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The Sword and the Flame

Page 14

by Stephen Lawhead


  Bria smiled, the light softening her features. “In truth, Esme, I did not think you would care to come with me. It is a long journey to Dekra, and an uncertain errand at that. It is something I feel I must do.”

  “And you must do it alone?”

  “No, my mother will go with me.”

  “And I will go with you, too. Chloe has already packed a few things for me, and you see”—she indicated her riding clothes—“I am ready to go.”

  Bria laughed and hugged her friend. “Then you shall come along, by all means. Forgive me. I should have invited you. I merely thought that . . . Well, we will go together, and I will welcome the company.”

  Esme smiled too. “It will make me feel useful to you. And I must admit that I have always wondered about this mysterious city of Dekra. There are many strange stories about it—is it really enchanted?”

  “Yes, but not the way you mean. Its enchantment grows from the love of its citizens. It is, as you shall see, a most remarkable place.”

  “You have been there many times?” Esme fell to the task of helping Bria ready herself for the journey.

  “Not many, but a few times. Quentin and I would go there occasion-ally before the children were born. The last time was for Yeseph’s funeral, a few years ago. Quentin talked about our going back there to stay, but after Yeseph died he never spoke of it again. He is king, and the king must remain on his throne in Askelon.” She shrugged, and Esme finished tying the points at her sleeves. “Now then, let us go and wake the girls.”

  The little princesses were awake and chattering like squirrels when the two women entered the bedroom. Chloe was there, along with their own nurse, packing their clothes into carved chests for the journey. When they saw their mother, they jumped up and flitted across the floor to embrace her.

  “Mother, oh, Mother! Is it true? Can we really go with you?” they begged. “We will be good, and we will be quiet. We promise it. Oh, please?”

  Bria smiled and kissed them both, then knelt down to speak to them. “Yes, my darlings. You are coming with me. But I want you to remember that this is a long journey, and you will get very tired. You must do as I say, for we will travel quickly.”

  “Are we to ride horses too?” asked Brianna.

  “Yes, horses?” echoed Elena.

  “You will ride in a coach with Grandmother. She will need some-one to keep her company on the way.”

  “Is Daddy going, too?”

  “No.” Bria sighed. “The king is searching for Gerin and will not come with us. Hurry now, and finish dressing—this stone floor is cold on your feet! We will wait for you in the yard. Chloe will bring you out when you are ready. Now run along.”

  Both girls scampered away to finish dressing. The two women crept back into the silent corridors of Askelon Castle and made their way down to the hall, where a simple breakfast had been laid for them. There Alinea was waiting, her trim form clothed in summer green—an embroidered tunic over trousers and tall riding boots. An image flashed into Bria’s mind of her mother standing just so, telling her good-bye. For a moment she imagined this had all happened before just this way.

  “Good morning, Mother.” The queen paused, then asked, “Have I ever seen you wear these clothes before?” She examined them carefully.

  “Yes,” Alinea laughed, “I believe you have. But I am amazed that you would remember.”

  Then it came to her. “How could I ever forget? You were going off to rescue Father—dressed like that. You had to sneak out of your own castle.”

  “I thought I would just try them on and . . . well, they fit, so here I am. Do you approve?”

  “How could I disapprove?” Bria hugged her mother, and then they all sat down to eat before leaving. They spoke little, each occupied with her own thoughts of the impending journey. When they finished eating, they hurried out into the ward yard, where the horses and coach were already waiting for them; the coachman was tying the last bundle of pro-visions to the frame behind the coach.

  “Wilkins!” said Bria when she recognized the man.

  “My lady,” he bowed, “when Lady Esme told me of your wish to go to Dekra, I thought it best to travel with you.”

  “If you would rather have another . . . ,” added Esme.

  “No, it is a fine idea. I commend it and thank you both.”

  “I am at your service.”Wilkins bowed again and touched the hilt of his sword. Bria was once again reminded that theirs was not a pleasure outing.

  From across the yard the warder, a man with short gray hair and gray eyes, whose sinews seemed made of whipcord, approached. “My lady, I am against this enterprise.” He spoke directly, not wasting any words.

  Bria smiled. “I know, Hagin, but there is no worry.”

  “No worry? Your own son kidnapped, and you say no worry?” The man gave her a look of frank disapproval. “The king will have my hide stretched and nailed on yonder drawbridge if I let you go.”

  “We will come to no harm,” insisted Bria. “We travel with an escort of knights, and the king’s roads are safe enough.”

  “Then I shall go too,” he announced.

  “No, I would rather have you here to await the king’s return.”

  The warder grumbled but held his tongue and said no more.

  Bria and Esme were helped into the saddle, Alinea into the coach, and the horses were led out through the yard toward the gatehouse, where two knights, mounted and ready, were waiting. There they paused, and Chloe and the princesses came running out to scramble into the coach. A few of the castle servants had gathered to wish the travelers a speedy and safe journey; the little girls waved and threw kisses to all until they entered the dark tunnel of the gatehouse and were cut off from sight.

  Hagin the warder, nephew of Trenn, stood rooted to the spot until they had disappeared, then shook his head and stumped off.

  Askelon lay but two leagues away. With a little speed the tinker would arrive at midday, find himself a meal, and begin making his rounds. There were certain customers he visited every time he came to town. Milcher at the Gray Goose Inn, for example; he always needed a new pot, or a pan repaired, and always included supper too. Yes, he was one of the best customers, and there were others: the butcher’s wife, the chandler’s sister, the baker, and the weaver.

  In fact, all the merchants needed his services one time or another. Even the king’s kitchen staff occasionally bought his wares.

  “A wee bit further, Old Tip,” Pym told his dog, “and we’uns’ll stop a little in Askelon. What say ye there? Eh? A nice grizzle bone fer ye, Tipper. A hot pasty fer me—ah, innkeeper’s wife makes the best meat pies in all Mensandor. There’s a fact, Tip. The best. Makes me mouth water to think on’t.”

  Tip took all this in with a benign, thoughtful expression and wagged her tail with appropriate enthusiasm, and they ambled down the road, clinking and clattering as they went. As they came within sight of Askelon Castle, they heard the sound of hooves drumming along the road behind them. Pym turned around, stepped to the side of the road, and waited for the rider to pass. In an instant the white charger and its regal rider swept past them.

  Pym raised his hand in greeting, and the intent rider dipped his head in acknowledgment as he rode on by. The tinker followed the horseman into the distance with his eyes and continued on his way.

  “Comin’ a day, Tip, an’ we’uns’ll ride too! A wagon an’ a sharping stone an’ treadle-foot—that’s fer we!” He nodded slyly to his dog. “We’uns’ve found our fortune!”

  He gazed after the rider disappearing into the distance. “But ye know, I think that ’un was the king that passed by jest now. I couldn’t say fer a certain, but might’ve been. Looked a king t’me. Would ye not say, Tipper? Eh? Quite right, quite right. Looked a king. Maybe ’twas the king.”

  Pym glanced at his black dog. “The gods be with him, poor king. Terrible thing. Terrible. His son snatched off like that. A terrible thing—deed most foul, that. Didn’t I say it, Tip? A deed
most foul.” The tinker raised his voice to a shout and called after the rider, now just a speck in the road far away, “The gods be with ye, Sire!”

  He squinted up an eye toward the sun, gauging the time of day. The morning shone fair and bright, the sky high and wide and blue. Across the green fields farmers worked their land, coaxing grain out of the soil. Occasionally the tinker would wave to one, who would answer his greeting likewise.

  Ahead the town drew slowly closer, and the sun rose higher. “Tipper, we’uns’d best stir our bones or be too late to get our meal. Come along, now.”

  He put his head down, hoisted the straps of his baggage, and picked up his pace; they clanged and rattled down the road to Askelon. “You cannot be serious,” said the high priest. He stared at the old man as if unable to comprehend the words just spoken.

  “I assure you I am.” The cold eyes glared; the tongue poked snake-like between the thin scars of lips.

  “But why? Why risk discovery now? It is not wise.”

  “Not wise? You dare to presume wisdom beyond Nimrood’s?” There was poison in the voice, and echoes of cracking thunder.

  High Priest Pluell paled and threw up his hands. “Oh, no! It is not that.” He hurried to explain. “It is just that I thought—that is . . . we are safe here. We have time now to think this through, plan our course of action. We must move very carefully, you would agree.”

  “I have decided,” said Nimrood flatly. “There is nothing more to discuss. I will tell you what to do; I will make all the decisions from now on.

  “You have nothing to fear if you do your part and see to it that your stupid priests do theirs. Leave all else to me.” The old wizard glared at the priest with malevolent glee. “You want to humble that usurper king, do you not? Ah, yes. I can see it on your face. You want him and his God Most High brought low before all Mensandor. Then you will be acknowledged and the power of the High Temple increased.”

  The high priest could not resist a smile at the prospect.

  “Well, then, do nothing—do you hear? Wait for me. I will return shortly, and we can begin.”

  Pluell watched the old man—fearing him, loathing him. But his desire to flaunt his power over the throne crushed any resistance he might offer to Nimrood. Yes, to humble the proud king, to reassert the claims of the temple over the affairs of the realm—that was worth the price of putting up with the troublesome old long-beard Nimrood. It was worth the risk.

  “Very well,” said the high priest. “It shall be as you say.”

  Nimrood nodded and winked and smiled his gruesome smile. “That is good, my pet. Do as I say and all will be well. Now I go.”

  The high priest sat in his handsome chair and listened to the tap of Nimrood’s footsteps receding into the temple. When it is done, I will cast the old vulture out, he thought. I have but to contend with him a little longer.

  24

  Blazer’s hooves sounded dull thunder over the great planks of the drawbridge; his iron shoes struck sparks from the stone flagging of the gatehouse road. Shouts of “The king is coming! Open the gates! The king is here!” preceded him, and startled gatekeepers leaped into action.

  Horse and rider jolted to a stop in the inner ward yard. Squires dashed up to take the king’s well-lathered mount. Without a word Quentin went straight into the castle, through the banquet hall filled with people still lingering over their midday meal, and on to the throne room.

  He flew up the steps to the Dragon Throne and threw off his soiled cloak as he collapsed into the throne. Quentin called angrily for his high minister, his voice booming out into the quiet of the deserted room. His call was answered with a flurry of footsteps, but no sign of Toli.

  Quentin seethed inside. He had risen late—later than he had planned—and had started his journey to Askelon after the sun was well up. This put him in a raw mood. Every stride was too slow after that, and he arrived in Askelon harried, fuming, out of patience.

  He had slept well enough, curled in his cloak on the farmer’s own bed—the farmer’s wife would not have it any other way but that the king should have their bed—and had awakened feeling better than he had in days. But his tardy start, and the dark thought of what awaited him in Askelon, soon destroyed the fragile peace he had achieved.

  As a result, he now raged about the lack of respect for his person and the slipshod attention his interests received.

  “Where is the high minister?” he bellowed. His voice echoed back to him from the far corners of the empty hall.

  There was no answer.

  Quentin sank deeper into his melancholy. He shouted again and this time heard answering footsteps.

  “Well?” He looked down to see Hagin, the warder, coming resolutely toward him.

  The man bowed when he reached the dais and said simply, “My lord, you have returned.”

  “Yes, I have returned,” Quentin snapped. “Where is everyone? Tell me quickly, if you value your tongue.”

  Hagin appeared unperturbed. His clear gray eyes regarded Quentin unflinchingly. He was man enough for any monarch’s moods. “They are gone, Sire,” he related simply. “All are gone.”

  “All? What do you mean all?”

  “Everyone.”

  Quentin stared sullenly at the man. “What are you babbling about? Send for them at once.”

  “It may not be, my lord.”

  “The queen—where is she?”

  “Her Highness and the dowager and the children have left Askelon, the Lady Esme with them. They ride for Dekra.”

  “What?” He had not expected that answer. To Dekra? Why? “When did they leave?”

  “Just before sunrise.”

  Quentin struck the arm of the throne with his fist. While he had dawdled on the road, his wife had left the castle. If he had not stopped, if only he had ridden on to Askelon, he would have been here in time to detain her. She would not have gone if he were here.

  “Where is the high minister?” Quentin growled.

  “He has disappeared, Your Majesty.”

  Again an unexpected reply. “Eh?”

  “He was last seen in attendance at the hermit’s funeral, Sire. After the burial he disappeared. He did not return to the castle. It is believed he slipped away from the procession on the way back to Askelon. No one has heard from or seen him since.”

  Toli had disappeared? Well he might. If the prince was not found, it would be better if he never returned.

  Who else was left? “Theido and Ronsard—have they arrived?”

  “They arrived, my lord, and immediately took responsibility for the search party for the prince. They have gone.”

  That was it, then. All were gone—those he needed most to see. He was alone.

  The gnawing loneliness he had felt on the road was upon him once more. It was true: everyone he cared about was gone.

  Here was a loneliness deeper than that of the temple. Then he had not known any different life, but now . . . He had not been so deserted in years. Every day he was surrounded by his closest friends and loved ones—every single day. He had thought it would never end, that the closeness, the love, would go on forever. But he was sadly wrong. In three short days—already it seemed a lifetime—his world had been shattered and the pieces scattered by some cruel fate. Nothing remained now of the happiness he had so recently possessed.

  “Sire?”

  Quentin stirred himself. The warder was looking at him strangely.

  “I asked if that would be all, Sire.”

  “Go now. Leave me.” He heard the man’s steps diminish as Hagin left the hall. A door closed, and the boom rang in the silence like a pronouncement of doom.

  There in the dim interior of his throne room, the king gave him-self over to the hopelessness that assailed him, sinking deeper and still deeper beneath the crushing weight of despair.

  With a round wooden bowl tucked between his knees, Toli sat on a woven grass mat outside the summer hut of Hoet. The Jher went about their daily business around h
im, but he was aware of their constant side-long glances that told him that he was still very much in their minds. No one would ask him about what had happened last night as he stood before the fire, unable to speak—that would be too impolite. Still, they would wonder, and the gentle Jher would watch him when they thought he was not looking. So Toli, aware of their scrutiny, pretended not to notice and slowly dipped his hand into the bowl of sweet mulberries that were his breakfast.

  A shadow fell over him as he squatted in the sunlight listening to the chirp and twitter of the early-morning forest and the soft soughing of the upper branches in the breeze, drinking in the musty fragrance of earth and bark and growing things. Toli glanced up at the figure who had come to stand before him.

  “You are leaving again,” Hoet observed.

  Toli nodded. “I must.”

  “I knew that you had not returned to stay. You are needed, for there is trouble in the land.”

  Toli cocked an eye to the old chieftain. “You know about the white men’s trouble?”

  “It is not only the trouble of the white race; when darkness falls, it covers all. Yes, we know there is trouble in the land. Wind is a swift messenger, and the forest holds no secrets from the Jher.”

  “Then you know the king I serve needs your help. His son has been taken from him by force.”

  Hoet nodded and leaned long on his staff before he spoke again. When at last he did, he replied, “And you carry the blame for this deed.”

  Toli looked away. “How did you know?”

  “How else can it be that you are not with your friend in his time of need? He blames you, or you blame yourself, and that is why you ride alone.”

  “Yes,” replied Toli softly. “Your wits are as sharp as your eyes,Wise One.”

  “When you did not speak last night before the fire, I knew—though I guessed even when you came riding alone to our camp.”

  “Then you knew why I could not speak.”

  “Come with me,” said Hoet, and started away.

  Toli rose, set the bowl aside, and followed the aged Jher leader through the village among the trees. The glances of his kinsmen fol-lowed him as they walked the length of the camp to where Toli’s horse waited, already saddled, grazing in a clump of sweet clover at his feet.

 

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