THE STONE STAG
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Karigan arrived at the practice field just as the
last note of nine hour pealed from the bell tower down in the city.
Soldiers were already at work in the practice rings going through
drills, their efforts punctuated by grunts and the clack of wooden
practice swords. The morning was hot and humid, and many were
already stripped down to tunics.
A couple arms masters prowled about evaluating
their trainees, pausing to correct them, and setting them off on
additional sets of drills. One was Arms Master Gresia, who trained
the Riders. She was a reasonable woman by all accounts, and Karigan
watched after her longingly, knowing Drent was an altogether
different matter. What did he have in store for her?
“Girl.”
Karigan resisted the impulse to cringe, and turned
about knowing exactly to whom the voice belonged, and exactly what
“girl” he addressed.
There Drent stood, in all his puffed up glory,
fists planted on his hips and biceps bulging, his little eyes
glaring. “While your right arm mends, we’re gonna do a little work
on you. I’m going to teach you how to fight with your left
side.”
If Captain Mapstone had been looking to punish
Karigan, she had certainly succeeded. Karigan had one last straw of
hope that just maybe she could get out of this.
“Shouldn’t we check first with Master Destarion? I
mean—”
“Don’t Master Destarion me.” Drent hacked
and spat. “What we’re doing is with his approval. We’re not
touching your bad arm. Yet. In the meantime, the rest of your body
is mine.” He gave her a harrowing grin. “Just because you have one
bad arm doesn’t mean the rest of your body should waste away. I
want ten laps around the practice field.”
“Laps?”
Drent’s eyes narrowed. “You got legs, don’t
you?”
Karigan nodded.
“You will respond with yes, sir.”
“Yes, sir.”
“RUN!”
Karigan dropped her hand weight to the ground and
sprinted off—
“HALT!”
—and she skidded to a stop, glancing back at Drent
with trepidation.
“That hand weight you’ve brought,” he said, “you
will carry it in your left hand. How are you going to fight with
your left side if we do not build up the strength there? Now pick
it up and RUN!”
Karigan did not hesitate one moment—she scooped up
the weight, and she ran. By the third lap, sweat made her shirt and
work tunic cling most unpleasantly to her skin, and the hand weight
felt more like a hundred pounds instead of just one. Arms Master
Gresia spotted her as she passed by, and fell in beside her with
long, easy strides.
“I see Drent has taken you on,” she said.
Karigan grunted an affirmative.
“That’s quite an honor, you know,” Gresia said. “He
takes on only the most gifted students, and leaves the rest to
Brextol and me.”
How could the woman run and speak so effortlessly
at the same time?
“Not honor,” Karigan puffed, “punishment.
From Captain Mapstone.”
Gresia smiled at her. “Are you so sure?” Then she
winked, and peeled off.
Karigan was sure. Absolutely sure. As she drove
herself onward, she could only believe it was punishment.
The bright side was that the sooner Drent got her
physically fit, the sooner she would be on a message errand riding
away from him.
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Laren smiled slightly as the city bell tolled nine
hour.
Zachary glanced down at her from his throne chair.
“You look like a cat who’s caught a mouse.”
Laren flashed him a quick grin, but did not
explain. She wondered how Karigan would fare with Drent. Or maybe
she should wonder how Drent would fare with Karigan. She and Mara
had made a bet on how long Karigan would tolerate Drent’s style of
training before it wore thin enough for her G’ladheon ire to flare
up.
She couldn’t wonder for long, for moments later,
Sperren pounded the floor with the butt of his castellan’s staff to
begin the king’s public audience. The great oak doors of the
firebrand and the crescent moon were drawn open, and a line of
petitioners filed in. There were bored aristocrats, and awed
countryfolk whose wide-eyed gazes took in the vast room with its
tall windows, along with the Weapons who lined the walls in shadowy
recesses, the banners, the soldiers, and most of all, their
king.
Also standing in line were the frightened, the
downtrodden, and the schemers. Every week it was the same, and
every one of them wanted something from the king.
Zachary wore his king’s mask, an expression that
would not permit any of the petitioners to guess what he was
thinking, and in this way, he held an advantage over those less
adept at hiding their emotions. If the common folk believed their
king cold and forbidding, then let them judge him by his justice
and impartiality.
The first pair brought forth by Neff the herald
were sheep farmers disputing grazing rights. Zachary listened to
their arguments, asked a few questions, then sat in silence for a
few moments, stroking his beard. If he wished Laren to use her
ability to read a petitioner, he would look at her, and she would
nod or shake her head to indicate truth or falsehood.
In this case, Zachary found the dispute rather
straightforward, and worked out a compromise by which both farmers
could use the pasturelands by cooperatively tending their flocks.
The farmers were surprised, but not displeased.
As the morning dragged on, a craftsman accused a
minor nobleman of shorting payment for a fine knife. The nobleman
was quite arrogant, something, in Laren’s experience, that was not
uncommon. The more minor the nobleman, it seemed, the more arrogant
he was.
Not once did Zachary turn to her. Over the few
years he had been king, he had managed to hone his instincts and
learn what questions to ask. He listened to his advisors, but had
developed a sense of when to heed their advice, and when to dismiss
it. From Laren’s perspective, his decisions on each case proved to
be just and appropriate.
The next man in line shambled forward with his eyes
downcast, nervously twisting his cap. “My name is Vander Smith,
Excellency. I come from the county of Aidree in Wayman
Province.”
“What do you wish to petition of the king?” Sperren
asked.
Vander Smith’s gaze flicked from the castellan to
the king before returning to his feet. “I’ve nothing to petition,
sir. I’ve come to make a report.”
That caught the king’s attention, and Laren’s,
too.
“You see, I am a game warden for Count Gavin
Aidree, cousin to Lord-Governor Wayman. He asked me to come speak.”
Vander Smith tugged a sealed letter from his pocket and passed it
to Sperren.
Sperren cracked the seal and read the letter. “His
lordship writes: Please hear the tale my game warden, Vander
Smith, has to tell. No matter how strange his statements, I swear
on my honor he speaks the truth. By my own hand, Gavin, Count of
Aidree.”
Sperren passed the letter to Zachary, who glanced
briefly at it before handing it over to Colin Dovekey.
“Please tell us your report, Warden Smith,” Zachary
said. “You’ve traveled a long way for this.” Wayman Province was on
the southwest border of Sacoridia, with Mirwell Province its
neighbor to the north, and L’Petrie Province to the east. The
country of Rhovanny sprawled on its western border.
Vander Smith bowed. “Aye, Your Highness. It’s an
odd thing to tell.” He wrangled his hat some more and licked his
lips. “The count and I were leading a hunting party through the
west woods of his forest preserve. A stag was sighted and the count
loosed an arrow.” Here Vander Smith paused, his eyes darting from
one to the other of them. “The arrow bounced off.”
Colin chuckled. “Come, come, Master Warden. I’ve
heard that tale often enough. It’s right there with fish
stories, and how the big one got away. The arrow bounces off the
stag, and it runs off. The hunters return home without their prize,
but of course it has nothing to do with their poor prowess as
hunters and marksmen. No, it’s because the deer has a tough hide!”
Some within hearing range laughed.
Vander Smith’s expression remained solemn. “No,
sir, the arrow bounced off the stag, and it didn’t run away. There
were eight of us in the party to verify this, including the count.
You see, the stag was turned to stone.”
“Turned to stone?” Laren recognized a hint
of doubt in Zachary’s voice. “You are saying this deer was not a
statue of some kind?”
“That’s correct, Your Highness.”
“Are you sure about that?” Colin asked.
The warden licked his lips. “The count and I, well,
we know every inch of those woods. A right good hunter is the
count. There is no statuary in those woods—no reason for it. And if
it was something carved by a sculptor, it is the most amazing
thing. Accurate to every detail, capturing even the texture of its
hide and antlers. What’s more, it wasn’t just the deer.”
Even though Zachary did not request it of her,
Laren touched her brooch to affirm the warden’s words. Oddly, her
ability did not answer. Before she could wonder about it, Vander
Smith continued his story.
“You see, it was a whole grove of trees around the
deer. And the birds in the trees. And the flowers and moss.”
Now Zachary turned to her, but she could only
shrug. He raised a questioning eyebrow, but returned his attention
to the warden, who now held something in each hand. Sperren took
the objects with wide eyes, and passed them to Zachary. One object
was a pine cone, the other a butterfly, each made of granite.
Zachary gazed at them in wonder, then glanced sharply at the
warden.
“A whole grove, you say?”
“Aye, Your Highness.”
Zachary passed Colin the pine cone, and handed
Laren the butterfly. It was amazing. She held it up before her
eyes. Its wings were paper thin—but stone. The delicate object was
so lifelike to the smallest detail, she almost expected it to
flutter its wings and lift from her fingers. But it did not. It was
unnaturally heavy.
Zachary sat back in his chair and crossed his legs.
“Thank you for your fascinating report, Warden Smith. I’d be most
appreciative if you and the count maintained your vigil over your
lands for any other . . . unusual happenings of this nature, and
report them to us.”
The warden, very obviously relieved, bowed. “Aye,
Your Highness. It is my honor to serve.”
“May we keep these?” Laren asked, enchanted yet
disturbed by the butterfly.
“Certainly, ma’am.”
Warden Smith bowed again, and dismissed, he stepped
aside so the next petitioner in line could move forward to seek
audience with the king.
Laren beckoned a Green Foot runner to her side and
whispered, “Make sure this is put in my quarters.” She passed him
the butterfly, and the lad ran off on his errand.
A petitioner was in the middle of a tearful plea to
release a son jailed for public drunkenness when an angry muttering
broke out near the throne room entrance.
What now? Laren wondered.
Two men pushed their way through the crowd to reach
the head of the line.
“King’s business,” one of the men told them. “Make
way for the king’s business.”
“I’ve got my own business with the king!” shouted
one man who had been in line for a very long time.
Much to Laren’s surprise, the man pushing his way
through the petitioners was one of her Riders. He was a tall rangy
man with a thick black beard, his chin streaked with gray. Long
hair was tied back into a ponytail. He went only by the name of
Lynx—it was how he had signed his papers when he entered the
messenger service.
A brooding, silent man who grew up in the northern
wilds, he would not set foot in any city or large town if he didn’t
have to. To Zachary’s line of thinking, that was just fine, for he
had other uses for Lynx, such as keeping a secret watch on the
boundaries.
Lynx did not wear the green uniform of the Riders,
but the buckskin of a woodsman, nor did he carry the traditional
saber—he preferred his forester’s knife and long bow. Laren had
also heard he was handy with a throwing ax. The only thing about
him that revealed his affiliation with the Riders was his brooch,
but even that was invisible to all but other Riders.
So what sort of “king’s business” had brought Lynx
out of the woods? Another stone deer?
The man following him was thin and haggard, his
face ashen. He pressed his hand to his ribs as though in
pain.
Lynx finally emerged from the crowd and bowed
before the king. “Excellency,” he murmured, “the information I
bring you is urgent.”
Zachary did not waste time. He gestured to Sperren,
who banged his staff on the floor. “The public audience is
concluded until further notice.”
There were glares and indignant protests, but no
one resisted when guards in silver and black herded them out of the
throne room. The great doors shut resoundingly after the last
petitioner passed through.
“Greetings, Lynx,” Zachary said. “What is this
urgent news of yours?”
“Excellency.” Lynx’s voice was like sandpaper. “I
have with me here Durgan Atkins of the northern border, and
recently a refugee in D’Ivary Province.”
The man glanced at Zachary, and Laren thought she
caught a flash of anger and hatred in his eyes.
“Why have you come before me?” Zachary asked.
“Go ahead,” Lynx said to Atkins. “Talk.”
Atkins then raised his baleful gaze defiantly to
Zachary. “All right. I’ll talk. My family and I fled to D’Ivary
Province seeking safety. Groundmites repeatedly attacked our
village on the border, and after losing kin and some of our best
fighters, we saw no alternative except to seek safe haven within
guarded borders. It was not an easy decision. We did not want to
leave homesteads that we had carved from the forest with great
hardship, and worked so long to defend.
“We tried to find some clearing or field where we
might set up a household for a time. Some among us were injured,
and most of us grieving. At every turn we were harassed and
evicted. Even the common folk spat upon us and called us
trespassers. We tried to offer work in exchange for refuge, but
were refused.
“Thugs hired by the landowners forced us off the
land, and so we were set to wandering. We were even attacked by
bandits, but I suspect they were the hired cutthroats of the
landowners. We were stripped of any belongings of value, and our
young men beaten, and our daughters . . .” His expression nearly
crumbled.
Zachary and the others said nothing, giving the man
time to regain his composure. Although Zachary exuded quiet calm,
Laren could almost feel the white hot fury building within
him.
“Eventually we found others such as we,” Atkins
continued, “encamped on a field that was no more than mud. It was
cramped—there were hundreds—but none permitted to go beyond a
perimeter guarded by soldiers.”
“Soldiers?” Zachary asked. “What soldiers do you
speak of? D’Ivary has no militia.”
Durgan Atkins did not conceal his hatred. “Soldiers
like the ones I see around here. Soldiers in silver and
black.”
Sacoridian soldiers? Laren thought.
That’s impossible . . .
The throne room had gone silent, and it was as if
the air had been sucked out of the place. Zachary let go his king’s
mask and no longer hid his fury.
Lynx nudged Atkins. “Tell them the rest.”
Atkins grunted. “One day the landowner comes down,
looks at us as though we’re no more than cattle. Lord Nester, he
was called. He picked some of the girls and women, and the soldiers
took them away. They’ve not been returned to us . . . my
nine-year-old girl was with them.”
Laren’s own hackles rose at this last. She had
heard rumors about Nester and his appetites, but nothing had ever
been proven. And no doubt he’d be well shielded by his
brother-in-law, Lord-Governor D’Ivary.
“This Lord Nester,” Atkins continued, “he stood up
on a block and announced to us that by proclamation of King Zachary
all refugees were to be returned to the northern border.”
Zachary stood, hands clenched.
“They marched us.” The man’s voice had ground into
a painful whisper. “They marched us hard to the border. Those too
weak or sickly were killed outright so as not to slow the march. At
night we were bunched together so there was hardly room to lay
down. We were not given much food or water, just enough to keep us
marching. Whatever girls or women Nester hadn’t chosen, the
soldiers made use of. My wife . . .” He pointed at the king. “You
brought this upon us! They were your soldiers, your
words!”
He sprang up the dais steps to attack Zachary, but
in a blur of motion, two Weapons were on him and dragged him away.
They pinned his arms behind him, his chest heaving. He spat at
Zachary’s feet.
How could this be? Laren wondered. Her ability had
indicated D’Ivary spoke truth when he promised the refugees would
come to no harm.
False, her ability said, without her
request.
What?
Her attention was then drawn to Zachary slowly
descending the dais to stand before Atkins. His expression had
turned from fury to sadness.
“Those were not my soldiers,” he said softly, “nor
did I issue a proclamation to have your people marched to the
border. Regardless, I am very, very sorry.”
Atkins was unconvinced. “Apologies won’t bring back
the dead, will they? Apologies won’t bring back my daughter.”
“Ellen,” the king said, suddenly addressing one of
the Weapons, “will you see to it that Master Atkins is made
comfortable in one of the guest suites? Ask the steward to
accommodate his wishes, and perhaps have a mender look in on
him.”
“I don’t want your hospitality,” Atkins
growled.
Zachary simply said, “We will talk more
later.”
With that, the two Weapons escorted him from the
throne room.
“It’s true what he says,” Lynx said in his harsh
voice. “I’ve seen those soldiers, but I figured they were mercs
dressed to look like ours. I tried to convince Durgan of it, but he
wouldn’t hear me. I’ve seen the trail of bodies left behind from
the march, and talked to other borderers, so I guess I can’t blame
Durgan for his anger. He was the only one willing to come, and I
think it’s because he wanted to see the face of the king that
brought so much misery upon his people.”
Disbelief warred with anger in Zachary’s face. He
tore off his royal mantle of heather, tossed it on the throne
chair, and started pacing. “I had thought D’Ivary understood my
wishes in this matter.”
He hadn’t directed the comment at Laren, but she
felt the thrust of it into her gut.
“I will need to speak with you further, Rider,”
Zachary said, “but go eat and rest. When Atkins is ready to talk
again, we shall resume.”
Clearly dismissed, Lynx hesitated.
“Is there something else, Rider?”
“Yes, sire. Not having to do with the refugees, but
I thought I should mention it. The forest, it’s restless. The wild
creatures—well, they’re spooked. They know of some darkness passing
through the woods, but are vague on exactly what it is.”
Zachary sighed. Lynx’s ability was to communicate
with animals—not so much as speak with them directly, but to feel
the currents of mood and emotion, and understand their
meaning.
Lynx departed and Zachary said, “First a stone
deer, and now spooked wildlife.” He shook his head. “I’m afraid
that’ll have to wait. Our refugee situation is more urgent.” He
called a runner of the Green Foot to him. “Find General Harborough
and tell him to attend me immediately.”
“What are you going to do?” Colin asked.
“What needs to be done.” He didn’t pause before
turning to Laren. “Captain, do you care to explain to me why you
felt D’Ivary could be trusted?”
She grasped her brooch. False, her ability
offered. Why was it doing this?
“I—”
True.
“Were you using your ability that day, or
not?”
“Of course. I knew how important the truth
was.”
False.
Laren’s fingers quavered at her neck scar. “I don’t
know what happened.”
“Well, I do.” Zachary pivoted away from her and
resumed his pacing. Then he halted and turned back to her. “Lord
D’Ivary lied to us that day. He hired mercenaries to harass and
hurt refugees, but he had them impersonate our Sacoridian troops.
Not only has D’Ivary given those border people more reason to hate
me, but they were beaten and raped. A nine-year-old, Captain. A
nine-year-old taken by Lord Nester. How could you have read D’Ivary
as honest?”
Laren backed away, hurt and astonished, and
fighting for control, unable to explain herself. The reading she
had taken of D’Ivary couldn’t have been more clear.
True.
She slammed her barriers down around the inner
voice of her ability, but her control eluded her; slipped out of
her hands like a wriggly fish.
Zachary walked away from her to speak with Sperren
and Colin Dovekey, his body posture stiff as though he tried to
contain intense rage.
Laren closed her eyes. She would never forget how
he looked at her, and his words: A nine-year-old, Captain. How
could you have read D’Ivary as honest?
It was her fault, the rapes, the beatings, the
deaths. All of it on her shoulders.
True.