The next swordsmanthe one behind Kith-Kananprodded his charge in the back, forcing him to stand a little straighter, as the general"s eyes came to rest upon him. But only for a moment, for the human leader allowed his scornful gaze to roam across the entire row of his captives.
"Which of you holds rank over the others?" inquired the general, casting his eyes along the line of remaining elves.
For the first time, Suzine realized that Kith-Kanan wore none of the trappings of his station. He was an anonymous rider among the elven warriors. Giarna didn"t recognize him! That revelation encouraged her to take a risk.
"My general," she said quickly, hearing her voice as if another person was speaking, "could I have a word with youaway from the ears of the prisoners?"
He looked at her, his dark eyes boring into her. Was that annoyance she saw, or something darker?
"Very well," he replied curtly. He took her arm in his hand and led her from the tent.
She felt the mirror"s case in her hand, seeking words as she spoke. "They are obviously willing to die for their cause. But perhaps, with a little patience, I can make them useful to us ... alive."
"You can tell me whether they speak the truth or notbut what good is that when they are willing to die with lies in their mouths?"
"But there is more to the gla.s.s," she said insistently. "Given a quiet place and some timeand some close personal attention to one of these subjectsI can probe deeper than mere questions and answers. I can see into their minds, to the secret truths they would never admit to such as you."
General Giarna"s black brows came together in a scowl. "Very well. I will allow you to try." He led her back into the tent. "Which one will you start with?"
Trying to still the trembling in her heart, Suzine raised an imperious hand and indicated Kith-Kanan. She spoke to the guard behind him. "Bring this one to my tent,"
she said matter-of-factly.
She avoided looking at the general, afraid those black eyes would paralyze her with suspicion or accusation. But he said nothing. He merely nodded to the guard behind Kith and the swordsman beside him, the one who had just slain the fallen elf. The pair of guards prodded Kith-Kanan forward, and Suzine preceded him through the silken flap of General Giarna"s tent.
They pa.s.sed between two tents, the high canvas shapes screening them from the rest of the camp. She could feel his eyes on her back as she walked, and finally she could no longer resist the urge to turn and look at him.
"What do you want with me?" he asked, his voice surprising her with its total lack of fear.
"I won"t hurt you," she replied, suddenly angry when the elf smiled slightly in response.
"Move, you!" grunted one of the guards, stepping in front of his companion and waving his blade past Kith-Kanan"s face.
Kith-Kanan reached forward with the speed of a striking snake, seizing the guard"s wrist as the blade veered away from his face. Holding the man"s hand, the elf kicked him sharply in the groin. The swordsman gasped and collapsed.
His companion, the warrior who had slain the elf in the tent, gaped in momentary shocka moment that proved to be his last. Kith pulled the blade from the fallen guard"s hand and, in the same motion, drove the point into the swordsman"s throat. He died, his jaw soundlessly working in an effort to articulate his shock.
The dead guard"s helmet toppled off as he fell, allowing his long blond hair to spill free when he collapsed, face first, on the ground.
Kith lowered the blade, ready to thrust it through the neck of the groaning man he had kicked. Then something stayed his hand, and he merely admonished the guard to be silent with a persuasive press of the blade against the man"s throat.
Turning to the one he had slain, Kith looked at the body curiously. Suzine hadn"t moved. She watched him in fascination, scarcely daring to breathe, as he brushed the blond hair aside with the toe of his boot.
The ear that was revealed was long and pointed.
"Do you have many elves in your army?" he asked.
"No-not many," Suzine said quickly. "They are mostly from the ranks of traders and farmers who have lived in Ergoth and desire a homeland on the plains."
Kith looked sharply at Suzine. There was something about this human woman. . . .
She stood still, paralyzed not so much by fear for herself as by dismay. He was about to escape, to leave her!
"I thank you for inadvertently saving my life," he said before darting toward the corner of a nearby tent.
"I know who you are!" she said, her voice a bare whisper.
He stopped again, torn between the need to escape and increasing curiosity about this woman and her knowledge.
"Thank you, too, then, for keeping the secret," he said, with a short bow. "Why did you ... "
She wanted to tell him that she had watched him for a long time, had all but lain beside him, through the use of her mirror. Suzine looked at him now, and he was more glorious, prouder, and taller than she had ever imagined. She wanted to ask him to take her away with himright nowbut, instead, her mouth froze, her mind locked by terror.
In another moment, he had disappeared. It was several moments longer before she finally found the voice to scream.
The elation Kith-Kanan felt at his escape dissipated as quickly as the gates of Sithelbec shut behind him and enclosed him within the st.u.r.dy walls of the fortress. His stolen horse, staggering from exhaustion, stumbled to a halt, and the elf swung to the ground.
He wondered, through his weariness, about the human woman who had given him his chance to flee. The picture of her face, crowned by that glory of red hair, remained indelibly burned into his mind. He wondered if he would ever see her again.
Around him loomed the high walls, with the pointed logs arrayed along the top.
Below these, he saw the faces of his warriors. Several raised a halfhearted cheer at his return, but the shock of defeat hung over the Wildrunners like a heavy pall.
Sithelbec had grown rapidly in the last year, sprawling across the surrounding plain until it covered a circle more than a mile in diameter. The central keep of the fortress was a stone structure of high towers, soaring to needlelike spires in the elven fashion. Around this keep cl.u.s.tered a crowded nest of houses, shops, barracks, inns, and other buildings, all within other networks of walls, blockhouses, and battle platforms.
Expanding outward through a series of concentric palisades, mostly of wood, the fortress protected a series of wells within its walls, ensuring a steady supply of water.
Foodmostly grainhad been stockpiled in huge barns and silos. Supplies of arrows and flammable oil, stored in great vats, had been collected along the walls" tops. The greater part of Kith-Kanan"s army, through the alert withdrawal under Parnigar, had reached the shelter of those ramparts.
Yet as the Army of Ergoth moved in to encircle the fortress, the Wildrunners could only wait.
Now Kith-Kanan walked among them, making his way to the small office and quarters he maintained in the gatehouse of the central keep. He felt the tension, the fear that approached despair, as he looked at the wide, staring eyes of his warriors.
And even more than the warriors, there were the women and children. Many of the women were human, their children half-elves, wives and offspring of the western elves who made up the Wildrunners. Kith shared their sorrow as deeply as he felt that of the elven females who were here in even greater numbers.
They would all be eating short rations, he knew. The siege would inevitably last into the autumn, and he had little doubt the humans could sustain the pressure through the winter and beyond.
As he looked at the young ones, Kith felt a stab of pain. He wondered how many of them would see spring.
6.
Autumn, Year of the Raven.
Lord Quimant came to Sithas in the Hall of Audience. His wife"s cousin brought another elfa stalwart-looking fellow, with lines of soot set firmly in his face, and the strapping, sinewy arms of a powerful wrestlerto see the Speaker of the Stars.
Sithas sat upon his emerald throne and watched the approaching pair. The Speaker"s green robe flowed around him, collecting the light of the throne and diffusing it into a soft glow that seemed to surround him. He reclined casually in the throne, but he remained fully alert.
Alert, in that his mind was working quickly. Yet his thoughts were many hundreds of miles and years away.
Weeks earlier, he had received a letter from Kencathedrus describing Kith-Kanan"s capture and presumed loss. That had been followed, barely two days later, by a missive from his brother himself, describing a harrowing escape: the battle with guards, the theft of a fleet horse, a mad dash from the encampment, and finally a chase that ended only after Kith-Kanan had led his pursuers to within arrow range of the great fortress of Sithelbec.
Sithelbecnamed for his father, the former Speaker of the Stars. Many times Sithas had reflected on the irony, for his father had been slain on a hunting trip, practically within sight of the fortress"s walls. As far as Sithas knew, it had been his father"s first and only expedition to the western plains. Yet Sithel had been willing to go to war over those plains, to put the nation"s future at stake because of them. And now Sithas, his firstborn, had inherited that struggle. Would he live up to his father"s expectations?
Reluctantly Sithas forced his mind back to the present, to his current location. He cast his eyes around his surroundings to force the transition in his thoughts.
A dozen elven guards, in silver breastplates and tall, plumed helmets, snapped their halberds to attention around the periphery of the hall. They stood impa.s.sive and silent as the n.o.ble lord marched toward the throne. Otherwise the great hall, with its gleaming marble floor and the ceiling towering six hundred feet overhead, was empty.
Sithas looked at Quimant. The elven n.o.ble wore a long cloak of black over a silk tunic of light green. Tights of red, and soft, black boots, completed his ensemble.
Lord Quimant of Oakleaf was a very handsome elf indeed. But he was also intelligent, quick-witted, and alert to many threats and opportunities that might otherwise have missed Sithas"s notice.
"This is my nephew," the lord explained. "Ganrock Ethu, master smith. I recommend him, my Speaker, for the position of palace smith. He is shrewd, quick to learn, and a very hard worker."
"But Herrlock Redmoon has always handled the royal smithy," Sithas protested.
Then he remembered: Herrlock had been blinded the week before in a tragic accident, when he had touched spark to his forge. Somehow the kindled coal had exploded violently, destroying his eyes beyond the abilities of Silvanost"s clerics to repair. After seeing that the loyal smith was well cared for and as comfortable as possible, Sithas had promised to select a replacement.
He looked at the young elf before him. Ganrock"s face showed lines of maturity, and the thick muscle of his upper torso showed proof of long years of work.
"Very well," Sithas agreed. "Show him the royal smithy and find out what he needs to get started." He called to one of his guards and told the elf to accompany Ganrock Ethu to the forge area, which lay in the rear of the Palace of Quinari.
"Thank you, Your Eminence," said the smith, with a sudden bow. "I shall endeavor to do fine work for you."
"Very good," replied the Speaker. Quimant lingered as the smith left the hall.
Lord Quimant"s narrow face tightened in determination as he turned back to Sithas.
"What is it, my lord? You look distressed." Sithas raised a hand and bade Qiumant stand beside him.
"The Smelters Guild, Your Highness," replied the n.o.ble elf. "They refusethey simply refuseto work their foundries during the hours of darkness. Without the additional steel, our weapon production is hamstrung, barely adequate for even peacetime needs."
Sithas cursed quietly. Nevertheless, he was thankful that Quimant had informed him.
The proud heir of Clan Oakleaf had greatly improved the efficiency of Silvanost"s war preparations by spotting detailssuch as this onethat would have escaped Sithas"s notice.
"I shall speak to the smelter Kerilar," Sithas vowed. "He is a stubborn old elf, but he knows the importance of the sword. I will make him understand, if I have to."
"Very good, Excellency," said Lord Quimant, with a bow. He straightened again. "Is there news of the war?"
"Not since the last letter, a week ago. The Wildrunners remain besieged in Sithelbec, while the humans roam the disputed lands at will. Kith has no chance to break out. He"s now surrounded by a hundred thousand men."
The lord shook his head grimly before fixing Sithas with a hard gaze. "He must be reinforcedthere"s no other way. You know this, don"t you?"
Sithas met Quimant"s gaze with equal steadiness. "YesI do. But the only way I can recruit more troops is to conscript them from the city and the surrounding clan estates.
You know what kind of dispute that will provoke!"
"How long can your brother hold his fort?"
"He has rations enough for the winter. The casualties of the battle were terrible, of course, but the remainder of his force is well disciplined, and the fortress is strong."
The news of the battlefield debacle had hit the elven capital hard. As the knowledge spread that two thousand of the city"s young elvestwo out of every five who had marched so proudly to the westhad perished in the fight, Silvanost had been shrouded in grief for a week.
Sithas learned of the battle at the same time as he heard that his brother had fallen and was most likely lost. For two days, his world had been a grim shroud of despair.
Knowing that Kith had reached safety lightened the burden to some extent, but their prospects for victory still seemed nonexistent. How long would it be, he had agonized, before the rest of the Wildrunners fell to the overwhelming tide around them?
Then gradually his despair had turned to angeranger at the shortsightedness of his own people. Elves had crowded the Hall of Audience on the Trial Days, disrupting the proceedings. The emotions of the city"s elves had been inflamed by the knowledge that the rest of the Wildrunners had suffered nowhere near the size of losses inflicted upon the elves of Silvanost. It was not uncommon now to hear voices raised in the complaint that the western lands should be turned over to the humans and the Wildrunner elves, to let them battle each other to extinction.
"Very wellso he can hold out." Quimant"s voice was strong yet deferential. "But he cannot escape! We must send a fresh army, a large one, to give him the sinew he needs!"
"There are the dwarves. We have yet to hear from them," Sithas pointed out.
"Pah! If they do anything, it will be too late! It seems that Than-Kar sympathizes with the humans as much as with us. The dwarves will never do anything so long as he remains their voice and their ears!"
Ahbut he is not their voice and ears. Sithas had that thought with some small satisfaction, but he said nothing to Quimant as the lord continued, though his thoughts considered the potential of hope. Tamanier Ambrodel, I am depending upon you!
"Still, we must tolerate him, I suppose. He is our best chance of an alliance."