Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
“Oh, nothing as barbaric as that happened. In fact I had a rather
big cell, all to myself in the beginning. The food was simple but
adequate and the days mind numbing and interminable. Until I got
company. In the beginning he didn’t say much. Daily they took him
away for questioning. Him they did torture. When they brought him
back, barely conscious and horribly wounded, I tried to take care of
him, but it was a rather frustrating endeavor as all I had was water
and some rags to clean him up a bit. Maybe it was because I never
asked him anything that he began to trust me. Eventually he opened
up. There seems to be some comfort in being able to tell your story
to a sympathetic pair of ears.”
He looked again at Anaxantis, as if to check whether he was still
following his account.
“He seems to be buying it. Gods, he’s become handsome. Hard to
believe that he’s ruling the Northern Marches, though. Warlord? He
looks nothing like a general. If he were anybody else, but a prince of the
House of Tanahkos, I would know what to do.”
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“Well, to make a long story short, it turned out he was accused
of being a defector, a traitor actually. He denied it of course and said
he had only made some general remarks about the leadership of
the Black Shields. Eventually they stopped questioning him, and as
I said, the days are long and boring when you’ve got nothing else to
do than stare at four walls. Within weeks we knew each other’s life
story, mine being the shorter by half. You get to know each other so
intimately it seems you have been brothers all your life. I guess it’s
natural you lower your guard under those circumstances.”
They had reached a patch of trees and Anaxantis led them behind
it, so that they were out of sight of the party waiting by the road.
“He had many interesting stories, but two are of importance to
you. Did you know that some sixteen years ago the head of the Black
Shields ventured into Mukthar territory, incognito, with only a few
companions?”
Anaxantis looked up, suddenly all attention.
“Oh yes,” Rullio continued. “More than a year nothing was heard
of them. Then the head returned, alone. They had been captured
shortly after crossing the Queneq pass. The others were killed but
the baron—”
“Damydas? It must have been. Was it?”
“Yes, that was his name, though my cell mate usually called him
that bloody butcher.”
“That would fit the man, I believe, if only half of the stories I
heard are true.”
“Anyway, it seems the baron managed to gain the trust of one of
their princes. They had kept him alive, to be used as a slave, but he
copied their ways so quick and thoroughly that in a short while he
out-mukthared the Mukthars. To be honest, I wouldn’t be surprised
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if the Damydas family tree were researched, they would find some
Mukthars among his ancestors. The man is a natural brute and a
barbarian, if my cell mate is to be believed. No wonder they took
to him. Within three months he spoke their barbaric lingo fluently.
Well, seeing he was so like them, they could hardly make him into
a slave, much less kill him. After a year they trusted him so much
that they let him go. Once back he reported immediately to the king.
They locked themselves up in your father’s private study, and they
only emerged six hours later. My friend couldn’t be certain what they
talked about. But he could make an educated guess. They will most
certainly have talked long and hard about the oath of Sherashty.
“The what?”
“The oath of Sherashty. It seems that one of their kings, probably
a king of the original tribe—”
“Wait. What do you mean? The original tribe? Does that mean
there is more than one Mukthar tribe?”
“Oh yes. Didn’t you know? The Mukthars are not so much a single
tribe. They’re a people, a nation. They must have been a single tribe
ages ago, but whenever their numbers become so big that their
territory can’t sustain them anymore, they split up. The new tribe
wanders around until they find suitable lands to occupy. They call it
the Parting, or something like that.”
Anaxantis digested the information hungrily. None of his books
had mentioned something like this. In fact, all of them had been
scarce with information about Mukthar society.
“To continue,” Rullio said, “it seems that a long time ago one of
their tribes suffered a humiliating defeat. The king of the original
tribe, Sherashty, swore that he would not rest before he had taken
revenge for the slight inflicted upon his people. Now, you must
understand that dealings between the tribes are none too friendly.
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They will not fight each other, but neither do they entertain amicable
relations. I suppose that’s one of the consequences of the Parting. So
it was a rather unusual step when Sherashty sent embassies to all the
other tribes and invited their kings for a conference. Such was the
prestige in those days of the original tribe that all the other Mukthar
tribes answered his call, though a few kings sent plenipotentiaries
instead of attending themselves. Sherashty managed to convince
them that they couldn’t let anybody defeat a Mukthar tribe in such
a devastating way. He argued the Mukthar name would suffer, and
hence the safety of all tribes would be compromised. He told them
that, whatever they decided, he for his part would seek revenge. If
need be alone. He repeated the oath he had sworn. It didn’t take long
for one of the other kings to stand up. Several tribes claim the honor,
by the way. He repeated the oath word for word. All in turn did the
same.”
“The oath of Sherashty,” Anaxantis said, keeping his composure
with some difficulty. “Does that mean what I think it means? Even if
I manage to stop one tribe...”
Rullio hesitated. He saw the look of foreboding on Anaxantis’s
face.
“Good,”
he thought, keeping a straight face,
“I hope I scared you
into caution.”
“It depends, I suppose, how humiliating their defeat is. That is if
you can defeat the tribe that raids our borders at all. But if you do,
there is a good possibility that all the other tribes will fall on you.”
Anaxantis halted.
“How many?”
Rullio made a non-committal gesture.
“My friend wasn’t sure, but he estimated that the Mukthar nation
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could at least field a hundred thousand warriors. At the very least.”
Anaxantis took a deep breath.
“Incidentally,” Rullio said, “that’s why your father send Damydas
to the Northern Marches last time, and that’s why he made him an
autarch. He wanted to be absolutely sure that the Mukthars would
have no reason whatsoever to invoke Sherashty’s spirit.”
Anaxantis reeled, and he felt as if his knees would give out under
him.
“Damydas. He sent Damydas. As autarch. So that was who... and
that’s why... All these months I’ve been searching high and low for the
answer. It was so illogical, so incomprehensible. Why stop the army?
Why discourage the defenders of Dermolhea? Now I know... Damn you,
father. You could have told me. So that’s why we were sent here with
such inadequate forces. It didn’t matter, because you never meant for
the Northern Army to draw one sword or shoot one arrow. What was
it, father? One of your lessons in kingship? Yes. But it was more. You
wanted us to fail. And of course we couldn’t win. You made certain
of that by giving Demrac Tarngord his secret charter, knowing he
probably wouldn’t need it. Between Landemere obstructing every
effort to raise additional forces, the mistrust of the Forty in Dermolhea,
and the total spinelessness of the Elders of Mirkadesh, even a blind
man would have seen that nothing could be done but retreat and hope
for the best. All the same you would have made bitter reproaches. You
would have accused us of incompetence and even blamed us for the
devastation caused by the Mukthars.”
He turned around and looked out over the fields. Rullio waited
silently.
“That’s it, isn’t it, father? That’s what you wanted to show us. That
we aren’t ready for the Devil’s Crown. That you still have matters firmly
in hands. A fine lesson, father. And so cheap. Only fifteen thousand
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human lives. Human lives entrusted to your care. That also you wanted
to teach us, didn’t you? How to count human lives as if they were beans.”
Rullio coughed. Anaxantis turned around again.
“I’m sorry, my lord, but there is this other thing...”
“Go on.”
“My friend said that since months — probably from before the
day your father made you lord governor — there is an emergency
plan in place for the eventuality things should turn sour.”
Seeing the pained look on the young prince’s face, Rullio
hesitated.
“You must understand,” he said, almost by way of an apology,
“that your father doesn’t think Ximerion can withstand a war on two
fronts. What with the situation in the south... Anyway, in the event
things shouldn’t go as desired, your father planned to appoint Baron
Damydas as autarch of the Northern Marches again to make sure the
Mukthars would be given no excuse to invade en mass.”
“What? He’s sending an autarch? But I am his son. I am his
representative. The lord governor. An autarch would—”
“Supersede your authority. He would simply take over. The army,
the administration, the nobles, all would be compelled to obey him.
If necessary he could—”
“Arrest me.”
“That, or worse.”
“What? Kill me?”
“If he thought it was necessary, yes. You probably know better
than I do why he got his nickname of Bloody Baron.”
“He got it during the Mattinian Rebellion.”
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“Exactly. He used to say, ‘With a piece of rope you can tie a man
down, and he won’t bother you for a while, but eventually he will
free himself. With a piece of rope you can also hang a man, and he
won’t bother you ever again. You get your rope back as well.’ He’s not
exactly one for half measures, our baron.
Anaxantis thought for a while.
“How did you get out?” he asked suddenly.
“They just let me go. I wasn’t important anymore. I probably
never was.”
“And you decided to come and tell me all this?”
“To be honest, no. Actually I wanted to warn Ehandar… sorry, his
highness, Prince Ehandar. It was only when I came here that I heard
the strangest stories and that you were in control. We, his friends
that is, had a standing agreement that should anything happen, we
would try to make our way back to him up North. Did any of them
make it?”
“Not that I know of. I’m sorry.”
“Damn. Another mistake I made. I never thought of keeping a
permanent check on his friends and trying to find out what became of
them. If Rullio got here, others might have managed to do so as well,
without me knowing it.”
“Would you care to tell me, what happened to his highness? We
are friends, you see.”
“I know. We had the same classes, remember? But it’ll have to
wait. What about the baron? When is the king going to appoint him?”
“Yes, of course. I almost forgot to tell you the most important
news of all. The king has already appointed him. They tried to keep
it a secret, but soldiers are gossipers, and Nira is not a big city. It’s
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a garrison town. Right after they let me go, I decided to go and
buy a good meal. The first in many months. While I was eating in
a tavern some soldiers a few tables away from mine were talking.
They were simple garrison soldiers, not Black Shields, but they had
heard things. The baron was leaving that day for a secret mission on
express orders of the high king. The fort at Nira was abuzz with the
rumor. One of them told the others he had heard some clerks say that
they had prepared the charter that confirmed Damydas as autarch of
the Northern Marches, ‘to put the region in order and to safeguard
the realm’ being the official rationale.”
“I see.”
“Pardon me, but you don’t. According to this soldier the clerk had
also said ‘The king is not chary with the lives of his sons.’ There is but
one possible explanation for this remark.”
“Damydas will not just depose me.”
“I’m afraid not. He means to kill you, though why I wouldn’t
know.”
“Yes? Why? You would think it would be sufficient to supplant
me.”
“Well, maybe he thinks you’re too dangerous to be kept alive.