Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
“Mistress, call me mistress.” The queen sighed. “Thank you
captain. You, sit down. What is your name?”
“Ondrov, my la— mistress.”
“Well, Ondrov, ready to take a message?”
The man nodded nervously. He was in his early twenties, and
Sobrathi saw he was in awe of Emelasuntha.
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“Yes… yes, of course, mistress.”
The queen looked inquisitively at him.
“You seem nervous, Ondrov. Any reason for that?”
It sounded like a normal question, but Sobrathi knew better:
Emelasuntha was in killer mode, and anything could unleash her
anger.
“It’s just that this is my first assignment, mistress. I would hate
to disappoint you.”
“Oh, yes, Ondrov, you would so hate to disappoint me,”
Emelasuntha agreed. Then she smiled and added lightly, “But I’m
certain you won’t. I have the highest confidence in you. You were the
best in your group, one of your teachers told me.”
“Yes, indeed. I was. I was indeed,” Ondrov stammered.
“Well, my friend, then neither of us has to be worried.”
Sobrathi followed the interchange with mounting worries of her
own.
“So, here we go,” the queen said. “I’ll speak slowly… To Anaxantis
from his mother and his aunt. We are coming. You were right: he
is sending a detachment of Black Shields to the Northern Marches
under the leadership of the baron of Damydas. We don’t know exactly
what powers your father has given him, nor what his exact mission
is, but we do know it was he who prevented the army from marching
against the Mukthars twelve years ago.
“We also know that he means to kill you.
“The caravan is over three thirds of its way to the Amirathan
border. We can’t stress enough how important it is that Damydas
never crosses it. He is hiding among the merchants in the caravan,
but we have a plan to smoke him out. As previously agreed we will
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meet you where the Northern Highway crosses the road to Garstang,
at the place called Elmshill.”
She paused to give the living letter time to absorb everything.
Sobrathi had listened with open mouth but every inclination to say
something was cut short by the forbidding look in Emelasuntha’s
eyes.
“There could however be a small change. Chances are we won’t
be coming alone. In all probability we will be in hot pursuit of
Damydas and his Black Shields. We managed to bribe someone who
worked at the royal castle and who knows him by sight. He knows
him so well that he will see right through any disguise he might be
wearing. The problem is that he will have to look at everybody from
close by, because it seems the baron has a small, but very distinctive
scar on his face that would be difficult to hide. We fully expect that he
will grow suspicious, choose the safer option and leave the caravan.
That’s when we will be certain of his identity, and that’s also when
we will leave the caravan to follow him.”
Again she paused. Sobrathi was looking down at the table and
shaking her head in disbelief. Emelasuntha gave her a vicious kick
against the shins which almost brought tears to her eyes.
“We will do our utmost to kill him before he gets very far.
Should this prove impossible then we will need your assistance.
Since Garstang is out of your jurisdiction, you’d better come
incognito with a small band of trusted friends. About twenty will
be enough. More would raise suspicion, and we don’t want anyone
to know that the governor of the Northern Marches had a hand in
the disappearance of the Bloody Baron. We will follow Damydas
with about twenty Tribesmen. We’ll crush him in a classic anvil and
hammer maneuver.”
For the third time she paused, daring Sobrathi with her eyes to
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utter a single word. The baroness remained silent.
“You see, my son, we have done everything to assure that
Damydas soon will be but a nasty memory. I send you my love, and
so does your aunt Sobrathi.”
Ondrov had closed his eyes and his lips moved soundlessly.
Once in a while he asked the queen to confirm if he had retained her
words exactly. She had to correct him only once. Finally, when he
was certain that he would be able to repeat her message verbatim,
he stood up.
“I will depart as soon as possible, mistress. Where am I to go?”
“Follow the highway to the north, ride past Garstang and cross
the Amirathan border. My son is waiting in the village of Fior-Dryff,
ostensibly to recruit troops. Almost everybody you meet will be able
to tell you his whereabouts.”
Emelasuntha gave him her most beautiful smile.
“May the Great Goddess protect you, Ondrov. Everything depends
on you. Not in the least the life of my son.”
Ondrov nodded and bowed his head, filled with awe and the
weight of his responsibility.
When he was gone, Sobrathi burst out.
“Where did you get all that? Anaxantis is nowhere near his
southern border. Not that we know of. What defector were you
speaking about? And, most of all, I didn’t realize we had a plan to
smoke out Damydas.”
“No you didn’t, because until less than half an hour ago we didn’t
have a plan. I have one now.”
“But why are you sending that poor guy on a fool’s errand? The
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Black Shields will be keeping an eye on the highway. If they catch
him—”
She stopped abruptly and looked at Emelasuntha with sudden
comprehension. The queen lifted the corner of her mouth slightly.
“I make no excuses,” she said softly. “It’s just something that
needed to be done.”
“You want the Black Shields to catch him,” the baroness said, not
believing her own words. “Yes, you want him to fall in their hands.
You want him to be tortured, and you want him to spill his guts,
probably literally, and feed them that absurd story.”
She sighed and shook her head.
“Emelasuntha, dear, he’s so young…” she added, knowing it
would be to no avail.
“Anaxantis is younger, Sobrathi,” the queen said. It was most
uncharacteristic, but she sounded almost apologetic. “It’s not only
that he is my son. On him depends the fate of thousands. Have you
thought about that?”
Sobrathi relented. She hadn’t taken into account that without
Anaxantis the whole of the Northern Marches would lie wide open
to the barbarians.
“You’re right, of course, but still... was there no other way?”
Emelasuntha remained silent.
“Right,” Sobrathi said, “we discussed that not half an hour ago.”
“I’m not too sure the baron will believe his cover will be blown,
but I would bet a lot that he won’t be able to resist the chance to get
Anaxantis so early in the game. You can see, can’t you, why I needed
a living letter? When he finally breaks down they will believe he is
telling the truth. And he will be, as far as he knows it. Whatever they
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do to him, there is only one story he can tell them. We need that
convincing quality of someone who believes totally in what he is
saying, dear.”
“Yes, I can see that. I don’t like it, but I can see why you did it.”
“I don’t like it either, Sobrathi, but that is the only plan I can come
up with to force him to break cover. I’m open to suggestions though.”
She waited impassively, but her friend shook her head sadly.
“I hate days like this one,” the baroness said in a resigned tone.
“It’s not over yet. There still remain two less than agreeable tasks
for us.”
“Yes?”
“We can’t simply rely on the competence of the Black Shields.”
“Oh, dear, no…”
“I am afraid so. We’ll have to make certain that a rumor is started
that a very important messenger was sent ahead of the caravan by a
party or parties as yet unknown.” Her eyes were cold. “We can’t run
the risk that the Black Shields would overlook our letter, can we?”
Sobrathi sighed as she saw the last glimmer of hope for
Ondrov getting out alive of this mission evaporate into thin air. But
Emelasuntha’s iron logic, in all it’s horrifying cruelty, couldn’t be
countered.
“Yes, I can see that,” she complied reluctantly. “I wish—”
“Wishing something doesn’t make it so. Just think how many
lives will be saved by sacrificing his. Anaxantis will live and stop the
Mukthars from ravishing the province.”
Again Sobrathi felt there was nothing she could say. She stared
morosely in the distance, until suddenly it occurred to her.
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“Two things. You said there were two unpleasant things that had
to be taken care of.”
Emelasuntha shrugged.
“It’s no good setting a trap without some kind of bait. Damydas
will send men in advance to reconnoiter Garstang—”
In a flash Sobrathi knew what her friend was planning.
“No. Emelasuntha, no.”
“Yes. And what they see will have to match what the living letter
told them.”
“Not calling him by his name won’t make this less horrible and
please, tell me you’re not thinking what I’m thinking.”
“They will expect to see Anaxantis and so we will—”
“No, please, no, dear, you can’t—”
“I can and I will. Because it is necessary.”
“They have seen him. Some among them at least. Damydas most
certainly has.”
“They were half drunk by then. It was in the tower, in a room
without windows, so they saw him by the flickering light of candles.
Besides, they make the staff wear those ridiculous caps. You would be
surprised how difficult it is to recognize someone out of his familiar
surroundings, out of his usual context. You often don’t see what you
don’t expect to see. Different clothing, a more commanding way of
speaking—”
“He won’t fool them for long.”
“He won’t have to. We will be there. With more than sixty
Tribesmen, and not twenty as the letter will have told them.”
“Yes, yes… but, no, please, don’t do this.”
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Sobrathi looked defeated, but she soon recovered.
“We will be there,” she thought, “like she said. Nothing will
happen to him. He’s just a decoy. Bait. Damydas won’t get near him.
We will see to that. I will see to that.”
Still, she repeated her plea.
“Don’t do this. Please, dear.”
“I must, so I will. I’m sending for Jerruth.”
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Chapter 10:
Gathering Clouds
Speed was of the essence. The queen herself had said so. She
had urged him to make haste and to take the shortest route possible,
which was the Northern Highway. If he rode fast he could be in
Fior-Dryff in less than four days. Although the Tribe had issued him
with a horse, Emelasuntha had hired one for him shortly after she
had dictated him her message. The inn where they had stopped
for midday happened to be a Merchant Guild station. That way he