“If we had more supplies we could try to go around them, but we’re limited, and it’s been a long trip already,” she said. “It would help if you were healthy and we could move faster.”
“Should we split up?” Grange asked. He didn’t see any advantage to Jenniline in having him as her companion, and he didn’t have any fondness for her continued, abrasive company.
“If I travel alone, I can reach home in four days, maybe even three,” she said so quickly that Grange knew she had already considered the proposition. “You don’t know the way to return on your own, or how to avoid the rebels, though.”
“I go north, and it doesn’t matter if they catch me anyway, does it? They’ll have no use for me,” he told her, speaking practically.
“That’s true, you wouldn’t mean anything to them. You’d only be a burden, as long as you didn’t join them as a fighter,” she spoke, and her words picked up speed. Grange could tell he had opened the door to an idea that the girl wanted to pursue.
“Go ahead,” he told her. “You can leave today and be back at your home in a few days. I’ll leave here tomorrow and follow. When I get to Southgar, I’ll,” he paused, not sure what he would do. The girl had talked about the temple of Acton, but what that would do wasn’t clear. There was nothing clear in his future, just as there was nothing evident in his past.
“When you get to the temple, you’ll ask to present yourself to the God, and tell the priests about all that’s happened in the wilderness,” she said. “Then the God Acton will know if his hero has arrived or not,” she spoke with a touch of bitterness. She stood up. “I’ll go pack my things,” she said, then turned and was gone.
An hour later, Grange hobbled to the campsite, as Jenniline was strapping her pack of supplies onto her back. She picked up her bow and put it on her shoulder, the last step she needed to take to be ready to leave.
“When I get back, I’ll tell the temple to expect your arrival,” she told Grange. “I’ve left you enough supplies that you can probably even rest here another day extra if you need, to help strengthen that leg,” she told him.
“You’ll want to go due north for three days, then angle to the north east after that. You should get back to civilization within five days. If the rebels do intercept you, just tell them you drank from the Yellow Spring, and your memories are disturbed,” she added. She hitched her pack up slightly, ready to reall go.
“Yr wyf yn gobeithio y Pwerau uchod yn rhoi cymorth i chi deithio yn ddiogel ac yn gyflym,” Grange told her. He was of a mixed mind about her departure. He would have preferred to travel with someone who knew the countryside, and who could provide assistance if needed, but the girl was prickly and clearly had no desire to travel with him. They were better off go their separate ways.
Jenniline’s eyes widened. “What did you say?” her face turned red.
“I said, ‘I hope the Powers above give you support to travel safe and swiftly,’” Grange replied with a feeling that something was wrong.
“No!” Jenniline shouted. “You spoke in our language. You’ve known how to speak the Tongue all along! You’re some kind of an impostor! You probably didn’t even drink any water at Yellow Spring, did you?” she spoke with passion. As she did she released the straps on her pack, pulled her bow off her shoulder, and let the pack slide to the ground.
She pulled her sword free from its scabbard.
“There’s only one way to deal with spies,” she said menacingly.
Grange watched in alarm, then scrambled to reach for his own sword, as he saw Jenniline pull her sword free and start to advance towards him. He felt a twinge in his thigh, and momentarily thought about the stitches there, then ignored the pain as he pushed himself up to his feet and held his sword defensively.
“Jenniline, I don’t know your language,” he said quickly. “If I said something, I didn’t know what I said.
“Maybe I am from Southgar. Maybe my memory is starting to return, a little,” he tried to placate her. She was approaching him determinedly, holding her sword firmly, circling around him, and making him slowly turn to match her, wincing from the pain in his leg as he tried to maneuver.
“I fought for you when your men went crazy,” he reminded her.
“It must have been some kind of trick,” she snarled. “Maybe you did something to make them attack in the first place.”
Jenniline launched her attack, springing in close and pulling her knife off her hip, so that when Grange swung his sword to stop the attack from the sword in her right hand, the knife in her left hand sliced across the skin of his arm, leaving a bloody red line.
“Jenniline! Stop!” Grange screamed. “Think this through; what have I done to threaten you?” he asked.
The girl stabbed her sword viciously. Grange blocked the attack, and for a second he saw an opportunity to harm her, but he held his strike, and dodged out of the way of her knife.
“I’m the one who said you should leave to go home on your own,” he reminded her.
“You are a trick, or you are a trap,” she hissed at him as she continued to circle him. Her tactic of continual motion was an effective one, Grange realized, as he continued to try to twist himself fast enough to present his defenses.
She launched another attack, but followed his defensive success by engaging in a new attack immediately. She attacked low, and when he blocked the slice, she swung her knife, then raised her sword. Her sword hit him, but it had twisted as she tried to recover from his defense, so that it only scraped across his chest without cutting his flesh deeply.
“I am not your enemy!” Grange shouted. He flung his sword forward so that his hand and hilt struck Jenniline in the center of her chest and pushed her away, breaking the engagement momentarily.
“There’s something about you – something broken,” she said. “The God wouldn’t use you to win the battle that is coming.
“After this is over, I’ll go back home and resupply, then I’ll go to the Yellow Spring again,” she jumped at him both blades ready to strike as she seemed to rise up into the air and then come descending down towards him like a hawk falling upon a rabbit, with steel talons poised to skewer its prey.
Except for the fact that Grange did the unexpected. He dove downward, aiming his body to drop down into the air beneath where she had departed from, so that he started to pass beneath her, headed towards freedom from her attack. As he passed below her he suddenly raised up and clipped her feet hard. He grabbed one and pushed it upward, rotating her body unexpectedly, so that she lost control of her body before she landed, and then Jenniline struck the ground hard, her shoulder striking the soft earth first, causing her to bounce and flip.
She came to rest lying on her back, and Grange bounded over towards her, ignoring the pain in his leg, and across his chest, and upon his arm. His adrenaline was flowing from the heat of the combat, prodding him into more action that seemed possible.
Jenniline lay still for just a moment, stunned by the force of the landing, and then shocked again when Grange sat heavily upon her chest, falling forcefully, and extending his legs to trap her arms, as a way to prevent her from lifting her blades against him again. His eyes looked into hers – he saw no fear, only pain. He lifted his sword, then stabbed it down hard, thrusting it with all his might so that it penetrated to a depth of several inches.
Jenniline blinked, and her mouth fell open. She was shocked, unable to comprehend what had suddenly happened to her.
<
br />
Perilous Travels (The Southern Continent Series Book 2) Page 30