They nodded, sullenly.
"All of us are wound up," Stryke continued, his tone mollified. "But there's a rebellion coming and we've gotta be united." The band's grunts, lounging at a distance, were listening attentively. He looked at Jup. "Way things are going, you'll be out in the thick of it soon enough."
"You keep telling me that."
"It'll happen. That thing in the sky, the prophecy, the rallying call Sylandya's going to make: it'll all rouse the orcs in these parts. We've got to get behind 'em. That's the main thing for us."
"Is it?" Coilla ventured.
"What do you mean?"
"I have to say it, Stryke. Doesn't getting the stars back come first?"
He sighed. "I admit I fouled up over that, but — "
She raised a hand to still him. "I'm not knocking you. I was as much to blame over the one you trusted me with. 'Course we're pledged to helping the rebels. But knowing we can get home's more important, isn't it?"
"On my oath, we'll have the stars back."
Silence descended. It was the younger of the two humans, Jode Pepperdyne, who broke it. "What can we — " He glanced at his companion, Micalor Standeven. "What can I do to help?"
Stryke's reply was a cautious, drawn out, "Well…"
"We're stuck here too, you know," Standeven protested.
"We have to keep plans close to our chests," Stryke explained. "For security."
"You mean you don't trust us," Pepperdyne said.
"Nobody's saying that," Coilla assured him.
He scanned the room, taking in their wary eyes. "What folk say and what they think aren't always the same."
"Not with me," Haskeer told him. "I don't mind saying I reckon too many outsiders know about this band's business."
Coilla glared at him. " Haskeer," she hissed through clenched teeth.
"And when too many know," he ploughed on regardless, "we get treachery."
"I don't have to take these… insinuations," Standeven announced, puffing up his fleshy chest.
"Whatever they are," Haskeer said.
"You're questioning my honour."
"Well ain't that a shame. If you don't like it, you can fuck off."
"That's enough," Stryke warned.
"I know when I'm not wanted!" Standeven responded, summoning up what passed for his dignity. He gestured at Pepperdyne, as though signalling to an obedient cur. "We're leaving!"
Pepperdyne hesitated, catching Coilla's eye for a moment, then followed his departing master.
"Jode!" she called out.
They slammed the door behind them.
Coilla turned on Haskeer. "You fucking… moron! You oaf! We're beholden to Jode. I owe him my life."
"Yeah, him," Haskeer replied. "What about the other one?"
"I… I don't know about Standeven."
"We can't trust either of 'em; they're humans. And you're getting too chummy with the younger one."
Before Coilla could hit back, Stryke took a hand. "Seems we're forgetting something." His expression grew dark. "This is supposed to be a disciplined band," he told them all. "Only some of you are acting like it's not. But there's just one way we're gonna get through this, and that's in good order. That means respecting the chain of command, and obeying orders without bellyaching. And it means an end to this bickering! "
Wheam, along with a couple of the other tyros, visibly winced.
"We're gonna see more discipline in this band," Stryke went on, "and less backbiting. I'm not asking, I'm telling. And if anybody here thinks they can do a better job than me, now's the time to say it." No one broke the hush that had fallen, and few met his eyes. "Right. So no more bullshit. Clear? "
There was a general murmur of agreement.
"What can we do about the stars, Captain?" Dallog asked.
"Hold your horses. Noskaa! " The grunt sprang to his feet. "Check that we're not overheard."
Noskaa went to the door, looked outside and gave a thumbs-up. Then he stood watch there.
"Whether any of you like it or not," Stryke continued, taking a brief look at Coilla, "there could be a traitor, in the resistance or nearer home. So any plan about Jennesta's best kept to us for now."
Dallog said, "This might seem stupid — "
Haskeer cleared his throat, making a noise that implied ridicule but stayed just short of insubordination.
Dallog shot him a glare and tried again. "It could be a dumb question, chief, but how do we know Jennesta has all the stars? Including the one Coilla had, I mean."
"We don't. But it's a good bet she has."
"You mentioned a plan," Jup chipped in. "If it involves getting into the fortress… well, that didn't turn out too brilliant last time, did it?"
"There could be another way."
"Such as?" Coilla wanted to know, her irritability about Pepperdyne still apparent in her tone.
Stryke chose not to pull her up about it. "Something I heard from the resistance might be useful. Seems Jennesta's been making regular trips to some kind of sacred place on the edge of the city. A stone circle."
"What for?"
He shrugged. "Who knows? Something rank, I expect."
"Anyway, what about it?"
"She goes in a carriage, in convoy. It's one time when she might be exposed."
"Why not go for her at the circle?"
"Too well guarded there, and the ground's too open."
"What makes you think she'd have the stars on her?" Haskeer asked.
"Wouldn't you?" Stryke replied. "After all she's been through to get 'em?"
"Even on the road she'd have a heavy guard," Coilla reckoned. " ' Specially on the road."
"Course. But the escort peels off for their barracks just before the fortress. That could be our chance."
"Sounds tight."
"I didn't say it'd be easy."
"Brelan and Chillder aren't going to wear another assassination attempt," Jup decided.
"I'm not saying we should try killing her. Though if we got the chance…"
"Whether we try to kill her or not, Stryke, the resistance won't want to be involved," Coilla said.
"That's another reason we're keeping this to ourselves. We do it without them knowing."
"How?"
"We'd need a cover story. And if we do this right it'd only take about half the band."
"We had a small team last time, and look how that turned out."
"This is different. It's an ambush. We've done plenty of those in the past."
"Never against somebody like Jennesta."
"If you've got a better idea, Coilla…"
"No, I haven't. But I still think we should let Pepperdyne in on this." Haskeer let out a loud groan. Coilla ignored him. "He's an asset. He could help us."
"And he'd keep it a secret from Standeven?" Stryke said.
"I don't think that'd be hard for him."
"I don't trust 'em," Haskeer stated.
" So you said," Coilla responded ominously.
Stryke shook his head. "No. We won't need Pepperdyne. Not the way I'm thinking of doing it."
"What if he and Standeven get wind of it?" Spurral wondered. "Could happen, with all of us cooped up together."
"If they do, we'll kill 'em."
Coilla frowned at that, but said nothing.
"So it's settled," Stryke said. "We'll work on a plan. Meantime, we fight with the resistance. Pepperdyne can help with that. They'll need all the blades they can get with a rebellion coming."
" If it comes," Haskeer muttered.
"Have faith."
"I leave that to the temple priests." He drew his sword and held it up to catch the light, turning its glistening length fiery. "I put my faith in this." He gazed at it almost reverently.
Stryke smiled. " 'Course you do. You're an orc."
"We can't be sure a rebellion's going to work," Coilla reminded them. "This is such a different world. Most of the orcs here are like sheep, and the humans have magic. Not to mention the odd
s we'd be — "
"It's simple," Stryke interrupted. "We fight, they die."
The grunts gave a ragged cheer at that.
"Hope you're right," she said. "But trouble has a habit of popping up in this place."
He shrugged. "I reckon we'll be fine as long as humans are all we have to cope with."
Not too far away, outside the city limits in one of the sparsely populated, less fruitful areas, stood an abandoned, semi-derelict water mill. The wheel itself was broken, and the watercourse that fed it had dwindled to a weed-choked trickle. Even an astute observer would see the place as desolate and forsaken.
Except perhaps for those possessing the skills of sorcery, or the gods-given power of farsight. These rare individuals might have detected the coppery taste and faintly sulphurous odour of magic cloaking the place. If they were particularly gifted they might have sensed a certain prickling in the atmosphere, a galvanic quality that made the hairs on the back of their necks stand up, signifying an enchantment intended to deceive.
The mill was nearly a ruin, but it wasn't uninhabited. Behind the magically generated facade a special operations unit of the multispecies Gateway Corps had commandeered it.
The group's leader was another deception, in a way. Pelli Madayar, a youthful female of the elfin folk, had a petite frame and looks of such delicacy that she could have been mistaken for frail. It was a false impression. Her energy and strength were prodigious, her determination inexhaustible.
She was in consultation with a lieutenant, a short, stocky individual with the sour expression habitual to the race of gnomes. All about them, the rest of the unit busied themselves with various chores. Gremlins, centaurs, goblins and a satyr were present, along with pairs of brownies and harpies. A small band of pixies and several trolls laboured beside entities that might have been considered exotic even in such diverse company, including a chimera and a wendigo, creatures normally preferring solitude. It was testament to the Corps' mission that so various a collection of races had chosen to put aside their natural inclinations, and their differences, to join in a common purpose.
Mid-sentence, Pelli Madayar broke off, closed her eyes and lifted a hand to her brow. Then she excused herself and hurried away. Her subordinate understood, having seen her do the same thing many times before.
She climbed the slats of a rickety staircase to the mill's upper level. In one corner stood a barrel, larger than she could have got her arms around, its metal bands red with rust. It was full of rainwater from a breach in the roof, and there was a rainbow film on its oily surface. The water was filthy and foul-smelling, but that didn't concern her; it was still a suitable medium. In any event she had no option if this was the way her leader chose to get through to her.
Hands on the barrel's edge, she gazed down at it. The water immediately became agitated and began to gently bubble as though coming to the boil. Then it changed its nature. It became something other than simply water: a kaleidoscopic eddy of churning matter suffused with radiance. Shortly it settled and an image came into focus.
She was looking at Karrell Revers, supreme commander of the Gateway Corps, his likeness projected across an infinity of worlds. He was in late middle age, his close-trimmed beard and hair turning silver. But he was still enormously energetic, and acuity lit his eyes. Revers was exceptional among humans in being a possessor of magical abilities.
"Pelli," he said, "there's been a development." His voice had an echoing, ethereal quality.
Even though they were separated by an unimaginable void, she could see he was troubled. "What is it?" she urged.
"I told you we thought there could be another player in the little drama you have unfolding there, and that there are indications someone other than the orcs has the instrumentalities. Now we've detected a further anomaly, making for a new possibility."
"Yes?"
"There could be another set."
" Another? Here? How likely is that?"
"The odds are… incalculable. But I should sound a note of caution. Because this is unprecedented we could be misinterpreting the signs. Though I have to say it's hard to reach any other conclusion."
"So now we've got two sets to track down."
"Yes. Well… perhaps."
"Please, Karrell, help me on this. I can't operate properly if I don't know what — "
"I'm sorry. The thing is, it isn't clear. We're getting different magical signatures from what might be two sources. Their characteristics vary in a way we've never seen before."
"All right. So what do we do?"
"We're working hard on resolving this. But you can see this makes your mission even more vital."
"Yes, but what's my brief now?"
"Essentially, it remains the same. If you can recover the instrumentalities we know exist, those held by the orcs, or that were held by them, we can eliminate them from our search. The important thing is that you act quickly."
"I can see that."
"And I have to say, Pelli, I'm concerned that you haven't acted already."
"Time spent on reconnaissance is never wasted, you know that. Also we've had to be sure that no innocents get caught up in this. Trouble's brewing here. Relations between the native population and their oppressors look as though they're coming to a head, and — "
"We don't concern ourselves with local affairs. It's one of the Corps' primary rules, as you're fully aware. I just hope it isn't some element of sympathy you feel for the orcs that's staying your hand."
"It's true I think they've blundered into something they don't understand, and in that sense perhaps they're not to be blamed. That's why I hope to use persuasion to get the instrumentalities back before taking the ultimate step."
"I've told you before that your compassion is understandable, and it reflects well on you." His tone came across as a mite petulant. "But these are orcs we're talking about. Some races are beyond the pale, even for the Corps. Your sympathy could well be misplaced. The outcome of your mission is more important than mere individuals. You must use all means to achieve our objective. Is that understood?"
"Yes, it is." She mulled things over for a second and added, "There's something I've been meaning to ask you. You gave me no orders about what would become of the warband once we've taken the instrumentalities from them."
"Assuming they survive their encounter with you and your superior weaponry."
"Yes, assuming that. Am I to return them to their home world?"
If she didn't know him better, Pelli would have thought the look Revers gave her was unduly hard. "You have no such orders," he told her.
Without further word he broke their connection.
5
Like a chunk of ordure floating in the middle of a cesspit, the great fortress at Taress never failed to draw the eye.
Its baleful walls and haughty towers subjugated the city as surely as the human invaders who had annexed it. Built long ago, by orcs when they were warlike, the pile had been turned from defensive to offensive by recent events. From a place of sanctuary to a place of dread. It stood as a perpetual reminder of the native population's loss of independence and dignity.
There was a great deal of bustle in its spacious central courtyard. A detachment of uniformed men, and some women, were square-bashing. Others were paired off in mock combat. Weapons were being issued, horses groomed, wagons loaded.
From the balcony of his quarters high above, the stern figure of Kapple Hacher surveyed the activity. His aide and probably closest professional confidant, the young officer called Frynt, stood beside him.
"Now we're training clerks and medics to patrol the streets," Hacher said.
"I understand more reinforcements are due for despatch from Peczan soon, sir," Frynt informed him.
"I'm not sure there'll ever be enough for Jennesta."
"Sir?"
"Taress is to be entirely purged of subversive elements, to quote our mistress's own words. How many troops do you think that would take?"
&
nbsp; "With respect, General, you've often said that the troublemakers are a minority."
"I still think that's so. But it's a question of definitions. Who are the dissidents?"
"Isn't it our job to weed them out, sir?"
"Good question. But not one that unduly troubles m'lady Jennesta. Her view is that any orcs who arouse suspicion should be rounded up. And eliminated if they resist. In effect, they're all revolutionaries to her. So we have this ever increasing clampdown."
"You can't deny that incidents have increased of late, sir."
"Yes, they have. What do you expect when you prod a hornet's nest? I believe the resistance, the actual core, is quite small, but I've never said they weren't dangerous, and I'm all for coming down on them hard. But I can't help but feel that Jennesta's policy is only making matters worse."
"Perhaps this comet the orcs are so excited about is what's really stirring them up, sir."
"And who's putting the idea into their heads of linking it with omens and prophecies? No, we should be using a rapier here, not an axe."
"Regrettably, sir, your counsel is unlikely to sway the lady Jennesta."
"You're telling me." Hacher grew thoughtful. "Though there is one weapon in our armoury that could be useful in winkling out the real insurrectionists."
"Your… source," Frynt said knowingly.
The general nodded. "Although it isn't entirely certain that I can keep that channel open, it might prove invaluable."
"But surely, sir, all this talk of rebellion is somewhat academic in light of the nature of the orcs we're governing. The majority are passive."
"Jennesta doesn't think so. She maintains the entire race is capable of something like savagery. Though what experience she might have had with them to reach such a conclusion is open to question."
"And you, sir? Do you think they have some buried appetite for combat?"
Hacher turned and surveyed the city. "Perhaps we're about to find out."
At one of the resistance's safe houses, hidden in the tangle of the troubled capital's back streets, Jode Pepperdyne and Micalor Standeven had found a secluded room.
"How often do I have to tell you?" Standeven angrily protested.
"Try me one more time," Pepperdyne said.
"I had nothing to do with Coilla's star going missing!"
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