Date: Thu, 26 Dec 2013 20:59:52 -0500 From: redpatience@Safe-mail.net Subject: Magpie and the Prince Part two IV. Ten Irau was allowed to pull on his freezing cold breeches and coat, but not to take back his ornaments nor any other possessions, much less his, which the Captain of the Guard laughed at when he removed them. "Stone?" he exclaimed. "Stone arrows? Savages. No wonder the Aldeni are nearly all dead. Or else became blood drinking cannibals. How can a man hunt with this shit?" "We hunt well!" Irau hissed, "and eat better than you Slave-Takers. It's you who are the savages!" "Says the slant-eyed boy, who is a whore and yet--calls himself a prince--and wears cloth shoes," the Captain exclaimed. He and his lieutenant laughed heartily. "Can you read, savage?" Irau hissed. His stomach twisted with pride and anger; he didn't care if he got himself hurt or killed, he could no longer accept this abuse. "I can," the Captain said, but Irau cut him off from any further elaboration. "How many languages? How many scripts? How many songs have you committed to memory? How many songs have you written? Can you recite the verses of your own bards? Can you recite the verses of all the foreign ones? Can you remember all the names of the kings of your enemies? I can!" Irau spat on the man's boots. "Because the Aldeni are the keepers of memory!" The captain merely spat on the boy's face, laughed, and had him taken away. The prince ground his teeth together, and his nostrils flared in barely suppressed rage. They gave him water and hot broth and bread and locked him in a wagon-crate with the other survivors from the raid. One of the prisoners had a crossbow bolt in his foot, and looked on the verge of death. The other knew he would soon be put to thumbscrews and other tortures, and it only heightened his anxious stroking of Irau's inner thigh and muttering of mixed threats and promises under his filthy breath. After quite enough of this, the boy slipped out a broken arrowhead he had hidden in his coat sleeve, tore the man's hair back and thrust the point against his jugular. "I'm hungry enough to drink blood," the boy hissed, "put your cock near my teeth and see how long it takes me to find a vein." He spent the rest of the night in a staring-contest with the man, but in spite of his best efforts he collapsed the moment he knew his wagon-mate was asleep. Irau awoke a little after dawn. They had stopped at a crossroads between fields of pumpkins. A scarecrow bent over a row of spent cornstalks, crows hopping up and down on his shoulders. Mist hung in sheets from the clouds, and far off to the south the boy saw the ridge of mountains that the King's Highway followed. Ahead, he noticed that the captain of the guard was speaking to another man on a horse. It seemed to be a heated conversation. After a few shouts of protest, this stranger on a horse came back to the prison wagon. Very handsome, dark skinned, he wore a pointed black hood and wool cloak. Silver hoops hung from his ears, and though he was perhaps only twenty-five, he had a crows feet of a much older man and scars on his cheeks and jaw. A green enameled sword was strapped to his back and he had a longspear over one shoulder. He looked Irau up and down with sad, kindly eyes. "You are the prince of the Aldeni," he said in Irau's tongue. The boy gulped. "Yes." "This is him," the man said in the common speech, "he must come with me." The captain came on foot. "He was found with them naked and being defouled. No doubt he knows all about the rebels." "Fortunately, you have two other victims for your dungeons. You don't need him," the stranger argued. The knight blocked the wagon door. "He is a prisoner of the King's guard of Chaldicia. No authority can change save the King himself." Sighing, the stranger removed a scroll from the breast of his black coat and unfurled it with a snap. Some marvelous hand had scrawled it in blue ink and sealed it with a stamp of golden wax. It flapped in the breeze as the captain read it haltingly and confused. Across the bottom, a signature swept so grand that Irau felt hypnotized by its loops and dashes. "I am Ten Parasimha, Paladin of White Deer Tower, here on the orders of its merciful wizard," the man said. "Stand in my way at the peril of the realm." The knight would not move. Without drawing it, without moving his arm at all, the man's sword appeared. The way a rainbow appears. The blade however, only touched a scratched name on the scroll much smaller than the other writing. "The prime minister of Chaldicia has signed this warrant. Your resistance is treason. Open this wagon or I will peel you like a pear." The guards hastily unlocked the wagon and helped the boy out and onto the stranger's horse. They galloped off the second they had the satchel with the boy's things, including his ornaments, and had wrapped him in a mantle they appropriated from the spoils of the night before. Irau took back his arrows with a scowl at the captain, and they burst off in a splash of mud. As they rode away to the west, Irau looked behind them to see two identical horses, complete with Paladin and Aldeni prince, riding away from the crossroads to the East and North. The Aldeni princes on those horses pointed to each other at the exact moment Irau pointed at them. "What! What are those?" he asked, pointing. "I can't look back or I will break the spell. I imagine you mean our doubles." "Doubles?" "An illusion to confuse our enemies. Not just the King's guard," the man said, "but your uglier enemies as well." "What do you mean?" the boy asked haltingly. "You know what I mean. I won't say more." They crashed through a stream and water flew up into the sunlight; after they crossed this boundary, they slowed to a canter and took a drink from the man's waterskin. They got off the horse for a moment to fill water skins and take a few bites of cheese and some apple. Squatting there, by the bank of the stream, Irau appraised the newest of his three captors. There was a sadness in his grey eyes; what Irau's people called the gaze that pierces mountains. "You know about the darkness," the boy said. "Yes, your grace. I'm afraid to say we caused the darkness," the man said sadly. The boy's eyes narrowed. He knew enough songs to judge that there were many figures like the Paladin in tales. Ten's magic, his power, his charm suddenly made sense; Irau would not be enchanted by such deception. "You are a dark magician," Irau said in an accusatory tone. "No," Ten assured, "we made the darkness to keep them from growing stronger." "They move in darkness! You helped them! You doomed my people!" Irau was backing away, now. "We are not your enemy!" Ten protested, "We brought the darkness over the mountains to keep them from moving quicker. We frightened away as many of the beasts and birds as we could, and hoped that people would follow: they move in darkness, but they feed on creatures of light. Only a few have moved beyond, and those only to follow you. Their master knows what you carry." "Their master," the boy said darkly. "Your master. No difference." "You want to know why that boar never found you last night?" the man asked sharply. Irau said nothing. Ten fetched his spear and let the butt fall to the ground. He unsheathed the leather over the blade of his weapon and revealed the edge covered in an unmistakable powdery coat of serpent's blood. Some black tar and a hunk of fur still clung to the shaft. "It never found you because I found it first." IV. Mysteries A drizzle came down warm and wet. Irau fell half asleep, half entranced by the passing trees and the clip of the horse's shoes on stone. Who then was this stranger, with his languages, illusions, sweet voice, eyes to pierce mountains? V. The Three-Legged Dog That night, they reached a three-way junction in the forest. A tavern of five stories stood not far, its placard painted with a three-legged dog. There were drunks puking in the dark and as they neared the door, two whores, one a dwarf, cooed at them from the shadows. They exclaimed how handsome Ten was and pressed their breasts together for him, screeching with laughter. The place did not improve when they entered. Although packed with bodies, few could be seen. Only the hearth fire gave any illumination, and a single candle at the innkeep's window, which was covered in an iron grate. "A room and meal," Ten said, slipping a silver piece under the grate. Before he could continue the transaction, a man of no particular strength or size thrust himself onto them with a knife, demanding a silver piece or a bad time. Irau heard Ten sigh in exasperation. Then his hand floated in the darkness, moving as slowly as if it were underwater and yet confounding the eye with cat-like speed. Ten's thumb jabbed the man in the throat and belly, and the boy heard two sucking noises. Their assailant collapsed on the floor gasping for breath and unable to see. Ten leaned down after they had their key and whispered "stay close to me," in Irau's ear. They pushed through the crowd with only minimal obstacles, passed through dark warrens of rooms where whores and men and boys were all engaged in various types of debauch, and finally arrived a door with a big lock. Irau had never seen such a device, but immediately grasped its purpose and beauty when the key clicked it open. Within, they found a filthy straw bed, loaf of bread, a bowl of broth, and a tankard of ale. They had hardly spoken a word all day after their confrontation at the stream, and now they ate and drank in silence, stealing odd glances into one anothers' eyes. With no fire and only a single candle, Irau chose to sat across from ten, weary but cautious. He chewed his bread and tried to avoid looking up at the big window that opened onto the rooftop; he had contemplated escaping by it since they entered. "You won't get away," Ten said softly. "What do you mean?" Irau said in mock ignorance, horrified at what seemed to be a consistent ability for the Paladin to read his thoughts. "I know you distrust me," Ten said, dipping his bread into his beer, "and I know why, so I don't blame you." "You don't know anything about what I've seen." "I've seen plenty." "Like what?" Irau said with a snort. "I know you wouldn't want to speak of the things you've seen," Ten said softly, "and so I know you don't really expect me to do so, either." The boy chewed thoughtfully, feeling a little guilty about how difficult he was being. He felt hotly frustrated with how the knight outmaneuvered him at every turn, but he felt guilty nonetheless. What if the Paladin truly was good, noble, and kind as he seemed? "It doesn't matter what you say to me," Ten said. "I won't trust you." "I don't expect you to." "Good." They kept eating, and drinking, until they had finished all but a small rind of bread and the drippings at the bottom of the bowl of broth. "Soon, my prince, you will enjoy proper food. Fresh vegetables and sweet fruits. Fine white bread. Good wine." "In your White Deer Tower?" Irau whispered acidly. Ten lay down his canvas shelter on the bed to deter the inevitable vermin in the mattress. They bedded down with their backs toward each other against the cold, wrapped in their own mantles and cloaks. Irau lay there uneasily, but it seemed that his captor had no interest in taking liberties with him--at least not at the moment. After a while he noticed Ten's slow, relaxed breathing. The boy dropped off as soon as he heard it. Irau had a nightmare. These days it was a common enough occurrence; he could rarely remember them when he awoke, but he knew enough what they were about. This time, as always, he jolted awake sweating and whimpering and making stifled shouts. This time, however, instead of being pressed into rough groin of an oak tree, Ten's muscular arm encircled him, his strong hand pressed softly to the boy's chest. His other arm had reached beneath the crook of the boy's neck to enfolded him completely. Irau could not for a moment understand where he was, or who was holding him, and he thought at first that he had been taken by the unspeakable. He whimpered and felt tears flushing his eyes. "Shh, shh, my little hare," Ten whispered. His own mother used to call him that. As far as he knew, only the Aldeni used this expression. He remained tense, and swallowed. "Why are you holding me?" Irau whispered. "You were crying for help," Ten said. In spite of his misgivings, Irau relaxed. He didn't want to think about it any more. It felt good. It felt safe. Nothing else mattered but that. "Are you all right?" Ten asked. "Y-Yes," the boy said reluctantly. "Do you want me to let go?" "A little," Irau said. "No. It's all right." "I will prove myself to you, Prince of the Aldeni. And so will my magician."