Kings of Morning (19 page)

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Authors: Kearney Paul

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: Kings of Morning
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TEN

L
EARNING
A
SURIAN

 

 

R
AKHSAR KNELT IN
the noisome water of the ditch and breathed softly through his mouth, ignoring the mosquitoes whining about his face. Up ahead the road was clear, and the only light was that of a single torch left guttering in a sconce on the waystation wall, with moths as big as sparrows fluttering around it.

He looked up. Firghe, moon of patience, was setting, and the pale glow of Anande had begun to rise in the north-east. All across the sky between the two moons the stars blazed in a welter of spangled lights. He felt he had been staring at stars, at the moons, at the black night sky, for a long time. He could barely think of walking upright and unafraid under the sun.

I am still here, he thought. I have made it this far, and I am my father’s son.

He brought the pommel of the scimitar to his swollen lips and sucked gently on it. He was very thirsty, for they had lain up all day, and the insects of the Bekai River valley had sucked them dry. The stinking water of the ditches had not yet tempted him, unlike Roshana.

He turned, his eyes a gleam of violet light in the dark, and beckoned to the deeper shadow of the overgrown ditch. Tall irises rose on both sides, creating a space almost as good as a tunnel, but he had grown to hate their fragrance with a passion. If ever he sat on a throne, his palace would not have an iris within ten pasangs of it.

The boy splashed to his side first, his dark skin a perfect camouflage in the night, the same colour as sun-paled mud.

‘You know what to do,’ Rakhsar said, and Kurun nodded. He climbed out of the ditch and padded across the road, a dark shape against the dust. Then he ran noiselessly up to the waystation, a passing shadow, no more.

Roshana was beside him now, breathing heavily, her face darkened with smeared filth. He touched her cheek gently, and felt the swollen stipple of bites ringing her eyes. Behind her the looming hulk of Ushau rose up in the ditch like some child’s monster.

‘Make sure she does not stumble,’ Rakhsar said in a sharp hiss to the giant
hufsan
, and Ushau nodded.

The shadow reappeared at the side of the nearest blockhouse, and waved.

‘Time to go,’ Rakhsar said in a whisper, and he laboured out of the ditch. He was barefoot, for the muck had sucked the footwear off all of them days ago, and as he stood upon the roadway the familiar agony of his blisters began to throb again.

Slippers! He thought. And I once considered myself wise in the world. We knew nothing.

Roshana was hauled out of the ditch by Ushau, protesting feebly. She could barely take her own weight, and at an impatient gesture from Rakhsar the big
hufsan
scooped her up in his arms as he had Kurun in the early days of their flight. The three of them hobbled and hopped across the road, Rakhsar spitting with pain and anger, the scimitar a carmine gleam in the last light of the red moon.

A horse ruckled softly down its nose in the shadow behind the blockhouse. Kurun was already lifting a halter from a peg on the wall. They heard laughter within, and there was the yellow gleam of a lamp under the ill-fitting wooden door.

The door opened, and the light was like a white, silent explosion in the night, so accustomed had Rakhsar’s eyes become to the dark.

‘Two horses!’ he hissed to Kurun, and then he moved in with a strange, light-hearted happiness, the scimitar held two-handed, the blade resting on his right shoulder.

A dark silhouette in the doorway, and the beginnings of a shout, felt as much as heard. Rakhsar swung the sword with all the pent-up fury of the day, and the beautifully chased blade took the figure in the doorway at the collarbone.

The blade went through flesh and bone as it had been crafted to do, and the superlative steel continued the arc, through the ribs and lights, until it was free again. The shape in the doorway fell in two cleanly sliced pieces. Something akin to laughter gurgled in Rakhsar’s throat. He recovered, as the best weapons-masters in the empire had taught him to do, and when the second
hufsan
came charging out of the lamplight he skewered him as cleanly as a frog on a grillspike.

Again, recover. The doorway was blocked with bodies, or parts of them, and even the dust could not swallow up the slick ropes of clotting gore sliding out of the bodies like shit from a dysenteric sphincter.

‘Rakhsar!’ it was Roshana’s voice, hoarse and low.

He stepped backwards. The night was ruined with shouting now, and the red moon had set. Anande, that the Macht named Phobos, moon of fear, had risen, and Rakhsar stood in the cold rising light under the stars, and laughed.

The horses were stamping and panicking at the smell of blood. Ushau sat on one, as incongruous as a dog on a chair, with Roshana in his arms. Kurun clung to the back of the other, fists knotted in its mane. The animal half-reared under him, but he hung on with the tenacity of the undercity.

There were other
hufsan
in the doorway now, standing in horror, their feet swathed in the mire of their comrades’ gore. They saw Rakhsar standing before them with the black-slimed scimitar, his eyes blazing like those of a wolf caught in torchlight, and that wide grin splitting his face.

‘Come out to me, if you dare!’ he cried, and the happiness and the laughter fluttered in his breast until he felt he could barely breathe, and barely needed to.

The figures retreated inside, back to the lamplight and the sanity within. Rakhsar leapt the fence, and in another bound he was up behind Kurun, and he felt the horse gather itself under him, aware that there was a thing on its back now which could master it and would brook no rebellion.

Still laughing, Rakhsar kicked the animal’s ribs, and it took off into an instant canter, while behind him its fellow lumbered along gamely, Ushau thumping it mightily on the shoulder with one great fist, Roshana a limp figure in front of him, her white face hooded by a mat of black filthy hair.

 

 

T
HEY GALLOPED LIKE
fiends along the Imperial road in a pale cloud of moonlit dust, and once they had left the waystation behind the night was dark and tranquil again, except for the exertions of the beasts that bore them. Rakhsar had always been a good horseman, but Kurun was bouncing upon the withers of the animal like a sack, and Rakhsar heard him cry out in pain, his fists clenched in his groin.

‘Throw up a leg – I’ll hold you,’ he said to the boy, and Kurun writhed until he was sat on the horse sideways, and only Rakhsar’s arm kept him from sliding off feet first. Rakhsar kissed the boy on his salty, dust-caked neck, and gripped the barrel of his mount between his knees until the animal grunted. He looked back, and saw Ushau still belabouring his own horse, to some effect, for it was killing itself to keep up with them. Rakhsar reined back into a canter.

‘The next stop is Arimya,’ he said into Kurun’s ear. ‘I have an estate there I’ve never seen, and I have need of a bath and a bed.’

‘Yes, lord,’ Kurun said.

‘As do you, my stinking little friend.’

 

 

T
HEY LEFT THE
road and cast off across the fields and paths to the north of it shortly before dawn. It was while they stood stock still in a thicket of tamarisk, holding their horse’s noses, that they saw the pursuit storm past. A dozen
hufsan
soldiers on the hardy scrub ponies the lower ranks rode, trotting up the wide stone road and shouting to one another, spears in their fists and apprehension written all over their faces.

They passed, and the travellers drew a breath.

‘We have Mot’s luck with us,’ Rakhsar said.

‘Don’t say such things,’ his sister snapped.

‘We have become creatures of the night, Roshana, who live by guile and murder. We are Mot’s children. Bel has turned his face from us.’

Roshana did not speak, but clambered awkwardly away into the bushes with a moan and squatted there. They heard the liquid gush out of her. A few weeks ago Rakhsar would have been scandalised. Now he merely gathered up some dry leaves and grass and joined his sister in the depths of the thicket.

She lay on her side, her skirts pulled up, white legs drawn up to her stomach like those of an unborn baby. Rakhsar looked her over, and grimaced.

‘Kurun!’

The boy came scuttling over at once.

‘Master?’

‘Clean my sister.’

He hesitated, and then with infinite tenderness he set to wiping Roshana free of the liquid filth that smeared her buttocks, her thighs, her private places.

‘How long since you ate?’ Rakhsar asked his twin, his face close to hers.

‘No food – I cannot stomach it, even the thought.’

‘We are a long way from the garden and the nightingales, Roshana. You must keep life in you.’

‘I want clean water. I am so thirsty.’

‘We’ll find some tonight.’ They had not realised just how different the world beyond the palace was. Not just in the obvious things, but in the very food they ate and the water they craved. The peasant farmers of Pleninash drank a liquid that was as opaque as soup, called it water, and seemed to thrive on it, as did Kurun and Ushau. Rakhsar could just tolerate it, but it had devastated Roshana.

‘We will sleep in comfort tonight,’ Rakhsar said fiercely. ‘I promise you that.’

Beside him, Kurun finished his task, and pulled Roshana’s garments down over her legs. Hesitantly, he patted the Kefren princess’s thigh.

‘Take your paws off my sister,’ Rakhsar snapped.

‘Forgive me, lord.’

‘Do not forget your station, Kurun. I value you, but you are still only a slave.’

The boy hung his head. ‘Yes, master.’

‘Good.’ Rakhsar touched Kurun under the chin, raising his head. ‘Now help me get her to the horses.’

 

 

O
FF THE ROAD
the countryside was a patchwork of dyked fields in which rice rose green and thick from the water. There were raised causeways of red earth which the travellers took in single file, and each led to a junction of fruit trees – which they knew now to leave alone, for they were not yet ripe, though even the sight of the hanging peaches and pears set their soured mouths watering.

At the centre of each cluster of fields and clumped orchards would be a mud-brick hut with the earth packed into a yard around it, sometimes a rough wooden fence hemming in a few chickens, or a brace of hogs. They had avoided these little steadings up until now, but Rakhsar did not know how many more nights in the open Roshana could survive.

This night would be different.

A
hufsa
woman saw them as she went to the well with a leather bucket. She stopped in her tracks, and a naked toddler came running after her and set its fists in her skirts and began to wail.

‘Talk to her,’ Rakhsar told Kurun. ‘Tell her we want food, clean water set to boil, and a place to sleep. I will pay her husband.’ His hand settled on the hilt of the scimitar, and he made sure the woman saw it.

It was interminable, this reasoning with people. Rakhsar was not accustomed to it. All his life he had stated what he wanted and it had been instantly to hand. He could barely get by in the common Asurian that the
hufsan
spoke, and this far into the backwaters of the empire, the people knew no Kefren.

And yet this, too, is my own country.

It had been easier crossing the Magron, for there were more places to hide in the high country, and the water was good, the highland folk a sturdy, hospitable breed who were used to seeing high-caste Kefren come and go. Their travels in the mountains had accorded more with Rakhsar’s notions of what a heroic escape should be. At least at first.

They had lost Maidek and Maryam to an avalanche, and the horses too. Ushau had dug the rest of them out of the suffocating layered snow one by one, and the rest of their passage had been on foot. They had become thieves in the night, stealing and poaching to eat, afraid of every shadow, barely able to light a fire in the dark to keep the blood in their veins from freezing. Like dogs, they had huddled together, all differences in caste and station forgotten in the struggle to survive.

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