I
Streamers of cloud clung to the Altes Hills,
lit by the warm glow of the rising sun. The mountains reared just
over the horizon, bright to dawnwards, shrouded in shadow to
duskwards. As Ullsaard's small troop broke camp, the king looked
coldwards, knowing Magilnada lay nestled at the foot of those
peaks, though he could not see the city.
The thought of it made him fume.
He had expected Anglhan to skim off a few taxes, perhaps aggrandise
himself a little; this betrayal went far beyond anything Ullsaard
could tolerate. The king's feelings went beyond resentment at the
man's ingratitude, into a deep well of anger fuelled by personal
loathing. Anglhan's alliance with Aegenuis was almost
understandable; Ullsaard was well aware that he had turned on the
previous king. That was, he had painfully learnt, the simple facts
of power and politics. But to hold Ullsaard's family hostage, to
threaten the lives of his wives, made the matter
personal.
He wondered if Allenya was aware
of the danger she was in. Was she being held prisoner, or was she
blissfully going about her normal life, ignorant of the knife that
Anglhan held to her throat? Ullsaard was thankful for one small
mercy; his mother, Pretaa, had left Magilnada to return to her home
in Enair. At least she was beyond Anglhan's reach.
And there was the matter of
Noran. Ullsaard felt enough guilt on behalf of his friend without
any need for further burden.
"Are you ready, king?"
Ullsaard turned his attention to
the legionnaires around him, their tents packed away, the fire
smothered. He realised he had been staring coldwards for quite some
time.
"We'll get the bastards, won't
we?" asked one of the soldiers.
Ullsaard looked coldwards again,
picturing the walled city sitting at the base of the cliff. In his
mind's eyes he saw the Hill of Chieftains and the governor's
palace; Anglhan within, pleased with himself for his manoeuvring,
doubtlessly plotting his betrayal of Aegenuis.
The former governor had every
right to be smug. Anglhan held the one thing that could keep
Ullsaard in check, dragging tight like the reins of an ailur.
Ullsaard had not the first idea how he was going to change the
balance of power. Anglhan had seen how easy the city had fallen to
infiltration before and would have agents scouring every visitor
for signs of subterfuge. A full-scale attack was out of the
question. The merest hint of a legion approaching the city would
spell death for Allenya and the others.
For the moment, Ullsaard was
powerless, but he knew that there was no such thing as a sure
guarantee. The situation would change, and when it did Ullsaard
would find a way to even the score.
"Yes," said the king. "We'll be
getting the bastards."