A
gold coin for your thoughts," Konowa said, spying Rallie pacing
back and forth near her wagon. Blue smoke hung thick around her as
she puffed rapidly on a large cigar. Every few steps she would
stop, take the cigar out of her mouth, and look to the sky, visible
now that the sun was up and had burned away the mist. It appeared
that she was speaking to someone Konowa couldn't see.
"I can't see him, either," Rallie said,
sending a cool trickle of unease up his spine as she answered his
unspoken thought.
"Martimis, was it?" he asked. He looked to the
sky, but beyond a new batch of rain-laden clouds on the horizon,
there was no sign of the sreex, or any other flying creature, for
that matter.
"Oh, I hope it still is," she said, clamping
down on the cigar and walking back to her wagon. She motioned for
him to follow.
Konowa obliged and was surprised to see Jir
curled up underneath her wagon, his muzzle resting on his paws and
his ears twitching in dream. Rallie bent and gave the bengar a
scratch behind the ears, and his whiskers fluttered and his hind
legs stretched out to the fullest. He never opened his eyes. She
stood up, jumped onto the running board along the side of the
wagon, and leaned her head back against the wooden cages. The
sreexes inside purred in response.
Konowa remained standing a few feet away.
"Martimis looked like he could take care of himself."
"Normally, yes, but things are no longer
normal," she said, pulling out her cigar and waving it around her.
The smoke left a fat trail in the air like a snake through mud.
"Will you send another?"
Rallie sighed and looked at the caged sreexes.
"I've sent two more since Martimis. My editor is not the most
patient of dwarves—if my reports aren't getting through he'll send
Wobbly."
"Wobbly?"
Rallie smiled and closed her eyes. "You'll
know him when you see him. Still, I keep hoping that you
won't."
"Then it is hope in vain, and you know it,"
Visyna said, appearing from around the far side of the wagon. She
was dressed in a light cotton wrap the color of warm gold and had
traded in her riding boots for a pair of woven grass sandals again.
Her hair was pulled back and tied up off her shoulders, revealing
an enticing amount of bare brown skin, much of which was covered
with intricate tattoos of animals and plants in perfect
harmony.
"Hope is never in vain, my dear," Rallie said,
opening her eyes and watching Visyna walk toward them. "Hope is
hope. What is vain is when we do nothing to help it along."
"Then you should convince the Prince to turn
this regiment around, now. Going to Luuguth Jor will only result in
disaster." She pointedly refused to look at Konowa.
Konowa touched his hand to his shako. "Get up
on the wrong side of nature this morning?"
Visyna gave him a withering glance and took a
few more steps toward Rallie, showing off a significant portion of
smooth thigh in the process as the cloth fluttered and settled
about her body again. Konowa found himself remembering the touch of
her hands against his skin and allowed himself a small smile.
"I'm glad to see someone is enjoying our
plight. Everywhere the world grows strange and the weight of an
Imperial hobnailed boot does little to aid it."
He sighed and held out his hands. "Surely you
don't blame the regiment? We're on the same side, remember?"
Rallie stood up suddenly, clapping her hands
together in obvious annoyance. She set the wagon rocking as the
sreexes reacted with throaty screeches that hurt even his
musket-deadened ears. Jir growled, and his claws extended, but he
slept on.
"It would be best for all concerned that the
two of you hurry up and consummate this relationship of yours
before someone gets hurt," Rallie said. There was not a hint of
humor in her voice.
Konowa wasn't sure who looked more
embarrassed.
Just then a soldier came running toward them,
shouting. Konowa reached for the acorn against his chest and
instinctively willed his senses outward, but the natural chaos of
life, annoying but not threatening, was all he felt. The soldier
came to a stumbling halt, his shako falling from his head and
landing at Konowa's feet. Konowa picked it up and handed it back to
the soldier, who quickly put it back on and saluted, his chest
heaving as he struggled to breathe.
"M-major! The villagers are back! They have
news from Luuguth Jor."
"Show me," Konowa said, setting off at once in
the direction the soldier had come from, forcing the winded man to
trot after him. Visyna and Rallie followed, their heads close
together as they walked, whispering to each other.
A minute later they came upon what could only
be categorized as a land dispute in full heat.
"—a right swift kick where the sun rarely
graces—Oh, hello, Major," Yimt said, spotting Konowa. He gave him a
brisk salute, his elbow just missing the very angry face of the
elfkynan male he'd been arguing with a moment ago. "Beautiful
morning, wouldn't you say? I was just telling my new friend here,
Nobnuts the fool, was it, about the Empire and how lucky they are
we've come to this land, bringing them a healthy dollop of good old
civilization."
"N'bhat," the elfkynan said, stomping away
from Yimt to stand in front of Konowa. He was no taller than the
dwarf, dressed in only a simple cloth around his privates. His skin
was as brown as bark, and he wore his hair in a single braid down
his back. A group of villagers similarly attired, including many
women and several children, stood off at a distance watching. "My
name is N'bhat, foloo of the village. You go now. Go
and come back never." It was said with fierce determination, and
Konowa admired the elfkynan for it, surrounded as he was by a
well-armed regiment of the Imperial Army.
"Foloo?" Konowa asked, turning to
Visyna. She looked as if she had just taken a drink of frog-bottom
ale.
"It means headman," she said, with an edge of
contempt in her voice clear to everyone, including N'bhat, who
looked both angry and frightened of her. The women of the village
suddenly began making warding signs and spitting on the ground.
"They are Majazi, a nomadic tribe of elfkynan that follow the fish
as they move upstream to spawn."
The Hynta-elves, though not the Long Watch,
hunted buffalo, deer, and tarnir in the same way, tracking them
from the forest as they moved across the great plains. Konowa
figured he could deal with these people as well.
"N'bhat," he said, turning back to the
elfkynan, "we have no desire to get in the way of your hunting.
Tell me what you've seen and we will leave here in peace."
The elfkynan fidgeted. "You go now. We want no
trouble. You go."
Konowa tapped the pommel of his saber. "No one
wants trouble, but it has a way of finding you all the same. What
did you see?"
One of the women, perhaps N'bhat's wife, began
shouting at him and gesticulating wildly, pointing at the way they
had just come. N'bhat shouted something back at the woman, the only
effect of which was to agitate her even more.
"The sooner you tell me, the sooner we'll be
on our way," Konowa offered, keeping a wary eye on the woman, who
showed no signs of quieting down. The other women seemed emboldened
by her display, and many were holding fishing spears in their
hands. This could get ugly fast.
N'bhat threw up his hands at the women and,
turning back to Konowa, sighed and nodded. "There, where siggers
live, Luuguth Jor. Terrible things. Go now."
"What happened?"
"You go if I say?"
Konowa resisted the urge to grab the elfkynan
by the throat and shake him. "Or maybe I set up a garrison here.
I'm sure the ladies wouldn't mind too much," he said.
N'bhat looked startled at the suggestion.
"Terrible things. No see, but hear. And more elfkynan come, come to
war against siggers." He knelt in the dirt and began drawing.
"Siggers are this many," he said, making a dot
with his finger.
He then began making rows of dots in a circle
around the first dot, and Konowa's heart sank.
When N'bhat finally finished there were over a
hundred dots surrounding the first.
The Thirty-fifth Foot had sent a half company
to garrison the fort, approximately fifty men. Fine for showing the
flag among peaceful natives, wholly inadequate for what was bearing
down on them now.
They wouldn't hold out for long.
"You go now."
If N'bhat was right, that meant a rebel force
of at least five thousand elfkynan, not counting what the "terrible
things" were.
Konowa waved the headman away and looked to
the east. The land rose gently into a series of low, scrub-covered
hills. The river wove its way through them, a thin strip of flat
grassland to either side. It would offer the regiment a fairly easy
time of it after the vines. It was also the quickest route, and one
the enemy would be sure to watch.
"We'll have to be vigilant," Rallie said.
She didn't have to read his thoughts—every
soldier there saw the danger. Konowa turned. "Do you believe
him?"
"Do not trust him," Visyna interrupted. She
kept casting a glance toward the women villagers, her fingers
moving rapidly.
"He seemed genuine enough," he said, unable to
determine what was at work here. "Do you know him?"
Visyna gaped and her eyes narrowed. "Most
certainly not! The Majazi are nothing like my people."
Rallie scowled, but said nothing.
"Aren't you all elfkynan? They seem very much
in tune with nature, which, as you so often remind me, is a
wonderful thing," Konowa said.
"You wouldn't understand," she replied,
looking with disgust as one of the village women began
breast-feeding a baby in the open.
Konowa considered Visyna's fine garment, the
way she held herself, her life as the daughter of a wealthy
merchant, and suddenly understood perfectly.
"Major!"
Konowa looked past Visyna and grimaced. Lorian
was coming toward him with the Prince.
"Sir," Konowa said, saluting for all present
when the Prince arrived.
The Prince seemed caught off-guard for a
moment, then saluted and looked around. His jacket was undone and
his shako was perched at a precarious angle on his head as if he
had thrown it on in a hurry. And then he yawned and rubbed his
eyes. The bloody fool had just woken up.
"Major, what's this I hear about finding the
villagers? Fishermen, are they? I distinctly smell bara jogg being
fried."
Konowa gave Lorian a subtle hand signal and
the RSM had the surrounding troops bustled away in a flash, leaving
only the RSM, the Prince, Konowa, Visyna, and Rallie.
"A refined nose you have, sir," Konowa said,
opting to make this as painless as possible. "Apparently the
villagers are nomadic, following the fish as they swim the rivers.
This village here is their main dwelling. It was empty because they
were away upstream, toward Luuguth Jor. The headman tells me
something has happened at Luuguth Jor, though he doesn't know what,
and that a rebel army is marching toward it. He estimates their
numbers to be at least five thousand troops."
"This is good news," the Prince said, waking
up considerably at the news. "Rallie, you'll want to make note of
this. This is clearly a pivotal moment. Everything is falling into
place. We have ascertained the whereabouts of the rebels." He
smiled indulgently at the small group around him and placed his
hands behind his back, rocking slightly on his heels.
Lorian stared at the Prince with something
close to panic in his eyes. Konowa hoped his own didn't show as he
realized that the fool had no idea what to do next. "Yes, sir, a
pivotal moment. May I suggest we break camp at once and march on
the garrison?"
The Prince stopped rocking and nodded sagely.
"Exactly what I was going to say. Yes, we'll march at once and meet
the rebels head-on. When those elfkynan see the Iron Elves, they'll
run like the cowards they are—no offense, Ms. Tekoy, I know a few
of your race to be quite steadfast, almost Calahrian in
constitution."
Anger flashed in Visyna's eyes, but she only
smiled at the Prince and nodded deferentially to him.
Would have taken my head
off, Konowa thought, then focused on what the
Prince had said.
"Of course, sir, but we might want to consider
a cautious approach when we get there. We don't know the exact size
of the force we're dealing with, and what, if any, additional
support it might have," he said, wondering what Her Emissary could
be up to. "And there is the matter of whether the Thirty-fifth Foot
still hold the garrison."
The Prince's smile vanished, to be replaced by
the look of one accustomed to getting his own way. "We
will find the
star there, Major, and we will do whatever is necessary to procure it.
I will not lead a regiment of skulking pad foots through the
shadows. This is the new Iron Elves, and will march tall
and proud straight at the enemy, and it will be they who turn and
run. I do hope that is perfectly clear."
"Yes, sir." Konowa saluted and watched the
Prince stride off toward his tent, no doubt to make sure his
precious books were packed away properly. Rallie and Visyna were
already walking away, still whispering to each other. Lorian turned
to Konowa.
"I hate to say this, Major, but I think the
Prince is going to get us all killed."
Konowa kicked a small clod of dirt with his
boot, sending it rolling across the ground shedding bits of itself
until it tumbled into nothing. "Then it's up to us to see that that
doesn't happen. I can't spare you, but grab what horses you can,
including Zwindarra, find troops that can stay in a saddle, and
send them ahead of us so we aren't surprised by anything
nasty."
Lorian shook his head. "It sounds like a wise
course of action, sir, but it won't work. The horses are all but
done in. Your mount looks all right, and the Prince has a couple
that might hold up for a bit, but this weather is taking the wind
right out of them. We could still do it—I brought a few of the lads
from the Fourteenth over with me—but I spread them out through the
regiment to steady the weaker elements. I don't think I want to
take them out now just when things are going to get dicey."
Konowa considered for a moment commandeering a
few brindos or muraphants, but quickly threw out that idea. "Then
they'll have to go on foot. If we get there blind, we're dead."
"A section ought to do it. They'll move a lot
faster than the regiment, even on foot, especially with that
elfkynan as a guide. If we send them out right now, we should have
good warning of what's up ahead. If the Thirty-fifth Foot still
hold the garrison, we might be able to squeeze the rebels between
them and ourselves and catch them in a crossfire when we get
there."
Now Konowa shook his head. "Don't
underestimate the elfkynan. For all we know, there could be thirty
thousand of them waiting for us, and that isn't counting the
star…or the Shadow Monarch."
"You really think so, sir?"
Konowa patted his jacket over his heart and
looked east at the growing wall of rain clouds. "Lorian, I'm not
sure what I believe anymore. All I know for certain is we're going
to need every bit of luck, skill, and chicanery we've got, so get
N'bhat and get me those scouts."
Lorian saluted. "Have no fear, Major, I know
just the lads for this."
Konowa saluted and stood there while Lorian
ran off into the bustling camp. If there was something terrible
waiting for them, the soldiers Konowa had just ordered to scout
ahead weren't coming back.