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Authors: Judith Tarr

Tags: #prehistorical, #Old Europe, #feminist fiction, #horses

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BOOK: White Mare's Daughter
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The priest spoke briefly. When he fell silent, Tillu said,
“He says, you were not born alone. The stars say so. Where is the other one,
the one you were born with?”

Agni blinked. Of all questions he had expected, this was one
of the last. “The other—my sister?”

The priest nodded as if he had hoped for such an answer.
“Your sister,” Tillu said for him, “yes. Where is she?”

“She went west,” Agni said, “ahead of me.”

The priest nodded again and smiled, and did a strange thing:
he patted Agni on the shoulder. If he had been anyone Agni understood, Agni
would have said that he offered sympathy. Though for what—

“Is she dead? Are you telling me that? Did this place kill
her?”

The priest shook his head. He looked pleased, and not as if
he grieved for any loss. He patted Agni’s shoulder once more and vanished into
the night.

Tillu had not moved. Agni rounded on him. “What was that?
Why did he ask about my sister?”

“He reads the stars,” Tillu said. “He says that your star is
twofold, and one is brighter than the other. I think he wants to know which
one.”

“She’s not dead, is she?” Agni demanded. “She’s not sick? Or
dying?”

“I don’t know,” said Tillu. “No one asks priests why they do
what they do.”

That was eminently true, but Agni did not have to like it.
He went to bed soon after, snarling, and lay awake too long, fretting over his
sister.

Which no doubt was exactly as the priest intended. That one
liked to trouble a man’s sleep, Agni thought. He had a look about him, as if
there were more gods in him than he could easily carry.

Sarama had it, too. Had had it. Still had it, by the gods,
and would have it till she grew vastly old.

“Horse Goddess,” Agni whispered into the dark. “Lady,
protect her. Keep her till I come.”

56

On the eighth day, as Tillu had predicted, they reached
the wood’s edge. It was a gradual thing, a thinning of trees, a greater
frequency of clearings, and sun so bright that it dazzled them. And then at
last through the thin and straggling treetrunks they saw open country, a long
roll of hillside and the gleam of water in a river.

Green country. Fair country. Country that lay naked beneath
the sky.

It was more beautiful than a woman. Agni felt his body rouse
to it: startling, a little, as if he had been deathly ill or dead, and had come
to life again.

Just so he had been when he saw the sun in the morning after
he came out of the barrow. He had been naked then and rampant for all the men
of the tribe to see; but none of them had laughed, except to admire his spirit.

There had been no woman for him just then. No more was there
one now. He shifted on Mitani’s back, and turned to look over his shoulder.

His people emerged from the wood in ones and twos and
threes, with their packhorses and their led horses. They should have been a
brave sight. They looked like children emerging sleepy from a tent, blinking
and squinting, some rubbing their eyes. If the forest people had had a mind for
treachery, or if this country had known war, they could have been cut down
where they stood.

As they woke to the truth, first one and then another looked
about in amazement; astonishment; joy. A whoop rang out. One of the men of the
White Horse kicked his mount into a gallop, shrieking like a mad thing, taking
the hillside by storm.

His gladness spread like sparks from a fire. Between one
breath and the next, the whole yelling mob of them had surged into motion.

Mitani jibbed and reared, but Agni was not moved to join
that wild ride.

He should have been leading it. He knew that. Nevertheless
he held his place, looking back, searching the shadows for signs of a
heavy-browed face, or a stag’s crown of antlers in the season when a living
stag wore only velvet.

He did not see them, nor Tillu the halfling, either. The
forest people had fulfilled their promise. They had not lingered after. No
farewell; no tidy ending. Simply their absence.

Agni did not know why he lingered himself, when he knew that
there was no reason. Mitani was growing frankly angry.

He sighed at last and let the stallion go. Mitani bucked for
spite, twisted, nigh unseated his rider. But Agni had ridden out worse, and
Mitani was too eager to catch his fellows to put his heart into it. He smoothed
into a gallop.

It came to Agni, as the wind sang in his ears and tugged at
his hair, that he should have kept the priest as a guide. The man knew this
country, surely. He knew where they should go, and how they should speak to the
people there.

But he was gone. Agni had no guide now but the gods.

Well then. First he must gather his scattered people and
pray that none of them had run afoul of someone from this country. War was best
fought if one had the advantage of surprise. And though tales said that war was
not known in the sunset country, Agni did not want just now to trust to tales.

oOo

None of them ran far. Just far enough to be truly away
from the trees, and to see that this was a green and lovely country.

The horses saw that even sooner than the men. They were none
too eager to gallop when they could crop the rich green grass.

In a little while that whole rolling field between the
forest and the river was dotted with grazing horses. Their riders had slipped
from their backs to lie in the grass, or had gone down to drink from the river.
A few, Agni was pleased to see, had begun the making of a camp.

He gathered a handful of his own young men and sent them out
to scout and to bring back what game they could. The others set to tending the
horses and pitching camp.

It was still early in the day, but they were all agreed,
with no word spoken: they should stop, rest, let their horses graze. And, if
they could, the elders and the warleaders should gather to plan the war.

The western tribesmen camped next to but not among Agni’s
men of the east. Agni pondered very briefly before he ventured to send
messengers to their leaders, inviting them politely to visit him in his camp.
He hinted at mead, and at kumiss.

Taditi had worked wonders with what was left of their
provender, in expectation that this country would feed them well and amply. It
was a wager of sorts, that they would not starve before they hunted and
gathered all that they needed. Or, of course, won it in battle.

Agni settled in front of his tent on the bear’s hide that
was his sleeping fur, and kept company with Rahim and Patir, Gauan and some of
his warriors, and various of his tribesmen. They came and went as they pleased,
babbling with the pleasure of sun and grass and sky, and the dizzy delight of
having come at last to the place they had been seeking.

“Do you think we’ll find cities?” they kept asking. “Will
there be copper? Cattle? Women?”

To be sure, Agni thought, this place seemed empty enough. He
saw no great gatherings of people, no tents of stone such as the tales told of.
Only grass and river and a scattering of trees which Patir had not yet made a
move to burn.

One by one as the day wore away, the elders and the
warleaders happened by. It was not because Agni asked, they made it clear, but
because it pleased them to wander this way. His mead, his kumiss, the venison
toward evening, for one of the hunters had found a herd of deer grazing on the
edges of the wood, drew the westerners to his campfire. They lingered for the
mead and for the company.

As the shadows grew long and the sun sank over the hills to
the westward, Agni observed rather idly, “If we’re to fight a war, we might
consider how we’ll do it.”

“Ride,” said a warleader with the features of the forest
people but startling pale eyes. “Fight. Kill. Take what we win.”

“Certainly,” said Agni. “And what will we do with it once we
have it?”

“Use it,” the warleader answered, “and when it’s finished,
ride away.”

“We could ride clear into the sunset,” one of his fellows
said. “Right past the world’s edge.”

“What, and fall off?” Rahim shook his head. “I’m not minded
to go as far as the edge. A rich tribe, beautiful women, copper for the
taking—all those will well content me.”

“If there’s any such thing,” growled a man who sat just out
of the light. Agni saw a pale blur of face, a glitter of eyes, but little else.
“What if this country’s empty?”

“It’s not empty,” said Tillu, making his way through the
seated men to settle beside Agni. This, his manner said, was his proper place,
and he would face down any who challenged him for it.

Rahim, who had been gently but distinctly thrust aside,
shrugged and reached for another collop of venison. There would be payment
later, his glance said, but for the moment he was content to let be.

Agni suppressed a sigh. Horses were much simpler than men.
They tolerated one another, or they fought. They did not bide their time, or
form factions that could trouble their herd-leader’s mind both now and later.

Tillu, who seemed to have ambitions to lead this herd of
men, went on with what he had begun on the circle’s edge. “There are people
here,” he said. “Hundreds. Hundreds of hundreds. The forest people led us to a
region that’s little frequented, so that we can gather our forces and take them
by surprise. But there are people here, oh yes. And cities. And cattle and
copper and gold. All the riches that a man can dream of.”

“I should like to see them,” said the unbeliever.

“Ride half a day’s journey north or south or west, and
you’ll see,” Tillu said.

“I intend to,” said the unbeliever.

“So should we all,” Agni said, “but we should do it
together, and we should know beforehand how we’ll go about taking whatever we
find.”

He held his breath. They all stared at him, but even the
unbeliever was silent.

He breathed out slowly.
Think
like a king.

Yes. Like a king.

When he could trust his voice to be firm, he said, “We’ll
camp here tomorrow, if you will, and see which of our scouts come back, and
what they’ve found. Once we know, we’ll agree which direction is best, and ride
in it. Some of us will lead, and fall on whatever camp or city we find. Others
will come behind to secure it. Then we’ll leave men in it to hold it, and after
we’ve taken what we please, we’ll go on to the next. And the next. In this
country, if the tales are true, every man can be a king. And every king that we
find will be a woman.”

They laughed at that, mocking the thought of it. But Tillu
did not laugh.

He said, low enough that only Agni and those closest to him
could hear, “Women rule the forest people. I’ve seen it. And they say that
women rule here. That their only god is Earth Mother, and they worship her with
rites of gold and blood.”

“All the easier for us to take and hold them,” Gauan said.
“Is it true, then? They know nothing of war?”

“So it’s said,” said Tillu.

Gauan shook his head in amazement. “I don’t know if I’ll
believe that even when I see it. But if it does happen to be so—what a gods’
gift for us.”

“Where are their men?” someone wondered.

“I’ll wager they’re all geldings,” Gauan said, “except the
few they keep for stud.”

Nervous laughter ran round the circle. “Maybe the women are
bearded,” said a man across the fire from Agni. “Maybe they walk like men, and
look like men, but when you catch them in bed—if you can stand to kiss those
hairy cheeks—they’re as female as they need to be.”

“I like a smooth skin,” Gauan said, “and a pretty face.”

“Razors!” the other sang out. “We’ll all carry razors and
shave every bearded face we find. If it’s soft, if it’s pretty, if the body’s
cleft below—it’s ours to take.”

“Just be sure the cleft is in front and not in back,”
someone else advised.

They whooped at that.

Agni would have been interested to hear how far they would
take this flight of fancy, but someone tugged at his sleeve. It was Patir, who
had gone to relieve himself. “Muti’s back,” he said.

Even as Agni rose, a prickling in his belly warned him to
yawn, stretch, mutter something about too much kumiss and not enough bladder.

No one noticed, even Tillu. He slipped away easily after
all, following Patir round his tent and into the cool sweetness of the night.

oOo

The air was different here. Grass scented it. The wind
moved freely, unhampered by trees. The sky was clear overhead. The moon was
thin but waxing, shedding a pale light on the faces of not only Muti but his
two brothers who had gone out with him.

And in the midst of them a stranger. It seemed to be male,
and young, too young to have grown a beard.

Agni refused to share the foolishness that reigned still
around the fire, from the sound of it: ribald laughter, and a shout as if at a
particularly clever sally. This in front of him was a boy or a very young man,
small among the tribesmen, with a shock of curly hair, very dark, and big dark
eyes. They were wide, but Agni saw no fear in them.

He turned to Muti. “Well?”

Muti grinned. The boy smiled tentatively back. “We found him
just over the hill,” Muti said, “herding a flock of goats—which, before you
ask, we took possession of; they’re back with the cattle. He’s simple, maybe.
He’s yet to say a word that any of us can understand.”

“Has he said a word at all?” Agni asked.

“Plenty,” said Muti. “All in gibberish.”

As if he had understood, the boy spoke. They were words,
Agni could tell, and they appeared to have meaning, but it was none that Agni
could find. He jabbed his chin at the younger of Muti’s brothers. “Fetch me
someone who understands this language.”

“But,” said the brother, whose name at the moment Agni could
not recall, “I don’t—there isn’t—”

“Find one,” Agni said. The brother grumbled, but he went.

BOOK: White Mare's Daughter
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