Hero's Lot, The (The Staff and the Sword Book #2)
Page 43
Errol’s horse jerked on its reins, trying to get at the fruit Karele had so generously distributed along the road.
“So?”
“They’ve also been soaked in sleepwell. Any horse that eats it won’t be able to manage more than a walk for at least a day.”
Cruk laughed. “You’re starting to come in handy, solis. You really are a master of horses.”
Karele gave a mocking little bow. “Thank you. I thought it would be better than poison. I don’t like killing.”
In the distance the sounds of pursuit drifted across the sands.
Merodach pulled his horse around to face the others. “Go. I will stay here and make sure the horses don’t gallop past their refreshment.” He unlimbered his bow.
“I’ll stay with you,” Rokha said.
The moonlight glinted off Merodach’s white hair and his stricken expression. “No. You cannot. They’ll almost certainly have bows.”
Her mouth set. “I’ve already lost one man I loved tonight. I will not lose the other.” She glared at him. “And curse you, you stone head, for making me say it first.”
The cold reserve of Merodach’s face melted. A smile blazed forth in the moonlight that turned the stoic captain into a boy. He urged his mount next to Rokha’s and caught her in an impassioned kiss that lasted long enough to embarrass the rest of the company.
“There,” she said with a voice both rough and breathless, “that’s how you’re supposed to treat the woman you love.” She loosened the bow attached to her saddle. Merodach nodded.
They left the pair there and set a ground-eating trot that ate up the miles. Five hours later they stopped as the sun cleared the horizon. Errol’s legs and midsection ached from the ride. He stopped at moments to stretch as he cooled his horse.
The sight of Martin breathing his mount filled him with an obscure guilt, as if he’d deceived his friend. In halting words, he told Martin of his encounter with the ilhotep and of the existence of the book.
Loss and pain wreathed Martin’s face. He spun south to face Guerir. Even from such a distance, smoke from the city was visible. “We have to . . .” He swallowed. “Oh, Deas, it’s lost. We’ve lost it again.”
Errol looked at the ground, abashed by the priest’s anguish. “I’m sorry. I didn’t think to retrieve it.”
Martin put one hand on the back of Errol’s head. “You were fighting for your life, lad. You’ve given the kingdom the chance to fight another day. It’s not your job to do it all.”
Errol nodded, but in his heart he wondered. They walked their horses over to Karele. The master of horses moved down the line of mounts, checking the legs and hooves of each. He pried a stone out of the frog of one, then ran his hand up and down the leg before giving a satisfied nod.
“They need water,” he said to Rale. “We’ll have to give them a longer rest at the next loop of the river.”
Rale nodded, not looking pleased.
“We need some way to slip through the towns without attracting attention,” Cruk said.
“It’s going to be a little hard to go unnoticed with most of us wearing blood,” Rale said.
“What if we pose as merchants?” Martin asked.
Rale shook his head. “Ru’s not here to bluff us through.”
A touch on Errol’s arm diverted his attention from the discussion. Adora stood behind him wearing the ilhotep’s silks and an expression that conveyed hope and doubt at the same time.
“Are you well, Errol?” she asked.
The sun glinted off her gold hair. The sprinkling of freckles around the delicate perfection of her nose only made her more beautiful. With everything in him, he wanted nothing more than to sweep her into an embrace as fierce as Merodach’s with Rokha, but he schooled himself to stillness. Still, he allowed his smile to communicate everything he would not grant his body.
“I am well, Your Highness.” He bowed, took her arm, and stepped a few feet away. “Will you forgive my absence?”
Surprise lifted her blond eyebrows. “What absence would that be, Earl Stone?”
His smile deepened. “The one I so rudely took after Martin shared his truths with me. I am back now, and I won’t leave that way again.” Before she could ask for clarification, he pressed on. “Are you well? When the ilhotep claimed you for his own, I thought . . .”
She cut off his question with a chop of her hand, but red tinged her cheeks. “We do not need to speak of that. The ilhotep did not take me.” Her blush deepened. “But Merakhi men and women are much more . . . familiar with each other.”
“Errol.” Rale waved him over.
Not knowing exactly what she referred to but relieved, Errol bowed to Adora and rejoined the rest of the company.
“You and I will pose as the merchants,” Rale said. “The rest will be our servants.”
A tingle of fear raced up his neck and into his scalp. “Us? Why us?”
“Because we look more like Merakhi than anyone else. We have dark hair and, with the sun’s help, the complexion to go with it.”
Errol shook his head in denial. “If they get close enough to look me in the eyes, they’ll know I’m not one of them.”
Rale nodded. “I know. I’ll lead. Just keep your head down.”
They mounted and set an easy trot to the next loop of the river. By the time they got there, Merodach and Rokha were coming up from behind. The pair shared triumphant smiles as they rejoined the group. Merodach cast frequent looks toward Rokha, wonder and desire written on his normally impassive features.
“We’ll have to dress Adora and Rokha in whatever clothing the rest of us can spare,” Rale said. “They draw too much attention dressed as they are.”
Rokha sat her horse, her head high, her bearing almost regal. Her silks fluttered in the breeze. Adora matched her beauty, blazing like the sun. The two women looked like rare flowers against the washed-out color of the road.
Which gave Errol an idea. “They can be the merchandise.”
“Are you trying to get us noticed, boy?” Cruk asked.
Errol shook his head. “That’s just it.” He pointed. “Look at them. Do you think any man will notice us with them dressed like that, looking that way?”
Adora’s face showed her surprise, but Rokha tossed her head and laughed. Rale rubbed at his jaw muscles. “They are distracting, aren’t they.”
“Better than that,” Martin said. “The ilhotep has presented them as a gift to the royalty of the kingdom.” He gave Errol a lift of his eyebrows. “You are part of the royalty of the kingdom, are you not, Earl Stone?”
They formed up the company with Adora and Rokha in the middle, surrounded like precious cargo, and rode north. The women donned veils, but the sheer cloth only accentuated their beauty. Men and villagers gaped.
Three days later, they arrived at Shagdal, Sahion’s village. But as they stopped on a low rise overlooking his inn, there was no sign of their betrayer or anyone else. Dust blew through the streets unimpeded by man or horse. Rale sat his mount at the head, staring at the scene before him, his brows furrowed over his broad nose, and scratched at his short beard.
“It looks empty,” Errol said.
Rale pointed. “Perhaps. A carrier bird could have beaten us here, or perhaps Belaaz has managed to appropriate Valon’s circle. If the village is empty, there’s no threat. If it’s not, then trying to skirt it will only bring investigation.” He sighed. “The horses can’t take this heat for more than a day without water.”
They rode into Shagdal, each with one hand on the reins and the other on their weapons. Merodach guided his mount with his knees just behind Rale and Errol, both hands free to hold a bow. Cruk brought up the rear, his blunt face more grim than usual behind the red of his beard and mustache. Adora and Rokha held swords low and out of sight, flanked by Luis, Martin, and Karele.
Furtive figures appeared, then disappeared as quickly. Elsewise, nothing stirred.
Rale pointed to the well in the center of the v
illage. “Merodach, take everyone and check the water. Make sure it’s safe. Come with me, Errol.” He turned his horse toward the inn.
“Why are we going there?”
Rale’s face hardened, like stone. “Never let an enemy think you are soft, Errol. Mercy is a fine thing, but if it costs you men, you can’t afford it.”
Errol dismounted and tied the reins of his horse to one of the posts that supported Sahion’s porch. Rale had his sword out. They entered the large, open-air room next to the kitchen. Sahion sat at a table as if asleep, one hand clenching a dagger, the other pressed against a dark stain in his side.
Rale put the tip of his sword against the innkeeper’s throat.
Sahion’s eyes fluttered open at the touch. He laughed. “Ru would not have paused. Ha. Ruthless enough to rule the sand, that one.”
Rale increased the pressure on his sword. “You may find me less merciful than Naaman Ru. What happened here?”
Sahion laughed even as his face contorted in pain. Instead of answering, he pointed. Across the room the village’s akha lay dead, cut from shoulder to sternum. A headless messenger bird lay like a pile of discarded feathers on the floor next to him. Flies buzzed over the carcasses. “They took my sons. Even the youngest. Liars.”
He pointed across the room at the dead man. “That stupid pig came to gloat, bragging—with messenger bird in hand—about how he’d been the one to arrange the conscription of my sons and about how my friends would never make it to the coast alive. I killed the bird first and finished him—” he spat—“with his own dagger. Akhen aren’t supposed to carry weapons. You can’t trust anyone anymore.”
“Where is everyone?” Errol asked.
Sahion waved a hand. “Gone—or preparing to leave. Killing an akha is mal-un. Everyone in the village dies.”
Rale sheathed his sword. “Let’s go. If we hurry, we might be able to make the strait before the news of the ilhotep’s death does.”
Sahion touched his forehead, then his lips at the news.
They pushed the horses as fast as they dared. Karele checked them every four hours. The fast trot gradually beat Errol’s legs into jelly. Even the horse master began to look uncomfortable.
But they crested the rise overlooking the port of Oranis early the next morning.
The city teemed with Merakhi guards. Errol nudged Rale’s shoulder and pointed by turns to four ships tied up at the dock. “Those look familiar.”
Rale nodded, his face creased with disappointment. “I’d hoped I was wrong. Those are the ships that turned us back. Now they’re in port with us.”
“What does that mean?” Martin asked.
“There’s no way to know for sure,” Rale said. “Once Valon learned Errol was in Guerir, there was no point in trying to keep him out.” He turned to Luis. “What happened to Valon’s circle when he died?”
The reader raised his hands, palms up. “It is impossible to say with certainty. His death may have broken their minds. Perhaps one of his subordinates assumed power. Possibly, Belaaz took over somehow.”
“What’s the worst possible outcome?” Rale asked.
Luis stared at the ships in the port. “Belaaz. If he was able to take control of the circle, then every reader down there knows what we look like. Karele will be able to shield us from their lots, but they still have their eyes.”
“This just keeps getting better,” Cruk said. “Even if we get past the readers and their guards, we have no ship to take us home. Anybody care to take bets on how long it will take our pursuit to catch up to us?”
Rale looked back to Luis. “We need information. Where is Tek?”
Luis shook his head. “I’m sorry. I don’t have any blanks, and there’s no wood here in the desert for me to use.”
“What can you tell us, Karele?” Rale asked. “Martin says your power exceeds that of a reader.”
Karele shook his head. “It’s not my power. It’s whether Aurae, the spirit of Deas, chooses to communicate or act.”
“And?” Rale prompted.
Karele shook his head.
A breath of wind ruffled Errol’s hair in the moment, whispered in his ear. An incomprehensible thrill of hope, like a drink of cold water in the desert, coursed through him, and he wanted to laugh at the joy of it.
Martin and Karele lifted their heads and spoke at the same instant. “Tek will be here just before sunset.”
“Are you sure, Pater?” Cruk asked.
Karele nodded, laughing. “Aurae has spoken.”
Martin added his confirmation to Karele’s.
Cruk grimaced but swallowed his doubt. “If you say so, but how are we going to get on board?”
“Fire,” Merodach said. He lifted his bow. “We’ll have to get close enough for me to put arrows into the ships.” He pursed his lips. “I wish I had a longbow. It’s got twice the range of this.”
Two hours past midnight, fire still raged on two of the Merakhi ships, and the other two were useless wrecks. Errol still marveled at Merodach’s skill with a bow. His ability to plant burning arrows in the furled sails of the Merakhi longships amazed them all. Now the flames were bare pinpoints of light astern as Tek sailed away from the port of Oranis.
The sea was almost lake smooth, and Errol felt only the slightest twinge of queasiness. Karele stood next to him with Martin and Luis on the other side. The three men listened raptly as Errol told them everything he could remember of the book three times over, and still they asked for more.
“If only we could have brought it back with us,” Martin said. “The Judica would have to believe.”
Karele shrugged. “Perhaps, but some would no doubt question its authenticity or interpretation.”
Errol gazed off the raised deck in the stern of Tek’s ship, holding the decision he’d made in Guerir close in his heart. He would not chance interference, not even from these men who received unexpected knowledge from Aurae.
Without warning, a stab of pain in his chest like the thrust of a dirk left him clutching the rail for support. He groped with one hand against his unbroken flesh. Luis reeled like a drunkard, holding his head. Beside him, Karele and Martin dropped to the deck, gasping in shared pain. The priest, his face ashen, lifted a trembling hand to point northwest, toward Erinon.
“My Deas,” Martin breathed. “Rodran has died.”
Errol didn’t need Karele’s tortured nod to know it was true.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This second book of The Staff and the Sword series contained its own challenges, and I would like to thank my agent, Steve Laube, for going to bat for me and being the voice of experience and wisdom; my critique partners, Austin Deel and Tori Smith, for giving me the feedback I needed and for putting up with me when caffeine made me long-winded; the students at Martin Luther King Magnet High School and Croft Middle School in Nashville, for being interesting enough to be characters themselves; and as always, you the reader, for giving me the opportunity to tell you my tale.
After graduating from Georgia Tech, Patrick W. Carr worked at a nuclear plant, did design work for the air force, worked for a printing company, and was an engineering consultant. Patrick’s day gig for the last six years has been teaching high school math in Nashville, Tennessee. Patrick is a member of ACFW and MTCW and makes his home in Nashville with his incredible wife, Mary; their four awesome sons, Patrick, Connor, Daniel, and Ethan; and their dog, Mel.
Books by Patrick Carr
* * *
THE STAFF AND THE SWORD
A Cast of Stones
The Hero’s Lot
Resources: bethanyhouse.com/AnOpenBook
Website: www.bethanyhouse.com
Facebook: Bethany House
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