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'No, Jaldaric,' he said. 'I doubt that your loyalty to whatever oath it is you've sworn will enable you to do that. But, even so, you must realize that if you injure Tirilen, your men will die on the instant as will those outside, and nothing could protect you from Loman's wrath.'
Jaldaric glanced at the two unconscious figures sprawled at the feet of Isloman, and at the two with their heads held effortlessly against the table by Loman. He scarcely heard Hawklan's words, or noticed the look on Loman's face, but the tone of Hawklan's voice and his unwavering green eyes chilled him to his heart. This time he could not keep the fear out of his voice.
'So be it,' he said hoa.r.s.ely. 'We're High Guards. If we've to die then that's . . . unfortunate. The manner of our dying is rarely ours to choose. Our orders must be obeyed. We've some honour left.'
Hawklan realized, to his horror, that he had driven the young man too far. Now, impulsively, Jaldaric had steeled himself to face death, and his actions would be unpredictable. Hawklan did not allow the uncertainty into his face but an eerie silence descended on the group.
Abruptly an unearthly shriek filled the tent and a black thrashing shape burst through the gash in the tent wall and made straight for Jaldaric's face. Involuntarily he raised his knife hand to protect himself from this screaming apparition.
Isloman took one step forward, seized Jaldaric's wrist and wrested the knife from his grip as if it had been from a child. Then he immobilized him in a great bear hug. Jaldaric was almost the same height as Isloman, but less heavy and far less powerful. He made a token effort to drive the back of his head into Isloman's face, only to find he was suddenly unable to breathe in the huge man's embrace.
Loman casually threw his two captives to the floor, and moved quickly to Tirilen, who had also been deposited on the floor when Jaldaric was seized by Isloman.
Hawklan let out a long breath and put his sword back in its scabbard. Other High Guards appeared in the doorway of the tent, attracted by the noise. Two rushed forward but Hawklan's hands went out like striking snakes and the two men received blows which rendered them so instantly unconscious that they fell to the floor like dropped meal sacks.
The speed and ease of this action stopped the other High Guards in their tracks. Hawklan gazed at the uncertain faces in front of him, as they slowly registered the implications of what they were looking at:their expert defences silently breached, their leader taken and six of their compatriots incapacitated with apparently contemptuous ease, Loman standing protectively in front of Tirilen, his hand on his iron-bound club. The two men Loman had held were ma.s.saging their necks and twisting their heads ruefully, but they remained on the floor, loath to make any move that might bring down further punishment on them.
Without taking his eyes off the group in the doorway, Hawklan spoke. 'Loman, explain to these young men that we need to have a little talk.'
Loman shot a baleful look at Jaldaric, then Tirilen touched his arm and his manner softened. He put his arm round her again and looked across to his brother, eyebrows raised. Isloman nodded and released Jaldaric who fell, gasping, to the ground. Then Loman spoke to the men in a language that Hawklan had never heard before.
Without exception, surprise suffused the faces of the watching men. Loman, an Orthlundyn, was speaking their Battle Language, the language that was known only to the Fyordyn High Guard. Sometime during his life this Orthlundyn had done service for, or with, the High Guard.
Jaldaric staggered painfully to his feet, his young face riven with confusion. He gestured to his men. 'Lay down your arms,' he said breathlessly. 'We must talk. This has been a sorry affair from the start. We must talk.'
There was some hesitation.
Jaldaric leaned with one hand on the table while the other tenderly rubbed his ribs and stomach. 'Do as you're ordered,' he shouted angrily. He waved his arm towards Loman. 'Didn't you hear him? It was an ill thing to kidnap a woman for whatever reason. Now we find we've made war on the daughter of an Orthlundyn who speaks the Battle Language. We've violated the hearth of one of our own. Lay down your armsnow ! We must talk.'
Chapter 6.
While some of the High Guards righted the disarray in the tent, Hawklan busied himself with the injured.
With a little ma.s.sage he very quickly revived the two men he had knocked unconscious, and they seemed none the worse for their experience, physically at least. The victims of Loman and Isloman, however, had to be advised, after examination, that they could look forward to several days of discomfort.
Briefly, the child still in Tirilen showed itself as she embraced her three rescuers, but it was only they who felt it, and it was a composed young woman that turned away from them and moved her attention to Gavor, now proudly displaying his spurs.
'You look very dashing, Gavor,' she said.
Gavor acknowledged the praise with a toss of the head and a bow and then, jumping on to her head, looked down beadily at Jaldaric who returned the gaze nervously.
'Is that bird safe?' he asked.
'Oh, yes,' said Tirilen. 'Perfectly safe. It's you who's in danger.' Then unexpectedly she laughed and ruffled his hair.
Her laughter lightened the atmosphere and Hawklan could not forbear smiling both at her powers ofrecovery and at Jaldaric's discomfiture as he stood up and occupied himself with straightening his tunic until he had stopped blushing.
In spite of what this young man had done, Hawklan felt no real evil in him. He was certainly not the instigator of what had been happening. Nor were any of the others, although one or two of them seemed to be of an angry and surly disposition.
However, knowing or unknowing, Jaldaric was a player in this game and was, so far, Hawklan's only contact with whoever was manipulating events.
'Good,' Hawklan said, dismissing his last patient and dropping into a seat. 'We've reached this point without serious injury or damage to anything other than our peace and our pride. But it's been a near thing. I'd welcome an explanation, Jaldaric, as would Loman and Isloman.'
One of the surly-faced individuals spoke out. 'The Lord Dan-Tor's decreed this man an enemy of Fyorlund, Jaldaric. We shouldn't even be talking to him. Tell him nothing.'
Jaldaric answered him wearily. 'Esselt, sit down. This is a truce. Don't dishonour us further with your foolish talk. I'll be responsible to the Lord Dan-Tor for my decision.'
His att.i.tude seemed to find favour with most of the High Guards present, and Esselt sat down and folded his arms sulkily without further comment. Hawklan was about to ask a question when Jaldaric spoke again.
'Hawklan, are you an enemy of Fyorlund?'
The question was put so positively that Hawklan started.
'Brilliant,' said Esselt sarcastically. 'Such mastery of the subtle techniques of interrogation.'
The men on either side of him eased away slightly, as if to avoid an impending impact.
Jaldaric rounded on him. 'Esselt, keep that wicked tongue of yours to yourself or you'll find your much vaunted favour with the Lord Dan-Tor won't protect you from severe field punishment, and I'd remind you that we're a long way from home. I'll ask such questions as I see fit and we'll all judge the answers for ourselves.'
Esselt held Jaldaric's gaze for a moment and then lowered his eyes without replying. Jaldaric turned his still angry face back to Hawklan enquiringly.
'I'm an enemy to no thing and no creature as far as I know,' Hawklan said. 'But I see this Lord Dan-Tor of yours imagines I am. I'd like to meet him and ask him why he should think this and why a Lord of Fyorlund should pose as a prancing tinker and bring corrupted wares to our village.'
Esselt looked up but did not speak. Jaldaric looked embarra.s.sed.
'The Lord Dan-Tor has returned alone to Fyorlund, Hawklan,' he said. 'And he doesn't account to us for his actions. He's the King's closest adviser and friend. He's greatly respected and has brought many changes to our land.' Hawklan caught his eye and Jaldaric hesitated. 'Although I think some of them have a price we weren't originally aware of,' he added reluctantly. Both Loman and Isloman nodded.
'What your Lord brought to our village carried a price in its every fibre,' said Loman. 'It wasn't the work of Fyorlund craftsmen such as I've seen in the past. That had its own rough harmony. These objects were made by evil hands; hands that knew nothing of balance and harmony or, more probably, wilfully destroyed them.'
Hawklan briefly recalled the unreasoned horror he had felt when he looked into the face of the tiny mannequin marching up and down on his hand. A horror that drove him across the mountains to look for its source and, he presumed, was driving him still.
'What do you know about craftsmen, you soil-tilling oaf?' sneered Esselt. 'Nothing can equal the work that comes from the Lord Dan-Tor's workshops.'
Surprisingly, the insult seemed to roll off Loman without effect, and Esselt started as if his own venom had returned and struck him in the face. Hawklan looked straight at him.
'Esselt, you're a foolish young man, but I suspect it's beyond my skill to make you understand why. You seem to be set on an ill course and, if your rash tongue doesn't get you killed by one of your own kind, then I fear much worse lies ahead of you. Be silent and listen carefully.'
Although this was said without any menace, Esselt went white under Hawklan's gaze.
Jaldaric watched the exchange impa.s.sively and for a while only the rustling hiss of the wind-blown trees could be heard in the tent. Then he looked at Loman sitting quietly, unperturbed by Esselt's vicious taunt, and then at Hawklan, also sitting patiently, waiting. He made his decision.
'We're escort to the Lord Dan-Tor, Hawklan, but we know nothing of his purpose in being in Orthlund.
What he ordered us to do here was contrary to everything that the High Guard should believe in and protect. I should have had no part of it. We betrayed freely and generously given hospitality with foul treachery. I should have spoken up if only for the sake of my men. A High Guard should not obey orders mindlessly.' Then, in reluctant admission, 'But the Lord Dan-Tor has a way of . . .
His voice faded and there was an angry exclamation of disbelief from Esselt.
'Enough, Jaldaric. You're talking treason. This man's an enemy of Fyorlund. Seize him now. There are enough of us to take them all.'
Jaldaric turned on him furiously. 'I'll not warn you again, Esselt. There's been enough treachery.
Besides, if memory serves me correctly, you were in charge of tonight's guard, were you not? These "soil-tilling oafs" had little difficulty in slipping by your eagle-eyed watch, did they? And we could just as easily have been killed as knocked insensible for all the chance we had to defend ourselves. They've repaid our treachery with mercy, Esselt. You might care to ponder on that.' Esselt glowered at him, but Jaldaric was warming to his work. 'And pray, master of the guard, would you care to stroll out into the woods and see how many more such "oafs" might be waiting for us right now in these woods their woods? Doubtless the Lord Dan-Tor will be most impressed by your contribution to this evening's work.'
Hawklan raised a hand to his mouth to hide a smile.
Esselt fired a parting shot. 'You use his name too lightly, Jaldaric,' he said. 'His sanction justifies all.' Jaldaric gave him a look of contempt but did not reply. Then ma.s.saging his ribs he grimaced in distaste as he turned again to Hawklan. 'I don't know what to do, Hawklan,' he said. 'Personally, from what I've seen and heard, I can't imagine that you or, for that matter, anything out of Orthlund could be an enemy to Fyorlund, but the Lord Dan-Tor has branded you as such, and this scheme for your capture was of his devising.' He looked down, unable to meet Hawklan's gaze. 'Tirilen was to be used to lure you closer to Fyorlund. We were to move ahead of you so that you would follow until such time as his agents could safely take you prisoner. No one was to be hurt,' he concluded, looking up again.
He tapped his fingers nervously on the table. 'I'm sorry,' he said. 'It was an error of judgement on my part to have anything to do with it. I think probably most of my men think so too.'
There were various signals of agreement from the others with the exception of a small group centred around Esselt.
'What will happen to you?' Hawklan asked.
Jaldaric shrugged. 'We'll return to Vakloss, report what's happened and take the consequences. But what will happen toyou? 'he replied. 'I'll be subject to military discipline, but you've no such protection.
Dan-Tor will send others for you . . .' He hesitated. 'And rumour has it that he has darker agents than us when need arises.'
Hawklan nodded. 'I think I may have met some already,' he said.
Jaldaric looked at him. 'I don't know what you can do,' he said. 'Other than be on your guard. You seem more than capable of looking after yourself, and you've a friend in every Orthlundyn I've heard speak of you, but . . .'
Hawklan nodded again. He had known his future course of action from the moment that Tirilen's safety had been a.s.sured. It was impossible that he should attempt to recapture his old life. Loman's words about hands that wilfully destroyed harmony and balance had crystallized his thoughts. So obvious was it that he wondered how he could not have seen it before.
He used the word evil to describe the creator of these events, but he had used it as a healer, to whom evil is an inadvertent disharmony that needs correction, an accidental movement away from balance and equilibrium. Now, he realized, or perhaps remembered, that evil could be an active force. That some people knew of balance and harmony but chose deliberately to destroy them. People motivated by he knew not what, to take, and to take only. People so tormented that they could not rest while others enjoyed tranquillity.
Such thoughts had not occurred to him in his twenty years in Orthlund and with them came other, darker thoughts. Could he himself contain the seeds of such a creature? Could the strange plateau that Andawyr had shown him imprison an evil that had rightly been locked away by wise hands? However, would Dan-Tor resort to such subterfuge to waken an ally? He felt rea.s.sured. But then, evil allies would not lightly trust one another, would they?
A vista of conflicting possibilities opened before him which defied his reason to reach a conclusion. And could he trust his intuition as it cried out, 'No. There is no evil in you'?
He had no choice. He must trust it. Both intuition and reason found no evil in Andawyr, and there had been patently much evil in that corner of the Gretmearc and in the wares offered by Dan-Tor. Then his own words came back to him. Ignorance is a voracious, destructive, shadow-dwelling creature that must always be destroyed. Destroyed by the light of truth, no matter what horrors it exposed.
So be it, he concluded.
A light touch on his arm brought him out of his reverie. It was Tirilen.
'Are you all right?' she asked.
He smiled and put his arm around her shoulder. 'Yes,' he said. 'Just thinking about what to do next.' He looked at Jaldaric's concerned face.
'It would seem that neither of us knows what's happening and that both of us, and my friends, are being used in some way. I'll ride with you to meet this Lord Dan-Tor and seek an explanation from him personally. That way you'll have fulfilled at least part of his instructions, which may lessen your punishment, and I'll find out the truth of what's been happening.'
This p.r.o.nouncement silenced the onlookers for a moment, then there was a babble of voices. Isloman stepped forward and took him by the arm, his craggy face alive with alarm.
'Hawklan, you can't,' he said in disbelief. 'You might be imprisoned, or even killed.'
Hawklan shook his head. 'Imprisoned? Why? I've offended no law that I know of. And I doubt I'll be killed. I'm sure that could easily have been done many times over by now. This man wants to see me alive. And I'm increasingly anxious to see him. I'm sure these young men will protect me.'
Isloman gazed skywards as if for guidance and then slapped his hands on the sides of his thighs. 'These young men, as you call them, are soldiers, Hawklan,' he said. 'They'll do as their superior officers tell them. They may argue a little, but ultimately they'll do as they're ordered. And if they don't, then more soldiers will be found who will.'
'That's true, Hawklan,' said Jaldaric. 'If it's your choice, then you may ride under our protection but, once we're in Fyorlund, I can't guarantee your safety. I'm only a humble captain . . . probably less, very shortly.'
Hawklan looked doubtful. He turned to Loman enquiringly. Without moving, Loman looked at his brother and then at his daughter. When he spoke, his voice was strained.
'You'llhave to go, Hawklan,' he said. 'You're the centre of all this change, if not its cause. You've been chosen in some way, by some power we can't begin to understand. Jaldaric's right. Wherever you go, this Lord . . . tinker . . . will pursue you, and the next time he'll use less scrupulous soldiers.'
Isloman turned angrily on his brother but stopped as he met Loman's desperately sad gaze.
Uncharacteristically he swore and struck the table violently with his fist as if such an outburst might a.s.suage his doubts and pain.
'Thank you, Loman,' said Hawklan. 'Go with Tirilen back to the village. When you meet Ireck, tell him what's happened. Whatever happens, Gavor will bring you news.'
There were tears of bewilderment in Tirilen's eyes as she watched and listened. Hawklan took her facebetween his hands.
'You and I are healers, Tirilen. We have to enter into other people's pain. We have above all to see the truth no matter how painful it is. Your father spoke the truth and you know it. I have to seek out this Dan-Tor for all our sakes.'
Child and woman conflicted in Tirilen's face.
Hawklan continued. 'You've tended your uncle's hand very well. And you did good work on that tortured heap outside the village. You'll be the village healer until I return. Don't be afraid.'
He reached into a pocket for something to dry her eyes with, and drew out the cloth that Andawyr had wrapped around his arm. It was some days now since it had fallen from his arm to reveal it sound and whole again.
'Take this,' he said. 'It has healing powers of some kind. Powers of weave and voice. You might be able to find out more about it in some of the books at the Castle.'
Tirilen took the cloth with a watery sniff then wiped her eyes boyishly with the back of her hand.
'You'll be all right,' she said, half statement, half question.
Hawklan nodded. 'Tend to the village,' he said. Jaldaric reached out and, with a slight gesture, gently extinguished the torch that had been illuminating the tent. The change in the lighting was barely perceptible. Fyorlund torches adjusted themselves to the natural light.
'Dawn,' he said.
'You'll find our horses nearby now,' Hawklan said to Loman and Isloman. 'Serian will have led them here as I asked him. Time for you to go.'
He looked at the brooding Isloman and intercepted a brief exchange of looks between the Carver and his brother.
'What are you two up to?' he asked suspiciously. Isloman's dark look cracked into a smile, increasing Hawklan's suspicion. 'Hawklan,' he said. 'You're too naive to be let out on your own, as is this young man here.' He jerked a thumb towards Jaldaric. 'You're both going into nothing but trouble, and someone's got to look after you. Fortunately I don't have a castle to attend to, and I don't have to take orders from anyone, so I'll come with you. I could do with a change.' He rubbed his damaged hand.
'Besides, I've one or two questions of my own for this Dan-Tor.'
The dawn was flooding the clearing, pink and misty, as the Guards broke camp. Loman and Tirilen turned and gave a final wave before their horse carried them out of sight into the morning haze.
Hawklan and Isloman walked slowly through the dewy gra.s.s towards their horses. Gavor, sitting on Hawklan's wrist, flapped his wings restlessly.