Mordraud, Book One (67 page)

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Authors: Fabio Scalini

BOOK: Mordraud, Book One
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Mordraud
’s appeal rang out as final in the musty darkness of the hut. Gwern whimpered something incomprehensible. Saiden watched all the Flux threads scattered around him slacken and retreat inside.


Saiden, do you know what to do?”

Saiden
chuckled. Pinpointing where the chanters were concealed was easy for him. Potentially, exterminating them was too. If he drew on all his Flux, on all his destructive power, then the Khartian chanters caught unawares would leave themselves open to being slain with little resistance.


Yes. I’ve already located them. We just have to get there... and, if need be, fight. Instead, you... do you feel up to tackling them?”

Mordraud gr
unted and stretched his legs out in the sawdust.


I can’t wait.”

Saiden
clapped a single time.


Then we can manage it.”


Even if you’re not interested in the cause, right?” went on Mordraud.

Saiden
was caught off-guard. “I too have to endure this horrific winter, wouldn’t you say?” he attempted.


So why didn’t you take any action before?”


I’m a master of harmonies, not a warrior,” Saiden responded. “I would never have embarked on attacking Cambria’s chanters alone.”


You could have offered your services to Eldain’s army. Someone would definitely have listened to you.”


That’s enough, Mordraud,” Gwern interjected. “He’s given his word that he’ll help us. We shouldn’t be demanding more, don’t you think?”


I just wish to know why your teacher decided to intervene only when I asked for your help.”

Saiden
realised he had to be careful. The black mass marking out Mordraud’s presence suddenly seemed menacing to him.


I did it to help Gwern grow. So he could learn something new in the field.”


And what exactly?! I haven’t heard the two of you chant even once.”

Gwern, that time, didn
’t interrupt. He didn’t stop his brother. He also shared some of those doubts. He also found it hard to grasp his tutor’s behaviour and his decisions.

So far
, they’d done nothing but walk in the direction dictated by Saiden.


By tomorrow we should have the source of all the resonances within sight. He’s still not expert enough to pick up on them at such as distance...” he uttered in a calm and understanding tone. “That’s when we should be able to begin practising again.”

Gwern
ushered out a sigh of relief. He could finally see a direct purpose in that journey. Not just the enigma of not having the faintest idea of what to do. Mordraud resigned himself, slipping down onto his back to get a few hours’ rest on the floor. His empty shell still appeared vaguely threatening, but it seemed to have loosened its hold.

Saiden
left them to chat in private, losing himself in his conjectures.

He had absolutely no idea what to do to placate their demands. He did not want to actually teach
Gwern about harmonies. Their lessons were in truth endless experiments he conducted on Gwern’s core of Flux. The fact that he was learning something about the realm of resonances was a side-effect and, in a certain sense, an unwanted one. He didn’t wish to risk placing more power in the hands of a being whose essence he hadn’t fully comprehended yet. Gwern was still too great a mystery. He kept him close with the excuse of teaching him harmony – not to actually do it.

He had to
come up with a way to drive Gwern’s Flux to react even more vehemently. He had to dig up what was beneath that curious bond between the two brothers.

And
to do so, he had to take drastic action.

He already had half an idea of how to go about it
.

 

XXVI


Berg’s in a bad way.”

Adraman
felt the earth gape beneath his feet. He’d travelled day and night to shorten as far as possible the weeks of distance from Hannrinn, just to report news of his success to Eldain. A diplomatic masterpiece, and an unexpected one – particularly on his part. He’d never been very adept at following the complicated mechanisms of diplomacy, yet the emergency had made him shrewder than even he had expected of himself. However desperate the situation might seem, at least he’d earned a few precious months.

But
he never would have expected to find Eldain in that sorry state.

Berg
was stretched out on the bed, drenched in sweat and contorted by unbearable pains. The cold outside the tent was shocking, but it certainly wasn’t much better inside. He seemed gripped by a fire consuming his flesh from inside. The wound on his shoulder was blackened and swollen, and Adraman’s experience was great enough to understand that the man’s future hung by a thread. But he was more worried about Eldain.

He looked
like a corpse that insisted on standing up.

His face had lost any hint of colour, was as ashen as the grey of his hair and his once-blue eyes. His cheeks seemed hollowed out with a spoon. Stooping over
Berg’s bed, with his hands clasped over his captain’s, Eldain could easily be mistaken for a seriously ill man – like all the others. His breathing was laboured, and he struggled to keep his back straight. The winter was killing him, like a tree whose roots were slowly freezing.


You must return to Eld,” Adraman pronounced, grasping his friend by the shoulders. “You need a bit of rest.”


Ah, really?!” he replied, assenting sorrowfully. “And what about you?”


I’m fine, now.”

Adraman m
oved his still-bandaged leg and lifted the stick he used for walking. The bone was almost back to normal, and even if he still couldn’t run or jump, the worst seemed behind him.


Perhaps because you haven’t had a good look at your face.”

Eldain
took a small mirror hanging on a support in the tent and thrust it in front of him. “You’re not such a pretty sight yourself.”

Adraman
peered in alarm at the crinkled whitish skin on his face, scored with creases and red marks caused by the cold. He hadn’t looked at himself in ages. Hardly surprising really, as he’d had more pressing business to attend to.


It must be the lack of sun. It’s been a lifetime since I last saw the sun peep out from behind the clouds.”


It’s not only that... You’re tired too, like me... like everyone.”

Eldain
was right, but only partially. Adraman wasn’t in great shape, but his leader was in a far worse state. His breathing was a rough rasp, his ashen eyes were injected with a nasty dull yellow. But Adraman already knew how pointless it was trying to convince him.


How did it happen?” he inquired, pointing to poor Berg.


During an assault. They managed to get over the Rampart.”


But... how...” he stammered disbelievingly. By now he was used to Cambria’s strategies. Taunt them, exhaust them – those were the Empire’s usual tactics. The Rampart had remained inviolate for years, apparently impregnable.


A Lance helmed a raid, using a chant. Terrible resonances. Inflicting dreadful damage, awful damage...”

Eldain
took Berg’s hands again, as the captain twitched on a bed of sweat. “If it hadn’t been for him, it would have been much worse.”


The Lances have never dared do such a thing! Cambria’s too afraid of losing its best men!”


It was a surprise for all, believe me. We’re still busy patching up everything they set fire to with their bloody chanting...”


When did it happen?! Did they try it again?”


No, luckily not. The first and last attack targeting the Rampart was two weeks ago.”

Adraman
pondered for a moment on that staggering news. He couldn’t recall Cambria embarking on such a hazardous enterprise in years – so many he failed to count them. The Empire had invariably implemented a sluggish wearing strategy, one that was inconsequential at times, but always detached and patient. Brutal assaults at the front in the last ten years could be counted on the fingers of one hand, and these nevertheless involved masses and lacked strategic aim. The Night of Fire battle was an exception, but even then the Empire used its own men as a battering ram made of human flesh, compact and confident only through its crushing superior number.

It wasn
’t the only murky spot in that situation. They’d never discovered who had decided to warn them, and why, about the imminent attack that night. Adraman had found out thanks to a tip-off by a simple foot-soldier who’d fled from the mass of troops and had reached them in the camp to the south. Without him, the Rampart would never have held out.

It was a secret only he and
Eldain knew. And the reason was simple. They’d never worked out the real purpose of that unforeseen help. Whether it came from someone inside Cambria, or perhaps from an army fringe planning on a change of ruler. They didn’t know, and so preferred not to share the information.

T
he Empire was behaving wholly unpredictably. That sudden spurt seemed caused by something else. “A rash act by a Lance captain. Somebody tired of wasting time,” Eldain decided.


The message is clear,” he went on. “They can break through our lines when they want. They just need a little commitment and to do the right thing. They’ve got chanting on their side, they’re better rested than we are, and they have three or four times our number of men. Maybe more.”


So why don’t they do it?”


If I knew the answer, I wouldn’t be so concerned.”


Let’s hope it was merely their mistake... and that they go on seeing it as such,” Adraman muttered. “If they were to realise just how much damage they inflicted with a mere handful of men, it would be the end of us.”


Talking about ends...” Eldain gazed at him with an unusually resigned and defeated expression. “What did the Rinns say? Did they sell us out?”


No!” Adraman smiled, purely in an attempt to raise his morale. “I’ve earned us a few months... more or less till next spring.”


What spring?! Does spring still exist?” Eldain hissed sarcastically.


Mordraud will pull it off, you’ll see!”

Adraman
would have liked to feel convinced of his own words, but the truth was he didn’t at all. All their plans and hopes were resting on a slim clay slab. Mordraud and his brother. He’d accepted that farce simply to gain time, to bring hope to those who were so desperate as to believe it feasible. Two, against the Imperial plan of the Long Winter.


Do you remember what the sun looks like?” Eldain asked, going back to sit near Berg, who was struggling against a pain that made him thrash futilely. Adraman was unable to answer.


I no longer remember.”

***

Deanna was waiting for Adrina to return from her scouring. She watched out of her reading-room window, in the hope of seeing her emerge beyond the half-open gate. The servants had dug out a path through the snow, to reach the street, but they’d given in when finding themselves faced with a daunting white barrier between the courtyard and the villa walls. Nobody had shovelled out that stretch for weeks. Adrina had had to clamber up over the snow, until she reached the roof pitches.

Deanna
wrapped the blanket tighter around her shoulders and took the cup between her hands. It was already cold. She’d stopped having a fire in her room, to economise on wood, which was now only used in the cast-iron stove in the kitchen. She no longer slept alone: she’d accepted to spend her nights with the serving staff, on the floor, next to the table where Adrina would prepare the dinner. The rest of the house was an appalling ice cave. Outside, the wind chapped the skin. The skies were the colour of bottomless sorrow. She felt like weeping every time she poked her nose out the window.

Trees were nowhere to be seen. The fields were a white sea. Their walls
appeared as ridiculous stone stripes scoring the tops of the mounds, heaped up when Eld’s people still endeavoured to keep the roads clear. That desire to react had passed long ago. Just like cordiality and hope.

Two
servants hadn’t returned to the house, the day before.

They
’d gone out hunting for some wood. But the only way to find it was to sneak into the homes of the dead, hoping it hadn’t all already been used up. Table legs, chairs, mantelpieces, wall-panelling. Many families perished from cold before they had the time to fully bleed their homes of their few possessions. Her serving staff had already been out looting a couple of times. Without taking risks, and only coming across corpses mummified by the freeze, huddled together in pitiful embraces on the owners’ beds. But the third trip must have been fatal.

Deanna
shifted her eyes from the yard, to avoid picturing the scene.

The other
two lads were ill. A fever that left little optimism. The rest of the staff were two old men whose work was once tending a patch of land outside the walls of her property. Although Adrina was the same age as them, she was the only one in the house still with enough strength to leave it. They had a few supplies in the cellar yet, but she hoped to find some meat. Especially for the two fever-racked boys. Deanna was eating very little, and didn’t even expect to be able to at all. She’d burnt out and gone cold, like the empty belly to a disused stove. She’d heard nothing more of Adraman. Even less of Mordraud. She was alone. And she had discovered how deeply she hated that state, to the extent of sincerely missing her husband. That automatic sense of safety he conveyed to her.

Instead
Mordraud belonged to the rare moments when she still dreamt.

Sleeping in the
kitchen wasn’t so bad. She’d initially felt robbed of her authority in the house. But listening to the others’ breathing and the rustle of their blankets helped slacken panic’s grip on her. She could no longer sleep alone. It was too chill,
inside
her. She managed to push the winter out with her covers. But the solitude was irrepressible – a gruesome pain that was killing her. She’d lost weight, no longer put make-up on. Adraman, with his stoic and silly attempts to win her over, had always made her feel desirable. The way Mordraud looked at her provided her with her own sense. It allowed her to consider herself still alive.

She was possessed by
a distraught terror she might fall asleep one night, to the drone of the blizzard beyond the roof, and never wake up again. Might die and crumple to the ground, like the bodies she’d seen emerge beneath the shovels of those digging to free the roads. She didn’t want Mordraud to find her like that.

Or
Adraman. She felt bemuddled when Adrina wasn’t nearby, to ceaselessly natter to her about what she had to do to survive. Stamp your feet. Stay clean so you don’t need to wash. Damp hair could be lethal. Sleep little and often.

Without someone to guide her, she felt naturally lost.

She left the lounge and slowly descended the staircase. Another tip: never make careless movements. The cold made the bones weak. Breaking an ankle was on a par with attempting suicide. But halfway down, she heard the main door open and she suddenly stopped block still. Adrina had gone out the back. The last ones to use the front entrance were those two poor boys who’d died the day before. Deanna crouched down on the steps and peered below, between the banister railings.

For an instant, when she spied the
two men, she was tempted to rush downstairs to hug them. They’d come home, at last. Their legs were bogged down in the snow tumbling through the open door.

But
it was a mere moment of futile hope. Those two were strangers to the town. One tall, the other short and emaciated. Hollow faces with eyes drooping from eyelids. They mechanically shook the snow from their hair and began looking around.

Deanna
was crushed by fear on the freezing step.

They didn
’t utter a word. They simply gazed about. With foreheads crinkled, as if they couldn’t see their surroundings well. And frighteningly filthy. The lanky one pounced limply on a chair, at the corner of the stairs stretching up to Deanna. He raised the cushion and squeezed it between his fingers. He sniffed it. As if wondering if he could eat it. He tried to lift the seat with one hand. It was made of brass, and didn’t shift a whisper. The stunted intruder went in the opposite direction, and Deanna lost sight of him. She heard him touch the white tablecloth on the commode in the hall, with the keys and topped with flowers. A crackling of small bones. It was the dried flowers standing in a glass vase.

He was chewing them
.

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