Harald-ARC

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Harald-ARC Page 24

by David Friedman


  "One ladder. Turtle's down to six men."

  "Use this one." Asbjorn pulled a rock from the wall, rolled it back to Thorvald. A moment later they saw it bounce down the slope, barely missing the ladder.

  Trumpet calls from below. What was left of the lead formation stopped clearing rocks, started back down the path. The man halfway up the remaining ladder looked down, abruptly reversed direction. Two more rocks bounced down the slope from the men above; both missed. The attack was over.

  * * *

  Kiron stepped back from the stretcher party, looked away from what they were carrying, turned to Giorgio.

  "Why did he stop?"

  "Wasn't going to make it. Turtle runs out of men before it gets to the top of the path. Could send another one up, but things were getting pretty crowded, bodies, rocks coming down. One ladder was down, the other getting men picked off from the cliff. Getting two or three men to the top isn't going to do it."

  "So what now?"

  "Cleared a good deal of the path; doubt they have the manpower to fill it up again with bolts flying around their ears. We'll build more ladders, maybe some long enough to get all the way up from the bottom. More rocks for our throwers. Patch the wounded best we can. If nothing changes, should take it tomorrow."

  "Who's the Commander talking with?"

  "Has a horse; probably word from Niko. Hope nothing's gone wrong."

  When they reached Artos he was standing still, eyes closed. He opened them, saw Kiron.

  "Harald wants a parley."

  "Why?"

  "One way to find out. Second can get ready for the next attack without me. Come along; he's worth meeting."

  Before dark they reached the encampment by the ford; the commander of the fifth legion met them.

  "There's a tent at the halfway point, out of range of both sides. He's waiting; two men with him."

  "Giorgio, Kiron, gives us even numbers."

  Niko hesitated, spoke:

  "Sure you want ...? I could lend you Konstin."

  Artos shook his head.

  "No need. Not Harald's kind of trick."

  "What do you think ...?"

  "Tell you when I get back."

  The three men rode out to the tent—a roof, no walls—where Harald was waiting. At the sight of the man sitting behind him, the commander's eyes widened.

  Harald stood up.

  "News for you. Brought Danio along to tell it."

  The cavalry officer hesitated, looked down, up.

  "We surrendered. I'm one of the hostages."

  "Everyone?"

  "Ravens cut out west; don't know if they made it. Everyone else."

  "Tell him where you surrendered; it's the important part."

  "The Oasis. Outside."

  He looked up at the commander.

  "They were inside. With the water."

  "You're holding the Oasis?"

  "Took it a week ago. Get your whole army there you can have it back; my men have orders to leave if anything big shows up. Don't see how you'll do it. I've got more than half your water wagons, all the collection points along the cliff edge. Prince knows by now; sent a courier to tell him your cavalry would be walking home, needed food, water. How long for him to put together an army—when most everything he has this end of the province is here—supply train, get them to the Oasis, take the Oasis, get supplies to you? Doubt he can do it—damn sure he can't do it before you run out of food."

  The commander remained silent.

  "Lower vale, nothing to eat but grass. We're still holding the upper vale; I'm guessing you tried today, didn't make it. Might tomorrow, might not. Get through in force, they torch the grain stores. Flocks have been leaving since you took the ford, goat paths up into the mountains. Start early tomorrow, everything goes well, might get a good dinner for your boys from what's left. Not two weeks worth. Don't believe me, welcome to send someone up vale and look—flag of peace, one of mine to keep him company.

  "One thing more. Pass is open, word got here today. Gavin's back his side of the river. Lost a lot of his cavalry, Bashkai, got the legions safe home. Can't prove it, but it's true."

  The commander's voice was calm:

  "Your proposal?"

  "You get your oasis back, Eagles get theirs. Other than that, same terms I gave Danio here. We keep the gear, everything but personal stuff. Make sure your boys get home—maybe a little thin, but alive. Ransom is two gold emperors a man. Till it's paid, they can't fight outside the Empire, can't fight me or my allies inside. Officers as hostages till we get the gold. Looking forward to your company. Hardest I've had to work since Talinn died. What—twelve years back?"

  "Thirteen. I accept your terms on behalf of His Highness. Me, legion commanders, company commanders as hostages; enough officers left to get the men home."

  He stood up. So did Kiron.

  "I have a different proposal. One hostage. Me."

  "You're sure?"

  "Father needs you. Needs the rest. He sent me along for an education. Can't ask him, but I know the answer."

  Artos nodded. Kiron turned to Harald.

  "I am Kiron son of Sikander son of Alkiron. I offer myself as hostage for my father's men."

  Harald looked at him carefully, turned to Knute.

  "Fetch Donal."

  Turned back to Artos. "Not that I don't trust you—but there was that swimming pool."

  "His Highness's idea."

  "Get back, give him my best wishes. Don't blame Konstantin—ten times his numbers and a trick. Lost a lot of his men, got hurt himself, getting better. Escort too. Had to kill a lot of them; rest would have kept fighting if I hadn't grabbed their water. Good men."

  The two felt silent. Kiron watched both, wondered what the next few weeks would be like. Not dull.

  The silence was broken by Donal's arrival. He dismounted, walked over to Kiron, looked at him carefully, spoke.

  "Yes. Prince's eldest son. Won three silvers off him."

  Kiron looked back at him.

  "I didn't think the horse ..."

  "Guesting with us, education, first rule: Don't bet with Westkin. Second rule: Especially on horses."

  A Guest

  Better gear than good sense

  A traveler cannot carry

  "Camp here, Mainvale tomorrow. Beds the night after."

  "How do cats make camp? I'm used to traveling with wagons, tents."

  Niall grinned. "I'll show you. Gets me even with Egil."

  Kiron looked puzzled. Niall got out tent cloths, lance sections, stakes and went to work. When he was done, Kiron kneeled down to look into the tent.

  "Not much room."

  "Two people, bedding. Infantry can afford wagons; we can't. Too slow."

  "Who's Egil and how does showing me how a tent goes up ...?"

  "My big brother. Couple of years back, after Father captured King James, Egil got to show him how we put up a tent. I figure the grandson of an emperor is about even with a king."

  "You captured the king of the Karls? I thought you were allies."

  "So did we. Your grandfather bribed one of the King's kinsmen to give him bad advice. Ended up taking 'Nora prisoner, trying to get control of the Order. Father got her out, took James prisoner, talked sense into him. Now we're allies again."

  Kiron still looked puzzled.

  "Who is 'Nora, what does she have to do with the Order, why did your father go to war with his allies to rescue her ...?

  Niall stopped a moment to think.

  "Forgot—you're a foreigner. Leonora is the Lady Commander of the Order. Also the mother of my big sister. Egil's big sister too—Cara's the oldest. She found the castle they were holding 'Nora in, she and Father got 'Nora out, all three of them went after James. I wasn't there, heard about it later."

  "I thought you people, the Karls, a man only had one wife."

  "Mostly. Father and 'Nora were before Father married mother. Still friends, though. Family. Is it true your grandfather has dozens o
f wives?"

  "Of course not. Just three, and the senior only gave him daughters."

  "My brother Donal said there was a whole women's palace in the western capital."

  "That isn't just for the wives—concubines too."

  "Sounds like fun. Job you're planning for?"

  "I don't have to be Emperor for that."

  "What do you have to do, your part of the world, end up with a palace full of beautiful women?"

  "Stay alive. Grandfather had four brothers. None of them managed."

  Knute cut into the conversation:

  "Could stay here. Lots of beautiful ladies—whole holds full. Ask Niall. Safer, too. He started with three brothers, still has two—back to three counting Donal."

  Kiron looked puzzled, changed the subject:

  "Both of you speak Tengu, Harald as well as I do. I thought I wouldn't be able to talk to anyone."

  Knute answered:

  "Two years caravan guard, Imperial traders. Some vales folk speak it, mostly learned the same way, more don't. Want to talk to ladies, got a new language to learn."

  "That sounds like a good reason."

  By lunch time, bored with language lessons, they switched back to Tengu.

  "Ever hunt in the mountains?"

  "Near the summer palace. It's south of the low pass—mountains, but not as big as yours."

  "With a bow?"

  Kiron nodded. "You'll like our mountains. Rabbits, goats. Climbing fun too. May take a few days to get used to it."

  "What do you mean?"

  "Harder to breath high up. Not bad at Haraldholt, but you're used to the plains. Over the high pass everyone has trouble, even us—and we're the highest hold in the Vales."

  Before dark the riders reached the Silverthread, turned up it into Mainvale. At the first farmstead Niall rode ahead, returned shortly.

  "Dinner, beds in the hayloft."

  The next day was spent riding, at times walking, as the vale narrowed and grew steeper. Where they stopped for lunch its sides were linked by a wall of weathered stone twice the height of a man, a narrow gap for the stream, the road beside it. Kiron looked at it curiously; Niall answered the unspoken question.

  "Two hundred years ago, to keep Westkin from the upper vale, back when that's where the people were. Oldest wall in the vales."

  "It isn't all old. See."

  "That's one of the bits Father talked folk into patching when he heard about His Highness's swimming pool."

  It was almost dark when they reached Haraldholt. Niall led the other two to the stable, where they unsaddled and rubbed down the horses with the assistance—loosely speaking—of half a dozen younger members of the household. As they came out of the stable a woman met them, a bundle of cloth over her arm. She looked inquiringly at Niall. He spoke slowly in Tengu:

  "Mother, this is Kiron, the Second Prince's son. Father sent him to guest with us for a while. Kiron, my mother—Gerda Bergthordottir."

  "Be welcome." Gerda nodded to a grandchild, who stepped forward; the plate held a chunk of bread, a small bowl. She reached into the bowl, sprinkled the bread with salt, offered it to Kiron. He took the bread, ate it.

  "My thanks for your hospitality, noble lady."

  Gerda returned his smile, handed the bundle of cloth to Niall.

  "All three of you—I can at least send Knute back home clean."

  "Yes mother."

  Niall led the other two through the woods to a small house. For a moment Kiron thought it was on fire, then realized it was steam.

  "Hot spring. Reason they settled here, first folk over the pass."

  The next day Niall spent introducing Kiron to the holt and its occupants. The day after he found his guest a longbow and went hunting. Three hours and a lot of scrambling later, they were on their way home with two rabbits and a bird.

  "That's a lot of work for lunch. Wouldn't a mountain goat be better?"

  "Less fun. More food. Aren't any this close."

  "I might at least be able to hit the thing."

  "Just need practice. Strange bow."

  Kiron looked skeptical.

  "You're mine."

  Kiron looked up, startled; a moment before there had been no one there. The youth had a bow in one hand, the other pointed at them.

  "Fair enough." Niall handed over their catch. "You get to clean them."

  He turned to Kiron:

  "The bandit who has just ambushed us is my nephew Asbjorn; it's his favorite game. 'Bjorn, this is Kiron, guesting with us a while."

  Kiron spoke slowly in the vales tongue: "Honor defeated so valiant a hunter by."

  Asbjorn looked at his uncle: "He noticed."

  Kiron watched as Asbjorn, booty in hand, vanished downhill. Niall spoke in a puzzled tone:

  "Noticed what?"

  "What language he was speaking. He knew who I was. How young do they go for caravan guards?"

  "Not that young; learned from Father. Tells a story in our tongue, mixes in Tengu, Llashi. Been doing it since 'Bjorn was little. For us too."

  "He wasn't one of the ones I met yesterday, was he?"

  "Arrived last night, across from Newvale. Boy climbs like a goat. Pretty good at stalking, too. Caught Father once—above himself for a week. Till Father caught him."

  "And?"

  "Took a mountain goat off him—had spent two days hunting it."

  Over the next weeks, Kiron learned what he could of both hunting and stalking, including one fruitless afternoon under cover watching the path they thought Asbjorn would come home on. Evenings were spent learning the language, trying to make sense of the busy chaos around him. One evening, as he sat watching the children play, he heard a footstep, looked up. Gerda was watching him. She spoke slowly in her own tongue.

  "I hope my son is taking proper care of you. "

  "Yes. Not boring. Different."

  "The language. Is it a problem?"

  "Hard. Learning. Slowly. "

  "You are doing very well." This time she spoke in heavily accented Tengu. "Better than I would so short time.

  He switched with relief to his own language.

  "Your speech is a little like Alteng—what the common people speak in our province. When I was little my nurse sung me songs in the Old Speech."

  "You find it different here. Different how?"

  "Less orderly."

  "Vales less orderly than kingdom. Kingdom than Empire. Like it that way." She smiled at him, held up a hand for silence, listened a moment, went off to deal with a quarrel between two of her grandchildren.

  Kiron was still considering the difference between Haraldholt and his own childhood at breakfast the next morning when Niall sat down across the table from him, spoke hesitantly.

  "I'm going down vale. Probably back tonight. Be all right, won't you?"

  Kiron nodded. "I can practice my archery, language. Plenty to do. I could go hunting, but I'm afraid the rabbits and your nephew are both too much for me."

  "Could go with him. Couldn't ambush you then. Lot of climbing, though. It's Aliana. My Lady, the one Knute teased about. Valholt Ladies should be back today—got word last night. Want to be there to meet her. Too long."

  By early afternoon, having concluded that hunting with Asbjorn, although not dull, was too strenuous for an old man of twenty, Kiron made his way back to the hall in search of food and drink. The room was empty save for a lady in a chair by the fire, eyes closed. The boots by her chair were splashed with dried mud, the brown tunic almost black with dust. Kiron went into the kitchen, came back with a pitcher, mugs. Sat down, searched for words.

  She opened her eyes. He spoke. "Beer. Weary from travel seem you."

  She blinked, looked at him curiously, accepted the mug, drank.

  "Weary indeed—left Cloud's Eye yesterday morning. That's good."

  "Pool of hot water, for traveler."

  "Plan to soak when I'm done sitting. Might take a while. What do you speak when you're at home?"

  "Tengu. Kn
ow you any?"

 

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