Read The Hordes of Chanakra (Knights of Aerioch) Online
Authors: David L Burkhead
Kreg looked over the five of them as they lounged in the room. They had lost much, all of them. Kaila had lost her mother's sword. Keven and Marek had lost a kingdom. And Kreg had lost a world.
Kreg allowed himself the hint of a grin. To all appearances, Shillond had lost nothing but weight.
His grin widened. While they had lost, they had gained too. Kaila had changed since Kreg had known her. No longer just a good-natured bruiser with a quick temper, she had revealed a keen mind that he would never have suspected when he met her. And Kreg? He had become someone that his self of a year ago would never have recognized.
"You smile," Kaila said. "I would hear cheerful thoughts."
"I was just thinking," Kreg said. "Five people now have to sneak back into Aerioch and raise a rebellion against the Schahi. While the death of the High Mage is likely to cause such confusion that Chanakra won't have much influence, these five people will have to escape the country, reach Aerioch, raise forces from somewhere with all the knights either dead or imprisoned or enslaved, and then throw the Schahi out of Aerioch."
Kaila seemed puzzled. "And this causes you to smile?"
"Of course," Kreg said. "The Schahi don't have a chance."
Kreg looked over the four people in the room with him. They had lost much, all of them. Kaila had lost her mother's sword. Keven and Marek had lost a kingdom. And Kreg? He had lost a world.
Kreg allowed himself the hint of a grin. To all appearances Shillond had lost nothing but weight.
The High Mage of Chanakra was dead. Kreg had accomplished that along with the destruction of the changeling armies that had conquered Aerioch and most of the rest of the known world. And in the doing he had helped King Marek, Prince Keven, Kaila, Shillond, and himself win free of the High Mage's dungeons.
Kreg's grin widened. While they had lost, they had gained too. Kaila had changed since Kreg had known her. No longer just a good-natured bruiser with a quick temper, she had revealed a keen mind that he would never have suspected when he met her. Kreg himself had become someone that his self of a year ago would never have recognized.
"You smile," Kaila said. "I would hear cheerful thoughts."
"I was just thinking," Kreg said. "Five people now have to sneak back into Aerioch and raise a rebellion against the Schahi. While the death of the High Mage is likely to cause such confusion that Chanakra won't have much influence, these five people will have to escape the country, reach Aerioch, raise forces from somewhere with all the knights either dead or imprisoned or enslaved, and then throw the Schahi out of Aerioch."
Kaila seemed puzzled. "And this causes you to smile?"
"Of course," Kreg said. "The Schahi don't have a chance."
In the corner, Shillond frowned.
“Shillond?” Kreg said.
“The High Mage was an idiot,” Shillond said.
“Be thankful that he was, father,” Kaila said.
“How did an idiot best Baaltor even once?” Shillond said. “How did an idiot gain the magical power to become High Mage of Chanakra? How did an idiot direct the conquest of so much of the world?”
Shillond frowned again and looked into his hands. “I fear that it was not the High Mage of Chanakra who was our foe. He was no more than a pawn. All of this was just one more deception within the deceptions.
“I fear that our true foe, whoever it might be, somehow has won.”
#
Early evening of the next day, Shillond returned to the room they shared carrying a modest basket of bread, cheese, and small flasks of wine.
"It is as we feared." Shillond set the basket on the room's small table. "With the death of the High Mage discovered there has been much confusion but the city has been sealed. Guards have been increased at the gates and lesser mages assigned to them to watch for magic. Troops search all ships before permitting them to sail and more mages join those searches. And more parties search the city for us, also accompanied by mages."
"That's a lot of mages" Kreg took a small loaf of bread and a block of cheese from the basket. "From everything you've told me I thought there would not be many mages in the world." He bit into the cheese and grimaced at the sour taste.
"There were fewer than a dozen in all of Aerioch," Marek said, taking his own portion from the basket. "From whence come these Chanakranon mages?"
"I do not know," Shillond said.
"If gates and port be closed to us," Kaila said, "How may we escape the city?"
"Can we scale the wall?" Keven asked. "Cut the throats of patrols and be off before anyone notes their absence?"
"And have those within the towers feather us from afar?" Marek shook his head. "I think not."
"Then hide within the city." Keven waved toward the room's shuttered window. "There are many thieves and cutthroats here. Of what note are four more? Five, with Good Duke Kaila."
"I am neither thief nor cutthroat--" Kaila's voice rose with each word, then she stopped and smiled. "--but I may play the part if needed."
Shillond sighed. "I don't think so." He opened one of the shutters on the window and peered into the alley below. "Of the five of us, King Marek does not speak the Chanakranon language and only I speak it well enough to pass for a local. And with three of us being veritable giants to the locals we would be soon noted and draw the searchers to us. And we cannot remain hidden in these rooms or again we would be noticed and found."
He turned, leaned against the windowsill and folded his arms. "We must escape, and soon if we are to escape at all."
"What about that seeming spell?" Kreg asked. "It made Keven not only look like the High Mage but sound like him. If you could change us, we could pass for natives."
"It would make us look and sound like natives, but it would not teach Marek the language."
"I could be a mute," Marek said. "If I do not speak, I will not need to know the language."
Shillond shook his head. "The spell is easily penetrated by any mage who thinks to look. And with mages searching for us we would again soon be revealed."
Marek sat on the room's single bed and leaned his head in his hands, his elbows on his knees. "Is there no hope then?"
"Children!" Kaila said sharply. "Are you all children? We have walked the width of the world, slipped within the enemy's own stronghold. And, when captured, Kreg did, from within his very cell, destroy the changeling armies that had conquered Aerioch and when questioned by the High Mage did slay him with no more weapon than his hands. And then we proceeded to escape from the enemy's dungeons and win free to the city. And now, now, when beset by these . . . inconveniences, you give up hope? Children, I say."
Kreg smiled and stood. "Kaila is right. We still live. We're still free." His eyes met hers. "Fear not for us. Fear rather for all the evil in Chanakra."
"Well said!" Keven stood as well.
Marek straightened and nodded. "So be it. How shall we proceed?"
"We need to learn more," Shillond said. "The seeming spell is our best chance to avoid detection for now." He looked first at Kaila and then at Kreg. "Eyes and ears?"
Kreg nodded. "Eyes"
Kaila laid a hand on Kreg's shoulder. "And ears."
#
Kreg and Shillond waited in an alley overlooking the docks. Keven, as the one who spoke the Chanakranon language best after Shillond, had accompanied Marek to inspect the gates. Kaila was prowling the depths of the city alone. Shillond's magic had given them the seeming of random locals. He had admonished them to watch carefully and avoid mages at all costs.
The alley was little more than a crack between the adobe walls of low buildings. On one side stood a tavern, on the other a brothel. Rat's scurried in the shadows picking at the garbage dumped in the alleyway. The shadows of the alley, coupled with the bright sunlight of the docs concealed them from casual view.
"We have not had chance to talk since escaping the dungeons" Shillond said. He had assured Kreg that no one was nearby. "You said that you destroyed the changeling armies but did not say how, only that you no longer can block spellcraft."
"I remembered the spell you used to challenge Baaltor," Kreg said. "You told me that even someone not a mage can cast that spell, only that spell. I challenged Baaltor. He...made me promises--send me home, even restore Bertan to life--if I would give up on you. I refused and, well, turns out that was the challenge and I won. The prize I sought was the means to break the changeling spell. He gave me that and sufficient power to cast it...once. Once I did that, the extra power was gone, but I guess I have whatever someone gets after a first challenge with that demon. I don't know. If I have it, I don't know how to use it."
"That should not be possible," Shillond said. "Baaltor is not so easily bested as that."
"Easy?" Kreg said. "You think that was easy? Bertan...."
"I know, Kreg," Shillond said softly. "But compared to what Baaltor could have done.... And you did not know to choose the form of the challenge so Baaltor could set the form. And to choose the challenge of temptation instead of a physical contest? He was right, you know. Weakened as you were, he could have bested you with ease. And when you won, he went beyond what he was required and gave you sufficient power to cast the spell? Why?"
Kreg sucked air over his teeth. "Because it's what he wanted to happen."
"He permitted you to win for his own ends. And if he permitted you...."
"Then maybe we've learned why Chanakra has so very many mages."
"That could also explain--"
Kreg held up a hand. At the docks a search party left one of the ships. As they watched the mage heading the party stood at the dock as the gangplank slid up onto the ship and the and teh crew pushed the ship off from the dock. Oars churned the water as the ship moved out into the harbor.
"That's the fifth ship," Kreg said. "All the same pattern."
"No chance to slip aboard after they search."
"Not here anyway," Kreg said.
#
Kaila frowned as she lounged against the corner of a tavern. Men passing would frequently pause to leer at her scanty attire but would scurry past on seeing her scowl. Too often of late she had worn this particular disguise and wondered what she would do if she needed to carry through on the implied promise of her clothing and pose.
So far three men had braved her scowl. Each would wake, eventually, in the alleys to which she had taken them, stripped of coin and other trinkets they might think valuable, but alive. And each time she needed to change locations. So far she had learned that Chanakra possessed few forces ready to search the city but others were coming, drawn from other cities. Eventually she and her companions would no longer be able to hide within it. Shillond was right. They had to escape and soon.
There. That one. As another man, resplendent in the uniform of a high officer of the guard departed the tavern, Kaila looked up to meet his eyes and smiled. The officer--a captain, Kaila thought--met her eyes and turned toward her. As he looked at her, Kaila arched her back slightly in a way that she knew emphasized her breasts and pulled the hem of her tunic higher.
The woman on whom Shillond had modeled the seeming had much larger breasts than her own. But through such subterfuges as this, she had learned that few men would ignore even her own modest breasts if she chose to twist just...so.
The captain was openly staring now.
"Is Milord seeking company?" Kaila let her smile widen. She let her mouth open slightly, her tongue touch her upper lip, and then let her lips stretch into her most inviting smile.
The captain looked her up and down. "I'm thinking about it."
Kaila pouted. "Well, think faster."
Kaila made no mention of coin. Chanakran law forbade the selling of sexual favors and the watch took that law very seriously indeed. The law made no mention of gifts given by a pleased lover to the object of his overnight affection. And if the gift was inadequate? Why not even a captain of the guard would willingly face the wrath of the powerful, if unofficial, pimp's guild.
The captain bowed and extended a hand. Kaila giggled, curtsied, and took it, grateful for once for the years the King and others had tried to turn her into a court lady instead of a warrior and a knight. Indeed, she hoped that her curtsey was not too polished.
She let the captain lead her where he would. Once some distance from the tavern outside which she had met him she stumbled and bumped into him.
"I beg milord's pardon," she said.
"Are you all right?"
"Milord is kind, but--" She looked to the left, stuck her tongue in her cheek as if gnawing on it, then to the right. "--I need to get off the street."
"Are you well?"
"Please, Milord. It will not take long."
Now it was the captain's turn to look both ways. He paused, then pointed at the opening to a dark alleyway. "There."
"Milord is gracious," Kaila said. "If...if you would be so kind as to keep watch. There are cutpurse's about."
"My lady's wish." He waved her forward and followed her into the alleyway.
Once within the shadows, Kaila's left hand darted out. Her fingers closed on the Captain's throat, cutting off a cry before it was made. With inexorable strength she drew him deeper into the alley. Once certain she was no longer visible from the street she held him pinned against the wall.
"And now, good sir," she said, watching as his eyes began to roll back in his head. "Let us see just what you are about." She released the pressure on his throat and held her other hand against his mouth, not so hard as to cut off air, but but muffle the sound of his coughing fit.
The captain snatched at his dagger with his left hand. Before he could draw it, Kaila dropped the hand which had been covering his mouth, grasped the captain's wrist, and twisted. She felt bones break under that grip.
"That was unkindly done, sir." She leaned closer, her eyes less than a handwidth from the Captain's. "As you might surmise, I am no street wench, but a warrior and a knight. And if you wish to live out this day, you will tell me all you know of the search that proceeds in this city."
#
How strange, Keven thought, to treat his own father, the King of Aerioch, as a servant.