VI
The wreckage of clay pots, plates, tables and
chairs littered the pavilion. Ullsaard's campaign throne lay
upended against a roof pole. The ornately carved and painted panels
were stained with splashes of wine, running down the vistas of
Askhor like blood.
The king lay in a stupor,
surrounded by crushed goblets and shattered jugs, his shirt wet
with sweat and wine. His breastplate lay where it had been flung,
his helmet at the other end of the room. Ullsaard murmured in his
sleep, grunting and growling; his gnarled hands clenched and
unclenched in torment, as the king was gripped by wine-fuelled
nightmares.
Askhos walked out of the flames
that engulfed Ullsaard's dreams, clad in the finest robes of state.
A red cloak trailed behind him, edged with white fur. Upon his
breastplate snarled the etched face of an ailur and his hair hung
in oiled curls about his shoulders.
Naked and shivering, Ullsaard
looked up from a bed of hot ash.
"Not now," he snarled.
"Neither of us seems to have a
choice," replied the dead king. "I would rather leave you to your
unpleasant fantasies."
Ullsaard rolled away, eyes
screwed shut.
"I do not think it works like
that," said Askhos.
With a deep-throated growl,
Ullsaard sat up, bringing his knees to his chest, arms clasped
around his legs. Smoke from the all-encompassing fire swirled into
a column and formed a stool for Askhos to sit.
"How do you do that?" asked
Ullsaard.
"Practice," said Askhos. "I have
a lot of time on my hands at the moment. It gives me plenty of
opportunity to explore every dark corner of your mind. I would have
thought you had more control over it, but apparently
not."
The fires burned white as a wave
of irritation swept through Ullsaard. He flinched at their sudden
ferocity. As the king's mood settled, the flames
quietened.
"So, what are you going to tell
me now" he asked, resting his chin on his knees.
"I think you already
know."
"I am not going to attack
Magilnada."
"It seems my purpose has become
that of bearer of bad news, Ullsaard." Askhos ran the fingers of
one hand through his beard, tugging at the tight loops of hair.
"Maybe that is why we keep getting brought together."
"You're my conscience?"
"The opposite. I have been cast
in the role of the truth-teller. You cannot let Anglhan hold
hostages against you. It is a neverending negotiation from which
you cannot escape. Call his bluff. Attack the city."
"And he will kill Allenya, and
Noran, and Meliu. Anglhan is sly, but he never lets go an advantage
without a fight. I can't do it."
"You think Allenya is special?
She is not. How many wives have I had over two hundred years? Save
for the first, my darling Ausieta, I have chosen none of them. And
I have outlived them all. It is a sad thing to lose one you love,
but you must be stronger than that."
"Jutaar is dead. Allenya probably
doesn't even know yet. This isn't her fault. I can't have her death
on my hands as well."
"Fault? What has fault go to do
with anything? Was it that messenger's fault that he happened to
carry Anglhan's letter?"
"I acted in anger. I'll not
repeat the mistake with my wife's life."
"And so we come back to where all
of these conversations seem to end. You did so much to take my
Crown, but now that you have it you have become weak. Perhaps we
are seeing the lie of your ambition. You did not kill Lutaar
because the empire was growing soft. You stole the Crown for
yourself. The first small hurdle, the first obstacle Anglhan throws
in your path, and you cringe from what you have to do."
"I will find another way," said
Ullsaard. He stood up and faced Askhos, fists balled at his sides.
"Anglhan will pay for what he has done."
"Words, words, words! Do what you
have to do, Ullsaard. Destroy Magilnada; kill this traitor that
makes a mockery of you. I felt the shame you felt, when you had to
order your army to stand down. It sickened me more than you can
imagine. I heard those Salphor bastards laughing, heard the
discontent amongst our men. And you explain nothing to them. You
cannot. You know they will tell you the same thing I am telling you
know. Destroy Anglhan. Pay the price you have to pay."
"I will not!"
"And you will fail. Piece by
piece, Greater Askhor will crumble without strength, without the
respect for the Blood that held it together. The governors will see
your weakness and they will take your power. They will fight like
dogs over the scraps of the empire's carcass. If you are lucky, you
will not live long enough to see it."
"And you? When I die, what
happens to the almighty, immortal Askhos? Perhaps it is that fear
that drives you? When I am gone, will you be gone as
well?"
Askhos sagged, the point of his
gaze moving into the flames.
"I do not know. Perhaps the end
of Ullsaard will be the end of Askhos." He turned his attention
back to the king. "It will certainly be the end of Greater
Askhor."
"Then we both have good reason to
keep me alive," Ullsaard said. He smiled grimly and folded his arms
across his scarred chest. He wondered briefly why his dream-body
was still marred by the marks of his worldly injuries while Askhos
seemed untouched. The thought fluttered away as it soon as it
appeared. "Maybe now you realise you should be doing everything you
can to help me, rather than arguing against every course I
choose?"
Askhos laughed and
shrugged.
"Maybe I will have to accept
that. It is such a shame that you did not kill Kalmud and Ersuan as
well as Aalun. With my mind and your body, I could have done great
things."
"There's no reason we can't do
great things as we are."
The dead king studied Ullsaard
shrewdly for some time. He gave a slight nod and smiled.
"No reason at all."