Rulers of the Darkness

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by Harry Turtledove


  He waited for everyone to nod and agree with him. In most squads, everybody would have. Here, the agreement was slow and halfhearted. It was badly acted by men who wanted to seem normal Gyongyosians but had trouble doing so. Lajos didn’t realize that. Istvan hoped the motions of the stars would grant that he never did. The young trooper grunted and shifted uncomfortably, knowing things had gone wrong and not understanding why.

  Szonyi said, “Captain, when can we take the fight to Swemmel’s men again? We drove ‘em through the mountains and we drove’em through the woods. We can still do it, any time we get the orders.”

  Tivadar answered, “If the men set over me tell me to go forward, go forward I shall, unless I should die serving Gyongyos, in which case the stars will cherish my spirit forevermore. But if the men set over me tell me to wait in place, wait in place I shall. And if the men set over you, Trooper, if they tell you to wait in place, wait in place you will. And they do. I do.”

  “Aye, sir.” Szonyi dipped his head in reluctant acquiescence. He was a man of his kingdom—and, like Istvan, a man of the countryside. Given his way, he would go straight at a foe, without subtlety but without hesitation, and keep going till one or the other of them couldn’t stand up anymore.

  “Remember, boys, you have to stay alert all the time,” Tivadar warned. “The Unkerlanters are better in the forest than we are. We couldn’t have come so far against ‘em if we didn’t have’em outnumbered. They don’t always need magic to have a go at us—sometimes sneakiness serves’em just as well.”

  He climbed out of the redoubt and headed off along the line to the next Gyongyosian strongpoint. Istvan wished his countrymen had enough men to cover all the line through the forest they held. They didn’t, especially in winter, where staying out alone might so easily lead to freezing to death.

  “The captain is a pretty good officer,” Lajos said.

  “Aye, he is,” Istvan agreed, and all the other veterans in the squad chimed in, too. Lajos let out a small sigh of relief. Not everyone thought he was an idiot all the time, anyhow.

  Kun said, “If we can keep what we hold now when the war is over, we’ll have won the greatest victory against Unkerlant in almost three hundred years.”

  “Is that a fact?” Istvan said, and Kun nodded in a way that proclaimed it was not only a fact, it was a fact anyone this side of feeblemindedness should have known. Istvan sent his corporal a look a little less than warm. Kun returned it: not quite so openly this time, for Istvan outranked him, but unmistakably nonetheless.

  Szonyi sniffed, for all the world like a hound taking a scent. “More snow coming,” he said. “Won’t be long, either. You can taste the wind.”

  Istvan had plenty of practice gauging the weather himself. He opened and closed his mouth a couple of times, as if he were taking bites out of the air. The chill of the wind—a wind that had suddenly picked up—the feel of the moisture it carried … He nodded. “Aye, we’re for it. Coming out of the west, from behind us.”

  “Blowing right into the Unkerlanters’ faces,” Szonyi said. “Seems a shame not to hit’em when we’ve got that kind of edge. We could be like mountain apes, gone before they even knew we were there.”

  “Aye, I see the resemblance, all right.” Kun planted the barb with a self-satisfied smirk. Szonyi glowered at him. Istvan kept the two of them from quarreling any worse than they usually did.

  Whether right about striking or not, Szonyi was right about the storm. It blew in that night, snow swirling around the trees and through their branches till Lajos, on sentry-go, complained, “How am I supposed to see anything? King Swemmel and his whole court could be out there drinking tea, by the stars, and I wouldn’t know it unless they invited me to have some.”

  “If Swemmel was out there, he’d be drinking spirits.” Istvan spoke with great conviction. “And the son of a whore wouldn’t invite anybody to share.” But he could see no farther than Lajos. If the Unkerlanters were gathering in the forest not far away, he might not know it till too late. He might not, but Kun would. He shook the onetime mage’s apprentice out of his bedroll.

  “What do you want?” Kun asked irritably, yawning in his face.

  “You’ve got that little magic that tells when somebody’s moving toward you,” Istvan answered. “Don’t you think this would be a good time to use it?”

  Kun eyed the snowstorm and nodded, though he warned, “The spell won’t say whether the men it spies are friends or foes.”

  “Just work it,” Istvan said impatiently. “If they’re coming toward us from out of the east, they’re no friends of ours.”

  “Well, you’re bound to be right about that,” Kun admitted, and worked the tiny spell. A moment later, he turned back to Istvan. “Nothing, Sergeant. Remember, the snow gives the Unkerlanters as much trouble as it gives us.”

  “All right.” Istvan used a brisk nod to hide his relief. He knew he shouldn’t have been so relieved; it wasn’t proper for a man from a warrior race. But even a man of a warrior race might have been excused for being unwilling to wait and receive a blow from the enemy.

  Kun said, “We’ll get through another day. That will do.” He sounded none too fierce himself, but Istvan didn’t reprove him.

  Now that Vanai dared go out onto the streets of Eoforwic once more, she wished she could find some books written in classical Kaunian. But they’d long since vanished from all the booksellers’ shops, those dealing in new and secondhand volumes alike: the Algarvians forbade them. The redheads had aimed to destroy Kaunianity even before they’d started destroying Kaunians.

  Vanai suspected she might have been able to get her hands on some had she known which booksellers to trust. But she didn’t, and she didn’t care to ask questions that might draw notice to herself. She made do with Forthwegian books.

  My magecraft makes me look like a Forthwegian, she thought. Even Ealstan sees me this way almost all the time. I speak Forthwegian almost all the time. People call me Thelberge, as if I really were a Forthwegian. Am I still Vanai?

  Whenever she looked in a minor, her old familiar features looked back at her. Her sorcery didn’t change the way she saw herself. In the mirror, she still had fair skin, a long face with a straight nose, and gray-blue eyes. But even in the mirror, her hair was black. Like any Kaunian with a grain of sense, she’d dyed it to make it harder for the Algarvians to penetrate her disguise.

  Am I still Vanai, if the world knows me as Thelberge? If the world knows me as Thelberge for long enough, will the Vanai inside me start to die? If Algarve wins the Derlavaian War, will I have to go on being Thelberge for the rest of my life?

  She didn’t want to think about things like that, but how could she help it? If the Algarvians won the war, would Eoforwic stay shabby and battered, its people—even real Forthwegians—scrawny, for the rest of her life? She didn’t want to think about that, either, but it looked like being true.

  A lot of the graffiti that said SULINGEN had been painted over, but Vanai knew what rectangles of fresh whitewash meant. She smiled fiercely every time she saw one. The Algarvians had pasted recruiting broadsheets for Plegmund’s Brigade everywhere they could, as if to mask the importance of the defeat they’d suffered from the Forthwegians and maybe from themselves.

  Up on the hill at the heart of the city stood the royal palace. Vanai hadn’t thought about King Penda very often back in the days before the war. She hadn’t thought much of him, either, but that was a different story. Like most Kaunians in Forthweg, she hadn’t been enamored of the rule of a man not of her blood, and a man who strongly preferred those who were of his own blood.

  These days, a large Algarvian flag, red, green, and white, flew about the palace. An Algarvian governor ruled Forthweg in Penda’s stead. Things surely had been less than ideal before the war. Now they were a great deal worse than that. Vanai shook her head. Who could have imagined such a thing?

  Eoforwic had several market squares. It needed them, to keep so many people fed. The one close
st to her block of flats was perhaps the smallest and meanest in the city, which meant it was larger than the one in Gromheort and dwarfed the tiny square back in Oyngestun.

  Vanai bought barley and beans and turnips: food for hard times, food that would keep people going when nothing better was to be had. Even the beans and barley were in short supply, and more expensive than they should have been. If Ealstan hadn’t brought home good money from casting accounts, the two of them might have gone hungry. By the pinched and anxious looks on the faces of a lot of people in the square, hunger was already loose in Eoforwic.

  She stayed watchful and wary as she carried her purchases back toward her flat. She’d heard stories of people knocked on the head for the sake of a sack of grain. She didn’t intend to be one of them.

  A blocky Forthwegian man stood in the middle of the sidewalk, staring east and pointing up into the sky. Vanai had to stop; there was no polite way around him. But she didn’t turn and look. For all she knew, he’d come up with a new way to distract people and then steal from them. If that did him an injustice, then it did. Better safe than sorry ran through her mind.

  Then the Forthwegian shouted something that made her change her mind: “Dragons! Unkerlanter dragons!”

  She was just starting to whirl when the first eggs fell on Eoforwic. “Get down!” screamed somebody who must have gone through such horror before. Vanai hadn’t—the Algarvians hadn’t reckoned Oyngestun important enough to waste eggs on it—but she wasted no time in throwing herself flat on the slates of the sidewalk … and on top of the precious food she’d bought. Even with dragons overhead, she couldn’t afford to lose that.

  More eggs burst, seemingly at random, some far away, others only a couple of blocks off. Along with the roars from the bursts came the almost musical tinkling of shattered glass hitting walls and pavements and shattering further and the screams of men and women either wounded or terrified.

  Now Vanai did look up. The dragons were hard to see. It was a cloudy day, and their bellies were painted a gray that made them look like nothing so much as moving bits of cloud themselves. The eggs their dragonfliers released were easier to spy. They were darker, and fell straight and swift.

  One seemed to fall straight toward Vanai. It got bigger and bigger—and burst only half a block away, close enough to pick her up and slam her back down to the ground with shocking and painful force. Her ears were stunned, deafened, she hoped not forever. A tiny sliver of glass tore a cut in the back of her left hand. But a full-throated scream drowned out her yelp.

  The man who’d warned of the Unkerlanter dragons lay writhing on the sidewalk. His hands clutched at his belly, from which blood poured: a flood, a torrent, a deluge of blood. Vanai stared in helpless, dreadful fascination. How much blood did a living man hold? More to the point, how much could he lose before he stopped being a living man?

  His shrieks faded. His hands relaxed. The blood poured off the edge of the sidewalk into the gutter. Vanai gulped, fighting sickness.

  Almost as soon as it began, the Unkerlanter attack ended. The dragons had flown a long way. They couldn’t carry very many eggs, or very heavy ones. As soon as they’d dropped what cargo of death they could bring, their dragonfliers guided them back toward the west once more.

  Vanai picked up her groceries and hurried past the stocky man’s corpse toward her block of flats. A couple of other bodies lay beyond that one. She tried not to look at them, either. A wounded woman cried out, but someone was already tending to her. Vanai went on without feeling the bite of conscience.

  Eoforwic boiled like an anthill stirred by a stick. People who’d been inside their homes and shops when the eggs started falling came rushing out to see if loved ones and friends were all right or simply to see what had happened. People who’d been on the street rushed toward their homes and shops to make sure those were still standing. Here and there, physicians and mages and firefighting crews had to push their way through the chaos to do their duty.

  All things considered, the Algarvian constables on the streets did a pretty good job of opening the way so help could get where it was going. They weren’t subtle or gentle about it: they screamed abuse in their language and in broken Forthwegian and Kaunian, and they used their bludgeons to wallop anyone who proved even a split second slow in grasping what they meant. But Vanai didn’t think Forthwegian constables would have acted differently. They did what needed doing on the spur of the moment; whys and wherefores could wait.

  Vanai let out a great sigh of relief when she found her block of flats undamaged but for a couple of broken windows and no fires burning anywhere close by. She carried the barley and turnips and beans up to her flat, set down the sacks in the kitchen, and poured herself a large cup of wine.

  She’d got halfway down it, a warm glow beginning to spread through her, when she started worrying about Ealstan. What if he didn’t come back? What if he couldn’t come back? What if he were injured? What if he were … ? She wouldn’t even think the word. She gulped down the rest of the wine instead.

  Hour followed hour. Ealstan didn’t come. There’s no reason for him to come, Vanai told herself, over and over again. He’s doing what he has to do, that’s all. That made perfect sense. Eoforwic was a big city. The Unkerlanter raid had killed or wounded a relative handful of people. The odds that Ealstan was one of them were vanishingly small. Aye, it all made perfect logical sense. It didn’t stop her heart from racing or her breath from whistling in her throat with anxiety.

  And it didn’t stop her from leaping in the air when she heard the coded knock at the door, or from crying out, “Where were you?” when Ealstan came inside.

  “Casting accounts. Where else would I be?” he answered. Vanai’s expression must have been eloquent, for he added, “None of the eggs fell anywhere near me. See? I’m right as rain.”

  Maybe he was telling the truth. Maybe he just didn’t want her to worry. She didn’t say anything about the cut on her hand, for fear he would worry. What she did say was, “Powers above be praised that you’re safe.” She squeezed the breath out of him.

  “Oh, aye, I’m fine. All things considered, it wasn’t much of a raid. I wonder if any of those dragons will get home again.” Ealstan sounded dispassionate, but his arms tightened around her.

  She squeezed him again. “Why did the Unkerlanters bother, if they didn’t do Eoforwic any harm?”

  “Oh, I didn’t say that,” Ealstan answered. “Haven’t you heard?”

  “Heard what?” Now Vanai wanted to shake him. “I was bringing groceries home when it happened, and I came straight here afterwards. How could I have heard anything?”

  “All right. All right. I’ll talk,” Ealstan said, as if she were a constable pounding the truth out of him. “Most of their eggs fell around the ley-line caravan depot, and a couple of them smashed it up pretty well. The Algarvians will have some trouble moving soldiers through there for a while.”

  “Soldiers or … anybody else,” Vanai said slowly. She couldn’t bring herself to come out and mention by name the Kaunians the Algarvians sent west to be sacrificed so their life energy could power the redheads’ sorceries.

  “Aye, or anybody else.” Ealstan understood what she meant. He set a hand on her shoulder. “With that sorcery you worked out, you’ve done more to make that hard for Mezentio’s men than all the Unkerlanter dragons put together.”

  “Have I?” Vanai considered that. It was a pretty big thought. “Maybe I have,” she said at last. “But even if I have, it’s still not enough. The Algarvians shouldn’t have been able to do what they did in the first place.”

  Ealstan nodded. “I know that. Anybody with any brains knows it. They never would have been able to, either, if so many Forthwegians didn’t hate Kaunians.” He gave Vanai a quick kiss. “You need to remember that not all Forthwegians do.”

  She smiled. “I already knew that. I’m always glad to hear it again, though—and to see proof.” This time, she kissed him. One thing led to another.
They ended up eating supper later than they’d intended to. They were both young enough to take that kind of thing for granted, even to laugh about it. Vanai never stopped to wonder how rare and fortunate it was.

  Commander Cornelu guided his leviathan out of the harbor at Setubal and into the Strait of Valmiera. The leviathan was a fine, frisky beast. Cornelu patted its smooth, slick skin. “You may be as good as Eforiel,” he said. “Aye, you just may.”

  The leviathan wriggled its long, slim body beneath him. It was far more sinuous, far more graceful, than its blocky cousins, the whales. It didn’t understand what he’d said—he didn’t think it would have understood even if he’d spoken Lagoan rather than his native Sibian—but it liked to hear him speak.

  He patted it again. “Do you know what kind of compliments I’m paying you?” he asked. Since the leviathan couldn’t answer, he did: “No, of course you don’t. But if you did, you’d be flattered, believe me.”

  He’d ridden Eforiel from Sibiu to Lagoas after the Algarvians overran his island. Going into exile in Lagoas was vastly preferable to yielding to the invaders. Without false modesty, he knew Sibian-trained leviathans were the best in the world. Eforiel could do things no Lagoan leviathan-rider could hope to get his mount to match.

  But Eforiel was dead, slain off his home island of Tirgoviste. After making his way back to Lagoas again, he’d had this new beast for a while, and he’d worked hard to train it up to Sibian standards. It was getting there. It might even have already arrived.

  The leviathan darted to the left. Its jaws opened for a moment, then closed on a mackerel. A gulp and the fish was gone. Those great tooth jaws wouldn’t have made more than two bites of a man—maybe only one. Like dragonfliers, leviathan-riders had, and needed to have, great respect for the beasts they took to war. Unlike dragonfliers, they got respect and affection in return. Cornelu wouldn’t have wanted anything to do with dragons.

  “Nasty, stupid, bad-tempered beasts,” he told the leviathan. “Nothing like you. No, nothing like you.”

 

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