Target Of The Orders (Book 3) (4 page)

BOOK: Target Of The Orders (Book 3)
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Elman closed the box, but did not latch it. He looked Garrick in the eye, and spoke to the rest of the room with a voice that was cold, and even.

“Kill them,” he said.

As he spoke, the window across the room exploded inward.

Chapter 5

A lamp of burning oil flew across the room. Flames spewed over the table and floor before catching on the drapery and running up to the ceiling. Outside, wizards dressed in black cast magic, their faces covered with dark kerchiefs.

A rumbling explosion belched forth from someplace distant.

The mages in the room broke and scattered for cover, and the spell that bound Garrick tight was suddenly gone.

He whirled and cast a bolt of energy at Elman.

The Lectodinian matched his magic, and the two sorceries met with an explosion that rent the air and caused the box with the viceroy’s pet inside to skitter across the tabletop.

Elman grabbed for it, but missed, and the egg slipped out, tumbling to hit the floor with a muted crunch.

A creature crawled from the shell.

It was small and dark, with a slick wetness to it. It smelled of rotten fruit so strong that everyone in the room gagged. The creature splayed itself over the floor, then crouched and shot forward to latch onto a wizard’s face.

Darien, wasting no time, grabbed a wizard’s sword and swung at the Lectodinian closest to him.

The mage cast green flame, but Darien still managed to skewer him.

“Come on,” he cried, running to the door.

Garrick followed.

They found themselves outside the mages’ headquarters.

Sorcerous fire filled the streets, and the odors of Koradictine magic merged with Lectodinian spell work, and it merged with another aroma, too; the strange and wild flavor of Torean magic that was equal parts bitter and sweet.

Garrick set his gates and cast raw energy at mages, guards, or anything else that moved. Now that he was free, his magic rolled over him. He felt the entirety of the city as if he was everywhere at the same time.

A black-garbed mage came through the alleyway, then another, both covered head to toe with only their eyes exposed. They moved with catlike grace and militaristic precision, exposing themselves long enough to cast spells, then ducking back to shelter before rushing to new locations.

Toreans, he thought.

Or at least definitely
not
Lectodinians and not Koradictines.

Garrick and Darien ran.

Citizens scurried for cover

A fiery explosion tore through the headquarters and set the Koradictine banner ablaze. An animalistic growl rumbled from inside the building, and a terrified scream ripped the air.

The viceroy’s pet was on a rampage.

How quickly would it grow?

How far would its rage take it?

Garrick's attention was drawn by a Koradictine preparing to attack an unsuspecting Torean. Without conscious thought, Garrick loosed a bolt of pure life force, and the Koradictine quite literally disintegrated.

A black-clad mage motioned them toward an alley.

“Do you want to stay and fight?” Darien asked.

“No,” Garrick said.

They ran to the alley, and found two of the dark mages waiting with horses.

“Mount up,” one said.

Garrick recognized her voice, then her eyes.

“Suni?”

“In the flesh.”

“So your friends are?”

“The Freeborn, of course. Get on the damned horse.”

“Why am I not surprised?” Garrick said.

“Get your people away from that house,” Darien yelled as he mounted. “There’s a creature in there. I have no idea exactly what it is, but I’m certain none of us want to be anywhere near it.”

Sunathri nodded, then blew a piercing two-toned whistle.

The Toreans fell back in a coordinated retreat.

“Let’s go,” she said.

“Where’s Kalomar?” he asked.

“Who?”

“My horse. I promised I would keep him safe.”

“How in the gods’ names should I know where a horse is? Now, shut up and get going!”

“It’s important to me.”

“It’s time to go, Garrick,” Darien said, leading him toward the horses Sunathri had provided.

As if by its own decision, Garrick’s energy rose to scry the city. He sensed fear and confusion—but mostly he felt the cold black essence of Hersha Padiglio’s pet in the middle of the headquarters. Just the touch of the creature’s aura was enough to make Garrick want to retch. Its strength overpowered everything around it, and he could not discern anything new about the city.

He got no read on Kalomar, however, and no read on Will, the stable boy.

Garrick grimaced.

Darien was right, they had to leave now. But he would come back after things had settled, and he would find both the horse and the boy if he could.

He mounted up, then dug his heels into the flanks of his horse and hung on as they raced through the streets. Another blood-curdling screech came as they reached the outskirts of town.

The confusion of the moment made their retreat easier than it might otherwise have been.

They entered the woods, and rode even farther before Sunathri brought them to a halt. With a moment to breathe, Garrick and Darien found there were just five Torean wizards with them.

“Five mages can create such a stir?” Darien said.

Sunathri removed her wrap. “Surprise can be a powerful advantage if you use it well.”

Darien nodded. “And I would say you did just that.”

“Not well enough,” she said as she turned to Garrick. “We lost two men. I hope you’re worth it.”

Chapter 6

The Freeborn moved through the forest like ghosts. They were alert to each wild call, noted each bird that flitted from branch to branch, and examined each print of a rabbit or doe or creature of prey that crossed over this ground. Darien, too, worked the woods, merging easily with the band of mages.

It left Garrick feeling alone, again. Isolated, and out of place.

They arrived at the makeshift camp at the Freeborn had pitched at the juncture of two creeks and the Blue River, and in a clearing made amid a rugged ring of oak and evergreen trees. A stew-pot dangled over a smokeless fire, its aroma rich and tantalizing. The men and women of the Freeborn gathered around as they entered camp, maybe fifty in all. They looked at Garrick with a sense of expectation that left him feeling naked. These expressions said he had been rescued for a purpose, that after a long fight against overwhelming odds the Freeborn were desperate for hope.

Sunathri dismounted.

“Welcome to our home,” she said with thinly disguised sarcasm. “Get some food and we can start planning.”

“Thank you,” Darien replied.

He and Garrick dismounted and walked toward the kettle.

“You see it, don’t you,” Darien said.

“See what?”

“The way they look at you.”

“Yes, Darien. I see it.”

“And?”

“Don’t start this again.”

His partner’s silence was sharp as a blade.

They served themselves as the stewpot. The broth was filled with venison and rabbit, tubers and wild scallion. The broth boiled at the edges of the pot. They took their bowls to a quiet creek bed and sat down.

Springtime had turned to summer, but the breeze here was cool and fresh. Water slid over slick stones of brown, red, and orange.

“I’m sorry,” Garrick said. “That was uncalled for. I didn’t ask for this, though. It's all too much. I’m not ready to be the Torean leader.”

“The Freeborn would accept you as Sunathri’s champion.”

“That’s not how it works, and you know it. I’m god-touched. If I join the Freeborn, I’m the leader.”

A crooked expression came to Darien’s face.

“I see,” he said.

“You see what?”

“How could I have missed it before?”

“Missed what?”

“You're probably telling the truth about being afraid to lead, but that’s not why you’re avoiding the Freeborn. You’re ducking this because you're afraid to commit to anything larger than yourself. It’s easier for you to just complain about everyone else than it is to do what you think is right.”

“Is that what you think?” Garrick replied.

“I see it all over your face.”

“We are only a half-day’s ride from Dorfort,” Garrick said.

“And?”

“Will you go see your father?”

“What does my father have to do with this?”

Garrick scoffed. “How can you can sit there and tell me about my inner demons, when you’re afraid to deal with your own?”

“My issues with my father are different,” Darien said. “Even you can see that. The Freeborn is different.”

“You should join them yourself, then.”

“I think I will.”

Garrick raised an eyebrow. “You’re no mage.”

“They won’t care, and I find their cause just.”

“There is no just cause,” Garrick said, feeling strange as he finished the thought inside his mind,
only actions and consequences.

“You don’t really believe that, do you?”

“I don’t know what I believe, Darien. But I know I don’t want to rely on anyone, and I don’t want anyone relying on me.”

Darien’s face grew clouded. He stood deliberately, cradling his bowl.

“Tell that to your new superior.”

He strode away.

Garrick spooned stew and tried to settle down again. He leaned back against the tree trunk.

Darien didn’t understand—probably couldn’t understand—but, nonetheless, who did he think he was telling Garrick what he should and shouldn’t do?

Footsteps rustled behind him.

This time is was Sunathri who sat down, her forearm brushing his. The contact was brief, yet still felt warm, and still felt intimate.

“Caledena is an example of what it will be like if the orders take control.”

“Caledena happened because the orders were looking for me. That’s all,” Garrick said. “That’s why our path to the city was so simple. The orders decided to wait for me, rather than attack straight away when I might actually be prepared for them.”

“That’s true enough as far as it goes, Garrick, but you’re missing big parts of the picture and your view is short-sighted. That the orders were able to take Caledena so easily shows they have the ability to take what they want, and that they did take it shows they will continue to do so as soon as it meets their purpose.”

Her eyes were dark, and her hair hung to her shoulders. She kneaded her temple.

“We need you, Garrick. History is filled with lessons taught by short-sighted people. Don't be one of them. You’re god-touched. We desperately need you.”

“I have other things I need to do.”

“I know,” she said. “You intended to fight the orders on your own.”

“Darien’s lips are too loose.”

“Let me help you. I know where the orders’ weaknesses are. I have people in important positions. We can do this together.”

Her eyes blazed, then.

He could get lost in the depths of those eyes.

She was attractive in a way beyond physical, a way that dug under his skin. But as he looked up at the darkening sky, and as he felt the featherlike tickle of his hunger stir inside him, he was suddenly afraid for her, afraid for what he could do to her and for what, in turn, that would once again do to him.

“It’s not a good idea, Suni.”

“We can’t win if we don’t have you on our side,” Sunathri said.

Garrick did not reply.

After several moments, she sighed and, like Darien before her, walked back to camp, her boots whipping through the grass.

It rained the next morning.

The camp woke up wet, and went about their well-practiced ritual of loading supplies and preparing their animals. The dampness around them muted all sound.

Garrick sat beside the creek and ate stale bread.

Sunathri came to him. She said nothing, merely sat silently beside him until he finished eating.

“It’s no use,” he finally said. “I’m going on my own.”

“We’ll leave you a horse,” she replied.

“I don’t want one.”

“You’ll need to move quickly.”

“I intend to go back to Caledena and gather back the one I left behind.”

Sunathri’s silence grew awkward once again.

“Don’t you have to go?” he asked.

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