V
Furlthia wanted to turn around the cart and
head back into the wilds. Never before had he felt so scared. Even
when he had been caught up in the madness with the rebels, and
watched the fires spreading across Magilnada, he had felt safer
than now.
The Askhan army stretched across
the hills for half a mile to either side of the road; right flank
anchored against the river, left flank secured by the still smoking
ruins of a Salphorian settlement. Perhaps it was Furlthia's
knowledge of why they were here that gave the blocks of
legionnaires a vengeful air. The thousands of Salphors driven back
to Magilnada were a sure sign that King Ullsaard was very unhappy
with the current course of events. Tales of the Askhans' brutality
had been brought along by the lines of ragged women and children,
spread by the warnings of terrified old men, carried from the
fighting like the refugees' packs and handcarts.
He was well aware of the strange
sight he must present, emerging from the line of Magilnadan
legionnaires and Salphorian tribesmen on his small, lupus-drawn
wagon like a peddler who had lost his way. The lupus itself, a
larger black-furred cousin to the wolves of the Altes Hills, was
unknown in Greater Askhor; a gift from Aegenuis.
A mile separated the two armies,
a short enough distance in itself, but the journey from one side to
the other seemed to take forever and Furlthia's skin crawled with
nervousness the whole way.
Ahead, Askhan companies drilled
and shifted, as adjustments were made to the line. Squadrons of
soldiers on kolubrids passed back and forth in front of the
phalanxes, the shimmering bodies of the serpentine creatures
catching the morning sun. At the heart of the Askhan line Furlthia
thought he could see a small group of officers gathered beneath a
shining icon, one of them mounted on an ailur. His gut clenched and
his sphincter tightened at the thought of approaching the Askhan
king. He patted the letter inside his jerkin and whispered an
entreaty to the spirits that Anglhan knew what he was
doing.
When he was halfway across,
Furlthia noticed several of the skirmishers redirecting their
steeds in his direction. They closed in fast, ten of them, hefting
heavy bellows bows to their shoulders, bronze arrowheads pointed at
his wagon.
He pulled back on the harness and
called the panting lupus to a halt. The beast settled to its
haunches, a growl in its throat as it watched the circling
kolubrids with slitted eyes, its ears folded back. The kolubrids
hissed and swayed their heads, their riders hauling tight on their
reins to keep their distance a few dozen paces away.
"Are you lost?" one of the riders
called out.
"I bear a message for King
Ullsaard." Furlthia's declaration was greeted with harsh laughter.
He held up a hand to shade his eyes against the glare of the sun
reflecting back from the speaker's helm. The man's face was heavily
tanned, creased with age, his eyes alive with amusement.
"I don't think the king is
welcoming visitors just at this moment," the man said, affecting a
cultured accent. "Perhaps if you made an appointment you would have
more luck."
"The message is from Governor
Anglhan."
The humour fell away like a
dropped stone, replaced with such an air of hostility that
Furlthia's stomach turned another somersault.
"Nobody cares what that
treacherous cunt has to say. Best turn around now, you dog-fucker,
before we send you back to your master with a bit more bronze to
decorate your guts."
Furlthia dearly wanted to comply,
but he knew that he had to deliver the letter. He tried a different
approach.
"Anglhan isn't my master. I think
he's just as much a cockloving traitor as you do. I'm just doing a
job. Please, the king has to read this letter."
The scout's sergeant urged his
mount closer and leant forward, eyes burrowing into Furlthia. The
kolubrid and lupus eyed each other with similarly deadly
intent.
"What's the message? We'll pass
it on."
"Doesn't work like that. I have
to deliver it myself, and get the reply. Please, it is very
important. Thousands of lives depend upon this letter being
delivered; maybe even yours."
The sergeant sat back. With a
barest flick of the head, he sent one of his men heading back
towards the Askhan line, a sinuous trail of flattened grass left in
the kolubrid's wake.
Furlthia wanted to break the
uneasy silence as they waited, but all small talk fled his mind. He
watched the scout racing up the road, following his progress all
the way to the king. It was impossible to see any reaction from
this distance, but it was only a matter of moments before the rider
had turned around his mount and was heading back. Furlthia did not
know whether such a brief exchange meant good news or
bad.
As the scout approach, Furlthia's
bladder added to his discomfort. He could not let go of the lupus's
reins, fearing what the creature might do if he let it out of
control for a moment, and so had to sit on the board, squirming
with the growing urge to relieve himself.
The scout and sergeant had a
brief conversation, their eyes turned on Furlthia. The sergeant
nodded and reined his kolubrid away.
"Follow us," he snapped back over
his shoulder.
Furlthia gratefully flicked the
reins and the lupus strained into its harness, black furred
shoulders bunching as it pulled against the wagon's weight. The
cart rocked from side to side along the rough road while the
kolubrids slithered through the grass to either side, the scouts'
bows still trained on Furlthia.
When they were some fifty paces
from the king, the scouts formed a ring around the wagon again and
motioned for Furlthia to dismount. He did so, moving forward to
hobble the lupus. A group of orderlies approached from the throng
of Askhan officers. Two of them stood either side of the cart, two
more gesturing for Furlthia to accompany them.
Taking one reluctant step after
another, Furlthia walked towards Ullsaard, trying to gauge the
king's next action. The ruler of Askhor appeared impassive, but
Furlthia knew not to be fooled by looks alone; he had seen before
the instinctive way Ullsaard had despatched those that displeased
him, having shown not the slightest sign of murderous intent in the
preceding moments. He comforted himself with the thought that had
the king wanted Furlthia dead, Ullsaard could just as easily
ordered his scouts to shoot him where he had been.
"So, here's Anglhan's little
whelp come to beg terms," said Ullsaard. "Does he take me for an
idiot? Perhaps you are going to lie to me? Tell me that I have come
to the wrong conclusion about what's happened? You are wasting your
breath."
"I will not lie to you, king,"
said Furlthia. "I am only a reluctant associate of Anglhan. What
you believe to have happened is true. Your former governor has
betrayed you. He has brokered a deal with King Aegenuis, and
between them they have agreed to return Magilnada and these lands
to the status of Free Country."
"You know that his actions have
killed my son?" Ullsaard growled.
A quiver of panic shot through
Furlthia.
"I did not know, king. I am sorry
to hear that. I can't begin to think what that must be like, I have
no children myself, but I wouldn't wish that on any father. But
there are a lot more sons and brothers going to be killed unless
you choose to accept Anglhan's new position."
"Accept his new position?"
Ullsaard's voice dropped to a hissed whisper that sent another
shudder of dread down Furlthia's spine. The king's brow was knitted
in a deep scowl, his teeth clenched, as he continued. "I gave him
that city. I made that ungrateful whore-bastard governor. I'd
sooner let my whole legion take turns fucking my wives than agree
terms with that snivelling little bitch-cunt."
The king swung off his ailur and
tossed the reins to one of his officers. He stalked towards
Furlthia, shoulders hunched, hands clenched in massive fists. It
looked likely that the king would beat him to death and spare
himself the effort of unsheathing his sword. Faced with a beast of
a man bearing down on him, Furlthia could hold his bladder no more.
A trickle of warmth soaked his groin and seeped down the left leg
of his trousers.
He snatched the letter from
inside his jerkin and thrust it towards Ullsaard, holding out the
folded parchment as if it were a ward against all the evils in the
world.
"You have to read this!"
Furlthia's voice was almost a squeal. The letter flapped in his
trembling hands as he fought to control himself. He took a deep
breath and spoke again with a little more dignity. "Please read the
message."
Ullsaard stopped, barely two
paces away, fully a head taller than Furlthia. The Salphor looked
up into the king's face and considered dropping to his knees. He's
going to kill me, thought Furlthia, over and over, the words
bouncing around inside his head.
Plucking the letter from
Furlthia's grasp, the king cocked his head to one side.
"This will fix everything, will
it?"
Furlthia shrugged helplessly. He
sincerely hoped it would, but he had no idea what was contained in
the letter. His breath came in short gasps as Ullsaard inspected
the seal and then broke it with his thumb. The king held the letter
in one hand and rubbed his chin with the other. Furlthia followed
every movement, watching Ullsaard's eyes flicking left and right as
he read. The king's scowl deepened and his jaw worked as he ground
his teeth. The veins in Ullsaard's thick neck stood out like cords
and his eyes moved to Furlthia, windows into pure fury. For a
moment, Furlthia believed he saw tiny flickers of flame in the
king's murderous gaze.
He stepped back out of instinct,
but not quick enough. Ullsaard's fist caught him square in the
chest, smashing him to his backside, all the wind driven out of his
body. Coughing, he struggled to get up and was met by a booted foot
in the ribs.
"You delivered this? To me?"
Ullsaard's accusation was a deafening roar, punctuated by another
kick.
Furlthia curled up, arms across
his head, knees to his chest.
"I don't know what it says!" he
wailed. "I don't know what it says! I'm a messenger, you can't hurt
me. I'm protected!"
Ullsaard's next kick caught
Furlthia in the kidneys, sending a spasm of pain up his
back.
"Please, king, please! I'm just
delivering the letter. It's from Anglhan, not me!"
Ullsaard grabbed a handful of
Furlthia's hair and dragged him up to his knees. With his other
hand, the king thrust the letter into Furlthia's face.
"Can you read, you little
shit?"
"Yes, king, yes."
"Then read it! Look what message
Anglhan has sent me."
Through tears, Furlthia tried to
make sense of the scrawled marks. It was written in Askhan, and
used some words that he did not understand. Forcing the fear from
his mind, he concentrated, trying to understand what had provoked
such a reaction.
The start of the letter laid out
what Furlthia had already explained: Anglhan's secession from
Greater Askhor. It went into some detail on this, which Furlthia
skipped over on the second reading. The letter went on to make
various demands for the withdrawal of the Askhan legions across the
border into Ersua, and insisted that Ullsaard agree to take no
military action or other reprimand against the city of Magilnada or
its territory.
It was not until the end that
Furlthia realised what Anglhan had done. The letter ended
pleasantly enough, assuring Ullsaard that as a free city Magilnada
would uphold its previous trade agreements with Askh. The last line
was the guarantee that made Anglhan so confident. On the face of
it, the words were innocuous enough. Furlthia read them several
times, realising how much weight could be put into a single
sentence, and why Ullsaard was so enraged.
The parting comment simply read:
Also rest assured that I will continue to
protect your family and friends for the remainder of their stay in
my city.
Furlthia turned wide,
disbelieving eyes to the king. Ullsaard let go of Furlthia's hair,
stepped back, took the letter from his weak fingers and folded it
crisply before tucking the parchment into his belt.
"I had no idea…" said
Furlthia.
"That just makes you an idiot,
not an accomplice," replied the king.
Ullsaard turned away and Furlthia
let out an explosive breath of relief. He looked up at the
cloudless sky and let his hands drop to the dirt, feeling it
between his fingers, the grass rubbing against his palms.
Almost quicker than Furlthia
could follow, Ullsaard span back, sword sliding from sheath. In one
motion, the king struck, plunging the tip of the blade into the
flesh between neck and shoulder, driving it down into Furlthia's
chest.
Furlthia felt only a moment of
pain before he died; his last vision was of the Askhan king's
hate-filled eyes boring into him, blood spattered across his
bearded, weathered face.