Read Wizard of the Grove Online
Authors: Tanya Huff
“Father!” Rael pushed through the gathered crowd and flung himself to his knees, desperately catching up his father's hand in his.
“I'm fine,” the king insisted. He managed a weak smile, but his face was gray and slick with sweat.
Rael looked up at Belkar, his whole body begging the duke to say it would be all right. Belkar shrugged.
“The king is down,” ran the whisper through the ranks. “The king is dying.” Weapons, tools, meals, lay forgotten as the army fell silent and waited for news.
“Get out of my way.” Glinna's voice, impatient and commanding, pushed apart the silence and split the circle surrounding the litter. The surgeon strode through the break and glared down at the king. Her mouth pursed and her eyebrows lowered. “I told you so,” was all she said, but there were several lectures worth of meaning in the words.
A wave of near hysterical giggles rippled outward. The king would live. No one used that tone on a dying man.
Glinna looked up at the sound. “Don't you lot have something to do?” The crowd melted away and she shifted her gaze to stare pointedly at the prince. He stared back, the green of his eyes growing both deeper and brighter. She raised one eyebrow. “Very pretty, Highness. Now get up off your knees so we can move your father inside.”
Rael sighed as he scrambled out of the way.
It's not fair,
he thought.
When I want people to be impressed, they never are.
As the litter moved away, Glinna slipped her hand under the bloody surcoat.
“Madam!” Raen gasped, his eyes wide, pain mixed equally with surprise. “Try to remember, I am your king.”
“And if you want to remain my king,” the surgeon told him dryly, lifting the tent flap and standing aside to allow the litter to pass, “or anyone else's king, for that matter, you'll do as I say.” The flap fell behind them.
“She's got a terrific way with her patients,” Rael muttered and started back to where he'd left Rutgar holding his horse.
The Duke of Belkar fell into step beside him. “Think of it as an incentive to stay in one piece, Highness.”
“What do you mean?”
Belkar's voice quivered on the edge of laughter. “If you're injured, she'll be taking care of you as well.”
Rael shuddered.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The sun rose high over the mountains, turning arms and armor to a burnished gold, but the Melacians remained in their camp at the valley's edge. Rael, Doan, and the remaining dukes gathered on the highest bit of ground they held; little more than a hillock but enough to give them a clear line of sight. Not that it did them much good.
“Even I can see they're still in camp, Prince Rael.” Cei blew his nose vigorously. “What we need to know is why.”
Rael squinted, trying to bring the tiny figures of the enemy closer by force of will. Finally he shook his head and gave up. “Something's upset them, they're scurrying around like headless chickens. The only thing I can say for certain is that, for now, they show no interest in us.”
“Then we attack. Ride in and grind the scum into the mountain.”
With the Duke of Hale's death, and the heir only a child, command of his forces had gone to Allonger, the senior of his two captains, a vicious fighter, a man of quick and explosive temper, who was also the dead duke's uncle. Most of his conversation since he took command had centered on revenge.
“Too risky,” Doan grunted. “They hold the high ground. It's got to be a trap.”
“Then we wait?” Aliston's heir suggested.
“We wait,” Rael agreed. Allonger opened his mouth to speak but snapped it shut again as the prince continued. “It's a pity we can't get scouts close enough to nose out what's going on, but there's no cover and I'd never order a man to commit that kind of suicide.”
Belkar hid a snicker behind a cough. Doan became very interested in the space between his horse's ears. Cei and Aliston's heir, safely out of line of sight, exchanged amused glances. Rael looked steadily at Hale's captain.
Allonger glared at the prince, well aware he'd been neatly outmaneuvered. A very long moment passed in silence. “Oh, all right,” he said at last. His voice was gruff, but the edges of his mustache trembled
as he tried not to smile. “We wait.” He inclined his head, adding respectfully and without a trace of sarcasm, “Your Highness.”
They waited all that day, thanking the Mother-creator for the rest, and wondering what kept the Melacian army in camp. Not until the sun began to set did they find out.
“Highness!” The Messenger darted into Rael's tent, glanced quickly around and headed for the inner room.
Ivan snagged her sleeve and dragged her to a stop. “And just where do you think you're going, young woman? You can't just run in here like you owned the place, this is . . .”
“Let her go, Ivan.” Rael ducked through the inner flap and smiled down at the Messenger, who twitched her sleeve free and ducked her head in a shallow bow.
“It's the Dukes Riven and Lorn, Highness. They're in the command tent. Milord Belkar asks you to attend them at once.”
Lorn was not in the command tent when Rael reached it moments later, but Riven sat, head buried in his hands, at the center of a milling crowd of the dukes and their captains. Voices were hushed and shoulders tense and every eye on Riven.
“They blocked the pass, Commander; Riven, Lorn, and their men.” Doan fell in at the prince's side as he crossed the tent. “They drove wooden wedges into cracks in the rock then poured water over them until they swelled and slid a couple of tons of rock into a canyon just the other side of the border.” His voice was frankly admiring. “Couldn't have done it better if they'd had a company of dwarves.”
“Most of the men in these parts are miners, they know what they're doing. Where's Lorn?”
Doan paused before answering, weighing the words to use. “They took him to the infirmary,” he said at last, his tone carefully neutral.
Just then Riven looked up. His dark hair hung in a tangled mass down his back, his face was pale and streaked with dirt, his nails were broken and his fingers were scraped raw. Blood stained his hands and clothes; much more blood than his own wounds could account for.
“He wanted to die, but I brought him back. I couldn't leave him out
there.” His throat convulsed and the sound that emerged quavered halfway between a choke and a sob.
Belkar, who stood close by Riven's side, looked up and shook his head at Rael's silent question. “I don't know, lad, that's all he'll say.”
Rael dropped to the bench, took a goblet of wine from a hovering servant, and shoved it into the Duke of Riven's hands. “Drink,” he commanded.
Riven sipped, coughed, then drained the goblet.
“Now, tell me,” Rael prodded gently. “What happened?”
Once, twice, Riven opened his mouth but no sound came out. The third time the words spilled free. “I, I was on the other side of the canyon. They said, his men said, one of his captains was standing too close to the edge when the rock began to fall. He tried to save him. They both went over.” Riven's eyes went dark with memories and tears began to cut new channels through the dirt. “I got to him as fast as I could. He wanted me to kill him.”
Startled, Rael looked up at Belkar.
“His legs were crushed,” the duke said softly.
“I couldn't kill him.” Riven turned to Rael for support. “I couldn't. I dug him out. I brought him back.”
Rael had no idea of what to say or what to do. He reached out a tentative hand and touched the grieving man lightly on the shoulder.
Riven drew a shuddering breath. “I couldn't kill him.” Then he threw himself to the floor and began to smash his fists into the canvas leaving scarlet smears, his blood and Lora's mixed together.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
“He carried Lorn every step of the way himself,” Doan said later as he stood with Rael looking toward the enemy camp. “The men with them say that he wouldn't let anyone help. And during every lucid moment, Lorn begged Riven to kill him. When begging didn't work, he tried curses.”
“Will he live?”
“Probably. But he'll never walk again. Myself, I'm more worried about young Riven.”
Rael remembered Seven Day Festivals, when the boys who'd grown up to be Riven and Lorn had come to the palace with their families. They were only five years older than the prince. He'd watched them running and playing and fighting as a single unit. He'd envied them their closeness.
Doan shoved his hands deep behind his belt. “It won't mean much to them now, but the two of them have ended the war. With supply lines cut, no cavalry, no new troops, and no line to their king, the Melacians will have to surrender. It's the only logical thing to do.”
Rael pushed away visions of falling rock and two boys who would never run together again, and brought himself back to the present. “How did the King of Melac think he could command from four hours behind the lines?”
“He may have sent up the occasional order,” Doan grunted, “but the real commanders are out there on the field.”
Over the Melacian camp a cold blue fight suddenly flickered and then darkness claimed the night again.
“Sheet-lightning?” Rael wondered aloud.
“Maybe.”
Just for a moment the captain's eyes flared brilliantly red. Rael blinked and the moment was gone. He had the feeling Doan knew more than he was willing to tell, but after one glance at the rigid set of his jaw, Rael decided not to ask. Now that the war was over, there would be plenty of time for questions.
In the morning, the Melacians' expected surrender turned into an all-out attack.
“This is crazy!” Rutgar yelled, tossing aside the splintered remains of his lance and drawing his sword. “They can't possibly hope to win.”
“Don't tell me!” Rael bellowed back, in the breathing space they'd cut for themselves. “Tell them!”
Rutgar stood in his stirrups. “You guys are crazy! You can't possibly hope to win!”
Rael laughed and bashed his armsman lightly on the shield. “Feel better?”
Behind his visor, Rutgar's teeth gleamed and he laughed as well. “Yeah, I do!”
When the Elite charged, crashing through the screaming chaos the enemy pikeline had become, the Melacians swarmed about them, rats turning on the terrier. The horses' legs were soon red to the hocks. Weapons dripped and armor ran with gore.
“I don't believe this,” Rael muttered as the press of bodies, the dead, the dying, and the living behind them, slowed the charge and forced the Pairs apart. He roared the retreat, ripping his throat raw with the sound. All around, he heard the call repeated. And then he heard the scream. Behind him.
He twisted in his saddle.
Rutgar.
His shield arm hung limp and blood ran down the armor, pouring from his fingers in a ruby stream. His sword wove dizzying patterns of steel, trying to protect his wounded side, but he was tiring, and there were too many attacking.
“No!” Practically lifting the animal onto its hindquarters, Rael yanked his horse around, cutting and chopping like a madman the entire time. The Melacians surrounding him began to fall back. If they were crazy, he was crazier. If they welcomed Lord Death, he'd happily send them Death's way. But Rutgar was not going to die.
Three horse lengths apart.
Rutgar faltered. A sword drove through the seam between breast and back.
Two.
Hands stretched up to pull the swaying armsman down from the saddle.
Too far away to help, Rael saw the terror on Rutgar's face; saw Rutgar's hand reach and close on nothing; heard, as though there wasn't another sound on the battlefield, Rutgar call his name.
It was Doan who kept him from vaulting out of his saddle, Doan who steered him back to the Ardhan lines when he would have ridden
into the heart of the Melacian army and tried to cut it out, and it was Doan who held him while he wept.
Later, in the command tent, he glared out at the assembled men and said, “Enough.”
“Granted,” Cei agreed. “But what can we do?”
“We take out their commanders, tonight.”
“Tonight?”
The raw emotion on Rael's face choked off the babble of questions before it truly began. “Doan.”
The Captain of the Elite stepped forward.
“The Elite will follow where you lead, commander.”
“Will you follow him into Lord Death's embrace?” Cei sniffed. “Because without a moon, that's right where you'll be going.”
Although Cei stood almost two feet taller, Doan managed to look down on him as he repeated, “The Elite will follow where he leads.”
“Cei's right,” Belkar said gently. “Without a moon, that valley will be pitch black.”
“Then they won't expect an attack. The lack of a moon can work to our advantage as well, giving us cover and a better chance of success.” Rael ground out the words, the lack of expression in stark contrast to the pain that twisted his face.
Belkar sighed. He wished, not for the first time, Glinna had allowed Raen to attend. A king and father could command where others could only advise. “I want to end this as much as you do, Highness, believe me, but men cannot see in darkness.”
“If the Elite will follow,” Rael lifted his head and green fires blazed in his eyes, “then darkness will not stop us.”
I
t was raining the next morning when Rael came to his father's tent. He stood for a moment and stared blindly at the wet canvas, letting the water cut channels into the red-brown mud that caked his armor. The lines etched into the pale skin about his mouth and the purple bruises beneath his eyes, eyes in which the green fires had all but died, bore eloquent testimony to the night's work. He had never looked less like his mother.
The Guard before the entrance saluted and stood aside but Glinna, standing guard within the canvas walls, could not be so easily passed. She folded her arms on her chest and blocked the way.
“The king finally sleeps. Anything you have to say can wait.”
“I have news of the war.”
“No doubt,” she said dryly. “But I don't care if the war is over, you may not wake him.”
“The war is over.”
Her eyes widened. She looked down at the dried blood that stained his sword hilt, so thick in places that it filled the hollows in the ornate scrollwork, then she stepped aside.
“Don't allow him to become excited,” she cautioned as Rael passed. “If he opens the wound again . . .” Her words trailed off, but the meaning was clear.
When Raen had left his bed and reopened the wound, it had infected, swelling and putrefying. From a serious although hardly fatal injury, it had grown to be dangerously life threatening. Glinna,
however, refused to admit defeat, draining, cleaning, cauterizing, and pouring potion after potion down the king's throat. Three times she forced Lord Death away, and in the end she won; the king lived. But under the scented smoke that eddied around the inner room, the smell of rot remained.
“Less than a week,” thought Rael, looking down at his father, “how could he change so much in less than a week?”
As the war had aged Rael, the wound had aged Raen. Flesh hung from his bones as if it belonged to another man, and the lines of his face were now furrows. Not even the most loving son could deny that the king had grown old.
Rael dashed a tear away with an impatient hand.
You will not mourn him while he still lives,
he told himself fiercely.
He needs you to be strong.
He dragged a chair over to the bed and perched on its edge. “Father?” Reaching out a slender hand, he placed it gently on the sleeping man's chest. The steady rise and fall seemed to reassure him. He sat quietly for a moment then called again.
With a sound that was half question, half moan, the king woke, blinked, and focused slowly on Rael's face.
“Father, the war is over.”
“You have the battle commanders.” It wasn't a question. Late in the night, Belkar had told him what Rael planned to do, indeed, was doing, for the prince had ordered the duke not to speak until he and the Elite were well on their way. “You did the right thing. The only thing. I wouldn't have stopped you.” The boy had needed an outlet for his grief. The war had needed to be ended. That both had been accomplished at once, and with a plan only the prince commander himself could carry out, would further consolidate said commander's position with the army. That said commander was his son, and the plan placed him in mortal danger, had given Raen a sleepless night. “Did they surrender?”
“Not quite.” Rael leaned forward and propped a pillow behind his father's head. “We torched their camp, destroyed half their army, and still had to knock a tent down on the commanders to get them to quit.”
“Prisoners.”
“Besides the seven commanders, about eight hundred; at least half of them wounded.”
Raen brought up a skeletal hand to stroke his beard. “Hmmm, not many.” His eyes unfocused as he considered the best course of action. “The men are rabble without the leaders. Strip them of their arms and have them taken back across the border.”
“But, Father, the pass is blocked.”
“Oh,” Raen looked momentarily confused. Had he known that? Memories of the last few days were soft edged and smoke-filled; he remembered pain clearly but not much else.
“And they don't want to go back.”
“Are you sure.”
“Very sure.” Rael shrugged wearily. “But I don't know why.”
“Well, I've a pretty good idea,” Raen snorted, suddenly more energetic as he came across something he thought he understood. “They lost. Melac and that idiot who advises him aren't likely to be very welcoming.”
“Father, about that counselor . . .”
“An ambitious upstart,” the king dismissed their unknown enemy with a choppy wave of his hand. “I'm not surprised someone like him showed up to grab power. Melac was always weak. We'll keep the border guarded and have nothing more to do with either of them.”
Rael was not convinced. From things he'd overheard in the last few hours, he suspected Melac's counselor would remain a threat. But that was for the future to deal with; here and now he had other worries. “So what do we do with the prisoners?”
“Divide them up and scatter them amongst the dukes.” The crease between the king's eyes deepened as he remembered the mass graves that held the flower of Ardhan's youth. “We'll all be a little short-handed for a while. I'm sure they can find ways to put them to use. If they truly don't want to go home, they can begin to work off the lives they owe us.”
“And the battle commander and his officers?”
The king sighed. “Well, they
can't
go home. Melac can always get more spear-carriers and crow-fodder, but returning his officers would be asking to do this all over again. Have them take the standard oath about laying down arms and ever after cleaving to the soil of the land they invaded.”
“They won't.” Rael sighed as well, and rubbed a grimy hand across the bridge of his nose. “They say they've taken blood oaths to fight for Melac and the Empire until death.”
“Empire!” Raen snarled and tried to sit up. “What Empire?”
Rael pushed him gently back. “The one we were supposed to be the first part of. They're fanatics, Father. When we took away their weapons they attacked with bare hands. We practically had to bury them in chains before they stopped. They fought like men possessed.” He paused and his eyes narrowed in memory. “Or men in mortal terror.”
“They'll have to die.”
“Father!”
“How many men did you kill last night?” Raen asked gently.
“I told you, we torched the camp. It's likely hundreds died.”
Raen held his son's eyes with his own. “No. How many did you kill? Yourself?”
Rael yanked his gaze away and stared at the carpet. “I don't know. Eighteen. Twenty maybe. I lost count.”
“And Rutgar's still dead.”
The terror; the reaching hand; his name screamed.
“Yes.”
“It didn't bring him back, so the killing is over.”
Rael lifted his head and green embers stirred. He'd fought last night blinded by anger and pain and with every life he sent to Lord Death the anger bled away until there was only the pain. “Yes,” he said. “There's been enough.”
“Unless those seven die, the war isn't over and we've won nothing. Rutgar died for nothing. The men you killed last night died for nothing.” Raen lifted a hand and touched his son's arm. “A king has no conscience, lad, he gives it to his people.”
“That's garbage, Father, and you know it. The people do what you say.”
Raen let his hand fall back onto the blanket. “Then do as I say, Rael, and carry out my command.”
Rael searched the stern, closed face on the pillow for his father but saw only the king. He stood so quickly his chair tipped and fell and he almost kicked it out of the way as he spun and headed for the door.
“Rael.”
He paused but didn't turn.
“Last night you let your anger define the thin line between justice and murder; a king never has that luxury.”
“A lesson, Father?”
“If you wish, and here's another. You'd rather I gave this task to one of the dukes, but the king must be willing to carry out the king's justice. As I am not able, you must stand in for me.”
“I don't think I'm ready to be king.”
Raen's teeth flashed white amid the dusky gray of his beard and the lines of his face lifted with the smile. “Good.”
Doan was waiting when Rael left the king's tent. The night's work had added a limp and several new scars to the Elite Captain's inelegant appearance. He fell into step beside the younger man.
“You were right,” Rael said at last.
Doan kept silent. He appeared to be watching the rain drip off the edge of his helmet.
“We're to divide the men amongst the dukes, but the commander and his captains die. I'm to see that it gets taken care of.”
Doan merely pulled his cloak tighter to stop the rain from running down his neck.
Rael's laughter sounded a great deal like choking. “Life would certainly be a lot easier if my father was a woodsman or a farmer.”
The captain grunted, there being little he could say to his own words.
“If it must be done, then let's do it now.”
“I'll call for volunteers, Commander.” As Rael's head jerked around
to face him, he added. “You must only be present, Highness. You don't strike the blows yourself. And it's not a job you can command a man to do.”
By the time the Guard was formed, the rain had stopped. The sun came out, and seven men died.
And the war was over.
“At least I never enjoyed it, Mother,” Rael whispered as the breeze lifted his hair from his forehead and blood soaked into the ground at his feet. “At least I never enjoyed it.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The fire reached the grimy foot of the elderly woman tied to the stake and began to lick daintily at the blistering skin.
“'Ware the child,” she screamed in a mad voice raw with much shrieking. “'Ware the creation of Lord Death's children.”
“Lord Death's children?” Lord Elan half turned, enough so he could see the king's counselor but not so much that he must look at the king. That pain at least he would spare himself. “What does she mean, Lord Death's children?”
The golden-haired man lounged back in his chair and sighed. “The race of Man was created for Lord Death's benefit. Thus Man,” he inclined his head toward the stake with chilling courtesy, “and Woman also, are Death's children.”
“It burns! Brilliance within! Brilliance without!” And then not even madness was enough to overcome the effects of the flames. The old woman sagged against the ropes and prophesied no more.
The king shifted on his throne, hips rotating with each spasm of the body on the pyre.
“She wasn't very clear,” Lord Elan grunted.
Full lips molded themselves into a smile. “She was clear enough earlier and more than willing to repeat the entire prophecy as often as I chose to listen.” Even the most obscure prophet could be convinced to find clarity and while there was no real need in this instance, the convincing had filled a few otherwise tedious hours.
“Then what does it mean?” The old lord sounded tired. The greasy smoke stung his eyes and coated his throat. He hated executions, even the most necessary, and had attended this one only because he'd vowed that the king would spend as little time alone with his counselor as possible. Others of the nobility, those who had not died with the armyâhe saw their faces wide-eyed in the firelightâseemed to be taking their idea of pleasure from what pleasured their liege. He gritted his teeth and glanced quickly at the king.
He was beginning to lose interest now that the body had stopped moving.
The voice of the king's counselor was closer to content than it had been in years. He lifted his face to let the evening breeze cool skin flushed by the heat. “It means, Lord Elan, that I have something to look forward to.”
“But we're going back to Ardhan.”
“No.”
“But . . .” Lord Elan jerked as sapphire eyes caught his and held. A thin rope of drool fell from one corner of suddenly slack lips. He jerked again as he was released and would have fallen had he not clung, panting, to the arm of the king's throne.
“I said no,” the counselor repeated quietly. He stared past the pyre, out over the remains of the army. So clever of him to have kept the cavalry back; they would replace the officers killed and, well, one could always get more peasants.
South and east,
he thought.
I
will create an Empire to the south and east, giving Ardhan enough time to fulfill the prophecy.
Glancing down at the smoldering pile of meat and bone, he rubbed long fingers against the silk covering his thighs. “Well,” he purred in a voice barely audible over the sizzle and crackle of burning fat, “almost enough time.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The army returned triumphant to the city, although the king did not ride proudly at its head but was carried on a litter. Rael, with the Elite behind him, led the army home.
The war quickly became a thing of the past. Men went back to holdings and fields, battle armor was polished and put away, and Rael received a most unexpected welcome home from the Duke of Belkar's blue-eyed daughterâwho had supposedly ridden to the palace to meet her father. Rael was pleasantly surprised to find that blue eyes held depths as well as green and that the eyes of mortal women also glowed.
The king did not recover.
Glinna now slept in the room next to the royal bedchambers, when she slept at all. The infection had returned and spread, and now the king's whole lower body strained against its increasingly heated covering of skin. She did what she could but finally, no longer able to deny what training and common sense told her, she admitted defeat.
“His life is now in the hands of Lord Death,” she told the prince. “I can do nothing more.”
“My father doesn't believe in Lord Death,” said Rael bitterly.