The Standing Dead sdotc-2

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The Standing Dead sdotc-2 Page 5

by Ricardo Pinto


  He stabbed a finger at the dead. 'Your brother and your eldest are corpses. Though you hide it, you yourself have taken a wound that's as like as not going to finish you. Then all that will be left of your line will be a few boys barely of age and, for a while, the half-breed.'

  He cast a dismissive glance at Fern. 'Do you believe the brass still at his throat is going to command much awe in the Tribe?'

  Carnelian searched for and found the plain legionary collar forged around Fern's neck which only the Masters had the knowledge to remove. Cloud let him go as Stormrane squared his shoulders to face down Ranegale and Loskai. Clearly, he intimidated them.

  'When the time comes, Fern will pay for his desertion.' Stormrane glanced at Fern who hung his head.

  The raised voices were making the aquar nervous. The youths on their backs were looking upset; several close to tears. Cloud forced his way between the two parties.

  'Stop this! We're not going to help ourselves or our tribes by fighting each other.'

  Cloud went among the aquar, smiling, addressing each youth in turn, putting straightness into their backs. Some dabbed their eyes, sneaking looks at each other to see if their unmanliness had been witnessed.

  'Will the Elders do us the favour of letting us hear their plan,' growled Ranegale.

  'Nothing's changed,' said Stormrane. 'We go on to Makar.'

  Through the scouring line? With the dead?'

  Now at his father's side, Fern lifted a fist. 'Do you want to leave them here to rot and so deny them their place in the sky?'

  'If it will save the rest of us from joining them. Besides,' he pointed to the kraal tower, 'that will form a perfectly good burial platform.'

  Stormrane shook his head with anger. 'Even if this sky were our sky, you deliberately forget this accursed land is shunned by all but the most unclean birds. Had you been in his place, my brother would never have left you behind.'

  Cloud had returned. 'We'll just have to find some way to take them with us through the line.'

  Stormrane did not seem to hear him.

  'What about the Standing Dead?' asked Ranegale.

  Stiff-faced, Stormrane and Fern both looked sidelong at Carnelian.

  Cloud shrugged, grimacing apologetically. 'You did make us bring them, Fern. Surely you must've had some notion what to do with them?'

  Carnelian was relieved when Fern looked away, running a hand up his forehead, pushing back the cloth and revealing some of his thick curling hair. 'Revenge…? Some recompense…?'

  Torture?' asked Loskai. 'Murder?'

  Fern let his hand fall. 'What good would that do?'

  Cloud was looking at them horrified. Torture? Murder? Are you all possessed? These are Standing Dead; angels. Can you imagine with what fury the rest of their kind would hunt us if we harm them in any way?' His eyes widened. 'For such a sin they'd torch the Earthsky from end to end.'

  Ranegale gave a snort. They're rather shabby for angels.' Despite his bravado, Carnelian felt the man's unease as he turned his single eye towards him. 'Just being here they make a bad situation hopeless. Let's finish them. What more do we have to lose? If we bury them deep enough, they'll never be found.'

  Stormrane shook his head. 'I agree with Cloud. The risk's too great. Besides, now we have them we may as well try and put them to some use.'

  Ranegale sneered at him. 'And how do my fathers suggest we take them along with us? We've no spare aquar.'

  Cloud looked at him tentatively. 'Some of the lads could double up.'

  'Am I the only one who can see that the Standing Dead are too weak to ride? We barely got them this far,' said Ranegale.

  'We're going to have to make drag-cradles to carry our dead,' said Fern. 'Making a couple more wouldn't delay us much.'

  'Drag-cradles will slow us down.'

  Loskai spoke up: 'My brother's right. Whichever way we go, we'll run into dragons. Pulling drag-cradles, we couldn't hope to outrun them.'

  Stormrane looked murderous. 'I'll not leave my son nor my brother behind.'

  Fern clasped his father's arm but Stormrane tore himself free.

  'I won't have to,' he said, oblivious of the hurt he had just caused his son. 'I'll work out some other way to get us through the line.'

  'It becomes clear how the renowned Elder, Stormrane, achieved the rank of a three-squadron commander,' drawled Ranegale.

  Stormrane's face hardened and he looked away to the horizon as if he had noticed something moving on it. 'Between the South Road and the Ringwall, the land narrows all the way to Makar. It would be preferable if we were to hold back: the longer we wait the more the line will stretch, pulling open the gaps between the dragons.'

  He held up a knotted cord for all to see. This only holds fifteen days. Pulling the drag-cradles through mud we'll need every one of those to reach the meeting in time.'

  'Do you think we'll make it, father?' asked Ravan, hope in his face.

  Stormrane smiled. 'Of course we will, son.'

  Cloud had become sombre. 'Let's hope so. Our tribes sent us to protect our tributaries. Only a few days remain before we're supposed to meet them in Makar. If we're late, they might try crossing the Leper Valleys without us.'

  Ranegale fixed them with a baleful eye. 'And will you, Father Stormrane, and what's left of your line take it upon yourselves to look after the Standing Dead?'

  Grimly, Stormrane glanced at Fern, then gave a nod.

  As he leaned against the neck of Carnelian's kneeling aquar, the youth stared at him without a blink. It was easier to ignore that stare than the constant throbbing ache of his body. Sleep with its grinding, bitter nightmares was a poor refuge. Carnelian tried instead to distract himself by concentrating his attention on the demolition of the kraal tower. More of the barbarian youths were swarming its upper storeys, tearing off the woven matting to get at the scaffolding beneath. Poles that had been worked free were being fed down to the kraal bridge, where the men were splitting them with axes.

  When his aquar stirred and seemed about to rise, Carnelian gritted his teeth, anticipating agony. Through his lidded eyes he watched the youth reach up and caress the creature's eye-plume fans closed. Carnelian looked for what had disturbed the aquar and saw Stormrane and Fern approaching. The older man had the same slow pained walk Carnelian's wounded father had had as they journeyed along the leftway to Osrakum. Snatches of that other life formed and melted before his mind's eye. He glimpsed but would not allow to fully surface the thought of his father exposed to Ykoriana's malice. For a moment it was better to relive what had been. Back on the leftway. It was strange that dark time should now appear so bright. At least then, a few pieces of his world had still remained unscattered.

  Feeling someone beside him, he looked up. Grief sat over Fern's face like a mask. Carnelian saw the brown eyes registering surprise, perhaps at detecting his compassion, but then they flicked away.

  This one's conscious,' Fern said to his father, in their tongue.

  Carnelian considered the man who had saved him from the slavers. His eyes were drawn to the brass bright against Fern's dark throat. The boss bore no legionary cypher and the band appeared to be free of rank and service sliders.

  Carnelian became aware Fern was watching him. As their eyes meshed the barbarian erupted into anger.

  'You have to get out of the saddle-chair,' he said in thickly accented Vulgate.

  'I don't have the strength,' Carnelian said.

  'We'll lift you.'

  Carnelian saw the opportunity. 'Did you have to lift the other Master?'

  'We don't have time for debate.' Stormrane grabbed Carnelian's arm and pulled on it.

  Carnelian cried out as his spine twisted.

  Fern's voice came through the ringing pain. 'You're hurting him.'

  Carnelian opened his eyes and saw Stormrane throwing off his son's restraining hand. Carnelian could not help noticing it lacked a middle finger.

  'If you're so concerned about this one, you sort him out,' snapped
Stormrane. He snatched the shoulder of the staring youth and led him away. Fern watched them go with the look of one who had just been slapped. He became aware of Carnelian.

  Though he is an angel, your friend burns with fever.'

  Carnelian looked from the barbarian's four-fingered hand into his face, fear for Osidian freezing everything else out. 'Can you let me see him?'

  The barbarian crossed his arms, hiding his mutilated hands in his armpits.

  'I can hardly tell you apart. Are you brothers?'

  Carnelian was touched by the man's vulnerability.

  'Well?'

  Carnelian regarded the frowning mahogany face and wondered what answer to give. A nod was safer than the truth. 'Please show me where he is?'

  Fern shook his head. 'We don't want you near each other.'

  Carnelian considered befriending this barbarian by confessing that he understood their tongue, but decided this was an advantage he could ill afford to give away.

  'You mean, the older man that was here doesn't.'

  Fern's face darkened. That older man is my father, who with good reason blames you for the killing of our kin.'

  'Do you?'

  'What do you think!'

  Carnelian caught a look in Fern's face that belied his words. 'Can you do anything for… my brother's fever?'

  Fern looked surprised. 'You believe it possible he might die?'

  Carnelian worried about what power his answer might lose him.

  Fern frowned. 'If he were like other men there would be a chance he might wake from it. Until then, all that can be done for him is to give him water and what food he will swallow.'

  Carnelian saw he had to speak. 'He is a man.' Clearly, Fern had difficulty believing this.

  'Will you see to feeding him yourself?'

  When Fern gave a ragged nod, Carnelian decided that would have to be enough. The man made motions indicating that Carnelian should climb out of the saddle-chair. Twisting sent a deepening stab into his back.

  'Perhaps it'd be better if I stay here.'

  Fern set his jaw. 'No.'

  'Are you afraid I'll escape?'

  'Why wouldn't you?'

  Carnelian was reluctant to attempt an explanation. 'How far could I get without reins?'

  Fern's mouth curved with contempt. 'Real riders don't need them.'

  Carnelian was too weak to argue.

  It took them a while to manoeuvre him out onto the ground. He stood, swaying a little, stooping to relieve the agony which was squeezing a cold sweat from his skin.

  Looking at Fern's feet, Carnelian began chuckling. The dark mirth bubbled out until over it he could hear the man, puzzled, asking him what was happening.

  Carnelian managed to speak. 'I was just thinking…' Chuckling took over again. 'I might… might be more comfortable if you gave me back my ropes.'

  Rain ran down Carnelian's face. It was the only part of him exposed. The rest sloped down to where, just beyond his feet, the two poles of the drag-cradle were gouging the earth. He could see their double track scratching off over the wake of chopped-up mud left by the aquar. Beyond, the land stretched featureless, greyed by the downpour. Above him the tail of Fern's aquar swung like a tiller, narrowing to a whip that sometimes stroked his feet. Blankets and leather bands swaddled him to the drag-cradle frame. It quivered with each step the aquar took. Dozing, Carnelian thought he was back on the accursed ship that had brought him with his father and his brothers from their island to the shore of the Three Lands and the Commonwealth of the Masters.

  When day began fading to night, the barbarians called a halt. The stillness of the drag-cradle came as a blessed relief. Fern walked out in front of Carnelian, his face haggard, his legs and cloak splattered with mud. He was motioning instructions. Carnelian felt a tremor in the frame. Turning his head, he saw brown hands holding on to the wood.

  'What're they doing?' he asked.

  Fern glanced down at him. 'Unhitching your drag-cradle from my aquar.'

  His dark eyes flicked away. The frame gave a shudder that awoke Carnelian's pain. With a rasping, he felt the poles come free even as the aquar's tail started feeding away over him, its tip dragging up the blankets towards his face. He closed his eyes, anticipating its touch, but then he felt the frame being lowered to the ground.

  He opened his eyes and blinked away the rain. 'What news of the dragons?' he said to no one in particular.

  Fern loomed over him, issuing instructions in their barbarian tongue. Carnelian could hear the suck and splash of footfalls as the youths moved away.

  Fern's face came close enough to Carnelian's that it sheltered him from the rain. He examined Fern's brown eyes. He could smell him and feel the heat of his anger.

  Fern bared his teeth. 'Don't imagine they'll rescue you. I'd kill you myself before I let that happen.'

  He disappeared. When the constant patter of rain on Carnelian's face had cooled his own anger, he began to wonder if he was going to be left all night in the rain. When Fern returned, it was to force some strips of leather into Carnelian's mouth which he had to chew or else choke. It was only as his mouth began to fill with musty flavour that he realized it was dried meat.

  For days, Carnelian was dragged through a constant pelting rain. His blankets clung heavy and sodden. Often the mud grew so deep the poles stuck fast. As Fern's aquar struggled to break loose, Carnelian would suffer with each shudder. Though the barbarians were always hidden from him, he could hear the desperation in their voices as they urged their aquar on. Their march was a monotonous slap and suck amidst the downpour. Carnelian knew they were sending lookouts ahead. A voice would shout something down from the sky. The raiders would not pause but would continue on until the kraal tower would slide into Carnelian's view and he would watch it shrink and fade.

  Each evening as the day was squeezed black by the rumbling sky, Fern fed him more strips of dried meat. Carnelian lubricated his chewing by opening his mouth and letting it fill with rain. When asked, Fern would confirm Osidian's condition unchanged. His moroseness discouraged conversation. Ravan was often there, resentful as he helped his brother with the feeding, with the unhitching, with the hitching that every morning freed Carnelian from the blinding rain. As he was angled up he was able to blink his eyes open and peer blearily at the infinite, drear monotony of the Guarded Land.

  Against that landscape, Fern and his brother were often the only living things Carnelian could see. He became intuitive in reading their moods, seeing past the masks of fear they wore. Their grief was deepening and he felt he knew the cause: he could not recall the last time he had heard their father's voice.

  The raiders pressed on towards Makar. Each day that passed put another twist of dread into their stomachs as they searched the horizon for the scouring line and its dragons.

  ***

  The drag-cradle came suddenly to a halt. Carnelian heard Ravan cry out, then Fern. Young voices were making a commotion. Carnelian shook himself out of his stupor, anxious to know what was going on. Facing away from the barbarians, all he could do was strain to pick out their voices.

  'Does he live?' asked Ranegale. There were some words Carnelian could not catch, then: 'Put him back in his saddle-chair.'

  'We must make another cradle.' Fern's voice, sounding frightened.

  'We've no time for that,' said Ranegale.

  'We'll make time.' Cloud's voice. 'Do you really believe he'd be lying there in the mud if he had the strength to ride?'

  'He gave you the cord, Cloud. How many knots does it hold now?'

  For a while Carnelian could hear only the whispering of the youths. 'Seven.'

  'Our best hope is that whatever's delaying the scouring line will keep it in Makar for five days more. That's already bleak enough don't you think, Father Cloud? And now you've decided to back Fern in what will cause us at least half a day's delay.'

  'Let's dump one of the Standing Dead,' said Ravan. 'My one's fever is going to get him anyway so we might as well u
se his cradle for my father.'

  Ranegale's nasal voice rose to a bellow: 'No. We need them both alive.'

  'Why?' demanded Cloud.

  There was a silence during which Carnelian struggled but the leather bands were too tight.

  'Why doesn't my father let us all in on his plan to get through the scouring line should we run into it.'

  'My plan is that which Stormrane trusted me with. We fire some kraals and when the auxiliaries come to see what's happening we slip through the gap they leave in the line.'

  There were murmurs of support.

  'So you all feel this is a good plan, eh? I'd like to see you set fire to rain-sodden wood.'

  Voices rose in protest.

  'Listen. Listen! That's not really important. If you'll listen, I'll tell you what is. Have you any idea how close the roads have come on either side of us?'

  They all fell silent.

  'I can see you do. Well, imagine now how close together the aquar twenties will be in the line. It will be a city wall with dragons as its towers. Most of us have seen how fast dragons can move and we all know perfectly well how swift unburdened aquar run. The Standing Dead in the dragons' towers will spot us the moment we make a break for it. They'll close the gap like this.'

  A slap like whiplash.

  Then we'll just have to creep through at night,' said Fern.

  'If you'd stayed in the legions more than a few days you wouldn't be saying anything so stupid. They'll set their fires close enough for their light to overlap. Even if they didn't we'd never be able to time it. No. If we run into them there's only one way we'll get through. We'll have to move one of the dragons out of line.'

  Everyone began shouting at once. Carnelian strained to hear Ranegale's voice among the others. He caught the phrase, 'Standing Dead'. The hubbub quietened.

  'We'll leave them both, or maybe just one of them, in a kraal to be found by the auxiliaries.'

  'Rather than suffer death for having looked on them, they'd murder them,' said Fern. 'How would their commanders ever find out?'

  'We'll tie them up to the kraal's outer wall so they can be seen from the dragon towers. Of course the poor bastards will all die for seeing our Standing Dead, but it'll bring a dragon. With luck, more than one.'

 

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