The Sword Of Heaven - An Earthly Crown - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Is this the general?" Vasil asked when Viaka came up beside him on her pony.
She shrugged. "How should I know? All these Habakar b.a.s.t.a.r.ds look the same to me. His armor is rich enough."
"Then you shall have it, my dear. Piotr, strip him."
The man protested, at first. Piotr grabbed his left hand and cut off his little finger, and after that, the man submitted in silence. Until Yevgeni returned with seventy riders, a few of whom were wounded, and two captives. The first of the captives was a stalwart man in a fine brocaded surcoat who endured many bleeding wounds stoically. The second was an adolescent boy without a trace of beard on his face, tall but clearly young and terrified. He, too, wore a gold surcoat and gilded armor. When the Habakar general saw him, the old man broke out in a storm of weeping and struggled away from his captors to embrace the boy.
"They force children to ride into battle, too," said Yevgeni, pulling his mount up beside Vasil. "It's barbaric. But the boy seemed important, so we let him live."
"The other man?"
"He fought courageously to defend the child."
"Bind his wounds, then, after you've stripped him of his armor. Leave the boy in his, though, or they'll never believe we found such a child fighting."
The old man, stripped down to his linen tunic and hose, broke away from the boy and threw himself at Vasil's feet, babbling in his khaja tongue. Vasil sighed and looked around for Viaka, but she was kneeling, running her hands over the golden surcoat and the fine armor with a gleam of l.u.s.t in her eyes. She glanced up, and when she saw that Vasil was watching her, her face flushed with pleasure and she rose and came over to him, glancing back frequently as if to make sure her new armor was not being stolen by one of her villagers. She halted beside Vasil and listened to the old man, then spat on him.
"He says he will gladly give you anything you please, as long as you spare the boy," she said to Vasil. "He says his name is Yalik anSiyal, and he is a great n.o.bleman and the leader of this army. The boy is his son."
Vasil smiled. Not gloated, not quite, but he felt entirely pleased with himself.
"We'll ride, then. I have what I need.''
"I'm coming with you." Viaka's gaze up, at him seated splendidly on his mount, was wors.h.i.+pful as well as possessive.
Vasil chuckled. "My dear, you are wealthy now. You don't need me."
"My father will only take these things from me once you are gone and give them to my brothers. I would gladly become your wife. My father would not protest."
Yevgeni laughed under his breath. "He'd be glad enough to be rid of her," he said softly.
"I am married," said Vasil quietly.
She gestured impatiently. "I do not ask to be your chief wife. But surely you have a place for a secondary wife."
"Savages," muttered Yevgeni.
"Yevgeni, get the men ready. We must go." Vasil put out a hand and took Viaka's, holding it a moment. "My dear, however much I might wish it, it is impossible." Then he released her hand and reined his horse away. Piotr bundled the general onto his horse and tied him there, stringing the boy's mount on behind. Viaka simply stood, staring at them. One of the villagers, an old man who had protested the most at the girl's usurpation of authority, grinned vindictively as the riders mounted and rode away.
Vasil did not even glance back, although Yevgeni did. "You cold b.a.s.t.a.r.d," he said to Vasil. He laughed. "G.o.ds, these khaja can't even keep their own tents in order.
How can they expect to resist Bakhtiian's army?"
"We are not part of Bakhtiian's army yet."
"I still don't understand," said Yevgeni, "how you can expect Bakhtiian to take us in, now that we're arenabekh, and then agree to let you become dyan of the Veselov tribe, after we rode with the last dyan who tried to kill him."
"There is a great deal you don't understand, Yevgeni. There is a great deal no one understands. But I am determined to have my way, this time." He glanced back as Piotr cantered up from the rear. "What is it?"
"The girl. She's following us."
"Let her follow. I'm no longer concerned with her."
Yevgeni snorted. "Meaning you don't need her anymore."
Vasil did not answer. He picked up their pace, and they made good time down to the valley, riding past the ransacked city by late afternoon. A contingent of armored riders, hailing them, met them by an outstretched arm of ruined wall.
"Halt! I hadn't heard of arenabekh in these parts. Where's your leader?" This from their captain, a beautiful young man whose handsome face was marred by scars along the jaw and across the ridge of his nose. "Vasil! G.o.ds, I thought you were dead!
Everyone thought so."
Vasil smiled. "But I am not dead, Petya, as you see."
"But these are arenabekh, Vasil!"
"It's true that I've proven myself as a dyan by leading these men. Now I've returned. How is my sister? Have you any children yet?"
Petya flushed. "You must know that Vera is disgraced. It isn't-it isn't anything to speak of here.""Then forgive me for speaking of it. Have you any news of my wife?"
"Karolla is well. Your cousin Arina took her in."
A gleam lit Vasil's fine blue eyes. "And my children? They are well also?"
The tight line of Petya's mouth relaxed slightly. "They are well. They are sweet children. Everybody loves them."
"Of course. You're outfitted differently-all that armor. You look like khaja soldiers."
"Things have had to change." Petya regarded the older man warily. "Why are you here, Vasil?"
"Even arenabekh may return to the tribes, if their etsana agrees to it. I heard that my father died. I have come to claim the position that is rightfully mine. Can you take me to Anton? He is here, is he not? I saw the Veselov standard."
"He is here." Petya hesitated. Then, as if he could find no excuse to refuse, he motioned to the riders under his command and they turned and escorted Vasil and his men back along the valley. Corpses speckled the gra.s.s and the fields, fleeing soldiers who had been cut down and left to die. An overturned cart blocked the road, but the riders simply rode around it, not bothering to move it. Vegetables spilled out from its bed, bruised or flattened by the impact. In a far field, a crowd had been herded together under the watchful eyes of a group of riders.
"You have prisoners," Petya studied the two men and the boy in the middle of Vasil's jahar. "We were just heading up into the hills to see if we could catch the general of this army. He fled the battle."
"I have him. That one, there, and his son."
"Ah. Sakhalin will be pleased."
"Yaroslav Sakhalin leads the army? Bakhtiian isn't here?"
Petya's brows drew down in confusion. Then he laughed. "You didn't think this was the entire army, did you? We're only the vanguard. Bakhtiian is coming soon with the main army. We are as plentiful as the birds, and as strong as the winter wind."
"Then it is true," said Vasil thoughtfully. "Bakhtiian will conquer all the khaja lands."
"Did you ever doubt it?" Petya blinked up at Vasil, looking naive and perplexed and utterly a.s.sured all at once. "Did you ever doubt that he could do it?"
Vasil did not reply. Instead, Yevgeni leaned forward. "Excuse me," he said politely to Petya. "But if you are with the Veselov tribe-do you know-I have a sister. She was with me, before, with Mikhailov, and I never heard what had happened to her. Perhaps you've heard of her. Her name is Valye Usova."
"I don't know her," Petya confessed. "I'm sorry. But Arina Veselov might, or Irena Orzhekov. After Mikhailov died, those two etsanas oversaw what became of the women and children who were left behind." He hesitated again, visibly, his open face betraying doubt. "Vasil. Are you certain you will be welcome? You followed Mikhailov, after all. You tried to kill Bakhtiian. He has no reason to forgive you."
"No reason except what lies in his heart," said Vasil, so low that only Petya heard him.
Petya's face became a flood of emotions that he suppressed with difficulty. "Then it's true, the things Vera said about you." He spoke quietly and, because it was in his nature, deferentially.
Vasil snorted. "Vera is a snake, Petya, which I think you ought to know by now, being married to her as long as you have been. She says only what she pleases, to strengthen her own position."
"She no longer has a position. The etsanas stripped her of all rank. Arina argued against it, but Orzhekov and the elders insisted. Vera does menial work for Varia Telyegin, who treats her kindly enough, though she's nothing but a servant now.''
Vasil laughed. "I am amazed. She endures such treatment?"
"What choice does she have?" Petya asked bitterly.
Vasil turned his head smoothly to stare at Petya. "And after everything, after the way she treated you, after she betrayed your trust, you still love her?"
Petya pressed his lips together and turned his face away, refusing to answer.
"Here is the main army," said Yevgeni. A scout hailed them, and Petya led them around its ma.s.s to the northwest, where they came to a ring of horses and a knot of men standing talking together.
"Ah, there you are, Petya," called a middle-aged man, dark featured and with a pleasant, open face. "What did you catch?" His gaze skipped over Vasil, wrenched back, and he blanched, as though he had seen a ghost. "Vasilley," he said hoa.r.s.ely. "I thought I would never see you again." Then, transformed as if by the rising sun, his face lit with joy. "You d.a.m.ned b.a.s.t.a.r.d, where have you been?"
Vasil dismounted and strode forward. The two men embraced. "Anton." Vasil's tone was fervent. "How I've missed you, you more than anyone, for all the kindness you ever showed me. You look well. I'm glad to see it." He disengaged himself from Anton and turned to regard the other five men, who watched this reunion with interest. His gaze quickly fastened on the man who stood with quiet command to the far right. "You are Yaroslav Sakhalin?"
Sakhalin nodded, acknowledging the question. "You are Sergei Veselov's son Vasil? It would take a greater man than I not to be astonished by your sudden appearance here, and so many years after you vanished and were presumed dead." He examined Vasil with an intent, intelligent gaze. He carried himself easily, with the relaxed authority of a man who knows he is both important and competent. He was a man at the height of his maturity, older than Vasil and Anton, but not yet old-old enough to have a married daughter and a nephew just elevated to his own command, and yet young enough to be a dangerous fighter still. His gaze settled on Anton, reading the dyan's face, and then returned to Vasil. "What brings you back to us, Veselov?"
Vasil did not speak immediately. His own men stirred restlessly in their saddles.
Petya looked worried, gnawing at his lower lip. In the end, in the silence, it was amazingly enough Anton Veselov who spoke.
"But, of course, if you just heard of your father's death, then you must have returned to claim the jahar. You are dyan by right, if the etsana and the elders agree to the election."
"But you are dyan, Anton," said Sakhalin without expression. "Bakhtiian himself approved your election. I am sure no one will protest if you pet.i.tion to keep your position."
Anton looked surprised. "You know yourself, Yaroslav, that it isn't proper for a brother and sister to act together in authority over a tribe. They're too close. There was simply no one else to take the position. And now there is." He nodded at Vasil.
"I have led these arenabekh for three years," said Vasil quietly, "and I have brought khaja prisoners that I feel sure Bakhtiian wants."
"Arina will wish it also," added Anton, "that her cousin become dyan." Vasil flashed him a smile.
Sakhalin's lips twitched up. "Then the question becomes, will Bakhtiian wish it?
Very well, Veselov. It is no business of mine. You may take your case to Bakhtiian himself." He looked beyond the two men, at Vasil's jahar. ' 'Who are these khaja you have with you?''
"The general of the army you just defeated, Sakhalin. As well as his son. The third is an honorable soldier who fought courageously in defense of the boy.''
"You do me a service, then, in bringing them to me."
"I meant them for Bakhtiian, begging your pardon."
Sakhalin chuckled. "Did you, indeed? You may take them to him, then, and save me the bother. Anton, you will have to go as well, but I can't afford to lose your riders. Have your captains report to me, until you-" Here a glance spared for Vasil.
"-or your cousin returns."
"As you wish, Yaroslav," replied Anton. He gave Vasil a slap on the arm and a grin, and then mounted and rode away with Petya and his troop to give the orders.
"You seem to inspire loyalty, Veselov," said Sakhalin, whether with sarcasm or admiration it was impossible to tell. He was distracted by a scout riding in. "What news?"
"We've rounded up every khaja we could find in the valley and on the nearby slopes. There's few enough women and children-they've either fled or been slaughtered by their own army, I don't know which. What shall we do with the men?"
"Sort out those who have some skill, artisans and blacksmiths. Kill the rest."
Sakhalin turned back to Vasil. "You'd best be on your way at dawn, Veselov.
Bakhtiian is a.s.sembling the army, and he won't want any confusion about his commanders, not on this campaign. We'll be driving on through the pa.s.s in the morning. The heart of the kingdom lies beyond these mountains." Then he turned to the man at his right, dismissing Vasil, and began to discuss supplies and fodder for the horses on the mountain crossing.
The finest blush crept onto Vasil's cheeks, but he turned and walked with a careless stride back to his horse. "We'll set up camp here," he said to Yevgeni, "and go on in the morning."
They found a quiet spot, distant from the ruined city and the slaughter going on there. The men built a few fires, including one set aside from the rest for Vasil. He sat before the fire, brooding. Bringing out his komis cup, he poured the pungent drink out of a flask and into the cup, and drank. By the other fires, his men laughed and sang songs and gambled, relaxed now as they had not been for a long time. Still, there was no a.s.surance that Bakhtiian would not punish them: they were arenabekh, after all, men who had left the tribes for their own reasons, or been cast out. Some had no families to return to, and others, no hope that their tribes would want them back. But with the jaran tribes united, they had no future anywhere else. Vasil licked a spot of the fermented milk off of his lips and smiled. He knew Bakhtiian's weak spots, and he knew how to exploit them. It came down to one thing in the end. It always had. What he wanted, he intended to have.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE.
"Diana, you don't have to go through with this."
Diana stared at her hands, refusing to look up. After nine days sequestered in the Company's camp, rehearsing every day and then staying behind when the others went out to explore the jaran encampment, she had grown used to her colleagues coming back to harangue her, to get her to change her mind, and in some cases to ridicule her for going native. But the more they tried to budge her, the more her resolve hardened.
Now it was early morning of the day she was to marry, and Yomi had appeared at her tent at dawn with Tess Soerensen in tow. And left the two women there together.
Diana stared at her pewter bracelet and heard Tess sigh. "Diana, are you even sure why you're doing this?"
Diana looked up. "You did it. You married Bakhtiian."
Tess chuckled. "Not on my second day in camp, I didn't. Although it's true enough the tribe welcomed me in as soon as I arrived, and adopted me only days after that. You must think of Anatoly as well. Have you considered what it would be like to stay here, after your Company goes back to Earth?"
Diana twined her fingers together and fastened her gaze on her knuckles.
"Or what it will be like for him if you leave?"
She pressed her lips together. She could feel the heat burning in her cheeks. "Isn't it better that we-even if I go, isn't it better that we have shared something together than nothing?"
"If by something you mean you want to have s.e.x with him, I must tell you that you don't need to be married to him to do that.''
"But-" Diana felt all at sea, confused and hurt at once. "But why did he mark me, then? I thought all barbarians were prudes, that you had to be married or else it was-taboo or something. Bakhtiian killed a man, back at the port-"