Read Glasswrights' Progress Online

Authors: Mindy L Klasky

Glasswrights' Progress (13 page)

“I
told
you,” Monny complained loudly. “We didn't know who you were. We were out on maneuvers. We thought that you were attacking the Swancastle!”

“Attacking the Swancastle!” Crestman exclaimed scornfully. “An old woman and a single captain in the king's army. What sort of attack do you think that would amount to?”

“Davin told us to,” Monny whined.

“Who is this Davin?” Shea asked one more time, even though the waves of fatigue were beginning to swamp her again.

“He's
Davin
.” Monny shrugged, as if there could be no other answer.

“He's – ” Crestman started to say, but he was interrupted by the crash of the
cottage door on its hinges and the swirl of autumn-cold air that swept into the room.

“He's standing outside the cottage, listening to an old fool and two children babble away into the night.”

“Davin!” Monny leaped from his crouching position by the fireplace, flying across the cottage to the ancient man who entered. Along with dusty robes and a long crooked staff, the old man brought the scent of autumn into the room – cool crisp air, tinged with crumbled leaves and dark earth. “We've got them here! We've kept them as prisoners!”

“Prisoners!” The old man snorted through his nose, and the child crumbled before the ancient disdain. “Are they chained, your prisoners?”

“Well, no – ”

“Are they bound up with magical spells?”

“No, but –”

“Are they hamstrung so that they cannot run away?”

“No, Davin, but –”

“Have they sworn loyalty to King Sin Hazar, and let the blood oath flow from their veins?”

“No, but we thought –”

“I have.” Crestman set the words amid Monny's protest, steady and even. “I've sworn my loyalty to the king.”

The calm statement silenced the thundering old man, settling his beetling brows over his night-black eyes. Davin blinked and shrugged and suddenly seemed to be nothing more than an old, old man, pottering about his cottage on a cold autumn night. “So,” he said at last. “You're staking claim to the king's army, then, are you?”

“I've been a member of His Majesty's troops. I've been a captain.”

If the old man caught the past tense of Crestman's words, he said nothing. Instead, he gestured vaguely toward Shea. “And what about the woman?”

“The king entrusted her to me. She was his nursemaid when she was young. He was afraid that she would starve along the road, so I brought her with me. I gave her some of my dried beef while we traveled. I kept her alive.” Crestman's voice was growing strong with his story, and he dared to look the old man in the eyes. “She would not be here, if not for me.”

“And you, old woman. What do you say?” For the first time, Shea was pinned by Davin's gaze. At first impression, the old man's eyes were mild enough; they watered at the corners, as if stung by the wind that blew outside the cottage. She could sense the power in those deep pits, though, the raw energy that flashed far beneath the surface. She automatically looked for his tattoo, to see if she confronted a lion or a sun, a swan or an owl, but she could make out nothing in the flickering firelight. The wrinkles around the old man's eyes were too deep; his face was too worn to provide the familiar signposts of Shea's world.

She wanted to tell him that Crestman spoke the truth. She wanted to rely on the lionboy's stories to pull them out of this disaster. She wanted to find herself spirited away from the murderous child, Monny, from the strange talking bird that even now had awoken and shifted from foot to foot on its wooden perch.

But when Shea looked into those eyes, she found that she could not lie. She was snared by Davin's age, by the power that emanated from him like the ripples of a stone dropped into a pond. “I don't know, lord. I don't know what's the truth any longer.”

“The truth is what you make it to be.”

Shea heard the words, but she did not understand them. They sounded like the sort of thing Father Nariom said, like an owl's hooting.

“I don't know how to make things, lord. I'm a sunwoman. I raise my children. I find food. I keep a clean house.”

Crestman stepped forward, settling a firm hand on Shea's arm. “You did those things in the king's household, Grandmother.” Shea blinked, confused. She'd never been in the king's household. She'd never been farther north than her little cottage.

Davin turned his piercing gaze on the lionboy. “You set your game pieces on an unsteady board, boy.”

Crestman's reply was immediate. “I play no games, lord. I haven't played games since I set aside my toy sword for a real blade.”

There was a long moment, while the only sound was the fire crackling on the hearth. Then, the old man exhaled slowly. “It's been a long night. The stars are bright, and I stayed out to see the Owl rise. The Owl will watch over the next phase of my work. My work for the king.” Davin shuffled toward his hearth, letting his ragged cloak fall onto the packed earth floor, as if he were an absent-minded child who did not care where he set his belongings. “Monny! Bring me some ale. And you'd better tell me that you've kept some stew for an old man.”

“Yes, Davin!” The boy was prompt to answer. Shea could hear the relief in his voice, his joy that he'd done right in bringing Crestman and Shea to the cottage. Or at least, he had not done wrong.

“We'll wait until the morning,” Davin grumbled as Monny tugged off the old man's boots. “We'll decide what to do with our prisoners in the daylight.”

 

 

Chapter 5

 

 

Sin Hazar rubbed his hands, sliding his fingers over the dead chill of the cabochon-cut rubies and emeralds set into his rings. A draft seeped through the stone chamber, blowing across the packed earth floor deep beneath the castle. It was unnecessary to continue holding war strategy sessions here – the Uprising had been crushed for more than seven years. The days of secret planning against rebellious nobles were long past. Nevertheless, the planning had begun here when Sin Hazar needed to fear spies and traitors. Habit kept the soldiers gathering in the bleak stone room as they began to plot their campaign against Morenia.

Habit or tradition. That was the problem with these noblemen – every one of them was snagged by the dead branch of
tradition
. We can't fight a war as winter approaches because no Amanthian had before. We can't feign war against the Liantines over the ocean to the east because no Amanthian had before. We can't raise an army of children, because.…

An army of children. They were wrong there. Sin Hazar
could
raise an army of children. Could and had.

Certainly the Little Army was not going to march for days and then pitch battle against that southern upstart Halaravilli. The child soldiers would never take a battlefield by sheer force, and the advantage of surprise – the startling appearance of bloodthirsty, screaming babes – would only last for one battle, or at most two.

But there were other advantages to the Little Army.

Sin Hazar looked up from the map that he had been studying, from its grim message that Sin Hazar needed a deeper treasury. Money. Mercenaries. Supplies. With scarcely a conscious thought, the king of all Amanthia raised a broad finger to the swan's wing that stretched across his cheekbone, reinforcing the royal command behind his question: “What word from Teleos?”

“Your Majesty.” Al-Marai, Sin Hazar's older brother and the most senior general in Amanthia, bowed deeply before answering. The king braced himself for yet another round of argument. “May I speak plainly?”

Sin Hazar nodded once, tautly. It would not do for his own brother, for his own
general
to fear him. Honor him, yes. Respect him, certainly. Recognize the power of his swan tattoo, of course. But fear did not have a place on a battlefield. At least not on one's own side of the bloody, trampled earth.

Al-Marai narrowed his eyes to a squint above his curling chestnut beard. The grim expression crinkled the lion tattoo that sprawled across nearly half his face. “You know that the men despise Teleos. They hate what he stands for and what he does. That hatred is weakening them as your tools. Is it necessary for us to continue doing business with that pig?”

“Are you saying that your soldiers are ready to rebel because I choose to conduct business with a particular merchant?”

“Of course not, Your Majesty.” Al-Marai ducked unhesitatingly into a bow, folding at his waist as if that were the most natural reaction in the world. Of course not. But that
was
what Al-Marai had implied. Sin Hazar continued to gaze at his brother, at the greatest commander in all of Amanthia. The grizzled warrior grimaced at the map, avoiding his liege's eyes. The soldier fidgeted with the belt that held his sword about his waist, finding ways to occupy his fingers, his eyes, his mind. But Sin Hazar could be patient. He knew the compelling power of silence. At last, Al-Marai shifted from foot to foot, slamming a hand against the map board so hard that three of the pieces toppled to their sides. “He
is
a pig!”

“You may call him a pig, Al-Marai, or say that he eats the flesh of boars, or say that he couples with swine. Debase him in any way you see fit. The fact remains that he is the man who fills our coffers. I need hardly remind
you
of the expense of horsing and housing and feeding my men at arms.”

“Nay, Your Majesty.” Al-Marai swallowed hard, mastering his fury. He inclined his head and spoke through set teeth: “I know the costs of war.”

“Then perhaps you'll help me pay a little of the toll.” Sin Hazar pinned his brother with a steely gaze. “I asked, what news from Teleos?”

“He says that he can take another hundred before the new year. In the spring, he's prepared to take as many more.”

“Two hundred? That's all?”

“Sire! That's two hundred more of your subjects shipped overseas!”

“Two hundred children who would otherwise starve come spring! Al-Marai, I need hardly remind you of the facts. Every child who boards one of my ships for Liantine lives longer than he would live in the countryside. Every child who serves his king abroad plants a seedling of support over the sea. Every child who is given to Teleos will come back to reward us a thousand-fold.”

“Yes, Your Majesty.” Al-Marai bit his lower lip. He swallowed hard, and when he spoke again, his voice was pulled even tighter. “There's more, Sire.”

“Aye?” Sin Hazar refused to spare his brother more than the single word. The man should know better. Al-Marai was the one who had taken the coin gained from those children and transformed it into a winning army at home. He was the one who trained the children before they left, who inspired their passion and their confidence. Al-Marai made certain that the Little Army would stay loyal to its king, even in a strange land, even in the midst of adversity.

“Teleos is willing to buy more than two hundred boys.”

“You just said –”

“He'll buy girls as well. He'll pay for them, the same as soldiers.”

For just an instant, Sin Hazar was knocked silent, surprised enough that he did not bother to reprimand Al-Marai for cutting him off. The possibilities unfolded like a rare flower blooming beneath a chilled midnight moon. Girls.… The kingdom was filled with
girls
– suns, lions, owls, even swans – who would never find a husband, not with all the men and boys gone or killed. Girls who would become more of a risk than they were worth once they realized they would never find a husband, never bear babes.

“What does he want with them?”

“What does one ever want with girls, Your Majesty?” Even with distaste creeping across his words, Al-Marai managed to keep his voice dry. “I suppose he'll keep
some
of them as soldiers. He said they need not be trained, though. No moreso than the girls who already tag along beside the camps, in whatever unofficial capacity.”

“Girls.…” Sin Hazar said aloud, turning the concept about in his mind. The word felt smooth beneath his thoughts, like coins cascading between his fingers. Why had he never thought of it before? Why had he passed up the possibility?

Before he could follow up on the thought, a guard hurried into the stone chamber, bowing deeply before his king. “What is it, man?” Sin Hazar snapped.

“You have visitors, Your Majesty.”

“I'm the king. I always have visitors.” Sin Hazar was frustrated at being disturbed, interrupted before he could work out the import of Teleos' new offer.

“You'll want to see these, Sire.”

Sin Hazar shot the man a probing glance. “Will I?” Whatever his frustration, Sin Hazar trusted his household lions. He shrugged his robe off his shoulders, the better to display the dragon-chased azure doublet that he had chosen for the day's formalities. “And who is so important?”

“Prince Bashanorandi, Sire.”

“Felicianda's bastard?” Sin Hazar heard a surprised note creep into his own voice.

“Aye, Your Majesty. He's just come from the harbor.”

“Is he traveling as an ambassador from Halaravilli?”

“I don't think so, Sire. He has a handful of soldiers with him – our men.” The guard brushed the tattoo on his right cheek, silent explanation of his words. “There are two girls as well. No one in Morenian livery.”

So. That gambit had paid off at last, sending lions to Morenia. Sin Hazar had almost given up on Bashanorandi. He had debated before deciding to send lions south in the first place. If the men had been discovered, if they'd been unmasked as Amanthian soldiers, then that upstart Halaravilli would have pitched a diplomatic tantrum. Nevertheless, Sin Hazar had argued with Al-Marai, the risk of sending a dozen men was minimal. A dozen men, dispatched alone or in pairs.… It was worth the gamble.

Other books

The Last Stand of Daronwy by Clint Talbert
The Sign by Khoury, Raymond
Luanne Rice by Summer's Child
Just Visiting by Laura Dower


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024