Read The Long War 03 - The Red Prince Online
Authors: A. J. Smith
Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction & Fantasy
The sound of running feet intruded and Randall looked across the fountain, over flagstones, towards the entrance. The inner courtyard where they sat was at the back of Claryon’s warehouse, obscured by interior walls and separate from the main building. He could see a slave, easily identified by his simple white loincloth and neck shackle, running into the courtyard from one of several arched doorways. The man was agitated and heading straight for the mobster.
‘Master Soong,’ he said, bowing his head and spreading his arms wide. ‘There are men in the warehouse.’
‘What men?’ asked Claryon coolly.
‘I believe they are wind claws, master. They wish an audience.’
Voon shared a look with the mobster. Both men were now concerned and Randall saw Claryon tense up slightly and crack his tattooed neck.
‘How many?’ he muttered.
‘Walan says five, master. With guardsmen, maybe fifteen in all.’
‘I assume there is a back way to this place?’ asked Utha.
More noise, this time raised angry voices. Claryon, standing up from his seat, glared at the entrance.
‘There is,’ he replied. ‘Perhaps you should use it. Voon, show them the way.’
A gurgle of pain sounded from another archway and a figure was thrown into the courtyard. A bloodied body, his throat cut, slid across the flagstones. They all stood up and Randall reached for his sword. Sounds were now coming from all around and he guessed that there were more men than simply a few in the warehouse.
‘Does that make us surrounded?’ asked Utha, lowering his eyes at the twitching corpse.
Claryon strode round the fountain and retrieved a two-handed scimitar from the wall. Voon unslung his long spear and the two Karesians exchanged another look. It seemed to Randall that they had a certain rapport and could convey significant meanings with simple looks and gestures. On this occasion, he saw them frown at each other and glance with concern at Utha.
‘Yes, I think we are surrounded,’ replied Claryon. ‘They must have been closer than I thought.’
‘Is there a fight here or should we run?’ asked the albino.
‘You should stay back,’ offered Ruth. ‘You are too valuable to die in a petty fight in Kessia.’
‘I concur,’ agreed Voon.
Utha chuckled. ‘I get the impression you’ll need my help.’
As if in answer to his query, men began to appear at all four of the archways leading into the courtyard. Several of them wielded wavy-bladed knives, reminiscent of the weapons Dalian Thief Taker carried, and Randall knew they must be wind claws. Most were simple Karesian guardsmen, however – but simple or not, there were twenty or so of them.
Claryon’s slaves scattered, leaving their master and the others to come together in a defensive circle next to the fountain. Ruth was not armed, but the others held their weapons low and ready.
‘Too late to run?’ asked Utha, with a smile.
Voon looked unimpressed at his attempt at humour, but Claryon laughed, swinging his broad-bladed scimitar from side to side. The mobster was a huge man and showed no sign of fear.
‘You will all come with us,’ announced a wind claw. ‘We will kill any that resist.’
‘Wrong man to threaten,’ boomed Claryon, advancing towards one of the doorways and the five men who had entered through it.
When it became clear that none of them was going to surrender, the guardsmen attacked. Randall was startled at how quickly things escalated and he found himself involuntarily on the back foot while Utha, quicker to react, rushed past him.
He paused as Voon, Claryon and Utha attacked the intruders with ferocity. The mobster drew first blood, slicing a man across the chest with a mighty swing of his sword and throwing the body backwards. Voon was more guarded and whirled his spear with great speed and skill, darting from side to side with nimble steps.
Utha, true to form, seemed to come alive now that he had an enemy to fight, and Randall’s master had run a man through and kicked another in the groin before the squire had even thought about moving.
Ruth simply stood and watched Utha attacking five men. The Gorlan mother showed an interest in the albino’s manner, pouting as he roared insults and laughed. Then she glanced at Randall, standing next to her, sword in hand. ‘I think you should help him,’ she said calmly.
The young squire nodded and took a deep breath before joining his master in combat. The wind claws were the more dangerous opponents and, once several of the guardsmen had been slain, the kris-wielding Karesians became more defensive. Randall advanced on one of them, meeting an incoming thrust with his sword and stepping back to parry the off-hand strike. To his left, Utha fought two guardsmen, keeping them at bay with kicks and punches while his longsword parried their scimitars.
The wind claw was faster than Randall and he wasn’t used to fighting a man with two long knives. He tried to keep his forward momentum, but the Karesian was quicker than him and a backhand attack caught the squire’s neck, opening up a glancing wound and causing him to retreat several steps.
He saw a headless body fly into the fountain behind him as Claryon chopped his way through the guardsmen, and to his right Voon had skewered a man through the mouth. The young man grabbed at his neck and felt blood seep over his hand, though the wound was not deep. He held his blade up as the wind claw nimbly covered the ground between them, crouching down and lunging at Randall’s chest. He couldn’t bring the sword of Great Claw down quickly enough to parry and the attack would have killed him had Ruth not intervened. She reached out and grabbed the man’s wrist. With effortless strength she pulled him away from the squire and flung him across the courtyard.
‘Thanks,’ he said breathlessly.
‘Welcome,’ she replied, returning her gaze to Utha as if nothing had happened.
Randall glanced behind him and saw Claryon duelling a wind claw. The mobster was driving him back as he negotiated the small pile of bodies spread across the flagstones. Voon was less violent, but no less impressive, as he somersaulted across the fountain and barrelled into two of the remaining guardsmen. The exemplar of Jaa was too quick to be pinned down and Randall thought none of the three warriors really needed his help. With a slight sigh, he grabbed a goblet of wine from the table behind him and took a large gulp.
‘Very impressive,’ remarked Ruth. ‘Utha the Shadow is strong.’
The young man took another gulp and nodded, watching his master decapitate a man and throw another head first into the wall, before turning round for someone else to fight. Randall looked round and saw Claryon kill the last of the men in front of him. Voon was catching his breath off to one side and finishing off some wounded men with swift downward strikes of his spear. Within a few minutes all the intruders had been killed and Randall stared wide-eyed in astonishment at the spectacle he’d witnessed.
The three warriors eventually realized there was no one left to fight and strolled back to the central fountain. All were out of breath, though Claryon and Utha both seemed revitalized by the encounter.
‘I don’t like being threatened,’ grunted Claryon.
‘Evidently,’ replied Utha, wiping his sword with the cloak of a wind claw. He looked at his squire, noting the shallow wound in his neck. ‘You’re still over-extending your sword arm, my dear boy.’
‘One still lives,’ said Ruth, pointing to a motionless wind claw.
Claryon placed his scimitar on the table and hefted the unconscious man back to the middle of the courtyard. The wind claw was bleeding from a head wound and his leg was deeply cut, but he was still alive.
‘We don’t have long,’ said Voon. ‘More will be here. We need to leave the city.’
‘After I talk to the traitor here,’ replied Claryon, dumping the man head first into the fountain. ‘Right, boy, wake the fuck up.’ He grabbed him roughly around the neck and held his head under the bubbling water. After a moment the wind claw began to flap his arms, grabbing at the mobster’s hand and trying to free himself. Claryon pulled him up and shook him. ‘Good morning,’ he said.
The man was pale and his eyes bloodshot, but he focused on the huge man holding him. ‘The Sisters will eat your heart.’
‘They’re all in Tor Funweir. All you’ve got are swords and we’ve got them as well,’ replied Claryon. ‘Tell me how many are watching and you won’t have to taste your own eyeballs.’
Randall baulked at the comment. ‘A little unnecessary,’ he blurted out, and everyone except Ruth looked at him. ‘I’m sure hitting him or something would have the same effect.’
Without taking his eyes from Randall, the mobster punched his captive in the side, making him breathe in sharply and struggle even more. Claryon then held his head back under the water.
‘Any experience with torture?’ he asked the squire.
‘Er, nope. This would be the first time.’
‘Keep your mouth shut, then,’ said Claryon.
‘Watch it, mobster,’ interjected Utha. ‘That’s my squire you’re talking to.’ He pointed to the wind claw. ‘And that man is about to drown.’
The mobster allowed his victim to breathe, but he continued to glare at the two men of Ro. Randall didn’t consider himself particularly squeamish, but the thought of Claryon making the man eat his own eyes was too much for the young squire to bear and he felt slightly nauseous. He found it strange that the sight of blood and mangled bodies didn’t bother him any more, and yet the prospect of torture was abhorrent.
‘Who’s watching?’ repeated the mobster.
The wind claw smiled, spitting out bloody water on to the flagstones. ‘Sasha the Illusionist watches. She will find the Ro scum.’ He spat again, this time in the direction of Utha.
Voon reacted quickly to the news that one of the Seven Sisters was returning, swearing under his breath and looking at the various exits from the room. ‘We should leave. Now! We need to get some distance on the enchantress.’
‘Thrakka?’ asked Claryon.
Voon nodded. ‘Shadaran Bakara owes me a favour.’
‘Is that another mobster?’ said Utha.
‘No, he’s a lesser vizier. The old fool is too stupid to do what he’s told by the wind claws. If anyone is still a follower of Jaa, it’s him.’ He darted forward, drawing his spear and thrusting its point through the soaking wind claw’s neck, killing him instantly. ‘I believe I said we leave now!’
* * *
Claryon Soong was a stubborn man. Years as a Hound had given him a violent resolve, a dark determination never again to be beholden to another man. He had risen through the webs and deceits of Kessia, killing men by the hundreds, as he cemented his place as one who would never kneel, never beg, never have a master.
He looked up from the table against which he was restrained. ‘I can survive torture,’ he snarled, spitting blood at the black-armoured man of Ro who stood over him.
‘I don’t care,’ replied the knight. ‘I like seeing powerful men all bloodied and broken.’
A light and airy chuckle filled the room as Sasha the Illusionist returned. She had left Claryon in the company of Sir Pevain while she arranged to travel south. The enchantress was more determined to find Utha the Ghost than Claryon had realized. The mobster had thought he’d have at least a day to resolve his affairs before they caught him. As it turned out, he’d had barely six hours.
‘My sweet, Master Soong,’ said the enchantress. ‘We have severed your head from your body. You are already dead and I know everything I need to know. The torture is over, you have no cause to resist further.’
Claryon looked around him and remembered. First they’d cut off his hands, throwing them into a wooden basket. Then his arms, feet and legs. His mind had been lulled into a blissful euphoria by Sasha’s enchantment. Even when Pevain sawed through his neck with a serrated blade, he’d barely woken. But neither had he died.
‘I hope you understand,’ said the enchantress. ‘Claryon Soong is a mighty name. You are an ideal example for the other mobsters not yet... compliant.’
Pevain scratched his straggly beard and slapped Claryon’s face. ‘You listening, boy? We’re gonna display your meat around Kessia as a warning.’
‘Except for your head,’ offered Sasha. ‘That will stay in the Well of Spells. In time, your madness may yield great wisdom. Until then, your screams will be as music to us.’
Claryon laughed. It was his only remaining weapon.
DALIAN THIEF TAKER IN THE CITY OF RO WEIR
T
HE MAN WAS
tough. Dalian realized he’d underestimated his opponent. Saara the Mistress of Pain had sent out dozens of wind claws and Ro servants to find Dalian, ever since he had carelessly let his face be seen outside the duke’s residence. The man who faced him was standing over two dead guardsmen who had foolishly attacked the Thief Taker, but the survivor was a skilled swordsman and Dalian needed to concentrate.
‘I’ll be well paid for your head, old man,’ grunted the man of Ro as he circled the old Karesian.
They were in an alley, several streets from the northern gate, a place where Dalian had been staying while he waited for the Kirin assassin to arrive. He’d spent the last week scouting out the situation in Ro Weir, a situation that was growing worse by the day. Not only had the enchantress successfully brought order to the city, but she had established a religion among her followers. Dalian was disgusted to learn that the worship of Jaa was slowly becoming illegal.