Read Land of the Silver Dragon Online
Authors: Alys Clare
With a sick certainty, I understood where he had been.
They must have put up a fight, my family. They wouldn't have stood by while little Leir and the baby Ailsi were hurt; that I knew as well as I knew my own name.
Hurt
. What a poor, inadequate word for what Skuli had vowed to do to them.
I stood quite still, forcing myself to stare right into those mad eyes. I was too late; my resolution to end my own life to save that of my brother and my nephew could no longer avail either of them. Somewhere deep inside me a great wail of agony was growing; a river of grief, for Leir, for Ailsi, for Hrype, bleeding out his life on the track behind me.
I said, quite surprised by how calm I sounded, âI haven't got it, Skuli.'
His face darkened, as if the flesh had filled with his own black blood. âBut you have discovered where it is,' he said firmly. Perhaps he thought that if he spoke with enough conviction, it would make the statement true.
I shook my head. âI haven't.'
His brows drew together. His face was thunderous now. âYou have been absent from your village all day,' he said, his voice icy. âWhere else have you been, other than to fulfil your mission?'
I hesitated. Ought I to tell him? I could see no reason not to; there was nobody else left to be hurt by my failure, so I might as well share it with him. There was always the faint hope that his fury might set off the sort of apoplectic seizure that kills a man stone dead. With his loyal band of men all around, Skuli's death wouldn't help me, but at least there would be one less murderous devil in the world.
âI went to find the little healer,' I said softly. âI found out where she lived, and I walked all the way. But she wasn't a healer, she was a shepherd. And she was dead,' I added with vindictive emphasis. âIf she ever knew about your shining stone, Skuli â and I doubt very much that she did â then I got there too late to ask her.'
He was shaking his head slowly from side to side, as if in denial of my words. âNo,' he said, â
no
. She must have hidden it somewhere ...' Wildly he turned to look at his men, ranged around him. âWe'll go to this place you found, find her house, take it apart until we find the hiding place, andâ'
â
She never had it
,' I said loudly, speaking over his rising panic. âAren't you listening, Skuli? The only small clue I had regarding the stone's whereabouts has proved useless.' I felt my face stretch in a smile. âYou will
never
get your filthy hands on it.'
As I watched, I saw something break in him. He opened his mouth, but no words emerged. He raised his great head, eyes staring up into the sky. He muttered something â it sounded as if he was apologizing â but I could not make out the words.
A tear spilled out of his eye, running down his face to lose itself in his beard.
Then, abruptly, he returned from whatever dark place his thoughts had taken him to. He nodded at the two men holding me, and they forced me to my knees.
Then Skuli drew a large knife from its sheath on his belt. He held it up to the growing light, and its edge glistened. I could tell, all too clearly, that it was very, very sharp.
With a strangely detached part of my mind, I wondered where Thorfinn and Einar were, and the crew of Einar's ship. They had promised to watch over me, but now, in the time of greatest danger, they were nowhere to be seen. I was on my own.
I concentrated on sending out my love. To my sisters and my brothers; to my beloved Edild; to Hrype. To my mother; to my father. As his face appeared before me, I whispered, âI am sorry, Father.'
If he was by some miracle still alive, he would grieve for me the most deeply. I imagined his big, strong arms around me; I imagined reaching up to kiss his dear face.
I sent all the rest of my love to Rollo.
I'm scared
, I admitted, saving the confession for him.
I'm terrified. I'm going to die, and I shall never see you again. I'm very afraid it's going to hurt, and I don't know what's going to be waiting on the other side.
I saw my Granny. Quite clearly, standing just behind Skuli on the track. She smiled at me.
With her dear face a clear, final image, I closed my eyes and waited for death.
In the village, a small group of bloodstained, stunned men watched the sun come up. As soon as they could, they were going to hurry along to the church. Nights like the one just past did not come very often, and they felt an urgent need to kneel before their God.
They had been ready. As night fell, their leader had gathered together his eldest son and some of the toughest of his friends, warning them what would happen. âNone of you must feel compelled to stay,' he had said. âYou have families of your own, and do not need to suffer wounding or death to defend mine.'
Everyone had stayed.
The attack had come with horrible suddenness. The big, bearded men seemed surprised to have met such opposition. They fought back hard, but they had been beaten off. Besides, once they had seen that only grown men (and one large, furious woman armed with a heavy iron pot) had been in the house, they had turned and fled.
Now all was quiet. Now the ragged band of defenders waited for whatever the new day would bring.
âA
nd I can't see how our future together will be, if, indeed, we can ever be together, for she has her studies, both in her village and in a nearby town, and I am fully engaged in work for an exacting but generous paymaster, and soâ'
Rollo broke off in mid-sentence, seized by cold fear so paralysing that it was only with an effort that he could breathe. Lassair. Oh,
no
... He could see fragmented images. A road, faintly lit by the rising sun. A blur of shapes, which were moving with swift, violent gestures. The glint of light on drawn swords.
It was early morning, and his mother had arrived with breakfast on a tray, wanting to hear more about the strange woman with whom her son had apparently fallen in love. He had thought he'd told her all there was to tell the previous evening, when they had talked together long into the night. Yet she had returned for more, and he had been trying to answer her question as to what he and Lassair planned to do next, when the terrible moment of fear had hit.
He sat now, straight-backed, every muscle tense as if he was about to plunge into action. He had felt something similar on his way home the previous day, yet it had been nowhere near as powerful as this.
He knew, without stopping to ask himself how he could be so sure, that Lassair was about to die.
And there was nothing he could do about it.
Barely aware of himself, he gave a moan of pain. Instantly Giuliana was beside him, a cool hand on his wrist, looking up into his face with anxious dark eyes. âWhat is it, my son?'
He met her gaze. Of all people, she was perhaps the one most likely to believe what was happening to him. Whether or not she was truly a
strega
, she was certainly open-minded enough not to dismiss it out of hand.
âLassair's in great danger â mortal danger,' he whispered. âI think ...' He could not bring himself to put it into words.
Beside him Giuliana waited, holding his hand. He felt the aftershocks of the terror work their way through him, and, glancing at his mother's face, he thought she felt them too. Then, abruptly, everything went still.
Calm, of a sort, descended.
After what seemed a very long time, Giuliana said, âWhat are you sensing now, Rollo?'
âNothing.' His voice broke on the word.
His mother squeezed his hand. âPerhaps the moment of peril has passed?' she suggested.
He thought it was a faint hope. He said, his voice barely a whisper, âOr else it is all over and she isâ'
But his mother put a hand over his mouth before he spoke the word. âNo,' she said firmly. âDo not even admit the possibility.'
He felt a moment of anger. âIt is better to know if sheâ'
â
No
.' Giuliana spoke more forcefully now. âMy son, you are many miles from this young woman whom you love, and it will be a very long time before you know what has been happening back in her country. You must convince yourself that all is well, and not allow yourself even to consider otherwise.'
He met her eyes for a long moment. âI want to go now,' he whispered. Pain ripped through him; sudden, acute. â
Aaagh
, I feel as if I'm being torn apart.'
Compassion filled her eyes. âCan you not return?' she asked.
âI could,' he said, âbut my task here is not really complete. I was planning to go on east, and seek audience with Emperor Alexius.'
She nodded. âYes, that would be the logical thing to do,' she agreed. âHis land is at the frontier between the Christian and Muslim worlds, and, besieged as he is, will be better able to provide the answers that your King William seeks to know.'
Rollo would have said he was beyond surprise at his mother's uncanny ability to be aware of things that she had not actually been told, but he discovered he wasn't. How did she do it? He had no more idea now than when he'd been a mystified and awestruck child, more than a little frightened by his mother's magic powers.
She was watching him steadily. âWhat do you feel now?'
He closed his eyes, concentrating on Lassair. âI ... it's not clear.'
She sighed, and ran a hand over her face. Then, once more looking at him, she said, âHave you anything of hers?'
He glanced down at his hand. The woven leather bracelet she had given him had not left his wrist since he began to be so very anxious about her. âYes,' he said softly.
Giuliana looked at the bracelet. âIt is beautiful,' she observed. âDid she make it?'
âYes.'
Silently she held out her hand. He drew his own away; he did not want to take off the bracelet. Not now ...
His mother made an exasperated noise. âIf you want me to help you, son, I need to hold an object that holds her essence.'
âIf I want you to help me?' he repeated stupidly. Had she suggested it? Had he missed that?
She was holding out her hand. Mutely he removed the bracelet and placed it in her palm. Her long fingers folded around it and she closed her eyes.
The cool, sunlit room was utterly silent as Giuliana put herself into the required trance.
I knelt before Skuli, waiting for the sword cut that would end my life.
Nothing happened.
I did not dare open my eyes, for I was clinging on to my courage with my fingertips, and if I saw the sword raised above me, I knew my terror would overcome me and I would somehow disgrace myself.
I waited for death.
Then, breaking the terrible silence like a great sheet of ice cracking under stress, I heard a clash of arms, swiftly followed by a shout: a great war cry. There were whoops and yells, and the harsh, metallic sound of metal on metal.
I opened my eyes, but my fear had affected me so deeply that what I saw made no sense. There seemed to be men everywhere; big, burly men, most of them long-haired and bearded, many wearing leather protective gear, all of them bearing swords. They were fighting â desperately, fiercely.
And
very
close to where I knelt.
Faint, my head spinning and vertigo rising like nausea in my throat, I threw myself sideways and scrambled to the side of the track. I managed to crawl up the bank that rose up to the right, and forced a way in beneath the scrubby, stunted trees that made up the hedge. Then I turned to watch.
Already recovering at least a portion of my senses, I realized, not without surprise, that I recognized some of the newcomers. I'd seen that stubble-headed giant with the tattoos on his arms before; I was quite sure of it.
I put my slowness down to the fact that I'd just had a very close embrace with death. The men were Einar's crew; of course they were. Even as understanding dawned, there was Einar himself, pounding down the track, yelling at the top of his voice, his sword in his hand already dripping blood from some recently accomplished, victorious encounter.
Skuli was engaged with one of Einar's men, and the man was getting the worst of it. Einar shouted at him and, although I didn't understand all the words, the meaning was clear:
get away from him, he's mine!
The crewman stepped back â a swift expression of relief crossed his bloody face â and Einar stepped into his place.
Part of me wanted to watch, but I'd never seen close fighting before and soon I realized, sickened, that watching wasn't such a good idea after all. I turned away from the savage ferocity of Einar and Skuli's battle, only to be met with the same sight everywhere I looked.
Then, horrified that it hadn't occurred to me before, I remembered Hrype. Where was he? Frantically I stared down the track to where he had fallen, but he was no longer there. His blood still stained the ground, although the smooth pool it had formed was already scuffed and smeared.
He could not still be alive. Could he? He must have been carried to the side of the track, for I was certain he could not have made his own way.
I edged along the top of the bank, searching for him. He must be on this side, I reasoned, for on the other side the ground was soggy and sloped quite steeply down into the water. It was no place to take a wounded man.
But all right for a dead body
, came the thought.
No!
I hurried on.
I could see something on the bank just ahead of me: a long shape, lying on its side on the bank and wrapped in a cloak.
I leapt forward, already fumbling with the buckles of my satchel. I knelt down beside him, my hand going straight to his neck to feel for the life's beat that pulses there, beneath the angle of the jaw. At first I felt nothing. Then my trembling fingers felt a very faint movement.
He was alive.
Gently I turned him over so that I could see his face. His eyes were closed and there was a big bump on his forehead. It was likely, I decided, that he had struck a rock on the track as he fell.