He collected a fallen javelin, pretended to examine it. "Something"s going to happen," he whispered to Reskird. "Start moving the men out."
Chin responded to the withdrawal with the slightest of frowns and a touch of nervousness.
"My Lord," said Ragnarson. "Could you tell me why you killed my people? My wife never did anything to you." Iron and pain tinged his voice.
Chin glanced at the hourgla.s.s, brought his sword to guard. "Nothing personal.
You"re in the way. But we"ll correct that soon enough. The hour has come."
For an instant Ragnarson thought that the Tervola meant it was his moment to die.
Then, when Varthlokkur gasped and staggered, he realized Chin had been warning his companions.
The Power had come alive. A portal had opened behind Chin and the Fadema.
The Tervola attacked. Haaken and Michael met him, prevented his blade from reaching the Marshall. The Fadema came at Bragi with a dagger identical to that he had taken off the leader of the a.s.sa.s.sins who had killed Elana. A trooper savaged her knife hand with a wild swing, kicking the dagger toward his commander. He tried to follow up.
Bragi grabbed his arm, yanked him away from Chin"s blade.
"Thanks." He slapped the dagger into the soldier"s hand. It was rich booty, a spell-blade worth a fortune.
Chin hurled the two Argonese soldiers, the Fadema, and Ethrian into the portal"s black maw, chanting a hasty spell. Varthlokkur responded with a warding spell.
Chin jumped for the portal. His magick roared through the chamber.
Bragi hurled the javelin, then dropped to the floor, rubbed his eyes. He couldn"t see. His skin felt toasted.
He moaned.
"Easy," said Varthlokkur. "You"ll be all right. I blocked most of it."
Ragnarson didn"t believe him. "Did I get him?" he demanded. "Did I get him?"
Chin"s life almost seemed worth his eyes.
"I don"t know. I"m sorry. I don"t."
TWENTY-SEVEN: Mocker Returns
The brown man watched from the shadows. He shivered, sure Varthlokkur would notice him. But only one man glanced his way, a squat, hard looker he didn"t recognize. The youth didn"t react to his stare.
His breath hissed away. Relieved, he waited till they rounded a corner, then followed.
What were they up to? Bragi and Varthlokkur had no business being in Necremnos.
And who was the Necremnen? Everyone seemed to know and fear him.
The brown man interrupted a street cleaner.
"Self, beg thousands pardon, sir. Am foolish foreigner, being ignorant of all things Necremnen. Am bestruckt by puzzlement. Am seeing man pa.s.s, moment gone, ordinary, with foreign companions, and people hide eyes from same. Am wondering who is same?"
"Huh?"
Necremnen was one of the languages of Mocker"s childhood. He could reduce any tongue to unintelligibility.
He tried again.
"Him? That"s the high and mighty Arist.i.thorn, that is. Him what makes himself out to be a little toy G.o.d, out in his little toy castle.... Here now. Where"re you going already?"
Mocker had heard enough. He had never met Arist.i.thorn, but he knew the name.
Bragi had mentioned it often enough.
So the big b.a.s.t.a.r.d was recruiting old accomplices into his schemes, eh?
He slid hurriedly through the crowds. But he had wasted too much time with the street cleaner. He had lost them.
He traced them to the waterfront. Again he was too late. He did learn that they had visited shipping firms and the master of the fishers" guild.
Boats. A lot of them. That had to be it.
Why would Bragi be in Necremnos trying to build a navy? It didn"t make sense- unless he was on some adventure with Ravelin"s army.
It seemed possible, with Argon a probable target, but reason failed him at that point. He could conceive of no cause for Ravelin to attack Argon. Nor could he figure how Bragi hoped to get away with it. Bragi had pulled off military miracles before, but this was unrealistic.
Mocker knew Argon. Ragnarson didn"t. The brown man knew that the city boasted a population greater than that of Ravelin. The biggest force Ravelin could muster would simply vanish into the crowds....
But Bragi had Varthlokkur with him. That could make all the difference. It had for Ilkazar.
He might be guessing wrong. Bragi might need boats to ferry across the Roe.
He kept on the trail. This needed investigation.
It was time he started moving. He had been here for a month and a half accomplishing nothing. He had gambled away almost the entire fortune Lord Chin hadprovided him before transferring him here. He knew what he was supposed to do, but old habits, old thought patterns, died hard.
Chin would throw a fit next time they met. He should have been in Ravelin by now.
Hunger taunted him. He touched his purse. Empty again. It was a long walk to his room, where his final emergency reserve lay hidden. He considered stealing, didn"t try.
He wasn"t as quick as he used to be. Age was creeping up. Soon he"d be able to commit robbery only by the blade. He hadn"t lost his skill with a sword.
Cursing all the way, he trudged across town, retrieved his poke, bought a meal twice too big, downed it to the last drop of gravy. Overindulgenee was his weakness, be it in food, gambling, or drink.
He finally overtook Arist.i.thorn three days later. Bragi and Varthlokkur were long gone. Their visit had caused little public comment.
But something was happening.
The half-ruined stone pile palace of Necremnos"s Ring had come alive. The captains of Necremnos"s corrupt, incompetent army swarmed there, coming and going with ashen faces. They were hobby soldiers, allergic to the serious practice of their craft. They hadn"t signed on to die for their country, only to bleed its treasury. In the taverns soldiers patronized, there was both grumbling and antic.i.p.ation.
Mocker was there, listening.
The subject was war with Argon. No one seemed to care why. Pessimists argued that penetrating Argon"s defenses was impossible. Optimists verbally spent the booty they would bring home.
Regiments mustered at the Martial Fields south of the city, slothfully, in the tradition of all Necremnen state activity.
Mocker was there, too. He wasted no time insinuating himself into the camp following. He recruited a half-dozen young, enthusiastic, attractive girls capable of drawing the big-spending officers. He put them to work. And listened.
He quickly determined that the high command was stalling. The generals would never admit it, but they knew they were incompetent. They knew they couldn"t manage forces like these against Argon. That city"s army was poorly trained and equipped, and its officers as corrupt as they, but it did take war seriously.
Finally, sluggishly, like a bewildered amoeba, the Necremnen host stumbled southward, following the east bank of the Roe. A hundred thousand regulars, levies, allies, and plunder-hungry auxiliaries had responded to the raising of Pthothor"s war baton. The movement went forward in dust and confusion. Despite Arist.i.thorn and the King, the ma.s.s never did quite sort itself out.
Its first skirmish nearly resulted in disaster, though the enemy numbered no more than ten thousand. The regulars and levies almost panicked. But hard-riding auxiliaries from the plains tribes finally harried the Argonese border force into retreating, then swept ahead, burning and pillaging.
After the near-disaster the army began suffering seizures of near-competence.
Pthothor hanged fifty officers, dismissed a hundred more, and demoted scores. When someone grumbled about losing traditional prerogatives, Pthothor referred him to Arist.i.thorn.
No one challenged the cranky old wizard.The army eventually blundered into the Valley of the Tombs, where countless generations of Argonese n.o.bility lay with their death-treasures. The Argonese came out to forestall looting and vandalism.
An unimaginative battle raged among the tombs and obelisks from dawn till dusk.
Thousands perished. The thing came to no conclusion till the steppe riders broke free, circled the valley, and began plundering Argon"s suburbs. They captured the pontoons to a dozen outlying islands. During the night the Argonese command brought up thousands of hastily mobilized citizens, and might have turned the tide had the news not come that the Queen"s bastion had fallen.
Mocker whooped when he heard that Bragi"s banners flew everywhere over the Fadem.
The Necremnens took courage. The Argonese began melting away, running to salvage what they could from their homes.
Pthothor pushed on, occupying islands which had failed to destroy their pontoons and bridges.
Mocker couldn"t believe the confusion on both sides. This had to be why Bragi believed he could best Argon. Kavelin"s troops were superb compared to these, and the quality of their leaders was incomparable.
Haaken and Reskird would be here, he knew, with the Vorgreberger Guards and the Midlands Light. Ahring and Altenkirk, too, probably with the Queen"s Own and the Damhorsters. And, knowing Bragi"s fondness for archers, TennHorst and the King"s Memory Bows.... Maybe even the Breidenbachers and the Sedlmayr Light, and who knew what from the Guild....
The more Mocker thought, the bigger the army he conjured from imagination, till he pictured the Fadem crawling with the entire adult male population of Kavelin....
His depression began receding. He showed flashes of the Mocker of old, amazing his girls with his lighthearted nonsense. For a time he forgot the pressure....
The officers he entertained knew little about Bragi. Arist.i.thorn and Pthothor were tight-lipped, trusting none of their staff. Mocker wished he could get the wizard into his tent.
His girls went along most of the time, but that they wouldn"t tolerate.
Arist.i.thorn had a reputation. He took home girls who caught his fancy. They were never seen again.
So Mocker just tagged along, the officer"s best friend, and awaited the opportune event.
His moment came soon after The Valley of the Tombs.
A Necremnen barge came meandering up a delta channel. Aboard were Bragi, his son, Varthlokkur, Haaken, Reskird, Trebilc.o.c.k and his squat friend, and-Nepanthe!
They were hunting Arist.i.thorn and Pthothor, allegedly to arrange coordinated action against Argon, most of which remained unconquered.
Mocker spotted Nepanthe long before she saw him. And couldn"t believe what he saw.
She was laughing with Haaken and Reskird about the clown army of their allies. The immaculate, perfectly disciplined troopers of the Queen"s Own made the ragtag Necremnen loafers at Pthothor"s headquarters look pathetic. Like poorly organized bandits.
Mocker eased as close as he could without revealing himself.
Nepanthe was supposed to be in the dungeons of Castle Krief.He didn"t see Ethrian, and that disturbed him more than his wife"s presence. The boy seldom strayed from his mother"s side. She wouldn"t let him.
She was going to make Ethrian a mama"s boy in spite of himself.
He was so intrigued by his wife"s presence, and by trying to eavesdrop, that he ignored everything else-especially the others in Bragi"s party.
Beyond being able to get into trouble anywhere, Aral Dantice had one noteworthy talent. He remembered. Now he remembered a dark face seen only momentarily in Necremnos when he noticed the same face peeping from an ornamental hedge. He whispered to Trebilc.o.c.k.
It didn"t occur to them that they shouldn"t nab suspects on Necremnos"s turf. They decided, they split, they drifted round till they could take the watcher from behind.
Mocker"s first warning was a grip of iron closing on his shoulder.
He squealed, "Hai!" and jumped, kicked, sent Dantice sprawling-and found himself staring into the cold, emotionless eyes of Michael Trebilc.o.c.k, along the blade of a saber.
He whipped out his own blade, began fencing. In silence, which was one of the most un-Mocker-like things he had ever done.
The clash of steel drew a crowd.
He had meant it to be a quick pa.s.sage at arms, perhaps wounding the boy as he whipped by and fled across the yards and hedges....
But Trebilc.o.c.k wouldn"t let him.
Mocker"s eyes steadily widened. Trebilc.o.c.k met his every stroke and countered, often coming within a whisker of cutting him. Nor did the younger man give him any respite in which to calculate, or regain his wind.
Trebilc.o.c.k was good.
Mocker"s skill with a blade was legend among his acquaintances. Seldom had he met a man he couldn"t best in minutes.
This time he had met one he might not best at all. He managed to touch Trebilc.o.c.k once in ten minutes, with a trick never seen on courtly fields of honor. But Trebilc.o.c.k wasn"t daunted, nor did he allow the trick a second chance.
Trebilc.o.c.k couldn"t be intimidated. Mocker couldn"t perturb him. And that scared Mocker....
"Enough!" Ragnarson shouted. "Michael, back off."
Trebilc.o.c.k stepped back, lowered his guard. Perforce, Mocker did likewise.