Authors: Robert J. Crane
Cyrus settled his jaw then turned to look at Vara, who stood beside him still.
Still
. He smiled, though faintly; she did not return the smile, but neither did she look away. “I think,” Cyrus said, looking at the hole in the doors and seeing the wall and gates beyond, “that Saekaj Sovar needs a lesson in civilization.”
There was a silence, broken by Vaste. “And how do you plan to teach them this lesson, oh mighty Warlord?” His words dripped with sarcasm.
“By depriving them of something that they desperately need ripped from their vile, clawing grasp,” Cyrus said with a grin. Now he a caught a hint of a smile on Vara’s lips as well—but only a hint. “Prepare to march; we’ll be taking a route through Saekaj and out to the surface, where we’ll kill the guards to their portal and bring in the rest of our army.”
“And then?” Vaste asked, waiting. “Sack the city? Slaughter their livestock? Grab the Sovereign’s corpse and parade it through town with a pike up his ass?”
Cyrus paused. “Maybe that last part, on our way out.”
It’ll probably keep them from giving us much trouble.
“That’s civilized,” Vara snorted.
Cyrus ignored her. “But, no … that’s not the purpose. The purpose is to bring our army in … and free every slave in this godsdamned land by sheer force of arms.” He stared into the assemblage before him and imagined his eyes glowing the way Vara’s had, a righteous fury as he laid it out before him. “We finish the job, we end slavery in Arkaria for good, and we do it here, on this very night.” He gave a single nod and started them on a forward march, dodging his way out of the wreckage of the throne room of Saekaj with Vara at his side.
“Good speech,” she said as they crossed out of the front doors, the army following close—but not too close—behind. “Magic aside, we’ll make a crusader out of you yet.”
He smiled as they crossed the bridge and entered the city unopposed. Guards quailed before them, faces hidden behind windows, nervous eyes nearly afraid to look at them. Cyrus marched through Saekaj with Vara at his side, unopposed, as they threaded their way into an open tunnel road, on a path for the surface. And the army followed behind them, unstoppable, felling the few enemies that made it past the paladin and the warrior who led them out of the darkness.
“A lot of people have said over the years that they’re going to free the slaves,” Andren said as he walked beside Cyrus through the streets of Reikonos, “but no one’s really done much about it until the Lord of Perdamun.” The elf held up a hand in the air, and brought the other up to smack it down with a loud clap. “Then you go and order your army to knock over Gren, and four months later you force Saekaj to give up every one of their slaves at the point of the sword.” He shrugged expansively. “There’s talk, and then there’s you. Worlds apart. You just do it, don’t you?”
Cyrus let his cloak part in the middle. The spring air was swirling through the streets, matched by the construction efforts that were in progress. Roofs were being re-thatched on stone houses that were black with the scorching kiss of fire brought to them in the sack. People still walked with a hesitancy, as though something were going to leap out with them. It was not the same city, this Cyrus knew. It was more guarded, more afraid—but there were survivors. “I wish I could have ‘done it’ here when it came to saving the city.” He frowned. “That didn’t sound right.”
“City’s still here,” Andren said. They threaded their way down an avenue that was all too familiar, the sun far, far overhead and barely visible in the gulch-like valley of the slums. “Battered, sure. A little beaten. But you made your deal, and the dark elves pulled out only a day or two after we finished our job in Saekaj.” He shrugged again. “I don’t think Pretnam Friggin’ Urides was responsible for that, do you?”
“No,” Cyrus said. “I think Terian Friggin’ Lepos was.”
“Guess you won’t know unless someone finally comes out of Saekaj to tell the tale,” Andren said. Not a word had been heard from Saekaj in the outside world since Sanctuary had ravaged the surface farms and gone into the slave quarters under the earth and freed everyone within them. Cyrus could still see the scared faces of the whip-wielding guards, running for their lives with the Army of Sanctuary coming at them in overwhelming numbers.
“Since it’s been two months and we’ve heard nary a word,” Cyrus said, “I don’t imagine that silence will end anytime soon, do you?”
“Suits me fine,” Andren said. He was still clean-shaven, a fact which amazed Cyrus to no end. He seemed different, but Cyrus saw little need to comment upon it for fear it would push him away. “I can do without the dark elves for quite some time, if you know what I mean.” He laughed. “You probably can, too, right?” His laugh stopped. “How’s your back?”
“Only hurts when it rains,” Cyrus said as they came around the final corner. There was construction everywhere, buildings going up, buildings being repaired. The shanties that had dominated the slums had been burned, and the smell of ash was thick in the air along with that of fresh pine lumber dragged from the forests of the Northlands.
“Why did you let her go?” Andren asked. “Every single one of us would have gladly gutted her for you.”
He blinked in surprise at the vehemence of the healer’s pronouncement. “Even you?”
“Especially me,” Andren said and Cyrus saw a pinprick of red anger in his eyes, something he did not usually see from the elf unless he had both drink and provocation. “But she feeds you a sad story, and you just let her walk away.”
Cyrus paused, looking in the direction of their destination.
In truth, I don’t want to go on; this cannot end well.
“Let us presume … just for a moment … that it was not as she said. That she stabbed me and failed, that she was with me for no purpose but that she served the Sovereign.” He fiddled with his cloak, the thought of it producing its own sort of discomfort. He felt a bit sick but held it back. “Then she spent years trying to and eventually succeeding in sleeping with someone that she had no interest in. The only way she held my confidence was by sex, and every time I started to slip from her grasp, she was forced to go back to this same well in an effort to reclaim me.”
“Yeah,” Andren said, nodding, “and we should have killed her for it.”
“She had to sleep with me for over a year,” Cyrus said, and he felt a swell of pity, “even though she didn’t want to, because her master bade her do it. He exercised his power over her to get her to use her body against her will.” He shook his head. “No, I wouldn’t have her killed for that; he did far worse to her by using her in such a way, and I feel ill that I was complicit in such an act.”
Andren’s cheeks crinkled in disgust. “You thought you were with someone who wanted you.”
“But she didn’t, did she?” Cyrus asked. “And I was fool enough to buy her act. Egotistical enough, I suppose.” He shrugged. “She should hardly be penalized for that, no matter how … used I feel.” And he did feel used; he woke in the night with a sense of disgust, and showered under a stream of chill water for hours, imagining he could still smell her upon his skin.
“Come on,” Andren said, a pity in his eyes that went unspoken.
“Yeah, okay,” Cyrus said and followed behind the elf.
“You gonna be all right?” Andren asked as he fell into step beside Cyrus again. A blustery wind, the last gasp of winter, whipped through Cyrus’s cloak.
“Eventually,” Cyrus said.
“You know, there are other women. Plenty who wouldn’t mind—”
“I am fully aware,” Cyrus said, unblinking.
Plenty of … choices.
But there’s only one I want.
They came out from behind a lumber wagon, filled to the overflowing with long boards, its axles strained under the load. “Well, I’ll be,” Andren said aloud.
Cyrus looked in more than a little wonderment himself. The old barn stood before them, untouched; a weathered, run-down thing, the chains across its door intact. It had been their home once, long ago, and though the mark of fire was evident on every building around it, it remained completely unharmed, standing proud in its place on the street.
“Probably not worth burning,” Andren said.
“Maybe,” Cyrus said, unconvinced. The healer moved toward it with key in hand, ready to open the doors.
Or maybe it’s just a survivor …
… like us.
Two days after Cyrus returned from Reikonos, Vaste sat upon the front steps like a discarded bag of refuse upon a slope, the wide part of his middle threatening to pour out of his robes, his head looking up into the sky like it was going to fall on him at any time. Cyrus stared at the troll; he’d been apprised of the healer’s unusual behavior by whisper and worry from guildmates. So odd was the troll’s state that he’d thought about having Curatio talk to him, but something prickled him about it.
It’s not the sort of thing a friend leaves to others
, he decided.
“Oh, hi,” Vaste said, not even rolling over to look at him. “Come to deal with the blatantly obvious troll that’s lying strewn across your front steps?”
Cyrus thought about doing his usual poke, sending the troll’s repartee right back at him, but something gave him pause. “I’m here to talk to my friend, Vaste, who appears … not himself.”
That forced the mammoth green head to turn toward him, neck braced against the stone step. Sanctuary’s shadow loomed over them, the front doors cracked just a hint at Cyrus’s back, doubtless to allow any number of curious listeners to hear their conversation. “I am not myself,” Vaste agreed. “But I’m not anyone else, either.”
Cyrus arched an eyebrow. “So … who are you?”
“Oh, don’t be an obtuse shit,” Vaste said. “I am who I’m always been, I’m just suffering a bit of an identity crisis.”
Cyrus eased down next to him, lowering himself to sit on the step next to Vaste’s head. The troll watched him with bright yellow eyes, looking just a bit like he might snap and attack. “My question still stands. You’re still Vaste, but what do you think of yourself?” He paused. “Is this because of Gren?”
“No, it’s because the damned sky is blue,” Vaste said, staring upward. “Of course it’s because of Gren. But it’s not
just
because of Gren, if you catch my meaning.”
“I couldn’t have a more difficult time catching your meaning if it were a greased goat,” Cyrus said.
Vaste glared at him. “Oh, yes, add your humor to the situation. That’s sure to help.”
Irony
. Cyrus picked his words carefully. “So … what else is it besides Gren?”
“Do you know what it’s like to not know your place in the world?” Vaste asked.
“I know something of it, yes,” Cyrus said.
“Please don’t give me a ‘Poor me, I was all alone in a city of my people and hated by everyone around me’ story,” Vaste said, “because I suspect you and I could match each other tale for tale.”
“Probably,” Cyrus agreed. “So, we both had difficult childhoods … Now what?”
“So now you have a homeland, albeit battered,” Vaste snapped, “and I don’t. Poor me. I win.”
Cyrus shook his head. “You win. Is that what you want?”
“Will you stop asking me questions and give me a chance to get around to pouring my heart out to you?” Vaste shook his head, neck rubbing against the stone step. “Honestly, it’s so difficult to work my way around to a tearful admission with you being so busy being sympathetic and understanding.”
Cyrus chuckled then stifled it swiftly. “Sorry. Go on.”
“Do you know what gets me the worst?” Vaste spun his head around. “It’s not the lack of homeland; Sanctuary fills that. It’s not the … pitiful lack of romance, there are books to fill the void.” He snuffed his statement and sunk into another stubborn silence.
“What is it, then?” Cyrus asked.
“I’m glad you asked,” Vaste said, launching right into it. “It’s Goliath. It’s Malpravus.” He turned his head to Cyrus, and the yellow eyes glowed with feral anger. “You know I’ve been … different … since I learned from that shaman outside of Gren several years ago. He opened my eyes to things. Gave me an … attunement … with the dead.”
Cyrus found himself wanting to say something but stopped just in time.
“Nothing to say to that, eh?” Vaste kept his eyes on Cyrus. “I know what you wanted to ask, though—does it make me like Malpravus?”
Cyrus cleared his throat. “You’re nothing like Malpravus.”
“No, I’m not like Malpravus,” Vaste agreed. “No one is like Malpravus. A necromancer is supposed to speak for the dead. To use the power of the deceased with their cooperation. Malpravus … abuses their power like it’s his own. It’s not. It’s not even in the same city as his power, and he runs roughshod along with it like he worked for it himself.” Vaste made a disgusted noise. “And he got away, again.”
Cyrus felt himself nodding. “There will be a reckoning. Between us and Goliath. You may bet on that.”
“They’re not honest fighters, Cyrus,” Vaste said, and he sounded quiet. “They’re liars and cheats, and they would do to you a thousand times what Aisling did given only a half of her opportunity.” He looked up at Cyrus, and the anger was gone. “I fear the day we are forced to go up against them, because even if we outmatch them ten to one, it will not be a fair fight in our favor.”
Cyrus stared across the lawn at the sky, white clouds drifting overhead. For a moment, he imagined he saw them exactly as Vaste did, and there was some small measure of peace there amid the dangerous skies far in the distance. “I guess we’ll just have to be ready for anything we can imagine they’ll pull.”
“It’s not the things I know they’ll do that scare me,” Vaste said, and his voice was a hushed whisper. “It’s the ones I can’t imagine that wake me up in the night and don’t let me return to sleep again.”
Cyrus could not find it in himself to disagree.
A meeting that Cyrus had long anticipated came two weeks after his conversation with Vaste under the blue skies. This was to be quite a different conversation, he imagined, and he had prepared himself by summoning the full Council and awaiting the arrival of their guest in the silence of the chamber. The blue sky was still visible out the window, and Cyrus sat at his place at the head of the table, adjusting himself in his seat. The chain that bound the medallion he had received from Alaric had begun to chafe, just slightly. He wondered what it would take to adjust to it, that oddly shaped, circular thing, and sighed when he had to concede that he had no idea.