Royal Exile
Page 8
De Vis shook his head. “Where is Faren?”
The archer was almost manhandled in.
“Well, show us, then!” the king ordered, more ferociously than perhaps he intended. Faren flinched.
It was De Vis who snatched the note and read it. “Well, it seems Loethar has perfect command of our written language. Or he had someone write this for him—perhaps the poor sod recently slain. Either way, majesty, he requests that you meet him for a parley.”
The king looked surprised. “But this is what we want.”
“I can’t allow you to take him up on the offer, your highness. I will go in your stead. I agree it’s important we meet but we cannot risk you.”
Brennus nodded. “Has he said when, where?”
De Vis handed the note to the king. “He is bold. He is happy to meet in front of Brighthelm, in full view of Penraven but obviously out of range of archers.”
“Doesn’t trust us?” Brennus said, his tone laden with sarcasm.
De Vis gave a grim smile. “Seems not.”
“It says here he will meet at the sound of a bell. His, I presume?”
De Vis shrugged. “I’ll be ready.” He turned to Faren. “You may go.”
Once again Gavriel saw the man glare defiantly at his father, although Legate De Vis hardly noticed the archer’s expression. “Thank you, sir.”
“One more thing.”
“Yes, legate.”
“How is your sister?”
Faren shrugged, slightly embarrassed. “He wasn’t my brother-in-law, sir. The horse wasn’t the one I thought it was once I got up close.”
“I wouldn’t think your brother-in-law would have a horse that answers to the whistle of our enemy.”
“No, sir.”
“But if it wasn’t your family why did you give him the note?”
“He said he would find my sister for me if he could.”
“I see. And are you aware the man was shot in the back by our not so gallant enemy?”
“I am, sir, yes. Shocking.”
De Vis studied the archer. “I trust nothing incriminating or dangerous was in that note, Faren?”
The archer looked deeply affronted. “Why would I do such a thing?” he demanded, adding “sir” as an afterthought. “He got killed after I’d given it to him, sir. It was too late to worry about it then.”
Gavriel couldn’t help but mistrust the man. There was something cunning lurking behind that innocent expression, something directed at his father that he couldn’t for the life of him work out.
“All right, Faren. Back to your post.”
The man bowed to his king, banged his fist against his heart to the legate and departed.
“Something’s amiss there, father,” Gavriel said, unable to stop himself.
“Yes, I noticed. All the more reason for you to take your leave. Your majesty, I have instructed Gavriel to put the plan into action. The prince and he should leave immediately.”
“Yes, yes of course,” Brennus agreed.
The Valisar king turned to his son. “Come here, Leo, my boy. We must now say goodbye, you and I.”
Gavriel was as unhappy as Leo was to be hurrying down the stone steps away from where all the action was about to take place. The farewell between both pairs of fathers and sons had been stilted as each individual did his best to quell his emotion. Gavriel felt the goodbye as a pain at the back of his throat, as though grief had taken a form and now resided as a diseased lump…a cancer.
“Gav, we have to watch what happens,” Leo suddenly said, stopping short. “If we leave right now we’ll have no idea what has occurred, and therefore what are the best decisions to make once we’re on the run.”
The prince was right. Gavriel bit his lip as he thought it through. “I was going to give you time to speak with your mother.”
“When I hugged her tonight I already felt like I’d said goodbye. She was so sad. I don’t want to see her crying like that again…unless we can take her with—”
“We can’t,” Gavriel interrupted. “I’m sorry, Leo.”
The prince’s lips thinned. “But you agree we need to know what’s happening, don’t you?”
“Yes. I’m thinking we can see it from the spare watchtower.”
“The one with the broken hinge on the door, you mean?”
Gavriel nodded. “No one uses it but we can probably get a reasonable view of what’s happening. We’ll also be out of everyone’s way.”
“Come on!” Leo said, bounding up the rest of the flight of stairs.
They encountered no one of note on their way; a few servants passed, rushing about their business, but they hardly glanced in the boys’ direction. Until of course they ran into Genrie.
“Majesty, Master De Vis,” the servant said, striding in her usual manner, arms laden with heavy linen. She curtsied to the prince as she stopped.
“Genrie,” Gavriel said as they approached. Leo said nothing but Gavriel could all but see smoke erupting from his ears at the delay. “Need help?” he offered.
“I can manage, thank you,” she replied. “Where are you hurrying to?” She cast a stern glance toward the prince but she addressed Gavriel. He wished she hadn’t done either.
“Actually, none of your business,” Leo replied.
“Well, can I let someone know you are in this part of the palace, your majesty?” It was offered sincerely, no hint of curiosity in her voice. Gavriel believed she was genuinely being polite.
“Why?” Leo asked.
She was undeterred by his uncharacteristically brusque manner. “This area is mainly storage. I just thought—”
“Don’t think, please, Genrie, not on my behalf anyway,” Leo said and Gavriel frowned as the prince moved on. He threw a glance of apology toward Genrie but she appeared unimpressed by his politeness or by the prince’s rudeness. She’d already turned her back on him.
Once inside, Gavriel pushed the door closed quietly. “Why are you so determined to be rude to Genrie?”
“I told you. She dislikes me and it’s obvious. And that’s fine, I don’t care. But I don’t appreciate her snoopy ways. She’s far too interested in my life, always giving me looks of disapproval.”
Gavriel sighed and when Leo pointed toward a candle, he shook his head. “No flame. We’d light up like a beacon from outside and I just know my father will know who it is.”
“Mine too,” Leo said, conspiratorially. “Have we missed much?”
“Nothing as far as I can tell. If you stand on that old crate, you’ll see better,” Gavriel said, pointing. “That window will give you a good view.”
Leo did as suggested and a silence fell over them both as they spotted Legate De Vis guiding his horse slowly out from beneath the great gates of Brighthelm. He held himself proudly erect and Gavriel noted that his father had shown immense faith in the barbarian leader’s request for parley, taking himself unarmed toward the enemy.
Leo seemed to read his thoughts. “Your father is not wearing his sword or any armor,” he said, awe in his voice.
“It’s a peaceful discussion,” Gavriel said, although the callous death of the Barronel rider suggested it was anything but that.
“A peaceful discussion?” The prince scowled. “Before we all start trying to kill each other, that is.”
“There’s Loethar,” Gavriel said, pressing forward, squinting as he saw a shadow move against the line of trees.
“Does he really think he’s out of range of our archers?”
“No. He knows he’s not. He won’t take any chances. They’ll talk, that’s all.”
“I wish I could hear their conversation.”
Gavriel nodded silently in the dark of their tower. The torch his father carried threw a bright glow around the parley spot, which was well past the halfway mark between the castle and the woodland. Once again he felt a surge of love for his father’s bravery. Loethar moved his horse forward into that circle of light now and Gavriel held his breath, certain that every othe
r person watching—especially the king—did the same.
Initially both men sat seemingly relaxed in their saddles, leaning slightly toward each other. But the language of their bodies quickly changed when the barbarian stiffened. Alarm pulsed through Gavriel as he saw his father open his arms at his side, in a strange gesture that echoed of an attempt to convey innocence. And then, suddenly, the marauder reached behind his back and lifted a mean-looking blade clear of a hidden scabbard. It was a fluid movement, clearly one he had performed countless times previously and Loethar didn’t break speed or rhythm as he brought the blade down onto the legate’s head with all of his body’s force, cleaving a grisly path that ended midway through the soldier’s neck.
Gavriel let out a sound of anguish and then his stomach heaved at the momentary glimpse of one side of his father’s head falling away before his body slumped unnaturally sideways. The legate’s horse started at the unnatural movement, turning a frantic circle before dashing off toward the trees. Gavriel could see little other than what the moon and the torch—now smoldering in the grass—could highlight, but the vague shapes told him that his father had fallen to the ground. The legate’s foot was still stuck in the stirrup and although it was bent at an unnatural angle, it clung doggedly and his body was being dragged behind the now panicked horse.
Loethar was yelling from somewhere in the dark. Gavriel could no longer make out his shape but his voice carried through the still, suddenly unnaturally silent night.
“I demanded to see you, Brennus, not your lackey! And now that you have insulted me, not even paid me the due respect, I will slaughter every member of your family and one member from every family who lives in Penraven. Do not let it be said that I am not a magnanimous emperor of the Set for I shall let them choose who dies. But there will be no mercy for the Valisars.” He spat, turned his horse and rode for the trees, long before the first archer could refocus sufficiently to unleash a single arrow into the darkness.
Gavriel stood unsteadily, swallowing back the desire to vomit, to scream, to hurt Loethar. Breathing shallowly he gasped, “Leo, we go now.”
“Gavriel,” an equally shocked prince began.
“Now!” Gavriel yelled into Leo’s face and the youngster fled toward the door.
And then they were running.
With the trees to shield them Loethar stood with Stracker at the head of the two units he’d ordered to follow him to Penraven. It had not been his intention to try and take Brighthelm this night but golden opportunities rarely flagged their arrival in advance. And today a particularly precious one presented itself to him via a curious note that had been given to the Barronel prisoner. The Barronel prisoner they had made use of had been swiftly despatched in front of the Penravian audience but the horse had brought his body back and with it a note from a disgruntled soldier called Del Faren. Faren had curiously offered to open the eastern side gate. In return he requested they slaughter Legate De Vis publicly.
“Do you think it’s a trick?” Stracker mused, watching lights being extinguished all over Brighthelm as the king ordered its shut down.
Loethar didn’t answer immediately, stroking Vyk’s large head instead while he considered the situation. He too watched candlelight and torches winking out all over the massive castle, which had been so brightly illuminated for their arrival. A show of power, no doubt. He smiled in the dark. It seemed Brennus had been expecting him but if Valya’s information was correct, Brennus and De Vis were blood brothers. The king would not have expected the death of his legate and close friend.
“No,” he said finally. “Faren, I suspect, is a traitor.”
“Having the head of the army slaughtered is certainly a daring move. He must trust you to be a man of your word.”
Loethar shrugged. “De Vis is expendable. It was no hardship to me.”
“So you think we can trust this Faren?”
“I trust no one. But I think he will be shocked that we took him at his word and did as he requested in killing De Vis. He’ll have little choice now about opening the gate for he knows I can tell the king who betrayed him. I imagine this is a man with a grudge and that desire for revenge has now been answered. A weak man—as he obviously is—will feel compelled to obey the plan, lacking in courage or imagination to do otherwise.”
“So we go?”
Loethar nodded. “We only have one chance at this. If we send a scouting party, they may well get in but that won’t be enough of us to take the castle.” He scratched at his beard, the trinkets of silver that pierced his skin making a soft jangle as he did so. “We all go.”
There was no time to pick up anything and Gavriel was grateful that he was already wearing his sword and dagger. As they neared the kitchens, he realized he was running so hard he was almost on top of the prince. As they burst through into the main preparation area, their arrival scattered pots and pans loudly. But instead of seeing Cook Faisal and his team, Gavriel found himself staring at the person he least expected to see in the kitchens.
“Master Freath,” he said, stunned.
“Your highness,” Freath acknowledged first, before inclining his head ever so briefly at Gavriel. “Master De Vis.”
“Why are you here?” Gavriel demanded.
The man looked down his aquiline nose at him. “I wasn’t aware I needed your permission.”
“Where is everyone?” Gavriel replied, ignoring the reprimand, looking around uncertainly. Was this a trap too?
“I imagine you can work that out yourself, Master De Vis. There seems to be quite a show going on out there.”
“How dare you, you bastard!”
“Gavriel!” The prince slid away from his champion and stood between the two men. “Be calm,” he warned, sounding almost like his father. “Master Freath, where is Cook?”
Freath nodded once politely at the boy’s manners. “I have dismissed most of the kitchen staff upon the queen’s orders. In fact many staff are dismissed. I think you misunderstood me earlier, Master De Vis. Loethar and his men have already breached Brighthelm. Word has come down from the battlements from King Brennus himself that we have been betrayed by one of our own. Someone opened a side gate, and too many of the barbarian horde breached Brighthelm, I gather, before we realized we had a traitor in our midst.”
“Faren,” Gavriel murmured.
“I wouldn’t know. None but the key staff is required to do anything other than return to their families. We no longer have any stronghold. Our soldiers are now fighting for their lives.”
Gavriel felt his insides twist with fear. Brighthelm breached! He thought it would be weeks, possibly months of siege before the Valisar stronghold showed any signs of weakening. And he had held to the hope that Loethar would tire of the endless waiting, that a peace could be negotiated. The vision lingered of his father’s shape being dragged behind a horse, his head in halves. “And you, Master Freath? Why do you remain?” Gavriel asked rudely.
Gavriel knew that the Valisar family liked Freath but the manservant worked primarily for the queen and none of the De Vis family came into contact with him much. Gavriel had never fully warmed to the wintry, somehow superior, expression Freath wore most of the time. If he were honest, on the occasions he did come into contact with him, he found the man’s acute intellect unnerving.
“I have no family, Master De Vis. The palace is my home, the royals are the people closest to me in the world.”
“Indeed. Did the king tell you anything else?”
“That I was to await your arrival and give you a message.”
Leo stepped forward. “What is it, Master Freath? Does he wish me to go to my mother?”
“No, your highness. His message was rather cryptic. He wishes you to follow the plan, but not to leave as originally arranged. He believes the marauding barbarian to be far more cunning than we have given him credit for. We already know from his recent action against the legate that he has no honor whatsoever.” Gavriel bristled. “Master de Vis, forgive me if
I sound insensitive. The fact is your father is dead and nothing can be done to change that. Couple this with the fact that time is of the essence and you have a situation in which my words sound harsh…cruel, even.”
Gavriel clenched his jaw, unmoved by the hollow apology. “What are the king’s instructions for our crown prince, Freath?”
The queen’s aide straightened. “He suspects we are already surrounded. You cannot hear it down here but the fighting is fierce. Do not set foot out of Brighthelm.”
“Did he tell you what we should do?” Leo asked, aghast.
Freath shook his head, his expression grim. “I’m sorry, your highness,” he said, looking only at Leo. “He seemed to think that you alone would know.”
Leo turned to Gavriel. “Let’s go.”
“Where?” Gavriel asked, feeling helpless. He ran a hand through his hair, glowering at Freath. “You’d better return to her highness.”
“Oh, I intend to, Master De Vis, now that I’ve fulfilled this errand. Your highness,” he bowed low, “may Lo light your path and keep you safe.” At Gavriel he simply nodded as he pushed past them. Gavriel mumbled a curse under his breath at the aide’s tall, narrow frame.
“Come on!” Leo urged. “We have to go back into the castle.”
“You know if we do that we’ll be trapped. There’s nowhere to hide indefinitely.”
Leo frowned. “There is a way out—it’s risky, a bit dangerous, too, but we have no other choice.”
It didn’t sound very encouraging but Gavriel had nothing else to offer. He ran out after the youngster and behind him heard the main kitchen door smash open.
Gavriel felt a surge of panic break through the stupor he had begun to drift into. “Run!” he growled.
Six
Loethar felt a pulse running through his body that he could liken only to the flashes of awakening that the sky experienced from time to time during a storm. Although he showed little in his expression, he was elated to finally have his prize in front of him: the King of Penraven, 8th of the arrogant, powerful Valisars that had ruled the region and virtually controlled the Set for centuries. He smiled at Vyk, who was awkwardly hopping around the king.