Konowa
watched Lorian disappear into the night, then walked back across
the makeshift bridge. He let out his breath, enjoying the coolness
of the air on the west side of the river. Konowa stepped off the
dock and looked around, amazed at how fast things were
happening.
Luuguth Jor was all but gone. Soldiers were
knocking down the last of the village huts and using the mud bricks
to create a series of barricades all along the riverbank. Two half
walls of one hut still stood near the gap in the trees to protect
the five-pounder cannon and its crew. That a family had once lived
within the protection of those walls now seemed a distant and
quaint idea. Everything from clay jars to wooden platters was now
put to use for a far more violent purpose.
Much the same was happening at the other end
of the firing line some fifty yards shy of the
sarka har
that curved all the way down to the river. A recalcitrant muraphant
trumpeted its displeasure as it was used to haul the second
five-pounder into place. Little of the peaceful existence that had
once thrived here remained.
With each step deeper into the encampment,
Konowa felt his senses clearing. The sweat on his brow cooled and
dried and left him wondering where he'd left his riding cloak. He'd
take the cold any day, no matter how it was created. He lengthened
his stride and made the short distance up the hill to the fort
without need to catch his breath. In fact, he felt amazing.
"I do hope your nap did you some good, Major,"
Rallie said. She was sitting on a fallen mud block at the edge of
the fortress, looking down at the river below. As usual, the hood
of her cloak was pulled up around her head, a cloud of blue cigar
smoke hanging above it.
Part of the nightmare flashed again through
Konowa's mind. "If what I saw was real, then I don't think Wobbly
made it. I'm sorry," he said, looking back at the river. Fires
burned everywhere as the regiment raced the coming dawn to ready
their defenses. Even the tumbled walls of the fortress were being
reassembled, the power of the muraphants a significant help in that
regard. He took another deep breath and let it out slowly.
"Oh, I wouldn't count the little souse out
just yet, Major," she said. "Did you actually see Wobbly killed in
your dream?"
Konowa thought about it for a moment. He
decided to leave the part about the trees out. "No. The last thing
I remember before I woke up was a large shadow coming straight at
me—him."
"Then have a little faith, Major," she said,
tilting her head back slightly to take another puff on her cigar.
When she leaned forward again, her voice had a sharper quality to
it. "Tell me, what now?"
Konowa found himself nodding. "Now we wait.
The belief in the Star will bring our enemies here, all of them. A
trap is a trap for everyone—it's all in how you use it."
Rallie blew out a long stream of smoke and
pointed her cigar at the trees. "And how do you suppose the Shadow
Monarch is using it?"
It was a question Konowa had deliberately
chosen not to think about. "It doesn't really matter. Maybe some
rakkes attacked the fortress expecting the elfkynan to have already
taken the place and installed the Star. Maybe we scared them off
when they heard us approaching. I don't know. What I do know,
however, is that by this time tomorrow, the Prince will have the
Star for his museum, the rebel force will be defeated and
scattered, and the Shadow Monarch will have lost Her chance for
increasing Her power."
Rallie's cackle signaled her disagreement. "My
goodness, it all sounds so neat and tidy, I could write my story up
now and save the bother of waiting to see what actually happens,"
she replied. "Oh, just a minor detail, Major, but where are these
rakkes of Hers that did all this? If She is as eager as everyone
else to own this Star, one would think Her forces would be close at
hand, perhaps waiting and watching the outcome of the coming
battle."
"Let them watch," Konowa said, his hand coming
to rest against his chest. "If they try to attack, they will
pay."
Rallie suddenly stood up, grinding her cigar
out on the stone as she did so. "It seems, Major, that your nap
restored a bit more stiffness to your spine than I had hoped. Next
time, I'll suggest a warm bath, maybe then you'll have time to
consider a little more the consequences of your actions. Good
evening, Major." She turned to leave, then paused, looking back
over her shoulder. "Should you see His Royal Highness, please
inform him I'd like a word. I hope there is one officer here who
will listen."
Konowa started to protest, then cursed under
his breath and kicked at a weed growing by his feet. She didn't
understand.
He moved off aimlessly to explore the crumbled
remains of the fortress in more detail, frustrated after his talk
with Rallie. It was the same feeling he often had after talking
with his father. They always ended up asking questions that pushed
him to think about things he would just as soon not. He couldn't
explain the forest, or its purpose, or where its creators had gone.
He wasn't even sure what his father had wrought by giving him the
piece of Her Wolf Oak, or what it meant for the men who made up the
Iron Elves—living and dead. All he knew for certain was that he
would not lose his regiment again, and if that damned him in the
eyes of those around him, it was a price he was willing to pay.
Konowa walked through the fortress, silently
assessing it and noting with satisfaction the positioning of the
howitzer to cover the far bank of the river. Although it looked
much like a cannon, the howitzer didn't shoot on a flat plane, but
operated by lobbing a hollow shell filled with black powder high
into the sky to then fall straight down among enemy soldiers and
horses. The sudden explosion of the shell, even if it fell too far
away to cause injury, was often enough to unnerve the approaching
force, as no soldier could tell where the next shell would land.
Set with a burning fuse, the shell could even be timed to explode
while still in the air, but Konowa would be happy if the
soldiers-turned-artillerists could fire the gun without blowing
themselves up in the process.
Soldiers had piled several chests of
ammunition beside the cannon and were building a small wall around
it. He made a mental note to talk with the crews before it got
light—their shells could become critical.
The remains of the Prince's marquee were set
up against the southern wall, so Konowa chose to explore the center
of the fortress next. His walk took him to a small inner keep. It
was square, no more than ten feet by ten feet, with a flat roof of
overhanging timbers. He paused at the wooden door half torn from
its hinges, aware of voices coming from inside.
"…right to be wary…suitably impressed with
your skills…"
"…be stopped before it's too late—"
"What, or who, must be stopped?" Konowa asked,
stepping into the small room.
The Prince and Visyna stood up from the table
they had been seated at, the surprise on their faces evidence
enough that they had been talking about him. The Prince recovered
first.
"You forget yourself, Major."
Konowa threw a quick salute, unable to hide
his own surprise. "I'm sorry, sir, I didn't expect you here." His
sense of the surreal continued to expand. Visyna and the Prince
were the two people least likely to be having a close conversation,
of any kind.
"Where else would I be, but where I am? In any
event," the Prince said, growing more authoritative as he spoke. "I
have been having a most interesting chat with Miss Tekoy. We share
a love of nature, did you know? The birds, the bees, even the
forest at large."
"Is that so?" Konowa said, finding the notion
implausible at best. "Have you ever tried living in one, sir? Not
quite as posh as a palace."
"It's all in one's attitude, Major. I think I
would get along splendidly if put to it."
"Perhaps you'll find out—the elfkynan are
here."
The Prince clapped his hands. "Excellent news,
Major, excellent news. We should have them on the run in no time,
and then be able to devote our attention to finding the Star and be
on our way."
"Your Highness!" Visyna said, her eyes blazing
as she looked at him. "We were talking about the importance of the
Star to my
people."
"The Star is important to many people, my dear
Miss Tekoy. In fact, I grow more convinced that it is imperative
all such power be placed somewhere it can be studied, learned from,
and most important, protected, especially from misuse. I do, after
all," he said condescendingly, "share your concern that such power
not fall into less civilized, cultured hands," he said, looking
directly at Konowa. "Now, Major, was there something that you
wanted?"
Konowa nodded. "Rallie has asked if you might
see her sometime in the next while. I believe she wanted some more
detail on your theories of warfare."
The Prince adjusted his shako and rolled his
neck inside the loose-fitting collar of his jacket. "Then she shall
have them. I am done here. Miss Tekoy, Major."
Konowa saluted as the Prince left, staring at
Visyna the whole time. When the sound of the Prince's boots faded
he tipped his shako to her. "Slumming it, are you?"
Visyna huffed, then sighed and sat back down
on an overturned crate. "Events move with increasing speed, and I
feel I have less and less control over anything."
Konowa walked over and sat down on the other
crate, angling his scabbard to the side as he did so. He placed his
hands on the small table, crossing one over the other. "For once,
we are in complete agreement."
She brushed a hair from her face and her
expression softened. He was treated to the smile that had dazzled
him back in the forest.
"We always have been, I think. We both want
what's right, I know that," she said, looking the way the Prince
had gone.
"Did you think you could sweet-talk him into
letting the Star stay in Elfkyna?"
Visyna shrugged. "I don't know. But I thought
if I could reason with him, he would understand. He understands all
right—he understands power, but not the terrible price that goes
with it."
Konowa thought he detected a subtle jab in her
words. "I'm not like him."
Visyna smiled at him. "No, you're not. In some
ways you're worse. He wants the Star the way a child wants a sweet
from the market. You, on the other hand, don't seem to want it at
all, and that worries me."
"Worries you? I thought you would be pleased,"
he said. "I have nothing against your people. In fact, I've come to
care a lot about one of them in particular." Saying it out loud
felt good. He did care about her, and if it wasn't for their
current situation, he'd be showing her right now…if she let him,
that is.
"And I care about more than just my people,
too," she said, dipping her head as if suddenly shy. Konowa found
himself even more attracted to her. "But look where we are. Her
foul trees ring this place in a noose, defiling the land as they
dig their roots deep in search of the Star. Yet you still call on
that same power with utter disregard for what you will bring down
on us all. The earth is changing and the air grows cold with
malice. You must—" She caught herself. "Konowa, please, give up Her
power and break the oath while there is still time."
He shook his head. "Someone has to look after
this regiment. Should I leave that to His Highness? You see what
he's like. That is our future King." Even saying the words gave him
a chill.
Visyna reached across the table, then seemed
to think better of it, pulling her hands back. "But he is not King
yet. It's a dangerous world out here in the wilds; much could
happen."
Konowa waited for her to smile. She
didn't.
"Why, Miss Tekoy, the bengar shows its teeth,"
he said, only partially surprised.
Visyna looked embarrassed. "I'm not saying you
should actually…I, just…things are not going as they
should."
Konowa knew the feeling all too well. "They
never do."
A musket fired in the distance. He stood up—it
was time.
She stood as well, moving closer to him until
her face was only inches away from his. "Give up this power and
embrace the natural order. Help me, and your reward will be greater
than you can imagine. You won't just be saving my people, you'll be
saving your men, and I can save you, if you'll let me."
Her hand came up to gently brush back his hair
at the side of his head, revealing the ruined ear. She gasped and
drew back her fingers. Frost sparkled at the tips.
"It's too late," he said, turning and walking
out of the room.
The pain was overwhelming, and for the first
hour the Viceroy actually cried for his mother, a sharp-tongued
shrew who had substituted a wicker cane for love in the belief that
it was the only way for a child to grow strong. Had she lived to
see her son as he was now, she would no doubt have despaired that
she hadn't hit him often enough.
Though the pain remained, he forced himself up
onto his knees, his scarred arms clutching the edge of the
table.
It should have been charred, but his sacrifice
had spared it—at a cost.
He staggered to his feet with excruciating
effort, cringing at the sound of crisped skin stretching and
tearing as he unbent his legs to stand. He looked down on the
table, which gleamed as if no flame had touched it, and brushed
away the ash from its surface that he knew to be his own flesh.
He saw who had done this, and who would pay.
First, however, he needed strength.
He ran his blistered hands across the surface,
seeking its depths, seeking Her.
"Help me," he said, his voice a thin rasp, his
breathing ragged and uneven. "Help me do your bidding."
A tinge of frost sparkled beneath his hands.
Red, swollen flesh froze, then turned black and gray, the surface
rough and striated. He held a hand up to this face and flexed the
fingers. They curled slowly, creaking like autumn twigs. He
carefully moved the rest of his body and found that his movements
were slowed by the new, barklike skin, but that the pain was
subsiding.
He bent over the table again and focused all
his thought on Luuguth Jor.
They would all die.
He placed his hands on the table and called to
it, but he was too weak. He could see the Iron Elves, but he
couldn't direct Her power through it.
"Then I shall
go there and kill them myself," he said, not
the least bit surprised by the sound of his new voice.