Chapter 8
The loud creaking and jostling from
the worn-out shocks of an old steam wagon greeted Burtrend when he
finally woke. Each sound and movement caused aching pain in the back
of his head. Why? Why is it always my head?
Through the pain, he managed to open his eyes
and then he wished he hadn't. The light of the sun stabbed his eyes
and momentarily blinded him from the sight before him. He was lying
on his side with Darline beside him and he could easily see the dried
blood and hair matted to the back of her head. Their hands and feet
were bound tight with coarse rope that irritated and rubbed his
wrists raw.
Reaching for Darline's shoulder, he
shook it with no response. He shimmied closer so that he could
discern whether she was alive or dead. He checked her throat for a
pulse, found a weak one, and saw that her breathing was very shallow.
The blood came from a small gash along her hairline above her ear
that appeared to be festering already. He felt her forehead and found
her feverish. Grateful
that Darline was still alive, if even barely, he laid back down with
a sigh. I have a chance to repay my depts.
A loud chorus of rough, cackling
laughter suddenly reminded him of the men that had attacked them.
Straining to hear them through the ruckus of the shocks on the rough
road, he could barely catch their excited whisperings but couldn't
understand them through the other noise. A large rut in the road
suddenly bounced him and Darline hard against the wooden bed of the
steam wagon, making his head feel worse.
"Did yah feel tha' one?" the
short one gruffly yelled back at them, followed by more laughter from
both men.
"Stupid blighters, they though'
they could ge' the slip on us, eh Chumley?" the shrill voice of the
skinny one sounded out.
Burtrend closed his eyes and tried to
rest, hoping to be more clear-headed when they finally stopped for
the night. He listened to their conversation, but it was riddled with
useless information about people and places in their lives. Still, it
helped to determine that these men were not sent by any god. There
were little similarities between the cold, determined killer at the
inn and these two simpletons.
The day wore on and, as Burtrend had
hoped, his headache slowly waned. Angry stomach growls and a parched
throat now plagued him, though. He was grateful when the wagon
stopped in the evening.
"Wha' do yah mean I go' to ge' the
firewood? I did i' the las' time." The taller one whined
plaintively.
"No yah didn', Firkus! Besides,
if yah weren' so darn bad startin' fires I'd go ge' i' jus' to
stop yur whinin'!
"Well, leas' I don' burn the
food!" Firkus retorted as he wandered into the small strand of
trees. Burtrend could still hear him complaining to himself the whole
time as the burly one named Chumley started the fire and set up the
camp. He wondered when their captors would remember them in the cart.
Please stay alive, Darline. I will repay you
for saving my life, I swear.
"Go see if either of them is
awake." Chumley ordered as soon as Firkus was back with the wood.
"Yah don' need to order me around
like tha', yah could ask me nice like."
"Please
go see if they're awake. If yah don' I'm gunna kill yah, and feed
yah to the wolves. Then, I'll kill me some wolves and make some
nice coin off the hides." It was quiet for a moment after Chumley
said that.
"Why are yah always so mean?"
Firkus finally said as he walked to the wagon.
"Well, yur gunna be useful one way,
or the other."
The skinny, drawn face of Firkus
appeared as he made his way to Burtrend and Darline.
"Hey Chumley, the man's awake."
He looked down at Darline and nudged her a little. "I think yah
might a killed the woman."
"I told yah, I didn' kill her,
jus' hi' her real good. Hurry up and ge' him down."
The next few moments were quite
embarrassing to Burtrend. Firkus grabbed the rope tied around
Burtrend's feet and pulled him off the bed of the steam wagon. For
a moment, Firkus smiled, showing off his yellow and black teeth that
sat crooked in his mouth, and then he tried to stand Burtrend up. So
sore and cramped from hardly moving all day, his legs refused to
work. Burtrend promptly collapsed and fell on his face.
After struggling to get him stood up
with his feet tied, Firkus gave up. Taking his knife out, Firkus
sawed the rope binding the feet together until it finally came apart.
"Idiot! How we gunna stop him
runnin off in the nigh'?" yelled Chumley. "We aren' gunna be
able to tie him up again, tha' was our las' bi' of rope!"
"I didn' think about tha'. Hey,
where would he run to?"
Burtrend ignored them and slowly half
walked, half crawled to the fire and sat down as they continued their
pointless argument. They are Faynecians, what
should I expect? I need to find out what they plan on doing with us
now. After Firkus and Chumley finished
arguing, they finally realized that he had been sitting quietly by
the fire the whole time. Both decided to join him.
"So," Firkus spoke excitedly,
"Why were yah in chains coming off duh ship? Are yah a spy? Did yah
kill someone importan' on the motherland?" Crickets chirped with
the dusk, adding an uncomfortable element to Burtrend's silence. "I
don' think he knows how to talk, Chumley."
"Yah don' think. Tha's the
problem. He's Vitarri, of course he don' know how to speak like
us. I reckon tha' all he heard was a bunch of gibberish."
Downhearted, Firkus fetched Burtrend a canteen of tepid water. He
needed to pry apart his dry lips and peel his parched tongue from the
roof of his mouth before he could drink.
The water went through him faster
than he expected, and it was only minutes later when he had the
sudden urge to urinate. He knew he hadn't gone all day otherwise he
would have really stunk.
"I need to piss." Burtrend
decided to state.
"See Chumley, he can
talk."
"Well, since yah're so smar'
yah can go help him."
"But I go' him from the wagon!"
Firkus objected.
"I swear, I will shoo' yah if yah
don' listen to me." Chumley stood as menacingly as he could with
a clunky, slightly rusted pistol in hand and a scowl on his face.
Burtrend looked back as Firkus quietly led him away and saw a great
big smirk on Chumley's round face.
Burtrend stopped when they finally
reached a distance away from camp that he knew Chumley wouldn't
hear them.
"Perhaps you could do me a favor?"
Burtrend quietly asked, holding up his bound hands to Firkus. "Could
you untie this? It would help so that I don't piss all over
myself." The tip of Firkus's dagger hovered over the rope for a
moment. Quick as lightning the dagger was back in its sheath, the
ropes uncut. Burtrend saw Firkus looking back towards camp and knew
then that he feared Chumley more than he would admit to.
"No. Jus' make do with them
tied."
Once they returned, Burtrend found
that Chumley had busied himself with maintenance on the steam wagon.
Afterwards he brought out a sack that contained the evening's meal.
It was almost worse than the food fed to him in the brig. The tall,
half-starved Firkus suggested waking Darline so she could eat as well
but backed down when Chumley barked at him again.
"Alright Vitarri," Chumley said
after he ate most of the food, "Who are yah? Don' try and be
quiet, we know yah can talk."
"Before I tell you who I am I would
like to know what you plan on doing with me. If you can tell me that
then I will be happy to tell you whatever you want."
"I's a grea' plan! Isn' i',
Chumley?"
"Of course, i' is! I's my
plan." Chumley replied gruffly. "We seen yah come off the ship,
see? In all yur shackles and chains."
"And we knew yah're someone
importan'." Firkus said excitedly, incurring a hard stare from
Chumley.
"We don' know how yah go' tha'
pretty girl to help yah, or why yah burned down half of Sobeck.
They're questions tha' need answers." Chumley had turned his
glare to Burtrend now.
"You still haven't told me what
you plan on doing with me and the girl." He replied.
"Ransom yah!" Firkus piped up
again, apparently unable to stay quiet any longer. He donned the
broad, decaying-toothed smile again, which slowly faded when he saw
Burtrend's confused face. "We're gunna ransom yah."
"To whom?"
"Wha' yah mean, to whom?"
Chumley sounded enraged. "To the Queen, of course! Yah're a
prisoner of war. They'll want yah to hang for the trouble yah
caused."
"You would look less like outlaws
and more like heroes if you would take me there without asking for a
ransom first. I hear your Queen is a kind and rewarding person."
"Yah know Chumley," Firkus said
excitedly, "tha' isn' a bad idea. He's righ', we could be
heroes." Chumley looked like he was going to explode into a fit
when he heard that. Burtrend was sure it was because the hero idea
wasn't his plan.
"You fine men have a hopeful
future, something to look forward to, just imagine the gold the queen
will reward you with." Chumley's anger deflated at the thought of
more gold. "There's just one small problem." Burtrend could see
curiosity eat at them until he thought Firkus would burst.
"Wha' problem?" Chumley finally
said in his gruff tone.
"You are going to need to explain
to any guard we meet on the road why there is a dead Faynecian girl
in the back of the wagon."
"I told yah she was dead!" Firkus
shouted at Chumley.
"She's no' dead!" he shouted
back.
"You are right," Burtrend broke
in, "she's not, but she will be soon if she isn't taken care
of. It would be terrible if you went through all this trouble to
capture me only to be arrested for murder on the way there. Please,
let me help her. At least let me try." Firkus looked nervously at
Chumley who just sat there with a mean look. "Please, she's been
unconscious all day. She needs water and her wound cleaned."
"She should die for helpin' you."
Chumley said quietly. "She's nothin' bu' a traitor."
"I understand why you would say
that, but do you think the guards would believe you? No matter how
much they torture me I will deny that she ever helped me. That is, of
course, if you can convince them that I'm from Vitar and not
Iddea." Shocked over those words, their eyes sized him up for a
minute. "Oh, and if she does die, I'm going to make sure they
know you killed her. I'll say that you murdered her in cold blood.
I'll make sure you get hanged for it." He let Chumley digest
everything that he just said. With his level
of intelligence, this will take a while. They
stared at each other.
"Alrigh'," Chumley finally gave
him a nod, "Firkus, go help him care for the girl. If he tries
runnin', shoo' him."
Burtrend couldn't help feeling
relieved. He slowly stood so that he didn't startle them. The last
thing he wanted was bullets flying his direction. He hobbled to the
wagon with Firkus right behind. He felt her forehead and found a
small fever.
"Please," he said quietly,
turning to Firkus and stretching out his bound hands, "She has a
fever, she needs help." Firkus nervously looked toward his friend
sitting at the fire. "Look at me, Firkus, I'm not going
anywhere."
The poor man fidgeted, but only for a
couple of seconds. Firkus put his old pistol down on the open
tailgate. He slid out his pocketknife and cut Burtrend's bonds.
"Thank you," he whispered while
rubbing his wrist for a moment. Then he turned his attention to
Darline. Gently he picked her up and brought her over to the light of
the fire. There was another stare down with Chumley when he noticed
Burtrend's free hands, but Chumley switched his gaze to Firkus.
"Wha' do yah need for her? How
can I help?" Firkus ignored the large man's gaze.
"Water, some alcohol, a towel if
you have one and a blanket would be nice." Firkus hurried to
assemble everything under the watchful glare of Chumley.
"Wasn' no towel, but I found an ole
tunic of mine." He put everything down in front of Burtrend and
stood back to watch with worry on his face.
First Burtrend cleaned the wound with
the small flask of cheap whiskey, binding the wound with strips from
the tunic. Next, he tilted her upon his lap and poured the water into
her mouth. She choked, sputtered, and coughed the water up, but it
woke her enough for her to start swallowing. When she finished
drinking she opened her eyes, looked deeply into his, and gave him a
soft smile. With the smile still on her face she closed her eyes,
leaned her head into his chest and with a soft sigh went back to
sleep.
Burtrend took Firkus's offered
blanket and covered her with it to keep off the chill of the night.
He sat there, holding her, wondering how this could have happened.
Here was a Faynecian woman sleeping, curled up in his lap. He was a
Vitarri, her mortal enemy. It didn't help that he couldn't stop
thinking about her beautiful, perfectly shaped lips that had smiled
up at him. They had smiled just for me.
It was hours later, when the cold
ache in his legs caused him to stretch. Burning and tingling consumed
his legs. He looked at the two men that had fallen asleep. Firkus had
loyally sat near him, waiting in case he needed something else for
Darline. Now he was curled close to the fire to stay warm, snoring
quietly. Chumley, wrapped up in a blanket, was snoring and snorting
loudly. His pistol lay in the weeds beside him.
He gently laid Darline down on the
ground, being careful not to jar her. It was then that anger over
what Chumley had done to her consumed him. It took only a few long
strides to reach the pistol left forgotten in the back of the steam
wagon. He checked the bullets before he walked over to Chumley and
picked up the second gun. I could easily kill
both of them, he thought as he pointed a gun
a short distance from the sleeping man's head. Angry as he was, he
knew that Firkus was really a kindhearted, ignorant man that tried to
do the best by people despite Chumley's insatiable greed and
degrading manner. He felt that Firkus deserved a second chance at
life.
His hand began to tremble and almost
couldn't pull the trigger, but he looked over at Darline again. She
couldn't come with him on his travels, but she wouldn't be safe
in Fayneland with Chumley left alive.
*** *** *** *** ***
The Great Hall of Morak was not as
vast as her castle home, but it was warm at night instead of drafty,
and it was cool during the hot summer days. A breeze that blew
through the open doors freshened the air with the memory of
wildflowers. Princess Jenniah found the Mordloks to be great
artisans, especially of wood. Under their fingers the roughest chunk
of wood or stone became like clay, they masterfully carved it into
glorious patterns that wove together like a well-written song. She
could easily imagine that the whole roof was supported on pillars of
music.
Despite the Mordloks being short,
hardy people that enjoyed nothing more than a good battle, it seemed
that they were also kind, generous and enjoyed their times of peace
as well. That is what Jenniah found there, peace. It was in the sound
of young boys training for combat, the horses neighing, the soft
summer breezes warm with the scent of flowers, and it was even in the
loud roars of laughter during dinner.
It was there that she first
experienced what it was like to walk free of judgment. Back at home
there was always someone watching in the shadows, in the crowd, or
even right beside her. The nobility, servants, slaves, heralds, even
the guards loved to gossip. The insufferable and oppressive weight of
being under constant scrutiny had defined her childhood. There were
still watchful eyes here, but it wasn't to see what dress she wore
or whether or not she slouched while eating. Everyone wanted to know
what type of person she was. They wanted to determine if she is
honorable and kind, or haughty and spoiled. Jenniah thought it odd
that her earlier mistakes did not condemn her with these people like
it would have at home.
With the gentle wind caressing her
face, Princess Jenniah stood at the entrance to the Great Hall
looking out over Nygaard and the workings of the common people. It
had been only a week since she first met Morak, but it still amazed
her how he walked amongst the people and talked to them as if they
were family. Daren had warned her that there was no true hierarchy
other than the clan leaders and Morak himself, but it had been
difficult for her to understand without experiencing it. Everything
here was all so wonderfully different.
Basking in the beauty of the
afternoon, she was not surprised to see Morak striding purposefully
up the hill. Avron walked alongside him, strong-willed, focused, and
handsome with his strong jaw and dark, braided hair. Jenniah couldn't
help but feel enamored by Avron's presence. Despite being half head
shorter than her he towered nearly a head taller than his own people,
except his father. Avron's broad shoulders and muscular arms made
her feel tiny and weightless every time he asked her to dance during
the revelry they've had since she arrived. She watched wistfully
after Avron as he walked past her into the hall. Morak approached her
instead of going into the hall.
"I've thought about the treaty
thing you spoke of
earlier." Morak's voice was rough and hoarse. The sound brought
with it the image of a man yelling at the top of his lungs while
charging headlong into battle. At least, that's what Jenniah saw
and heard in him.
"Have you reached a decision?"
she asked quietly.
"I have a question about it. Your
mother asks us to be at peace with your people, but only so that we
will make war on your enemies. Enemies we will likely never meet,
since they are an entire ocean away. This is not about peace. Would
it not be better named a 'War Treaty'?"
"My mother, Queen Rheanna, believes
that the term 'peace treaty' is better received and accepted,
especially by common people."
"It shows her ignorance, Mordloks
see prolonged peace as a weakness. War is our life and battle is our
blood. The beat of the war drum might as well be the beat of our
hearts. But a war for no good reason brings the dead warriors
dishonor. My people will not rally behind a cause that they cannot
make their own." Jenniah could see the treaty slipping away as the
possibility of failure made her face grow hot.
"Then I ask that you do not see it
as her asking for a peace treaty. I, Princess Jenniah implore you to
unite the Mordlok tribes and fight with the Faynecian army."
"Why should I?" He had asked that
before, when she had presented the treaty to him the first time. It
was just as frustrating to hear it this time, as it was the first.
"Vitar has never done us ill and we have nothing to gain from it
but death. When you know why we should do this for you, then we will
speak again, but this war will need to be worth it." He turned and
began to walk away.
"What about gold? Are your people
interested in gold?"
"It's useless," He shouted over
his shoulder, "A soft metal that no one wants or needs. You value
strange things Princess of Fayneland, strange things."
Jenniah didn't know what to say as
she watched him follow his son inside. She stood confused and
frustrated where she had been happy only a few minutes before. Lost
in her thoughts, she didn't even notice Daren until he was already
standing beside her.
"Princess, are you alright?"
Genuine concern sounded in his voice.
"I'm fine." She tried to sound
convincing, but when he didn't move or turn away she knew he
wouldn't leave without a better answer. "Morak is frustrating. I
expected to be on my way home already. He refuses to agree to any
treaty until I can come up with a good reason for him to do so. He
laughs, scoffs, or refuses every suggestion I've made, and they
don't want gold. Who doesn't want
gold?" She finally turned to face him; soft, reddish brown curls,
straight chin and his beautiful green eyes softened by a smile.
"So, they don't like gold. What
do they value?" he prompted.
"War, but I'm offering them war
and he still refuses. I'm so confused, why wouldn't he jump at
this opportunity?"
"Maybe it's not war that they
value. Maybe it's something else."
"I don't know. Everything just
feels so... complicated."
Did you think this was going to be
easy? Politics are never easy and the Mordloks are far from simple
people."
"So, are you here to remind me how
horrible I am at this?" Jenniah asked bitterly.
"No." Daren sighed, "I want to
apologize again." She stared at him questioningly until finally he
looked away. "I'm sorry that I took over your responsibilities
earlier. I never meant to insult you."
"You never meant
to insult me?" Frustration bubbled forth from deep in her heart
from years of trying to make her mother proud... and failing. "You
had to know. You had to know it was going to upset me. This treaty
was clearly my task since we set out."
"Was it?" Daren sounded hurt,
where he had been calm a moment before. "Was it that clear why you
were sent?
"What do you mean?" Fresh
confusion clouded her mind. She couldn't understand his sudden
burst. "What are you talking about?"
"You were told by Queen Rheanna
that it was your duty to get the Mordloks to sign the treaty. It was
never my responsibility to teach you to be a politician. I was
ordered by your mother to teach you their ways, gain your confidence,
and then make sure you could follow through. If you couldn't, I was
to step in, finish the treaty, and use you as a marriage bond to
solidify the deal with Avron, or even Morak himself if he wanted
you." He paused to wait for her response, but Jenniah was
speechless. "She gave me the authority to sell you off like a piece
of meat. It is my shame that I was ready to follow her orders and was
doing everything I needed to make sure it happened. It is for this
that I am apologizing, and I will carry it as a disgrace until you
forgive me." Now he remained silent, waiting for a response while
looking away from her.
"Why are you saying such things? Is
this a sort of sick game? Do you delight in tormenting me?"
"You don't need to believe me,
but would you believe your mother? Here," he shoved a small bundle
of papers at her.
Looking over them, Jenniah easily
recognized her mother's seal. Inside was written exactly as he had
said. Mortified that her mother would have done this to her, shame
constricted her chest and embarrassment burned in her face. Tears
welled, adding to the humiliation for a princess should never let her
emotions show, especially when distraught. Daren turned to comfort
her, but she couldn't look at him. He couldn't know that her
mother's disregard for her emotions had wounded her deeper than it
should have.
"Princess, I didn't mean..."
"Don't... don't speak to me."
She thrust the papers back to Daren and walked off. She wanted to
run, but to do so would have meant that her despair had completely
taken her over.
She walked aimlessly as she tried to
hold back the well of tears, through one street and out another,
until she reached Nygaard's gate. Jenniah paused for a moment to
look back toward the Great Hall before she walked out into the world.
Memories of her mother, in her beauty and splendor sitting tall on
the throne, brought the salty tears forth. Fear that someone would
see her crying finally forced her to run. She didn't know where she
was going and didn't care, but she was determined not to stop until
she could run no further.
Blinded by
tears, the world was nothing but a blur as she ran over uneven forest
floor. Branches whipped her arms and legs, leaves stung her wet face.
Painfully stubbing her toes and tumbling to the ground finally forced
her to stop. Fresh tears poured down her cheeks from the
self-loathing and the pain in her foot. Her eyes were swollen, and
she struggled for breath. She couldn't remember the last time she
felt this hurt.
Exhausted, she looked around to see
where she was. The branches she had ignored earlier belonged to
strange dark trees with leaves so thick they blocked out the sun.
Suddenly fearful, Jenniah realized that she had run headlong into the
Godwood. The darkness seemed to close in around her. She turned in
the direction she thought she had come from and tried to find her way
out.
Despite the darkness and the
foreboding nature of the wood, her mind kept returning to her mother.
I'm the only heir to the throne right now.
Doesn't that mean Avron would be the next king? But so many
princesses have been sold to solidify peace between people, why
should I be any different? Still, I didn't think she would ever do
it, not without asking me, or even ordering me to. Why didn't she
talk to me about this? Why all the secrecy?
The afternoon waned, and the shadows
grew long. She kept walking, sure that she should have been out of
the forest by now. The sound of running water drew her deeper into
the wood. Her reckless flight through the trees had ripped her fine
gown while dirt, pieces of twigs, and bark were snagged in her curly
hair and the lace of her dress. It all seemed so unreal that she
walked dazed toward the gurgling stream. She barely realized that she
had finally found the source of the watery sound until she almost
fell in. A wide and shallow stream was rushing over rocks and
pebbles.
She collapsed at the edge of it,
looked around vaguely for a vessel to use as a cup, and ended up
simply using her hands. As royalty, she had never been as improper as
this moment. She was sure that if her mother saw her she would be
disowned. Despite the improprieties of the situation, she couldn't
remember a time when the simple taste of water on her lips had been
so refreshing. It was so cold that her hands began to turn numb and
it soothed her dry throat. Cupping the water in her hands, she washed
her face, and it was as if the clouds in her mind were washed away
along with the dirt and tears. I must have
been wandering deeper in; otherwise, I surely would have found a way
out by now. Should I follow the stream, or the sun? Should I stay
here or venture out? I'll be cold either way.
Finally, she decided to stay there until morning when she could use
the direction of the rising sun to find her way back to Nygaard. She
searched for a soft spot of grass or moss large enough to curl up on
and sank back into self-pity as the evening became chilly and her
stomach began to protest in hunger.
Weeping softly on and off, she tried
to calm herself by listening to the sounds of the forest, only to
become more anxious and fearful. There were sounds as the rustling of
dried leaves and small branches breaking, even the trees creaked in
protest to the wind. Since she was unused to the sounds of a forest,
she didn't know which ones should be expected and so assumed that
every sound she heard was ghostly and surreal. It was then she heard
a sound that sent chills down her spine.
"Princess... Jenniah..."
whispered softly through the trees in
Mordlok. She clung hard to her knees, shaking with fear and cold.
"Princess..." this
time it sounded a bit louder. After hearing it a third time closer
still, she realized that it had to be someone searching for her. It
has to be...
"I'm here! I'm here by the
river!" She called out. Hopefully I'm
right, or the spirits will be upon me soon.
She was not long in waiting when a figure seemed to solidify out of
the deep shadows. The features sharpened to show Avron and his
jingling braids.
"You are shivering." He had
carried her travel cloak with him and wrapped it around her. "What
are you doing here? Jaax told me you ran like evil spirits were
chasing you, with a face full of tears." His voice was kind and
soothing and his beaded hair jingled as he shook his head.
"I was shown something upsetting.
It was about my mother."
"Did she die?" He sounded so
concerned that she couldn't help but laugh while shaking her head.
"Well then what was so terrible that you came here?"
"I didn't mean to come here, it
just happened." Jenniah became uncomfortable under his continued
stare, knowing he wanted a better answer. Finally, she resigned
herself to the inevitable. Explaining the customs of nobility was
easier than expected and Avron was patient and perceptive.
"So, your mother wants you to marry
me? She wants this for stronger peace between our people?" Her face
grew red in the darkness, embarrassed by the truth. "I do not
believe that she can force you to do anything you don't want to.
You are smart, beautiful, and strong. Decide what you want for
yourself. Also, I want you to know, I would not refuse a marriage
offer from you as long as that is what you
want." He gave her a reassuring smile.
"Thank you, but from my
understanding of your people, my marrying you wouldn't affect our
peace in any way. It doesn't matter." Hopelessness engulfed her.
"It does! It might not matter to my
people who your mother is, but it matters for your happiness. Do what
makes you happy." His soothing voice brought a smile on her face,
despite her inclination to disagree. "Come, let's get you warm,
washed, and fed." With that, he helped stand her up and slung his
strong arm around her to help guide her through the dark trees. By
the time they reached the edge of the wood, the night had finished
its decent and blanketed stars across the sky. Back through the
sleepy town they traveled, working their way closer to the inviting
glow of the Great Hall where a warm fire burned.
At the top of the stairs in front of
the large doorway sat Daren. He looked miserable and had obviously
waited for her. His face clouded with concern when he saw them.
"Where was she?"
"Lost in the Godwood." Avron's
arm stayed strong around her shoulders as they climbed up. Daren's
face moved to shocked outrage when the light finally revealed the
untidiness of her dress and hair.
"What did you do to her?" Daren
didn't wait for a response, "Take your hands off her!"
"Daren, what is your problem?"
Jenniah asked, shocked by his outburst. "He saved me." Never had
she seen him this angry.
"And you!" Daren turned to her,
"How could you let him touch you?"
"He didn't do anything wrong!"
"If I find out otherwise..."
Daren's voice was suddenly cut short by a hard slap across his
face. Jenniah's hand stung, but she didn't regret it. She grabbed
Avron's arm again and allowed him to guide her inside, leaving
Daren to his shocked silence.
*** *** *** *** ***
King Adrian looked down from the
inner wall of Warrindal. The last of the Vitarri were being pushed
back out of the hole they had created in the outer wall of the city.
Many that were lost in the streets had been cut down were they stood.
Some surrendered, but not many. He himself was surrounded by the dead
bodies of countlessVitarri soldiers. Many were struck down by his own
hand, which prevented them from breaching the inner wall of the grand
mountain city.
Not so long ago Warrindal had been
the capitol of Fayneland, but after Vitar had consumed all of the
other countries on the island continent of Seahd, he had suggested
the possibility of moving the capitol. When Vitar began the war with
Fayneland and gained land, all of the lords conceded to his wisdom
and the capitol was moved to Kingsbury on the continent of Asikarra,
far from the battle lines of Vitar. He was grateful for his decision
because this battle might have ended differently.
As it was, nothing with this battle
went right, except the end result. Vitar had sent a decoy, luring him
and his men to Thirsten to protect it. Just when they had arrived,
Adrian had received word that there were some important civil matters
he needed to attend to here in Warrindal. At the time, he was upset
that he had to leave his men in Thirsten to come here. Now he was
grateful that he had been in the city when the Vitarri army had
attacked, so he could send an Olfen's-code message to General Reeves.
The Vitarri seemed to be becoming more clever
over time. Or, perhaps I'm just getting too old for this.
He did wish to travel to Kingsbury
Castle before his only child, beautiful little Jenniah gets married
off and isn't his any longer. He wished adamantly that he could have
been there for her more, but was sure that his wife was doing a fine
job taking care of her. He did miss her sticky sweet kisses and
bright brown eyes that twinkled with childish mischief. He had to
keep reminding himself that she wasn't that young anymore. Sometimes
he wondered if sending them to Kingsbury was truly the right choice.
He had done it for her, to protect her. He had done everything for
her. Today, as he looked out over Warringdale, he was grateful she
wasn't here to see it. He put his sentimentality aside and started to
descend the wall to start leading the clean-up.
"Your Highness!" A young,
hansome youth in the blue uniform of the Fayneland army ran up to
him. "Your Highness, I need to have a word." The young man
bowed low before him.
"Yes, young man. What is it?"
asked King Adrian.
"I'm sorry." With that, he
suddenly stood up and plunged a blade deep into to King's chest,
sliding it expertly through a thin slit in the chestplate. "It's
not personal, I swear."
King Adrian looked down to see an
assassin's kris being pulled back out from his chest. My
sweet daughter and beautiful wife, may the gods guide you. The
man gently laid the king down. Carefully he cleaned the kris and hid
it once more upon his body.
"The King!" he shouted as
he ran, "The King has fallen! Hurry! Someone, I need help! The
King has fallen!"
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