Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
who hadn’t been exceptionally intimidated by the high king himself,
bounced back in seconds.
“But, your highness, what will you do if the Mukthar nation
comes against you with a hundred thou—”
“I will raise an army of a hundred and
fifty
thousand, and I will
beat them.”
“But you can not—”
“What I can or can not, my lord, is my business. And I warn you,
do not presume to meddle in my affairs.”
“Ehandar,”
Rullio at once realized.
He was about to protest further but Anaxantis raised his hand.
“That will be quite enough, my lord,” he said tersely. “This
conversation doesn’t need me anymore.”
He walked back to his men, leaving a confused Rullio standing by
himself.
“You blond devil,”
the young noble mused, not without some
amusement.
“What happened? I’m certain I left you on the edge of
despair. You must have a trump card, or you would be devastated,
unable to hide it. Your plans should be lying in ruins around you. Yet
you seem determined to follow them all the same. Are you that smart,
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or just that stubborn? How interesting.”
Anaxantis mounted Myrmos.
“I could raise a hundred and fifty thousand men,”
he thought,
“provided I had two, three years to do it in. As luck would have it the
solution is far more simple and far less costly. But first I must find out
what exactly Damydas’s mission is, though Brenx is probably right. It
fits in with what I suspected myself. Father must have told him to stop
me at all costs, and knowing the Bloody Baron and his ways that means
he will kill me. With a smile on his lips. I’ll be waiting for him. Just
outside the border, before he has had a chance to invoke the powers
of his autarchy. And I’ll not be alone. We’re near Mirkadesh. I’ll collect
some fifty Clansmen, send the Mukthars to Lorseth under escort and...
yes, what am I going to do with Brenx? We’ll have to ride as if Zardok
and his devils were chasing us, but with some luck we should be able to
reach the border before Damydas does.”
His thoughts turned to Lorseth Castle. To the tower and its
occupant.
“He’ll have to wait just a while longer. Damn, I was almost home
and now... But I have to protect us both. It’s not without danger what
I am about to undertake. If anything goes wrong... It doesn’t bear
thinking about. I should have made provisions for him sooner. Too late
now.”
“Gentlemen,” he said, and he smiled, “There’s been a change of
plans. No rest for us, I’m afraid. We’ll have to ride the whole night
through.”
His men and the Mukthars looked expectantly at him.
“To Mirkadesh,” he said, making a sign to start moving.
He turned around in his saddle.
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“My lord of Brenx,” he shouted, “are you coming with us, or are
you going to remain standing there, waiting for spring to arrive?”
“Coming, your highness, coming.”
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Mellar had only ten minutes ago relieved another Tribesman
and was still making himself comfortable. He sat behind some
shrubbery where he could not be seen, but from where he himself
had an excellent view of the back of the Guild Station. He had brought
something to drink and some food for later. His shift would last four
hours.
His comrade had left a piece of tent canvas to sit upon while he
kept an eye on the back wall of the hostelry, which judging by the
sturdy walls, had once been a big, fortified farm. The windows were
clearly later additions.
All seemed quiet, and he was just settling down for a boring
watch, when someone came around the corner. Mellar stretched
his neck to have an unobstructed view. The man didn’t look too
steadfast on his feet, and sure enough, there he went, falling flat
on his belly in the mud. He heard him swear. The man had a rich
vocabulary. He crawled more or less upright, put some kind of flask
to his lips, and waggled on, changing directions haphazardly. Then
he looked around, saw the shrubs and stumbled to them, clawing at
his pants. He was going to relieve himself against his hiding place,
Mellar realized. Just his luck.
Mellar knew he should have tried to retire unseen, but that was
impossible as the bushes he was hiding behind were freestanding.
So, he stood up and went over to the man although he knew this
was against every rule in the book. He wasn’t too sure what he was
going to do. When Mellar had almost reached him, the man dropped
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his flask and shakily bended over to retrieve it. Mellar was only two
paces away when the man came upright, in his hand not the flask
but a sharp dagger. Fast as lightning and with sure movements he
fell upon his victim, with one hand covering Mellar’s mouth and with
the other slitting his throat. The wound produced a hissing sound
of escaping air, air that should have stayed in Mellar’s lungs. He
struggled for a minute before dying.
The man laid the body behind the shrubbery on the piece of tent
canvas and then went back from where he had come. On his way
back he made a tentative waving gesture to one of the windows on
the second floor.
After about five minutes, that same window opened, a rope fell
out of it, and soon after two men, one after the other, climbed down.
When the second had reached the ground, the rope was pulled up
again, and the window closed silently.
The men hastened over the open stretch of land behind the Guild
Station. They relaxed somewhat when they reached the woods.
“That went surprisingly well,” Xirull said.
“We’re not there yet,” Damydas said curtly. “Pay attention, these
woods stand on a swamp. One wrong step...”
For more than half an hour they plodded on. A few times they
fell on the slippery ground, making foul reeking mud stick on their
mantles. Eventually they reached the other end of the woods. A pale
moon shone over fields, fields as far as the eye could see, except for
five men and seven horses who were quietly waiting.
“Captain, sergeant,” one of the men greeted them.
Damydas nodded curtly.
“Is everything going as planned?” he asked.
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“Yes, captain. We have bypassed the tail group of the Tribe of
Mekthona. Their vanguard unit is about eight miles from here. We’ll
drive for fifteen miles on these side roads and then join our own
vanguard. Without complications we should be in Elmshill, the day
after tomorrow.”
“How many men do we have at our disposal?”
“I recalled everybody I could from non essential duties. About
sixty.”
The baron nodded. It was difficult to tell if he was satisfied or not.
Although they were some miles behind the Guild Station they
rode slowly and silently for another five miles.
Then the baron gave his horse the spurs.
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About two hours after the Bloody Baron had left the Merchant
Guild Station unseen, somebody grated at Emelasuntha’s room.
She woke up immediately out of her light sleep. She had slept fully
clothed, wearing pants and a thick shirt.
She opened the door and two men entered, followed by Sobrathi
who had heard them arrive.
“I have a message from Master Dram, your highness. He thought
you should know as soon as possible. He has captured the grandsons
of baron Damydas.”
The queen smiled broadly.
“Finally things are going our way. Very good, Ffindall. Now, I have
some bargaining chips. His grandsons. It could be enough to make him
stop and think again. Or slow him down. Just enough for us to catch
him and then...”
“Where is Master Dram at this moment?” she asked.
“Making his way by small roads to the Northern Highway. For the
first fifty miles he had to keep the boys out of sight. The risk was to
great they would be recognized, or that they would cry for help.”
“By the Great Goddess, don’t tell me he forgot—”
“No, my lady, he drugged them.”
“Good. When does he expect to get here?”
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“Difficult to say, my lady. At least two days, maybe three. He’s
traveling as fast as circumstances permit him. He has to be cautious.”
“Yes, I understand.”
She thought for a moment.
“See that this man gets something to eat and that he finds a soft
bed,” she said. Then she turned again to the messenger. “Thank you.
Master Dram has done an outstanding job and so have you. Go and
enjoy your meal.”
The man was visually pleased with the compliment and the
obvious concern the queen showed for his personal welfare.
When they had left, Emelasuntha turned to Sobrathi.
“Finally, finally, we have something in our hands to hold over that
animal.”
“Yes, dear, and I’m glad for Anaxantis’s sake, but still, they’re so
young.”
“Oh, Sobrathi,” Emelasuntha said, smiling smugly, “we’ve been
over this. Listen, they’re just little rats who will grow up to be
horrible big rats like their grandfather. In that family they can’t turn
into anything else but vicious, cruel brutes. A double plague on their
fellow humans.”
“But as of now they have done nothing wrong.”
“Look at it this way. Remember that woman they hanged in
Torantall a few years ago? The one who had poisoned her parents
for the inheritance, then poisoned her husband for
his
possessions,
and finally gutted her two little daughters because they hindered her
love life and cost money?”
“Of course I remember. But she was a horrible, horrible woman
who had murdered little children, much like you pl—”
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“Ha. A moment, my dear. I’m not going to harm my baby daughters,
and you know I never could. That is not the point. If you could save
those adorable little girls, and the poor husband, and the parents,
would you do it?”
“Of course, I would. Gladly.”
“See, that’s what I thought. So would I. Now, pay attention. What
if you knew, oh, let’s say twenty years earlier that someday she would
commit these despicable crimes?”
“Well, I’m not sure...”
“No? The woman was in her late twenties, so she would be eight
or nine. An adorable little girl herself. So you would let her live?”
“Probably.”
“Knowing that by letting her live you sign the death warrant of
five innocent people, among which... two adorable little girls?”
“Hey, wait a moment—”
“You’re far too sentimental, dear. Sentimental for the wrong
reasons and at the wrong time. I tell you, no matter how cute they
may be now, their fathers were raised by the Bloody Baron, and they
will grow up in an environment where they will learn that a human
life counts for nothing if it is in the way of their ambitions. Nobody