T
hey rode as if demons pursued them in the flesh. More than once Dasadas shouted to Epona, “Do not look back!” because he was afraid of what would happen if she did. She would turn the gray stallion and go back to Kazhak, and Dasadas would be sacrificed with her for helping her escape.
But she did not go back. She made herself lock her eyes on the western horizon and lash the horse with the ends of her reins until he found a speed within himself he had not known he had, and soon they had outdistanced even Dasadas and his strong young mount and were racing alone across the steppe.
Dasadas followed her. It was not difficult; he knew the only direction she would take. He did not allow himself to think of the coming night, when they would be alone together. He did not allow himself to think of Kazhak, facing the wrath of the shamans.
He thought of nothing at all but the running horse and the setting sun.
If a party of pursuers came after them they never knew it. Long after dark, guided only by a sliver of moon and the gray stallion’s unerring instinct, Epona was still traveling west. She had at last fallen back to a trot, and she heard Dasadas calling to her from the distance.
“Epona? Are you there, Epona?”
“Here, Dasadas.” She reined the gray to a halt and waited for him.
“Clouds return,” the Scythian commented as he rode up. “With no moon is too dark to see ground, not safe for horses. We stop here?”
“I think we can. The last time I looked back, there was a terrible fight going on in the camp; all the men were involved in it. It was … the wolf, I think. It was impossible for anyone to mount a pursuit party just then, and we have come a long distance without catching sight of any followers. We might as well rest here and ride again before dawn. The shamans will surely send someone after us eventually, but our horses are swift and we have a great start; they can never catch us now.”
“How far do we go?” Dasadas asked, unhesitatingly surrendering the mantle of leadership to her. To Epona, who was not like other women.
“I am going all the way to the Blue Mountains, Dasadas. Like Kazhak, I have an obligation.”
He did not understand what she meant by that, but he understood danger to himself well enough. “Scyth will not be welcome in Blue Mountains,” he told her.
“If you come riding that stallion you will be. The Kelti raise ponies for pulling ceremonial carts; if we breed your stallion and mine to pony mares, in the future my people will have horses large enough to be ridden. Your good bay will make you welcome, Dasadas. You bring treasure with you.”
“Can do more than that,” he told her. “Dasadas will show you.”
They made camp in the lee of a slight rise of ground, but they did not dare light a fire, though the night was dark and cold. To eyes accustomed to the steppe, however, there was
enough light to see, dimly, the things Dasadas pulled from one of his saddlebags to show Epona. An ivory comb. Gold jewelry. A copper bracelet.
“These are your things, Dasadas?” Epona asked in surprise.
“No, were sent by wives of Kazhak. For Epona to buy safety, food, whatever she needs.”
She recognized the copper armband, then, that she had given Talia. She sat on the earth, holding the little hoard in her lap, and wondered if she was going to cry. Those reserved, indifferent women. They had never encouraged her to think of them as friends; they had never really allowed her behind their veils. Yet they had sent all the wealth they could gather to insure her a safe journey.
I never knew them at all,
she thought, her throat scorched with regret.
“When was there time to do all this, Dasadas?” she asked.
“When Kazhak found you were missing, he guessed what shamans intended. From that moment he meant to find you, send you away. He told one wife, she told others.”
“I am surprised the shamans weren’t guarding him as they were me. Surely they did not think he would allow them to sacrifice his woman or his horse without offering any resistance.”
“Why not?” Dasadas inquired. “Order of Kolaxais, Kazhak would never disobey. So they thought. On Sea of Grass, if one man disobeys his
han,
word travels on wind. He will not find allies in other tribes; princes of other tribes would not allow. What man wants to make angry the man who rules him?”
“The power of the
han
is not only total, it can be terrible,” Epona commented. “Only now, among the Royal Scythians, it has become the power of the shamans. Why are they doing this, Dasadas? Why hurt their own people for the sake of gold and livestock?”
“Is not only reason. Shamans are jealous men, Dasadas thinks. They have watched many years as
han
ruled people,
made decisions. Shamans think they can do better. They want their turn. They want everything.”
Epona shivered. The cold of the steppe was settling around them. Though Dasadas had brought a wide range of provisions, including her
gorytus
and ample clothing, he had found himself unwilling to touch or pack the bearskin cloak, and Epona must now satisfy herself with a Scythian cloak of sewn skins and a blanket of goats’ hair.
“I do not think Tsaygas and Mitkezh are possessed by white
taltos
, Dasadas,” she remarked as she sat, thinking. “I believe they contain black spirits, spirits of evil. Only such creatures would harm their own kind or use magic for selfish purposes. In time they will be punished for it, of course. The earth mother insists that all things ultimately come into balance.”
Her words had no meaning for him. He was content merely to sit as close to her as he dared, smelling the aroma of her skin, thinking his own thoughts, and dreaming his own dreams.
“I should have stayed, Dasadas. I should have stayed to help Kazhak,” she murmured, as much to herself as to him.
Dasadas said nothing. She was tormenting herself over what she perceived to be her defection, but that would pass. They had many days to ride, and sometime along that journey she would stop thinking of Kazhak.
“Be my brother now,” Kazhak had said to him. “Take care of my woman as you would your own. Guard her with your life.”
For that, a man must have some reward. Kazhak would not have expected it to be otherwise.
The same thought played at the edges of Epona’s mind as she sat on the earth, listening to the gray stallion cropping a last few mouthfuls of grass before she signaled him to lie down beside her. A new pain twisted her as she realized what it must have cost Kazhak to send her away with Dasadas.
It should have been Kazhak who fled with her; who took her safely home. But Kazhak was a man of honor; he had stayed to try to fulfill his obligation to his father and his tribe.
And I ran. I ran,
Epona thought, hating herself.
When she could bear it no longer, she had the stallion lie down and she pillowed her head on his neck and surrendered to silent, bitter tears.
Dasadas lay a few paces away, waiting.
Soon,
he promised her under his breath.
Soon Dasadas will give you a reason to stop crying, Epona.
They fell into a half-sleep, almost expecting to hear the thunder of approaching hooves.
Thisworld did not look better in the morning. If anything, it was colder, grayer, and more forbidding. Epona would have almost welcomed an attempt by Dasadas to invade her body and drag her away from her own thoughts, but the man kept his distance, watching her with the same mixture of lust and worship she had seen in his face for over a year.
“They may come after us now,” he cautioned. “We must go.”
“You will travel with me, then—all the way back to the village of the Kelti?”
“Kazhak ordered me to take you where you want to go,” he answered.
When they had eaten a quick meal of dried meat and hard bread, they turned the horses westward. But as they rode, Dasadas explained that this would not always be the direction they took, though their ultimate goal was in the direction of the setting sun. “Is very bad weather here in winter, you know that, Epona. Dasadas thinks it is better we ride south soon, toward shore of Black Sea. There are good roads there, trade roads, easier in this season. There are towns where we can get supplies.”
“But Kazhak avoided all settlements; almost all settlements,” she reminded him.
“We were war party, then. Too small a number; we were careful. Now, just two people, no one will see a threat in us. Dasadas has clothes for you, man’s clothes; we will smear dirt on your face so no one can tell who you are. We will ride as travelers only, emissaries of some prince of the horse. Is well known Scythians possess much gold. We may be welcomed
if it is thought we bring commissions for craftsmen. Scythians have good reputation among craftsmen in the south.”
All the way back to the Blue Mountains. It would be a very long journey, and Epona realized that any such travels were dangerous of themselves. She might never make it to her own village; anything could happen.
But that has always been your destination,
the voice within told her suddenly.
Go home
,
Epona.
The days rolled past under the hooves of the horses, and the landscape changed and changed again as they entered new territories. Since they were not trying to avoid those who might take them for hostile marauders, they did not always ride across trackless expanses. When bitter weather drove game into hiding and their bows found no targets, Epona and Dasadas ventured into settled communities and bartered for meat and staples, or a strengthening measure of grain for their horses.
Dasadas was determined that they avoid the tribes of “savages” occupying the western fringes of the great steppe. He hoped to follow the coast of the sea south to the Duna and across the father river, then travel west across Moesia, avoiding the dark Carpatos altogether. A longer route, one that would take much more time, but Dasadas was not comfortable with the prospect of facing the Carpatos again.
Disguised as a male Scyth, her bright hair darkened with mud and topped by the pointed felt cap that protected ears against bitter wind, her body encased in tunic and comfortable trousers, Epona experienced a new kind of freedom. She rode with Dasadas as a comrade, an equal, and soon he fell into the habit of talking with her as he would have with one of his brothers. There was not the closeness between them that her spirit had established with that of Kazhak, but they became comfortable with one another.
Except at night, when they were alone in the darkness, and
she was as aware of his thoughts as of the horse beneath her.
No amount of dirt would disguise the fact that Epona had no beard, but the weather worked for them, providing ample reason for her to wrap a scarf around the lower part of her face. As she rode the superior horse, those they met assumed her to be a young noble and Dasadas her attendant, and while they hastened to do his bidding—spurred by dreams of Scythian gold, or fear of Scythian reprisals—they bowed deferentially to her.
Epona found she quite enjoyed their forays into the settlements.
Following Dasadas’ plan, they worked their way southward toward the coast of the Black Sea. They crossed two major rivers on their journey across the Sea of Grass, rivers Dasadas identified as the Borysthenes, a large and powerful waterway, thickly settled along its southern reaches, and the Hypanis, a smaller stream, easily forded as it was surprisingly low in this season.
“Next river will be the Tyras, which is boundary between Scythian land and the territory of the Neuri,” Dasadas explained. “We cross Tyras, we ride on to Duna, we are out of range of the people of the horse. From the Duna we will be safe … if the wolf-demon does not follow us.”
The wolf seemed to be a preoccupation with Dasadas, second only to his obsession for Epona. Yet neither of them had seen the wolf since the evening they fled the winter camp of the royal tribe, in spite of the fact that for many nights they had been too cautious to build a fire. But Epona was not concerned about the wolf. She was heading back toward the Blue Mountains; she did not think it would bother them now.
Dasadas was not so sure. He kept his Kelti iron close to his hand, and when they heard distant animal sounds in the night he was instantly on his feet, staring into the darkness. “Since Dasadas drank the blood of first man he killed,” he confided to Epona, “according to our custom, no enemy has escaped the bow of Dasadas for long. Except that wolf.”
“It is not to your discredit that you could not kill him,”
Epona said as she tried to reassure Dasadas. “As Kazhak said, the silver wolf is a … demon.”
“Have not killed him yet,” Dasadas corrected her. “But someday. Someday.”
The bleak reaches of the Sea of Grass lay behind them, and so far they had avoided pursuit or challenge. As they crossed the Tyras—seasoned travelers now, with many days in the saddle behind them—Dasadas looked north, upriver, and shuddered. “If we follow Tyras to land of Neuri we will be again in the Carp
tos,” he said. “Demon wolf waits for us there; Dasadas is sure of it. Wolf was very strong in Carpatos, Epona, remember? Remember? But we fool him; we go another way.”