Read Banewreaker Online

Authors: Jacqueline Carey

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Epic

Banewreaker (44 page)

"Will Haomane order you to slay everything that lives and does not obey his command?"

For a moment, they stared back at her. The Ellylon were expressionless. Blaise's face was grim. Fianna, the Archer of Arduan, turned away with a choked sound. Aracus Altorus sighed, rumpling his red-gold hair. "Sorceress—" he began.

"We were attacked," a soft voice interjected; an Ellyl voice. It was Peldras, of Malthus' Company, who alone among his kind traveled in worn attire. He gazed at her with deep sorrow. "I am sorry, Lady of Beshtanag, but it is so. Blaise and Fianna will attest to it. On the outskirts of Pelmar, in deepest night, the Were fell upon us. Thus was Malthus lost, and the Bearer, fleeing into the Ways of the Marasoumië. Thus did one of our number fall, giving his life so that we might flee."

"Hobard of Malumdoorn," Blaise murmured. "Let his name not be forgotten."

"Even so." Peldras bowed his head.

"Phraotes?" Lilias asked in a small voice. "Is it true?"

"What is truth?" The Were bared his bloodstained teeth. "A long time ago, we made a choice. Perhaps it was a bad one. This time, we were forced into a bad bargain. Yet, what else was offered us? Perhaps
you
made a bad bargain. I am only an ambassador. I would be one to this Son of Altorus did he will it."

Aracus frowned. "Do you gainsay the testimony of my comrades? Your people attacked Malthus' Company under cover of night, unprovoked. A valiant companion was slain, the wisest of our counselors was lost, the greatest of our hopes has vanished. You have shown no honor here, no remorse. Why should I hear your suit?"

"Why not?" The Were's head lolled, eyes rolling to fix his gaze on him. "It was a favor extracted by threat, nothing more. We failed; it is finished. We did not make war upon you in Beshtanag, Arahila's Child. The Grey Dam fears the wrath of Satoris Third-Born, but Haomane's is more dire. We seek only to be exempted from the Shapers' War. Yea, I feared to approach in good faith, and I have paid a price for it. Will you not listen before it is paid in full?"

Angry voices rose in reply; in the saddle, Aracus Altorus held up one hand. "Set him down." He waited while Blaise and the others obeyed. Phraotes curled into a tight ball and lay panting on the pine mast. His ears were flat against his skull and the shaft of the arrow jerked with each breath, slow blood trickling down his grey fur, but his visible eye was watchful. The Were did not die easily. Aracus gazed down at him, his expression somber. "There remain many scores between us, not the least of which is Lindanen Dale. And yet you say you are an ambassador. What terms do you offer, Oronin's Child?"

With a sound that was half laugh, Phraotes coughed blood. His muzzle scraped the loam. "The Grey Dam is dead; the Grey Dam lives. Though she carries her memories, the Grey Dam Vashuka is not the Grey Dam Sorash." One amber eye squinted through his pain. "What terms would you accept, King of the West?"

"Son of Altorus!" There was a stir in the ranks, and the gilded bee of Valmaré fluttered on its pennant as Lorenlasse rode forward, glittering in his armor, to place a peremptory hand on Aracus' arm. "Dergail the Wise Counselor
died
through the treachery of Oronin's Children," he hissed, "and Cerion the Navigator was lost! The Lady Cerelinde would be your bride if they were not faithless. You may forget, but
we
remember. Will you treat with them and be a fool?"

Plain steel sang as Blaise Caveros unsheathed his sword. "Unhand him."

Finely chiseled Ellyl nostrils flared. "What manner of villain do you take me for, traitor-kin?" Lorenlasse asked in contempt. "Our way is not
yours
. We do not slay out of misguided
passion
."

"Enough!" Aracus raised his voice. "Blaise, put up your sword. My lord Lorenlasse, abide." He sighed again and rubbed his temples, aching beneath the Soumanië's weight. "Would that Malthus was here," he muttered. "Sorceress!"

Lilias glanced up, startled. "My lord Altorus?"

"Advise me." He brought his mount alongside hers and looked hard at her. "You know them; you have made pacts with them, and lived. I do not forget anything, but I have erred once in mistaking my true enemy, and innocent folk have died. I do not wish to err twice. Are the Were my enemy?"

"No." She shook her head. "They wish only to be let alone."

"Whence Lindanen Dale?"

He was close, too close. Their horses' flanks were brushing. His presence crowded her, yet there was no room to shrink away on the narrow path. Lilias swallowed. "It was your kinsmen slew her cubs. Do you not remember?"

"I was not born." His face was implacable.

"Faranol," Phraotes rasped. "Prince Faranol."

"Yes." Lilias drew a shallow breath, wishing Aracus would give her space to draw a deeper one. He was close enough that she could smell him, the tang of metal and the sharp odor of human sweat. This urgency, the exigencies of mortal flesh, pressed too close, reminded her too keenly of the limits that circumscribed her own existence, of her own aching, aging body. "Faranol of Altoria slew the offspring of the Grey Dam Sorash. A hunting party in Pelmar. Surely you must know."

"Yes." Because he did not need to, he did not say that Faranol was a hero to the House of Altorus. "I know the story."

"Hence, Lindanen Dale," she said simply.

"So." Aracus' fingertips pressed his temples. "It is a cycle of vengeance, and I am caught up in it by accident of birth." With a final sigh he dropped his hands and cast his gaze upon the Were. "You are dying, Oronin's Child. What power have you to make treaties? Why should I believe you?"

Lying curled upon the ground, Phraotes bared his bloody teeth. "We have walked between life and death since the Glad Hunter Shaped us, blowing his horn all the while. Death walked in his train as it does in yours. We are a pack, son of Altorus, and our Shaper's Gift lies in those dark corridors. Though Oronin's Horn now blows for me, the Grey Dam hears me; I speak with her voice. Ushahin-who-walks-between-dusk-and-dawn is banned from our company. The fetters of old oaths are broken, we are despised in Urulat, and Oronin has raised his hand against us this day. New oaths may be made and honored. What will you, King of the West?"

"Sorceress?"

His eyes were wide, demanding. Demanding, and trusting. For the first time, Lilias understood why they had followed him; Man and Ellyl alike. The knowledge made her inexplicably weary. "For so long as the Grey Dam Vashuka endures," she said, speaking true words to him, "the Were will abide by what bargain you strike. I have no other counsel."

"It is enough." He nodded. "Thank you."

Something in her heart stirred at his thanks. The mere fact of it made bile rise in her throat. Lilias looked away, not watching as Aracus left her side. He dismounted, walking away a small distance. Others followed, raising voices in argument: gilded Ellylon voices, the deeper tones of the Borderguard, the pleading voice of the woman Archer. Lilias glanced across the backs of milling, riderless horses. Aracus listened to the arguments without speaking, his broad shoulders set, his head bowed under the useless weight of the Soumanië. She wondered if they would regret having sworn their fealty to him this day. There was a twisted satisfaction in the thought.

"He'll do it, you know."

Glancing down, she saw Blaise standing beside her mount, gathering its reins in his capable hands. "Do what?"

"Forge a truce." He handed the reins up to her, his fingers brushing hers. Blaise's eyes were dark and intent. Her chestnut mare snuffled his hair, and he stroked its neck absently, still watching her. "He's big enough for it, Lilias, despite their fears. I ought to know."

Lilias shook her head, unsettled in the pit of her stomach. What did it matter that Aracus Altorus had forgiven Blaise Caveros his immortal ancestor's betrayal? Calandor, her beloved Calandor, was no less dead for it. On the ground, Phraotes coiled tight around a knot of pain and waited. Only the wrinkled, foam-flecked lips of his muzzle gave evidence to his slow death throes. He met her gaze with a glint of irony in his amber eye. He was the only creature here she understood. "It's easy to be magnanimous in victory, Borderguardsman," she said.

"No." Sighing, Blaise straightened. "No, it's not. That's the thing."

In time, the arguments fell silent and Aracus returned, retracing his path with heavy steps. The Rivenlost were amassed behind him, a quiet, glittering threat. A concord had been reached. Aracus Altorus stood above the dying Were, gazing downward, his face in shadow. His voice, when he spoke, sounded weary. "Will you hear my terms, Oronin's Child? They are twofold."

Phraotes' sharp muzzle dipped and lifted. "Speak."

"One." Aracus raised a finger. "You will foreswear violence against all the Shapers' Children, in thought and deed, in property and in person. Only such simple prey as you find in the forest shall be yours. You shall not conspire upon the soil of Urulat in any manner. You will disdain Satoris the Sunderer and all his workings."

The Were ambassador exhaled, crimson blood bubbling through his nostrils. It might have been a bitter laugh; the arrow in his breast jerked at the movement. "The Grey Dam Vashuka accedes. So it shall be. Do you swear us peace, we will retreat unto the deepest forests to trouble the Lesser Shapers no more, and be forgotten."

"Two." Aracus raised a second finger. "You will abjure the Sunderer's Gift."

Behind him, Lorenlasse of the Valmaré smiled.

So, Lilias thought; it comes to this. That offering, which Haomane disdained for his Children, he cannot bear another's to possess. The Shapers' War continues unending, and we are but pawns within it. Silent atop her mount, she thought of the things Calandor had shown her in his cavern atop Beshtanag Mountain, the things that filled her heart with fear.
One day
, he had said,
when his own are gone, Haomane will adopt Arahila's Children as his own. Until then, he will eliminate all others
.

She wondered if Oronin Last-Born would protest, or if he were willing to sacrifice his Children on the altar of Haomane's pride for the sin of having aided Satoris Banewreaker. In the silence that followed Aracus' pronouncement, it seemed that it must be so. Like Neheris-of-the-Leaping-Waters, the Glad Hunter would abide.

"No cubs?" Phraotes rasped. "No offspring?"

Aracus Altorus shook his head. "None."

It took longer to obtain an answer. The Were's eyes rolled back into his head, his body writhing upon the loam. Whatever path his thoughts traveled, it was a difficult one. Phraotes gnashed his teeth, blood and foam sputtering. His body went rigid, then thrashed, the protruding arrow jerking this way and that, his clawed hands digging hard and scoring deep gouges in the pine mast.

"Lord Aracus," Peldras the Ellyl whispered. "Such a request, whether you will it or no, embroils the Were in the Shapers' War…"

Aracus raised one hand, intent. "Such are my terms."

Say
no, Lilias thought, concentrating her fierce will.
Say no, say no, say NO
!

"Yea!" Phraotes, panting, opened slitted eyes. "The Grey Dam Vashuka accedes. Do you leave us in peace, Oronin's Children will abjure the Gift of Satoris Third-Born, and procreate no more in her lifetime. Like Yrinna's Children, we shall not increase; nor shall we remain. We shall dwindle, and pass into legend. Like—" his amber gaze fell upon Lorenlasse, "—like Haomane's Children, in all their pride." Head lolling, he gave his bloody grin. "Is it a bargain, King of the West? Will you swear to leave us in peace, and guarantee the word of all who are sworn to your allegiance?"

"I will," Aracus said simply. "I do."

There was a moment of silence, broken only by the sound of horses shifting, stamping restless hooves, cropping at foliage. It didn't seem right, Lilias thought. There should have been a vast noise; a shuddering crash such as there had been when Calandor fell, an endless keening wail of Oronin's Horn. Not this simple quietude. She wanted to weep, but there were no tears left in her, only a dry wasteland of grief.

"So be it." Phraotes closed his eyes. "Oronin has wrought this and the Were consent. With my death, it is sealed. Draw out the arrow, King of the West."

Aracus knelt on one knee beside the crumpled figure, placing his left hand on the Were's narrow chest. With his right, he grasped the arrow's shaft. Murmuring a prayer to Haomane, he pulled, tearing out the arrow in one hard yank. Blood flowed, dark and red, from the hole left by the sharp barbs. Phraotes hissed, tried to cough, and failed. His lids flickered once and, with a long shudder, he died.

"All right." Aracus Altorus climbed to his feet, looking weary. He rubbed at his brow with one hand, leaving a smear of blood alongside the Soumanië. "Give him… give him a proper burial," he said, nodding at the still figure. "If the Were keep their word, we'll owe him that much, at least."

There was grumbling among the Borderguard; the Ellylon made no complaint, assuming that the order was not intended for them. But it was Lilias who found her voice and said, "No."

Aracus stared at her. "Why?"

"The Were do not bury their dead," she said harshly. "Leave him for the scavengers of the forest if you would do him honor. It is their way."

He stared at her some more. "All right." Turning away, he accepted his reins from a waiting Borderguardsman and swung into the saddle. "Blaise, send a rider to Kranac to notify Martinek of this bargain. Tell him I mean to keep my word, and do any of the Regents of Pelmar break it, I will consider it an act of enmity. By the same token, do the Were break it, they will be hunted like dogs, until the last is slain. Let it be known."

"Aye, sir." Blaise moved to obey. In a few short minutes a rider was dispatched and the remainder of the company was remounted, preparing to depart. There was barely time for Lilias to take one last glance at
Phraotes. It was hard to remember the Were ambassador as he had been; a keen-eyed grey shadow, gliding like smoke into the halls of Beshtanag. Dead, he was diminished, shrunken and hairy. His eyes were half slitted, gazing blankly at the trees. His muzzle was frozen in the rictus of death, wrinkled as if at a bad scent or a bad joke. Phraotes did not look like what he had been, one of the direst hunters ever to touch the soil of Urulat.

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