Part 46 (1/2)
It was broken by the king.
”There is a courage to endure,” said he, ”as there is a courage to a.s.sail. When the snow-winds come, they will rid us of our enemy, without bending of bow or shaking of spear. But our grapes are yet green in the vineyards, our barley scarce whitening on the plain. How many days, think you, my brothers, will meat and drink be forthcoming if we elect to remain up here, cooped within the walls of Ardesh like a swarm of bees in a hive?”
Again opinions varied; some thought they might hold out a hundred, some barely a score. Thorgon offered to break through the lines of the enemy, and bring in sheep and horses from the wind-swept plains of his home.
”When we have eaten the last down to their hoofs,” growled the fierce warrior, ”we can always run out, sword in hand, and take what we want from the tether ropes of this scolding housewife whom they call the Great Queen!”
”Sarchedon,” said Aryas, turning to his bowbearer, ”you have held your peace too long. Give us your counsel, man; for you best know the strength and the designs of our enemy.”
There was a stir in the hall at this appeal to the stranger, and more than one sword leaped a hand's-breadth from its scabbard. Murmurs of ”Traitor, traitor!” rose by degrees to louder outcries. ”Out with him!”
”Down with him!” ”Slay him and cast him over the wall to his own people, who have come hither at his desire!” were the mildest of these revilings, while a scuffling of feet and crowding of shoulders about his place at the king's right hand denoted no good-will to the a.s.syrian, small chance of mercy or even justice if national prejudice and panic should get the upper hand. Aryas flushed dark red with anger; but Thorgon interposed his ma.s.sive person between the bowbearer and those who threatened him, while his deep hoa.r.s.e voice cried ”Shame!” in accents that might have been heard by the besiegers outside.
”A stranger, and treated thus in the king's council-chamber!” he shouted. ”By the sword that begot our nation, I will stamp the life out of the first man who steps across the hall! What! the a.s.syrian came to our gates a captive and a suppliant, and shall we deliver him up, were he ten times a traitor, at the bidding of the loudest-tongued shrew that ever wore a smock? Nay, my brothers, stand back, I say; give every man a fair hearing, and room to swing a sword!”
Thus adjured, the a.s.sembly subsided into their places, and Sarchedon took advantage of restored order to protest earnestly against the suspicions of those with whom he had come to dwell.
”I am an a.s.syrian,” said he, facing boldly round on such as had been most vehement in their outcries ”and I am proud of my birth as of my nation. But I was also a soldier of the Great King, who could never be urged to war within the confines of Armenia, and I owe no allegiance to her who has taken unlawful possession of his throne, who would establish herself thereon with tyranny and injustice. I came here a weary footsore slave; I was fed, comforted, and raised to honour by my lord the king. Every drop of my blood shall be poured out to do him service. Bethink ye too, Men of the Mountain, if the a.s.syrian takes me fighting in your ranks he will strip the skin from my body to make sandals for his feet. Those strike fierce and hard who have no retreat; and if honour, good faith, grat.i.tude, count for nothing, at least you may trust him for whom defeat is a cruel and shameful death. My lord the king hath demanded my counsel. To so n.o.ble an a.s.sembly it is not for me to offer advice, but I am enabled to give information. I have returned but a short s.p.a.ce from the outer wall. Since daybreak the enemy hath been busied in turning the course of the river, that he may advance to the a.s.sault dry shod. You yourselves best know to what purpose you can defend the city from an attack on its weaker side; but my lord the king hath demanded counsel of his servant, and it is not for me to shrink from speaking because of angry threats and scowling brows. Were I King Aryas of Armenia, as I am his faithful bowbearer, I would go down to battle with the a.s.syrian, and strive with him, man to man, outside the city-walls!”
Loud shouts of applause greeted this daring speech, and Thorgon, striding across the hall, laid his broad hand on the a.s.syrian's shoulder, with a gesture of unqualified approval and respect. The enthusiasm became general, so that even Saraeus, shouted and gesticulated with the rest; but Aryas, stepping proudly into the midst, drew his sword from its sheath, and kissing its handle, raised its point towards the roof. Each man present followed his example, and thus, with naked weapons gleaming in their hands, they listened in silence to the words of the Comely King.
”It is well spoken!” said he. ”Surely the bowbearer hath shot his arrow home to the mark. If indeed the river be turned, steep rock and solid wall will avail us little against the huge engines and innumerable archers of the a.s.syrian. It is wise to attack when it seems hopeless to defend; and who shall stand against Armenia coming down in her might, like one of her own torrents from the snow-topped hills? I am a free king, ruling over a free people, yet can I count on you, my friends and followers, as on the steel in my own right hand. Let us set the battle in array, and fight the quarrel to the death. The stranger never turned from our father's gate in peace, nor entered it in war. Shall we forget whose sons we are to-day, because of a fierce people, riding on horses, wors.h.i.+pping strange G.o.ds, and mustering countless as the snowflakes in a storm? I call on you, as Aramus would have called on your fathers, to rally round his son; and I pledge you in that sacred cup to which, since Armenia became a nation, traitor or coward hath never dared to lay his lips!”
With these words, the king filled a mighty bowl with wine, and bringing the edge of his sword so briskly across his naked fore-arm that the blood spouted from the gash, suffered a few drops to drain into the liquid; then, raising the vessel to his lips, drank heartily ere he pa.s.sed the bowl to Thorgon, who, following his example, sent it round amongst the rest, each man quaffing his share with the zeal and gravity of one who partakes in a religious rite. When at last the bowl reached Sarchedon, there was scarce a mouthful left; but the a.s.syrian, catching the spirit of this strange ceremony, pierced his own arm without hesitation, and thus pledged his new comrades in a draught of blood.
Any lingering suspicions they might have entertained were completely dissipated by so ready a compliance with their ancient custom, and not one but went out from the presence of his lord to prepare for battle with a confidence as implicit in the fidelity of the stranger as in his own.
With measured steps, lowered weapons, and a grave aspect, as having before them a task it would tax all their strength to accomplish, these Men of the Mountain departed one by one, each, as he left the hall, turning with grim salute to do obeisance to the Naked Sword. When the last had vanished, Sarchedon, looking into the face of his lord, felt his heart sink and his blood run cold; for on the brow of the Comely King, though courageous and serene as ever, there was imprinted the seal of the destroyer--there seemed to sit that cloud, so awful and so mysterious, which is the shadow of coming death.
CHAPTER XLIX
FAITHFUL UNTO DEATH
”It is our only course against such a foe,” said Aryas, after a gloomy silence, during which lord and servant seemed to have been following out no cheering train of thought. ”For any nation on earth to oppose thy countrymen in warfare is to wield a shepherd's staff against a blade of tempered steel. But one heavy blow from the club, well-aimed and unexpected, may sometimes s.h.i.+ver the deadlier weapon to its hilt. Our long swords of the mountain bite sharp and true. The wedge of Armenia can pierce a column, however dense, and the gap widens as we fight on.
Surely it will cleave the might of a.s.syria, as a woodman's axe cleaves the st.u.r.dy oak of the hills.”
”But the oak is rooted to its place,” objected Sarchedon, ”while the a.s.syrian can wheel and stoop and strike like a falcon in the air. His hors.e.m.e.n will open out, and bend their bows till they have wrapped the advancing wedge in a storm of deadly hail--till its men fall thick, and its might is loosened from the rear. Then will Semiramis order up her war-chariots on either flank; and, once broken, as well he knows, there is no rallying for the long swords of my lord the king.”
”They shall _not_ be broken,” exclaimed Aryas. ”With Thorgon to lead them on foot, with their king to direct the battle in his chariot, with thy skill of warfare, Sarchedon, and our own good cause, I commit the result to that power which hath ever befriended Armenia, in attack and in defence--the might of the Naked Sword. Yet I would we could fight them at a vantage, nevertheless,” he added, his enthusiasm changing to deep anxiety and concern. ”Their armour, their weapons, their horses, are better than ours, and they outnumber us ten to one.”
”True, O king!” replied Sarchedon; ”therefore must we fall upon them unawares. Behold! In their ranks every spearman hath been taught to handle spade, every slinger uses the pick deftly as he whirls the thong, each third man carries a mattock or a shovel; and the Great Queen values their labour no dearer than their lives. This night one half her host will be employed to turn the course of the river that keeps your city on its eastern side. Let my lord the king summon his men of war in the hours of darkness, and at daybreak go down to battle. If he conquer, it will be with the first onslaught. If he fail, then may Sarchedon, his friend and servant, pay back the life he owes, and die at his lord's feet.”
Again that ominous shadow pa.s.sed over the king's face: he laid his hand kindly on the other's shoulder, and spoke in a low sad voice.
”Sarchedon,” said he, ”when I s.h.i.+elded thee from the demand of an a.s.syrian emba.s.sy, it was for jealousy of my father's honour--for the cause of the stranger and the oppressed. When I took thee out from under thy horse--ay, from off the very horns of the wild bull--it was for care of a faithful servant risking life at the pleasure of his lord. Now we are master and slave, crowned king and belted bowbearer no more, but friends in esteem and affection, brothers in confidence and love. I tell thee that the days of Aryas, the son of Aramus, are numbered, and the Mountain Men must choose them another king to guide their counsels and lead their long swords into battle. Last night I dreamed a dream; and it needs no wise man, no cunning soothsayer, to read the interpretation thereof. Behold, I was hunting in the mountain, riding to and fro with bow in hand and hound in leash, seeking to take a prey. In vain I traversed hill and valley, rock and river, stately forest and scattered copse--leaf, gra.s.s, and flower were alike scathed and blighted. It seemed that a flight of locusts had pa.s.sed over all. Then I cursed the nakedness of the land in my wrath; and while thrice I shouted 'Barren, barren, barren!' mine own voice sounded hideous in mine ears. So I rode slowly on, and beneath my horse's feet I beheld three things that caused my blood to curdle and the hair of my flesh to stand on end.
”The first was a slain eagle pierced by a headless shaft; the second was a wild bull noosed in a woman's girdle; the third was a dead man lying on his face with the king's sandals on his feet, the king's baldrick on his shoulders, and the king's quiver at his back. I tell thee, Sarchedon, the warning lies betwixt thee and me. Let us drink a cup of wine in fellows.h.i.+p to-night; for if we go down to battle with to-morrow's dawn, one of us shall have quenched his thirst for ever by noon of day.”