Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
126
Andrew Ashling
Anaxantis had made it a point to regularly visit the new
encampments of the Amirathan Militia. Clad in the simple uniform
he wore for his daily training and accompanied only by Hemarchidas,
the first impression he gave was all but imposing. When he arrived
many a soldier wondered what this handsome lad was doing at an
army campsite. Some jumped to the wrong conclusion. The different
shades of gray of his clothing were only accentuated by two dashes
of color: his long, golden hair, and the small badge he wore on his
chest with the Amirathan colors, silver and purple. But when the
officers, who knew the lord governor by sight, flocked to him, they
soon made the connection between this blond boy and the warlord-
prince who had brought proud Landemere to its knees and imposed
his will on the unruly Amirathan nobility. They suddenly looked at
him with other eyes altogether.
As he progressed through the camp, surrounded by officers in
their rich garments, it was clear to everybody that it was with the
young man, simply dressed in subdued gray that somehow managed
to outshine the colorful uniforms, that the real power lay.
He mingled with the new recruits, listened to their worries as
well as to their boasting, and spoke encouraging words in a tone that
sounded more self assured than he felt. He ate and drank with them
at midday and used the same cheap tin utensils they did. He cursed,
just as they did, when he saw his meat was burned on one side, and
he drank his wine with as much gusto as them. After less than half an
hour most of them would have sworn he had been born and raised a
Bonds of Fear
127
Northern. He was one of them.
Sometimes he singled a particular soldier out and asked him
about his wife and children, his hopes and regrets. Was he afraid?
Did he have confidence in his officers? Did he feel that he was
being prepared adequately for the coming confrontation? Was his
equipment to par?
He also spoke with them in little groups. He asked where they
came from and if they were from the same village. Once, when one
of them passed along a beaker with warm, spicy wine, the man who
stood next to him was embarrassed because they had no clean mug
for the lord governor. Anaxantis shrugged, smiled, and without the
least hesitation took a swig from the one out of which half a dozen
men had drunk before him. When he passed it on, wiping his mouth
with the back of his free hand, the next man almost dropped it.
When one soldier timidly asked him if the north wasn’t but a dull
and miserable place for a royal prince to rule, he said that there were
three princes and a high king of Ximerion but only one warlord of
Amiratha and that he’d rather be the first here than the fourth there.
His answer went around the barracks and tents. Not only had they
adopted him, now they knew that he had adopted them as well.
He took care that not only the officers, but as many men as
possible heard from his own lips that every precaution was being
taken to minimalize casualties in the coming battle. The cornerstone
was good training and strict obedience, without panicking, to the
orders of their officers. They were better equipped, he stated again
and again, they would be better trained, and the leadership of the
army would be better informed than the barbarians. He himself would
reconnoiter the Renuvian Plains to seek out the most advantageous
battlefields. A famous doctor was organizing a whole group of his
colleagues and women with medical experience to take care of the
128
Andrew Ashling
wounded. Nobody would be left behind. Nobody would go uncared
for. As far as he was concerned his men were the most precious asset
of the army, and he would be parsimonious, stingy with their lives.
One militia man asked him what they would do if, despite all his
obvious preparation and precautions, the enemy would prove too
strong for them. He had looked the man in the eyes and had softly
answered: “Ha, that, my friend, is when we stand and die.”
When he was gone the men talked for hours about his visit. They
concluded that the king had been very generous to send the most
capable of his sons to the northern frontier to lead the defense in
person. It must have been a hard decision, they agreed, because the
situation in the south was even more dangerous, and the king must
have been sorely tempted to keep the prince at his side.
Bonds of Fear
129
Late in the afternoon Anaxantis was back at Lorseth Castle. When
he entered the tower he saw Rahendo, seated at a little table near
the door of the hallway to the war room, scribbling away on some
parchments.
“Any messages, Radyamirodyahendo?” he asked.
“No, my lord, but you had a visitor,” Rahendo said, as if that were
the worst possible news and dire consequences were bound to
ensue. “He went away when I told him you weren’t here.” He sighed.
“He will return though.”
“Did he say his name?”
“No, my lord, and he was so weird I forgot to ask. I’m sorry,”
Rahendo said, as though the weight of his shortcomings would soon
get the better of him.
“
You
thought he was weird?” Anaxantis said thoughtfully. “Wow.
Anyway, since he will return it doesn’t matter too much, I guess.
What are you writing so diligently?”
Rahendo looked shiftily around.
“Who?” he asked.
“You, little man.”
“Where?”
“There, at your table.”
“What?”
130
Andrew Ashling
“That parchment.”
“Oh, that,” Rahendo said nervously. “That’s nothing. Just some
notes for when next I write to my sisters. So I don’t forget… things.”
“Ah, I see,” Anaxantis said.
At that moment an irritated voice from the main entrance could
be heard.
“Appointment? Appointment? Fiddlesticks. I’m his doctor. Of
course I haven’t got an appointment. When you bump your silly head
into something that’s even thicker than your skull and you come for
help to me, I’ll ask whether you have an appointment.”
“It’s all right, Belmo, let him through,” Anaxantis yelled.
From where they stood they could clearly see Murno Tollbir
sticking his tongue out at Belmo of Yondar.
“See, I said he was weird,” Rahendo said sadly, raking his five
ringed hand through his hair.
“Doctor, good to see you. Please come right through. You know
the way.”
Anaxantis hastened to the war room, before the doctor had any
chance to impound his chair.
“What a weird kid,” Murno said, when he had closed the door
behind him and planted himself on the nearest available chair. “Still,
I suppose it’s very nice of you. It goes to show that even the mentally
challenged can be given semi useful jobs. Good for their dignity and
general well being.”
“Eh, it’s lovely to see you, but is there any particular reason for
your visit?”
“Of course. Two in fact. One: I’ve got the little item you asked
me for. Two: The organization of the medical unit we discussed isn’t
Bonds of Fear
131
going too well. Well, one part is going all right, though it drives me
mad, but the other part is a disaster, which is driving me mad. The
vultures just won’t budge.”
He blinked at Anaxantis and scratched his beard.
“I truly, truly wish I knew what you are talking about.”
“Let’s begin with the good news. Threndll — you remember my
housekeeper with, eh, benefits — and I have managed to rally quite
a sizable group of local women. Just in time, because the right herbs
will be starting to grow soon. They need to be harvested in the woods
and fields around Dermolhea, washed, dried, and prepared. We first
taught some twenty of them how to care for very sick and wounded
people, applying bandages, salves, splints, shushing them and so on,
and now they are teaching that to groups all over the city and the
neighboring villages. That’s going fine. Except there are far too many
women in my house. Driving me nuts, they are. Did you know that
four women together can make the noise of about eleven? That’s my
estimate anyway. With five women you would expect the noise of
about fourteen, wouldn’t you, being the fine mathematician you are?
Actually, it’s nearer sixteen. The racket grows exponentially and—”
“Very interesting, but what is it that’s not going as you would like
it to?”
“Ah, yes, the vultures. My dear colleagues. I thought my brethren
in the noble profession of healing would be glad to do their part in
the coming war. Not, as it became fairly quickly apparent when I
started asking around. They came up with all kinds of excuses, and
those were the polite ones. Never had so many doors slammed in my
face. One young sapling of about fifty even had the gall to tell me he
felt too old. Can you believe it?”
“Is there anything I can do to help?”
132
Andrew Ashling
“Commandeer them into the Militia. That would amuse me
greatly. Just round them up and drag them into a boot camp of some
sort. Tell me where, so I can go look at them and laugh my ass off. Go
on, humor me.”
“I don’t know if your amusement is sufficient legal basis for—”
“Fiddlesticks. You are the warlord. You can commandeer anything
and anyone for the defense of the province. Make them suffer for a
week and then offer them a choice.”
Anaxantis couldn’t help laughing.
“I like your little plan. Very well, I will see to it. I think that in
about ten days you will have a lot of doctors willing, even begging
you to allow them to help you.”
Murno nodded, satisfied. Out of a large shoulder bag he had been
carrying he took a small wooden box. In it was a cloth on which lay
three small, tube-like golden objects.
“Are those what I think they are?” Anaxantis asked.
“Yes, they are. It took some doing, you know. Several problems
at once. They couldn’t be too big, yet they had to be big enough
to contain an effective amount of, eh, liquid. They couldn’t be too
strong, yet they had to be able to withstand some handling without
starting to leak. Luckily my friend the goldsmith was prepared to
help me. We tested different qualities of silver and gold and finally
settled upon this.”
He pointed at the little golden capsules.
“You tested them?”
“Yes. People seem to think that I can cure anything. So, I have this
old patient — have known him for decades — who always brings
his dog. The man has never been sick in his life, but he wants me
Bonds of Fear
133
to check up both him and his dog regularly. He seems to think that
basically it is all the same, dogs and humans. Who knows? He could
be right. I just went along with it and over the years I actually learned
some things about beasts, go figure. So a week ago he came to see me
because his dog couldn’t stand on his paws anymore. Nothing wrong
with the animal, except it was old. Too old. It was obviously suffering
and he asked me if I could do anything for his friend. I had to tell him
I couldn’t cure old age. Not yet. He hated seeing the poor animal in
pain and asked if I knew of a kind way to make it go to sleep forever.
Which, in fact, I did.”
He blinked.
“So, after they had said their goodbyes and I had assured him his
friend wouldn’t feel a thing, I took one of the capsules and clenched it
between the animal’s teeth and pressed its jaws together. Poof. Gone.
No pain. Nothing. Nothing at all.”
Anaxantis hesitantly rolled one of the golden capsules between
his thumb and his index finger.
“Since you explained under what circumstances you would be
tempted to use it, I thought it best to make them small enough so you
could hide them on your person. Go on. Put one in your mouth. Gold
is non toxic. Now move it between your teeth and your cheek. Push