Exile's Challenge
Page 6
Davyd understood, even without the benefit of language: he nodded and began to strip. And as he did, he wondered that he trusted this silver-haired man like no other, save Arcole. It was as if the dreams had bonded them: he could not doubt Morrhyn.
Save, perhaps, for an instant as he entered the water. It was so hot he thought his skin must sear, and as he disturbed the surface he inhaled a lungful of thick, sulfurous air that set him to coughing, his eyes watering. He spat, looking to Morrhyn, who gestured that he immerse himself. There was such calm confidence in the Dreamer’s eyes that Davyd felt his doubts assuaged. Morrhyn would not, he somehow knew, allow him to come to any harm. He felt the wakanisha marked him for some purpose he could not yet properly comprehend, nor would until they were able to speak properly; converse as … not equals, for he recognized that Morrhyn owned such knowledge as he could only guess at … but as if he were Morrhyn’s pupil, and all that knowledge his for the asking.
So he lay down in the vaporous water and felt it ease his aches, the fumes no longer stinking but soporific. He sighed happily and closed his eyes, stretching out until only his face rose above the water. He would have slept there—should have been quite content to spend the night in that comfortable embrace—but Morrhyn touched his shoulder and spoke, and when he reluctantly opened his eyes, handed him a pinch of some herb. He swallowed the stuff, and in a while felt a vague and pleasant numbness pervade his limbs, as if the combination of the hot spring and the herb dismissed the day’s pain.
He was reluctant to emerge, save that his belly began to rumble and he saw the sun fall down below the western hills. Morrhyn indicated that he should dry himself and dress. So he climbed out, marveling that he could move limber again, and followed the wakanisha back to where a fire was lit and the evening meal cooking.
Flysse looked up as he approached and smiled. “You seem recovered.”
“I am,” he answered, returning her smile, “thanks to Morrhyn. And there are hot baths to be had.”
“Where?” Arcole asked eagerly. “Lead me to it, I beg you.”
Davyd laughed, all discomfort forgotten. This was, he thought, a fine land.
5
Another Country
Morning delivered a sky of pure blue striped with windblown ribbons of high white cloud. A breeze rustled over the lush grass of the meadow, the ripples like the swell of some green land-birthed ocean spread with a wrack of bright flowers. Birds sang a welcome to the rising sun, and from downslope a fox barked. Davyd emerged rested from the tent to find the Matawaye already preparing breakfast. He went to join them, smiling, his aches quite forgotten.
Arcole and Flysse rose slower. Both had availed themselves of the hot spring, but neither had enjoyed the benefit of Morrhyn’s restorative herbs, and both felt somewhat the rigors of the previous day.
“I grow old,” Arcole grunted as he laced his breeches.
Flysse laughed, combing her hair, studying the result in the mirror Marjia had gifted her. “You grow thin,” she said. “You need some fattening—padding for that saddle.”
“I surely need some kind of padding,” he returned. “God, what did Morrhyn give Davyd, that restored him so?”
“Shall we ask for some?” she wondered, her eyes bright with amusement for all she put a solemn and solicitous expression on her face. “Can you not manage?”
“No,” he said quickly, “and yes. I shall doubtless get used to this before long.”
Flysse nodded gravely, marveling at the vanity of men, which they named pride. Davyd, she thought, had been consumed with agony this last day, and would not admit it for fear he lose some notion of himself in the acceptance. Arcole, for all he had withstood the rigors of the journey better, was still in some discomfort, but would not ask for help, lest she or the Matawaye think the less of him for it. She found that difficult to understand—surely it was no loss of self-respect to ask help of friends? She finished her toilette and suggested they eat.
“Best flesh out those thin, old bones.”
Arcole scowled at her, then laughed. “Do you not suffer at all? Not even a little?”
“No,” she answered. “But then I’m accustomed to riding so. I’m not a lady, remember.”
He looked at her, no longer laughing, and shook his head. “You are, and do you deny it, I shall take offense.”
“Then,” Flysse rose, curtseying as best she could in leathern breeches, “I accept your compliment, ’sieur.”
“Good.” Arcole took her arm. “I’d not have a wife who argues with me.”
“That,” Flysse said, “I cannot always guarantee shall be the case.”
“Nor would I have it otherwise,” he replied, grinning. “Now do we go eat?”
Breakfast was again porridge, and some kind of hard bread that came in flat, round loaves, washed down with tea. It was not, Arcole thought, the height of culinary refinement, but undoubtedly filling, and he felt satisfied as the animals were saddled and they started down through the hills.
Davyd seemed happier today, more at ease on the buckskin, though Morrhyn and Kahteney still rode close to either side, poised to aid the lad should assistance prove needed. He will learn, Arcole thought as he watched Davyd swaying in the saddle; already he learns to move with the horse, and does it hurt, still it’s a needful lesson.
For his own part he grew steadily more accustomed to the primitive harness, though he still found it hard to understand how these folk could fight from horseback. As best he understood it, they had fought with the invaders of their first land, who seemed—as best Davyd had been able to describe them—terrible warriors. But surely to fight effectively from the back of a running horse, a man needed stirrups and a firm seat. How else could he own a solid platform from which to use his weapons? These Matawaye carried the accoutrements of war or hunting—all save the wakanishas had lances and bows and axes stowed about their saddles—but how did they use them without stirrups, or high-mounted saddles?
He got his answer as they came down from a defile flanked by two tall hills, onto a plateau where the broad shelf spread all grassy to the drop beyond and it seemed the world fell away into distance like a steep beach meeting a great green ocean.
A small herd of deer grazed the plateau, sentried by a high-antlered stag. The wind blew from the south, carrying the scents of horses and men away from the deer. Rannach raised a hand to halt the little column and turned, smiling, to Kanseah. Arcole saw the shy akaman nod, and then both men take bows from their packs and nock arrows. Morrhyn gestured that none move, but Arcole could not resist bringing his horse a little closer to the front, that he might see the hunt clearly. He thought that were it left to him, he would work his way slowly down on foot and belly until he had a clear shot—which should be difficult, because likely the stag would sight him and take his harem away.
Rannach and Kanseah had no such doubts: they heeled their horses and charged; and Arcole could scarcely believe what he saw.
The deer scattered at the first sound of the pounding hooves. The stag belled and ran away toward the timber edging the plateau, his harem running swift after him. Rannach and Kanseah galloped in the same direction, intent on cutting off the herd. Neither held their reins, but left them loose across their mounts’ shoulders, guiding the horses with their knees alone, both their bows full strung as they closed on the panicked deer.
A doe ran laggard, clearly aged, and hampered by some old wound. Arcole thought that her meat would likely be toughened by the years she carried, and that he would have selected younger game, but neither Rannach or Kanseah seemed to share that thought. They ignored the younger animals and closed on the limping doe. Both sighted and loosed their arrows, and the shafts flew straight and true, thudding hard into the doe’s chest, just behind the left foreleg, so that she was killed on the instant and fell over with the feathered poles jutting from her side.
Rannach sprang from his horse as it still ran, landing loose with a long blade in his hand, that he drove deep in
to the deer’s neck and slit her throat for all she was surely already dead. Then he fell to his knees and stroked her throat, and Kanseah joined him, and both men raised their hands to the sky and said something that Arcole could not hear, for the wind carried their words away, and he would not have understood them anyway. But he thought that they gave thanks for the kill to whatever god they worshipped, and that he had never seen such horsemanship.
Then Yazte slapped him on the shoulder and he must steady the prancing gray as he looked at the plump man, who pointed at the felled deer and then at his mouth, and then rubbed his ample belly, grinning hugely. Arcole nodded and smiled back.
“I think,” he said to Flysse, “that we shall eat well tonight.”
Flysse nodded, staring at the two akamans, who were already beckoning them forward that they might stow the deer on a packhorse. “I’ve never seen such riding,” she said, her voice awed. “They’re like …”
“Centaurs,” Arcole finished for her. And promised himself that he would learn to truly master this simple style of horsemanship: the admiration he saw in her eyes rankled somewhat. “Like the legends.”
“I wonder,” she said, “if we’ve not stumbled into a legend.”
He smiled at that, and squeezed her hand. Had he felt confident enough of his seat, he would have leant to kiss her. But he was not yet so able, and so only smiled. Then they were moving again, down to where Rannach and Kanseah waited, and the doe was loaded on a packhorse and they all, laughing, rode down off the plateau.
The trail grew steep here, narrow between high walls of roseate stone, and Arcole feared that Davyd should find it too difficult. Neither wakanisha could any longer ride beside him, but must go ahead and behind and leave Davyd to his own devices. The which, Arcole was pleased to observe, he managed well enough. He did not fall off, and was his face somewhat pale as they came out onto flatter ground, and his hands clasped like determined limpets on rein and mane, still he smiled proudly and called back, “I think I get the hang of this.”
“You do,” Arcole returned, “and well.”
Morrhyn caught his eye, smiling, and he wondered how fast the Matawaye would have traveled were they not hindered by their inexperienced guests. They showed great patience, he thought, and took pains to make three strangers feel so welcome; which prompted him in turn to think that these were kind people, such as he had never known. He looked up at the wide sky, all sun-burnished blue now, with the clouds fading like old dreams, and felt the wind on his face and laughed for the sheer wonder of it all.
This seemed a marvelous land, vast and verdant—he saw the hills falling away around and before their path, like great descending steps that cupped meadows and woods and streams within their huge and magnificent embrace; behind, the mountains stood sentinel duty, broaching the sky itself, snowcapped guardians dividing Ket-Ta-Thanne from Salvation. And ahead, where the lower steps ran down, he saw an infinity of blue-hazed distance that must surely stretch out to the ends of the world. Or perhaps go on forever: he could not know, only wonder at the enormity of it all.
“God, but this is surely a wonderful country!”
He had not realized he spoke aloud until Flysse answered him: “Yes, I think it is.” And Yazte brought his horse closer and beamed and waved a hand as if to embrace all of it, and welcome the newcomers. And Arcole nodded and reached out unthinking to clap the fat man on the shoulder, at which Yazte laughed and spoke in his odd guttural language, which Arcole could still not yet understand for all the words seemed daily to border on the comprehensible. Perhaps, he thought, some magic worked here, past those dividing mountains, that gave newcomers the gift of tongues. Surely it was a magical place.
That day they halted around noon to butcher the deer and pack the cuts. Morrhyn gave Davyd more of the herb that numbed his aches, and they continued down through the foothills. For a while, they followed a tumbling stream that danced away between stands of tall timber, larches and aspen that dappled harlequin patterns of sunlight and shadow over the ground, then the water turned and went off northward as they continued to the west, descending through the trees and over grassy hummocks. The woodland was loud with birdsong, and unseen animals crashed away through the undergrowth at their approach; plump rabbits watched from the hummocks, bounding for the safety of burrows as the horses came near; overhead, hawks circled the sky, and swallows darted, crows flew noisy, and magpies chattered announcement of their coming. It seemed to Arcole a land filled with life, untamed and quite unlike Salvation, and its inhabitants as different.
As the sun fell away to the west they made camp where a ring of ridgepole pines surrounded a meadow. There was no hot spring, but neither Flysse or Arcole felt overmuch need of that solace, and Davyd bore up well, even did he grimace as he seated himself and eagerly take the herbs Morrhyn offered.
Arcole noticed that the wakanisha offered neither him nor Flysse that cure, and wondered if that was compliment of their equestrian skills or indication of the herb’s scarcity. Or—as Morrhyn and Kahteney again engaged Davyd in a busy conversation that existed as much of handsigns as words—of the importance they attached to the young man.
Certainly, they paid him the greater part of their attention, mostly leaving Rannach and Yazte and Kanseah to communicate with the other newcomers. It was as if, Arcole thought, they would impress their language on Davyd as quickly as possible. And then he thought that that was surely the obvious course—the dreams had already imbued Davyd with far greater understanding than he or Flysse owned, and so it was logical the youth be taught first, and become translator for them all. Or was there something else? Some other reason, that lay beyond his comprehension? He recognized now that these folk were not savages—they were too kind, too courtly—and had he at first believed them primitive, he now began to see that it was only a different way of life they followed, which did not make them less than his own people, but only different.
That night he joined with Flysse in awkward repetition of words as the three akamans patiently spoke, holding up a variety of items and carefully intoning the names. It was not easy. The language of the Matawaye was deeper than his own soft Levanite tongue, even deeper than Flysse’s Evanderan, and much of it clicking glottal stops or what seemed to him an entirely unnatural joindure of tongue and teeth. But he learned to say the words for knife, and meat, and deer, and fire, and began to believe that he might—in time—converse articulately with their hosts. And that, no less than the kindness shown three refugee strangers, persuaded him he and Flysse might find a life amongst these folk. It was an afterthought to realize he already assumed Davyd should have a life here, as if the youth and Morrhyn had already reached some mutual treaty of adoption.
That night he slept well, and was it frustrating to lie so close to Flysse and not be able to hold her as he wished for fear they wake the softly snoring Davyd, then still it was good simply to be there, safe.
They went on down through the foothills, lower and lower, wending along ravines and gullies that turned and twisted, mazy as some rocky labyrinth, as if the mountains dug claws of stone into the land, reluctant to let go their hold. Three days they traversed the breaks, and then the stone leveled and fell away, like exhausted waves foundering on some imponderably vast beach. Save that beach was all green grass, and more akin to an ocean. Arcole had never seen such a plain: it spread out to the limits of the horizon as if it held all the world within its grasp, lushly painted with a myriad shades of green that rippled, shadow-shifting, under a soft wind. Stands of timber stood like hazy islands in the vastness, and as they rode through the knee-deep green sea he saw ahead vast, darker shadows that moved slowly over the verdancy, like great shoals of fish. He looked up, but the only clouds in that enormous sky were random billows of cumulus, too high and not large enough to lay such shadows. He wondered what they were.
A half day out onto the great grass sea he saw. The riders drew closer and the shadows resolved into individual shapes: great shaggy beasts, with massive
shoulders, all hair-hung and dwarfing the homed heads that turned suspiciously toward the riders. Some snorted a challenge and ran a little way toward them, horns tossing in warning, but when the horsemen offered no answering challenge, only hooved ground and returned to their grazing. Rannach pointed at them with his lance, making a thrusting motion, and said a word Arcole could not understand, then the word for meat—which he could—and that for leather, and more that were incomprehensible.
“What are they?” Flysse asked. “Some kind of cattle?”
“I think so, but wild,” Arcole replied, indicating the herd’s guardians. “Those are surely bulls. And ready to fight.”
He watched them warily, grateful the Matawaye steered a course around such massive beasts. For all the guardian bulls grazed, still they tossed their heads and watched and stamped their hooves, and there were so many of them. He calculated there must be some several hundred, perhaps even a thousand or more. If that herd charged, the riders would surely be swept under their weight like debris beneath a surging sea.
“You fight bulls in the Levan, don’t you?” Flysse asked.
“Yes.” Arcole nodded. “But not creatures like that. The bulls of the Levan …” He shrugged, kindling memories from a life that now seemed so distant it grew hazy as the horizon. “… They’re smaller, and with wider horns. They’re fast, but their shoulders are not so huge. I’d not much want to fight one of these—I think it would be impossible to get the sword past those shoulders. Surely, I’d not want to try.”
“You fought bulls?” Flysse was surprised.
“Have I not told you?” It was his turn to express surprise: surely he had told her everything about his life there. Certainly he had confessed his affairs and his duels, his gambling. They had agreed there should be no secrets between them, and since that night she had found him copying Wyme’s maps in secret—a betrayal of her trust—he had hidden nothing. Likely, he had only forgotten this: it was a small part of his past, unimportant for its foundation in the vanity he had learned to lose in her company.