Hawklan - Fall Of Fyorlund - Part 32
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Part 32

The man shrugged vaguely. 'I've to find Lord Eldric urgently,' he said. 'Lord Evison's message . . .'

Hawklan's tone was gentle but unequivocal. 'The Lord Eldric's in Vakloss and, I suspect, in no position to receive messages at the moment. The Lords Arinndier, Darek and Hreldar will accept it, I'm sure, but only when you've rested.'

The man became agitated. 'No, you don't understand,' he said angrily. 'I've lost too much time already.

The country's gone mad.' He shook himself free of Hawklan's hand and immediately staggered uncontrollably around the small circle formed by the gathered men. As each tried to help him, he pushed them away until finally he collapsed on to his knees. Hawklan bent down and pa.s.sed his hand over the man's face. The agitation left it and he slithered gently to the ground.

'That was a little premature, Hawklan,' said Darek. 'I'd say from his condition that his message was one of some urgency.'

'Undoubtedly,' said Hawklan. 'But he'll tell you precious little in that condition. He's on the verge of total collapse. I'd judge he's been riding for several days without food or sleep. However urgent his message I don't think an hour or two will make much difference.' He looked at Yatsu. 'Can we spare this man a little time?' he asked.

Yatsu raised an eyebrow. 'Ask your horse,' he said ironically. The comment provoked a little more laughter than it merited as it carried the group's residual battle tension into the breeze.

As if following it, Gavor extended his shining wings and rose leisurely into the air. 'I'll keep watch for you, Commander,' he said. 'It's a good day for resting on the air.'

Yatsu acknowledged with a nod of thanks, but posted sentries anyway. Only Hawklan heard Gavor's distant chuckle.

Hawklan made the newcomer comfortable and then joined the three Lords and Yatsu, who were sitting on a gra.s.sy embankment at the side of the road.

'Let me look at your wound,' he said to Arinndier. The Lord smiled to himself. He had already learned that this green-eyed healer was not to be stayed by any form of protest. As Hawklan's hands examined the wound and manipulated his neck and shoulders, Arinndier felt a deep relaxation seep through him.

'You've magic in your hands, Hawklan,' he said. 'The only person I've met who could do the same was Dan-Tor.' He paused thoughtfully. 'No, that's not quite right. He treated my wrist once when I sprained it. He cured it very quickly, but it felt more as if the injury was being . . . torn out almost . . . by a great power.'

The hands on his shoulders stopped moving and he turned his head to look at Hawklan. 'I suppose that sounds rather foolish to you, doesn't it? Healing's healing, isn't it?'

Hawklan smiled and, placing his hand on top of Arinndier's head, turned it to the front again. 'No, not at all,' he said. 'Far from it. You've just told me a great deal about the man. I'll have to think about it, it may be important. Now, be quiet and relax.'

But Arinndier was not so easily stopped. 'And where in this world did you learn that trick you used on our messenger?'

'I'd like an answer to that,' said Yatsu. 'What possessed you to tackle someone in that state? I take some pride in my fighting skill, but that was a textbook case of when to retreat. I've seen men like that take a score of arrows and still kill a dozen before they fell.'

Hawklan did not answer immediately. He looked down at his hands seeking out the damage in Arinndier's back. Though he knew no others could see it even Tirilen would see it only faintly it was written there quite clearly for him to read. The arrow wound, centring a vivid mosaic of tensions and strains brought about by the man's posture generally and his anxious response to the injury in particular.A ma.s.s of tiny interlinked wounds leading deep down into the very heart of the man. His hands would gradually release them, but he knew the body would partly re-establish some of them in spite of itself.

These people were always the same these people, the phrase made him scowl slightly always a part of them dedicated to self-destruction.

'The man had to be protected from the consequences of his actions,' he said.

'He had to be protected?' exclaimed Arinndier. 'What about us? He was the one with the axe and the frenzy ouch.'

'Be still,' Hawklan said, firmly. 'How many times do I have to tell you to relax? Stop fighting your body's attempts to heal itself.'

Yatsu casually lifted a hand to his mouth to hide his amus.e.m.e.nt.

'Anyway, you were in no danger,' Hawklan continued. 'Your Goraidin would've killed his horse and then him before he'd travelled half a dozen paces. Isn't that so, Yatsu?'

Yatsu nodded. 'There's no other way with people like that if you can't run away. At least I've never seen one until today.' He rolled a gra.s.s stalk between his thumb and finger and then launched it gently like a tiny spear. The breeze caught it and tumbled it along the road.

Hawklan sensed that Yatsu was recalling memories he would have preferred stayed forgotten. He looked again at Arinndier's back. 'That's all the answer I have for you, I'm afraid,' he said. 'I saw a path and followed it. It was different to yours.'

Yatsu looked at him. 'You took an incredible risk,' he said.

Hawklan shook his head. 'No,' he said. 'The path was there to be followed. The only danger lay in my leaving it.'

'I don't understand,' said Yatsu.

Hawklan laughed and slapped Arinndier's arm. 'That should do for now,' he said. 'Remember, relax into the pain when it troubles you. Stop fighting it.' He turned to Yatsu, still laughing. 'Youdon't understand it?' He bounced his finger ends off his chest in emphasis. 'Idon't understand it. Now where's Dacu?'

Ordan emerged from a warm, comforting darkness into a warm, comforting summer light. He stared up at the sky picture his father had carved and painted on his bedroom ceiling. The breeze on his face must be coming from an open window. Soon the house would start to bustle awake, and a sunlit day would spread before him.

Then he noticed that the cloud pictures were moving, and a small black dot was sweeping a wide watchful circle high above him. With an appalling jolt, his memory returned. His message! Lord Eldric!

More Mathidrin attacking him! He tried to sit up, but a gentle hand restrained him.

'Not yet,' said a voice. 'You're with friends. Rest while you can. We haven't much time, but you must eat, and tell us your tale before we decide what to do.' Ordan turned his head towards the voice. The speaker had a lean, carved face with high cheekbones and bright green eyes. Ordan remembered a haze of weariness and mounting frenzy, and a great force that had torn it from him effortlessly. The words, 'You're alive aren't you?' came back to him. This green-eyed man had saved him in some way when he could just as easily have killed him.

'What's happening?' he said. 'Who are you? Who are these . . .'

'My name is Hawklan,' came the reply. 'These other men are High Guards, of a kind, despite their uniforms. As for what's happening, that's a complicated tale which will have to keep. Come on, sit up.'

But the momentum of Ordan's long journey rea.s.serted itself and swept away most of his new-found quiet. He struggled unsteadily to his feet and looked round at the groups of resting men and grazing horses. Lord Evison's order had been unequivocal. Give the message to Lord Eldric only. But he had lost so much time. Lord Eldric's Castle had been sealed and his household reputedly fled to the mountains. Then he'd had to fight his way through black-liveried guards he'd never seen before. Now, this strange green-eyed man steadying him from Orthlund by the sound of him. And High Guards in black livery? And Lords? Arinndier, Darek, and was that grim-faced one Hreldar?

He put his hand to his head. He knew he was too tired from his relentless journey to think clearly. But these were Eldric's close friends. They would advise him. He walked over to them and saluted. 'Lords.

Ordan Fainson. Commander of the Lord Evison's High Guard. May I speak?'

Arinndier returned his salute without rising, and motioned him to sit down.

Ordan told his tale quickly and simply and the Lords listened intently and without interruption, though Hawklan could feel their mounting alarm. At the end, Ordan took the bundle from his tunic and gave it to Arinndier without comment.

Hawklan looked at the figure resting on the bloodstained kerchief. It meant nothing to him but, glancing around, he saw it meant a great deal to the Fyordyn.

Hreldar's face had become harder. The face of a man confirming and confronting his worst fears.

Darek's face was torn between belief and doubt, while Arinndier simply scowled and shifted his injured shoulder. The movement was unnecessary and painful and Hawklan watched him closely, waiting for him to emerge from behind the shield of self-inflicted pain that he found more acceptable than the truth of what he was looking at. When he did so, his face was contorted with anger.

'Commander, are you insane?' he shouted. 'You know what this is?'

Ordan bridled a little but stood his ground. 'Yes, Lord,' he replied. 'I know exactly what it is. It's my Lord's message to the Lord Eldric, sent to ask for help in extremity.'

Arinndier muttered to himself.

'What does it mean?' ventured Hawklan.

Darek started a little and then turned to him. His face was pale and his manner uneasy. He looked faintly embarra.s.sed as he spoke. 'It's the fourth figure from a Festival Shrine. The figure of Ethriss.' He seemed reluctant to continue. 'It should never be visible. The appearance of the fourth figure is a portent of the Second Coming of . . . Sumeral.' 'Madness,' muttered Arinndier, nursing his injured shoulder again. 'Evison's stirring up trouble because the King declared him a rebel.' But his tone carried no conviction.

'Nonsense,' Darek said impatiently. 'Evison's been badly treated by the King, but he's neither rebel nor troublemaker. I'll ask you to recall our discussion before we went to meet the King.' He gave a soft mirthless laugh. 'Our last night of innocence.'

Arinndier bl.u.s.tered. 'Eldric was unwell. I formalized things to avoid embarra.s.sing him.'

'No,' said Darek. 'He was perfectly well and perfectly rational and he said nothing that wasn't fit for Gathering. You'll perhaps recall also that we agreed first face proof for what he submitted.' He became heated. 'Everything that's happened since has been like a waking nightmare. That first face proof has been enhanced with time and you know it.'

Arinndier turned his face away angrily with a contemptuous oath.

'Enough,' said Darek coldly. 'Have you been so long away from the Geadrol, Lord, that you forget its ways so totally? I'll put your indiscipline down to your wound and your fatigue.'

Arinndier stepped towards him, eyes blazing.

Darek's jaw tightened angrily and s.n.a.t.c.hing the figure from his friend he held it up close to his face. 'In Ethriss's name, Arin, think. You know Evison. He's got even less imagination than Eldric. Do you think he'd have done this for no reason?'

Under the impact of Darek's uncharacteristic pa.s.sion, the resentment and anger abruptly drained out of Arinndier like water from a shattered bowl. He bowed his head. Sympathy replaced Darek's anger.

Hawklan took Arinndier's arm, and looked round at the anguished Lords and the Goraidin, standing bewildered at this outburst.

'Lords,' he said. 'Isloman and I are here because we believe this, too. Sumeral is risen again, and Dan-Tor is His agent. He'll unleash His corruption on the whole world if we don't oppose him. Even now, this very division among you here is a small victory for Him.' Before he could be questioned, he splashed practicalities in their faces. 'But our immediate problems are simpler,' he said. 'You have a known foe. You must obey Lord Eldric's orders and continue to his estate as quickly as possible and prepare to face Dan-Tor.' He took the figure gently from Darek and looked at it closely. It was beautifully and intricately carved. Its slightly raised right arm seemed to point to yet another new direction for him.

'Isloman and I will return with Commander Ordan to find out what happened to Lord Evison to prompt him to send this . . . ancient . . . message. We'll meet you at Lord Eldric's stronghold as soon as we're able.'

Chapter 44.

At the Palace gate, Eldric paused to compose himself. The wind tugged at his red cloak and, looking down at his shadow, he congratulated himself on the armour he had chosen from the many that Astrom and his friends had offered him. It would impress the crowd with its cla.s.sical imagery and it would enable him to defend himself very effectively if Dan-Tor chose to offer violence. Slowly, he unhooked a large horn from the horse's saddle and with half an eye on a pa.s.sing cloud, he blew a great blast on it just as the sunlight flooded into the square. The effect was electric. When the echoes died away, the whole crowd stood expectant, motionless and silent, awaiting Dan-Tor's response. The challenge had been issued.

Dan-Tor himself, however, was no mean manipulator of crowds, and he delayed his appearance until the effect of Eldric's entrance had begun to ebb away and a wisp of restlessness was beginning to rustle through the waiting people.

Slowly the great double gates of the Palace opened and, equally slowly, Dan-Tor walked through the widening gap, out into the bright sunshine. He wore a simple undecorated brown robe of office and carried no visible weapons. The high cowl of his robe threw his face partly into shade and Eldric was unable to see his eyes. Some way behind him came Dilrap and Urssain. The former twitching a little less than usual, the latter also apparently unarmed but exuding the menace that his uniform had come to mean in the City.

Eldric glanced at Dilrap. The Queen says he's to be trusted, Yatsu had told him, but Eldric knew he could expect no aid from him this day. To survive, Dilrap would have to help bring him down.

'Stay,' said Eldric in a commanding tone. 'That's near enough. The people are gathered here to listen to your Accounting, Lord Dan-Tor. We must needs keep our distance, for their sakes.'

Dan-Tor bowed slightly and raised his hands in acquiescence. 'Lord Eldric,' he said pleasantly and clearly, so that his voice projected well across the square. 'It's in deference to your past service to the King that I come to meet you in this . . .' he waved his hand searchingly, 'in this strange fashion. You're a fugitive from custody. Your co-conspirators ravaged the City to release you. I should order the Mathidrin to arrest you immediately, but I can see that would only cause more bloodshed, you've so deceived the people.'

'Enough!' said Eldric. 'You draw conclusions prematurely. Don't insult either me or the people by such contempt for the Law. This is no strange meeting as you know full well. It's the meeting of accuser and accused, as demanded by the Law. The time and the place are unusual, but they are also irrelevant. The form is not. We will hear and test each other's evidence freely and openly. If you choose not to do this you risk the immediate verdict of this jury here.'

There were some cries of encouragement from the crowd but, keeping his gaze on Dan-Tor, Eldric held up his hand to silence them. He wished he could see the man's eyes more clearly. His face seemed affable and relaxed, but his eyes? He reached up and adjusted his helm slightly to throw his own eyes more into the shade.

Dan-Tor shrugged regretfully. 'Unlike you, Lord Eldric, I'll do nothing which might endanger these people. I've only the best interests of both the people and Fyorlund at heart in these times of treachery and danger, when trusted Lords . . .'

'Again, enough!' thundered Eldric, resting his hand on his axe. 'You try the patience of the people, Lord Dan-Tor. If you abuse the form again I'll slay you where you stand, unarmed or no.'

An awesome silence fell on the crowd such was the weight of his anger and, for an instant, Eldric saw Dan-Tor's eyes flash red in the gloom beneath his cowl. For a brief instant the sight filled Eldric with an appalling and unreasoning fear and it was only with great effort that he did not turn and flee. Yes, hethought, whoever you are, let's see if this day can bring your true nature before the people. 'Now hear me in silence, as I in turn will listen to your Accounting.'

Then came his charges: suspension of the Geadrol; formation of a King's High Guard; disbandment of the Lords' High Guards; armed expeditions into Orthlund and attacks upon its people; arbitrary arrest and imprisonment of the Lords; threatened execution of Jaldaric after secret trial; appointment of himself as Ffyrst. Then came the final charge: the training, arming and use of Mandrocs against Fyordyn.

The mounting murmur of approval from the crowd that had accompanied each charge stopped suddenly with a noise like the hiss of a descending sword blade.

Dan-Tor felt the impact of the crowd's reaction. A serious problem, Dilrap had said. The words came back to Dan-Tor with a dark irony. Ah, Hawklan, he thought, I misjudged you again. It was a cast well worth the sacrifice of your Eldric. For an instant he felt the edifice of his years of scheming totter and shake. Such an announcement as Eldric had made could bring the stunned crowd on to him like wolves on to a downed prey. That would leave him only the Old Power. And where are you, Hawklan . . .

Ethriss? Did you truly leave the City? Or are you waiting nearby for the touch of my folly to awaken you?

Trapped. Dan-Tor swayed slightly as aeons of darkness opened before him.

'Your answer, Lord.' Eldric's voice reached through to him. Patience, came a thought from deep within.

Dan-Tor brought his mind sharply to the present and, under the shade of his cowl, he scanned the waiting crowd. Another irony began to unfold itself. Eldric was to be his unwitting saviour. The man's majestic presence as a protector of the Law was tempering the crowd's baser nature. They hadnot fallen on him immediately. The form would be observed. They would stand and listen. Dan-Tor felt the darkness move imperceptibly from him. Patience. Time would be everything.

Slowly, he began to reply to the charges. First in broad and general terms, and then working repeatedly over each in turn, in ever-increasing detail. The crisis pa.s.sed.

In the crowd were two Goraidin, Yengar and Olvric, sent by Yatsu, unbeknown to Eldric, to report on the Accounting. After a while they exchanged glances. Dan-Tor's tactics were becoming clear. Having survived the first and most serious part of the confrontation, he would weary the crowd and wear Eldric down with interminable argument, until exhaustion determined the outcome.

It was an effective tactic. As the day progressed the crowd gradually thinned and Eldric himself began to feel very weary. His concentration wandered. He wished Darek could have been by his side to bolster him against the bombardment of petty items that Dan-Tor a.s.sailed him with. He longed for the comfortable debating chambers of the Geadrol. Then Dan-Tor would be off on another tack. Stretching out explanations and precedents until they became lost in a cloud of detail.

It came to Eldric slowly that he had misjudged his opponent. The man was appallingly formidable. Eldric had chosen this Accounting almost on impulse, hoping that his oratory and the blatant justice of his case would see him through. But Dan-Tor picked away relentlessly; confusing, obfuscating, corroding his arguments.

Eldric looked down at the lengthening afternoon shadows and realized abruptly that he was going to lose. The Fyordyn had listened patiently, as he knew they would. And they were judging, as he knew they must. But this form of debate was ancient and, at heart, crude. From it had grown the Geadrol and the Law with their elaborate and sophisticated ways, but it was a meagre parent to such fine children, and now he saw the obvious. In this simple arena the people could only judge the matter on the skill of theadvocates, not on its merits painstakingly and objectively examined.

He felt that he had betrayed the people again, and it was only a monumental effort of will that kept the self-reproach from his face.

Dan-Tor, however, sensed him failing. 'Lord Eldric,' he said. 'I've shown you every courtesy, but I'm wearying of this endless picking over trivia. I am Ffyrst, and I've given you the reasons for this as determined by the Law and by the necessity of circ.u.mstances. I've answered each of your baseless accusations fully, in front of all the people here, when I should have had you arrested.' He paused to feel the mood of the crowd.

Slowly it had changed. Now doubts, bewilderment and fatigue mixed liberally with the partisanship that had initially been almost totally Eldric's. And there was increasing support for himself among the more foolish elements, aided by some calculated noisiness and irresponsibility emanating, he judged, from men that Urssain had placed in the crowd earlier.

In the tone of an affectionate parent whose patience had been tried too far by an erring child, he said, 'You mock the Law you pretend to defend, Lord Eldric. Had you any real regard for it, you'd not have taken such pains to escape lawful detention before a trial could be arranged and, given that the aberration mightn't have been totally of your own making, you would now lay down your weapons and return to the King's custody in peace and await his will.'

After so many hours of debate and argument, Eldric was in no mood to countenance such a device.

'You ignore the form again, Lord Dan-Tor, as you did at the beginning. You've answered none of my charges. Not one. At best you've thrown up a cloud of trivialities to obscure the real nature of your crimes. Your sole object has been to confuse and mislead. If my own inadequate advocacy hasn't served me well, it's at least shown the people here that while I strive towards the truth for them, you wish them to remain in confused ignorance.'

There was a mixture of cheering and jeering from the crowd and Eldric winced inwardly as he felt the rightness of his case fading into the darkness cast by Dan-Tor.

'If you believe that, Lord Eldric, then let the people judge us both now,' shouted Dan-Tor, sweeping his long left arm across the crowd. This provoked more noise.

'No!' roared Eldric above the clamour. 'No. How can the people judge when so much has yet to be presented? You weave fifty lies for every one you affect to refute.' He stood up in his saddle, his blazing eyes peering relentlessly into the gloom of Dan-Tor's cowl.

Dan-Tor started. It was a look he had not seen since he battled by the side of his Master, wielding world-shattering power against the Demons of the Great Alliance and all their forces.

The line still runs then, he thought. Through all this time. 'I'm not to be a.s.sailed, Lord Eldric.' His voice rumbled ominously.

The crowd fell suddenly silent, but Eldric did not yield. 'I don't a.s.sail you, Lord Dan-Tor,' he said. 'It's the weight of your crimes that a.s.sails you. The weight which will crush you when the people learn of them fully.' A tension began to build in the square. 'And they shall know, Lord Dan-Tor. I'll shine a light into every cranny of your dark Narsindal-misted soul. I'll untangle your every lie in front of these people, if I've to stay here on this horse until the Second Coming.' Urssain shifted his feet wearily and fidgeted with his hands. Abruptly, there was uproar in the crowd.

Seeing the hand signal, Urssain's men in the crowd began shouting noisily.