Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
the new king, Portonas, in your favor. Yes, yes, I remember it all now.
Gran was still indignant about the whole thing. She said Portonas —
she didn’t call him that — did it to make clear who was the ruler of
the land. To humiliate our House.”
In his turn he crossed his arms, and nodded curtly. Obyann’s face
became red.
“Your explanation is good, but your herring doesn’t fry, as we say
in Ramaldah,” he exploded. “The old miserly bastard decreed that you
should give back the meadows west of the Little Brannydenn Road.
But the Merlinger Meadows reached all the way to the Brannydenn
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Highway, didn’t they? He let you keep two thirds of our land. He may
have slapped you on the wrist, ever so lightly, but from one robber to
another thief he let you keep most of your booty. He royally fucked
everybody, that creep, but us he fucked the hardest.”
Arranulf didn’t know what to answer.
“Listen, Obyann, I’m very sorry,” he tried calming his friend, “but
even so... we weren’t even born when all this was decided. Damn, I’m
not sure my father was born at that time.”
“Well, a lot of babies are going to be born, just so they can die by
the middle of next winter, when food starts running out.”
He took his mantle from the peg on the wall.
“And you know what I hate most about all this? You’re not even
using that land for anything. You just wanted to have it to do exactly
nothing with it, as long as we couldn’t use it anymore. It just lies
there.”
Arranulf had become very white.
“Obyann, I honestly didn’t know. I swear—”
“Stinker,” Obyann shouted.
He left, loudly slamming the door behind him.
“What is so urgent, Arranulf, that it couldn’t wait till after my
return from the Plains?” Anaxantis asked.
“My lord, I have to speak to you in your capacity as Regent of the
duchy of Landemere. My duchy.”
“Oh, yeah, sure,” Anaxantis said, mystified. “Do you want
Hemarchidas to leave?”
“No, that’s quite all right. He can stay.”
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Hemarchidas who was already standing up, sank back in his
chair.
“What is it then?” Anaxantis urged him on.
Arranulf opened a parchment he had been carrying.
“I got this from master Tomar’s office. It’ll make it easier to
explain.”
“Oh, a map,” Anaxantis exclaimed enthusiastically. “I love maps.”
“That was very nice of you,” Hemarchidas said as they were
walking the hallway. „And most generous.“
Arranulf shrugged.
“It’s only right, isn’t it? It is their land after all, and really,
Landemere is more than big enough. We won’t even notice that it’s
gone. For Ramaldah it means the difference between life and death
for many of their newborns.”
“Even so. I don’t know many nobles who would see it that way.
And you went an extra mile or two. I’m impressed.”
“And I was impressed by Obyann’s fervor. He takes the
responsibilities of his House very seriously. He was talking about
his people as if they were his family. He spoke about their peasant
women, but I got the impression he knew them all by name. He will
make a fine lord of Ramaldah one day.”
“And a good neighbor, I suppose.”
Arranulf nodded.
“So...” he said hesitatingly, “tomorrow you’re gone. You’re
probably very busy?”
“Nope. I have a whole, lonely afternoon and evening before me.
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You packed everything I could need for the next year or so. Nothing
at all to do. It’s almost noon and I’d invite you over to my barrack for
a meal and a glass of real wine, not that slosh they serve to you in The
Hole, but I’m sure you have plans with your friends—”
“No, no,” Arranulf said hastily. “I have no plans. I have no friends.
None at all. I have a whole, lonely afternoon and evening before me.”
He shut up and blushed. Hemarchidas laughed out loud.
“Come with me then. We can share our loneliness, some food and
some wine. I know next to nothing about you. We must see if we can
remedy that.”
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Tenaxos looked from under his hood at Rullio of Brenx.
“You knew? Since when?”
“Almost from the first minute we met. A hood and a mantle only
go so far in disguising someone. As a companion of Ehandar I lived at
the Royal Castle for years, remember? I saw you many times. Only a
few times from nearby, but it was enough to recognize you.”
“Again I was naive,”
Tenaxos thought.
“At least he has a sharp mind
and he has some bravado about him. Not that I had a choice, but he
seems the right man for the job.”
He filled Rullio in, as far as he thought was useful, in short,
stinted sentences, devoid of emotion. When he had finished, Rullio
was nibbling on his last crust of bread.
“Let me see if I’ve understood the gist of this. First you send your
youngest sons, almost with no means, into a dangerous situation.
Then, when one disappears and the other is far more successful than
you expected, you send the Black Shields after him. Not to mention
that horrible baron. With horrible powers.”
“That horrible baron is to me what you are to Ehandar. Mind
your words.”
“Of course, sire,” Rullio said without batting an eye. “However,
now you’ve reconsidered and you want, how did you put it again... to
level the field a bit?”
“That’s about it. Prince Anaxantis doesn’t know about the Oath
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of Sherashty. He might reconsider once he knows what the risks are
of provoking a full scale war with all the Mukthar tribes. If he does,
there is no reason for Damydas to intervene.”
“I’ll do it. More because I want to find out what happened to
Ehandar than anything else. It seems I need his little brother for that.
Do I get documents? A laissez passer maybe? Something to prove
that I’m on a special mission?”
“No. Nothing. In fact, you’re not on a mission. Not an official one
anyway. I, myself, will deny all knowledge of you and whatever you
are doing. You were not supposed to know who I was.”
“Ah, yes, I forgot that for a moment.”
“You’re the third son of your House, aren’t you?”
“Yes, the House of Brenx has always been rather fertile.”
“If you succeed in doing what I ask of you and make sure the
prince doesn’t find out this came from me, you needn’t worry.
You’ll be the founder of a new, independent branch. With its own
demesne.”
“Lord or baron?”
“Oh, baron at the very least. If I’m particularly satisfied, a
countship might not be out of reach.”
Rullio whistled appreciatively.
“You’ve got a deal. My lips are sealed. Quite a reversal of fortunes.
Which reminds me. Why was I kept a prisoner for all these months?”
“Because you spied on a prince of the royal blood.”
“On behalf of another prince of the royal blood.”
“That doesn’t matter. You needed a lesson. You would have been
released eventually, with or without this emergency.”
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The king shoved a leather purse across the table.
“There’s about ten rioghal here. Half in gold coins, the rest in
silver and copper. That should be more than enough. Take a bath and
some rest if you need it. Buy travel clothes. Please, don’t waste any
time unnecessarily. Damydas left Nira two day ago, but he will need
some time in Ormidon to organize a party of Black Shields. Even so,
you’ve got no time to lose. It’s imperative you arrive in the Northern
Marches before him and with ample time to spare. I don’t think he
will be particularly in a hurry, so you’ve got more than a fair chance
to overtake him.”
“I’ll buy the fastest horse there is in Nira.”
“No. Nira has an inn that serves as Post for the Merchant Guild.
You can hire a horse there. They will ask for your destination and
if you will be traveling fast or at a normal speed. You’ll answer the
former, of course. They will ask for the money in advance and give you
a swift horse. They will also provide you with a receipt, a document
with a description of the shortest route and a list of inns that double
as Guild Posts. In each of those you can trade in your tired horse for
a rested one, without having to pay extra. Changing horses can be
done in minutes, if necessary. Staying overnight and meals are extra.
You can change horses as frequently as you like, so you’ll always be
traveling on an animal in top condition.”
“You know a lot about these things, Sire.”
“I helped design the system and urged the Guild to adopt it. I
wanted to stimulate trade. You need fast and safe means of transport
for that. The main roads are in fair to good condition. I saw to that
as well.”
Rullio looked at the king, for the first time with a shimmer of
admiration.
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“It was in the early days,” Tenaxos added, “when everything
seemed possible. Me and my friends, we were going to... Well, I won’t
bore you.”
“You aren’t, sire.”
The king nodded with a half smile but didn’t elaborate any
further.
“One last thing that prince Anaxantis should know,” he added
instead. “Twelve years ago I sent Damydas on a similar mission to
the North. He traveled from Ormidon to the Marches, disguised as
a merchant in a caravan. Another one of my innovations. Actually, I
merely organized a practice that until then had been irregular and
haphazard. Once every week caravans of merchants, with all their
wares, servants, and so on travel to different destinations. One of
them is the Northern Trade Caravan to Dermolhea in the province
of Amiratha. For a modest fee, depending on how many persons and
carts there are in your group, you can join it. For security, it is guarded
by a troop of professional soldiers, mostly recent pensioners of the
army.”
“Aha. You think Damydas will be joining such a caravan again.
That will delay him considerably. He’ll have to travel at the pace of
the slowest cart.”
“I can’t be sure. However, you are right. If he joins a caravan he
will be slowed down. The advantage for him is that he will travel and
enter the Northern Marches incognito. He has always put a high value
on the element of surprise. So, it’s a safe bet he will use the same
stratagem again. He probably hopes to surprise Prince Anaxantis by
appearing as out of thin air.”
“So I will come in time?”
“You should. Dermolhea is roughly between five hundred and
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fifty and six hundred miles from here. With always a fast and rested
horse at your disposal, you should be able to cover that distance in
twelve days. Damydas will be traveling at the same speed until he
reaches Ormidon. Once there, he will lose at least a day, maybe two,
to organize his escort, and he’ll have to wait till a caravan to the north
is formed. His speed will drop to about twenty to twenty five miles a
day for the last three hundred miles or so. Half yours.”
“While I will be traveling at full speed. I will make sure to warn
His Highness that Baron Damydas is on his way with an autarchy in
his satchel.”
“That is not enough. You must make sure, very sure — I cannot
stress this enough — that he realizes all the factors of the equation.
Once in the Northern Marches Damydas’s authority is unlimited.
Before he crosses the border his powers are those of a captain of
the Black Shields. Considerable, but far from awesome, let alone all-
encompassing. Make sure the prince understands all the implications
of him traveling incognito.”
“That would be so much easier if I understood them myself.”
The king sighed and hesitated a few moments.
“Very well. As long as he travels in disguise nobody knows who
he is. Nobody knows where he is. There are many robber gangs active