Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
“May I continue?”
“But, of course, my dear, dear Nulfie, pray continue.” Obyann
guffawed. “Since you think it’s cute, you don’t mind me calling you
Nulfie too, do you?”
He seemed on the brink of succumbing to the silly laugh again.
“Not at all,” Arranulf said. “Go right ahead. Ahem...” He continued
where he had been interrupted. “He seems a nice guy. We were so
worried when we read about that awful storm. You’re so lucky that
you found someone to sleep with. Not everybody likes naked boys
getting into their bed. So... So...”
Arranulf halted.
“So what?” Obyann, becoming slightly suspicious, asked.
Arranulf tried to keep his face as blank as possible.
“So... So... So don’t forget to thank Obie-Wobie as well—”
“What?” Obyann yelled, becoming instantly dark purple in the
face.
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He ran to the door, opened it and roared into the rain.
“Come back, come back here, I said, you scribbling, ink guzzling,
letter peddling, gossiping, stinking, miserable, dirty, weird little rat.
Come back, you hear me. I’m going to hurt you severely. I’ll break
every bone in your pathetic, emaciated body and more specifically
your evil fingers. You won’t write another word for the rest of your
wretched, depressing life, which won’t last long anyway if I get my
way, you rancid, stark raving mad, creepy, lunatic twat.”
“I thought it was cute,” Arranulf said soberly to nobody in
particular.
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Notwithstanding the late hour and the dark clouds that were
gathering above Lorseth, Anaxantis had decided to make the rounds
of the castle walls, seemingly as a surprise inspection, but in reality
because he felt he needed the cool night air. Upon seeing him, the
guards sprang to attention. He greeted them, told them to stand at
ease, and passed them without really taking notice. When he reached
the part of the battlements that jutted out above the gates, he leaned
on a crenel and looked out over the landscape.
It was dark, but he knew the disposition of the different units
well, and moreover, some of them kept fires burning day and night.
The army was growing by the day. More than half of the projected
three thousand men of the Landemere Contingent were joined by a
few hundred freshly recruited Amirathan Militia men, with dozens
arriving each day.
In all probability the Mukthars would attack between the end of
April and the end of May. That left barely enough time to recruit and
train the men. He sighed.
“I’ll have to face them with whatever men are ready. Even then they
will be nothing more than unbloodied, raw recruits. I’d better have
some good tactical plans ready. Who knows, maybe father has indeed
some excellent, compelling reasons for not wanting to confront them.
But whatever they are, they can’t offset so many civilian lives, not to
mention all the destruction the barbarians will leave in their wake.
Besides, if he thinks they are valid, he should have taken me into his
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confidence and explained his intentions. Am I not his representative?
Am I not watching his back while he guards our southern border?”
He pulled his mantle closer around him as a gust of wind made
him shiver. He looked up at the sky. The clouds were pitch dark. He
gazed a last time over the sprawling barracks and tents.
“What do you see, Demrac, when you look out of your headquarters?
I bet you see your army growing and growing. But from this vantage
point I see something entirely different, commander, and I am
astonished you don’t see it as well.”
He went back and descended the wall stairs, which ended in a
small turret. When he was about to exit it, he saw, behind the partially
open door, a figure in a hooded black mantle, pointing at something
that was scratched into the wall.
“Anaxantis, Anaxantis, standing firm in the storm, one try or no
cookie,” the figure whispered.
In a fraction of a moment, Anaxantis had drawn his dagger,
jumped the hooded figure, wrung his right arm behind his back, and
forced him to the ground with his knee pressed firmly on his back,
his dagger under his throat.
“Speak. Speak fast and clearly or you will never speak again,” he
hissed.
“Ouch, ouch,” came a complaining woman’s voice from under the
hood. “They said you would understand.”
“Renda?” Anaxantis gasped. “Is that you?”
“Yes, yes, it’s me,” Renda replied, on the verge of tears.
Anaxantis rose and held out his hand to help her up.
“Who would have thought,” he said when she was upright again.
“You of all people... You, a living letter?”
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“Yes, I am. So your lordship will understand that I don’t even
know what all that meant. I just learned it by rote. They also told me
to draw that in an inconspicuous place.”
She pointed at the scratched sign on the wall. Vaguely it showed
a capital A with a dot under.
“She mentioned my name twice. She mentioned the weather. There
on the wall is an A, representing my name, which she obviously couldn’t
write in full, with a dot under. The cookie was added to make doubly
sure that I would understand. Mother.”
“You have a message from my mother?”
“Yes. And you can send one back to her too. Where can we talk?”
Anaxantis thought for a moment.
“Go back to the kitchen. I’ll send a page over to ask for a bowl of
soup in about half an hour.”
He stuck his head out of the turret and looked around, but there
was nobody in sight.
“I’ll go first. Wait a few minutes after I’m gone. Don’t start heating
the soup. Wait until the page comes to ask for it before you do. Then
send him away and say you’ll bring it yourself when it is ready.”
“Renda is here with your late evening snack, my lord,” Ambrick
said from the open door of the war room.
“Show her in, Ambrick. Ah, Renda, thank you. Please, sit down,
I have some questions about a dinner I want to organize for some
of my friends. Thank you, Ambrick, that will be all. Close the door
behind you, please.”
Ambrick left and Renda put a platter with a bowl of soup, grated
cheese, bread, and butter before Anaxantis, who immediately shoved
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it aside.
“Aren’t you going to eat that?” she asked, sitting down.
“Huh? Oh no, I’m not hungry.”
“Won’t it be suspicious if someone noticed you called for a late
night snack and then didn’t touch it?” she asked, eyeballing the plate
with obvious appetite.
Anaxantis smiled.
“I really couldn’t eat for the moment, though it smells delicious.
Could you help us out here, maybe?”
Renda nodded, half rose and pulled the tray to her. She sprinkled
some grated cheese on the soup, hesitated, shrugged, took another,
much more generous portion, and dropped it in the bowl.
“Do you mind if we continue, while you’re eating?” Anaxantis
asked.
“No, of course not, my lord,” Renda said, blowing in her spoon.
“Since you’re a living letter, I suppose mother knows about...
him,” Anaxantis said, nodding towards the ceiling.
The Tribe of Mekthona had started using living letters soon after
they were founded. In the chaotic period of the Warring Barons
messengers were often intercepted and their destiny was anything
but enviable if documents were found on them. But who would
suspect a simple woman or an ordinary man who didn’t carry any
written message? While traveling through enemy territory they kept
their eyes wide open. Living letters often doubled as spies.
“I’m afraid so, my lord. I’m sorry, but my first loyalty lies with
your—”
“That’s quite all right, Renda.” Anaxantis smiled. “I suspected she
had informers in Lorseth. I just didn’t think they would be this near.”
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Renda looked at him with almost motherly concern.
“She means only for the best, my lord. She can’t do much herself
for the moment, I understand, but she wants to keep an eye on
you nevertheless.” She shrugged. “Of course, since I am no longer
permitted to bring him his meals, there hasn’t been anything to report
lately.” She hesitated. “Speaking about that, would it be terribly—”
“Yes, it would,” Anaxantis said curtly.
Renda looked down in her soup.
“Yes, I thought so. Such a shame...” She looked up. “Still, I suppose
you know best.”
“We’ll both have to hope for that to be true, Renda. Now, was
there more to the message?”
“Oh yes. She wants you to know that all is well with her and that
she is safe in Soranza. She sends her love and hopes that all is well
with you too. She wants you to know that, although she is restricted
in her actions, she will do all she can to help you. She rejoices in your
successes, but urges you to be careful. In particular, she strongly
advises you to be careful with those you trust the most. Some of your
closest collaborators have frailties that could make them susceptible
to certain influences. Your aunt Sobrathi, who sends her love too, is
investigating them.”
“I could have known. The fire at the moneylender’s. It bears aunt
Sobrathi’s hallmark. She was never one for half measures.”
“As for the coming battle,” Renda continued. “Your mother is
aware that you have grown a lot in the past year and that you have
overcome many difficulties. She is proud of you. She expects you to
bring the terror of war upon the barbarians with all that is in you.
Give no quarter. Spare none of them. Make the few that survive speak
your name in awe, trembling with fear. When you advance, may your
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men bravely follow you. When you stand fast, may they loyally stand
with you. When you take flight, may they ignominiously slay you...
Oh dear, that was a bit harsh, wasn’t it?”
Anaxantis smiled complaisantly.
“However, she also hopes that you have the wisdom to know the
difference between cowardly running away and a necessary retreat.
There is no shame in avoiding a battle that is lost before it begins
and retiring to fight another day. Only a fool fights against impossible
odds. Always remember that the blood of the ancient royal house
of Mekthona flows in your veins, as well as that of the Tanahkos
robbers. I’m sure she didn’t mean it like that, my dear... I mean, my
lord.”
“Oh yes, she did,” Anaxantis said, and laughed. “All of it. My own
men killing me included. If I wasn’t already, I would be really sure
now that this comes from mother.”
“Above all, she wants you to always remember that she loves
you... That was it.”
“Thank you,” Anaxantis said. “This works both ways, you said?
Finish your meal at your ease, while I think about a reply.”
“Maybe, just maybe, she still has some sources in father’s circle. The
Tribe is so intertwined with the Royal Administration that she must be
able to give me at least something to go on. My friends. She mustn’t
disrupt the lives of my friends.”
Renda laid down her spoon and cleaned out the bowl with the
last crust of bread.
“Ready?” he asked.
“Certainly, my lord. I may ask you to repeat some things. I was
born with a good memory and we were trained in special techniques,
but still, I will need a piece of parchment, a quill and ink. I have to
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make notes in a special form of writing. When you are done, I will
need some time to memorize the message. Afterwards, you can burn
the parchment yourself, if you want.”
Anaxantis went to a cabinet and fetched the items she had asked
for.
“Please don’t speak too fast, my lord,” she said, suddenly all
businesslike. Every resemblance with the good natured cook was