Part 34 (1/2)

'I don't think it will be much of a feast,' said Rabalyn. 'They don't seem to have a lot.'

'True. It's been a bad few years for Khalid. I've given them some of our supplies. Whatever they prepare, be suitably grateful. But don't eat much. Whatever we leave will be shared around the camp later.'

Diagoras chuckled. 'Are you suggesting the boy lie, Druss?' he asked.

Druss scratched at his black and silver beard, then grinned.

'You're like a dog with an old bone,' he said. 'Do you never let up?'

'No,' replied Diagoras cheerfully. 'Not ever. And I too have been wondering about the scars the brothers carry. They are almost identical.'

'Then ask them,' said Druss.

'Is it some dark secret?' pressed Diagoras.

Druss shook his head, then stripped off his jerkin, boots and leggings. Without another word he leapt into the water, making a mighty splash. Diagoras leaned towards Rabalyn.

'Swim over and ask them?' he said.

Rabalyn shook his head. 'I think that would be rude.'

'You're right,' said Diagoras. 'd.a.m.n, but I shall lie awake tonight wondering about it.'

Dry now, Rabalyn dressed and climbed from the cave. The sun was setting, the temperature becoming more bearable. He wandered through the camp and sat in the shade of an overhanging rock, staring out over the red land. As darkness began to fall he rose to his feet. As he did so he saw something move across the crest of a distant hill. As he tried to focus it vanished behind a towering rock. Then another figure flitted across the hilltop. The movement was so fast Rabalyn had no chance to identify the creature. It could have been a running man, or even a deer. For a while he stood still, seeking out movement.

Whatever it had been it was large. Rabalyn wondered if bears travelled in these high, dry lands.

Then a horn sounded. Glancing down into the settlement he saw people gathering round the large patchwork tent of Khalid Khan.

Hungry now, Rabalyn pushed the thoughts of the figures on the hillside from his mind, and loped down towards the chieftain's tent.

The feast was a poor affair. Two scrawny cattle roasted on a firepit, some salt bread, one keg of thin ale, and some flat baked sweet cake that, as Rabalyn discovered, seemed to have been flavoured with more rock dust than sugar. Khalid Khan was embarra.s.sed, and apologized to Druss, who was sitting beside him on a rug at the rear of the tent.

Druss clamped his huge hand on the nomad's shoulder. 'Times are hard, my friend. But when a man gives me the best he has I feel honoured. No king could have offered me more than you have tonight.'

'I have saved the best till last,' said Khalid, clapping his hands. Two young women moved out through the throng of men seated close in the centre of the tent, and returned carrying a wooden cask. Placing it on a table they bowed respectfully to Khalid, then backed away.

Khalid Khan took an empty goblet, and twisted the spigot of the cask. In the lantern light the spirit flowed like pale gold. Khalid handed the full goblet to Druss. The warrior sipped it, then drank deeply. 'By Missael, this is Lentrian Fire . . . and very fine, my friend.'

'Twenty-five years old,' said Khalid happily. 'I have saved it for a special feast.'

The young men of the clan gathered round and Khalid filled their cups, jugs and goblets.

The mood within the tent lightened considerably, and two of the Khan's warriors produced clumsily fas.h.i.+oned stringed instruments, and began to make music.

Within a short time there was a great deal of singing and clapping from the fifty men crowded into the tent of Khalid Khan. Rabalyn tried a sip of the drink, and understood instantly why it was called Lentrian Fire. He gagged and choked, and handed his goblet to a nearby clansman. 'It's like swallowing a cat with its claws out,' he complained to Diagoras.

'The Lentrians call it Immortal Water,' said the Drenai. 'To drink it is to know how the G.o.ds feel.' He drained his own cup, then moved away, seeking another. Rabalyn saw Skilgannon ease his way through the revellers and walk out into the night. Tired of the noise, and the press of people within the tent, Rabalyn followed him.

'I see you do not like the brew either,' he said. Skilgannon shrugged.

'I liked it in another life. What are your plans now, Rabalyn?'

'I will go with Druss and Diagoras and rescue the princess.'

'In Drenai culture the daughter of an earl is a lady.' He smiled. 'This is, however, no time to be pedantic. I think you should choose another path.'

'I am not frightened. I mean to live by the code.'

'There is nothing wrong with fear, Rabalyn. Yet it is not fear for yourself that should make you reconsider. Druss is a great warrior, and Diagoras a soldier who has fought in many battles. They are hard, resolute men. Their chances of success in this venture are slim.

They will be even less if they have to worry about keeping alive a courageous youngster who does not yet have the skill to survive.'

'You could help us. You are a great warrior too.'

'The girl is no princess of mine, and I have no reason to make war on Ironmask. All I require is to find the temple.'

'But Druss is your friend, isn't he?'

'I have no friends, Rabalyn. I have only a quest, that may yet prove impossible. Druss has made his choices. He seeks to avenge the death of a friend. He was not my friend. His quest, therefore, is not my concern.'

'That isn't true,' objected Rabalyn. 'Not according to the code. Protect the weak against the evil strong. The princess - lady, whatever you call her - is a child, and therefore weak.

Ironmask is evil.'

'I could argue with almost all of that,' said Skilgannon. The child is with her mother, who is Ironmask's lover. For all we know Ironmask loves the child as his own. Secondly, evil is often a matter of perspective. And, more important, even if both criteria you offer are true, the code is not mine. I am not a knight in some childish romance. I do not criss-cross the world seeking serpents to slay. I am merely a man seeking a miracle.'

The noise from the tent suddenly subsided, and, within moments, a voice of almost unbearable sweetness began to sing. Skilgannon s.h.i.+vered. 'That's Garianne,' said Rabalyn.

'Have you ever heard anything more beautiful?'

'No,' admitted Skilgannon. 'I think I will go and swim in the moonlight. Why don't you go in and listen?'

'I will,' said Rabalyn. He watched the tall warrior stride away up the mountainside, then returned to the open flap of the tent. Every man inside was sitting silently, entranced by the magic. Garianne was standing on a chair, her arms outstretched, her eyes closed. The song was about a hunter, who stumbled upon a golden G.o.ddess bathing in a stream. The G.o.ddess fell in love with the hunter, and they lay together under the stars. But in the morning the hunter desired to go. Angry at being rejected the G.o.ddess turned him into a white stag, then took a bow to kill him. The hunter sprang away, leaping high over the treetops, and vanis.h.i.+ng among the stars. The G.o.ddess gave chase. This was the beginning of day and night over the earth. The white stag became the moon, the G.o.ddess the sun.

And ever and ever she hunted her lover, throughout time.

When the song finished the silence was total. Then thunderous applause broke out.

Garianne stepped down from the chair, and cast her gaze around the tent. She took a few steps towards the entrance and half staggered. Rabalyn realized she was drunk, and stepped forward to a.s.sist her. She brushed his hand away.

'Where is he?' she asked, her voice slurring.

'Who?'

The d.a.m.ned?'

'He went to the hidden lake to swim.'

'I will find him,' she said.