Embers of an Age (Blood War Trilogy) (23 page)

Vorrul slowed his breathing and stared at Sultae, uncertain of what she wanted. “So, are they still a threat?”

“They may well be, bu
t that is why I have come. You must
stop them before they reach their goal.”

“What would you have of me?”

“As there
are no
O’hra
left within Ah Uto Ree
, I know where it is they travel: the desert.”

“The Funeral Sands?” Vorrul took a step back, his hands raised.
“You cannot expect—”

“I can, and do, expect you to answer to my every whim or I will rip the O’hra from your lifeless corpse and bury your bones in the ashes of your people. Do not
ever
challenge me
, vermin
.” Sultae stepped so close Vorrul could feel her breath as it tickled his whiskers. His pulse raced. “
But do not worry
.
T
here is no need for you to enter the Funeral Sands.” Sultae snorted. The rush of warm air caused Vorrul to blink. She took a step back
,
a smug smile creasing her cheeks
. “You would lose too many of your soldiers to be useful to me were you to brave the desert, but my brethren’s minions risk their own losses.”

Vorrul drew a breath, casting a furtive glance at the pack behind him. Their eyes snapped away at noticing his attention. He sighed inside wondering what harm the Sha’ree’s arrival had caused for his command.

Sultae went on, clearly indifferent to his concerns. “If the questers find the O’hra and manage to escape the desert, they will come straight for you and your army.
They expect you to be here
at Pathrale
, but
I want you waiting for them at Fhen.”

“So, we just leave the Pathra at our backs with only the Korme to guard them?”

She laughed. “Your erstwhile allies have already been routed, so it is best you don’t count on their aid.”

The commander looked to Sultae, questioning the truth of her statement, but he could sense no dishonesty. He growled at Rolff’s incompetence, but he had expected little more from the sack of meat. Vorrul glanced across the field to the jungle. Black smoke swirled above the treetops. He felt confident he could discourage the Pathra from mounting an assault upon his forces when they pulled back, but he was less certain they would remain ensco
nced in the trees indefinitely. A more immediate concern was meeting the Sha’ree allies in an open field
with them empowered by relics
.

“Why Fhen?” he asked. “That would leave my army with no cover or tactical advantage.”

“Not true,” she answered. “With their backs to the desert, they will be forced to press forward. It is unlikely they will have had time to rest or lick their wounds after the journey through the
s
ands should you meet them at the border. They will be weary and battered; an easy target. Even with the O’hra at their disposal, you will have surprise and a host of advantages, not the least of which is the capability of pushing them back into the desert for the beasts there to whittle away their ranks and split their focus.”

Vorrul paced as he con
templated her words. Her reasoning was
sound, if not the best
approach
to winning a battle
, in his estimation
.
His stomach felt in knots as he pictured the possibilities of the bitch’s plan, but deep down he knew he was wasting time acting as though he had a choice. He either did as Sultae commanded or
he
would die. It was that simple.

The secrets of the relics still beyond his reach, he had no hope of winning a fight against the Sha’ree
bitch
, even with his army. His men would hesitate and hold back
,
only to crumple
against her will once he was gone. They knew the source of their newfound power and feared its creator. History had long told of the Sha’ree reclamation of their magic and the brutality of the ancient race when they were defied. The Grol bloodline bore the
scarred memories
of Sha’ree might.

Vorrul would do as he was told, but he would bide his time. It was not the whole of the Sha’ree he had to lay low, but only one. Her time would come. He nodded his agreement. “We will travel to Fhen immediately.”

Sultae grinned
. “Fight well, commander. I am counting on you.” She gave him the barest of nods and strolled away, heading the direction of Nurin.

General Morgron returned to his side once the Sha’ree was gone. “
Your
orders?”

“Mind your tongue, Morgron. You can be replaced.”

The general grunted and masked his smile, but his eyes shone with amusement. Vorrul ignored
the
antagonism as he had since the two were pups at the same tit. Their futures were bound together, failure or success, but despite the general’s casualty toward Vorrul
’s stature, they both knew
death would come for them at the same time just as birth had brought them into the world together.

“Have the Bloodpack fire the closest trees and grass. We pull back immediately,” Vorrul ordered.

“To where?”

“To Fhen, to surprise a force that plans to squeeze us between them and the Pathra.”

Morgron glanced to the south
,
and then looked back to the commander. “Why not set an ambush at the far end of Lathah? We could hide our men in the hills of the Fortress Mountains and
strike the flank
as they pass
.”

Vorrul shook his head. “Our enemy comes from the Funeral Sands, and is empowered. The plan is to drive them back into the desert and to let
it
lay waste to them.”

The General raised an eyebrow, but said nothing. Vorrul knew he was just as uneasy about committing to a fight against an empowered foe on open terrain. After a quiet moment, Morgron grunted and walked away, calling out Vorrul’s orders. The men grumbled but started to move.

It was done. Vorrul watched as the army began the process of pulling back Not for the first time, he questioned the Sha’ree’s motives in supplying the Grol with relics and pressing them into battle.
What did Sultae have to gain
? The question haunted him as his men prepared to meet an enemy they knew nothing about. He looked once more to the jungle a
nd remembered to leave behind a few of the Bloodpack
to meet with the Lathahn messenger. Without the secret of the relics, he would forever be at the bitch’s beck and call, at least until her clandestine agenda left him dead. He sighed.

Something to look forward to
, he muttered
through clenched teeth
.

Chapter Twenty-Eight

 

Ellora followed the royal family until they reached the Crown. She had pondered her options since they left the Ninth and still she could see no way to free the princess without risk to the
orphans
with her or the royals. If she waited until
they
were locked inside the tunnels, there wo
uld be no chance at freeing them
. Though only four guards stood between her and the family, it was as though they were an army. None of the orphans with her, to include herself, had any clue how to use a sword. Her only hope was to distract and confuse the guards, but she held little faith in succeeding. As they drew closer to the tunnels, time was running out for her to make a decision.

Mikil kept glancing in her direction, waiting for her to say something. She felt Brandon’s eyes on her as Thelis hung close. They were all waiting on her.
What did she know about planning an ambush
? She sighed as she shifted behind the wreckage of the great spire and watched the family come closer and closer to the moment when it w
ould be
too late.

At last, she decided.
She looked to the boys. “I need a group of you to go out that way,” she pointed off to the other side of the spire, “and challenge the guards. Don’t fight them, but keep their attention on you.”

“What are you gonna do,” Mikil asked.

“Try to even the odds a little,” she answered, waving them off, setting a hand on Thelis’ arm to keep him with her. “Go. We don’t have much time.”

The boys darted off, slipping through the rubble and disappearing from sight. She turned to Thelis. “Stay close to me.” He nodded, and Ellora drifted off to slip in front of the royal entourage. Thelis
clung to
her heels
, uncomfor
tably holding the small club he’
d collected
.

After a few moments,
Ellora
slid behind a pile of debris and hunkered down, waiting as the family approached. Her heart drummed like thunder and she
worried the guards might hear
.
Thelis shifted at her back. His hurried breaths puffed
at
her ear
, warming it uncomfortably
.

The family grew closer and closer and Ellora wondered if the boys had lost their nerve. She could see the uncertainty in Argos and Kylle’s faces as they stuck
near
their parents. Even Malya looked concerned as Falen limped alongside her. Ellora looked to the men guarding them and had a moment of doubt. They were burly and strong, all older, veterans of the Lathahn army and clearly capable of slaying a handful of children. She turned to Thelis
, about to ask him to see if he can stop Mikil, when the
clack
of a tossed stone rang out. It was too late.

The guards shouted a warning as Ellora turned back to see Mikil and Brandon inching toward the royal family, short swords in their hands. The rest of the boys carried a mix of the weapons they had found and moved slowly at the backs of the two oldest boys.

“You better run
off
, boys,” one of the guards told them, drawing his own sword. It made theirs look like toys in comparison.

“Make me,” Mikil replied, his upper lip pulled back in a snarl.

Another of the guards’ swords left its scabbard. “I’m warning you, you little bastards
.
Prince Olenn won’t take your games lightly. We
will
kill you.”

“I don’t think they can,” Brandon told Mikil.

“I don’t think so
,
either,” Mikil agreed. The other boys muttered their agreement at
their
back.

One of the guards stepped forward, brandishing his sword. He swung it wildly well in front of the orphans. The boys held their ground with amused smirks.

“Think he missed on purpose, or is the prince’s guard just that poor with a sword?” Mikil asked of his companions.

The guard growled and
stomped even closer
, a second soldier joining him.
The last two
inched
forward, holding the rope lead that bound the couple.
All eyes were on the brewing conflict. Ellora raised her index finger to her lips, motioning Thelis to silence, and crept toward the family.
The dagger she wielded was nicked along half the blade, triangular shards missing from it
as though it had been gnawed away by a great beast
, but the lower half still held its edge. She had tested it as they followed along, her arm still stinging from where she dragged the blade across.

The guards closed on the boys, and much to Ellora’s relief, Mikil and his group moved back to keep
the
distance between them,
yet
they stayed close enough to
hold their
attention. Ellora took slow, deliberate steps toward the fami
ly as the drama played out
. Every footstep sounded like thunder to her ears and she feared the remaining two guards would turn and spot her. There would be no rescue then.

Step by step she drew closer. She raised her eyes from her feet to see Argos staring at her.
She raised a finger to her lips
and motioned for him to turn around. It took him just a moment, but he did, doing nothing
to draw attention to what he’
d seen. Ellora wiped the sweat from her brow and continued on, her pulse threatening to overwhelm her. Her hand trembled as she gripped the knife, her knuckles white through the layers of dirt.

At long last she crept behind Falen, Thelis just a few feet behind. She set her hand on the man’s forearm as a warning, fearful she might startle him into making a sound, but he stood rigid. The only sign he gave that he knew she was there was a quick wiggle of his fingers. Ellora wasted no time. She set the blade to work, slicing into the rope that bound him.
The quiet scrape sounded in her ears
as
she sawed back and forth, doing her best not to cut Falen in the process. Finally, the rope fell free.

Ellora reached out a
nd grabbed the club from Thelis
and
passed it to Falen
. His shaking
hand gripped it, but it
looked as though
it might slip away
at any moment. She sighed. It was all she could do for him. Out of the corner of her eye, she spied Malya peering at her. Ellora couldn’t read the pr
incess’ expression but it wasn’
t necessary to know Malya worried for the safety of her husband and children. Ellora smiled at her, hoping to convey similar thoughts, and then slipped a short distance behind the guard that stood before the princess.

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