Tracato: A Trial of Blood and Steel Book Three (63 page)

Then, from amidst the commotion, Balthaar appeared. Servants hurried to him, and assisted his weary, awkward dismount. He looked at Sofy, visor raised, and smiled wanly. Sofy walked to him, her heart pounding. She could not but be pleased that he lived, and was apparently unhurt. Beyond that, she was entirely uncertain of her feelings.

She took his gauntleted hands in hers. Balthaar just looked at her, sweaty and exhausted. His eyes, usually radiating such confidence, were now sunken and dull. Sofy recognised the look. She had seen it in the eyes of Lenay warriors on her march north, following grand scenes of carnage and pain. Balthaar stared at her, as though surprised that his eyes could once again regard something beautiful.

“My father is dead,” he murmured. “I am Bacosh Regent now.”

Sofy took a deep breath, her heart thudding. She curtseyed. “Yes, Your Highness.”

“We suffered grievously,” Balthaar continued, as though he hadn’t heard her. “Our dead carpet the fields in places so thickly that one could walk across entire paddocks without once touching the ground. I have seen men burned alive by the score, and entire lines of infantry cut down like wheat. The Rakani suffered terribly on the left flank, the serrin devils have taken nearly half their number. I fear many families have ended today, fathers, sons and cousins all slain without any one remaining to continue the line.”

“Your Highness,” said Sofy, trying to keep her voice from trembling. What did they do now? If they were to run for the safety of ancestral lands, surely they should leave immediately? “We have been defeated, then?”

Balthaar stared. His steel fingers clasped tightly upon her hands, causing Sofy to gasp in pain. “Defeated?” he rasped. “No, M’Lady.” He leaned forward, and his dull eyes came suddenly to a blaze, his lips twisting in a smile of vicious, righteous fury. “I bring you
victory
!”

 

J
OEL
S
HEPHERD
was born in Adelaide in 1974. His first manuscript was shortlisted for the George Turner Prize in 1998, and his first novel,
Crossover
, was shortlisted in 1999. He wrote two other novels in the Crossover series,
Breakaway
(2003) and
Killswitch
(2004).
Sasha
, the first novel in
A Trial of Blood & Steel
, was published in 2007.
Petrodor
, the second novel in this series, was published in 2008.

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