Authors: Paul Kearney
“Very good of you, I’m sure, Colonel Menin,” Lofantyr said smoothly. “But I need your talents employed here, in the capital. No, I have another officer in mind for the mission.”
The more junior officers about the table eyed each other a little askance, wondering who the lucky man would be.
“Colonel Cear-Inaf, I have decided to give you the command,” the King said briskly.
Corfe was jerked out of his reverie. “What?”
The King paused, and then stated in a harder voice: “I said, Colonel, that I am giving you this command.”
All eyes were on Corfe. He was both astonished and dismayed. A command that would take him south, away from the dyke? He did not want it.
But could not refuse it. This, then, was what the Queen Dowager had been referring to earlier. This was her doing.
Corfe bowed deeply whilst his mind fought free of its turmoil.
“Your majesty is very gracious. I only hope that I can justify your faith in my abilities.”
Lofantyr seemed mollified, but there was something in his regard that Corfe did not like, a covert amusement, perhaps.
“Your troop awaits you in the Northern Marshalling Yard, Colonel. And you shall have an aide, of course. Ensign Ebro will be joining you—”
Corfe found Ebro at his side, bowing stiffly, his face a mask. Clearly, this was not a post he had coveted.
“—And I shall see what I can do about releasing a few more officers to you.”
“My thanks, your majesty. Might I enquire as to my orders?”
“They will be forwarded to you in due course. For now I suggest, Colonel, that you and your new aide acquaint yourselves with your command.”
Another pause. Corfe bowed yet again and turned and left the chamber with Ebro close behind him.
As soon as they were outside, striding along the palace corridors, Corfe reached up and savagely ripped the lace ruff from his throat, flinging it aside.
“Lead me to this Northern Marshalling Yard,” he snapped to his aide. “I’ve never heard of it.”
N O one had, it seemed. They scoured the barracks and armouries in the northern portion of the city, but none of the assorted quartermasters, sergeants and ensigns they spoke to had heard of it. Corfe was beginning to believe that it was all a monstrous joke when a fawning clerk in one of the city arsenals told them that there had been a draft of men brought in only the day before who were bivouacked in one of the city squares close to the northern wall; that might be their goal.
They set off on foot, Corfe’s shiny buckled shoes becoming spattered with the filth of the winter streets. Ebro followed him in dumb misery, picking his way through the puddles and mudslimed cobbles. It began to rain, and his court finery took on a resemblance to the sodden plumage of a brilliant bird. Corfe was grimly satisfied by the transformation.
They emerged at last from the stinking press and crowd of the streets into a wide open space surrounded on all sides by timber-framed buildings. Beyond, the sombre heights of the battlemented city walls loomed like a hillside in the rain-cloud. Corfe wiped water out of his eyes, hardly able to credit what he saw.
“This can’t be it—this cannot be them!” Ebro sputtered. But Corfe was suddenly sure it was, and he realized that the joke was indeed on him.
Torunnan sentries paced the edges of the square with halberds resting on their shoulders. In the shop doorways all around arquebusiers stood yawning, keeping their weapons and powder out of the rain. As Corfe and Ebro appeared, a young ensign with a muddy cloak about his shoulders approached them, saluting as soon as he caught sight of the badge on Corfe’s absurd little breastplate.
“Good day, sir. Might you be Colonel Cear-Inaf, by any chance?”
Corfe’s heart sank. There was no mistake then.
“I am, Ensign. What is this we have here?”
The officer glanced back to the scene in the square. The open space was full of men, five hundred of them, perhaps. They were seated in crowds on the filthy cobbles as though battered down by the chill rain. They were in rags, and collectively they stank to high heaven. There were manacles about every ankle, and their faces were obscured by wild tangles of matted hair.
“Half a thousand galley slaves from the Royal fleet,” the ensign said cheerily. “Tribesmen from the Felimbri, most of them, worshippers of the Horned One. Black-hearted devils, they are. I’d mind your back, sir, when you’re near them. They tried to brain one of my men last night and we had to shoot a couple.”
A dull anger began to rise in Corfe.
“This cannot be right, sir. We must be mistaken. The King must be in jest,” Ebro was protesting.
“I don’t think so,” Corfe murmured. He stared at the packed throng of miserable humanity in the square. Many of them were staring back, glowering at him from under thatches of verminous hair. The men were brawny, well-muscled, as might be expected of galley slaves, but their skin was a sodden white, and many of them were coughing. A few had lain down on their sides, oblivious to the stone cobbles, the pouring rain.
So this was his first independent command. A crowd of mutinous slaves from the savage tribes of the interior. For a moment Corfe considered returning to the palace and refusing the command. The Queen Dowager had obtained the position for him, but clearly Lofantyr had resented her interference. He was supposed to refuse it, Corfe realized. And when he did, there would never be another. That decided him.
He stepped forward. “Are there any among you who can speak for the rest, in Normannic?”
The men muttered amongst themselves, and finally one rose and shuffled to the fore, his chains clinking.
“I speak your tongue, Torunnan.”
He was huge, with hands as wide as dinner plates and the scars of old lashings about his limbs. His tawny beard fell on to his chest but two bright blue eyes glinted out of the brutish face and met Corfe’s stare squarely.
“What’s your name?” Corfe asked him.
“I am called the Eagle in my own tongue. You would say my name was Marsch.”
“Can you speak for your fellows, Marsch?”
The slave shrugged his massive shoulders. “Perhaps.”
“Do you know why you were taken from the galleys?”
“No.”
“Then I will tell you. And you will translate what I say to your comrades, without misinterpretation. Is that clear?”
Marsch glared at him, but he was obviously curious. “All right.”
“All right,
sir
,” Ebro hissed at him, but Corfe held up a hand. He pitched his voice to carry across the square.
“You are no longer slaves of the Torunnan state,” he called out. “From this moment on you are free men.” That caused a stir, when Marsch had translated it, a lifting of the apathy. But there was no lessening of the mistrust in the eyes which were fixed on him. Corfe ground on.
“But that does not yet mean that you are free to do as you please. I am Corfe. From this moment on you will obey me as you would one of your own chieftains, for it is I who have procured your freedom. You are tribesmen of the Cimbrics. You were once warriors, and now you have the chance to be so again, but only under my command.”
Marsch’s deep voice was following Corfe’s in the guttural language of the mountain tribes. His eyes never left Corfe’s face.
“I need soldiers, and you are what I have been given. You are not to fight your own peoples, but are to battle Torunnans and Merduks. I give you my word on that. Serve me faithfully, and you will have honour and employment. Betray me, and you will be killed out of hand. I do not care which God you worship or which tongue you speak as long as you fight for me. Obey my orders, and I will see that you are treated like warriors. Any who do not choose to do so can go back to the galleys.”
Marsch finished translating, and the square was filled with low talk.
“Sir,” Ebro said urgently, “no one gave you authority to free these men.”
“They are my men,” Corfe growled. “I will not be a general of slaves.”
Marsch had heard the exchange. He clinked forward until he was towering over Corfe.
“You mean what you say, Torunnan?”
“I would not have said it otherwise.”
“And you will give us our freedom, in exchange for our swords?”
“Yes.”
“Why do you choose us as your men? To your kind we are savages and unbelievers.”
“Because you are all I have got,” Corfe said truthfully. “I don’t take you because I want to, but because I have to. But if you will take service under me, then I swear I will speak for you in everything as though I were speaking for myself.”
The hulking savage considered this a moment.
“Then I am your man.” And Marsch touched his fist to his forehead in the salute of his people.
Others in the square saw the gesture. Men began to struggle to their feet and repeat it.
“If we break faith with you,” Marsch said, “then may the seas rise up and drown us, may the green hills open up and swallow us, may the stars of heaven fall on us and crush us out of life for ever.”
It was the old, wild oath of the tribes, the pagan pledge of fealty. Corfe blinked, and said:
“By the same oath, I bind myself to keep faith with you.”
The men in the square were all on their feet now, repeating Marsch’s oath in their own tongue.
Corfe heard them out. He had the oddest feeling that this was the beginning of something he could not yet grasp: something momentous that would affect the remaining course of his life.
The feeling passed, and he was facing five hundred men standing manacled in the rain.
He turned to the young ensign, who was open-mouthed. “Strike the chains from these men.”
“Sir, I—”
“
Do it!”
The ensign paled, saluted quickly, and ran off to get the keys. Ebro looked entirely at a loss.
“Ensign,” Corfe snapped, and his aide came to attention. “You will find a warm billet for these men. If there are no military quarters available, you will procure a private warehouse. I want them out of the rain.”
“Yes, sir.”
Corfe addressed Marsch once more. “When did you last eat?”
The giant shrugged again. “Two, three days ago. Sir.”
“Ensign Ebro, you will also procure rations for five hundred from the city stores, on my authority. If anyone questions you, refer them to—to the Queen Dowager. She will endorse my orders.”
“Yes, sir. Sir, I—”
“Go. I want no more time wasted.”
Ebro sped off without another word. Torunnan guards were already walking through the crowd of tribesmen unlocking their ankle chains. The arquebusiers had lit their match and were holding their firearms at the ready. As the tribesmen were freed, they trooped over to stand behind Marsch.
This is my command, Corfe thought.
They were starved, half naked, weaponless, without armour or equipment; and Corfe knew he could not hope to obtain anything for them through the regular military channels. They were on their own. But they were his men.
PART TWO
THE WESTERN CONTINENT
TEN
T HE air was different, somehow heavy. It trickled down their throats and through the interstices in their armour and lodged there, a solid, unyielding presence. It ballooned their lungs and crimsoned their faces. It brought the sweat winking out in glassy beads on their foreheads. It made the soldiers pause to tug at the neck of their cuirasses as though they were trying to loosen a constricting collar.
The white sand clung to their boots. They screwed up their eyes against its brightness and slogged onwards. In a few steps, the boom of the surf out on the reef became distant, separate. The sun faded as the jungle enfolded them, and the heat became a wetter, danker thing.
The Western Continent.
Sand gave way to leaf mulch underfoot. They slashed aside creepers and the lower boughs of the trees, sharp palm fronds, huge ferns.
The noise of the sea, their universe for so long, faded away. It was as if they had entered some different kingdom, a place which had nothing to do with anything they had known before. It was a twilit world enshadowed by the canopy of the immense trees which soared up on all sides. Naked root systems like the tangled limbs of corpses on a battlefield tripped them up and plucked at their feet. Tree trunks two fathoms in diameter had discs of fungi embedded in their flanks. A bewildering tangle of living things, the very atmosphere full of buzzing, biting mites so that they drew them into their mouths when they breathed. And the stink of decay and damp and mould, overpowering, all-pervading.
They stumbled across a stream which must have had its outlet on the beach. Here the vegetation was less frenetic and they could make a path of sorts, slashing with cutlass and poniard.
When they halted to rest and catch their breath—so hard to do that here, so hard to draw the thick air into greedy lungs—they could hear the sound of this new world all around them. Screeches and wails and twitterings and warblings and hoots of human-sounding laughter off in the trees. A symphony of invisible, utterly unknown life cackling away to itself, indifferent to their presence or intentions.
Several of the soldiers made the Sign of the Saint. There were things moving far up in the canopy, where the world had light and colour and perhaps a breeze. Half-glimpsed leaping shadows and flutterings.
“The whole place is alive,” Hawkwood muttered.
They had found a tiny clearing wherein the stream burbled happily to itself, clear as crystal in a shaft of sunlight which had somehow contrived to survive to the forest floor.
“This will do,” Murad said, wiping sweat from his face. “Sergeant Mensurado, the flag.”
Mensurado stepped forward, his face half hidden in the shade of his casque, and stabbed the flagpole he had been bearing into the humus by the stream.
Murad produced a scroll from his belt pouch and unrolled it carefully as Mensurado’s bark brought the file of soldiers to attention.
“ ‘In this year of the Blessed Saint five hundred and fifty-one, on this the twenty-first day of Endorion, I, Lord Murad of Galiapeno do hereby claim this land on behalf of our noble and gracious sovereign, King Abeleyn the Fourth of Hebrion and Imerdon. From this moment on it shall be known as—’ ” he looked up at the cackling jungle, the towering trees—“as New Hebrion. And henceforth as is my right, I assume the titles of viceroy and governor of this, the westernmost of the possessions of the Hebriate crown.’ ”