His Ancient Heart

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His Ancient Heart Page 21

by M. R. Forbes


  Was I wrong about the Shifters? Had they been chasing the ebocite, and not their brethren?

  It didn't matter now.

  He approached the last box and stood in front of it. He stared at it for a moment and then backed away.

  It didn't matter now.

  CHAPTER FORTY-THREE

  Eryn

  "It is thirsty," Oz said.

  "How can it be thirsty? It isn't even human," Gesper said, keeping his voice low so that Oz wouldn't hear him.

  "What do you need, Oz?" Eryn asked.

  "It is thirsty," the juggernaut said again.

  They had exited the tunnel out of Varrow and headed deeper into the Washfall woods, moving as quickly and quietly as they could. Wallace had paused at one point to remove the shirt from beneath his hauberk, giving it to Eryn so she could cover herself up. The shirt was stained and smelled of sweat, but it was long enough to travel from her shoulders to her knees and restore some measure of her decency.

  Not that I care a wit for decency right now.

  Fehri and the Overlord had died to get her out of the city, leaving her desperate to ensure she wouldn't be captured again. She had kept them headed north, in the general direction she knew Talon had gone. After spending the next three hours in a desperate march through the forest, she began to wonder if she was doing the right thing. If General Spyne knew where Talon was heading, then he would know where she was heading. Could she stand up to one of the Nine and survive a second time?

  Oz pointed at the pack that Trock was carrying. "It must stop. It is thirsty."

  Eryn remembered the dark liquid. "Of course," she said. "Let's stop here."

  "I don't think that is wise," Trock said.

  "It must stop," Oz repeated.

  "We don't have a choice," Eryn said. "Ten extra minutes of walking won't do much if General Spyne shows up on horseback."

  "It is Ninth of Nine," Oz said. "Ninth of Nine. It remembers."

  "What do you remember?" Eryn asked.

  "Ninth of Nine. It is dead. It is all dead. It is ordered. It is done."

  "Genesia?"

  "Yes. Ninth of Nine. It kills it."

  General Spyne had killed the people of Genesia. Eryn wasn't surprised by that. The General had frightened her the moment she had seen him. There was such intensity in his eyes, such malice.

  "Okay," Trock said. "We stop here. Ten minutes."

  The soldiers slumped against nearby rocks and trees. Their faces were sweaty, their posture hinting at their exhaustion.They were grateful for the chance to rest, if only for a few minutes.

  "Wallace," Eryn said, "there are metal cans in the pack. Please give one to Oz."

  The soldier dropped the pack from his shoulder and opened it up. He found one of the cans and tossed it towards the juggernaut. Oz caught it, a breath of steam escaping through the grating at its mouth.

  "It is pleased."

  It held the can for a moment, and then put it on the ground. It still had the small satchel over its shoulder, and it lifted it and held it out to Eryn. "It is thirsty. It is a gift."

  "A gift?" Eryn said, taking the satchel. She untied the top and opened it. Inside was another lacquered box and a note. She took the note and unfolded it with one hand.

  Eryn,

  I have been an Overlord for too long to think that your safety in the palace was assured, and so I have left all of the cure that remains in Varrow with Oz for safekeeping. If I am dead, tell Talon that I love him, and I will be waiting to see him again.

  - Caela

  Eryn pulled the box from the satchel. It was larger than the one Kelkin had carried, older and more simple. She felt a tear run from her eye as she opened the lid and looked down at the six vials of the cure and the injector. It was enough to make her whole again, and still have some left over.

  Not yet. It leaves me unconscious, and we can't stop for long.

  "Thank you, Oz," Eryn said. She stepped up to the juggernaut and wrapped her arms around it as best she could. It was odd to hug a thing of magic and metal, but she didn't care.

  "It is pleased," Oz said. It surprised her by putting its hand to her back and pressing gently.

  Eryn bent down and picked up the can, and then handed it to the juggernaut. It took the can, shifted a finger, and stabbed the top of it. It brought the can to its grating and began pouring it in.

  They all watched in silence as it drank the contents of the can. They could hear something on the inside of the creature working, hissing and grinding in the top of its chest.

  "It is thirsty," Oz said, throwing the first can aside. Wallace tossed it another, and it repeated the process.

  "Where are we going to go?" Gesper asked. "This way leads past the mines. His soldiers are going to be right thick there."

  "We need to catch up to Talon," Eryn said. "He was heading for Edgewater."

  "You want us to go to Edgewater?" Wallace asked. He turned to Trock. "My apologies, my Lord, but that's suicide."

  "What choice to do we have?" Trock asked. "We weren't supposed to be found out so soon."

  "We weren't supposed to be found out at all," Gesper said. "To Heden with General Spyne."

  "Did you get a look at that tattooed man?" Wallace asked. "Gave me the shivers just looking at him."

  "He wasn't with Spyne the last time he came to Varrow," Trock said. "I wonder what pit they pulled him out of?"

  Eryn remembered the painted man. He had resisted her magic somehow and had almost caught her. She wondered who was more dangerous, him or Spyne?

  "It is this way," Oz said. It had finished the second can, and while it didn't look any different, when it lifted its arm to point, the motion seemed smoother and made less noise.

  "East?" Eryn said. "What is to the east?"

  "A way around?" Wallace said.

  Trock shook his head. "Portnis, and then the Killorns. You could head to Portnis and then get a barge up the Gorges, but that'll take weeks, and I think they'll have an awful mess of questions when they see Oz here."

  "It is this way," Oz repeated.

  "We can't take the Bridge," Gesper said. "There's sure to be too many soldiers crawling around. We might need to take the Gorges."

  "Even if we do, we're better off heading to Fulton and going downstream. It will be faster by days."

  "It is this way," Oz said for the third time. A heavy puff of steam suggested it was growing impatient.

  "What is that way?" Eryn asked.

  "It is First of Nine. It is this way. It is pleased."

  Oz started walking east.

  "Oz, where are you going?"

  "It is this way." Oz paused and pointed south. "It is that way. It is coming."

  "Spyne?"

  "Ninth of Nine. It is coming."

  "The metal man seems to know where he wants to go," Wallace said.

  Eryn walked over to Oz, getting herself in front of it. "Oz, Talon is that way." She pointed north.

  "First of Nine. It is this way." Oz pointed east.

  "Maybe Talon didn't make it to Edgewater?" Trock said. "What if he got cut off and had to change his course?"

  If he didn't make it to Edgewater, he would be no closer to finding the Refinery. Or, maybe he had discovered the Refinery, and it was to the east. "How do you know where Talon is?"

  "It remembers."

  "You remember where the Refinery is?"

  "No. It remembers."

  The words didn't make any sense to her. She wished the juggernaut could speak like a person. It was a wonder the thing could speak at all.

  "It is this way," Oz said again.

  "What should we do, my Lady?" Trock asked.

  Eryn didn't know what to do. She knew Edgewater was to the north, and Talon likely was too. Or could Trock be right, and he had been pushed east by the soldiers? Maybe he was heading to Portnis, to board a barge up the Gorges? Or was it something else? Something only the juggernaut seemed to know, but couldn't say clearly?

  It was a constr
uction of magic and metal, and yet when she had hugged it, it had hugged her back. There was something inside that ircidium plated shell. Some other kind of magic? Or something more?

  "It is this way."

  "My Lady?"

  They were all looking at her. Expecting her to make the decision. They didn't seem to notice or care that she was a fifteen-year-old girl. They had decided that she was in charge.

  She looked each of them in the eye, searching them to see what they thought she should do. Trock, Wallace and Gesper were all saying the same thing. Tell us where to go, and we will follow.

  They were good soldiers. Loyal to their General. There was fear in them, but it was a healthy fear.

  At least I'm not the only one who is afraid.

  "Oz, lead the way."

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

  Eryn

  They followed the juggernaut east, through the woods for as long as possible, and then out into the open grassland and farms of eastern Varrow. They moved as fast as they could on foot, keeping a steady pace that left Eryn's legs numb from the effort, her heart pounding and her breath hard to come by. It was a speed that would be impossible to maintain for more than a day at most, and had not come without cost. The jailers had already stripped off their hauberks and helms, diverting north to leave them abandoned in the woods before returning.

  Eryn could only imagine how they would appear to the first villager they stumbled upon. Her hair was still braided, and the fancy tiara still rested on her head, but from the neck down she was slicked in sweat. The blood she had cried stained the inside of the long shirt Wallace had given her, which hung from her like a potato sack. Her hands and feet remained covered by rich leather. She looked like an odd cross between a princess and a peon.

  Then there were the soldiers. Wallace was bare-chested, his lean muscle mixed with older sagging skin, sword scars on his forearm and shoulder. Gesper was huffing and puffing, his rounder body struggling to keep up, his shirt clinging tightly to him. Trock moved as if nothing could affect him. He was sweating, he was dirty. His shirt had a long hole on the left side. Even so he was stoic, he breathed normally, and he didn't seem as though he would ever tire. If Eryn hadn't noticed the slight wince of his eyes every time he took a step, she would have thought he too was one of the Nine.

  Finally, there was Oz. The one-armed man of metal and magic moved smoothly across the terrain, the liquid in the cans having seemed to renew it somewhat. Eryn could still see it pool and drip from one of the joints in the rusted, dented, and chipped ircidium armor, a bleeding wound that would never heal. Even so, the creature continued onward, repeating "it is this way" from time to time, as though driven by something beyond its control.

  "Reminds me of the time I made off with Anela Treyn," Trock said. "That was some, what, thirty-five, forty years ago? Such a long time. It was just after I returned from a campaign in the north."

  They marched through tall stalks of corn, pushing them aside as they moved. Eryn had forced Oz to divert into them in order to help disguise their progress. The cornfields went on for what seemed like forever, so large that the owner's farmhouse wasn't even visible from where they were.

  It must be owned by a noble, to be so large.

  They had grown both corn and wheat in her village, on single acre plots that surrounded the communal square. She'd never seen anything like this.

  "Ah, she was a beauty," Trock continued. "Hair as gold as the kernels on these here stalks, skin like milk. Her thighs were a gift from Amman." He glanced back at Eryn, ready to apologize.

  "Go on," Eryn said. "Quietly."

  Trock's stories were keeping them entertained and helping them to keep going despite their exhaustion. It seemed that no matter what terrain they crossed, the old soldier had a tale to match it.

  "Her father was like an eagle, the way he kept his beady eyes on her. He thought she was pure, and wanted to keep her that way." He chuckled. "She had other ideas, and a great interest in muscular soldiers."

  "Muscular?" Gesper said.

  "It was forty years ago," Trock replied. He was still in fine shape for a man of his age. "She comes running into the tavern where me and some of Talon's boys are drinking. We were coming back south to see our families before mustering again in the spring. She bursts into the tavern, her eyes wild. She looks around at each of us, and we look back at her. I says to her, 'are you well, my Lady?'. Of course, that's not what I was thinking. I was thinking," he glanced back at Eryn again, "you have the most amazing jugs I ever seen. And she wasn't carrying a water pitcher." He laughed again. His men laughed with him.

  "It is this way," Oz said.

  "So, I get up, and she comes over to me and grabs my hand, and the next thing I know she's leading me out of the town and into cornfields just like this. She forced herself on me right there in the middle of the field."

  "You're full of it," Wallace said.

  "No, I'm not. It's a true story."

  "It is not," Gesper agreed. "No woman is going to force herself on an ugly mug like you."

  "I wasn't ugly back then."

  "No respectable woman would force themselves on anyone," Eryn said.

  "I never said she was respectable."

  Their voices were growing louder in their banter. Eryn put a finger to her lips. "Shhh."

  They all fell silent at once.

  They stayed that way for a few minutes. Then Trock said, "Best girl I've ever lain with. Only time I ever done it outside, too."

  "Now I know you're lying," Wallace said. "You told us about Urla Grep not three hours ago, when we-"

  One moment, they were surrounded by high stalks of corn.

  The next, they were surrounded by crossbows.

  The men fell in around them, appearing through the vegetation as if they were spirits, close enough that if they fired they wouldn't have been able to miss on purpose. They were wearing dark cloaks, their faces hidden beneath layered cloth.

  Brigands? They aren't wearing army blacks.

  "Oz, hold," Eryn shouted. The juggernaut was already reaching for its sword. As strong as it was, it wouldn't have been able to cut them down before they all received a bolt to the eye. It stopped moving.

  "Who are you?" a man asked from Eryn's left. He was tall, nearly Wallace's height. All she could see of him were his brown eyes.

  Eryn was still carrying Wilem's wand. She clenched it tighter in her grip, ready to call on her magic. The man seemed to notice the motion, and he looked down at it. His eyes darted back up to her.

  "You're no Mediator," he said. He examined her more closely, and again Eryn was aware of how she must appear. "From the looks of you, you've had a run of a bad fortune of late."

  He eyed the soldiers, and then found Oz. He registered a moment of fear, but he didn't speak. Eryn gripped the wand a little tighter. Whatever he was planning to do, she would be ready to defend them.

  He turned back to her, and then slowly made a motion with his hand. The crossbows dropped.

  "Eryn Albion, I presume." He looked over at the soldiers again. "Which of you is General Talon Rast?"

  "None of them. Talon isn't here," Eryn said. She still wasn't sure what the man's intentions were, but the lowered crossbows were a good sign. "You know who I am. Who are you?"

  "My name is Finch," the man said, reaching up and pulling the cloth from his face. He was a younger man, with a large nose and a strong jaw that carried a few days of stubble. "Welcome to the rebellion."

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

  Eryn

  Finch and his companions led Eryn and hers from the cornfields, two miles to the crest of a short hill. Their camp was nestled on the other side, hidden on three sides by the hilltops, and on the fourth by a row of trees that had been painstakingly dug up and transported to the spot.

  "Wouldn't it have been easier to build up another berm?" Trock asked, looking down at the setup. There were perhaps a hundred people in the small camp, including women and children. They sat around co
ok fires kept intentionally low, sewed and laundered clothing, or put the edges of swords to stone to keep them sharp. A man in the back watched over a small pen containing half a dozen horses while a dog chased a thrown stick.

  "It would have," Finch agreed. "The Empire Road passes only a mile or so from the southern side, and when we spotted the site, we decided a berm would have stood out too much at that angle. It was tricky enough to get the trees out of the wood and cart them over here without being seen, though General Rast's escapades have done wonders for our ability to organize. Most of his army has been so busy hunting him down, they've forgotten about the camps like ours." He looked at Eryn when he said the last part.

  "Surely the patrols have come this way?" Eryn said.

  "We've seen the patrols go through, but only one has come over the hill. We dealt with them." He pointed to the north of the camp, where it was clear the earth had been recently dug. "He has too many soldiers to keep track of them all, especially now."

  Finch led them down the hill. The movement attracted the eyes of the camp, and all other activities stopped as everyone turned to watch them. Eryn could feel their gazes pass over her, most of them settling on the juggernaut, who now followed behind.

  A woman at one of the fires stood and walked over to Finch, wrapping her arms around him in a tight embrace. "You're back. I was getting worried." She looked at Eryn again, then the soldiers, then Oz, and then back to Eryn. She dropped to her knees in front of her. "My Lady. It is an honor."

  Eryn could feel the heat of her face and the jump of her heart. Why was this woman kneeling in front of her? She had done nothing to deserve such treatment.

  The other villagers approached them. Men, women, children. As they arrived, they followed the lead of the first, dropping to their knees in subjugation before her.

  "My Lady," they said.

  "I... I don't understand this," Eryn said.

  "You're a hero," Finch said, following them to his knees. "You and the General."

 

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