Web of Deceit

Home > Other > Web of Deceit > Page 17
Web of Deceit Page 17

by Richard S. Tuttle


  “Savage girl?” inquired Brakas. “What do you speak of?”

  “You have not heard the tales?” the leader of the Chadang asked with raised eyebrows. “He is the spawn of a cross marriage with the savage Qubari.”

  “The jungle people?” queried Brakas, “but that is forbidden.”

  “Of course it is forbidden,” snapped Vrylok. “And you can see why. It breeds insanity. Some even say that evil spirits are bred by mixing with the Qubari. Nothing good can come of such a union. Look what it has produced. A crazy man at the helm of a giant tribe and a son that is even crazier. Diakles should be killed before he can reproduce. Who knows what another generation will bring.”

  “That explains much,” replied Brakas. “Let us eat and then you can show me the map. I wish to continue my journey this evening. I fear I have little time to locate the other tribes.”

  Chapter 14

  Vultures

  Rejji, Bakhai, and Mistake sat astride their horses and gazed at the distant encampment.

  “Some great battle was fought here,” Rejji declared. “Do you see anything moving?”

  “No,” responded Bakhai. “Nothing but the vultures gathering overhead. We should proceed carefully.”

  “The vultures will not attack us,” retorted Mistake.

  “No,” replied Bakhai, “but there is a reason they are circling instead of landing and feasting on the dead. Someone must still be alive to keep them at bay.”

  “Or several people alive,” added Rejji. “Bakhai is right. We will approach carefully.”

  “Why not just go around them?” asked Mistake. “That is the safest plan of all.”

  “Lord Marak wants information on the tribes,” reminded Rejji. “A battle this large is of significance. We should try to find out what has happened.”

  Rejji drew his sword and started forward. He felt slightly confident of his abilities after training with the Torak, but he knew that his sword and Mistake’s daggers would not save them from any serious attack. Bakhai had joined in the training with Rejji, but he had declined to carry a sword. Rejji did not understand why Bakhai refused, but he wished now that his friend had one.

  Nothing moved as they entered the devastated camp. Bodies littered the ground and Rejji saw that there was a few red scarves intermingled with the predominantly blue scarves.

  “Jiadin,” he spat.

  “And a lot of Chadang,” added Mistake. “They were the local tribe around my village. I wonder what they were doing this far west.”

  “Why are their chests all cut open?” asked Bakhai.

  “It was probably a fierce battle,” responded Rejji. “Swords can be very sharp. Why did you refuse to carry one?”

  “I believe that carrying such a weapon would alienate me from my animal friends,” Bakhai answered. “I am not willing to do that.”

  Bakhai jumped off his horse and knelt next to one of the bodies. “I do not think these cuts were blows during battle,” he declared. “This man was obviously killed by that axe in his head, yet his chest is cut open like the others. And something else is strange.”

  “What else is strange?’ asked Mistake after a long pause of silence.

  Bakhai stood up and gazed around the battle site. “Nothing is alive,” he answered. “Nothing lives and nothing moves and yet the vultures continue to circle. This is puzzling.”

  Rejji dismounted and strode to the large tent in the center of the encampment with Mistake following him. They entered the tent and Rejji fought back the urge to vomit. The inside walls of the tent were covered in blood and body parts adorned the cushions on the floor, but the most troubling sight was a man’s head mounted on the shaft a spear which was thrust into the ground.

  “That is Vrylok,” Mistake said softly. “He was the leader of the Chadang. What is that stuffed into his mouth?”

  Rejji stood with his mouth wide open and shook his head as Mistake stepped forward and pulled the article out of the mouth.

  “It is his blue scarf,” Mistake announced as she held it by two fingers. “It is torn in half. I wonder what it means?”

  “It means that the tribe is no more,” answered Bakhai from the flap of the tent. “He has been made an example of and left as a remembrance of the power of the Jiadin.”

  “How do you know this?” Mistake queried.

  “The times I have spent among the human villagers has taught me much,” answered Bakhai. “The old men of the villages are eager to tell tales of old to the children. The children think they are just stories made up by the elders, but I think they are verbal histories handed down from generation to generation. There is much knowledge contained in those stories.”

  “I guess so,” muttered Mistake as she looked down at the small table in the center of the tent. “I never paid much attention to them. There is a map here. I think we should take it. It may be of use in finding the Sage.”

  “We need to leave this place,” stated Bakhai. “Now.”

  “Why the urgency?” questioned Rejji, who had recovered from his state of shock. “If nothing lives then nothing can harm us.”

  “I disagree,” frowned Bakhai. “The vultures sense a great evil here. That is why they are circling. They are waiting for this evil to leave, but I doubt it will ever leave. I think something has been stealing the souls of the dead here. That is why the chests are cut open. There is little blood flow around the cuts, which means they were made after death and not all of the corpses have been cut. We need to be well away from here by dark.”

  “You mean whatever is doing this is coming back for more?” asked Rejji.

  “I think so,” nodded Bakhai. “I do not know anything about these rituals, but I am guessing that something interrupted the gathering of souls. I suspect that it was interrupted by the dawn and will resume at dusk.”

  “How can you be sure of this?” questioned Mistake.

  “I am not sure of any of this,” responded Bakhai. “Do you think we should stay and test my theory?”

  “We do not need to test your theory,” Rejji declared. “There is little for us do here anyway. I do remember Brontos talking of not burying the dead so something could feast on them at night. Whatever it is, we shall be long gone from here. I have already seen more than enough. We will pause only long enough to see what we can find that will be of use to us.”

  The trio scrounged around the camp and then mounted and rode eastward. When they reached the Meliban River, they turned and followed it upstream. At dusk they made camp along the banks of the river.

  “That was a fine meal Rejji,” Mistake grinned. “Perhaps you should become the permanent cook for our group.”

  “That will not work,” Rejji chuckled. “We agreed to take turns and I am sticking to that agreement.”

  “I am going to bathe,” Bakhai stated as he rose. “You two fight over the cooking.”

  Rejji tossed a twig at Bakhai’s departing form and laughed. When Bakhai was out of sight, Rejji turned to Mistake.

  “I think you should contact Lord Marak tonight,” he said softly. “Let him know where we are and what we discovered today.”

  “Are you crazy?” Mistake asked. “Do you not realize how far we have come? It would take me weeks to get back there and it is in the wrong direction. I am seeking the Sage and Lord Marak will have to wait for his information.”

  “I don’t mean to go there,” frowned Rejji. “I mean with your magic.”

  “What magic?” questioned Mistake. “What are you talking about?”

  “The Air Tunnel,” Rejji said. “Use it to contact Lord Marak.”

  “The Air Tunnel?” repeated Mistake. “What I am supposed to do with that?”

  “It allows you to talk to Fardale,” informed Rejji. “That is why they taught it to you. Did you not know?”

  Mistake sat quietly staring at Rejji for a while before speaking. “You mean it is magic?” she asked. “I thought it was just a trick for snooping on others. How can I learn magic?”


  “Evidently, you have some magical talent,” Rejji said. “Supposedly, that is how you move so fast. They said that you could contact them because you know where Fardale is, but they could not contact us.”

  “Why did they not tell me this?” she questioned.

  “I don’t know,” admitted Rejji. “Maybe they want it kept secret. I had forgotten that you were not present when Lord Marak explained it to me. I think we should keep your abilities a secret between us. Will you try it?”

  Mistake nodded but sat silently for a while. After a short period of time she growled. “They were using it to spy on us,” she announced. “That is why they did not tell me fully about it. If I understood its potential range, I would probably have detected them listening in. How dare they!”

  “How dare they?” repeated Rejji. “Why shouldn’t they listen in? They have done everything for us and we have done nothing for them. Is it wrong for them to know if we intended to honor our agreements? In fact, thinking back on our conversations, I am surprised at their generosity. We have never really talked openly of actually doing anything to help them. Still they are gambling that we will.”

  “I guess you are right,” Mistake admitted as she recalled their conversations prior to leaving Fardale. “I guess I would do the same in their position. At least the listening part,” she chuckled. “Not sure I would have handed over my gold and the horses.”

  “One thing I learned during my stay at Fardale,” Rejji declared, “is that the people there love him and believe him to be sincere in wanting to help people. I could do much worse for a role model. I intend to honor our agreement after we find your Sage.”

  “As long as we find the Sage, I will help you honor it,” agreed Mistake. “The Sage is my only goal in life. After that, we do what you want to do.”

  Mistake removed the map she had obtained at the battle site and determined approximately where they were. She pictured where she thought Fardale would appear on the map and started casting the Air Tunnel. Nothing happened and she slowly moved the Air Tunnel further south. She could not make a connection by the time Bakhai returned, so she excused herself and went to the river to continue trying in privacy.

  Rejji and Bakhai sat talking until the fire died to embers and Bakhai settled down to sleep. Rejji was about to go find Mistake when she appeared from the woods. Her face sported a large grin and Rejji did not need to ask if she had been successful.

  “It will be easier next time,” she whispered as she passed Rejji and settled down for the night.

  In the morning, they rose and continued following the Meliban River eastward. Rejji remembered the last time he and Mistake had been in this area and was leery of encountering Zaldoni sentries, but they saw nobody. They passed through the area where they had been kidnapped without encountering another human and Rejji began to wonder why all of the villages had been deserted.

  Days passed without the sight of another person and eventually they encountered the South Fork River and could see the Giaming Mountains rising in the distance. They changed their path to follow the South Fork and the land began to rise slightly. Rejji could see the excitement rising in Mistake, as the mountains loomed larger and larger before them. Bakhai also appeared more relaxed and cheerful, as they got closer to the mountains he called home.

  Rejji spotted a beautiful clearing as the shadows grew long and decided to make camp. Bakhai prepared the meal while Rejji bathed in the stream. Mistake went off for her evening walk, which she had made a daily practice, so she could connect with Fardale and report on their progress. The three Fakarans sat and talked well into the night as they discussed the coming search for the Sage of the Mountain. Eventually they all drifted off to sleep.

  Bakhai was the first to notice something amiss as he sat up straight and strained his ears to listen. It was not a sound that had disturbed him, but a lack of sounds. The night animals had gone silent. He gently roused Rejji and Mistake and then eased himself into the bushes surrounding the clearing. Mistake and Rejji each went in a different direction to observe the trail passing by the clearing. Soon the sound of a single horse was clearly heard and moments later a rider came into view, illuminated by the moonlight.

  “Hail the campsite,” the rider called loudly. “I seek no trouble, but would welcome the company of others. I am Brakas, formerly of the Zaldoni. Might I spend a while here?”

  “Brakas,” Rejji called as he rose from cover and strode into the clearing. “You are far from home. Are you alone?”

  “That I am lad,” grinned Brakas as he dismounted. “It is good to see you have survived the perils that plague our land.”

  Brakas tied his horse to a tree as Mistake and Bakhai cautiously appeared. “I see you have fellow travelers,” continued Brakas. “Sorry if I have disturbed your sleep.”

  “Bakhai and Mistake,” introduced Rejji. “They are my friends. We travel to the mountains to see the Sage of the Mountain. Have you information that might aid us?”

  “Sage of the Mountain,” echoed Brakas as Bakhai stirred the fire to life. “I have heard such tales, but unbelievable rumors I would think.”

  “He exists,” Mistake declared stubbornly. “And we will find him.”

  “Well,” continued Brakas as he sat close to the fire, “what I have heard are stories about an oracle in the Bone Mountains, not the Giaming Mountains. Can’t say that the stories name him as the Sage of the Mountain, but these are all legends, lass. They are stories made to tell bored children in the villages to keep them from running off on their own.”

  “It is a story that we mean to know the truth of,” Rejji said before Mistake could verbally attacked Brakas. “Why are you so far from the fortress?”

  Everyone sat around the fire as the rekindled flames grew higher. Brakas removed his scabbard and laid it on the ground.

  “I am no longer Zaldoni,” Brakas frowned. “The greens have joined the Jiadin, so I left. Now I seek the free tribes to unite them against the reds.”

  “Klavin, Gregnic and the others are all reds now?” Rejji asked. “I never thought Wyant would join with the Jiadin. He sounded set against it.”

  “All Jiadin now,” nodded Brakas. “They have ways of convincing the leaders to become followers. Wyant was never a strong leader anyway. He talked a good talk, but in the end he was weak.”

  “What do you know of the Chadang?” Mistake asked.

  “I spoke with Vrylok not too many days ago,” Brakas answered as he tried to appraise Mistake through the flames of the fire. “He is a strong leader and will never join the Jiadin. The blues will be the centerpiece of the resistance to the Jiadin.”

  “No they won’t,” interjected Rejji. “We ran across them a few days ago. The Chadang no longer exist. I suspect it was Vrylok’s head we saw in the large tent with a torn blue scarf in its mouth.”

  “This is not good,” frowned Brakas. “I was counting on the Chadang being a part of the resistance to convince the other tribes to rise up. Not good at all.”

  “Why were the Chadang so far from home?” Mistake questioned.

  “All the free tribes are on the move,” Brakas answered as he looked at Mistake quizzically. “None of them want the Jiadin to know where to find them, so they have become nomads and abandoned their permanent fortresses. It makes my job of finding them much harder.”

  “How can you ever hope to find them all?” quizzed Rejji. “Fakara is a large country.”

  “I ask others,” Brakas answered. “Vrylok showed me on a map where three other tribes might be found. When I find them, I will ask them where to look for others. I also know how the tribes think and where they might hide. I will find them all. I just hope it is in time to organize against the Jiadin.”

  “Why is time a problem?” asked Rejji. “Are the Jiadin hunting all of the tribes?”

  “Of course,” Brakas answered. “Grulak cannot afford to have the free tribes at his back when he attacks Khadora. He must get them to join him or he must eliminate th
em.”

  “How can he hope to attack Khadora?” asked Rejji. “They have many armies there.”

  “Grulak has allies in Khadora,” Brakas responded. “He also has tens of thousands of warriors and there are no prizes in Fakara. He wants the riches of Khadora and there is little to stand in his way.”

  “What allies does he have in Khadora?” pushed Rejji.

  “I don’t know the names,” Brakas responded. “What does it matter to the likes of us anyway? Unless I can rally the free tribes, there is nothing to stop the Jiadin. This talk is depressing me though, especially your news about the Chadang. What are your plans?”

  “As I said,” Rejji offered, “we seek the Sage of the Mountain.”

  “Where are you going to look?” asked Brakas. “Maybe I can ride with you for awhile if our paths align.”

  “We are not sure where to begin,” admitted Rejji. “We had hoped to ask local villagers, but they all appear to have fled. I guess we will just go up into the mountains and look for him.”

  “Well I wouldn’t mind riding with you for a ways,” offered Brakas, “but I have to go a bit north of here tomorrow. After I finish my trip, I will try to locate you and travel along with you. At least I will be able to provide you with some protection. Traveling in Fakara is a risky proposition these days. I assume you are going to go through the pass?”

  “Are there villages with people in them on the other side of the pass?” questioned Rejji.

  “Yes,” responded Brakas. “There are a fair number of them. I don’t think the Jiadin have attempted crossing the Giaming Mountains at all yet, so the people would have no reason to flee.”

  “Then that is where we will start,” nodded Rejji. “If the Sage is known in this area, surely the villagers will have tales of him.”

  “Well that will take you a couple of days,” declared Brakas. “I should be able to complete my business by then and meet up with you. I must get some sleep now though so I can get an early start. I will be gone when you rise with the sun in the morning, so I will bid you a safe journey now.”

 

‹ Prev