The Devil's Armor

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The Devil's Armor Page 2

by John Marco


  “Yes,” replied Lorn, though it wasn’t quite correct. He detested Jarrin now, and would have preferred the company of just about anyone else. “Come in. I want to speak to you.”

  Suspicion flashed through Jarrin’s eyes. He covered it by feigning exhaustion, sighing and saying, “Forgive me, my liege. I am very tired.” As he noted the wine decanter he added, “I may not be proper company tonight.”

  “Come in and be quiet,” said Lorn, gesturing toward his daughter. “She’s asleep.”

  Jarrin did as his king requested, entering the room as quietly as his bulky armor would allow and coming to stand before the sitting Lorn. The king pointed to the opposite chair.

  “Sit.”

  The captain did so, looking uncomfortable. Lorn ignored this as he poured oxblood wine into the twin goblets.

  “We need to speak, my friend,” said Lorn. “There’s not much time, and I needed to get you away from curious ears.” He pushed one of the goblets across the table toward Jarrin, avoiding the carefully folded letter lying between them. It seemed to Lorn that his captain was making every effort to avoid glancing at the note. With a gauntleted fist Jarrin took the goblet but did not drink.

  “My liege, I should return to my post,” said Jarrin. “If the duke attacks—”

  “If the duke attacks he will run us down like dead grass.” Lorn smiled and lifted his goblet in toast. “To tomorrow, then, and our deaths.”

  Returning the smile, Jarrin said, “No, we are strong, my liege. We will repel them.”

  “Ah, you don’t think that, Jarrin. You’re not as stupid as Uralak. You know the truth.” Lorn raised his eyebrows. “Don’t you?”

  Jarrin hesitated. “I will admit our task is great . . .”

  He went no further. Lorn leaned back in his chair. With his goblet cradled in his long fingers he contemplated his captain.

  “Well, perhaps you are right,” he said. “Perhaps Jazana Carr hasn’t been able to buy as much loyalty as I’ve feared. Or maybe Duke Rihards will have a change of heart, hmm? Do you think he will renounce the bitch-queen for the sake of old friendships?”

  “I cannot say, my liege.” At last Jarrin drank, hiding his face behind the goblet.

  “No,” Lorn agreed. “Who can read the heart of a traitor?”

  Before the awkward silence grew too long, Lorn put down his goblet. “Look at that,” he said, pointing with his chin toward Jazana Carr’s letter. “A bold woman, that one.”

  Jarrin nodded. “I wish I had never laid eyes on it.”

  “What choice had you, my friend? Duke Rihards called you forth, and I needed Carr’s message. It was brave of you. Have no regrets.”

  For the first time since he’d brought the letter into Carlion, Jarrin looked remorseful. “Have you read it, my liege?”

  “Of course I have,” Lorn snapped. Then he remembered that Jarrin probably had not. “Go on. Read it yourself if you like.”

  “No,” said Jarrin. “I don’t care to.”

  With a flick of a finger Lorn nudged the note closer to Jarrin. “She calls me a tyrant. She thinks her reign would be better than mine. I suspect some in the city think that as well.”

  “It’s been hard for the people, my liege,” replied Jarrin. He was a proud man. It didn’t surprise Lorn that he was rising to the bait. “They’ve endured hardships for you. They want only to see an end to things, to have bread again.”

  “Then they can blame Jazana Carr for that!” In his anger Lorn almost crushed the stem of his goblet. He glanced toward the still sleeping Poppy, lowering his voice with effort. “Almost twenty years, Jarrin; do I have to remind everyone of that? It could have been twenty years of peace for us all if not for that ambitious bitch. If the people blame me for this war, then I say let them call me wicked.” He sat back, brooding over his wine, wanting to smash the goblet against the wall. There had been no way for him to make peace, and no other country had come to aid him. But his people, stupid, mindless sheep, had never seen that. “I get blamed for infants dying, for mothers having no milk, for crops withering, for blight of every kind. Is that how they’ll remember me?”

  “They will welcome an end to war when it comes,” said Jarrin.

  “They will celebrate my death.”

  “No, my liege.”

  “No, because I will not let them.” Lorn smiled sharply at his captain. “I will not die, Jarrin. Not tonight.”

  Again the silence rose between them. Lorn watched Jarrin’s expression. The moment stretched like molasses. And then he saw it, just for a moment, just a hint, and he knew that he was right about his trusted aide. Before the hint could flee, he seized it.

  “How much did she buy you for?”

  Jarrin knew in an instant he’d been discovered. His hand shot toward his dagger, but Lorn was ready, grasping the table and tossing it over, smashing it against Jarrin like a weapon. The decanter and goblets flew through the air as Jarrin tumbled backward, his armor unbalancing him. Quickly Lorn released his own blade, a narrow stiletto pinned beneath his cape. The weapon leaped forward as Lorn pursued Jarrin over the table, landing on him like a jaguar. Jarrin’s head collided with the floor, his arms flailing uselessly. Lorn dropped his weight down upon his quarry, buckling Jarrin’s breastplate and knocking the air from his lungs. Clasping his fists together he hammered Jarrin’s jaw, snapping it. The young captain wailed in pain. Too slow to react, his eyes widened horribly as he felt Lorn’s stiletto at his throat.

  “I know she paid you,” panted Lorn. He was a big man and easily held down the stunned Jarrin, straddling his midsection while the stiletto hovered threateningly. With one push he could puncture the gorget. “How much I wanted to believe you hadn’t betrayed me,” Lorn hissed. “But you’re like Rihards and the others; you love only money.”

  Jarrin tried to speak, but his fractured jaw garbled his words. “Butcher!” came the cry, spit out with blood and saliva. Lorn lifted Jarrin’s bald head and slammed it into the stone floor. Jarrin’s eyes fluttered wildly. Seeing his captain still awake, Lorn roared and hammered a fist into his temple. The stiletto’s pommel broke bone and skin; Jarrin drifted into unconsciousness.

  Lorn leaned back, exhausted. He closed his eyes and caught his breath, straddling his near-dead captain. Poppy was crying. Inadvertently they had struck her crib, knocking it aside. Lorn’s eyes shot to the door. He had left strict orders not to be disturbed, but Lariza was like a second mother to the child and always ignored Lorn’s gruff commands. Hurriedly he rose and went to the door, opening it. Not surprisingly he saw the nursemaid coming down the hall. The young woman stopped when she saw the king.

  “I heard the child, my lord,” she said, trying to look past him. “Is she all right?”

  “She’s fine.” Lorn hardened his expression. “And I knew you’d be on your way. What did I tell you, woman? I’m not to be disturbed.”

  “Yes, my lord, but—”

  “Go!” ordered Lorn. “I’m with Captain Jarrin.”

  “Then let me look after Poppy . . .”

  “Away, woman!” barked Lorn, pointing down the hall. “Now.”

  Swallowing her anger, Lariza spun and huffed down the hallway, her skirt billowing behind her. Lorn cursed under his breath and closed the door. Poppy was still crying in her crib. Lorn ignored her, going straight to the unconscious Jarrin. Stupidly, he had left his stiletto on the floor beside him. He picked it up, then noticed Jarrin’s own dagger thrown across the floor. Its blade was flat, like a carving knife, a better tool for the work at hand. Lorn picked it up, tested its edge with his thumb, and decided it was perfect.

  Knowing there was no turning back, he bent over Jarrin and pried open his mouth. Inside was his unmoving tongue. Lorn took the tongue in his left hand and pulled. With his right he worked the dagger, slicing off the tongue like bacon. Blood sluiced from Jarrin’s mouth. Amazingly, he did not awaken. He was a dead man anyway, Lorn knew, and sat back with satisfaction, the pink muscle from Jarrin’s mouth b
loody in his palm.

  Time was his enemy. Lorn rose and walked across the chamber to his dressing area, where a basin of water stood below a mirror. A small bale of white cloth rested on the dressing table. Carefully Lorn wrapped Jarrin’s tongue in some of the cloth, then placed it on the table. He dipped the bloody dagger into the basin of water, rinsing off the gore, then went to work on himself, carefully shaving his head, shedding salt-and-pepper hair at his feet. After a few minutes he was done and stared at his bald reflection in the wavy mirror. His eyes were nearly the same color as Jarrin’s, he noted with satisfaction.

  While his daughter Poppy continued to cry, King Lorn the Wicked shook the blade in the water once more, then began shaving his beard.

  At the foot of a small, dentate mountain range, Duke Rihards of Rolga waited impatiently atop his armored horse, eager for a sign of success. Around him were a handful of his loyal knights, men of his own country who had accompanied him from Rolga to lead the assault on Carlion. He had come with an impressive force of a thousand men, a mix of Rolgans and mercenaries from Jazana Carr’s conquered territories, men who were well paid for their loyalty to the Diamond Queen. After years of resistance, Duke Rihards had finally joined the ranks of Jazana Carr’s whores. He was not proud of himself. A man of few friends, the duke had counted King Lorn among them, but war and Jazana Carr’s wealth had conspired to change that. The duke looked out across the craggy plain toward Carlion, the fortress lit with torchlight as its defenders awaited their fate. According to Jarrin there were still two hundred men in the garrison. Rihards could barely believe King Lorn the Wicked had held the loyalty of so many in the face of certain death. But he had a strange and ruthless glamour. Rihards smiled a little. A breeze blew across the plain, making him shiver. In the moonlight his men looked ghostly, their polished armor dully gleaming. Behind him in the foothills, his mercenary force laughed and ate and sharpened their pikes, sure of the coming victory. They were northerners mostly, from places even more north than Rolga, from the Bleak Territories where Jazana Carr was most powerful. Duke Rihards suppressed a sigh as he spied Carlion, looking so forlorn in the clouded night. All across Norvor Jazana Carr’s forces were tightening the noose. In Vicvar and Poolv, the dukes of those southern cities were gasping their last. Rihards himself could have easily been among them, and he wondered now if he should have stayed loyal and died with honor like those brave fools.

  “Ah, but she pays, you see,” he whispered.

  A knight of his cavalry heard his lament and turned his helmeted heard toward the duke. “My lord?”

  Duke Rihards slowly shook his head. “Nothing, Glane. I was just thinking,” he said. He did not trust his men enough to share his melancholy. He was a turncoat and could trust no one these days. That’s what Jazana Carr had made of him. It’s what she made of all Norvan men; lapdogs to perform for her. Rihards ground his jaws together, knowing the misery of being gelded.

  For more than an hour he sat atop his horse, refusing to move or rejoin the rest of his troops, even when Glane suggested he rest. It was very late. They had plans to attack in the morning, with or without Jarrin’s success. But Jarrin’s plan would make everything so much easier, and Rihards could not bring himself to rest or to eat until he knew of Jarrin’s progress. He had already told the captain of Lorn’s secret escape route, a hidden collection of doors and tunnels the king had revealed one night in a drunken stupor. Jarrin had said he knew of the route, but had never seen it because it was part of the king’s private chambers, which consisted of an entire wing of Carlion Castle.

  So far, though, Captain Jarrin had not appeared. The Duke of Rolga began to fret. Lorn was a resourceful man. Perhaps he had discovered his captain’s plan. Perhaps they would need to battle the king after all.

  Then, like an angel from heaven, a lone rider appeared out of the misty moonlight, slowly riding away from Carlion across the rocky plain, toward Duke Rihards and his waiting army. The knights surrounding the duke noticed the rider at once and began murmuring. The rider was a wide man, barrel-chested and wearing a royal uniform. As he drew closer his helmet could be seen, forged into the likeness of a bird. Duke Rihards was overwhelmed with relief. Not wanting his army to see what was about to happen, he snapped the reins of his patient stallion and rode forward to meet Jarrin, calling to his knights.

  “Ride,” he commanded them, and the five cavalrymen followed, leaving behind the safeness of their army and entering the bleak flatland. Rihards rode at the forefront, keeping a watchful eye on Jarrin. The captain seemed to slump in his saddle. In his arms was a bundle of cloth, which he cradled carefully as he rode. Sighting the parcel brought a grin to the duke’s face. Amazingly, Jarrin had succeeded. As he drew closer his wishes were confirmed; the thing in Jarrin’s arms was indeed a baby. But Jarrin himself looked horribly wounded. Blood trailed down from beneath his closed helm, soaking his chest. He looked on the verge of collapse, teetering in his saddle. Finally he stopped riding and waited for Rihards and his men. The Rolgan duke reined in his horse, halting his company a pace from the wounded captain, who sat seething on his mount, bloodied and battered, his breath rasping beneath his helmet, the crying child of King Lorn in his left arm. Suddenly he let out an angry grunt, and with his right arm tossed something pink into the sand between them.

  “What the . . . ?”

  Rihards grimaced as he studied the bloodied thing. He looked up at Jarrin. “What the hell is that?”

  The captain shook his fist in rage, then tilted up the visor of his helmet. Stuffed into his mouth was a wad of bloodied cloth, holding back the worst of the gore like a stopper. Rihards reared back, confused and disgusted, then shocked when he realized the pink thing in the sand was Jarrin’s tongue. He could barely see the captain’s face for the blood. Jarrin pointed down at his tongue, cursing in angry squeals.

  “He cut out your tongue,” Rihards deduced aloud. “Why?”

  Of course Jarrin couldn’t answer. All he could do was rage and wince in pain.

  “But you have the child,” said Rihards. “What of Lorn? Did you kill him?”

  Jarrin nodded. He held the baby jealously against his bloodied breast, and when Rihards trotted closer he slammed down his visor and roared his anger.

  “We had a bargain, Captain Jarrin. Give me the child. I will see that Jazana Carr pays you your due.”

  Jarrin shook his head wildly. Again he grunted his curses. The way he held the child explained his meaning perfectly.

  “All right, then, deliver the child yourself,” Rihards said. “Jazana Carr is in the hills near Harn. My men will take you to her.” He ordered Glane and two of his other knights to take Jarrin to the Diamond Queen. It didn’t concern him at all if the captain bled to death on the way; he had killed Lorn and stolen his child, and that was all that mattered. “You’ve done well, Captain Jarrin,” he said. “Without your king, Carlion should fall in a day.”

  Jarrin tried to speak, then stopped. Rihards supposed his pain was enormous.

  “Go,” said the duke. “It’s a full day’s ride to Harn at least. You may rest first with my men if you wish. We have a surgeon who can look at you . . .”

  Shaking his head, the captain steadied himself in his saddle then rode off, heading northwest toward Harn with the child in his arms. When he gone only a few yards, he looked back at the knights who were to accompany him, as if to ask why they were dawdling.

  “Go with him,” ordered Rihards. “See that he gets his money from Jazana Carr. He’s brave enough to deserve his pay.”

  Glane, the duke’s lieutenant, nodded. Taking two of his fellows with him, they started off after Jarrin, who immediately took to riding again, obviously in a great hurry to get paid. As Rihards watched him go, he felt a twinge of regret. He knew that the child would be well taken care of by Jazana Carr, so that didn’t worry him. Any child the Diamond Queen encountered was well treated, so long as it was a girl child. But the death of King Lorn bothered the duke. For a moment he thoug
ht of all the good times they’d had together, the fine wines and stories they had shared, and all those dreams they had voiced about defeating Jazana Carr.

  But then he thought of conquering Carlion, and how he would be rewarded for the deed. He thought also about Lorn’s jeweled ring of kingship, and how his old friend had kept it hidden in a chest within his private wing, afraid to wear it for fear of theft in these dark days. And when Rihards thought of the ring—which he had always coveted—his feelings of remorse abruptly fled.

  Two hours before sunrise, Uralak went in search of his master, King Lorn. The old manservant was concerned that he hadn’t seen his king for some hours, not since he’d retired to his chambers. When it occurred to Uralak that he had not seen Captain Jarrin either, he began to worry. Up until then he had stayed with the soldiers of the garrison, guarding the main gate and watching the forces of Duke Rihards in the far, far distance. Because it was too dark to see anything, the guardians were uneasy. Uralak shared their fears but did not voice them. Though he was old and only a manservant, he would die with a smile on his face.

  Leaving the place he had come to call his “post,” Uralak went through the silent courtyard and entered the halls of Carlion, which were empty now of women and children and rang with his footfalls as he shuffled along. Pensive, he remembered his prior conversation with his king, and how his master had seemed so forlorn, sure that their cause was hopeless. There were not many in Carrion who loved King Lorn, but Uralak counted himself among the handful. There was nothing he would not do for his king, no secret he would not keep. As he walked through the castle, he kept his suspicions to himself.

  Because King Lorn’s chambers were in the tallest of Carlion’s towers, it took Uralak long minutes to reach them. When he did, he was exhausted from the climb. He found the area of the king’s chambers empty; those servants who hadn’t fled the castle had long ago gone to sleep. Carefully, he made his way through the darkened hall. He didn’t expect to be startled, but when he rounded a familiar bend a figure frightened him.

 

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