by Ted Dekker
“Then in two hours we move in. With any luck we may actually have that dog in a noose.”
“And if it is Thomas, would killing him now jeopardize the capture of the forests?” Woref asked.
He ignored Woref ’s question. There was no secret about the general’s interest in securing the forests. Woref was to be given Qurong’s daughter, Chelise, in marriage upon the completion of that task. All had their prizes waiting, and Woref ’s would be the object of his unrequited obsession. But Qurong was no longer quite sure about the wisdom of his agreement to turn Chelise over to this beast.
Qurong walked to a basin of morst, a powdery white mixture of starch and ground limestone, dipped his fingers in, and patted his face. The stuff provided some comfort by drying any sweat on the skin’s surface. Any kind of moisture, including sweat, increased the pain.
“How long before the main army from the Southern Forest reaches us?” Qurong asked.
“Today. Perhaps hours. Maybe we should wait until he gets here.”
“Is he issuing the orders now? He may have come up with this plan, but as I was last aware, I am still in charge.”
“Yes, of course, your excellence. Forgive me.”
“If we can kill Thomas, the Forest People will be even less likely to learn of our plans. They still don’t know about the fourth army on the far side of their forest. Their firebombs will only go so far against four hundred thousand men.”
“They do have other capable leaders. Mikil. William. And they may know more than we think they know.”
“None of them compares to Thomas! You will see, without him they are lost. Send the word: Cut them off! Have the rest of our men begin to break camp as if we are leaving for the deep desert. I swear, if Thomas of Hunter is among them, he will not live out this day.”
A GENTLE word on the wind woke him. Thomas was falling asleep on the transport plane, but he was also waking, here in the desert, with these words in his ear.
“They’re moving.”
Thomas sat up. Mikil squatted on one leg.
“It’s not a war assembly—they’re packing the horses. My guess is back into the desert.”
Thomas scrambled up, hurried to the top of the dune, took the eyeglass from William, and peered down. They couldn’t see the whole camp; the back end was hidden by a slight rise in the desert. But as far as he could see, the Scabs were slowly loading down their carts and horses.
Rachelle ran up the slope. “Thomas!”
He rolled on his back and sat up. “Did you dream?”
She glanced at William as if to say, Not here.
“William, tell the others to prepare to follow the army into the desert,” Thomas ordered.
“Sir—”
“How can you possibly go after them now?” Rachelle demanded. “The Gathering is in two days!”
“We have to get the Books!”
She glanced at William again.
“William, tell the others.”
“She’s right. If we follow them out for a day, it will add another day to our journey home. We’ll miss the Gathering.”
“Not at the rate these slugs travel. And I think Elyon will understand us missing the Gathering if we are busy destroying his enemies.”
“We’re stealing books, not destroying the enemy,” William said.
“We will destroy the enemy with the Books, you muscle-head!”
“How?”
“Just tell them.”
William ran down the dune.
“What happened?” Rachelle asked.
“Did you dream?” he demanded.
“No. Not about the histories. But you did. What happened?”
He stood. “You were right; there is a mountain called Cyclops in Indonesia. Something happened that allowed you to dream.”
“Then you’re going after Monique?”
“We’re on our way now.”
“Then let the Books of Histories go. It’s too dangerous! You can stop the virus with Monique’s help.”
“And what if we can’t rescue Monique? What if she can’t stop the virus? The Books may be able to tell us what we need to know to stop Svensson! The rest can’t understand that, but you have to.”
She started back down the dune, and he hurried to catch her.
“Rachelle, please, listen to me. You have to go back. I’ll send two of my men with Suzan to take you safely—”
“And why should I go if you’re out here risking your neck in the desert?”
“Because if anything happens to you out here, Monique might die! Don’t you see? We can’t risk any harm coming to you. And what about our children?”
“And what about you, Thomas? What happens to Monique or me or the forest or the earth if something happens to you? Our children are in good hands; don’t patronize me.”
He caught her arm and pulled her around. “Listen to me!”
She swallowed and gazed over his shoulder at the horizon.
“I love you more than life itself,” he said. “For fifteen years I’ve been fighting off these beasts. Nothing will happen to me now, I swear it. Not here. It’s there that worries me. We have to stop the virus, and for that we need the Books of Histories.”
Her eyes were paling. She’d bathed last night, but only with a rag and some water from the canteens.
“Please, my love. I beg you.”
She sighed and closed her eyes.
“You know that I’m right,” he said.
“Okay. But promise me you won’t let the disease take you.”
“Leave your extra water.”
“I will.”
They stood in silence. The others were casting curious glances up the dune.
Rachelle leaned forward and kissed him lightly on the cheek. “Please come back in time for the Gathering.”
“I will.”
She turned and walked toward her horse.
THOMAS LAY on the crest of the dune, watching with the other seven who’d remained behind. Their horses waited behind them, impatient in the rising heat. They’d scavenged as much water as they dared from the four who’d left two hours earlier, enough to keep them for two more days if they were careful. William and Suzan had gone back with Rachelle.
“Is it just my imagination, or are they moving slowly?” Mikil asked.
“They’re Scabs. What do you expect?” someone said.
“If they cut out half of all that baggage, they could move twice as fast,” she said. “It’s no wonder they march so slow.”
Thomas scanned the horizon. A tall hill rose to their right. Far beyond this hill lay the Southern Forest, where Jamous had been delivered by Justin, who brokered a peace with the Scabs.
The words he’d heard the night before ran through his mind. We’ll speak about peace and they will listen because they must, Qurong had said. By the time we work the betrayal with him, it will be too late.
Who was him? Martyn? No, Qurong had been speaking to the general, who was now dead. Perhaps Justin, but Thomas couldn’t accept that. His former lieutenant may have gone off the deep end, but he would never conspire against his own people.
Or would he?
“Sir, there’s some movement.”
He refocused down the hill. A line of horses had emerged over the distant rise and were headed toward them.
Then another.
Not just two lines of horses. A division, at least, riding at a gallop toward them. Thomas felt his muscles tighten.
“Sir . . .”
“They know,” he said. “They know we’re here!”
“Then we leave,” Mikil said. “We can outrun them without a sweat.”
“And the Books?”
“I think that the Books are, for the moment, history,” she said. “No pun intended.”
“Sir, behind!”
The voice had come from the Guard at the end of the line. Thomas whipped around. Another line of horses was just now edging over the dunes to the east, between them and the forest. A th
ousand, at least.
It was a trap.
Thomas plunged down the hill. “To the north, hurry!”
He reached his horse first, grabbed the pommel, and kicked the steed before his seat touched the saddle. “Hiyaa!”
The animal bolted. Behind him the other horses snorted and pounded sand.
The army on their left marched into clear view now, a long line that stretched farther than he’d first thought. While he and his men had been watching the breaking camp, the Horde had circled behind. Or worse, this army had been camped to the east or south and had been summoned.
They were now flanked on the east and the west. Surely the Horde knew that they would simply ride north out of the trap. Unless—
He saw the warriors directly ahead. How many? Too many to count, cutting off their escape.
Thomas pulled back on his reins, pitching his horse into a steep rear. Three of his men thundered past him.
“Back!”
They saw the Horde and pulled up.
Thomas jerked his horse around. “South!”
But he’d just laid into the wind when he saw what he feared he would see. The dunes to the south swelled with yet another division.
He veered to his left and plowed up the same dune they’d first hidden behind. There was no sense running blind. He had to see what was happening, and for that he needed elevation.
They brought their horses to stomping fits atop the dune. From here their predicament became abundantly clear. Scabs pounded toward them from every direction. Thomas turned his horse, looking for a break in their ranks, but each time he saw one, it closed.
They had been outwitted by Qurong.
Thomas took quick stock. He’d been in too many close scrapes to panic, too many close battles to consider defeat. But he’d never been eight against so many.
There was no way to fight their way out. Mikil had drawn her sword, but this wasn’t a matter of swords. They’d been beaten by a mind, and now they could only win with their own.
These thoughts came over Thomas like a single pounding wave.
But the thoughts that mattered—the ones suggesting a sane course of action—didn’t follow in its wake. The sea had gone silent.
Not even his dreams could help now. They could knock him out and he could dream, and they could wake him up in a matter of seconds, but to what end?
Rachelle’s words of warning spoke tenderly in his ear. She hadn’t used a sweet voice, but now any thought of Rachelle could only be tender.
I am so sorry, my love.
He touched the book that he’d strapped tightly to his waist under his tunic. Maybe he could use it as leverage. Buy time. To what end, he had no clue, but he had to do something. Thomas yanked the book out and thrust it over his head. He stood in his stirrups and screamed at the sky.
“The Books of Histories! I have a Book of History!”
The Horde did not seem impressed. Of course, they hadn’t heard him yet.
He released the reins, stood tall with knees tight against the horse, and galloped in a small circle around his men, right hand lifted high with the book between his fingers.
“I have the Books! I have a Book of History!” he cried.
When the circle of warriors reached the dunes surrounding his, they pulled up. Five thousand at least, seated on sweating horses in a huge circle many deep. The sand had turned into men. Scabs.
Perhaps their hesitation was simply a matter of who was willing to die and who wanted to live. They knew that the first few to reach the Forest Guard would die. Maybe hundreds before they overpowered Thomas of Hunter and his warriors.
They would overpower him, of course. Not one soul who had the scene in their eye could doubt the final outcome.
He yelled at them at the top of his voice. “My name is Thomas of Hunter, and I have the Books of Histories, which your leader Qurong reveres! I dare any man to test my powers!”
Over a hundred horses stepped from the ranks and slowly approached. They bore the red sash of the assassins, the ones who’d sworn to give their lives for Thomas’s at a moment’s notice. It was said among the Guard that most of them were surviving relatives of men slain in battle.
“It’s not working,” Mikil said.
“Steady,” Thomas muttered. “We can take these.”
“These, but there are too many!”
“Steady!”
But his own heart ignored the command and raced ahead of its usually calm rhythm.
The sound of a lone horn cut through the air. The ring of horses pulled up. The horn came again, long and high. Thomas looked for the source. South.
There, atop the tallest hill, stood two riders on pale horses. The one on the left was a Scab. Thomas could see that much from this distance, but nothing more.
The other rider, telling from his tunic, was a Forest Dweller.
“It’s him!” Mikil said.
“It’s who?”
“Justin.” She spit.
Another long horn blast. There was a third man, Thomas saw, seated on a horse just behind the Scab. It was he who blew the horn.
The Forest Dweller suddenly plunged down the hill toward the encroaching Horde. They began to part for his passage. The Horde frequently communicated with various horns, and this blast must have indicated sanctuary of some kind.
The rider rode hard through the Scabs without looking at them. He was still a hundred yards away, in the thick of the Horde army, when Thomas confirmed Mikil’s guess. He could never mistake the man’s fluid, forward-leaning riding style.
This was indeed Justin of Southern.
Justin rode up the dune and reined to a stop fifteen yards away. For a long moment, he just looked at them. Mikil scowled on Thomas’s right. The rest of his men held their places behind him.
“Hello, Thomas,” Justin said. “It’s been awhile.”
“Two years.”
“Yes, two years. You look good.”
“Actually, I could use a swim in the lake,” Thomas said.
Justin chuckled. “Couldn’t we all?”
“Including these friends of yours?” Thomas asked.
Justin looked around at the Scab army. “Especially them. Never can get used to the smell.”
“I think the smell might be coming from your skin as well as theirs,” Mikil said.
Justin stared at her with those piecing green eyes of his. He looked freshly bathed.
“I see you’ve gotten yourself in a bit of trouble here,” he finally said.
Thomas frowned. “Perceptive.”
“We don’t need your help,” Mikil said.
“Mikil!”
Justin smiled. “Maybe you should consider changing your approach. I mean, I love the spirit of it. I’m tempted to join you and fight it out.”
There was a twinkle in his eyes that inspired confidence. This was one of the reasons Thomas had selected him to be his second two years ago.
“Have you, by any chance, noticed how large the Horde’s armies are these days?” Justin asked.
“We’ve always been outnumbered.”
“Yes, we have. But this isn’t a war you’re going to win, Thomas. Not this way. Not with the sword.”
“With what. A smile?”
“With love.”
“We do love, Justin. We love our wives and children by sending these monsters to Hades where they came from.”
“I wasn’t aware they came from hell,” Justin said. “I was always under the assumption that they were created by Elyon. Like you.”
“And so were the Shataiki. Are you suggesting we take them to bed as well?”
“Most of you already have,” Justin said. “I fear the bats have left the trees and taken up residence in your hearts.”
Mikil wasn’t one to tolerate such sacrilege, but Thomas had made his will clear, and so she spoke to him, not Justin. “Sir, we can’t sit here and listen to this poison. He’s riding with them.”
“Yes, Mikil, I know how much these
words sting such a religious person as yourself.” They all knew that she was religious only when it served her. She bathed and followed the rituals, of course, but she would rather plot a battle than swim in the lake any day.
She harumphed.
“There’s a saying,” Justin said. “For every one head the Horde cuts off, cut off ten of theirs, isn’t that it? The scales of justice as it were. The time will come when you’ll break bread with a Scab, Thomas.”
Someone coughed behind Thomas. Clearly Justin was delusional. Even Thomas couldn’t resist a small smile.
“Mikil has a point. Did you come down here to give us a hand, or are you more interested in converting us to your new religion?”
“Religion? The problem with the Great Romance is that it’s become a religion. You see what happens when you listen to the bats? They ruin everything. First the colored forest and now the lakes.”
Heat spread down Thomas’s neck. Speaking against the Great Romance was blasphemy! “You’ve said enough. Help us or leave.”
Justin lowered his eyes to the book in Thomas’s hand. “The Books of Histories. The worst and the best of man. The power to create and the power to destroy. Whatever you do, don’t lose it. In the wrong hands it could cause a bit of trouble.”
“It’s empty.”
Justin nodded once, slowly. “Take care, Thomas. I’ll see you at the Gathering.”
Then he turned his horse and galloped past the Scabs, back up the tall dune where he pulled up next to the Desert Dweller.
A long horn blasted once, twice. The call to retreat. At first none of the Horde moved. The assassins seemed confused, and a murmur rumbled over the sand.
The horn blasted twice again, with more force.
The price for disobeying an order such as this was immediate execution for any Scab. They withdrew en masse, in the same directions they’d come from.
Thomas watched, dumbstruck as the desert emptied.
Then they were gone. All of them.
Their salvation had come so fast, with so little fanfare, that it hardly felt real.
He twisted in his saddle to look at Justin.
The hill was bare.
Mikil spit. “I could kill that—”
“Silence! Not another word, Mikil. Your life has just been spared.”
“At what cost?”