After tying the gelding to one of the larger pines, Rahl strode toward the nearest of the prisoners—a gaunt-faced man who just looked blankly at Rahl as he approached. One of fourth squad’s troopers had bound his hands and stood with a sabre at the ready.
“Why did you join the rebels?” asked Rahl.
“To fight for a real emperor, ser.”
“Who sent you here?”
“The Emperor Golyat, ser.”
“Where did you come from?”
“The Emperor sent us, ser.”
“When did you leave Nubyat?”
“When the Emperor sent us, ser.”
“How did you travel to get here?”
“I wouldn’t know, ser.”
Rahl kept asking questions, but the answers were much the same, either a variation on the Emperor or a variation on not knowing. Rahl could sense that the archer was not lying, and that the answers were the only ones that he had. Somehow, some sort of chaos compulsion or lock had been placed on him. Rahl would have to investigate that later.
He walked across the clearing to the second unwounded archer, beginning his questioning with, “Why did you join the rebels?”
“To fight for a real emperor, ser.”
Every reply was almost identical to those given by the first archer.
He turned to the one wounded archer who was still living…and fared no better.
In disgust, he stepped back and looked over the surviving archers. He was missing something. Something so obvious…Then he shook his head. None of the archers were young. In fact, all were at least as old as his own father.
He walked over and began to check the bodies, including their hands.
“They’re all graybeards, ser,” offered Fysett from his mount. “Every last one of them.”
Rahl also studied their hands. Several had welts and scars around the wrists, and the calluses on their hands and fingers were relatively light.
“Shackle marks, I’d wager,” offered Fysett, looking over Rahl’s shoulder.
After a moment, Rahl nodded. That would make sense. “I need to check our wounded. Then we’ll head back.”
“Yes, ser.”
“Oh…did they have mounts?”
“Yes, ser. They were tied back in the trees. Most of them sorry sway-backs. They could carry packs, though.”
“We can use them for that.” Rahl walked toward the wounded troopers.
One man had taken a shaft in the shoulder, and another in the thigh. Neither wound had gushed blood, and there were only slight amounts of chaos. Rahl did his best to remove that chaos. The effort did return his headache from merely a dull ache to a more active and sharp-edged throbbing. He didn’t know how Deybri and the other healers stood it, day after day. He smiled wryly. He did; he’d seen and sensed the pain and the exhaustion, and the determination to keep healing.
He looked at the last trooper he’d tried to help. “Keep the wound clean. You’ll go back to the main force until you’re stronger, but have the healers there keep checking it.”
“Yes, ser.”
Rahl remounted and rode to the front of the squads, now lined up in double file and ready to return to Third Company.
“Ready to ride, ser,” offered Fedeor.
“You have all the prisoners and all the bows and quivers—and their horses?” He supposed he was being callous by not burying the dead, but the rocky sandstone wasn’t suitable, and they didn’t have more than a spade per squad.
“Yes, ser.”
“Let’s go.” He urged the gelding downhill, back toward Drakeyt and first squad.
When they neared the other troopers, Rahl was careful to announce their presence. “Fourth and fifth squads returning!” he yelled, using order to boost the words through the pines.
“Squads returning,” someone echoed.
Rahl still was wary until he could sense that the waiting troopers were ready with weapons but holding position. He rode through the last of the pines between him and Drakeyt. “Mission accomplished.”
“Did any of them run this way?” asked the captain.
“No.” Rahl reined up. That was another thing he should have noticed. “None of them tried to run at all, even when it was clear that we had them trapped.”
“None?”
Rahl shook his head. “We have two of our men wounded. They should recover, but they’ll have trouble keeping up with us. We’ll send them back with the prisoners.”
Drakeyt raised his eyebrows.
“There were three. But all of them were under chaos compulsions. They might even have been trained as archers under those compulsions. I don’t know how it was done, but the overcommander might be able to find out. Also, they were all graybeards, or they would have been if they’d had beards.”
“Why would…”
“Prisoners or roadworkers, I’d guess. Not many people in Merowey would really care if they disappeared, and those that would were probably told that the men were better off than if they’d been caught by a mage-guard.”
“Would they have been?”
“By most mage-guards, probably,” admitted Rahl. “Most who resist capture get flamed on the spot.”
“Don’t the Codex breakers know that?”
“Some do. Theft and battery and killing are all offenses against order. Everyone’s taught that.” Rahl shrugged tiredly. “I wasn’t exactly the perfect child growing up, but even I knew that.” Of course, a small voice within him pointed out, he’d still gotten away with killing a Jeranyi pirate in Land’s End…but only because no one had cared that a pirate helping a dishonest factor had died.
“You don’t sound convinced,” Drakeyt said. “And you’re a mage-guard.”
“It’s better than the alternatives,” Rahl replied. Was it? Or was he just justifying things? “We’d better head back to the road.”
Drakeyt nodded. “To the rear, ride! Back to the road!”
XLIX
Five more days of scouting brought Third Company within ten kays of Helstyra—another river town. According to Drakeyt’s maps, perused by the two officers as they paused for a short rest, the town sat on the west bank of the Awhut River. There was a large half bow lake east of the river to the east, the ends of the lake little more than a kay from the river. Between where Third Company was and the town was a line of low hills. Beyond them, the maps showed that the road ran straight into Helstyra.
“Messengers coming forward, sers!” came the call from Quelsyn.
Rahl turned in the saddle to watch as two troopers rode along the shoulder of the road toward them. He recognized the pair as having been sent with reports and the archer prisoners, as well as the wounded, back to the marshal and Taryl five days earlier.
“Sers! Dispatches!”
“I’m not certain how welcome those might be,” murmured Drakeyt.
Rahl smiled faintly at the captain’s words, but just accepted the envelope extended by the trooper. Drakeyt took his dispatch as well.
After breaking the seal, opening the folded sheet, and seeing the first words of his dispatch, Rahl frowned. Why had Taryl addressed it to “Senior Mage-Guard Rahl” when all others had been addressed to him as Rahl? He continued to read, still puzzling over the salutation.
The rebel archers whom you sent for further interrogation proved most useful, not in what they revealed, which was little more than you already had determined and reported, but in confirming the precise nature of those mage-guards who have shifted their loyalties to the rebel Golyat. The means by which the rebels were trained and dispatched result from a technique developed by a most senior mage-guard. At the time of its discovery, the Triad banned the further dissemination and/or use of the technique. It has not been used heretofore, because any senior mage-guard can discover that it has been used, as did you, and, given the high-level skills required, it is unlikely that many mage-guards are capable of employing the technique. You might recall that you encountered one of originator’s trusted subordinate
s in the course of historical research sometime back, and you can understand the delicacy of this discovery, but it is necessary that you understand fully the dangers involved in any personal meetings with such individuals, even under the guise of a truce or armistice, unlikely as that may now seem.
Rahl understood most clearly the two levels of messages conveyed. What he did not understand was why Taryl had chosen to reveal the identity of the originator—unless Taryl wanted to make sure that someone else knew. That thought chilled Rahl. He continued to read.
Because of the importance of your discovery, as well as the effectiveness and efficiency of scouting and road-clearing accomplished by you and Captain Drakeyt, I also wanted to commend you both, and to let you know that the marshal and the Emperor have been apprised of your good work, and that you should not be unduly influenced by those who do not understand what you have accomplished. Lack of understanding carries its own penalties.
With the last words and the formal full signature, Rahl understood the salutation. He looked across to Drakeyt, who was not only frowning at the dispatch he held, but seething within.
“I take it that the submarshal was less than complimentary,” Rahl said dryly.
“You read it.” Drakeyt eased his mount closer to Rahl and practically thrust the dispatch at the mage-guard.
Rahl took it and began to read.
Captain Drakeyt—
I am amazed and astonished that you bothered even to spend the time and effort to dispatch your latest rebel prisoners. Given their imbecilic nature, there is no question of your success, but great question as to how you managed to incur any casualties at all.
Consider this notice that further lack of competence will not be tolerated.
Rahl read it again. Could the submarshal truly be that stupid? He shook his head.
“What do you think?” asked Drakeyt.
“I’m amazed at his stupidity,” Rahl replied. “I think you should read the dispatch I just received from the overcommander.” He handed both Drakeyt’s dispatch and the one he had received to the older officer.
When Drakeyt finished reading Taryl’s dispatch, he looked to Rahl. “The overcommander outranks the submarshal, doesn’t he?”
“He’s not in the chain of direct command, but, yes, he does.”
Drakeyt nodded, his smile faint and grim. “Machinations within machinations. I’m just a simple officer. What do you suggest?”
“What the overcommander recommended—that we ignore the submarshal and deal with the rebels. You weren’t really ordered to do anything. I’ve never gone wrong following his guidance, and he’s the one who rescued me from the slag heaps at Luba.”
Drakeyt looked stunned for a moment, and Rahl realized that he’d never told the other officer that.
“I’d been drugged with something that blocked my memories and skills. I’d been slipped into the ironworks and passed off as a Codex breaker. I spent seasons as a loader before he discovered I had order-skills.”
Drakeyt shook his head. “The longer I’m around you, the more I discover, and the less the world seems to be what I thought it was.”
That was life, Rahl was beginning to think. “We might as well keep scouting. It’ll keep us at a distance from the submarshal. I’ll head back to the outriders.”
Drakeyt nodded.
Rahl continued to scan the hills and the road, but the only thing he found unusual was that there were no steads nearby, although he could see that the hills had been logged in sections, and the grasslands between the remaining patches of trees had been grazed, heavily in places.
The hills were low, and the road curved between two of them. At the end of the long curve, the road straightened, heading toward a wide swampy marsh. Rahl could see why there weren’t that many steads, and he suspected that the area would be most unpleasant in summer.
Ahead, a causeway some sixty cubits wide arrowed through the swampy marsh and extended at least two kays toward Helstyra. Gray-stone riprap bordered the causeway on each side. The section of road atop the causeway was paved—the first section of paved road Rahl had seen since leaving Kysha—and was a good fifteen cubits wide.
“Ugly-looking swamp, ser,” observed Alrydd, riding to Rahl’s right as they neared the beginning of the causeway.
“It is.” Rahl had been studying the approaches to the swamp, but could detect nothing that seemed unusual. The winter-browned swamp grass rose less than a cubit above the dark and oily-looking water that extended from the edge of the gray riprap out through the marsh grasses eastward toward intermittent scraggly clumps of low bushes. Amid the swamp grasses were open spaces of the black water. Several hundred cubits ahead on the left was a large grove of live oaks.
Rahl could see and sense the ravages of age that permeated the ancient, massive, and clearly dying ancient live oaks rising from the marshlands to the southeast of the road. Even the moss hanging from sagging and rugged limbs was a whitish gray. Despite the bright if cold afternoon sunlight, an aura of gloom shrouded the trees.
The closer he rode to the trees, the more uneasy Rahl became, yet he could detect no chaos, and nothing that seemed unusual. The oaks were so tall that he had not realized that they were not all that close to the road, certainly a good hundred-fifty cubits to the left. Then he swallowed because he realized that he could not sense into the swamp as far as the oaks. Why couldn’t he? What was it about the swamp? Or was it this swamp? He knew water affected what chaos-mages could perceive, but why would it affect him?
In one of the nearer spaces of still black water, he saw a set of ripples radiating from one point, then recognized a water rat swimming into the higher marsh grasses. Farther to the south, there was a flurry of wings and two golden cranes lifted off, skimming over the grass and past the oaks, then to the southeast.
Then he saw a wider wedgelike head, attached to a scaly body, swimming parallel to the causeway before heading back toward the oaks. While he’d never seen one before, the creature matched an illustration he’d seen of a stun-lizard. It was smaller than the ones described as inhabiting the Great Forest of the druids, but he had the feeling it was either the same or similar, and a chill ran down his spine.
Rahl kept studying the swamp on both sides, but on the right side of the causeway, there were only bushes, water, and grass for at least a kay and perhaps twice as far. As he and Alrydd passed even with the oaks, Rahl tried even harder to sense what might be there, but his order-senses did not reach that far, although they certainly had extended much farther all the time—until now. He could see no movement in the trees, though, and nothing unnatural.
He used his order-senses to scan the bushy miniature islands, but found nothing, then glanced back along the causeway. First squad was drawing abreast of the oak grove, but what could happen from a hundred and fifty cubits away across an impassable swamp?
After another moment of studying the trees, he looked forward again. The lead scouts were another half kay ahead, but there was nothing except brush and grass near the causeway where they rode.
Sprung. The sound was so faint Rahl almost didn’t hear it.
He turned in the saddle just in time to see an ancient trunk drop into the swamp and a hail of arrows arch from the oaks down into the road, as well as onto the causeway and the swampy water on the left side of the causeway.
He turned the chestnut and urged his mount back toward the main body of Third Company at a full canter, hoping he didn’t fall off onto the hard stone pavement.
As he neared first squad and Drakeyt, he still did not see or sense anything moving in the swamp, except for the ripples from the fallen trunk and various birds taking wing in and around the live oaks, reacting to the impact of the ancient trunk on the dark water.
“Look to Whebyt there,” Drakeyt clipped, as Rahl reined up.
Rahl dismounted as quickly as he could, kneeling by the trooper who’d been lowered out of the saddle. Quarrel-like shafts protruded from his thigh and shoulder. Blood was no
t gushing, but his trousers and shirt showed wide dark patches.
If Rahl could stop the bleeding…After a moment, he concentrated, trying to erect tiny shields around the quarrels. He could sense the blood flow stopping, and he turned his head. “I can keep him from bleeding for a bit, until you can get this out and dress the wound. Then…maybe…I can do more.”
A trooper appeared, then another, and between the two, they eased out both shafts, cleaned the wounds as they could, and bound them. After that, Rahl removed the wound chaos.
Finally, he stood and looked at Drakeyt, who had ridden off down the column and returned.
“I think I did enough that Whebyt will make it.”
“That helps.” Drakeyt’s voice was slightly flat. “We lost one other, and there are three more with slight wounds.”
“I’m sorry. I can’t sense things as far in this swamp. I don’t know why. We didn’t see anything, even after the trap was sprung.”
“You can’t get them all,” Drakeyt replied tersely, his tone partly belying his words.
Rahl stiffened, even as he still felt that he should have done more, but how could he have gotten close enough to the oaks when there was no solid land there? How could they have avoided the swamp without going scores of kays out of their way? How could he have known?
“I’ll keep doing what I can,” he finally said. He walked toward his mount and climbed back into the saddle. Without looking at Drakeyt, he turned the gelding back toward Alrydd.
When Rahl reached the outrider, he just reined up and waited until the captain ordered Third Company forward. Then he eased the gelding forward. His head ached, and he rubbed his temples with his free hand. He still wondered how the rebels had managed to rig the quarrel-thrower to the falling trunk and what had set it off, but he wasn’t about to try to make his way through an unknown swamp, infested with stun-lizards, to figure it out. He’d have to send a message to Taryl warning about that tactic. There were still more than a few of the oaks standing.
Rahl couldn’t help breathing more easily when they reached the end of the causeway without any more difficulties. Within half a kay of the end of the swamp, the land firmed up, and Rahl could see steads, and well-ordered lines of low trees—orchards of some sort, although he did not recognize the trees. He also realized that he had regained the fuller range of his order-senses, and, again, he wondered what it had been about the swamp. The stun-lizards?
Mage-Guard of Hamor Page 36