Dragonfly (8 page)

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Authors: Julia Golding

Tags: #General, #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Social Issues, #Royalty, #Juvenile Nonfiction

BOOK: Dragonfly
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"I'm sorry you feel like that, Prince, because it's no use getting all hot and bothered about her. She's no longer your problem. Lads, sit on our guest here."

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The three acrobats moved so quickly that Ramil had no chance to escape.

He found himself pinned to the ground by their combined weight.

"I was going to have to tie you up anyway. We're expecting company and unfortunately we need to gag you." Orboyd produced a silk handkerchief and knotted it around Ramil's mouth. Next he roped his hands and feet. "Put him back in with Kosind and cover him up," he ordered the acrobats.

Carried like a rolled carpet, Ramil was put in the cage. His ropes were fixed tightly hand and foot to rings on the floor, and finally he was buried under a layer of straw. Uncomfortable though he was, he was tormented by fears for the Princess. If they treated him like this--a person they considered an equal--what would they do to someone they considered a witch?

Gordoc cornered Tashi by the magician's wagon. She knew it was no good screaming. Who would help her? Ramil was useless--she expected nothing from him. She gripped the sides of the wagon behind her and closed her eyes tight, wishing the man away. She felt a big hand touch the side of her face, just where she had struck him, then move to stroke her hair. She shuddered.

"See, I just wanted to touch your hair. Like gold, it is. Please don't run away.

You can trust me to protect you. Come back and eat your supper. I'll tell the others not to tease you." He took her hand and towed her after him. A few of the campers looked up in interest as they returned to the fire.

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"Catch the witch, did you?" called out Orboyd.

Gordoc grunted. "You're not a witch, are you, Princess?"

Tashi shook her head.

"She's just scared of us."

Orboyd laughed. "Scared of you, more like."

Gordoc smiled proudly at his princess. "Oh no, I've given my word I'll not let you lot harm her. She knows she can trust me." The big man picked up her bowl and thrust it at her. "Here, eat. You have to go back in with the other one in a moment so you'd better get that down you."

Tashi ate quickly, trying to hide her movements by letting her veil of hair flop forwards, but Gordoc brushed it back, out of her way. He then led her to a tent so she could wash and use the privy, then guided her back to the wagon. Orboyd was waiting, holding a rope and scarf.

"I'll do that," said Gordoc. "There now, that's not too tight?" Once Tashi was bound and gagged, he scooped her up in his arms, climbed the steps back into the cage, and placed her gently on the floor next to Ramil. "Make not a sound now and I'll let you out of here as soon as we've got to safety." He scattered the straw over her like a blessing.

The night seemed endless to Tashi. Lying on the wooden floor, pricked and near suffocated by straw, she tried to come to terms with what she was experiencing. None of her training had prepared her for this. No one here saw any of the things in her that her own

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people believed; she was not respected, listened to, or loved. So what did that make her? A demon, according to Orboyd. But she knew she was loved by the Mother; she couldn't be evil, even if other people fixed such labels to her. A pretty pet to the big man who had sensed her fear? But Tashi, raised in a land of matriarchs, revolted at the idea.

I suppose I'm left with me, whoever that is these days,
she thought bleakly.

Ramil could hear the Princess breathing next to him but was tortured by the fact that he could not speak to her, not even to ask if she was unharmed. He owed it to her at least to think of some way of escaping. They were still in Gerfal, heading down to the mountains that formed the border with Brigard.

The alarm must have been raised by now and his people would be combing the land for them. It was inconceivable that a caravan such as this would be missed before it reached the border.

At dawn he heard the sound he had been expecting all night: the approach of horsemen.

"Ho there, travellers!" called a Gerfalian soldier. "We have orders from the King to search all vehicles on the roads this day."

"But of course," said Orboyd at his most generous. "We are a peaceful group with nothing to hide. Conduct your search and welcome."

Ramil writhed in his bonds but he was so tightly bound and gagged he could do nothing to alert them to

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his presence. He heard the tramp of feet and good natured banter as the soldiers passed the time with the circus people.

"Found anything?" asked Orboyd casually from outside the wagon.

"No," replied the soldier. "What's in there?" He thumped the side of the wagon.

"Our tiger, Kosind. You're welcome to go in." Orboyd lifted the canvas on the front of the wagon, letting in the daylight. The tiger rose on its haunches, stretched and yawned.

The soldier peered into the cage. "It stinks in there!"

"That's wild animals for you. Shall I fetch the key?"

The soldier shook his head. "No, that wil do."

Orboyd dropped the canvas back down.

Ramil cursed the soldier. Sweat was running off him as he pulled on his ropes. This was their last chance!

Then he heard a thud. Tied less tightly, the girl beside him had enough freedom of movement to hit her head and heels on the floor in a regular beat--
Thud-thud-thud! Thud-thud-thud!

"What's that?" asked the soldier suspiciously.

"Tiger's tail thumping. Means he's hungry," replied Orboyd coolly.

The girl changed the rhythm--
Thud-thud! Thud-thud!

"I
think perhaps we had better take another look at that hungry cat of yours."

The soldier took a firm grip on the canvas.

"That is a shame." There was a hiss of breath and the

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sound of a body falling to the ground. "I do so hate shedding blood this early in the day," said Orboyd.

Further away, another man shouted but his scream broke off abruptly.

A short while later, the door to the wagon flew open. Ramil's bindings were yanked free and he was dragged, still half-covered in straw, down the steps and out into the clearing. Tashi was dumped beside him. In front of them lay the bodies of a Gerfalian forest warden and a Crescent sailor.

"Look what you made us do!" raged Orboyd, his hands still red with the warden's blood. "We were trying to do this the kind way--no one getting hurt, just a quick dash for the border and goodbye. We are peaceful people and you made us kill these men!"

Ramil now noticed that the dwarf, Tighe, was wiping a bloodied knife on a rag. It seemed that he had been responsible for despatching the sailor.

"I cannot have this. You must play by my rules or there'll have to be more killing." Orboyd seized the whip from the tiger tamer. "Which one of you made that noise? I've got to punish you or you'll force me to kill again and I don't like it!" He ripped the gag off Tashi, then Ramil. "I hope, Your Highness, it was the witch. I don't want to lay a finger on you if I can help it."

"It was me!" Ramil said quickly.

"He lies. It was me," Tashi said, appealing with a look to Gordoc.

The big man strode forward. "You're not harming

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the girl!" He snatched the whip from Orboyd's hand and threw it back to Pashvin.

"You forget yourself, Gordoc. I say who gets punished and who doesn't!"

thundered Orboyd, going eye to eye with the giant.

The old woman strode over, still wearing Tashi's boots, and spat at the ground in front of her. "You're wasting time, Orboyd. Now you've killed these men, others will be after us. We've got to get to the border by nightfall.

There's time enough for punishment when we get to Brigard."

Orboyd broke away from Gordoc. "All right, Minka, all right, we'll settle this later. Hide the bodies. Set the horses loose. Gordoc, put our guests back in the cage and tie them up properly this time."

The bodies of the warden and the sailor were not found until the evening.

Ramil's and Tashi's riderless horses were discovered not long after, trotting back towards the castle. King Lagan heard the news with dismay. It seemed clear that Ramil and the young Princess were victims of some terrible crime.

He regretted now that he had doubted his son even for a moment. Were their bodies waiting to be found too? Fearing the worst, he ordered the search to be intensified. Every wagon was unpacked, every traveller questioned; all that is except for the cage belonging to one very hungry-looking tiger. The border guard had peered inside and decided that no one could be in there and live. Besides, the circus people were friendly folk, free with their food 78

and wine, in no rush to pass over the border to Brigard. They did not act like fugitives with something to hide.

Once in Brigard, the neighboring country recently conquered by Fergox Spearthrower, Ramil and Tashi were untied and taken out of the cage. The mood of the circus people lightened now that the immediate danger of discovery had passed. They were travelling through spectacular mountain scenery: soaring peaks, snow-covered slopes, and thick forests of pine trees. They had to climb high to cross the range. The air was icy but the weather fine. Gordoc insisted that Tashi ride beside him for protection, snugly wrapped up in his fur rug. Ramil could see her now in the wagon ahead of him, her long fair hair streaming down her back in a ripple of gold.

He'd had no opportunity to talk to her--not that they had anything to say to each other--for he was now the travelling companion of Orboyd. The circus leader had taken the precaution of chaining his guest to the wagon, but then proceeded to treat him like a favored friend, chatting about Brigard, the fluctuating fortunes of his little band, his plans for the future. He regarded Gerfalians as natural friends to the Brigardians, lamented the political circumstances that temporarily put them at odds, looked forward to the day when those differences would be settled by Gerfal bowing to the inevitable and submitting to Fergox. He referred often to his master and hinted that Ramil would be seeing him soon.

"Who is your master?" Ramil asked frequently. "A Brigardian noble with a grudge against Gerfal?"

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Orboyd refused to be drawn. "I'm under orders not to say. But I assure you he will treat you as befits a royal prince of noblest lineage. And one day, when you are King, I will be able to point to you and say 'that man rode on my wagon.'"

Ramil thought it best not to mention that if he lived to be King he'd make sure that Orboyd was caught and tried for his crime against the royal person, so he was unlikely to live to enjoy his association.

"And the Princess? What does your master want with her?"

Orboyd shrugged, not very interested in that question. "Don't know. Hostage perhaps? He doesn't like the Blue Crescent Islanders, but then who does, except perhaps their mothers?"

"Gordoc appears to like the Princess," Ramil suggested quietly. He was sick of hearing such derogatory remarks about the Islanders from Orboyd, not least because they were uncomfortably like his own comments made back in the palace.

"Oh, Gordoc." Orboyd snorted. "He's soft-hearted. Nursed an abandoned leveret this spring only to cry buckets when he stood on it. I wouldn't pay much attention to him."

Tashi, meanwhile, sat beside the giant, letting his friendly talk wash over her. He let her mumble her prayers at the appointed time, did not mock or try to startle her. He just occasionally stroked her hair as if he could not believe its color and had to test that it was real.

She spent the time meditating on her anger. The

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murder of those two men in the forest had shocked her deeply. She was angry with her abductors, but most of her rage was directed at all Gerfalians, and one in particular. No one need have died if they had done their job of guarding her properly. How like Prince Ramil's people to let the caravan over the border without even a proper search! The prince had been useless as she anticipated and now seemed quite content to sit fraternizing with Orboyd when he should be doing something before they got too far from Gerfal. What it was exactly she expected him to do, she didn't know, but something, anything!

"Gordoc, do you know where we are going?" she asked hours later.

The giant almost dropped his reins, so surprised was he to hear his little travelling companion speak. She had a nice voice too--soft and gentle.

"We're going to meet him," he replied. "That's all I know."

"Who's him?"

"The master."

"Do you know his name?"

"Aw, little one, I can't tell you that." Gordoc passed her an apple.

Tashi twisted it in her fingers. "Can you tell me if he is a big master, like King Lagan, or a little master, like Orboyd?"

Gordoc chuckled. "You're trying to catch me out, aren't you? Well, he's nothing like Orboyd. Much, much bigger. But never you mind, you'll meet him soon enough."

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Ramil persuaded Orboyd to let him join the Princess for a short time that evening as they made camp. When he approached her spot by the tiger wagon, he found she no longer ate alone. Tighe, Pashvin, and Gordoc sat around her with their bowls, watching her like an audience, even

exchanging critical observations about her performance of the ritual.

"She did that one beautifully," remarked Tighe as Tashi made a sinuous gesture with her hands.

"I thought yesterday's was a little more pronounced," Pashvin noted with the air of an expert. "Today's is more subtle."

"She does everything beautifully," breathed an enraptured Gordoc.

Ramil sat down quietly and waited for her to finish. He admired her concentration with all these onlookers. Finally, he recognized the Crescent words of completion, having heard them often enough from the delegation.

"As the Goddess wills," he muttered in Common.

Tashi folded her hands in her lap.

"Do you mock me for praying, Prince Ramil?" she asked.

"No, I thought I was being polite." Did she have to be so hostile? he wondered.

"I was told by your prime minister that you say 'God willing.'"

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