Storm over Vallia (2 page)

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Authors: Alan Burt Akers

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy

BOOK: Storm over Vallia
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From the time before dawn when the twin suns rose in the sky, Lon had been murkily convinced that this was an evil day. He’d said as much to Nath the Goader, an intemperate and ill-humored fellow at the best of times. Nath, in charge of the wild animals and worried out of his wits by the unwelcome responsibility, had merely growled in his beard and sent Lon off with a flea in his ear, or, as Kregans say, a zorca hoof up the rump. The truth of Lon’s premonitions was here, awfully here, in this savage chavonth, and the corpses, and the blood, and the shambles outside...

The girl’s downdrawn level gaze did not waver from the chavonth.

When the thing launched itself into its lethal leap, she would be ready. Lon knew that. It was evident in every line of her body, every vibrant inch that, he saw with suddenly uncluttered eyes, was of extraordinary beauty.

Her sword did not waver.

Her left arm was held at her back, the hand hidden.

She was a Jikai Vuvushi, a Battle Maiden, and she had been riding with the cavalry at the head of the procession. No doubt these three poor corpses, all men, with the girl at the entrance-way, had been also with the advance guard. They’d spurred back to find out what the trouble was and had encountered horror.

So now this girl, this Jikai Vuvushi, faced the terror alone.

Lon swallowed again and slowly began to draw his right hand down to the awkward hilt of the main gauche thrust through his belt. Something about this girl attracted him in ways he was too wise to encourage. She was not for him. He tumbled the girls in the taverns when he could, and joyed in that. This girl possessed an aura, a flickering flame of power and allure, and she was tough. No doubt of that. She was battle-hardened.

The blood along the chavonth’s flank matching the blood on her blade proved that.

The chavonth sprang.

The girl leaped aside with such grace, such beauty of movement that the breath caught in Lon’s throat.

As she leaped and so avoided the long slashing stroke from the beast’s front claws, she struck. Her sword scored all along the animal’s fore sixth. She span about, sword blurring up for another stroke and the chavonth backed off, spitting.

“By Vox!” she said, viciously disappointed. And still her left hand remained invisibly at her back.

The hunting cat showed no interest in the three bodies on the floor. He glared from hating, slit eyes upon the living breathing form of the girl. And, again, he lifted one front paw, the claws sharp and curved and shining.

A scratching began on the door, and a hideous meowling. The other chavonth, mate to that one penned here, sought entrance. Lon felt his famous knees giving way; but still his right hand dropped cautiously lower and lower to the hilt of the left-hand dagger.

With the sudden and ferocious changes of fortune that overtake anyone who lives on the world of Kregen, the noise outside the door changed. The chavonth’s scratching ceased. The mewling screeched into a spitting snarl. Mingled with that noise another noise penetrated, a long ominous hissing.

Whether or not chavonths, or any other of the many and varied life forms represented by Kregen’s savage fauna, could communicate with one another, Lon didn’t as yet know. But the noise outside the door was easily understood within the room.

That low evil hissing was the churmod — Lon’s churmod for which he was responsible to the lord. In the next heartbeat it was all over. The snarling uproar ceased on a long screech of agony. No sound of the chavonth remained. Then, again, low and demonic, the hissing of the churmod.

What happened then Lon could not afterward well remember. His hand reached the dagger hilt and he drew ready to throw. He ranked himself as a man who could throw a knife, even one so clumsy as this left-hand dagger.

The chavonth, distraught at the death of his mate, for he had read those bestial sounds outside the door as accurately as the humans, whicked his tail and leaped.

Lon hurled the dagger.

He saw the point go into a blue patterned hexagon. He was aware of the girl’s sword sliding up and then he blinked in the abrupt blinding wink of fire, he caught a blurred impression of steel slashing, of the brilliance of the emerald and ruby suns light glancing off polished metal. The girl swung back and the sword licked again. The chavonth reeled about spouting blood, half its muzzle ripped away. One eye dangled. It screamed. The Jikai Vuvushi, very assured, very calm, stepped forward and drove her sword deeply into the beast’s side. That blade, Lon knew, and trembled, had burst through the savage heart and stilled its beating forever.

Strangely, without speaking, the girl turned her back on Lon the Knees. A brown canvas strap and sack thumped against her side. She swung about to face him, the sword dripping red in her fist.

She spoke evenly enough, yet lightly, on a breath, as though the horror of the past moments had not been so easily disposed of in the thrust of a sword.

“I give you my thanks, dom. Your name?”

“Why, my lady — it is Lon the Knees—”

“Yes.”

And she smiled. And Lon the Knees was overwhelmed.

He licked his lips and swallowed and got out: “My lady! You have slain a chavonth! It is a great jikai!”

He would not dare, naturally, to ask her name in return.

Her smile did not falter.

“A little jikai, perhaps, Lon the Knees. To gain the great jikai, let alone the High Jikai, one must do far more than this. Far more.”

He opened his mouth, and she went on: “Now give me a hand with this young lord. His companions are dead, which is unfortunate for them, although no doubt somewhere in this land of Rahartdrin someone is giving thanks to Opaz for this eventuality.”

Lon didn’t follow all this; but he stepped across, knees trembling, and helped to raise up one of the corpses.

This body was clad in gorgeous clothes of a nature that, while they filled Lon with envy, filled him also with repugnance.

As though inconsequentially, she said: “You throw a cunning knife, Lon.”

“Aye, my lady.”

“It did the trick. Gave me time — hold his arm, the idiot keeps on falling over — now, you young lord, open your damned eyes!” She slapped the corpse around the face and, lo!, the corpse’s eyes opened.

“Help!” The puffy lips shook as the man screamed.

The girl shook his shoulder. “It is all over! You are safe, Jen
[1]
Cedro.”

This young lord Cedro in the foppish gaudy clothes took some time to calm down. He was sick. His eyes, of a pale transparency so unlike the normal deep Vallian brown, stared vacantly at the room, the dead chavonth, his two dead companions. He shuddered and vomited again.

Only now, this close to the girl as he helped with this petulant young lord, was Lon aware of the blood scored along the rip in her black leathers. The slash from razor-sharp claws bloodied her left shoulder. That, Lon surmised, was why she’d held her left hand at her back.

“My lady! You are hurt—”

“A scratch. As soon as I’ve handed Jen Cedro over I’ll have the needle lady attend to it.”

“At least let me bind it up—”

“Don’t fuss, Lon the Knees.”

He felt chastened, and so said no more.

“That damned churmod is still prowling about outside.” She sounded fretful and just as savage as the damned churmod. “I don’t fancy having to go up against her with—”

“My lady! That would be madness!”

“Oh, aye, by Vox, absolute madness. So I won’t.”

“Thank the good Opaz!”

“We’ll sit tight in here and wait until Kov Vodun sorts out the whole stupid mess. You can tell me about yourself.”

So he told her, not that there was much to tell. Orphaned at an early age and sent to work on a farm, been looking after animals all his life. His twin brother, Nol, gone for a mercenary slinger and who might have any sobriquet now, a source of ever-present foreboding.

“Why, Lon?”

“Soldiers get themselves killed, my lady.”

“Oh, aye, they do that. But then, so do beast-handlers who don’t know their job.”

“My lady!” Lon was aware of deep disappointment that he should not have felt. The great ones of the land would always blame someone other than themselves. “I am not trained to handle wild beasts — give me a Quoffa, or a mytzer, a zorca or—”

“I know, Lon. I am not blaming you. Far from it.”

“They should not have put the captives so near the wild beasts, and—”

“And the cages were ludicrous. Yes, I guessed that. But, Lon the Knees, do you not think it strange that so many wild animals escaped — all at once?”

“I saw the churmod break the bars. It was frightening.”

“Assuredly. Yet I suspect that a hand loosened the bars of the cages — not yours, Lon, believe me, I did not intend to mean that.”

Oddly enough, given his usual attitude to the high and mighty of the world, Lon believed her, believed she spoke the truth. She was, he could see, a most remarkable young lady.

“You do not ask my name, Lon.”

“That is beyond my reach, my lady, as you know.”

“Oh — I see. Yes. I am a Jikai Vuvushi and am used to rough ways. Well then, Lon the Knees, I am Lyss the Lone — well, that is one name by which I am known.”

Very gravely, Lon said: “Llahal and Lahal, Lyss the Lone. Now we have made pappattu properly.”

“Lahal, Lon.”

So the introductions were made.

Lord Cedro groaned and started to roll over so Lyss the Lone pushed him away to avoid his own vomit.

Added to the rank smell of blood in the chamber the sour stink of Cedro’s sick gave Lon a queasy sensation, he who was used to the stenches of a farmyard!

Lyss walked to the window and looked out. She shook her head.

“The beasts still stalk arrogantly. There is no sign of a human being — alive, that is.”

“Oh,” said Lon.

“The kov will be rounding up his people now. Pretty soon they’ll come back and try to round up the beasts—”

“I should be there to help them.”

“You will stay here and help me.”

“Quidang, my lady.”

“So you never wanted to go for a mercenary, then?”

“Oh, I went off with my brother Nol. They took him for a slinger; me they sent home, laughing. But I was in one army for a time, looking after the totrixes.”

“Someone has to, otherwise the army would not ride.”

Nervously, trading on this amazing friendship he sensed between them, Lon ventured: “And you, my lady. You have been in many famous battles?”

“Some.”

“A — I see...”

“A battle is a battle, Lon. A messy business.”

“Yes, my lady.”

The idea that a battlefield was not exactly the right place for a young lady could only occur to Lon the Knees, or any of his contemporaries, as it might apply to one particular girl, one prized loved one. Girls had always fought in battles, and the Jikai Vuvushi regiments were justly feared.

Lon was perfectly content, now, to sit tight in this chamber and wait for Kov Vodun to come for them. That the kov would come, Lon felt no doubt. Now he knew this young and unpleasant lord was Jen Cedro, he knew him to be one of Kov Vodun’s nephews. If the foppish idiot was valued by his uncle, then rescue would not be long delayed. Thus reasoned Lon the Knees.

Also, and in this Lon felt unsure, he would meet the kov, face to face. Vodun Alloran might lord it over wide lands; the common folk could hope to see him barely more than a handful of times during their lives. The great ones of the earth rode past in a glitter of gold amid the trumpets and banners; the common herd cheered from the crowds and saw only what the dazzlement in their eyes allowed.

Assured that Cedro was still alive, Lyss the Lone did not seem bothered that he relapsed into unconsciousness. She sat on one of the chairs twisted to face the windows. She sat still and trim in her black leathers, and Lon felt the pang strike through him. If only...!

Well, jolly fat Sendra down at The Leather Bottle had been kind to him in the past, and he could always shut his eyes and dream.

Noise and fresh uproar in the street told that at last rescue had arrived. The clatter of hooves, the screeching fury of wild beasts skewered and feathered, the high yells of men and women drunk on slaying, filtered in through the window. Lyss stood up. She hitched her rapier and main gauche around, picked up her other sword, solid and powerful, and started for the door.

“My lady!” Lon was alarmed to such an extent he scared himself at the intensity of his own feelings.

“Well?”

“You cannot — I mean — why go out now?”

“I am a Jikai Vuvushi.”

Lon stiffened his spine.

“Aye! And like to be a dead one if you go outside that door now — my lady.”

Thankfully, she did not say: “And you would care?” Such banality, they both recognized, had long since vanished between them. She smiled that dazzling smile.

“I believe your justified concern no longer applies — listen!”

From outside the door the sounds of the churmod’s death hissed in, and Lon had no difficulty visualizing the hail of bolts from the crossbows, sleeting in to shred and bloody that ghostly silvery-blue hide.

Lyss opened the door.

“Hai! The lord Cedro is here, unharmed. Hurry, famblys, and take him up carefully, for he is beloved of the lord kov.”

Men and women wearing a variety of colorful uniforms entered the room, and at once began to attend to Cedro. Lon stared at the open doorway.

Vodun Alloran, Kov of Kaldi, conqueror of this island of Rahartdrin, entered. Lon stared, fascinated, quite unaware of his own peril in thus staring so openly at a great lord.

Alloran looked the part. His clothes were sumptuous, for he no longer wore the normal Vallian buff tunic and breeches; golden wire, lace, feathers and folderols smothered him in magnificence. His shrewd, weather-beaten face contained harshness engraved as a habit, and the bright brown Vallian eyes, partially hidden by down-drooping lids, revealed a little of the fury of ambition seething within him.

He wore an aigrette, the feathers of maroon and gray, the colors of Kaldi, and the golden device, that of a leaping sea-barynth, a long and sinuous monster of Kregen’s seas. His own personal retainers wore sleeves banded in maroon and gray in the old style of Vallia. He stared about from under those drooping eyelids, and Lon abruptly switched his gaze to Lyss.

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