IX
Smoke hung over the city in a thick pall,
coating every surface with soot. Blackened bodies lay sprawled in
fuming ruins, and the streets were choked with the crushed and
bloodied. At first the people had tried to move the bodies into the
lower city, but now there were just too many and everybody was too
tired.
Groups of people wandered the
streets with vacant looks, some of them clutching children whose
grimy faces were streaked with lines of tears. Others sat in the
rubble and wept, or simply stood unmoving at street corners while
the desperate and the traumatised shuffled past.
The gate towers had fallen
shortly after the bombardment had recommenced at dawn. The parapet
of the wall was like a row of broken teeth, and in places the wall
itself was crumbling, slopes of stone tumbled into the streets
behind.
Anglhan picked his way through
the destruction, swathed in a hooded cloak, a handcart dragged
behind carrying a small chest of coins and gems. His head throbbed
from lack of sleep; for the whole of the previous night the Askhans
had beaten drums, a slow, terrifying tempo that presaged the
assault to come. For just three days they had battered Magilnada,
but in three days they had brought Anglhan's city to
ruins.
He was numb, in mind and body. He
saw the remains of a mother and two children buried under a pile of
bricks, their bodies crushed by the collapsed building, and it
meant nothing to the lord of Magilnada. Blood stained the
flagstones underfoot and he stumbled through ruddy-tinged puddles.
Dust filled the air, coating his clothes, choking eyes, ears and
mouth.
The handcart jarred against
something, bringing Anglhan to a stop. He looked back dumbly and
saw that a severed arm had become trapped in the spokes of a wheel.
Disgust, despair, anger had all run their course, and now Anglhan
bent down, tossed aside the offending object and carried on without
a second thought.
A boulder smashed through the
roof of a house ahead, sending up shards of tiles and a cloud of
plaster dust. Anglhan did not flinch. He barely heard the shriek of
a man who came stumbling out of the damaged building, a splinter
the size of a sword jutting from his shoulder. He made a grab for
Anglhan, eyes pleading, but the ruler of the devastated city swiped
away the man's hand and pushed him back.
He had to get out.
The city was surrounded. As far
as Anglhan knew, nobody had escaped the ring of Askhans. Until that
morning, he had harboured the hope that he would be able to slip
away in the confusion and carnage of the final assault. That hope
had been dashed the moment he realised the Askhans planned to kill
everyone in the city. It would not matter if he could disguise
himself in a flood of refugees, he would be cut down all the
same.
So it was that he followed the
last-ditch plan he had concocted more than a year ago, when he had
first considered crowning himself ruler of the Free Country. He did
not do so with hope of expectation, or even desperation. He walked
through the city simply because the alternative was to wait in the
palace to die. He was not a fighter, and he was sure that Ullsaard
would give orders to ensure he was captured alive. Anglhan bore no
illusions about the fate being taken prisoner would bring. Torture
and an agonising death would be his only future.
He came upon Spring Road, where
the wells that served the city were found, fed by underground
rivers from the Altes Hills. There was a large crowd of people,
scrabbling with one another to get fresh water. People wanted to
drink; none gave thought to the dozens of fires that still burned
in the city.
Anglhan was not interested in the
fresh springs. It was pointless to stave off death by thirst just
to wait for a legionnaire's spear. He moved around the crowd,
avoiding the gazes of the desperate citizens, and made his way over
a shallow pile of debris into a half-ruined wooden hall.
Inside stank of shit and piss,
for this was the wastehouse of the upper city. Separate from the
river and pools that brought the city drinking water, another
foaming rivulet cascaded down into the plains, accessed by three
deep brick-lined holes. In normal times, the nightmen and pissboys
would collect the waste of the nobles and flush it away down the
open sewer; the common folk brought their own filth to dispose.
Nobody knew where the stream went – Shit River as it was known –
and until now nobody had cared.
Anglhan pulled a scarf from his
belt and wrapped it over his mouth and nose; it did little to ward
away the stench, but at least he would not get sprays of effluent
in his mouth. He lifted the small chest from the cart and set it
onto the lip of the closest sewer well. From the cart he brought
forth a length of rope and tied it about his chest in the manner of
a topman on his old landship. A memory flickered through his dulled
mind, of teaching the same knot to a rebel chieftain.
Searching for something secure to
tie the other end of the rope to, he spied a fallen beam from the
broken roof. Tying the rope with nimble hands, he tested the knot
and shuffled back to his chest. He passed the rope through a metal
ring on one end and secured the chest to his belt. It weighed
heavily at the moment, but it was only half-full, the rest of the
space taken up by an inflated bladder that would keep the chest
afloat once he was in the waterway.
Without any hesitation, no
thoughts of what he had lost or the misery he had brought upon the
thousands of people he had ruled, Anglhan flicked the rope over the
wall of the well and heaved himself up to the lip. Inside, the
bricks were coated with an uneven layer of dried waste, looking
much like brown and black ice. The smell hit him with renewed
strength as he swung his legs into the opening and dangled at the
edge.
Working the rope through the
special knot at his waist, Anglhan lowered himself towards the
foaming water far below. In small drops, feet braced against the
wall, the former lord of Magilnada left his city, face red with
effort, the scarf across his face wet with his panting breath and
sweat.
His foot slipped and for a moment
he swung from side to side, toes scraping at the accreted shit for
purchase. He eventually came to a stop and started down again. His
feet were almost in the torrent when he noticed something
different. He listened and could not place what he heard; then
realised that it was quiet.
The Askhan drums had stopped. The
assault was about to begin.
With a last effort, he slipped
the knot free and dropped into the water. Foam bubbled around him
as the current grabbed his legs and swept him away. His sodden
clothes dragged at him and he clawed at the surface of the river.
He snatched away the scarf and arched his neck to gasp for air, the
small chest of money bobbing along beside him.
Only now did he feel something.
Freedom. He laughed and spluttered, imagining Ullsaard's rage when
he discovered Anglhan had escaped.
"Fuck Ullsaard!" Anglhan shouted,
barely hearing his own voice over the rush of the river.
A moment later he was dashed
against an outcrop of rock, his head cracking against stone,
knocking him out.