[Hurog 01] - Dragon Bones (22 page)

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Authors: Patricia Briggs

BOOK: [Hurog 01] - Dragon Bones
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“Not if you want to keep your tongue,” she tossed back. I thought I caught a glimpse of a dimple, but her voice was serious.

 

“YOU
LOOK STUPID
,”
COMMENTED
Tisala, riding beside me. I learned Haverness's definition of small was an order of magnitude larger than mine. In addition to my troop's seven, Haverness had sent his daughter and her fifty sworn men.

“Stupid,” she said again, shaking her head.

I thought about crossing my eyes and drooling at her, but she didn't need any encouragement from me to continue.

“I think it's the eyes. No one expects brilliance out of a man with eyelashes like that.” Her disapproval was plain.

I wondered what she thought I should have done about my eyelashes.

“Thank you,” I murmured. “But I thought it was the color, myself.” She had brown eyes, too. I wondered if she'd catch the insult.

“Maybe it's your size,” she went on, turning her face to scrutinize the forest around us, but not before I caught sight of a betraying dimple.

“Large means stupid?” I relaxed in enjoyment as I realized she was teasing me. It gave me something to wonder about instead of dead cousins and the aching eyes from too little sleep.

“Everyone expects big people to be slow and stolid,” she said. I didn't see any tension in her, but her thin, narrow-hipped war stallion arched his neck and sidled. If the stallion weighed half what Pansy did, I'd have been surprised. On its back, Tisala did look oversized. Funny I hadn't really thought about her height, but she was as tall as her father, who was accounted a tall man, though not
nearly as tall as I. For a woman, being as tall as a man was no light thing.

“Slow, eh? And stolid?” I asked.

She must have heard the comprehension in my voice because her chin tilted up and her formidable brows lowered.

I grinned. “It would help if you had a real horse, rather than a skinny, cow-hocked pony.” He wasn't cow-hocked much, just enough to make her sensitive—and steer our teasing to a place less painful for her.

“Better to ride a cow-hocked pony than a dullard plow-horse.” The chill in her voice would have frosted a potter's kiln.

Dullard?
I thought. Looking at Pansy, I supposed her observation had merit. He was paying no attention to her stallion, walking with a relaxed air that might, indeed, have belonged to a draft animal. The image was helped by the long threads of grass hanging from his mouth. He must have snatched it when I wasn't paying attention. Not much left of the murderous beast who'd terrified my grooms—not this morning.

“His name is Pansy,” I said with painful dignity. “If you're going to insult him, you ought to at least know his name.”

On my other side, Ciarra snickered.

Tisala looked from my sister's face to mine, nodded her head to Ciarra, and said, “Your brother is a terrible tease.”

Ciarra raised her eyebrows.

“No, I'm not,” Tisala snapped. “I'm blunt and rude. Just ask anyone.”

Ciarra smiled broadly and tilted her chin at me.

“I have to agree with her, Ciarra.” I said sadly. “Anyone who calls my poor Pansy a dullard must be blunt and rude.”

“Rat,” commented Tisala. “I can't believe you carried
it off. How many years did you fool them that you were stupid?”

Ciarra held up seven fingers.

“Seven,” Tisala shook her head. “Seven years of holding your tongue. It would have killed me.”

“Probably,” I agreed.

She laughed. “Is he always this bad?”

Ciarra shook her head firmly, then raised her eyes to the sky.

“Not possible,” said Tisala. “He couldn't have been worse.”

There weren't many people who could read the language Ciarra spoke. Penrod, used to the silent speaking of his charges, could talk to her almost as well as I. Tosten could a little. But Tisala was the first woman who'd conversed with her with such matter-of-fact ease. Bastilla tended to avoid Ciarra, as if my sister's inability to speak made her uncomfortable.

I'd been avoiding thinking about Bastilla.

When I was fifteen, the daughter of one of Penrod's grooms had been the love of my life. She had been twenty, gentle and cheerful. When I was sixteen, she broke my heart by marrying a merchant in Tyrfannig. I understood her reasons and knew they were good ones. I even liked her husband, though that had taken me a good long time. After her, I'd slept with a few who had taught me that the act without love was dreary indeed.

I felt nothing more for Bastilla than I did for . . . Axiel. Less perhaps. Given that, I should have refused her outright rather than leaving the possibility open for some later time. I hadn't had the chance for private conversation until now, but the ride was too good an opportunity.

“If you'll excuse me, ladies,” I said, “I'll desert the field of battle, for no man wins a war with a lady's tongue.”

Ciarra stuck her lady's tongue out at me.

The trail we were riding through the overgrown forest
was wide enough for a wagon, so Pansy and I had little trouble working back to the rear ranks where Bastilla rode with Oreg.

I turned to ride beside them. “Go talk to Ciarra, Oreg. See if Haverness's daughter is any happier with you than she is with me.”

“She finds you objectionable?” Bastilla sounded amused.

“I believe it is my eyelashes.”

Oreg batted his eyes at me. “Mine are prettier than yours are, Ward. She's bound to like them.”

When he'd ridden off, I slowed until we brought up the rear. I switched to Avinhellish, which I spoke with a terrible accent but well enough for my purpose, which was to ensure that no one overheard what I had to say to Bastilla.

“I believe I owe you an explanation, Bastilla.”

Her marvelous eyes sparkled in the dappled light, and she smiled. “An explanation for what, Ward?”

“For my refusal of your offer the night before we came to Callis.”

Her smile fled as if it had never been. “How so?”

“If we had not been on duty that night, I would have taken you up on your offer. And it would have been wrong.”

“Ah.” Her gelding bowed his head against her white-fingered grip on the reins. “I am too old for you? Perhaps Tisala suits you better?”

I shook my head. “Not too old.” I couldn't let her think this had anything to do with Tisala. “For you, sex is a game—one you play very well. But I cannot view it that way.”

“You sound like a virgin bride.” Her voice was brittle with hurt.

I shook my head. “My first lover taught me that love only works between equals.” And she had been right. She had led and I followed, unable and unwilling to break out of my idiot act, even where I loved. “You and I are not
equal in this; you can sleep with Axiel and Penrod without causing them to fret. Anyone who can do that is far more skilled than I am. My second lover taught me that coupling without love is worse than nothing—at least for me.”

“And you don't love me.”

“Do you love me?” I wouldn't have asked it if I hadn't known the answer.

Her chin went up, and she didn't say anything.

“I should have said this that night. There is no love between us, lady. Respect and lust, yes, at least on my part. But not love.”

“You will regret this,” she said with a careful smile to hide the hurt in her eyes.

“Lady, my body already does,” I said ruefully. “But it is the right thing. I will not play games.”

She did not reply. After a few moments, I decided it might be best to give her some time to herself. As I rode past Penrod and Axiel, I jerked my head, and both of them fell back to ride behind Bastilla.

 

THE
PRIEST LOOKED AT
us blandly. “We are here to protect these things. They are dedicated to Meron, and we must keep them in her temple.”

The temple in question was a little timber building, half the size of the peasant huts of the town. The priest, Oreg, Bastilla, Axiel, and I were the only ones inside, as there simply wasn't room for anyone else. Tisala had tried to talk to the priest for a few minutes before throwing her arms up and stalking off to get the rest of the little village into packing up and leaving. I hoped she was getting further than I.

“Except for the armband, they're not much,” reported Oreg from the altar where he and Bastilla were getting a better look at the items in question. “What magic they had
upon them has faded. The armband was powerful once, but there's no shape to the magic anymore.”

The priest was visibly displeased with Oreg's assessment.

“They are not worth your life; even the goddess knows that,” Axiel said. I'd left the negotiations to Axiel, once Tisala left, since he looked the least like a Northman and spoke Oranstonian.

“I know that, my son.” The priest set aside his irritation to smile gently at the dwarf king's son. “But my word
is
worth my life. If I die in her service, I shall be with her forever.”

“You're aiding the enemy,” said Oreg unexpectedly. “These don't seem to be powerful, but if the Vorsag gain enough of them, and if they have the right sort of knowledge, they can use this to destroy even the memory of Oranstone and the Great Healer, Meron. If you take them to a fortified place, they will still be hers.” But the priest would lose his power outside this village, and he knew it.

“You imply Meron cannot protect her temple,” chided the priest.

Oreg moved to my side. “There are rules the gods must follow, or they invite destruction. If she steps in to protect this temple, the Vorsagian gods can act on their behalf, too.”

“Perhaps the Vorsag serve Meron, too. Perhaps she has decreed that they shall have the sacred objects.” The priest was enjoying this.

Stala said that to persuade someone, you had to know who they were and what they wanted. What made a priest of Meron? They were a peasant group, loosely knit with little higher organization. As Oreg continued to argue, I thought about what we must look like to the priest. Shavigmen, or at least not Oranstonian. But he'd been no more ready to listen to Tisala.

The followers of Meron were men of the land, farmers
and herdsmen. Peasants. If a peasant had spoken to a nobleman's messengers the way that this priest was, my father would have him whipped until he couldn't stand up. But a priest was different.

I looked at the priest's calloused hands; he helped in the fields. Perhaps he had his own herds.

“Eh,” I broke in, interrupting Oreg rudely. “They're mages, what do they know about the way of the Healer? Good with a fancy argument, they are.” I'd heard enough peasant Oranstonian to know I'd gotten the accent close to right. “Nobles who sit in stone halls don't understand the goddess. I worked the land myself, before I took up the sword, and didn't I feel her hand guide my plow?” I thought my father's head herdsman might be a man of the priest's ilk, and his mannerisms weren't difficult to adopt. “Doesn't mean I don't think you ought to take whatever the goddess holds sacred and save it for her.” I nodded at the armband that held its place of honor on the altar. “Hate to see that on the arm of one of those heathens who burned Silverfells and stole the dragon stone.”

For the first time, the priest looked shaken in his convictions.

“If you take them with you to Callis,” I said, “as soon as Kariarn turns his attention elsewhere, you can return them to their place.” I heard something odd outside.

He took a deep breath. “I suppose . . . temporarily . . .”

It was the faint clash of steel on steel I'd heard. I left the priest dithering to Oreg and took a quick step to the temple door and peered out. It required no more than a glance.

“To arms!” I bellowed, as if I wasn't the last person to see. “Raiders!”

They had doubtless meant to sneak up on the village. But had met with a few of Tisala's men who'd been on the outskirts of town. I tore out of the temple and was on Pansy's back before I'd finished speaking.

The first few men hadn't slowed the mass of Vorsag
down much, but by the time I arrived at the fighting, they'd run into the larger block of our troops and their forward progress had slowed to a crawl.

Pansy screamed, a harsh, shrill stallion's warning, and plunged into battle. And time slowed. Everything in me was concentrated on each moment, each block, each blow, each life lost. I became gradually aware that Tosten fought on my left and Penrod my right, but it had no meaning beyond the moment.

I loved the battle, even when it was against scarecrow bandits. Here, where sword met sword and I tested myself against the mettle of my opponent, it meant something when my sword sank deeply into flesh. Pansy told me with twitches of ears and muscles where he was going to move, and he listened in turn to my shifts of weight. We brought death to our enemies, and I loved the power of it. And that final love, one I shared with my father, frightened me more than any battle ever could.

Axiel had been right; a real battle was different. The knowledge that here at last I was facing my own kind, warriors trained in martial arts, added the sweetness of competition to the fray. These men had a real chance of killing me as the bandits we'd fought before did not. For these were regular army men, for all they wore outlaw's rags over their armor.

Stala would have told me to pull the men, because our armies were too evenly matched. There would be no victor here, just dead men to litter the ground. But there were villagers behind us, unarmed women and children I'd been sent to protect.

A long-fought battle has a flow to it. Fierce speed when I was in the heart of the enemy army followed by almost peaceful moments when Pansy and I broke through the battle lines and there were none to come against us. I held Pansy there to give him a rest and saw that there were others doing the same.

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