‘But we don’t have a choice, do we? Sha-Kaan has seen to that,’ said Hirad.
‘No we don’t,’ agreed Denser. ‘But there’s one more thing. We have to be inside the rip to collapse it.’
The shock swept through them though they were far removed from him. For those on watch, it was like a tornado in the mind, reaving the promise from the subconscious and threading turmoil through the conscious.
For those at rest, it was a nightmare come to haunt. The removal of security in sleep and the awakening of anxiety. Moans escaped from two hundred pairs of lips.
Any Wesmen watching would have seen the physical symptoms but would never have guessed the cause. The watch-line swayed, free hands clutched heads, legs quivered and feet sought new purchase. And behind them, the rest stood, staring in every direction, not believing the reality so rudely thrust upon them.
The shock had passed in a few moments but the after-effects would rumble on.
Aeb rocked his head, trying to clear the muddle encasing his mind. He could feel his brothers, he would always feel them, but he could not feel their Given.
He is gone. We have failed. The thought chased itself across the Protectors’ minds, accompanied by an acute feeling of loss and a dissolution of purpose.
It is not our failure. Aeb urged his response into the cacophony of sending. We are resolute in our mission. We have not surrendered the Manse.
But as he said it, he realised the futility of their position. They were guarding the Manse for the return of their Given. He was now dead. Their response now was surely to return immediately to Xetesk. The Wesmen no longer needed to be fought or kept at bay but they were still there and would surely prevent any Protector move to leave.
Aeb felt the confusion flood the Soul Tank. They were trapped but with no reason or drive to fight. Yet fight they would have to, hoping for salvation from other quarters than their Given.
Sol. We can fight for Sol, came a random thought.
Aeb flared. Our goal is to survive until such times as we can return to Xetesk to await further Givings. He paused, aware that the flow of other thought had ceased. He was the only one communicating. He felt them all. We all respect and revere Sol. He was a brother Protector. He alone among men understands our Calling. But without our Given, we can only fight for ourselves. Each of you fight for his brothers. Hold that ideal in your soul and we will still triumph. Return to your positions. The night is not over.
But he wondered. He wondered at the break in the linkage the Given had provided them. Had they enough belief in their own right to survive alone to win? Dawn would give him his answer.
Darrick could see the glow of the fires of the Wesmen camp around Septern Manse an hour before they were within striking distance. Forward mage scouts were despatched to assess the strength of Senedai’s outer defence, only to return to say there was none beyond the camp perimeter, which completely encircled the Manse and its few fierce defenders.
A brief Communion with Izack’s forces set the attack time. They would both move in, half an hour after the Wesmen had resumed their fight with the Protectors, Darrick deciding that the noise of battle was the best cover for any surprise strike. He and Izack between them commanded a little in excess of six thousand men and mages. It still left them severely outnumbered, given Tessaya’s tribes in the vicinity, but it was not a straight stand-up fight; and Darrick, master of spoiling tactics against the Wesmen, felt it gave him the edge.
Darrick could still hardly believe his plan had worked thus far. Under a strict silence order, with weapons and armour tied down, the fittest elements of the remaining regiments had run out of the back of their encampment, traversed north three miles and turned east, heading over rough ground towards the Manse.
Under the sure eyes of elf-scouts and mages, they had covered their advance from any watching eyes, their intimate knowledge of the terrain allowing them to keep a high pace throughout the night, stopping for just five minutes in each hour.
Finally, they halted, an hour’s march from the Wesmen, in a shallow valley part-sheltered from the wind but not from the intermittent showers that still fell from a lowering sky. Darrick had personally toured every centile, thanking them all for their incredible effort and exhorting them for one more when dawn broke.
And now he sat alone with his thoughts, stretching the muscles of his legs. To sleep was fruitless with dawn so close but rest was vital for what could be a long day.
It was only now that Darrick felt the enormity of his gamble. He knew the day was dawning with the noon shade over Parve completely covering the city, if the calculations had been correct. It was the beginning of the time when the Kaan would be too few to protect it effectively and when enemy dragons could potentially fly through to attack Balaia. But when or if The Raven would appear, he had no idea. If they didn’t, he supposed it didn’t matter, because it would mean the rip over Parve couldn’t be closed and, sooner or later, they would all die in flames anyway.
And if they did appear, what difference did it make if Septern’s rip was still in Eastern hands? The Raven were just a few when the opposing sides were drawn up and, good as they were, if the battle wasn’t going the way of the East by the time they returned, they would merely have saved Balaia for the Wesmen to rule.
He had always known it, he supposed. This wasn’t merely an exercise in stopping Wesmen from gaining the rip and the opportunity to defeat The Raven. It was a fight for Balaia. He knew exactly why he hadn’t communicated it. Something inside him had prevented him from believing it himself until now. While they had been trapped by Tessaya, he hadn’t wanted to let any desperation creep into his men. The desire to break through might have deflected them from the task of seeing at least some of the army through to the Manse.
But now they were largely all here, they should know the whole truth. Indeed they had to. If they were to fight and win against the odds they faced, they had to know what exactly was at stake. And Izack had to deliver the same message.
He got to his feet and went in search of a mage.
Sha-Kaan’s eyes blazed and he turned his head from Hirad who looked anxiously at The Raven gathered behind him.
‘Find another solution,’ said the dragon flatly. ‘This that you suggest will not happen.’
‘Great Kaan, there is no other solution. We are out of time. There is no room for more research. The rip has to be closed now or by your own admission it will be too large for your numbers to defend.’
Dawn had broken, though the fires still cast their mist-reflected light, and the day was beginning to warm.
‘No human will ever ride a Kaan dragon. It is submission. It is forbidden.’
‘It isn’t submission, it’s necessity,’ implored Ilkar.
Sha-Kaan’s head snapped back around, enormous fangs dripping fuel. ‘I do not recall inviting you to speak, elf.’
Hirad took a deep breath. ‘Sha-Kaan, I am your Dragonene. May I speak freely?’
‘It is your right,’ said Sha-Kaan.
‘Right.’ Hirad strode around to face the Great Kaan square on. ‘I understand your feelings about the situation but it is our only chance. I know it wasn’t your desire but, in killing Styliann, you removed a great part of our casting strength. Let’s face it, you created this mess.
‘But never mind that. Do you really think that we want to sit on dragons and fly into the middle of a battle to cast a spell? Do you think this is what we planned to happen? The furthest I have ever been in the air is as high as I can jump. Gods falling, Sha-Kaan, I can think of nothing worse than flying. Mages do it under their own power, warriors do not. And none of us, believe me, want to experience flight this way.’
Sha-Kaan regarded him solemnly. ‘And that is to convince me to accede to your request.’
‘Well, yes, but more than that, it’s to tell you that we none of us want this. Not you and certainly not The Raven. But it’s the only choice for your Brood and for Balaia. We’re prepared to try it. Are y
ou?’
‘But the shame of the submission.’ His head dropped.
‘Damn the bloody shame!’ Hirad raised his voice. ‘If this doesn’t work, there’ll be none of you alive to feel the shame. And if it does, you’ll be strong enough to shove shame down the long neck of any Brood that taunts you. What in all the hells are you worrying about?’
‘I think there’s history here,’ said Denser, attempting to placate both parties.
‘At last, wise words from the thief,’ responded Sha-Kaan. Denser smiled thinly.
‘Yeah, and it’ll be us that’s history if we can’t get up to the rip,’ said Hirad. ‘Sha-Kaan?’
The Great Dragon closed his eyes and drew his head back, his neck making the formal ‘s’. For a time, he was silent, then he opened his eyes to speak.
‘No dragon will submit to being ridden by a human. It is the ultimate sign of defeat for it signals that the dragon has become subservient to the human. But the Kaan understand that it is not to rule us that you wish carriage by us. It is to save both our races. For this reason alone, we agree to this partnership. Three dragons will each carry one mage. Those dragons shall be Nos-Kaan, Hyn-Kaan and Sha-Kaan. Elu-Kaan shall remain in his Choul, to rule the Brood should I fail to return.’ It was a speech made in the language of Balaia but Hirad knew that his mind had pulsed the same message to every Vestare and Kaan dragon in the Broodlands. The total silence was testament to the enormity of what had been decided.
‘Great Kaan, your faith will be repaid by The Raven saving your Brood from destruction,’ said Hirad, bowing his head.
Behind him, he heard The Unknown relax and he turned, a smile on his face.
‘Calmer now, Unknown?’
‘Naturally.’ He frowned. ‘Missed something, have I?’
Hirad nodded. ‘Just a bit. I mean, we all know the mages have to go up there but who do you think’s going to hold them on while they’re casting?’
The colour drained from The Unknown’s face and beside him Thraun’s jaw dropped.
‘Oh dear Gods in the sky,’ muttered The Unknown. ‘I wondered why you kept talking about yourself and flying in the same breath. Is there no other way?’
Hirad shook his head. ‘Unknown, I am surprised at you.’ He winked at Ilkar. ‘And anyway, The Raven never fight apart, remember? ’
The Unknown cleared his throat. ‘I think I’d better go and find some rope.’
Chapter 36
Darrick’s men moved closer and his scouts reported via Communion that Senedai was again taking the fight to the Protectors. Dawn had cast its gloomy light across Balaia, illuminating a tableau of rock, brush and scrubland soaked by steady rain.
Darrick brought his men to a halt near the head of a gentle rise. And, with the sounds of many thousand Wesmen voices raised in chant just carrying on the wind, he jumped up on a rock and begged for attention.
‘You all know why we’re here, and I must first thank you all for the determination, faith and courage you have displayed ever since we came together on the shores of the Bay of Gyernath.
‘Our march has changed from one of liberation to one of revenge. It is now one of defence. But not merely defence of Septern Manse to thwart the Wesmen and give The Raven and Styliann the time they need. There is far, far more at stake and I need you all to understand this before we march to battle.’
Darrick saw a ripple pass through the small army, a murmur like wind across calm ocean. He had them. Now he had to inspire them into fighting for the lives of every man, woman and child east of the College Cities.
‘Consider our situation. Gyernath stands but it has no reserves. Blackthorne is gone. So too is Julatsa. The remaining Colleges face enormous threat from west of the Blackthorne Mountains and a Wesmen army stands ready to strike Korina. Unless we stop it.
‘Korina has a pitiful regular guard. It has no walls. Baron Gresse might have mounted resistance but he is here with us. The other Barons hide in their castles, defending what is theirs and fragmenting our defence by so doing.
‘Who is left? You. You are Balaia’s final hope of victory and salvation. Nothing else stands in the way of the Wesmen. And if you believe in your land and your people - your family and those who you will never meet - we will be victorious.
‘The Wesmen may have the greater numbers but we have the greater heart. We have the fire inside of us, we have the belief. We are fighting for our land and the people we love.
‘The future of Balaia will not be decided at the gates of Korina, nor at the walls of Xetesk. It will be decided here at Septern Manse today.
‘And I know that every one of you will play his part. I believe in you. Do you?’
The roar that greeted his question lifted Darrick’s heart and made him very happy that the Wesmen had already begun their attack.
Great words, he thought, but the truth would be told by the stroke of the sword and the play of the mana.
Time to believe. Time to fight.
‘Sol?’
The Unknown spun round at the sound of his given name. It was Cil. He, Ile and Rya were standing over the mound of recently-turned earth under which the remains of Styliann’s blasted body now lay. There had been no reverence, indeed no interest from any but Denser who had felt a collegiate responsibility for the ex-Master’s burial.
No grand ceremony for Styliann in the crypts of Xetesk. No lying in state, no train of mourning, no ritual entombment. No honour. Just a rude grave dug in the soft ground away from the river under a rock overhang in an alien dimension. Dug by Protectors using Vestare tools and infilled the same way.
The Unknown walked towards the trio. Vestare woven rope coils over his shoulders.
‘What is it, Cil?’ he asked.
‘The decision has been made. We won’t travel back to Balaia. We are staying here, to live among the Kaan.’
The Unknown nodded. ‘I thought you might. Now, you are sure you can still feel your souls.’
‘And should the loneliness become too much, we can return,’ said Rya.
‘The masks?’ The Unknown touched his cheek, a painful memory returning unbidden.
‘You are the one chosen to be first to see,’ said Cil. ‘The demons can’t harm us here. They have no control in this dimension. Here, we are free.’
Without hesitation, each Protector unstrapped and lifted off his mask and clutched it in his hands.
The Unknown held his breath but the wonder in their eyes told him all he needed to know. They were feeling the air on their faces for the first time in months, maybe years. They took in huge lungfuls, shook their heads and drank in a world where their sight was unencumbered by the edges of their moulded eyeholes.
Rya, Ile and Cil were all young men, none of them older than twenty-five. Their faces, white but for the dark areas around eyes and mouth, were striped by red weals and marked by boils and sores that, though treated by Xeteskian healers to prevent infection, were never able to fully heal under the masks. Now they would and Cil’s young, handsome face, strong-featured with deep green eyes, would be a loss to the women of Balaia. The Unknown smiled to himself; at least that was one less in competition with him when he returned.
No words were needed to express their feelings. Their eyes said more than the longest text in Xetesk’s library. The Unknown, Sol, walked to the men, free while they remained in the dragon dimension, and hugged each one. He looked deep into Cil’s eyes, seeing the hope of every Protector reflected there.
‘One day, we will all be free and you can return unmasked as you are now. Our brotherhood will never be forgotten and, though we all once again own our souls, we will never be parted. Believe me, I still feel you.’
Cil nodded. ‘You’d better go. We’re joining the second wave of ground defence with the Vestare.’
‘Good luck,’ said The Unknown.
‘And to The Raven.’
The Unknown trotted back to where The Raven stood by the dragons that would carry them to the rip. Each stood in the shado
w cast by an enormous body, looking along the neck and up to the head that was held high and proud. Ilkar and Hirad would sit at the base of Sha-Kaan’s neck, the warrior behind to hold the mage in place when his casting took all his concentration. The Unknown and Denser would ride Nos-Kaan and Erienne would be held by Thraun on Hyn-Kaan.
‘Ready?’ asked Hirad.
‘Yes,’ said The Unknown, glancing back again to the free men. ‘There’s a lot of work to do back in Balaia. Let’s get going.’
There had been a feverish discussion about how best to attach themselves to the dragons. Sha-Kaan and Jatha had joined them and, in the end, the solution chosen was a relatively simple one. Each member of The Raven would have a rope looped and tied around their midriff, leaving both arms and legs free for grip and balance. The rope would then be tied hard around the dragon’s lower neck.
The idea wasn’t that the rope should hold them firmly in place but to stop them falling should they slip. The lower neck would move the least while still being narrow enough to sit astride. The mound of the body would provide anchor against slipping backwards and if the dragon dived . . .
‘. . . we’ll just have to hang on,’ said Hirad. ‘Right, let’s be aware that communication’s going to be very difficult. Sha-Kaan will lead the flight, keeping the dragons as close together as possible. We’ll have as much defence as they can spare from the rip cordon. Denser, I think you should lead the casting. Thraun, Unknown, you know what you have to do. Don’t let your mages go.’
‘What if we’re forced to break formation?’ asked Erienne.
‘Well, I’ll know through Ilkar whether it breaks spell concentration, meaning a restart, and Sha-Kaan knows to bring the formation back together as soon as he can. We have to trust them to fly defensively as necessary. What can I say? Don’t fall, any of you.’
With back-slapping, shaking of hands and hugs and a long, lingering kiss between Erienne and Denser, the three pairs split to their respective dragons, allowing Vestare woodsmen to fit their ropes. As they climbed on to the dragons’ necks, laid flat on the ground, Hirad could feel the ire rise from the chosen Kaan carriers.
The Raven Collection Page 105