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Authors: Guy Gavriel Kay

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BOOK: The Lions of Al-Rassan
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The Jaddites were going to double back. It was evident to anyone with half a mind. If they had spotted the ambush they would draw all the obvious conclusions. They were swine and unbelievers, but they knew how to wage war. They would circle back out of the Emin ha’Nazar and take the longer way around to the west.

And there was no other place of entrapment between here and the
tagra
lands that would allow eighty unevenly equipped men—a mix of bowmen, cut-throats, some riders, he and his brother and their notorious father—to have any hope of defeating so many soldiers. Gold was worth a great deal of risk, and so was glory, but neither, in Idar’s view, justified certain death. He despised the Jaddites, but he was not so foolish as to underestimate how they could fight. And his father had based his long career never giving battle save on ground of his own choosing.

It was over then, this uncharacteristic chance they had taken, so far north, so late in the year. Well, it had always been that: a gamble. They would wait for the Jaddites to clear the valley and head west. Then they would start back south themselves and begin the long journey home. If the season had not been so close to the winter rains and mud, they might have been able to take their time and find some solace in raiding through Ragosan lands along the way.

Solace, Idar thought glumly, was unlikely to be found before they got back to their own stone walls. He wanted a drink right now, actually, but his father would forbid that. Not for religious reasons of course, but as a commander on a raid. A rule of forty years, that one. Idar would have balked at the old man’s strictures save for two things: he loved him, and he feared him more than anyone alive.

“Look!”
whispered one of the archers beside him. “In the name of Ashar’s Paradise,
look
!”

Idar looked. He caught his breath. They were coming. The god had driven the Jaddites mad, or perhaps the woman’s voice had done so. Who knew what made men do such things as this? What Idar did know was that he and his brother and father and their men were about to be in a battle such as they hadn’t known in years. Their ambush had been uncovered, and the Horsemen were still coming.

The Jaddites approached the defile, one hundred riders, with six mules laboring in their midst. They were riding too fast. They would be blind, Idar knew, the moment they entered the shadows where the steep slopes hid the sun. They were making a terrible mistake. It was time to make them pay for that.

His was one of the first arrows. He launched another, and a third, then he started running and sliding down the slope to where Jaddites and their horses were screaming now in the pits that had been dug, hurled upon each other in a mangling of limbs, falling on the sharp spears planted in the cold ground for killing.

Fast as he moved, Idar saw that his father was ahead of him.

 

Jehane had been affronted at first by Rodrigo’s suggestion, then amused, and finally inspired to inventiveness. In the midst of the exercise she discovered that it was unexpectedly stimulating to be crying aloud in feverish, explicit desire for the whole of the valley below them to hear.

The two men beside her were nearly convulsed in silent hilarity as she offered increasingly flamboyant variations on the theme of her anguished physical yearning—as Queen Fruela of Jaloña—for the golden-haired count who had come to claim the
parias
from Fibaz. She had to concede that it was partly her pleasure at their helpless mirth, their unstinting approval of her performance, that led her on to wilder flights of suggestive fantasy.

They were high on the eastern slopes of the hills that ringed the valley bowl of Emin ha’Nazar, the well-known Place of Many Voices. Well-known, that is, save to the Jaddites who had entered the valley this morning. Even Rodrigo hadn’t heard of the place before today, but ibn Khairan had not only known of it, he had anticipated that this might be the place where a trap would be laid for the gold of Fibaz.

The Emin ha’Nazar was known for more than echoes. Among the ghostly voices said to resonate in the valley at night were those of men slain here in battles going back for centuries.

The first such encounter had involved Jaddites as well, in the great wave of the Khalifate’s initial expansion, when the boundary between Ashar and Jad had been pushed as far north as it was ever to go. Where it remained now, in fact, just south of the River Duric and the mountains that screened Jaloña.

That savage long-ago campaign had begun—in the endless paradox of things—the centuries-long splendor of Al-Rassan. A brilliant succession of khalifs in the growing Al-Fontina of Silvenes had chosen to name themselves for what they achieved in war: The Conqueror, The Destroyer, Sword of the Star-born, Scourge of the Unbelievers.

They had been those things, there was no hubris in the naming. Those khalifs and their armies, following upon the first reckless, astonishingly successful thrust northward across the straits from the Majriti more than three hundred years ago, had carved and hewed a glorious realm in this peninsula, driving the Esperañans into the farthest north, raiding them twice a year for gold and grain and slaves, and for the sheer pleasure and great glory of doing so in Ashar’s ever-bright name.

It had been called a Golden Age.

Jehane supposed that, as such things were measured, it had been. For the Kindath, treading lightly at all times, the expanding world of the khalifs had offered a measure of peace and fragile security. They paid the heretics’ tax, as did the Jaddites who dwelt in Al-Rassan; they were to worship the god and his sisters in their fashion only behind closed doors; they were to wear blue and white clothing only, as stipulated in Ashar’s Laws. They were forbidden to ride horses, to have intimate congress with Believers, to build the roofs of their sanctuaries higher than any temple of the Asharites in the same city or town . . . there were rules and laws that enclosed them, but there was a life to be found, and the enforcement of laws varied widely through the passing centuries.

A Golden Age. Now gone. The moons waxed and the moons waned. Silvenes was fallen; the petty-kings bristled and sparred against each other. And now the Jaddites were coming south again, on the magnificent horses they bred in the north. Valledo claimed tribute from Fezana. Ruenda was making overtures towards Salos and the towns north of it along the coast, and here now, below them in this valley, was the first
parias
party from Jaloña, come to share in the banquet, to bring Fibaz gold back to King Bermudo in his drafty castle in Eschalou.

If they could.

High on the slopes above the valley, Jehane lifted her voice again and cried out in Esperañan, in a tone she hoped would convey uncontrollable desire:

“Nino, my golden king, it is Fruela! I am afire for you!”

Screened behind cedar and pine, they saw the young Jaddite commander look up again. He hesitated, then clapped his helmet back on his head.

“That’s it,” said Rodrigo softly. He had stopped laughing. “I think you’ve done it, Jehane.”

“He’s calling back the party he sent up here,” Ammar said, also quietly.


What
have I done?” Jehane asked, careful to whisper now. Neither of them had yet bothered to explain. They had simply asked her to come up here and pretend to be helpless with desire. It had seemed amusing at the time.

“Goaded him,” Rodrigo murmured, not taking his eyes from the valley below. The Horsemen were beginning to move, shifting alignment, turning north. “Nino di Carrera is vain but not a fool. He had outriders ahead and behind. Given a calm space in which to think he would do the intelligent thing and double back. You’ve been taking space and calm away from him. He is not thinking properly because he is humiliated and angry.”

“He is dead,” said Ammar ibn Khairan flatly. He, too, had never stopped scanning the valley. “Look what they’re doing.”

The Jaddites had begun to ride, Jehane saw. High up among the trees in the wind she heard their voices lift in cries of menace and exaltation. Their massed formation looked terrifying to her. The huge thundering of hooves carried up to where they watched. She saw Nino di Carrera lead his company into the shadows at the valley’s end and she lost them there.

“Too fast,” said Rodrigo.

“Much. There will be a spear pit where the canyon bends,” Ammar said grimly.

“And arrows as the horses pile up.”

“Of course. Messy.”

“It works,” said Rodrigo.

A moment later Jehane heard the screaming begin.

The two men looked at each other. They had shaped events to achieve exactly this, Jehane understood that much.
What
they were striving towards, she did not yet know. There were deaths involved, though; she could hear men dying.

“First part done,” Ammar said calmly. “We ought to go down.”

She looked from him to Rodrigo, who had been the one to suggest the performance as Queen Fruela. “You aren’t going to explain this, are you?”

“Later, Jehane, I promise,” Rodrigo said. “No leisure now. We need our own swords to be ready, and then a doctor’s labors, I fear.”

“There’s Laín already,” ibn Khairan said, pointing to the other end of the valley bowl. Jehane saw their own men coming up from the south towards the shadows where the Jaloñans had disappeared.

“Of course,” Rodrigo said. She detected a note of complacency. “He knows how to do this. What do you think we are?”

Ammar grinned at that, the white teeth flashing. “Valiant Horsemen of Jad,” he said. “The same as the ones being butchered down below.”

“Not quite,” Rodrigo replied, refusing to be baited. “Not quite the same. You’ll see. Come on, Jehane. Can you control your smoldering enough to get down from here?”

She would have hit him with something, but by then the sounds of men and their horses in the darkness beyond the north end of the valley were appalling and she followed her two companions down in silence.

 

*  *  *

 

“We kill anyone who comes out from the defile,” Laín Nunez said flatly when he gave the command to ride. “No surrender accepted. Treat both parties as enemies. We are seriously outnumbered here.”

Alvar was intimidated by the grimness in the old warrior’s face as he gave his orders. It was no secret that Laín had always thought this intricate, many-layered plan to be foolish and unworkable. But with Mazur ben Avren in Ragosa, Ser Rodrigo and Ammar ibn Khairan all vying to outdo each other in subtlety the scheme had acquired so many nuances as to be almost incomprehensible. Alvar had long ago given up trying to follow what was happening.

He understood no more than the essence: they had made certain that a notorious outlaw leader knew about the Fibaz gold. They
wanted
him to come after the
parias.
King Badir had delayed agreeing to payment of the gold to Jaloña until as late in the year as possible to give this outlaw time to act, if he chose.

Then, after a lone messenger had arrived from the south one night, Rodrigo and ibn Khairan had led fifty of the Valledans out from Ragosa the next morning in a cold rain on the brink of winter. No banners, no identifying emblems, not even their own horses—they rode nondescript mounts from Ragosa. They had passed like ghosts through the countryside, heading east, twenty of them at any time scattering to watch for the movement of companies of men.

It was Martín, predictably, who had spotted the outlaw band coming north. The Captain and ibn Khairan had smiled then; old Laín had not. From that point on the bandit chieftain’s progress had been carefully monitored all the way to this valley. He had about eighty men.

The Jaloñans, led by a Count Nino di Carrera—not a name Alvar knew—were already in Fibaz, east and south of where the outlaws waited. Di Carrera had a hundred men, superbly mounted, by report.

When word came of where the ambush was being laid, Ammar ibn Khairan had smiled again. Rain had been falling that day too, dripping from hat brims and into the collars of overtunics and cloaks. The cart roads and fields were already turning to winter’s thick mud, treacherous for the horses.

“The Emin ha’Nazar? That old fox,” ibn Khairan had said. “He
would
do it in the valley. Truly, I shall be a little sorry if we must kill him.”

Alvar was still not sure how he felt about the lord Ammar ibn Khairan.

Jehane liked him, he was fairly certain of that—which complicated matters. Her presence on this ride was complication enough. He worried about her in the cold and the rain, sleeping in a tent on damp or frozen ground, but she said nothing, offered no complaint, rode a horse—normally forbidden the Kindath, of course—surprisingly well. She had learned in Batiara, he discovered. It appeared that in Batiara any number of normally forbidden things could be done.

“What is that valley?” Rodrigo had asked ibn Khairan. “Tell me all you know about it.”

The two of them had walked off together into the mist, talking quietly, so Alvar heard no more. He had happened to be watching Laín Nunez’s face, and from the older man’s expression had grasped a part of why Laín was so unhappy on this winter expedition. Alvar wasn’t the only man here feeling displaced by recent developments.

Nonetheless, Laín’s disapproval seemed unwarranted in the end. Even with all the complexity and the need for absolute secrecy of movement, it had all come together after all, here at this strange, high, echoing valley. There was even sunshine today; the air bright and very cold.

BOOK: The Lions of Al-Rassan
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