Read A Victory for Kregen Online
Authors: Alan Burt Akers
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Adventure, #Fiction
“I hope there is no murder.”
“So do I.”
A low whistle cut the dimness. We moved forward. Kaldu stood over the unconscious body of a Khibil guard. A Fristle slumbered at his side. Kaldu held his sword very purposefully.
“There are two vollers, my lady. And the third for the hyr-paktun.”
She looked at me, swiftly. “Kaldu dubs you a hyr-paktun and he has an eye for these things. Do you wear the pakzhan at your throat, Jak the Sturr?”
“I have done so, in my time, my lady.”
“So be it. Then let us board — and woe betide the laggard!”
“Now, just a minute—” began Tyfar.
She turned on him like a zhantilla turning to meet the rush of a leem.
“Tyfar! Fambly! Get aboard and fly — the guards will not wait for your waiting.”
“My lady, you treat me hard—”
“Now Krun save me from a pretty-speechifying ninny!” she said, and swung her leg over the voller’s coaming. That fancy sensil robe split down and revealed her long russet-clad leg. She was in the voller in a twinkling and Kaldu at her side.
I said to Tyfar, “Take your voller, Tyfar, and let us go.”
“What a — a girl!” stuttered Tyfar.
What a girl, indeed!
As the three vollers touched down on the grass and then ghosted in under the trees out of chance sight from the air, I felt relief that we had carried it off successfully. Tyfar leaped down from his craft, leaving Nath to assist Barkindrar. Such is the way of unheeding princes. I was watching Tyfar.
A shadow moved under the trees and the moons’ glitter caught on the blade that pressed against his breast.
I started to leap down, dragging the thraxter free, when Tyfar said, “What? What? Oh — yes, I understand, Modo.”
The Pachak’s tail hand quivered and the blade vanished in shadow.
I came up with them, pretty sharpish, and Modo, seeing me, said, “Jak. A word from San Quienyin. He wishes you to call him Naghan and not to let these new people know he is a Wizard of Loh.”
“Very well. If it is his wish.”
The others crowded forward and Hunch and Nodgen came up, and the pappattu was made, and Quienyin had forsaken his blue robes and doffed that turban, and stood forth in a simple brown tunic —
admittedly, there was a touch of silver braid at throat and hem — to be introduced as Naghan.
“Naghan what?” said Jaezila in her sweet voice, not at all rudely. She smiled and charmed old Quienyin clean through.
“Naghan the Dodderer, some folk call me, my lady. But, for you, the name Naghan the Seeing is more seemly. If it pleases you, my lady.”
I marveled. Such humbleness from a Wizard of Loh!
“It pleases me, Naghan the Seeing. And I am famished—”
“My lady!” And Hunch was there, grimacing away, filled with enormous desires to be of help to this imperious and lovely lady, who had appeared at our camp from the shadows.
We ate the viands we had, and none that we had brought from Khorunlad, alas.
“We rest for two burs,” declared Tyfar. “And then we fly. And we will let our fluttrells go free. They will bring joy to whoever finds them.”
“If they do not fly wild, Tyfar, as anyone would who had to support your—”
“Whatever happens to the fluttrells,” I said, “they deserve well of us. Now, rest us all — and I shall stand the first watch.”
Tyfar and Jaezila glared hotly, one at the other. I sighed. Bantam cocks — and a bantam hen, by Krun!
The Maiden with the Many Smiles shed down her fuzzy pink light as we took off into the soft night air.
Tyfar expressed himself as mightily pleased that Jaezila elected to fly with me.
“For if I have to endure the barbs of her tongue,” he said, “I swear by the names I shall—” And then Jaezila, climbing up beside me, smiled down, and Tyfar was struck dumb.
So we flew over the sleeping face of Kregen beneath the moons. Two of the lesser moons hurtled close by above. The night air breathed sweet and cool. The windrush in my face, my hair blowing, ah, yes —
and a glorious girl at my side! Well, she was not Delia, my Delia of Delphond, my Delia of the Blue Mountains; but I felt then they would be well-matched, and that, in all soberness, by Zair, was a strange feeling for me.
She talked a little, small inconsequential matters, of her mother whom she loved dearly, and her brothers and sisters, although she did not mention their names. It would have been all too easy to slide into confidences, and to have spilled out my own near-despairing feelings about my own children. But I did not. I purported to come from Hamal, and must therefore watch my tongue.
Hunch and Nodgen sat in the body of the voller. We fleeted on our way north and east toward the empire of my enemies.
And I had to make a decision. I was going to stop by South Pandahem and drag Turko the Shield out of his fairground booth. Then I would look in on Vallia, just, I assured myself, to make sure the place was on an even keel. I felt a traitor even to think it might not be with Drak at the helm. And then it would be Hyrklana for me.
“You are pensive, Jak the Storr.”
“Aye, my lady. I am thinking that I shall have to leave you and Tyfar soon.”
“Oh!” she flared. “Why link my name with that ninny’s?”
“Now, young lady,” I said, and I heard my voice harden, “you are altogether too harsh on Tyfar. He is a young man with high ideals and great notions of honor—”
“Like to make a laughingstock of himself—”
“That is true. But, at the least, laughingstock or no, he will not be shamed.”
She cocked her head at me. The moons’ light caught her hair and sheened soft brown and fuzzy pink.
“No. I think you are right. But he is so — so—”
“Gallant?”
“Very well.” And she laughed, her head thrown back. “A gallant ninny!”
We flew on into the blaze of dawn when the twin suns, Far and Havil, rose and the land came alive with color. Tyfar, in the lead voller, pointed down. Below us a small stream wended between wooded uplands. Some two dwaburs ahead, almost lost to sight, the towers of a city or fortress rose from the trees. Below us, by the stream, a clearing offered a landing place. Down we went.
Making camp, with the vollers pulled into the shelter of the trees, and a circumspect fire going, we surveyed our paltry rations and resigned ourselves to going hungry. The Pachaks glided into the woods to find game. Hunch brewed tea. Barkindrar, wounded leg or not, went off by the river to sling at birds.
Nath the Shaft and I stood watch.
Presently this Deb-Lu-Quienyin, whom we now called Naghan the Seeing, approached. He looked thoughtful.
“Tyfar and Jaezila and Kaldu are for Hamal. I would like very much now to go to Vallia. But — what of you, Jak?”
“You know. South Pandahem.”
“Yes. I followed your adventures in Khorunlad, a little, a few quick observations in lupu to make sure you were all right. I can tell you I was heartily glad you came out safely.”
I favored him with a searching look. His face that had, since he’d regained his powers, lost a deal of those lines and wrinkles, was now down-drawn in fatigue. The smudges under his eyes, bruised purple, were new.
“You are tired, Quienyin?”
“Aye, Jak. By the Seven Arcades! Since our little trip with Monsters and Moders I do think... I need to sleep in a soft bed for a whole season.”
“That can be arranged in Vallia.”
“So? I shall go, and, I sincerely trust, with your blessing. But you?”
“Give me a look out, from time to time,” I said, lightly, thinking nothing of the words, trying to jolly him along. He was very down and I wondered why. “I shall pull out with a whole skin, never fear.”
He shook his head.
“From anyone else, I would take that as boasting, Jak—”
I was dutifully repentant. “And from me, also, I confess.”
“Mayhap.”
I drew a breath. “I have known other Wizards of Loh. Some I account good friends and others, as you know, as foe-men. But for none have I felt... Even Khe-Hi... It is strange. I would never have believed it of a Wizard of Loh. But it is, and I joy in the gift.”
He smiled. “And I, too — Jak.”
Again, that hesitation before the name. A deliberate hesitation? Yes, by Vox, I said to myself. Oh, yes...
The Pachaks came back with game, and Barkindrar with a half-dozen birds, and Hunch got busy by the fire. Nodgen helped. Barkindrar stretched out with a grunt of relief, sticking his wounded leg before him like a crutch itself. Nath bent to him and Jaezila came across, imperious and commanding, ordering this and that, and mightily tender as she unwrapped the bandages to attend to the Bullet’s leg. I noticed that Kaldu remained always near his lady, ready to leap instantly to her defense. As a retainer, he was invaluable. Tyfar stood by as Jaezila worked on his man, and the cooking smells began to waft up. It was a pretty scene, there in the woodland, not quite Arden, perhaps, but very much a scene as I would like it on two worlds.
Now appeared a good opportunity to inspect the vollers we had liberated. I used this euphemism quite deliberately, to cloak the mischief we might have wrought in the desperate straits of our own needs. Two of these craft would go eventually to Vallia, and only one to Hamal. The Khorundese craft bulked far more blockily than the petal-shaped vollers of comparable size manufactured in Hamal or Hyrklana. They were profusely ornamented. I had felt the handling of the example I had flown to be clumsier than I was used to, not so quick in response to the levers of control. But, more primitive though they might be, they flew.
The food was served and we ate, a quite unbalanced diet; but succulent. Then I drew the Pachak twins aside.
“Brothers Fre-Da,” I addressed them seriously. “San Quienyin is for Vallia. Would you consider accompanying him?”
They looked, one at the other, each waiting a sign.
I went on, “I can assure you he will be received with honor in Vondium. As will you.”
“Will there be honorable employment for us there, Jak?”
I pulled my lip. “I am told the Emperor of Vallia no longer employs mercenaries to fight for his country.”
“This word,” said Logu Fre-Da, “we have heard.”
“With acrimony among the paktunsa,” elaborated Modo Fre-Da.
“It would not be seemly to allow the San to travel alone. I think if you give your nikobi, Vallia will welcome you royally. And there are many Pachaks who now call Vallia home.”
The twins looked at each other again and the looks said it all. They nodded. “This we will do.”
“Good.” I felt relieved. “Then that is settled.”
Nodgen returned to camp then bearing two huge armfuls of paline branches, and we all fell on the yellow cherry-like fruits with delight. So the day passed. Any good Kregan likes his eight good square meals a day — six at a pinch. But, as I say, our meals were woefully unbalanced. The suns began to sink.
The ostentatious way in which Prince Tyfar and Jaezila each avoided the other’s company amused me.
We were given a demonstration again of her prowess with the bow, for she hauled the bow off her shoulder, nocked the shaft, and let fly, and the bird that had been fleeting across the clearing fell plump down alongside Hunch. He jumped a foot.
“By Tryflor!” He grabbed the bird by the neck and swung it about, so that the arrow whirled. “It would not surprise me if the bird descended already plucked and stuffed for the fire!”
We all laughed.
Shadows of russet and sea green lay across the clearing. The Suns of Scorpio plunged into banks of ocher and rose clouds, and the broad bulk of Kregen rolled up to enfold them once more in night. The vollers were brought out from under the trees.
Barkindrar the Bullet declared roundly that, by the Resplendent Bridzilkelsh, he could get his leg up into the voller without assistance. He climbed in awkwardly. Nath the Shaft hovered over him. Tyfar was in the cabin stowing away his armor. At the second voller the Pachaks were stowing their gear and organizing the meticulous arrangements for their new employer to whom they had given their nikobi, and Quienyin was leaning on the coaming watching me walk across to him. I made up my mind.
“Hunch! Nodgen!”
“Jak?”
“You will fly with San Quienyin.”
“But—!”
“I shall see you soon. But I value the protection you, together with the twins, can afford the San.”
“Oh, of course,” said Hunch, crossly. “We can look after him all right.”
“So long as there is somewhere to run away, eh, Hunch?” And Nodgen guffawed. But there was no malice in him. He had seen how his comrade Hunch could fight, as had I.
“Up with you,” I said.
The good-byes were made. Tyfar came over with the others and we all called the Remberees...
Quienyin and those four men to look after him lifted away in the voller into the darkling shadows. The suns were nearly gone.
Tyfar hurried back to finish stowing his armor. He had picked up a fine harness and cared for it. Jaezila and Kaldu stood looking over the coaming of the foredeck beside the control levers. I started for the remaining flier. Then I halted and swung back. I wanted a final word with Jaezila and Tyfar both, some jumbled notions in my old vosk skull of a head of trying to get them to see reason, one with the other.
When Jaezila arrived in Ruathytu that young lady would discover that the gallant ninny Tyfar was a Prince of Hamal.
A twinge of disappointment that I would miss that entertaining spectacle afforded me resigned amusement.
From under the shadows of the trees men broke in a long savage line of twinkling steel and bared teeth.
They yelled war cries as they charged. They raced for the voller where Jaezila’s bow slapped into her fist. I stood halfway between the voller and the thrusting line of foemen.
“Run, Jak!” screamed Jaezila.
There was no time to reach either of the fliers.
I unlimbered the thraxter and swung about.
“Take off!” I bellowed.
The men running in with such headlong ferocity were a mix of races. I cast a swift look back. Jaezila was about to leap over the coaming to join me. There was no sign of Tyfar.