Authors: Piers Anthony
Chapter 22
Border Crossing
MOR AND LESTER RODE at the head of the column of hand-picked troops with General Broughtner. It had been determined that a show of force would be best. They were to cross the border, ride on to the capital, and demand St. Helens’ return. Since all were properly outfitted in Rud uniforms and the armor and weaponry polished until it shone, they did indeed make a magnificent spectacle to impress the imagination of the boyish king.
“What do you think, Dad?” Lester asked into his father’s war-shortened ear. He had pulled his horse up close so that they were almost touching as they rode. The lusty lyrics of “Horsemanure! Horsemanure!” the obscene cavalry song (whose title was actually a bit more direct and less polite than the official representation), were just fading.
“Gods, son,” Mor said, sounding almost angered. “How do I know? If that Phillip has the brains of a crawling loustick, he’ll keep Melbah on leash. He can’t really want war with us. Besides, he can’t know that Kelvin isn’t along.”
Yes, Kelvin, Lester thought. Everyone believed he could do anything now, and the farther one went from Rud, the more exaggerated the stories. Mythic heroes were neither ignored nor challenged with impunity. Phillip might be a boy, but he was a boy king. Melbah might run things, but Phillip had the official final word and had to be aware that his commands were those of a king.
“You think we’ll just ride in with no fighting and then out again with St. Helens?”
“Out again, anyway, I’d think. But I don’t think it’s fighting we need worry about.”
“You mean Melbah and magic,” Les said.
“Of course.”
“What are you two talking about?” General Broughtner inquired, jockeying his horse near. It always made Lester smile to think of him as a general, though indeed he was the best; before Rud’s War of Liberation he had been Franklin’s ne’er-do-well, drinking himself into a ruddy complexion and a daily stupor.
“Just speculating on Melbah,” Lester said. There, he had said it, and now must follow his unsoldierly doubts.
“It’s wise to plan,” Broughtner said. “If Phillip lets her at us, we’ll demand her head.”
“That’ll stop her?” Lester wasn’t quite certain he was joking.
“Gods, yes. She’s not that powerful. If she turns on her big blow, we’ll just squat down and wait it out. None of us will be flying like St. Helens. I could have advised him against that. Magic is bad enough, but when you pretend to understand it and call it science, it’s worse.”
“It is untrustworthy?”
“Right! Look at all the trouble it caused at the Rud palace.”
“We don’t know it was John Knight’s laser that caused that destruction. But it probably helped.”
“I just hope he burned up Rud’s former queen with it. Personally, I doubt that she or the consort she was using survived.”
“Kelvin thinks she fled,” Lester said, not telling all that he knew: if Broughtner hadn’t heard of Kian’s trip and Kelvin’s following after, he needn’t enlighten him.
“Kelvin could be wrong. Remember, I rode with him, and you and I were there when you were downed and he got himself captured. That almost cost us the war.”
“Only because no one but his little sister thought we could win against magic! We did win, eventually, though it took John’s lasers and Kelvin’s gauntlets. It was both magic and science that won.”
“And the prophecy. Don’t forget the prophecy!”
“Yes, maybe that helped most of all.” They were approaching the side road that led to the river and Aratex. The general held up his hand, and the column that had been formed of four riders abreast now formed itself into a column of twos. They rode on, the general ahead on his big white horse, Mor on his black horse behind him, and Lester on his roan at the side of his father. They approached the stream and started to ford it. Lester raised his eyes and looked at the sky; clear, with only a few soft clouds. There was no wind, no breeze rippling the low waters.
The war-horses’ hooves made a monotonous splashing. Now and then a few drops of muddy water lit on Lester’s face. A glob of mud hit him in the eye: he knuckled it out, and again looked at the sky. The sky appeared darker now. Clouds were scudding overhead, possibly propelled by magic. A ray of sunlight fell full on the flat top of Conjurer’s Rock, looming like a dark sentinel beyond Deadman’s Pass. Was old Melbah up there? Or had she turned herself into a eagawk or more likely a buzvul? He could imagine that one of the dark birds circling was her. With such power as she was reputed to command, could the boy king possibly control her? Would Phillip the Weak even have the will to try? One did not start anywhere on just a whim. A delegation from one kingdom to the next, even if it was composed of armed cavalry in full armor, would hardly justify their attack.
Wind howled suddenly. Whitecapped waves formed on the water ahead of them and beneath their horses’ bellies. Huge drops of rain began spattering them. Lightning cracked ominously in the sky.
General Broughtner raised high the standard of Rud: a flag displaying a large appear fruit crossed with a corbean stalk on a field of alternating brown and green stripes. Such a symbol raised in such a way at the head of a column meant peace, or at least nonhostile intent. It was the plan that they be accepted as a diplomatic mission from one sovereign to another, from one kingdom to another. Later, if this mission failed, as well it might, they could decide just what the show had accomplished. Back in Rud, King Rufurt had already cautiously dispatched a mission to Throod to arrange for mercenaries in case of war.
The wind blew stronger, stronger, much stronger. Head lowered against the blast, half suffocating in the water splashing from above and below, Lester wondered why General Broughtner did not order them back. Was it because it would not look right? Was it because if they succumbed to a bluff, he and his troops and all of Rud would be disgraced? But supposing it wasn’t a bluff? Suppose old Melbah meant to attack and finish them?
The wind calmed, though the water continued to rise. Overhead flew a large dark bird. Was it the witch? Melbah?
“Ack! Ack! Go back! Go back!” the bird screamed.
So much for any doubt! Lester looked at Broughtner, then urged his horse up by the general’s. “We’d better—
“NO!” Broughtner said. He had made up his mind. He was not to be bluffed and turned away.
Mor rode closer. “I wish your Jon were here to clunk the witch with a rock, Les.”
“Don’t say that, Father! Jon would be sure to try!”
The general turned his face. “Archers, shoot down that detestable bird!”
Instantly a dozen arrows snickered from a dozen quivers, bows were lifted, strings drawn, and the arrows loosed. In the meantime the bird was climbing, seeing their intent. “You’ll be sorry,” it squawked.
Then the arrows caught up with it: four above, three below, two to each side, and one into its dark body. Blood and black feathers flew as an arrowhead lanced through the creature’s heart. The bird plummeted, falling farther downstream. The current took it for a way and then bobbed it under. Blood stained the water where it had been.
The men gave a cheer. Lester found he was cheering as well. Good old Broughtner, he’d done exactly right. Thus would end the witch and her hold on the boy king of Aratex: end it forever and restore the kingdom to what it should be, a near duplicate of Rud.
As abruptly as a thunderclap, the sky was dark. The rain renewed itself, and the river seemed to rise all by itself to above its banks and above normal flood level. A hideous cackling laughter filled the air.
Their horses were now swimming, battling for their lives against a torrential current that had abruptly grown deadly. Large tree branches were swirling in it, and lesser debris.
“Don’t leave your horse!” Mor advised. “Don’t try, or your armor will sink you like a stone!”
Lester tried to answer, but a huge wave of muddy water splashed in his face, nearly drowning him upright. He was all but torn from the saddle, but hung on. Other horses, other men, were washing downstream, some free of their mounts. The river was bigger and uglier than any Lester had ever seen in what he thought fleetingly might be his short life. Banks went by and leaves and now the debris of whole trees. His roan swam for her life, as other horses were doing. There was no thought of reaching the other shore now, only of escaping.
If there were time. If only there were still time. They had really fallen into the witch’s trap!
*
St. Helens opened his eyes and found himself looking down from a height. His face was pressed up against a tree trunk, his belt holding him there. His gauntlets were not on his hands and his sword was missing. Down below, two men were chained to trees—soldiers of Aratex, one of whom he was certain he recognized. Where was Heln? If they had her—but maybe she had fallen.
“Hey, up there!” the man called Bemode cried. “You, St. Helens, you awake?”
“What’s it to you, child abuser?” This man St. Helens did not like. He had made up his mind definitely about Aratex and its need for Kelvin-style revolution after seeing what this man considered fun and within the rights of soldiery. St. Helens had ridden up on him one day when he was entertaining himself and a couple of friends with the small, sloe-eyed daughter of a peasant. The father had been begging him to desist, but the man had only laughed. Until St. Helens and the sword gifted to him by the boy king had put a stop to it. Had St. Helens had his way that day, Phillip would have hanged Bemode or at least demoted him and thrown him in the dungeon after a whipping.
“What’s it to me? I’ll tell you what. When our friends get here, we’re going to chop you down. Then, after we break your arms and legs so you can’t fly, and kick in your teeth so you can’t sass us back, we’ll turn you over to old Melbah for some real fun. Meanwhile, my friend Corry and I will ride after that girl of yours. We’ll let her ride all the way to the border and then we’ll grab her and use her in a way she’s never been used before, and if she still lives we’ll bring her on back so you can watch us do it some more.”
“So that smart girl went to the border, did she?” St. Helens remarked. “Thanks. That’s all I wanted from you; now you can shut up before all that dirt in your mouth poisons you.”
“Big mouth!” Corry said to Bemode.
St. Helens pushed the lever on the belt, pushed himself back from the trunk, and let himself drift slowly down. There, stuck in the ground, was his sword! Apparently Heln had been so confident that he would wake before the soldiers got help that she had left his weapon for him to pick up.
He lifted the sword, eying the abruptly silent men chained to the tree. It would be so easy to run them both through right now! But much as he was tempted, he could not do it; they were helpless, and it would be no more than murder.
Instead he sheathed the sword, touched the belt, elevated, and locked himself on flight. He stayed low to the ground so as not to attract Melbah’s attention. If another whirlwind came, he’d land.
“Get him! Get him!” Bemode cried.
Arrows zipped by, but they had been loosed from too far back. He twisted his head enough to see the soldiers riding hard through the forest, and then he zigzagged between trunks, finding a meer path and following it. He should have killed those chained soldiers when he had the chance! Then they would not have been able to give the alarm before he got clear.
If he could stay out of Melbah’s sight and not catch an arrow, if he could catch up with Heln and get her across the border, all might yet be saved. But he did regret the loss of the laser, with that he’d have had few problems. Had Heln taken the gauntlets? Little, fainting Heln? It seemed doubtful, and yet he knew she must have. The gauntlets would have given her the courage and skill, and that Female Liberation crap he had spouted might have helped. She was one fainthearted little lady, and even with a warrior sister-in-law she hardly seemed his daughter. But now, if he was right, she was on the way to getting herself rescued. And maybe, just possibly, to bring her old daddy reinforcements. That gesture with the sword—the gauntlets might have thought of that, to let him know.
The thought of what he had just considered struck him: the war he had wanted could now get under way. But without the laser, what could be done? Well, if he could get the gauntlets back, and if Kelvin somehow survived… but he wasn’t certain he wanted to think about Kelvin.
Conjurer’s Rock was looming up there to his right, far above the treetops, like a giant guardian for the old witch of Aratex. He’d bypass that and Deadman’s Pass again and just hope Heln was far ahead. His wound hurt abominably, now that the immediate threat had eased, and his head ached from its collision with the tree. He might have a cracked rib or three, too. But he looked on the bright side: he really hadn’t lost much blood, thanks to Heln’s tourniquet.
What he needed to do was get back, get healed, and then it would be St. Helens’ wartime. He’d fix that old crone and he’d give young Phillip the long-delayed hiding of his life! Yes, sir, once St. Helens got into action the fight should be as good as won!
But what about the witch? Old Melbah could do a lot of damage with that wind of hers. What damage might she do with her other tricks?
He contemplated the situation as the ground slid on below. Grass, brush, rocks, meer, deese, squirbets, rabells, flowers, and weeds. Brown and green and gray. His head throbbed, but not nearly as much as his leg, and he wished he could make better time. Damn that crossbowman! If only the rest of him were as hard as his head!
Well, what about Melbah? He’d get her if he had to run her down. Sooner or later he’d catch up to her despite her tricks, and if he had the gauntlets on he’d grab her scrawny throat with them and they’d squeeze out her foul life the way another pair had strangled the dwarf for Kelvin. Yes, that’s what he’d do eventually, just give him the chance!
Ahead the river flowed and sparkled through the trees. So peaceful, so pretty. For the sake of safety and in hope of spotting Heln, he’d have to stop. He aimed himself at a tall maysh tree and maneuvered himself carefully into its upper branches. Poised there, he could look down at the river from on high. There, starting from the opposite bank, were Rud cavalrymen. And at the head of the column, Kelvin’s friends the Crumbs. There was no mistaking Mor on that big horse with that big girth. That was them all right, so Heln must have made it back.