbarians don't have a clue how magic
works, so they aren't taking any
chances . . . they think."
"It might not be a bad idea,"
Harshu said almost pleasantly, his eyes returning to the images
before him, "to spend a little less time patting ourselves on our
backs for cleverness and a little more time making certain we
aren't underestimating the other side."
"Yes, Sir. Point taken," Neshok
said just a bit more crisply. Harshu's notoriously short fuse with
subordinates who he thought had screwed up might be as carefully
cultivated as other parts of his reputation. Still, the stories about
what had happened to people who'd really screwed up or
ugly enough to dissuade even Neshok from relying upon his
Intelligence patrons' protection.
"What I meant to say, Sir," he
continued, "is that, as you know, we went to considerable lengths
to convince them that the spell accumulators for the boats have to
be attached to the keels. They haven't even looked inside the
flotation tank under the after thwart, which—in the opinion
of my staff and myself—strongly indicates that they don't
have any idea we've hidden the real movement accumulator in
there. And because they're still turning the boats upside down as a
security measure, they're giving the recon crystals attached to their
bottoms a three-hundred-sixty-degree field of view. It's not as
good in terms of flexibility and total reach as we'd get if we could
actually move them around, or as good as what a gryphon pass
with an RC could give us, and their actual bivouac area is outside
our zone from where the beach the boats. In other ways, though,
it's actually better. The RC is close enough to get a good look at
their fieldworks and their deployments, and it just sits there, which
gives us an excellent opportunity to eavesdrop on anything they're
saying within its scan area, as well."
Harshu glanced at him again,
then nodded in grudgingly approving acceptance.
"Although the boat-mounted
RCs never move," Neshok continued more confidently, "we have
managed six RC walk-throughs." He smiled thinly. "Sending
Master Skirvon's escort in dress uniform was a brilliant idea, Sir. I
wish I'd thought of it myself." It never hurt to show a superior
officer you knew how to give a subordinate credit for good
ideas . . . especially when the
superior officer in question already knew the idea in question had
come from a subordinate. "They'd never seen our dress
uniforms, so they didn't have any reason to suspect that the crystal
mounted on that ridiculous horsehair crest on Fifty Narshu's
helmet is actually a reconnaissance device, not just a particularly
tasteless bit of decoration.
"At any rate, everything Narshu's
RC has picked up only confirms what we're getting from the boat
RCs."
"I see." Harshu frowned
thoughtfully, leaning his folded forearms on his desk. "And is
there confirmation about these two?" He twitched his head at the
two Sharonians under the canvas sunshade at one end of the
portal.
"Yes, Sir." Neshok nodded.
"We're still not certain how they do what they're apparently doing,
but thanks to the translation software Master Skirvon and Two
Thousand mul Gurthak provided, we've definitely confirmed from
their conversation and the chatter of their buddies that they're
some sort of lookouts. And we've also confirmed that whatever it
is they're doing, they can't do it through a portal any more
than we could cast a spell through one. They rotate around the end
of the portal on a quite rigid schedule, apparently to clear the blind
spot the portal creates for them. We've watched them for days
now, and they never deviate by more than a very few minutes from
their set timing."
"I wish we had managed to
determine exactly what it is they're doing," Harshu mused, and
Neshok nodded.
"So do I, Sir, but there's just no
way of guessing how these 'Talents' of theirs work. From what
we've been able to overhear, it sounds as if the Talent this one is
using—" he indicated the smaller of the two Sharonians
"—works sort of like one of our scrying spells. It
isn't the same, obviously. For one thing, they don't need a crystal
to gather the image. And, for another, they appear to be able to
sweep a general volume, rather than needing to know exactly
where whatever they're trying to observe is within that volume.
And, for a third thing—and we're not certain about this one,
Sir; it's based on a couple of fairly cryptic remarks we've
overheard and translated—he appears to be limited
to the ability to detect living creatures."
"I suppose that could make
sense," Harshu said thoughtfully. "If these Talents of theirs are all
some kind of weird mental powers, then perhaps what they're
picking up on is some sort of vibration or mental wave. Wouldn't
get much of that off of a rock, I imagine."
"No, Sir."
"And you've managed to confirm
their detection range, have you?" Harshu inquired.
"Ah, no, Sir," Neshok admitted.
Harshu slanted his eyes sideways, looking back up at the acting
five hundred, and Neshok grimaced. "So far, they haven't actually
referred to their maximum range—not, at least, where any
of our RCs have overheard them."
"That's not so good to hear, Five
Hundred," Harshu observed. "It could have a rather significant
effect on our military options, don't you agree?"
"Yes, Sir." Neshok refocused his
own attention on the display rather than continuing to meet
Harshu's gaze. Then he cleared his throat.
"Actually, Sir, we do have at
least an approximation. Or perhaps I should say a bottom limit at
which we know they can't 'see' us."
Harshu unfolded his arms and
made a "go on" gesture with his right hand.
"As you know, Sir, we've been
taking pains to conceal the existence of our dragons from them.
And while I'm on the subject, Sir, the recorded take from the boat
RCs confirms that they've never even dreamed about any sort of
aerial capability for themselves and don't seen to have a clue that
we have one." Which, he didn't add aloud, just
confirms what utter barbarians they are, doesn't it?
"Apparently they'd been wondering for some time how we got
people in and out from the Second Andarans' base camp through
all that muck and mire. Now that they've seen our boats, they think
they know."
"Well, that's certainly
good to hear."
"Yes, Sir. It is. And the fact that
they don't know about dragons or gryphons clearly indicates that
their lookouts haven't 'seen' our diplomats or their escort being
flown in. We've been landing our people on an islet about forty
miles from the portal and sending them the rest of the way in from
there in the boats. Partly, that was because we needed an excuse to
get the boats' RCs right up to the portal. But, just as importantly,
we wanted to keep our dragons safely out of sight. We hadn't
realized at the time that they had whatever kind of Talent this
lookout of theirs is using—somehow Hundred Olderhan's
shardon neglected to mention its existence to us, for some
odd reason—but Master Skirvon and Five Hundred Klian
agreed that it would be best to err on the side of caution.
Fortunately, it would appear.
"At any rate, at forty miles, they
haven't seen our people arriving. If they had, I'm positive someone
would have remarked on it by now where our RCs could hear it.
That both suggests that the dragons have remained safely unknown
to them, and gives us a limit—forty miles—beyond
which we ought to be safe from detection."
"Forty miles," Harshu
murmured. "Call it thirty minutes for a dragon—twenty
minutes, minimum."
"Yes, Sir. On the other hand, as I
say, that's a minimum safe distance. His actual range for
spotting us may be quite a bit shorter than that."
"And it may not be, too," Harshu
replied tartly.
"No, Sir. As you say," Neshok
agreed. "On the other hand, there is one other point." He paused
until the two thousand looked at him again, then shrugged very
slightly. "From a couple of things our RCs have overheard, while
this fellow appears to be able to . . .
sweep, for want of a better term, an entire volume, and while we
don't really know how large a volume that is, it would seem that
he does have to define the volume pretty carefully. We've watched
him while he's doing whatever it is he's doing, and he sits very
still, with his eyes closed, but his head turns slowly from side to
side, as if he's looking at something behind his eyelids."
"And?" Harshu prompted.
"And he never tilts his head
back, Sir."
Harshu frowned at him for a
moment, and then the two thousand's eyes narrowed slightly.
"So you're suggesting that since
they don't know about dragons, he's not looking up, just
out?"
"That's what I think he's doing,
Sir," Neshok said, and this time he chose not to mention that it
was one of his noncommissioned analysts who'd actually first
spotted the Sharonian lookout's head movements. "If they don't
have any flight capability of their own, it would make a lot of
sense for them to be concentrating on surface threats.
After all, they wouldn't know there was any other kind, would
they?"
"No, they wouldn't," Harshu
agreed slowly.
His eyes were focused on
something else, something only he could see, and they stayed that
way for the better part of two minutes. Then they refocused on
Neshok.
"Anything else? Anything new?"
he asked.
"That's most of the new
information, Sir. I've prepared a complete download for you, of
course. Shall I transfer the file to your PC?"
"Yes, go ahead."
"Yes, Sir."
Neshok arranged the transfer
with brisk efficiency. As he did, he noticed the headers for the
documents Harshu had been working on when he arrived. Troop
strengths and arrival schedules, the acting five hundred noted
without very much surprise.
"There you are, Sir," he said as
the little icon that indicated the file transfers were complete
appeared in both crystals.
"Thank you." Harshu considered
him for a moment or two, then nodded. "Aside from a certain
tendency to denigrate the enemy, that was an excellent brief, Five
Hundred," he said. "Keep up the good
work . . . and try like hell not to let
the fact that you dislike these people lead you into making the
sorts of mistakes contempt produces. Am I clear?"
"Yes, Sir! You are, Sir!" Neshok
said, bracing quickly to attention.
"Good. Carry on, Five Hundred."
"Yes, Sir."
Neshok turned with rather more
than normal military precision and marched out of Harshu's
office. The compliment on the quality of his work had felt
good . . . which, of course, only made
the sting of Harshu's admonition sharper.
Well, the two thousand was
good at that sort of thing. It was one of his hallmarks.
Everybody got a zinger from him every so often, Neshok
reminded himself; far fewer got the compliment which had gone in
front of this one.
He decided to concentrate on
that as he stepped out onto the Fort Rycharn parade ground.
Rycharn wasn't much of a fort,
he thought. About right for that broken down ass-kisser Klian to
command. At the moment, though, it was crowded to the bursting
point and beyond by the scores of dragons thronging its
improvised dragonfield. There were more transports than Neshok
had ever seen in one place in his entire life. The heavy transports'
cargo pods were parked as neatly as possible around the field's
perimeter, but there wasn't room to be very neat about it.
The tactical transports and the battle dragons were based on the
western side of the field, as far away from the fort's palisade and
the troop encampments as they could get. Three of Two Thousand
mul Gurthak's planned four reinforcement waves had arrived
already, and the fourth was due within the next week.
And what happens then, I wonder? Neshok mused,
listening to the sounds of the immensely overcrowded
encampment. Everybody's still being very careful to insist that
no final decision's been made yet. I wonder just how true
that actually is?
He snorted wryly at the thought.
From what mul Gurthak had said to him in his own private
briefing before he was sent out here, especially about the
importance of not allowing the enemy to tighten his grip on Hell's
Gate even further, he was fairly certain what the Fort Talon
commander had in mind. Of course, he could be wrong, and even
if he wasn't, circumstances might have changed—depending
on what Skirvon and Dastiri had been able to accomplish
diplomatically—since Neshok had been sent forward
himself. And there was also the problem that Harshu was
the commander actually on the spot. mul Gurthak couldn't push
Harshu too hard without being rather more direct than Neshok
was pretty sure the Mythalan two thousand wanted to be.
Which, of course, is the reason he sent me out
here, isn't it? A military commander's decisions are always based
on the intelligence available to him. Which means that the
fellow who provides him with that information has a better
chance than most to . . .
shape his probable command decisions.
Commander of Five Hundred
(Acting) Alivar Neshok smiled thinly as he gazed out across the
ranks of dragons, the cargo pods, the white canvas tents of the
waiting troopers, and the rows of field-dragons lined up so neatly
in the artillery parks, and reflected upon the influence which had
come to rest in his hands. It was a heavy responsibility, he told
himself. One which had to be discharged carefully, thoughtfully.
And the fact that it put him in a
position to help kick that sanctimonious, cowardly son-of-a-bitch
Olderhan's gutless plans to just hand the biggest, most important
portal cluster in history over to the enemy right in the balls was
totally beside the point.
Chapter Fifty
"You look unhappy, Five
Hundred."
Sarr Klian looked up. Two
Thousand Harshu sat across the table from him, holding his wine
glass loosely cradled in his right hand. That table was covered with
a white cloth and empty plates, for the two of them had just
finished dining in what had been Klian's sitting room before
Harshu arrived to take command of the steadily growing military
power which had come to be based here at Fort Rycharn. Klian
didn't resent giving up his quarters to the two thousand. Not
precisely, at any rate. He did rather resent giving up his office
space, but he knew that was silly. Harshu was the senior
officer present. He needed the best facilities available, and it was
inevitable that he should have them.
"Unhappy, Sir?" Klian repeated,
and Harshu smiled.
"Sparring for time, are we, Five
Hundred?"
His voice was almost gentle, at
odds with his normal public persona, and he shifted his hand
slightly, tilting his wine glass. The gleaming light elements of the
wall-mounted lamps had been turned down, reducing their normal
brilliance to a level more comfortable for dining, but they were
bright enough to light a red glow in the heart of the glass.
"I suppose I am, Sir," Klian
admitted levelly. He looked across the table into Harshu's eyes.
"It's been my experience that when a superior officer makes that
sort of statement, it's often the prelude to
a . . . counseling session, shall we
say?"
"Ah." Harshu's smile grew
broader, and he cocked his head to one side. "I suppose that's a fair
enough observation, Five Hundred. In this case, though, I'm
genuinely curious about your thoughts. You've been sitting out
here at the sharp end longer than anyone else. I don't say that
automatically gives you any sort of special insight none of the rest
of us can share, but I'm very well aware that I've come waltzing in
and taken over your territory with less than three weeks'
experience on the job, as it were."
"Curious about my thoughts
about what, precisely, Sir?" Klian asked. "If you mean about being
effectively superseded, I don't suppose any commanding officer
worth his salt is ever happy to see that happen. But I'm certainly
not sitting here nursing a sense of resentment over it. That would
be pointless, at best, and stupid, at worst. I'm a five hundred, and
what we're looking at out here right now is a five thousand's
command—maybe even a ten thousand's. Exigencies of
the service or not, there's no way I'd be fitted to command a force
that size, even if I were the senior officer present."
"I think you actually mean that,"
Harshu observed. He sipped a little wine, then shrugged. "I'm
relieved to hear it, too. After all, you're going to be in command
of our logistics node here, no matter what happens. I can think of
very few things better suited to trip someone up in a field
command than having his
logistics . . . creatively tangled, shall
we say, by a resentful subordinate."
"I can assure you, Sir," Klian
said just a bit stiffly, "that it never crossed my mind to—"
"I didn't mean to suggest it had,"
Harshu interrupted. "In fact, I meant to suggest rather the opposite.
However," he set down his wine glass, plucked a roll out to of the
breadbasket between them, and began tearing it into small pieces
and piling the fragments on the rim of his plate, "that wasn't the
question I meant to get at earlier. It seems to me, Five Hundred,
that you don't really approve of our contingency planning. I'd like
to know why."
Klian sat very still for a moment,
then drank from his own wine glass, mostly to buy a little more
time to marshal his thoughts. Then he cleared his throat.
"Two Thousand," he said,
"you're in command. Whether I 'approve' of your contingency
planning or not is really beside the point, isn't it? Since you've
asked, though, there are aspects of your plans—as I
currently understand them, at any rate—that do cause me
some concern."
"Specifically?" Harshu invited.
"Well," Klian sat back in his
chair, folding his hands neatly on the tablecloth and wishing he
didn't feel quite so much like an officer cadet who'd just been
handed a trick question in his third-year tactics class, "I can't fault
anything I've heard about your defensive planning, Sir. I think
you're entirely right that without any equivalent of our
dragons—and while I haven't seen Five Hundred Neshok's
reports to you, I'm inclined to agree that the evidence clearly
suggests they don't have any aerial capability—they'd be at a
hopeless disadvantage trying to fight their way out of that swamp.
They'd have to have a simply enormous advantage in manpower to
slog through that kind of mud and muck—especially
without any sort of spell-powered boats of their own—
while fighting off continuous air attacks, no matter how good
their weapons are.
"And no one could deny your
legitimate responsibility to plan for possible offensive
operations, either." The five hundred shrugged. "We're both
soldiers, Sir. We both know that, ultimately, battles and wars are
won by taking it to the enemy, not simply sitting still and letting
him bring it to us. I guess what concerns me is the feel I'm picking
up from the majority of your officers that they're actually
anticipating offensive operations."
He paused, still looking levelly
at Harshu, and the two thousand gazed back in silence for perhaps
twenty seconds. Then it was Harshu's turn to shrug.
"I don't doubt that they are," he
admitted calmly, and showed his teeth in a thin smile. "The bottom
line, Five Hundred, is that the most important quality any soldier
can have as he goes into battle is the offensive spirit. Even if we
wind up standing totally on the defensive, having the troops
thinking in terms of 'taking it to the enemy,' as you just said, won't
hurt a thing. If we do go on the offense, on the other hand, there
won't be time to turn everyone's thinking around if all we've been
planning for is digging in and holding our ground."
"I can see that, Sir," Klian said in
a neutral tone, and Harshu's smile grew wider.
"But you're still concerned," he
observed. Klian started to say something else, but the two
thousand waved it away. "No, that's all right, Five Hundred. I
asked for your opinion, and I really want it. And I don't think your
concerns are limited to the troops' attitude."
"Sir," Klian leaned forward
slightly, "I guess I'm worried on two levels.
"First, however good our
intelligence on their tactical dispositions right at the swamp
portal, or even between there and Fallen Timbers, may be, we
know literally nothing about these people's real military power.
We don't have any clear indication of what their heavy weapons'
capabilities may be, how close to the point of contact their major
military bases may be, or how big they are. I know the current
intelligence assessments are that they're not anticipating
reinforcement within the next several weeks, but what does that
actually tell us? We don't know anything about how big the
reinforcement they are expecting might be, or what might
be in the pipeline behind it. Even if we managed to punch
right through everything they've got in the immediate vicinity,
what happens when we run into their reserves? How does the fact
that we'd presumably have better reconnaissance capabilities,
thanks to our dragons and gryphons, play off against the superior
communications these Voices of theirs give them? And
how do these 'Talents' of theirs—including any we can't
evaluate at all, because we've never seen them in action—
play off against the capabilities our Gifts give us?
"Second, if Hundred Olderhan is
right, and I believe he is, then all of this started out of a
misunderstanding. A monumental fuck-up by Olderhan's second-
in-command, followed by a bad judgment call on my own part,
and what looks like terminal stupidity on the part of Hundred
Thalmayr. If that's what it was, if neither side deliberately set out
to create the situation, then surely the possibility of negotiating
our way out of it really exists. I don't want to see that thrown
away. And, if I may speak completely frankly, I'm concerned about
how the other side would perceive any further offensive military
action on our part. Especially after we initiated the
diplomatic contact between us."
"It may surprise you to hear this,
Five Hundred, but I think your concerns are well taken," Harshu
said. Klian felt his eyebrows inch upwards, despite himself, and
the two thousand chuckled harshly.
"I know I'm considered a loose
dragon," he said. "And there's probably some truth to that, if I'm
going to be honest. But I'm not blind to the risks and the potential
costs you're talking about. The problem is that I have my
instructions from Two Thousand mul Gurthak, and I can't allow
myself to be paralyzed by all of the perfectly good arguments for
doing nothing.
"The tactical concerns you've
just put your finger on have given me the odd sleepless night since
mul Gurthak handed this particular hot potato to me," he
continued. "Trust me, I've thought about them a lot.
"At the moment, I'm inclined to
think that the combination of our mobility and reconnaissance
advantages would more than compensate for their Voices. We
don't know how many of these Voices they've actually got, how
far down through their formations they'd be available. Do they
have them only at the battalion level? Or at the company level? I
find it difficult to believe that they have them all the way down to
the platoon level, and as I understand it, it takes a Voice at
either end for the whole system to work. So in an actual combat
situation, I suspect that our ability to see further and more clearly,
and the information that makes available to our commanders,
would give us what amounted to a shorter command and control
loop, even if we did have to send physical messages back and
forth. Now, in a strategic sense, that certainly wouldn't be
the case, and they'd probably have an edge in orchestrating troop
movements at the operational level, as well. But how important
would that be if we dominated in the tactical zone? How
much use is a communication advantage, if you simply don't know
what the other side is doing . . . and
the other side does know that about you?"
He shrugged, as if to
acknowledge the fact that neither one of them had the answer to
that question.
"On the other hand, from the size
of the forces they've got forward-deployed, and from the
conversations our recon crystals have recorded, it seems pretty
obvious that these people's transportation capabilities are even
more inferior to ours than we'd originally thought. They're clearly
dependent on unenhanced animal transport, and they're talking in
terms of literally months before any substantial
reinforcements can arrive. From the things they've said, however,
they're also anticipating that those reinforcements will be
substantial when they do arrive.
"Obviously, there are still some
really big holes in our own ability to translate what they're saying.
Even when we get the words, we don't always have the
context to make sense out of them. Still, it's clear that they're
bringing up a lot of combat power. Quite possibly more than
we've been able to assemble. But they won't be able to get it into
position for some time, whereas ours is almost completely into
position now. And, of course, there's a corollary to that, because
the striking power we'll have concentrated here by the end of next
week represents everything currently available in this entire chain.
We're going to be as strong as we're ever going to get—at
least for the foreseeable future—very quickly now, whereas
they apparently have substantial additional reinforcements ready to
move in behind the ones they're currently expecting, as you
yourself have just suggested. In other words, we're probably
looking at the most favorable balance of forces we're likely to see,
at least until the Commandery finds out what's going on and starts
sending in additional forces, and that's going to take months yet.
"And, finally, there's the
difficulty that what we're talking about here is the biggest, and
almost certainly the most valuable, portal cluster in our history.
From some of the things they've said, it seems apparent the same
thing is true for them, and at the moment, they've got possession
of it. If we had it, how quick would we be to give
it up, or to share it? Especially with someone we regarded as
murderous barbarians? Which," the two thousand's eyes suddenly
bored into Klian's across the table, "is precisely how they
think about us, judging from the RCs' take."
Klian looked back at his superior
and wished he had an answer for those last two questions. Or that
he quite dared to ask how important the possession of any portal
cluster was compared to the possibility of a general war with
another inter-universal civilization.
"I have to balance all of those
questions and considerations against Two Thousand mul
Gurthak's instructions and my own evaluation of the situation,"
Harshu continued after moment. "And, despite my loose-dragon
reputation, I'll be honest and admit that it scares the tripes out of
me. But that doesn't mean I don't have to do it anyway, now does
it?"
"No, Sir. I guess not," Klian
conceded. He wanted to ask just what Harshu's instructions from
mul Gurthak were, but that information hadn't been volunteered,
and he knew it wouldn't be.
"As far as the potential
diplomatic consequences are concerned," Harshu said, "I'm like
you, Five Hundred—a soldier. I was never trained as a
diplomat, and I've never wanted to be one. Master Skirvon and
Master Dastiri, on the other hand, are diplomats, and I
assure you that I'm giving very serious consideration to their
advice and conclusions. In his original briefing, Two Thousand
mul Gurthak made the point to me that it would be foolish to
neglect the resource they offer, and I have no intention of doing
so."
Klian nodded, suppressing yet
another of those nagging questions he wanted to ask but couldn't.
He strongly suspected that Skirvon and Dastiri were making more
than purely diplomatic assessments of the other side, and he
wondered how much influence those "advice and
conclusions" were going to have with Harshu.
Silence fell for several long
moments, and then Harshu inhaled sharply and gave his head a
little shake.
"Whatever we may end up doing,
Five Hundred, I have no intention of doing anything until
the rest of our assigned strength arrives three days from now. And
Master Skirvon and Master Dastiri are due to report back to us
here for 'consultations' the day after that. At this time, I can
honestly tell you that I definitely have not decided in favor of
launching any sort of offensive."
Klian's shoulders started to
relax, but Harshu wasn't quite finished.
"I haven't firmly decided
against it yet, either," he said. "I can't, not until I've heard what
Skirvon and Dastiri have to say about these Sharonians' current
attitude and fundamental posture. But," he looked into Klian's
eyes very, very levelly, "I can't possibly justify delaying my
decision much longer. Our logistics situation is going to be
difficult enough, just trying to hold all of our dragons and troops
here and keep them fed somehow. You know that better
than anyone else. And even if that weren't true, if offensive
operations seem unavoidable, then it would be criminally
negligent of me to wait for the reinforcements they're expecting to
actually get here."
"I wonder if Chava would accept
a dinner invitation?" Zindel XXIV wondered aloud, as he gazed
out across the Great Palace's immaculately landscaped grounds.
The sun was high in a clear blue sky, and a not so small army of
gardeners moved steadily across the grounds. The Great Palace
and its gardens were so vast that not a hint of the normal city
noises of Tajvana were audible here in the sitting room of his
palatial suite, and he wished passionately that the realities behind
that almost pastoral façade matched its appearances.
"I rather doubt he would, Your
Majesty," Shamir Taje replied from behind him. "I may not think
very much of the man's intelligence, and even less of his
morals—assuming he has any—but he does seem to
have quite well developed survival instincts."
"Are you suggesting he might
think I was inviting him here with ulterior motives, Shamir?" the
Emperor demanded in injured tones, turning away from the
window to look at his old friend.
"Oh, certainly not, Your
Majesty," Taje said piously, and the Emperor chuckled,
"Well, you're probably right. He
wouldn't come. And, I suppose that if I'm going to be honest, I
would have ulterior motives. Just think of all the room for
unmarked graves the Palace gardens offer. Just yesterday, I noticed
a bed of flowers that looks like it could use some fertilizer."
Zindel's tone was light; the
expression in his eyes wasn't.
"Your Majesty," the First
Councilor said, "I wish, with all my heart, that we could simply
ignore Chava. And I have to admit that some of our allies'
suggestions that we should simply leave Uromathia out of any
new world government are very tempting. Given time, the
Uromathians would have to recognize how much their isolation
was costing them, in both political and economic terms, and one
of Chava's successors would undoubtedly find himself forced to
reach some sort of rapprochement with us. Unfortunately, his
most probable successor is one of those loathsome sons of his,
which probably wouldn't be all that much of an improvement. And
even that presupposes Chava would be willing to settle for that
sort of ostracization long enough for a successor to enter the
picture at all."
"And," Zindel said grimly, "it
also overlooks the fact that we may just find ourselves needing
Uromathia's military capabilities quite badly."
Taje started to say something,
then visibly changed his mind. The Emperor looked at him for a
moment, then turned back to the window, clasping his hands
behind them as he returned his gaze to the gardens.
"Go ahead, Shamir," he said.
"Your Majesty, they are
talking to us at Fallen Timbers," Taje pointed out to his Emperor's
back.
"I'm aware of that. And I'm
aware also that the analysts and pundits are having a field day with
it. And, believe me, no one in the entire multiverse could more
fervently hope that something comes of these negotiations."
The Emperor's voice was calm,
but his expression was grim as he watched birds fluttering through
the grounds groves of trees and imagined how his falcon,
Charaeil, would have reacted to all those tasty treats.
It's a pity I can't invite her to dine on Chava, instead, he thought. And then, despite himself, he smiled.
Assuming, of course, that Finena would be willing to share.
Then his smile faded, and he
looked back over his shoulder at Taje. The First Councilor could
see the same peaceful, tranquil scene outside the window, but
there was something else entirely in his Emperor's eyes.
Something dark and terrible.
"I want us to settle this without
anybody else getting killed, Shamir. But I'm Calirath. And in here,"
he tapped his temple, "what I've Glimpsed doesn't include a
peaceful resolution."
"Your Majesty," Taje said gently,
"not all Glimpses come to pass."
"But very few which haven't
proven accurate have been this strong," Zindel countered. "And
don't forget Andrin." He shook his head. "I haven't been saying her
Talent is stronger than mine simply to bolster her stature in the
Privy Council's eyes, you know. It is stronger, gods help
her. It's not as developed as mine—she simply hasn't had the
life experience to train it the way mine's been trained. But it's
strong, Shamir. Strong."
His eyes were darker than ever,
and his jaw tightened as he stared at something only he and his
daughter could See. Then they refocused on the First Councilor.
"Peaceful coexistence isn't what
she's Glimpsed, either," he said.
"But even if that's true, when do
you and she See it happening?" Taje asked. The Emperor quirked
an eyebrow, and the First Councilor shrugged. "Even if these
negotiations only buy us a few years—even just a few
additional months—they'll be worth it, Your Majesty," he
pointed out. "As you've been telling everyone for the last month
and a half, we have a monumental task in front of us just to
prepare for this sort of conflict. Every day we can buy could be
invaluable."
"That's true enough," Zindel
conceded. "Especially," he added grimly, "with Chava dragging his
godsdamned feet this way."
"Well, at least he's finally stated
what have to have been his real terms all along."
"I know." Zindel's expression
changed subtly. Taje knew he would never have been able to
describe the change to anyone else, yet it was instantly
recognizable to someone who knew the Emperor as well as he did.
It was the expression of a weary, worried father, not a nation's
ruler.
"I know," Zindel repeated
quietly, "and I wish to all the gods that I could spare Janaki this."
"Your Majesty, you don't have to
accept," Taje said. "We can send it back to the Committee on
Unification with counter proposals of our own. Whatever he may
think, Chava isn't really the sole arbiter of this process, you know.
Or we could take Ronnel's advice and simply ignore Chava
completely."
"Don't tempt me, Shamir,"
Zindel said grimly. He turned back to the window once again,
letting his eyes feast on the peacefulness and calm. Yet even that
small pleasure was flawed, because it was his job—his and
his family's—to see to it that that peacefulness and calm
were preserved. He wished he could be certain it was a job they
could do. And he wished, almost as strongly, that there were some
way he could spare his son the price of that preservation.
And how many godsdamned generations of our family have
wished the same thing? he asked himself in a rare burst of
self-pity. The question hovered in the back of his brain, but no
sign of it colored his voice as he went on.
"As you've just said, we need all
the time we can buy. I can't possibly justify wasting more of it in
ultimately pointless maneuvers trying to avoid what has to be
done. Chava's traded away a lot of bargaining points to get to this
final demand—enough of them that is "reasonableness" has
actually managed to sway a hefty minority of the delegates into
actively espousing it on his behalf. Not only that, but this
campaign of his of exhuming every single bone anyone's ever had
to pick with Ternathia hasn't been totally useless from his
perspective, either. He doesn't need a majority to spike the wheel
of any modification of the Act he doesn't like, only a big enough
minority."
"Of course he doesn't, Your
Majesty," Taje agreed. "On the other hand, if you do decide to
accept his terms on behalf of Ternathia, you've still got to get our
allies in the Conclave to agree to it. I'm not at all sure that's going
to be a simple proposition."
"You're thinking about Ronnel, I
see," Zindel said dryly, and shook his head with a wry smile as he
considered the Farnalian Emperor. "I sometimes wish Ronnel
weren't such a throwback to his ancestors. I can just see him
charging the shield wall, foaming at the mouth, bellowing war
cries, and whirling his ax around his head as he comes!"
"He's not quite that bad,
Your Majesty," Taje protested, and Zindel snorted.
"He's exactly that bad,"
he corrected, "and he hates Chava with a pure and blinding
passion. Of course, he's had more actual contact with Chava than
we have, since he shares that section of border with Uromathia
near the Scurlis. He hasn't told me exactly what Chava's done, but
I've had enough reports from others to have a pretty shrewd idea.
And Junni of Eniath's told me quite a bit—more, actually,
than I suspect he realizes.
"So I understand why Ronnel's
so passionately opposed to any sort
of . . . accommodation with
Uromathia. And if he thinks he could be any more opposed than I
am to the notion of sharing grandchildren with Chava, he's sadly
mistaken. But ultimately, he's going to have to swallow it, just
like I am. We can't afford to split Sharona between Chava and his
supporters and all the rest of us. And let's be honest here,
Shamir—if we weren't the ones Chava was making that
demand of, we'd probably think it wasn't unreasonable in
light of the actual balance of power between Ternathia and
Uromathia."
Taje had no choice but to nod.
"Very well." Zindel never turned
away from the window. "Inform Representative Kinshe that
Ternathia formally accepts Uromathia's proposed amendment of
the draft Act of Unification. I suppose," his mouth twitched with
just a trace of genuine humor, "that the crown of Sharona is worth
a Uromathian daughter-in-law."
Chapter Fifty-One
"HISTORIC VOTE DUE
TODAY"
Thaminar Kolmayr barely
glanced at the banner headline on the morning issue of the
Gulf Point Daily News their new press secretary had brought
in. He didn't need to do any more than that, because he was
intimately familiar with the story beneath that headline. Indeed,
he'd gotten depressingly good at political analysis over the past
dreary, endless weeks.
Thaminar had never been a
particularly political person before, but since the murder of their
daughter, he and Shalassar had followed the news coming out of
Tajvana with quiet, grieving intensity, for reasons very different
from those motivating most other Sharonians. Everyone else was
worried about who would rule them, and how their lives would
change. Thaminar couldn't bear the thought of more change in
their lives—not after the traumatic savagery of the "change"
they'd already endured—but he knew it was inevitable. And
however little interested he might have been in change for change's
sake, he and Shalassar were profoundly interested in justice.
It had hurt desperately, seeing
their daughter's photograph and name splashed across newspaper
and magazine pages, or embedded in the telepathic Voicecasts.
None of it carried anything approaching the sheer agony of
Shaylar's final Voice message, but neither he nor Shalassar had the
heart any longer to View those Voicecasts. Using their Voices at
all, these last two months, kept bringing back the searing pain of
their daughter's death. So they read the newspapers, instead, and
told themselves they'd almost gotten used to seeing little Shaylar's
picture everywhere they turned.
But the endless, aching grief had
not yet passed, and he'd come to realize it never would truly heal.
It had faded enough to let them pick up enough of the shattered
pieces of their lives to move forward again, yet the pain remained,
wrapped around the jagged, empty void her death had left in their
hearts, and impossible to forget or assuage. To lose a child, no
matter how, was agony. To literally know how she'd died,
to have experienced with her the horror and terror of her final
minutes of life and yet been forever unable to so much as touch
her one last time . . .
Shalassar came in from the
kitchen, carrying their breakfast on a tray. He wasn't especially
hungry—he seldom was, these days—yet the
steaming scent of the coffee was a comforting reminder of normal
home life that he welcomed gratefully. They clung to such things,
little rituals, familiar things done a thousand ordinary times, as a
way of holding themselves together and getting them through each
day.
Shalassar glanced at the headline.
Just beneath it was yet another black-bordered photograph of
Shaylar between the photographs of the only two men in the entire
Conclave who truly mattered. The Conclave's delegates had
already voted to create a united Empire of Sharona based on the
Ternathian model and with Zindel chan Calirath as Emperor.
Uromathia's refusal to accept the outcome of that vote as binding
upon it had created an enormous amount of anger, but no one had
really been surprised. What had been at least a little surprising was
the fact that Emperor Chava had managed to convince half a dozen
smaller nations to stand with Uromathia by appealing to supposed
ancient Ternathian wrongs.
Actually, Thaminar reflected, it probably has less to
do with 'convincing' them to go along with him than it does with
finding ways of threatening them into going along. He's supposed to be good at that, after all, and every one of
them borders on Uromathia.
However he'd gotten their
support, it had given his protests an added degree of legitimacy.
Thaminar didn't much care to admit that, but he couldn't deny it,
either. Whether or not anyone liked it, Chava Busar and his
adherents had positioned themselves well behind their single
"reasonable demand." Now it remained to be seen whether the
nations which had already accepted Zindel of Ternathia as their
new world emperor were prepared to accept the amendment Chava
had demanded.
"Do you think they'll accept?"
Shalassar murmured, biting her lip gently as she set out the
breakfast neither of them truly felt like eating.
"I don't know," Thaminar
admitted. She paused, a plate of cut melon slices poised in her
hand above the polished tabletop in the bright, sunlit dining nook,
and looked up at him, and he shrugged. "I would have thought that
when Zindel accepted in Ternathia's name that that would have
been the end of it. But apparently Chava is even less popular than
I'd thought, difficult though that is to believe."
Shalassar surprised him with a
slight smile, then shook her head.
"Do you really think there's
significant opposition? Or is this another example of the papers
needing to play up the drama to help circulation?"
"My dear, that's pretty cynical,"
Thaminar observed. "Not that it couldn't be true, too."
He smiled back at her, but the
truth was that he didn't really know what was going through the
minds of the men and women in Tajvana. On the one hand, it
seemed remarkably cut and dried; on the other, some of the
delegates—the reports suggested that Emperor Ronnel of
Farnalia had probably had a little something to do with it—
had dug in their heels in stubborn resistance. Apparently the
thought of finding themselves one day living under the rule of
Chava Busar's grandchild was more than they could stomach. They
were a minority of the total Conclave, but they also included many
of the strongest original supporters of the concept of a world
empire. Besides, the Act of Unification had required a
supermajority for its original ratification. The same supermajority
would be required for any amendment of the original Act, and
there were enough holdouts to put final approval very much up
for grabs.
"In the end," he said, "I suppose
it depends on whether or not Ronnel goes on holding out.
According to everything I've read, he's one of Zindel's closest
allies on almost everything else. I can't believe he won't eventually
come around to Zindel's thinking on this issue. It's not as if it's his son who's going to have to marry one of Chava's
daughters, anyway."
"Oh? And what about Fyysel?
How reasonable was he when Chava's name was placed in
nomination?" Shalassar challenged, and Thaminar grimaced.
She had a point, he conceded.
Fyysel had strongly supported Halidar Kinshe's original proposal.
But when Chava tried to put his own candidacy forward, Fyysel
had spoken for his subjects' blazing outrage at the very suggestion.
If, the King of Shurkhal had said bluntly, the world were stupid
enough to ramrod Uromathia's ruler down Shurkhal's throat, it
would discover that Shurkhali honor still burned hot and that
Shurkhali men and women still knew how to fight a war.
Thaminar hadn't even tried to
keep track of the number of times he'd read or heard the phrase
"Death before Uromathia!" in his kingdom's newspapers and
public debates. He'd been in total agreement with the sentiment,
and he'd been well aware, through news reports, that Uromathia
had done everything in its power to stir up old and vicious hatreds
of Ternathia amongst those nations she'd once conquered in an
effort to generate some sort of counterbalancing backlash against
Zindel.
Despite the miserable failure of
Chava's effort to put his own candidacy forward, he had succeeded
in energizing a vociferous lunatic fringe almost everywhere
outside the current-day boundaries of Ternathia. Fortunately, that
fringe had found itself increasingly marginalized as the debate had
raged. And as Zindel had emerged more and more strongly as a
reasonable, moderate-minded, honorable man who
steadfastly refused to allow his own allies to ram his
candidacy down anyone's throat, the tide had shifted decisively in
his favor.
Yet it remained to be seen
whether or not Ternathia's ruler could talk his own
"allies"—including King Fyysel—into accepting an
arrangement which would guarantee Chava Busar's
dynastic grasp on the crown of Sharona.
"I think, in the end, they'll have
to accept," he said finally. "If Zindel is willing, how can
they refuse? They intend to make him the Emperor of all Sharona.
Are they going to start right out by telling him he doesn't have the
right to make this sort of decision for his own family?" Thaminar
shook his head. "That's insane."
"And people don't regularly get
insane where Chava is concerned?" Shalassar shot back.
"I don't have any easy answers
for you, love," he said. "I wish I did. I wish I still believed
in easy answers. But the only way we're going to find out is to
wait until the votes are counted."
"I know, I know," Shalassar said,
and managed to smile at him. He smiled back at her, then folded
the paper and deliberately set it aside as she began spooning
melon, grapes, and dates onto his plate. He wished that he could
put his worries away as easily as he could discard the newspaper,
but that wasn't going to happen. Today's vote was so critical that
neither of them really wanted to think about it, but he
knew they weren't going to be able to avoid it.
Which didn't mean they wanted
both going to try to pretend they could.
"Do you have any delegations
coming in today?" he asked, deliberately turning away from the
vote in Tajvana and concentrating on their own lives, instead.
Shalassar gave him another
smile, but he felt the terrible tension in her through their marriage
bond. It was just as hard for her to let go of the Unification vote as
it was for him.
"I'm not expecting any," she said,
shaking her head. "That doesn't mean the bell won't ring anyway,
of course."
Her smile turned a little less
forced as she added the qualification. An ambassador to aquatic
sentients couldn't do her job the way other diplomats did theirs,
and Shalassar's life—and that of her family—had
always reflected that inescapable reality.
Human-to-human ambassadors'
jobs were almost boringly easy in comparison. They simply
received written, verbal, or Voice messages about meeting dates,
times, and places, then went and had them. They could actually
calculate their calendars, at least for a day or so in advance.
The ambassadors assigned to
serve the great apes—the mountain gorillas, chimpanzees,
orangutans, baboons, some of the higher monkey species, and so
on—lived far lewith ifss organized lives. They couldn't
expect comfortable quarters in the fashionable, diplomatic
sections of Sharona's capital cities, because they had to live close
to the populations they served. So they ended up parked out on the
fringes of the wilderness areas set aside for the
apes . . . which allowed primate
emissaries to simply walk up to their houses and knock on the
door whenever they felt like it. Which they were notoriously prone
to do. The apes were much less interested in the sort of formal,
regimented protocols and scheduling humans preferred.
More often, of course, contact
with the apes was actually initiated from the human side. The
human ambassador would find himself compelled to trek out into
the wilderness, seeking out the population of apes affected by a
proposed development in their area—a construction site,
road, or mine—in order to ask the apes' permission to build
on their territory.
Sometimes no permission was
forthcoming, but those cases tended to be the exception, not the
rule. Usually, some sort of quid pro quo could the arrived
at. Sometimes the agreements hammered out provided for moving
the whole clan into an unoccupied region capable of sustaining
them. Sometimes all it took was a gift of technology to help the
clan improve its standard of living. More than one large cat had
been unpleasantly surprised by sword-wielding chimps protecting
their young and infirm, and most of the clans loved steel axheads
and saws. Other clans had acquired access to medicines and
Healers, paid for by the private developer or government
negotiating the treaty.
Word of that sort of agreement
generally spread to other clans in the region. Thaminar and
Shalassar had smiled over one news story, in particular. The
Nishani chimps had allowed mines to be developed in their clan's
territory in exchange for medical care. Not to be outdone, the
neighboring Minarti chimpanzee clan had plied their
telepathic ambassador with questions about what humans might
need or want from them. Once they'd discovered that
several varieties of rare medicinal herbs which grew in profusion
in their territory could be found virtually nowhere else, they'd
offered to exchange them for the same medical care.
Horticulturists had been
imported to coach the Minarti clan on propagation techniques
designed to promote a cultivated supply of the herbs, rather than
deplete the wild sources. The delighted chimpanzees had settled
down to enjoy their improved health care, tending the plants upon
which it depended, and everyone had been quite satisfied by the
arrangement.
It was all very
human-like . . . which was one of the
reasons it had amused Shalassar and Thaminar so much, since
Shalassar's own experiences had been rather different.
For one thing, even chimpanzees
had a far better developed sense of time—by human
standards, at least—than the cetaceans did. There was, quite
literally, no way to predict what hour of the day or night a whale
or dolphin might suddenly come seeking the human ambassador.
The denizens of the sea lived at an entirely different pace, and in a
totally different environment, from humanity or its close cousins,
and their perceptions and interests were shaped accordingly. If the
cetaceans had even been aware of the Minarti clan's activities at
all, they would have thought the entire business was unutterably
boring.
Most of the land-dwelling
sentients of Sharona (including the majority of humans) felt sorry
for and smugly superior to the cetaceans, which had no hands and
couldn't use human technology for much of anything. Most
cetaceans, on the other hand, didn't think about the apes at all,
except to feel sorry for and smugly superior to the hapless
primates (including the majority of humans) who were stuck on
dry land and unable to exploit a full three-quarters of their home
planet's surface. They were totally disinterested in the goings-on
of chimpanzees and mountain gorillas, although they'd been
forced to modify that attitude where the humans who routinely
crossed their home waters were involved.
Human beings might be unable
to do much more than barely scratch the shallows of the cetaceans'
endless oceans, but they did exploit at least some of the same
territory. And since the emergence of Talents among them, it had
been the humans who had initiated contact. No one—
Shalassar included—quite understood how cetaceans
maintained their historical record, but the fact that they did was
beyond dispute. And because they did, they remembered the days
in which even the greatest and most intelligent of them had been
no more than one more food source for
humanity . . . and how that had
changed.
There were those, among the
cetaceans, who remained wary of, even hostile towards, humanity
because of things which had happened thousands upon thousands
of years ago. More of them, though, remembered that humanity
had altered its actions once it realized that it was dealing with
other intelligent species. And even those who remained
wary, recognized that at least some contact with human beings
was inescapable.
That was where ambassadors
like Shalassar stepped into the picture. She'd spent her life
establishing contacts with the cetaceans, and even more than the
ambassadors to the apes, she'd discovered that the nonhumans
with whom she dealt had become the very center of her life and
career. She wasn't simply their official conduit to land-dwelling
humanity; she and her family had made friendships among the
great whales, the dolphins and the porpoises, building intensely
personal bridges across the inter-species gap.
Still, she was an
ambassador, which meant she had more than a merely personal
interest in the outcome of today's vote. She had a professional
interest, as well, because if Zindel chan Calirath did, indeed,
become the Emperor of a united Sharona, he would also become
Shalassar's ultimate superior. In essence, she'd find herself
working for him, as his representative to the cetaceans,
rather than for the Kingdom of Shurkhal. Which meant that
somehow she'd have to find a way to explain to those aquatic
intelligences just what sort of bizarre political convolutions those
peculiar bipeds were up to now.
That thought brought her back to
the vote once again, and she glanced at the clock on the mantle. It
was nearly time for the SUNN Voicecast from Tajvana, and she
suddenly felt Thaminar's arms wrap themselves around her from
behind. She closed her eyes and leaned back against him, clinging
to the love pouring through their marriage bond like another, even
stronger set of arms, and he kissed the side of her neck.
"Let's go out to the beach," he
said gruffly. "I don't want to stay inside."
Shalassar nodded, and they
walked outside. They moved well down the beach from the house,
past the official Embassy with its dock and bell, to a favorite spot
well shaded by palms. Then they sat down on a blanket between
the endless sweep of sea and sky. Shalassar sat in front of her
husband, leaning back against the solidness of him, and treasured
the cherishing strength of the arms about her.
Out here, there was enough
sunlight and wind and sky to make the ache of loss feel smaller
than it did enclosed by walls and a ceiling. They'd been spending a
lot of time out here, in recent weeks, and Shalassar sighed as she
leaned her head back against his chest. Memories slipped into their
shared awareness. They saw Shaylar skipping down the beach,
playing with her older brothers, building castles in the sand and
hunting for shells. They saw her laughing in the surf, riding on the
back of one of the dolphins who'd come as an emissary to the
Embassy.
They sat there for a long time,
watching the birds wheeling overhead, listening to their
inexpressibly lonely cries as they drifted against the vast infinity of
sea and sky. Shalassar's people believed that the human soul rose
like a seabird after death, singing its way into the sky in search of
its final resting place in the heavens, out in the endless vastness of
the ether where the gods dwelt. . . .
Shurkhali believed the soul was
like a grain of the endless sands that swept across their arid
homeland. When a Shurkhali died, his soul would be blown, like
those grains of sand, back into the great drifts of souls that
marched across the face of heaven, like the dunes of sand blowing
across the face of Shurkhal. The soul of a person found worthy
would be swept up and placed like a jewel in the diadem of
heaven, to shine as a beacon to guide others on their way home.
Whether her journey had ended
as a bird singing its way to heaven, or as a star shining in the
diadem of the gods, Shaylar's parents had to believe their daughter
had found the peace and happiness reserved for those who had
lived life in joy and service to others. Surely her final action,
safeguarding every living soul in Sharona by destroying the maps
that might have led her killers here, had earned their child a place
in the arms of the gods.
"Do you think Ronnel is
really on our side?" Ekthar Shilvass murmured quietly in
Shamir Taje's ear.
Andrin knew she hadn't been
supposed to overhear the Internal Affairs Councilor's question,
but she'd always had remarkably acute hearing. And, she had to
admit, she found Shilvass' inquiry well taken. The Emperor of
Farnalia was on his feet once more, his eyes crackling with fury,
as he rebutted the comments of yet another of Chava Busar's
allies.
He'd been doing a lot of that
over the past several hours, as early morning turned into late
afternoon, she reflected.
Taje's lips twitched in what
could have been amusement or irritated agreement—or
both, Andrin supposed—but the First Councilor didn't
respond. Perhaps he was too well aware of all of the attention
focused on the Ternathian delegation as the debate raged onward.
Andrin wished he'd responded anyway, and, after a moment, she
decided to take advantage of her own youthfulness. She didn't do
it very often, but she was barely seventeen years old. There
were times when being a teenager allowed her a degree of latitude
the official adults around her were denied.
"Papa," she said quietly, looking
up at her father in the chair beside hers, "why is Emperor Ronnel
kicking up such a fuss?"
Zindel chan Calirath found
himself restraining an abrupt temptation to burst into deep, rolling
laughter. "Such a fuss" was precisely the right word for what his
old friend was doing at the moment, although he rather doubted
that anyone except his Andrin would have described it with such
succinct accuracy. It took him a few seconds to be sure he had his
voice under control, then he looked down at her and shook his
head slightly.
"Ronnel is just a
bit . . . stubborn," he said, with
massive understatement. "To put it bluntly, he doesn't like Chava,
he doesn't trust Chava, and he doesn't want Chava
anywhere near the imperial succession. Not in any empire that
he belongs to, at any rate."
"But if you don't object to it,
then how can he?" she asked. "I mean, it doesn't seem very
logical."
"Politics often aren't
logical, 'Drin," he replied. "People think with their emotions at
least as much as they do with their brains—probably more, I
often think. Part of the art of ruling is to recognize that. To allow
for it when it's likely to work against you, and to figure out how
to use that same tendency when it can help to accomplish
the things you have to accomplish.
"At the moment, though, Ronnel
is convinced—in some cases for some pretty emotional
reasons—that he has a lot of perfectly rational reasons to
hate and distrust Chava. And he does, actually. To be honest,
most people who know Chava have reasons to hate and
distrust him."
He considered telling her about
his intelligence reports on Chava's use of terror tactics against
suspected opponents among his own
people . . . and against his neighbors,
as well. The "brigandage" which no one could ever quite stamp
out in the mountains and valleys along his borders had been
inexplicably on the upsurge over the last couple of
decades—a period which just happened to coincide with his
accession to the throne. And for some peculiar reason, it appeared
to be directed primarily against people the Uromathian Emperor
didn't like very much. That was bad enough, but there were other,
still darker reports which even Ternathian Imperial Intelligence
hadn't been able to definitely confirm or rebut.
He thought about those reports
as he looked down into his daughter's clear, sea-gray eyes, and
decided not to share them. Someday he might have to, but that day
had not arrived yet, and for all of her strength, she was still only a
girl. His girl, and the father in him decided that just this
once he would shelter her a little longer.
"No one is ever likely to confuse
Chava with one of the paladins out of the old tales," he said
instead. "Ronnel—and some of the other delegates—
aren't about to forget that. And, to be perfectly honest, I suspect
that the fact that Ronnel is one of my closer friends has something
to do with his present attitude."
Andrin looked puzzled, and he
squeezed her shoulder gently.
"I've told Ronnel this is how it
has to be," he told her. "But he's not at all convinced that it's how I
want it to be. Which is fair enough," he conceded, "since if
I had any choice at all, I certainly wouldn't do something like this
to Janaki! But the point is that Ronnel is convinced I made my
decision for reasons of state, and he's furious at the thought of
seeing me backed into this sort of corner by someone like Chava.
And don't forget, he's Janaki's godfather, as well. Do think he
really wants to see Janaki with Chava Busar as a father-in-law?"
Andrin shook her head with a
grimace, and Zindel shrugged.
"To be perfectly honest, neither
do I. But we don't seem to have a great deal of choice, and I know
your brother, 'Drin. Once everything was explained to him, he'd
make exactly the same decision I've made. Getting back to your
question, though, it's the combination of Ronnel's own reasons to
despise Chava, coupled with the fact that he's trying to 'defend' me
from a decision he feels has been forced upon me, which accounts
for his decision to oppose me on this particular issue. I did say,"
he reminded her, "that politics often aren't logical."
"But if this is
necessary—?" she said, and he shrugged once again.
"Ronnel and I differ on just how
necessary it is," he said. "I think we need Uromathia included from
the outset. And I think we need to do it in a way which makes it
perfectly clear to everyone that we've made an extra effort to
accommodate Chava's reasonable demands. I think we can't afford
to leave an excluded Uromathia sitting out there like some sort of
canker, distracting us while we're trying to gear up for a major war
against the Arcanans. And if we're going to include Uromathia, I
want to do it in a way which cuts the legs out from under any
future attempt on Chava's part to argue that we didn't meet him at
least halfway.
"Ronnel's view is that the
Conclave's already approved Unification and already approved my
election as Emperor. As far as he's concerned, the rest of Sharona
can get along quite handily without Uromathia. In fact, I think he'd
just as soon see Uromathia excluded in order to keep Chava as far
away as possible from the levers of power. And the news that the
Arcanans have initiated negotiations leaves Ronnel feeling less of
a sense of urgency than he felt when unification was originally
proposed. So where I'm willing—even determined, however
little I like it—to include Uromathia, he's perfectly prepared
to exclude it. And all he has to do to accomplish that is to
prevent me from assembling a big enough supermajority to amend
the original Act."
He smiled down at his daughter,
but his eyes were dark.
"So you see, 'Drin, it's the very
fact that he's my friend which is driving him to do everything in
his power to defeat what I'm trying so hard to accomplish."
Andrin nodded slowly, but the
youthful eyes looking up into his were just as dark, just as
shadowed, and he knew. She'd Glimpsed what he had. Neither of
them had Glimpsed it clearly—not yet—and, in many
ways, that was even more terrifying than it would have been if they
had. Over the millennia the Calirath Dynasty had discovered that
the more deeply involved someone with the Calirath Talent was in
the events he Glimpsed, and the more harshly those events
impinged directly upon him, the harder it was to See that
Glimpse's details sharply. That was what frightened Zindel chan
Calirath now, because there was too much darkness, too much
loss and pain, woven through the chaotic scenes he and Andrin had
managed to Glimpse for him to force clarity upon them.
But because his daughter shared
his Talent, she understood what Ronnel Karone—who did
not—never could.
"I do see, Papa," she said quietly,
laying her slender hand atop one of his. "Thank you for explaining
to me."
Chapter Fifty-Two
The bright morning sunlight only
made Sarr Klian's mood even darker by comparison.
The final draft of Two Thousand
Harshu's reinforcements had arrived last night, and it was, Klian
conceded, an impressive force. mul Gurthak had managed to
assemble even more fighting power than he'd projected in his
original dispatches to Klian. He'd not only managed to dig up two
complete Air Force talons, but he'd even come up with an
additional four-dragon flight of the rare yellows. Klian hadn't
expected that.
The Air Force's battle dragons
were divided into flights and strikes on the basis of their breath
weapons. The reds (the traditional colors of the original Mythalan
war dragons bore very little resemblance to modern dragons'
actual colors but still made a convenient shorthand for purposes
of reference) were the fire-breathers, although it probably would
have been more accurate to describe them as spitting fireballs.
They'd been bred as a general attack type, although the "flight
time" required for a fireball to reach its target made them less
suitable for air-to-air combat.
The blacks were the lightning-
breathers, who'd originally been developed expressly to fill that
gap in dragon-versus-dragon combat. Their attacks delivered less
total damage than a red's, but it was extremely focused. More
importantly, it struck with literally "lightning-speed," which meant
there wasn't any point in attempting to evade it the way someone
might a fireball, if he was fast—and lucky—enough.
Both weapons sites were, of
course, also effective against ground targets. No one in his right
mind wanted to get in the way of dragon-spawned fireballs or
lightning bolts, and it had been two hundred years since anyone
had. But however little Klian might have liked the thought of
being incinerated or flash-fried by lightning, the yellows were the
ones that really gave him nightmares.
Almost every peace organization
on Arcana—and a rather surprising number of officers
within the Air Force itself—had tried repeatedly to have the
yellows banned along with the weapons of mass destruction which
had been outlawed when the Union was formed. Although the
yellows' opponents hadn't succeeded in getting them completely
banned, the Air Force had allowed their numbers to run down
drastically. There simply weren't very many of them left, and Klian
hadn't imagined that any of them were out here in the Lamia
Chain. Nor could he imagine why they'd been sent in the first
place, or what possible use anyone in the Commandery might have
expected them to be.
Yellows were poison-breathers.
The shortest-ranged of all the
dragons, they were also the most lethally effective against
unprotected personnel. Their breath weapon had the largest area of
effect, and without gas masks and a sound doctrine in their use,
there was no defense against it.
They came in several varieties,
the most deadly of which breathed what the Healers called a nerve-
toxin that was uniformly lethal. Others breathed gases like
chlorine, which were horrible enough but at least offered some
possibility of survival if the wind was in your favor, or if you
could get out of the gassed area quickly enough. But even a tiny
concentration of the nerve-toxin was deadly once it was inhaled.
There were rumors that the Mythalans had developed contact
nerve-toxins during the Portal Wars. If that were true, at least
they'd never been used, thankfully, but the existing varieties of
yellows were more than enough to make Klian's skin crawl.
Especially now, as he stood on
the Fort Rycharn parapet, gazing out across the crowded
dragonfield at the rows upon rows of canvas tents. According to
the latest returns, Harshu currently had two cavalry regiments and
eight infantry battalions, plus artillery support, assembled under
his command. That gave him over two thousand cavalry and
almost nine thousand infantry, even before he counted the
artillerists, the Air Force personnel, and the special combat
engineer units. All told, Harshu had better than fourteen thousand
men—as many men as many a full division could have
boasted—and Klian felt a deep surge of inexpressible
bitterness as he gazed out across that crowded encampment and
thought how easily he might have contained this situation at the
outset if he'd had it under his command.
Assuming you hadn't pissed it away the way you did Charlie
Company, he told himself with bleak self-honesty.
He heard the flag above the fort
cracking and popping in the crisp wind, and he was tempted to turn
around and gaze back at the central office block. But he didn't.
There wasn't any point. He'd already heard everything he needed to
hear.
"Gentlemen," Two Thousand
Harshu had told his assembled officers less than two hours ago,
"Master Skirvon's latest dispatches make it quite clear the other
side is not negotiating in good faith. That fact has become
increasingly clear to him over the past several weeks, and he's
communicated that conclusion to Two Thousand mul Gurthak. In
addition, our reconnaissance has confirmed that the enemy
actually on the portal are anticipating the arrival of substantial
reinforcements within the next sixty to ninety days."
He'd paused, and Klian's heart
had sunk into his boots. The five hundred had looked around at the
silently watching faces, willing one of them to speak. When no
one else had, he'd drawn a deep breath and lifted his own hand.
"Yes, Five Hundred Klian,"
Harshu had said.
"Excuse me, Sir. But if they
aren't negotiating in good faith, what, exactly, does Master
Skirvon think they are doing? Why talk to us in the first
place?"
"They haven't requested a freeze
on troop movements," Harshu had pointed out. "Obviously, that's
because they believe—or hope, at any rate—that they
can move their reinforcements to the front faster than we can.
Unfortunately for them, they appear to be wrong. Master Skirvon's
assessment is that they've basically been intent on buying time to
bring those troops into play, without any intention of ever
seriously attempting to resolve the differences between us
peacefully. They continue to insist that the original confrontation
was entirely our fault, and they've persistently refused to
move beyond that to any discussion of the future possession of the
portal cluster. Master Skirvon—who, I hardly need to
remind anyone in this room, has by far the most personal
experience in dealing with them—is of the opinion that they
intend, at a bare minimum, to secure their own permanent and
exclusive possession of Hell's Gate. Whether or not they intend to
move beyond the cluster into our own territory is more
than he's prepared to say at this point. That possibility cannot be
overlooked, however."
Klian had hovered on the brink
of pointing out that Skirvon hadn't requested any freezes
on troop movements, either. But he hadn't said it. Harshu already
knew that, and Klian had no doubt that Skirvon had waited to see
what the other side proposed specifically as a test of the
Sharonians' sincerity.
"Based on Master Skirvon's
dispatches," Harshu had gone on, "Two Thousand mul Gurthak
has authorized me to take preemptive action against the enemy, if,
in my judgment, the situation requires it." Klian's plummeting
heart had seemed to freeze as the two thousand paused briefly,
then continued in measured tones. "He hasn't ordered us to attack,
but he's eleven days away by dragon. As he says, he can't possibly
be as good a judge of the immediate situation as we can here, at
Fort Rycharn."
He'd surveyed the taut ranks of
his officers. His eyes had challenged them to disagree with
anything he'd said, but not a single voice had spoken. Not even
Klian's.
"At the moment, we have a clear
and overwhelming superiority. All of our reconnaissance confirms
that they have less than one full regiment equivalent, and they
remain in complete ignorance of our aerial capabilities. We have
an equally overwhelming advantage in the speed with which we
can move our troops. Given the fact that we know they have heavy
reinforcements headed in our direction, I believe we have no
option but to strike quickly and decisively."
Klian's jaw had tightened as he
heard the words he'd dreaded from the beginning of the meeting,
but Harshu hadn't been finished.
"Our immediate objective,
obviously, is to secure Hell's Gate and control of its portal
cluster," he'd said. "Two Thousand mul Gurthak has made it quite
clear that the Union can't afford to leave it in Sharona's
possession. Especially not given the fact that they may well have
designs upon even more Arcanan territory. However, while the
seizure of Hell's Gate itself ought to be a relatively
straightforward proposition, given the balance of forces currently
available, holding it may be quite another matter, given the
hostile forces we know are already headed in this direction. To be
blunt, we need additional defensive depth, especially given the size
of the Sharonians' entry portal to that universe. We can't possibly
adequately defend a portal that size with the forces currently
available to us.
"Accordingly, I've decided that
we'll continue through Hell's Gate. Thanks to Magister Halathyn's
final discovery, we're equipped with portal detection devices of
unparalleled range and sensitivity. If necessary, we can survey for,
locate, and secure all of the portals in a given universe far more
quickly than was ever possible before. Our objective, however,
will be to get as far forward as we can. Ideally, I'd prefer to find
another portal, no larger than our own swamp portal, to use as a
chokepoint against the inevitable Sharonian counterattack. Failing
that, I want enough depth for us to use our air power to hammer
them mercilessly as they advance, and rip apart their supply lines
behind their spearheads. It's essential that we buy enough time for
the Commandery to dispatch heavy reinforcements of our own,
and we can't do that by standing passively on the defensive in
Hell's Gate."
Still no one had spoken, and he'd
shaken his head slowly.
"I realize that if we continue
beyond Hell's Gate we'll be clearly and unambiguously moving
into Sharonian territory. That, of course, would constitute an act
of war by anyone's definition. But there's no point in deceiving
ourselves, gentlemen. The moment we attack Hell's Gate, we
will be at war with these people."
He'd said it unflinchingly, and
continued in the same level tones.
"I don't say that lightly.
Nonetheless, as Two Thousand mul Gurthak has pointed out,
leaving Sharona in possession of Hell's Gate, and a
foothold in our own territory, constitutes an unacceptable risk to
the security and interests of the Union of Arcana. As soldiers in
the Union Army, it's our duty to protect that security and those
interests. I intend to do so. And once we've opened the ball by
attacking at all, it would be criminally negligent of us to fail to act
in accordance with the military realities and imperatives of our
mission. The diplomats can sort out who's responsible for what
and which of their universes we're prepared to hand back at the
negotiating table, after the shooting is over. Our job is to make
sure that when they sit down at that table, they sit down with the
winning cards already in their hands. Is that clearly understood?"
Heads had nodded all around the
room, and he'd nodded back.
"Good," he'd said, then showed
his teeth in a feral smile.
"Now, as I'm sure we're all
aware, the greatest single disadvantage we face are these 'Voices'
of the Sharonians. Frankly, I'm not convinced they represent as
much of a threat as some of us have suggested. It doesn't matter
what kind of messages they pass along if they don't have the
military wherewithal to stand up to us, after all. Nonetheless, I
could be wrong about that, and even if I'm not, denying the enemy
information about your own movements is one of the cardinal
principles of warfare.
"I confess that I'd given this
problem considerable thought without hitting on a solution to it. I
wasn't the only one thinking about it, though, and Five Hundred
Neshok has come up with an approach which may just work. It has
its downsides," his expression had gone grimmer, "and it's more
complicated than I'd prefer in an ideal world. In the world we've
got, though, I think it may just work.
"Five Hundred?"
He'd gestured for Neshok to
stand. The intelligence officer had obeyed, and as he'd explained
the concept he'd come up with, Klian had understood exactly why
Harshu's expression had been less than delighted.
Now, as he stood on the parapet
in the clean morning air, he felt . . .
dirty. And frightened. He had no doubt that Harshu was right
about the immediate tactical situation. Nor did he doubt that the
two thousand's initial operational plan would succeed.
But what happened after that?
What happened when the Sharonians discovered that they'd been
attacked yet again? And that this time no Arcanan could claim it
had been a simple "misunderstanding"?
Neshok keeps calling these people "barbarians," the five
hundred thought almost despairingly. Harshu's always careful
to avoid doing that himself, but it's there in the way he thinks about them. I don't know how much of that
stems from the fact that it's what Neshok keeps feeding him in his
intelligence analyses, and how much of it comes from
inside his own head, but I've met Shaylar and her
husband. Whatever these people may be, they aren't "barbarians," and after what they already did to Charlie
Company, they're not going to be military pushovers,
either, even if they don't have magic. Am I the only one who sees that?
He had no answer to that
question. Or not one that didn't terrify him, at any rate.
The sun wheeled slowly
overhead. Neither of them even tried to tune into the real-time
Voicecasts of the ferocious Conclave session they knew was
raging in Tajvana. Near the noon hour, the staff King Fyysel had
assigned to them brought a beautiful little luncheon out to them,
and they made a show of trying to eat it, although neither of them
could work up much enthusiasm.
"The debate has been furious,"
Dalisar Tharsayl, the head of their new staff said as he watched
them nibble at the food. "The Emperor of Farnalia keeps shouting
about Chava's 'extortion' and 'blackmail.' The King of Hinorea
keeps responding with rants about Ternathian 'crimes against
humanity' from two thousand years ago and demanding to know
just why Emperor Ronnel seems so eager to put his good friend
Zindel on the throne of Sharona, yet so bitterly opposed to
accepting any Uromathian representation in the dynasty he intends
to 'foist off upon the rest of us.'"
He shook his head, his
expression a mixture of bemusement, anger, and concern, and
Shalassar lifted her gaze to his.
"Did you expect anything else?"
she asked, and he shook his head again, harder.
"No, Lady," he conceded. "I've
given up expecting rationality out of human beings under any
circumstances. Why should I expect that to change under
these? Ancient prejudices and resentments, coupled with
opportunism where the possibility of power is involved, are more
than enough to reduce any semblance of reason to pure emotional
chaos."
Shalassar surprised herself with
a ghost of a laugh, and he smiled. Then he half-bowed in her
direction.
"The debate continues," he said,
"but I truly believe it's winding towards a conclusion. Our King
has spoken several times, and surely everyone in the entire world
must know how much King Fyysel—and all of our
people—loathe and despise all Chava stands for. Yet the
King speaks steadily and powerfully in favor of accepting the
modification to the Act of Unification. To those who oppose the
amendment, he points out that they intend to make Zindel of
Ternathia Emperor of all Sharona, their ruler, and asks if they
expect this man to be a mere figurehead. And if they don't, then
why do they propose to begin his reign by questioning his
competence to decide upon the political acceptability of the
marriage of his own heir?"
Thaminar couldn't quite keep the
surprise out of his eyes, and Tharsayl smiled crookedly.
"I wouldn't say His Majesty
makes the argument cheerfully, Master Kolmayr," he said. "Indeed,
the mere thought that his children must someday bow to Chava
Busar's get, even knowing that any child of Prince Janaki will also
be Zindel's grandchild, must be taking years off of his life.
But," the chief of staff's smile vanished, "he's determined to accept
it. Believe me," Tharsayl looked at both of them, "the Act of
Unification will be amended and sustained. King Fyysel—
and Emperor Zindel—will settle for no less than the
creation of a world government capable of fighting any war,
meeting any foe. It will happen, and justice will be done
for your daughter."
Shalassar's eyes burned, and
Thaminar reached out to grip her hand fiercely.
"Thank you," she got out, and
King Fyysel's servant bowed deeply. Then he departed, directing
the rest of the staff with silent gestures as they carried away the
remnants of lunch.
"Ladies and Gentlemen of the
Conclave, may I have your attention please."
Orem Limana's voice was tired
but clear and strong, and the huge chamber of the Emperor Garim
Chancellery stilled. It didn't happen instantly, but it did happen
quickly, and Davir Perthis smiled tensely at Tarlin Bolsh in the
Universal News Network booth high above the chancellery floor.
A corner of his own Talent was tapped into the Voicecast going
out from Darl Elivath, but most of his attention was on the
Conclave before him.
It all came down to this, he
thought. Everything he'd done, all of the corners he'd cut where
the letter of his profession's official ethics were concerned. All of
the Delegates' debates, all of the horsetrading and the
convincing . . . and the threats, and
the browbeating. All of it came down to this moment, and
this final vote.
He'd never thought for a moment
that it would be this close, but no one was prepared to predict
whether or not the vote to amend the Act of Unification would
succeed.
Who would have thought that Ronnel Karone would
fight so hard against Zindel's obvious wishes?
The Chief Voice shook his head,
bemused by the way the bizarre convolutions of politics could
surprise him even now. The spectacle of Ternathia's oldest and
closest ally fighting to the last ditch against a Ternathian
proposal would have been one for the history books even if the
issue in question hadn't been so grave.
"What do you think?" he
whispered to Bolsh.
"I don't," the International News
Division chief replied out of the corner of his mouth, never taking
his own eyes from Limana. "And I'm not sticking my neck out
with a guess, either, so don't try to get one out of me. By my
count, it's going to come right down to the finish line."
"You're a lot of help!"
"Sorry," Bolsh grunted. "You
want accurate predictions about something like this, hire a
Calirath."
"I—" Perthis began, then
shut his mouth as the chancellery finally settled into the sort of
silence that hurt a man's ears.
"Ladies and Gentlemen of the
Conclave," Limana repeated into the stillness, "the vote has been
tabulated. Chairman Kinshe?"
Halidar Kinshe, the chairman of
the Committee on Unification, stood with a sheaf of papers in his
hand.
"Ladies and Gentlemen," he said,
"the motion before this Conclave was to amend Section Three of
Article Two of the previously approved Act of Unification, by the
addition of the following subsection."
He looked down at the papers in
his hand and read in a slow, clear voice, giving each delegation's
Voices the time to guarantee a clean translation to its delegates.
"Article Two, Section Three,
Subsection Fourteen: It shall be agreed that the Heir to the co-
joined Thrones of the Empires of Ternathia and Sharona shall,
within three months of the ratification of this Act of Unification
by all Parties, wed a Royal Princess of Uromathia, and that the
Issue of this Marriage shall in perpetuity displace the claim of any
other Individual, Dynasty, or Nation upon the Crown of the
Empire of Sharona."
He paused and cleared his throat.
"The vote in favor of amending
the Act by the addition of the preceding subsection is four hundred
and sixty-three in favor, two hundred and thirty-seven opposed.
The motion to amend," he drew a deep breath, "is carried."
The sun had continued to wheel
steadily overhead. Now, at last, it was sliding down the sky and
painting the western heavens in glorious colors as it descended.
The day had faded nearly into dusk, and a chill breeze had begun to
blow in across the water, when Tharsayl reappeared. He walked
down the beach in the loose white robes which marked him
instantly as a royal servant and gave them a profound bow.
"It is done," he murmured.
Shalassar's heart shivered under
Thaminar's arm, and they looked up into Tharsayl's face, more
than half-dreading, even now, what they might see there. The chief
of staff loomed up across the last of the golden sunset as he
straightened and looked back at them.
"The amendment was sustained
by a single vote more than was required, and Uromathia, as was
agreed, has formally ratified the Act," he said simply. "We have a
new Emperor: Zindel chan Calirath. Zindel XXIV of
Ternathia . . . and Zindel the First of
Sharona."
Thaminar's breath exploded out
of him. Until it lifted, he hadn't truly realized how heavy the
weight of his fear had been. Despite all he'd said to Shalassar, all
the arguments logic and reason could present, he'd been so afraid
that at the last minute . . .
"Mother Marthea," he whispered,
feeling Shalassar's matching relief rippling through her, "thank
you for this mercy."
A burst of light dazzled their
eyes for just an instant; then the sun slipped down past the edge of
the world, and he realized that their long vigil here by the sea had
come to its close, after all.
"Let me take you in, love," he
murmured to Shalassar. "You're cold and tired."
She turned in his arms, peering
up into his eyes, and then her eyes lit with their first real smile
since the dreadful news had arrived.
"So are you," she said.
"And . . . I'm actually hungry."
She sounded almost surprised,
and Thaminar crushed her close for just a moment, nearly weeping
with relief. Then he stood and reached down, pulling her up from
the sand, and walked slowly with her back to the home they'd
made together over so many years.
They were just passing the dock,
when the bell rang. The sound startled them, and they paused. Then
Shalassar gave Thaminar's hand an apologetic squeeze and hurried
out onto the dock. He and Tharsayl followed her more slowly,
then stopped.
It was a dolphin. There was just
enough light to see its sleek hide, glistening wetly where the
elegant snout had lifted out of the water to reach the bell pull, and
Shalassar knelt down beside it, resting one hand on the dolphin's
head, just behind one large, liquid eye.
Those eyes had always seemed to
Thaminar to watch her—and him—with deep and
endless curiosity whenever one of these beautiful, mysterious
creatures came calling at their dock. But there was something
different about it, this time, and he stiffened as Shalassar's breath
caught in obvious surprise.
The dolphin made a sharp
staccato, chittering noise that
sounded . . . happy, somehow.
Thaminar wasn't actually able to Hear the dolphins his wife Spoke
with. But he could sometimes feel echoes of her conversations
through their marriage bond, and the dolphin's reaction felt light
and buoyant in a way he couldn't explain. It lingered for several
moments, then rolled slightly in the water, nodding its head
deliberately toward Thaminar and Tharsayl. And then it uttered a
strange burbling sound and slipped away from the dock.
It submerged, but only for an
instant. Then its dorsal fin reappeared, cutting through the water
with a dark V-shaped wake until the entire dolphin suddenly
exploded out of the water once more. It leapt into the air, droplets
of spray flying high enough to catch the fringe of the setting sun
and glitter like a shower of topazes and rubies. The dolphin made
a complete flip, three feet above the dark water, then splashed back
into its mysterious world and was gone.
Shalassar straightened slowly,
turning away from the waves, and Thaminar felt her sense of
wonder through the marriage bond.
"They wanted to know if we'd
decided yet," she said. "They wanted to know if we'd decided who
would lead us."
"They what?"
Thaminar wasn't quite sure he'd
heard her preposterous statement correctly. In all the years she'd
served as an ambassador, the dolphins had never taken notice of
human political affairs. Not like this.
She crossed the dock to his side
and slipped one arm around him. She stood beside him, leaning
her head against his shoulder, gazing at the spot where the
emissary had vanished from sight.
"They knew, somehow, that we
were making this choice today," she said softly. "Marthea alone
knows how—tonight, I could actually believe She told
them! But however they learned about it, they knew. So one of
them came to ask, when the light went. He was an emissary I'd
never met before, but it felt as if he must be very important in the
pod in which he travels, and he was very concerned when he
asked."
"What did he say when you told
him?" Tharsayl asked in an almost reverent voice, and a smile of
wonder spread slowly across her face.
"He didn't say anything. Yet I felt
a burst of joy, one unlike anything I've ever sensed in dolphin-kind
before. I don't understand it. You may tell King Fyysel that,
Dalisar. I don't understand it, but . . .
the dolphins are pleased—very pleased—that Zindel
chan Calirath has been chosen to lead us. It felt—"
She hesitated, biting her lip.
"Lady?" Tharsayl prompted
gently, and she met his gaze in the steadily darkening evening.
"It felt as though their emissary
had reached a decision. A desperately important decision. It's very
difficult to put dolphin-speech into human words, but they've
decided something. I'm sure of it. Decided something critical, but
whether or not they ever tell us what it
is . . . "
She shrugged and held out her
palms in a gesture indicating helplessness.
"We may never know. But I find
it very intriguing that the dolphins, at least, are paying attention to
what happens to human politics. That's never happened before."
"Never?" Tharsayl asked almost
sharply, and she shook her head.
"Never. The cetaceans are
remarkably indifferent to most of us land-dwellers, on the whole.
The great whales are more indifferent than the dolphins or orcas,
who are naturally curious souls. But even the dolphins, who enjoy
playing with us in the water and almost always help swimmers in
trouble, have never shown any interest in how we govern
ourselves. Their only 'political concerns' have always been strictly
limited to how our actions, our plans, might affect them, and
vice versa, not how we reached our decisions in the first
place."
Tharsayl stood frowning at the
dark water, barely visible now, and his eyes were troubled.
"Crown Prince Danith had a
remarkable story to tell his father, the day he came home from
here, Lady. The day you learned what had happened."
Thaminar frowned. So did
Shalassar.
"When you were linked with the
Portal Authority's Voice—" The chief of staff hesitated,
clearly choosing his words with care. "There were dolphins here,
in the floating ring, and one of the singing whales, and
they . . . reacted to the news.
"Reacted?" Shalassar repeated
with a frown. "Reacted how? To what?"
"There came a moment, a terrible
moment, when you screamed, Lady," Tharsayl said. "And when
you did, the sea came alive. They leapt from the water—all
of them. His Highness said . . . He
said the sound that broke from them was unearthly, horrifying. A
sound of rage."
Shalassar's eyes went wide in
shock. She stared at the chief of staff, and Tharsayl shook his head
slowly.
"Representative Kinshe said your
pain was so great, Lady, that it spilled across into their minds.
They were angry, Lady. Both the Representative and His
Highness agreed on that."
"But why?" Shalassar
half-whispered, her eyes meeting Thaminar's equally
dumbfounded gaze. "I could understand grief. Most of the
emissaries who come here knew Shaylar, watched her grow up.
Many of them, of the dolphins and orcas, at least, have played with
her in the water. But anger? I've never felt anger from a
cetacean." She turned a baffled look on Tharsayl. "Why did they
say it was anger?"
"I don't know, Lady, but they
both felt the same thing. The sound was a sound of rage, and their
anger was so deep, so powerful, that Lady Kinshe Felt it through
her Healing Talent. The singing whale came completely out of the
water Lady. It stood on its tail and bellowed so loudly it shook the
windows."
Shalassar gasped and her hand
tightened on Thaminar's forearm.
"They don't do that!" she
protested. "They just don't."
Neither man spoke, and
Shalassar shivered, abruptly and oddly frightened as the night
closed in around them.
"I want to go inside now," she
said in a small voice.
Thaminar nodded and slipped his
arm around her once again, steadying her on the walk back to their
home. She was more shaken, he realized, than she'd been by
anything since the day the news from Hell's Gate had shattered
their world.
He glanced back once at the dark
water, where the vast sweep of black sea met the equally vast bowl
of mostly-black sky. A faint glow remained visible on the western
horizon, where the sun had set beyond the coast of Ricathia, but
stars were already visible in the eastern sky and overhead.
Why were the cetaceans
angry over Shaylar's death? Why were they so interested in the
outcome of the day's vote? The world which had been so quiet and
predictable for the vast majority of his life seemed very cold and
frightening tonight. And under other skies, he knew, there were
Sharonians even closer to the danger that loomed, out there in the
darkness.
Keep them safe, Mother Marthea, he prayed with a sudden
fervor he couldn't explain. Keep us all
safe. . . .
Then they reached the house,
with its warm gas lamps to dispel the cold and frightened feelings
which had overwhelmed them all on the darkened dock. Merely
closing the door felt like an act of preservation, somehow. An act
that barred the way against the evil that lay waiting, out there in
the multi-universal darkness.
He helped Shalassar into a chair,
poured whiskey into three glasses, and handed them around. While
they sipped their whiskey and felt safe behind the closed door, here
inside these walls where the lights were warm and comforting, he
wondered again what the cetaceans were
planning . . . and why he'd felt that
sudden, deep surge of fear.
Keep them safe, he found himself praying once more.
Please, keep them safe.
"All right, Five Hundred,"
Commander of Two Thousand Mayrkos Harshu said to his senior
Air Force commander as the early afternoon sunlight burned down
across Fort Rycharn. "Let's get these dragons in the air."
About The Authors
David Weber is author of the New York Times
best-selling Honor Harrington series as well as In Fury Born,
1633 (with Eric Flint), and other popular novels. With Steve
White, he is the author of Insurrection, Crusade, In Death
Ground, and the New York Times best seller The
Shiva Option, all novels based on his Starfire SF
strategy game. Other collaborations include the four novels of the
Prince Roger series with John Ringo.
Linda Evans is coauthor with John Ringo of The
Road to Damascus and with Robert Asprin of four novels in
the Time Scout series for Baen, and has also collaborated with
Asprin on the recent For King & Country. An expert
on weapons both modern and ancient, she puts her expertise to
good use in her science fiction. She has also written the novel
Far Edge of Darkness (Baen), and several short novels for
volumes in Baen's popular Bolo series. She lives in Archer, FL.
THE END