Intrigue of Antares Page 5
“To Hyr Kov Brannomar.” His voice dropped in tone and volume. He was almost gone. “You must...” His eyes closed and his lips worked together. “By Cymbaro the Just I charge you!” That surged forth with the last remnant of his powers. He coughed and the blood poured down. His words were barely understandable and they trailed off into gibberish. “Take — take the sword — take the sword and...”
I bent and spoke gently into his ear.
“As Cymbaro is my witness, Strom Korden, I will take the sword to Hyr Kov Brannomar.”
Only Opaz knew if he heard me. When I straightened up the life had gone from him and he was dead.
I sat back on my heels for a moment and mentally consigned him to the protection of Cymbaro the Just.
Then I stood up briskly and looked about.
Scenes like this, although repeated often enough upon Kregen, always have the power to disturb. What this nobleman’s errand might be, to deliver the sword to Kov Brannomar, what the meaning was, I could not know. There was nothing else I could have done. Not a Krozair of Zy, not a Krovere of Iztar, not a koter of Vallia. Oh, no, I was bound by a sacred oath. I just hoped he had died with the comforting knowledge that he had done his duty as well as he could.
The sword must be the one he had gripped and used in his last fight. I bent and picked it up. There were plenty of black clothes to wipe the blade clean.
It was of that variety of sword more generally found in the easterly regions of Paz called a braxter. Nominally a straight cut and thruster it did have a slight and cunning curve to the blade. The steel rang with quality. The hilt was a plain affair of cross quillons and twisted silver wire grip. The only mark to distinguish it from a thousand other such braxters was the ruby set in the pommel. I judged the gem to be genuine although not of great value.
I took a deep breath and then expelled my breath in disgust. The sweet Kregish air lay flat and stinking on my tongue.
There was absolutely no use trying to force this sword into my shrunken and now useless scabbard. Strom Korden wore a plain leather belt about his waist, fastened by a bronze buckle. The lockets from which the simple scabbard swung were also of bronze. The whole rig was plain and workmanlike, a bladesman’s harness. The sword belonged in that scabbard and no other. With due reverence I unbuckled the belt and slid it from around the strom’s waist. I cleaned it up. I buckled it on and thrust the sword away. At that, by the Blade of Kurin, it felt right, far better than the rig I discarded.
Going around the dead bodies on the slight off chance one or two might still be alive, I found to my complete non-astonishment that all had been faithfully dealt with. These stikitches had known their trade and only the stout defense put up by Strom Korden had saved him for the short time left to discharge himself of his duty.
None of the armor available would fit me, that was obvious at a glance. Like any prudent warrior or paktun of Kregen who always tries to carry as much weaponry as is sensible and compatible with encumbrance and weight carried, I selected another braxter very like the sword I must carry to Kov Brannomar. I took its associated belt and scabbard and strapped on the rig. Also, I found a nice Bowie-type knife that could snug in the accustomed place I wore such a weapon, over my right hip. In addition, I availed myself of a quiver of arrows and a bow, one of the built and backed and heavily re-curved variety. No doubt my good blade comrade Seg Segutorio would have pulled a face; there were no great Lohvian longbows on offer.
As to transport, I rejected the carriage without hesitation. Still, I had a veritable remuda of zorcas at my disposal. Their spiral horns shone in the suns-light. Their wise spirited eyes regarded me warily; a clansman of the Great Plains of Segesthes knows well how to handle animals — voves, zorcas, chunkrahs — and I had no trouble.
The carriage itself had a schturval painted on the door, and this device denoting name, family, house or clan looked to be a stylized representation of a four-winged animal with a long tail and a double set of nasty looking teeth. Out of mythology, it was, and I had no idea of its name. Over its wicked head was painted a golden crown surmounting a helmet and two brailed scarves of red and blue trailed down tastefully.
There were also, I was extremely grateful to see, plenty of provisions, food and drink in good quantity and quality. There and then I tucked into a repast such as I had not tasted for far too long.
As I chewed and swallowed I reflected morosely on the injustice of the marvelous and terrible world of Kregen. Among the bodies lay six men each wearing a brown hooded robe like the one San Padria had worn. All had been chopped down and only three of them had used weapons, as was readily apparent. Also, there were bodies that made my lips thin unpleasantly.
Five of them, five young girls at the beginning of their adult lives, each pretty in her own way, each now lying dead with no future ahead at all. They wore multicolored gowns short as to hem and their legs just looked pathetic. Some had bells fastened around their ankles, and as you know I still had not made up my mind if this custom was tasteful or merely vulgar.
My feelings made me want to leave this spot immediately, yet I had at least to think about giving these poor folk decent burials. My mind was made up on the instant by the sight of more travelers approaching along the way I had traveled. I did not want to get into the inevitable hassle that would follow if I stayed around. Anyway, I had to get on and the newcomers could perform the funeral rites far better than I.
The zorcas pricked up their ears as I approached and some pawed the ground under the trees. One animal looked likely, a gray with eyes that appeared to be saying: “Ride me! I am the best!” I walked up to him, soothing him, and put my hand on his bridle. A glint of light in the dapple of suns shine beneath the trees and a hefty thwunk as the flung dagger sank into the tree trunk by my head made me instinctively swirl about and hunker down and the bow was in my left fist and the arrow nocked and half-drawn ready before I caught up with my reactions.
A shrill cracked voice screamed: “Assassin!”
In a voice that smacked back like a thunderclap I yelled: “I’m not an assassin, you fambly!” I was wrought up. “As Cymbaro is my witness, I am no stikitche!” Then I managed to quieten down a bit and finished in a less belligerent but no less loud voice: “Do I look like one?”
The voice, hesitant, choked, said: “No! But—”
“I can see you, hiding behind the carriage. Come out and show yourself or I’ll feather you between the spokes of the wheel.”
“If I had another dagger you’d talk differently!”
“Here!” I fairly snarled out. I reached up and wrenched the pretty jeweled thing from the tree trunk. “Have it back!”
I hurled it so that it stuck into the side of the carriage.
“There you are!”
In a hesitating almost sobbing voice, she said: “You’re stealing the strom’s zorca!”
I breathed out thinly through my nose.
“I’m not stealing him! I’m borrowing him!”
“That’s what they all say when they’re caught.”
“By the pendulous swag belly and monolithic veined thighs of Makki Grodno!” I bellowed out. I stood up and started across. “I’ve had enough of this. Come on out, miss, bratch!”
With the bow and shaft gripped in that cunning archer’s hold and my right fist bunched and half-cocked I must have made a daunting sight as I marched across. I own my face must have glowered out a great deal of that demonic expression folk call the Dray Prescot Devil Look.
“Up!” I said, and I snapped it out sharply, like an order rapped out on the barrack square. “Come on out.”
She wriggled her way out from under the carriage like a kitten squeezing through a narrow gap. Her pink dress was ripped all down the left side and flaps of it dangled. She made a half-hearted attempt to pull it up over her body. She stood up, breathing loudly. In her hands she cradled a bloody mess of hair. Tears stained down her cheeks and blood congealed all across the left side of her face and in her fair d
usty hair. Whatever restraints had held that splendid hair were gone, smashed away in the blow that had done her damage, and despite the dust and blood her hair was truly a glory.
She saw me looking at the bloody mess she held so tightly against her, against her bare flesh where the pink dress flapped open. Some change of expression as I stared was reflected in the strange shift of color in her eyes, clear in the light of the suns, a swirl as of oil on water or silk drawn through the fingers. From green to gray her eyes mirrored my own change of expression.
“Bandi,” she said, in a small voice. “My little Bandi.” Tears trickled stickily down her dusty and bloodied cheeks.
The animal was a mili-milu, one of those small friendly monkey-like creatures women keep as pets, perched on their shoulders, quick and mischievous but delightful. This little fellow had done his duty by his mistress, for the savage blow that should have killed her outright had smashed the mili-milu and his death had softened the shock to the girl. She’d been lying unconscious and unnoticed under the vegetation-choked end of the carriage all the time.
In a voice I gentled as much as I could, I said: “Let me take Bandi and—”
“No!” she flared.
“People are coming along the road. I must leave before they arrive. They will see to the burials. Please.”
She was young, like the other girls on the threshold of life. Of medium height, she was fully formed and I saw her legs were muscled in that particular way of a dancer’s training. Despite all the horror she held herself well and her head struck defiantly erect.
I said: “Whatever — Strom Korden charged me with his last breath to do his duty. That I must do. So I shall say remberee.” I gave her a hard stare and turned to stalk off to the gray zorca. Over my shoulder I said: “Your dagger is stuck in the carriage door.”
My reaction to her refusal to surrender the mangled remains of her pet clearly puzzled her. If she was a normal young girl, and I saw no reason to doubt otherwise, she’d be in shock. Normalcy in dealing with her now was vital.
My own rather overbearing first impression on her had been met and challenged by her own innate courage. She was a dancer well enough, and I was vaguely pleased to see she wore no bells around her ankles, and she was well-muscled, lithe and acrobatic without doubt. A tough little lady, then, whose toughness was all sliding muscle and rounded forms without a single unsightly bulge. I continued to stalk off as she spoke.
“At least, tell me your name.”
“Drajak.”
“You are very abrupt.”
“Some people call me Drajak the Sudden. Now, if you—”
“I am called Tiri.”
As I made no response but once more laid my hand on the zorca’s bridle she flashed out with: “Tiri is short for Tirivenswatha.”
I couldn’t help saying, dryly: “I am glad to hear it. I have little truck with long names.”
“I think the Lady Balsitha has deformed your ibma.”
“As I do not know who the Lady Balsitha might be, nor yet what an ibma is, you must forgive me if I do not tremble in my shoes.”
And she laughed.
“What shoes?”
I looked down, startled, and, by Krun! it was true.
As a hardened old adventurer and a sailor used to treading hard decks going about barefooted is no novelty to me. Still and all, a decent pair of shoes wouldn’t come amiss. Somewhat disgruntled, I swung back.
Little time was spent in finding a good pair of shoes, tough of sole and soft of uppers as had been the others, and I hauled them on. The party walking and riding up the road were near by now. I straightened up and she surprised me again. Gravely, she handed me the red ruined remains of Bandi, her mili-milu.
Equally gravely I took the poor thing and then reverently placed it down beside the still form of Strom Korden. “They will give him a proper burial with the due observances.” I turned back to her.
She had taken a belt and scabbard and was pulling the buckle tight. The tongue went into just about the last hole about her slender waist. She stuck a braxter into the scabbard with a snap.
I nodded, half in approval half in amusement.
“Very good, young Tiri. Now it is remberee. Farewell.”
“No.”
“No?”
For an insane instant I thought she might offer to challenge me.
She picked up an embroidered bag near the carriage and walked across to the zorcas under the trees.
“No. I am coming with you.”
With that, she gave a strong athletic leap and was astride the gray zorca I had chosen and taking up his reins.
“Come on, Drajak the Sudden. What are you lollygagging about for?”
She swung the zorca’s head and cantered out onto the road. Perforce I clambered aboard another likely-looking animal and chik-chikked him along. The other zorcas followed.
Resignedly, feeling something of the emotions of a fellow caught in a hurricane where he had been expecting a mild breeze. I trotted along in her wake.
Now what little she-madam was I embroiled with this time?
Chapter six
Young Tiri did not say a word as we let our animals take us quietly along the road to Bharang. She rode with her head sunk down between her shoulders. Her slender body shook. Now and again she moaned. She was going through the agony of what had happened over and over again, reliving the nightmare. I could do nothing but let her get the shakes out of her system.
“Why,” she would be saying to herself, the agony like live coals. “Why was I spared? Why do I live and all my friends are dead? And, why did it have to happen?”
As to the last, I fancied she knew far more about that than did I.
By the time we passed between agricultural fields and the outskirts of Bharang hove in sight she had largely recovered. She sat erect, her long slim dancer’s legs very fine and bronzed in the light of the suns. That was one problem if not solved then shelved for the moment. Another problem was worrying me now. Was it because Tiri would have watched and perhaps formed a certain opinion that I had forgotten? I am a longtime mercenary, a zhanpaktun, and after a fracas like the fight around the carriage any paktun worth his salt will investigate the portable property of the slain.
I had not done so. That this was remiss of me I own. Except when it is clear the possessions of the slain in battle should be returned to next of kin, any fighting man expects both to give and to take. When my time comes then certain things should be returned to Delia. The balance becomes the spoils of the victor.
This meant I had no money to care for Tiri or myself in Bharang. Oh, well, I could always hope to sell a zorca. I admit to the sin of pride in that I had muchly looked forward to relishing the look on Fweygo’s face when I turned up with a remuda of top class zorcas.
In the last hundred paces or so before we reached the town gates I looked up to see a magnificent scarlet and golden bird circling above my head. He swung in lazy effortless circles, pinions stretched wide. I knew him. This was the Gdoinye, the spy and messenger of the Star Lords. He watched me with his sharp beady eye, turning his head this way and that, circling.
Tiri took no notice for she would not see the Gdoinye.
I waited. Presently the raptor flew up and up, vanishing into the bright sky of Kregen. He had not uttered a single squawk of contempt or admonition. From this I took comfort. I must still be about my business for the Everoinye. Had I not been, by the maggot-infested nostrils of the Divine Lady of Belschutz! I’d have been snatched up into the eerie blue radiance of the Scorpion and whistled off to where I ought to be, and no mistake about that, by Krun!
The walls of the city looked to be in good repair and the spears and helmets of guards were only too obvious along the battlements. Onion shaped domes rose in profusion within the city, with tall towers and a multicolored variety of walls and roofs visible through the open gateway. A caravan of calsanys was just emerging, each pack animal laden down with a fat yellow plaited-straw panni
er slung each side. The escort was sizeable in number and impressive in appearance. I pulled the zorcas out of the way to let the caravan pass.
The guards on the gate gave Tiri, the zorcas and me a cursory glance and said and did nothing as we trotted into the city.
The time was just past mid-afternoon and there were certain matters to be attended to in order and with some urgency before nightfall.
The smells of Bharang were not such as to offend, rather the mingled odors of animals and dust and sweat reflected off the closely-packed walls gave one a vague feeling of safety being within the stout walls of a city. The doings of the next few burs are simply told. I found a one-eared Rapa with straggly green feathers who bought a zorca without question. Any brandings would be skillfully removed, judging by the Rapa’s manner. Tiri, in a distracted way, did say: “I have some money, Drajak. One silver Bhin and seven copper obs.”
I nodded and smiled and said: “The next thing is to buy you some decent clothes. That pink dress, apart from the color, is not fit to be seen.” We found her a nice dress of a deeper rose pink, a color she said she preferred, and some solid and sensible undergarments. Then it was time to find a respectable hostelry for the night. Neither of us mentioned what had happened on the road or of the circumstances of our strange meeting and unlikely partnership.
The Fluted Hen looked promising, in a street off the main drag. Its walls were of a yellow brick and its windows shone in the last of the suns. I halted Tiri and for a moment or two we watched the clientele entering and leaving. They looked respectable burghers of the place. So, in we went and obtained two separate rooms for the night. I had made no enquiries regarding Fweygo and the party. That would come when we were settled in comfortably.
The zorcas were stabled and seen to. We sat down in the general room for an evening meal. A group of mail-clad men entered, looking important, although their weapons were sheathed. At their head strutted a youngster wearing a uniform rather too grand for him. He was apim, yet most of the men following him were Hytaks. They are warriors to reckon with, good solid fighters. I began to give my order for the meal, taking no notice of the newcomers.