Authors: Bruce Blake
Khirro sighed and his shoulders sagged; he looked away from Athryn, directing his eyes toward the ground. Before, when they first began this journey, his lack of bravery and soldier skills constantly held them back; now it was his physical limitations. Would he ever be man enough to fulfill the destiny placed upon him by the Shaman? Could he ever be a worthy soldier?
Can I ever be a hero?
A leaf moved beside Khirro’s foot, distracting him. At first he thought a gentle gust of wind must have disturbed it, but it moved again, slowly and steadily scuttling across the grass away from him. He crouched and reached for the leaf, his hand hovering above it for a second, then he plucked it off the ground. Beneath it he found a caterpillar, its green skin marked with black dots noticeable against the yellowed grass and brown leaves.
Using the leaf as a disguise.
Khirro looked up at Athryn, held the leaf out for him to see. “I have an idea.”
***
They moved slowly and carefully, not knowing when or where they might run into a Kanosee patrol searching for them. The pain in Khirro’s head eventually dulled to an aching numbness as they scoured the area around them for the items they needed to put his plan into play.
“Can’t we rest? I’m tired.”
Khirro looked back to see the boy had stopped walking and stood looking down at his feet, hands held behind his back, a pout on his face. Athryn moved toward Graymon, but Khirro stopped him and went himself.
“Do you want to quit the game?” Khirro asked kneeling in front of the boy. “Do you want to stop playing before it’s done?”
Graymon looked up, his eyes widening. “Game? I didn’t know it was a game. What game are we playing?”
“It’s a scavenger hunt.”
“A scav-jur hunt? What’s that?”
Khirro nodded and smiled at the boy. “You’ve never been on a scavenger hunt?”
Graymon shook his head. A smile touched his lips and Khirro saw the enthusiasm building inside him; it showed in the gleam in his eyes and the color of his cheeks.
“A scavenger hunt is when you have to find things. The first one to find them wins.”
“Really? What do we have to find?”
“Some red berries. Dark mud. Green moss. Charcoal would be ideal.” Khirro ticked each one off on a finger as he spoke.
“Charcoal?”
“A burnt piece of wood.”
“Okay. Berries--”
“Red berries. They have to be red.”
“Red berries, green moss, mud and a burnt stick.”
“Yes, that’s right.”
“And if I find them first, I win?”
Before Khirro finished nodding, Graymon took off past him, racing into the woods. Khirro watched him pick his way around piles of deadfall and past prickled bushes, pausing at each, searching for berries, then looking at the ground, and the trees. Athryn caught his eyes and nodded once. Khirro stood and sighed.
If things were different, I’d one day have been playing this game with my own child.
Graymon disappeared behind a tree and Khirro and Athryn started after him. A few seconds later, they heard the boy whoop with joy.
“I found some moss,” the boy hollered.
Khirro fought back a smile. “It worked,” he said to Athryn. “But we best find a way to keep him quiet.”
Athryn nodded and they hurried after the excited boy.
***
Khirro looked down at himself, felt the mud on his face crack like a second skin pulled too tight across his cheeks. The charred remains of a Kanosee campfire—the last of the scavenged items they’d found—darkened his leather armor and would make do as a substitute for black mail, but he couldn’t see if the berry juice they’d streaked across it would pass for the red spatters on the Kanosee undead.
“How do I look?”
“Funny,” Graymon said from behind Athryn’s black cloth mask. He was equally as pleased with playing dress-up as he’d been with winning the scavenger hunt.
“Great, thanks. Athryn?”
The magician, who’d removed his own mask, looked him up and down for a few seconds, then he looked at the boy. He shook his head.
“Not good enough.”
Khirro raised his hands, then let them drop in frustration. “What else can we do? Kill me and bring me back?”
Athryn raised an eyebrow and Khirro worried for a second that he considered exactly that, but the magician shook his head. Instead, he rolled up his sleeve, traced his finger along the cursive lines etched in his flesh. Khirro waited until Athryn looked up again.
“You will need your dagger.”
Khirro’s heart jumped, then settled.
He doesn’t want my life, just my blood.
“What are you going to do?”
Khirro pulled the dagger from his belt, rolled up his sleeve, and rested the edge of the blade on his flesh next to the last cut he’d made to enable Athryn to cast a spell. A scab covered the straight mark across his arm but it looked a long way from being healed.
“With just your blood, I should be able to do a little magic to aid with our disguises. It should not harm you.”
He closed his eyes and began his chant, its rhythmic ebb and flow threatening to mesmerize Khirro as he held the cold steel against his arm awaiting his companion’s signal. When the magician nodded, he hesitated a second, then dragged the sharp edge across his forearm. Khirro watched the blood well up, then flow down his arm in a red trail, along the lines of his palm and finally down his finger to form drops that plummeted to the ground. As he watched, he thought of Maes and the scars that had covered the little man’s body.
Will I end up like him?
Khirro raised his eyes from the cut and the blood, looked over Athryn’s shoulder at Graymon sitting on the ground drawing in the dirt with the end of a stick, the magician’s black mask hanging loose over his face. Every few seconds, he reached up to adjust it to keep the eye holes in the right place. The action made Khirro smile. When he did, his face felt different. He no longer felt dried mud crusted on his cheeks. Only then did he realize Athryn’s chanting had ceased. Khirro looked at the magician.
“Did it work?” he asked, resisting the urge to touch his face for fear of what he might find.
Athryn said nothing , his expression remaining unchanged. In answer, he reached into his pack and pulled out the mirrored mask, holding it up for Khirro, who hesitated at looking into it. After a few seconds, curiosity got the better of him.
Khirro leaned forward to look at his face reflected in the mask. Seeing the way the curves of the mask’s cheeks and nose pulled his image into distorted caricatures always disturbed him, but this time, the face he saw wasn’t his. He saw enough to know that, even without the mirror’s distorting qualities, he would look hideous.
The mud they’d smeared on his cheeks had become black decay, the moss by his ears green mold. Athryn shifted the angle of the mask for Khirro to see the front of his armor streaked with red that would pass for blood instead of the berry juice he knew it to be. Part of Khirro wanted to smile and laugh with satisfaction at the magician’s work, but the part of him he held from recoiling in fear prevented it. He nodded once and looked away from the mask as Athryn returned it to the pack.
Now for the real test.
Khirro took a breath and stepped past Athryn, moving toward the distracted boy etching shapes and figures in the dirt.
“Graymon?” Though his appearance had altered, Khirro’s voice sounded his own. “Look at me, Graymon.”
The boy looked up halfway through drawing a line. The stick stopped moving; his eyes widened and his mouth dropped open.
Graymon screamed.
***
They walked along the dirt road in silence, Khirro leading Athryn and Graymon by a short rope loosely binding their hands. It had taken half an hour to convince the boy that the undead soldier was actually Khirro, and that the disguise was part of another game—a game in which Graymon had to pretend to be a captive again, although the knot holding his wrists was loose enough to free himself if he wanted. After that, they had to convince him part of the game was not to giggle every time he heard Khirro’s voice come from the undead face.
They’d been walking for less than half-an-hour when Khirro saw a Kanosee patrol approaching. There were three of them, but others might be hidden, searching the scrub at the sides of the road. At a distance, he couldn’t discern if they were undead soldiers or men, but the prospect of encountering them made Khirro’s flesh prickle despite the disguises provided by Athryn’s magic.
“Are you sure this will work?” he asked over his shoulder with the patrol still too far away to hear.
“As long as you do not panic, Khirro. Stay calm.”
A twinge of anger disturbed Khirro’s gut.
Does he expect me to panic?
He gritted his teeth rather than reply. Surely Athryn didn’t mean anything by it. During their trip, Khirro had certainly let fear rule him at times, but he thought enough time and events had passed to dispel such an expectation.
He breathed deep, inhaling the briny smell of the sea; the salt flats must be close. On them they would find the entire Kanosee army, and beyond, the Isthmus Fortress.
If I can’t get us past three soldiers, how will I get us by an army?
Khirro cleared his throat. He’d seen his reflection in the mask and knew Athryn’s magic provided him an adequate disguise, but it left him with his own voice. If anything would give him away, speaking with the voice of the living would. He growled to himself in the back of his throat, coughed. He gurgled a word through his lips and cleared his throat again. What did the words formed by a rotted tongue sound like?
The group of soldiers drew close enough for Khirro to see that two of them were living men and the third wore the red splashed mail of the undead. He clenched his free hand into a fist, felt the tendons stretch, the tips of his fingers dig into his palm. His grip on the rope tightened and he glanced over his shoulder.
The magician’s black mask still covered Graymon’s face, but the boy’s eyes darted nervously behind it. Athryn, his face bare, sensed Graymon’s distress and moved closer beside him to comfort him. Khirro turned back to the road ahead. The Kanosee were close enough he heard them speaking to each other. He lowered his eyes, staring at the dirt road in front of his feet, hoping they would let him pass.
Uncomfortable seconds dragged by as Khirro played in his head what might happen, carefully keeping his hand near, but not touching, the hilt of his sword.
Let us pass. Let us pass.
He concentrated on putting one foot in front of the other, on maintaining normal breathing. When the men were close, he growled and yanked on the rope, pulling his prisoners along.
“Oy,” one of the men called. Khirro looked up. “Whatcha got there?”
Fifteen yards separated them from the three Kanosee soldiers. The two men each wore a week’s worth of beard while dust and grime covered their garb. The undead soldier wore a helmet with a nose guard mostly hiding whatever decay might have decorated his face.
“Prisoners,” Khirro growled hoping he’d disguised his voice enough to hide his accent. He yanked the rope again to keep moving.
“That’s a boy you got there,” the other man said. “Be he the one we’re looking for?”
Khirro grunted a noncommittal response and averted his gaze. If he didn’t give them his attention, maybe they’d let it go.
“Why’s the kid wearing a mask?” the first soldier asked.
Khirro shot him a look and bared his teeth. Five yards separated the two parties; the three Kanosee soldiers stopped. Khirro kept moving.
“Hold up,” the second man said. “Let’s see what you got.”
Khirro stopped, positioning himself between the soldiers and his charges. A strained squeak of worry emanated from behind the mask covering Graymon’s face; Athryn made no sound. The undead soldier watched silently.
“Must get to camp,” Khirro croaked.
The two men eyed him, then looked past him at the prisoners, and Khirro followed their gazes. Graymon’s eyes were cast down and away from the undead soldier while Athryn looked back at them, his expression one of compliance rather than the defiance Khirro knew he must feel.
“What’s your hurry?” the first said. “If these be the ones we’re looking for, we can go back, too.”
“Yeah,” the second agreed. “I could use me a pint and a joint of meat. Searchin’s hard work.”
“Why you wearin’ a mask, boy? You is a boy, ain’t you? Show me what’s underneath.”
“His face is burned,” Athryn replied. “He does not like people to see.”
“We don’t care what he likes,” the second soldier said, hand falling to his sword. “And he wasn’t talkin’ to you, so shut your mouth.”
Khirro saw Athryn tense. Graymon didn’t move.
“Well?” the first man said. “Are you going to take it off or do I have to take it off for you?”
Khirro stepped toward the men. “Leave him. We go.”
For the first time since they stopped, the undead soldier moved. He closed the distance between them and grabbed Khirro’s hand holding the rope before he realized the monster had involved himself. At this close proximity, Khirro detected the reek of decay and old sweat leaking out from beneath his armor and had to fight to keep from gagging.
“Remove the mask,” the undead thing said, the odor its words carried made Khirro wish for the smell of decay.
The first soldier glared at Khirro, his eyes narrowing as though inspecting the green rot and black decay on his face. For one panicked second, Khirro thought he would see through the disguise. Then the soldier looked away and reached for Graymon’s mask.
Khirro’s fingers wrapped around the grip of his sword.
“Bloody Turesti,” Sir Alton Sienhin cursed under his breath as he pushed a bundle of salt pork into his pack. “Smoke. Of all the people to be traitorous.”
“It is what it is,” Therrador said.
“Aye. I suppose you can never tell who to trust, can you?” He looked sideways at the king; Therrador pursed his lips but held his tongue.
“But Hu can be trusted?”
Sienhin shrugged. “Who can say for sure? No one showed up with their sword to convince me not to leave the fortress at the time I told him. Wish I could say the same for Smoke.”