He savored that delicious possibility hungrily, but then his eye opened once more, and he glared out over the squalid city. At least the Guard was as determined to find Bahzell as Harnak could wish. His mind had been none too clear when he had awakened but he’d retained enough wit to shape his explanation. He’d played his part well, he thought, fighting the pain of his wounds out of “concern” for Farmah, driving himself to gasp out the news that Bahzell had run mad, attacking and raping the girl, beating her brutally, and then trying to kill Harnak when the prince sought to save his victim. His father and brothers had known it was a lie, but Churnazh had seized the chance with glee. He’d outlawed Bahzell within the hour, and Harnak’s swollen mouth twisted in another painful, evil smile of memory.
But the smile faded, and he swore again. If only they’d taken Bahzell and the bitches quickly! With them dead, no one in Navahk would have dared disbelieve Harnak’s tale or ask why Bahzell’s “victim” had fled with her rapist. But three full days had passed without resolution, and now that very question filled the city like a plague. Churnazh’s henchmen had put it about that Farmah had left before Bahzell-that the Horse Stealer, believing Harnak dead, had gone in pursuit to finish the only witness against him-but too many had seen her and Tala flee the palace rather than seek protection from the Guard. There were even rumors Bahzell had caught up with them in sight of the city wall-actually carried the slut off in his arms! Certainly she hadn’t tried to escape him, and if she had the chance to whisper the truth to anyone before Harnak had her killed, it might be more deadly than any plague.
The crown prince snarled another curse and lowered himself slowly, painfully back into his bed, and hate and fear pulsed deep within him.
A low, rough-piled stone wall separated the weed-grown pasture from the road. It wasn’t much of a road, even by hradani standards. Summer heat had baked its uneven surface to dusty iron; in spring or fall it would be a bottomless, sucking morass, unless Bahzell missed his guess, and he sat on the stone wall to glower at it with mixed emotions.
Leather creaked as Brandark swung down to rest his mount. The rough edges of camp life had left the Bloody Sword’s finery rumpled and travel stained, and he looked more like a brigand than a scholar and would-be bard as he beat dust from his sleeves and perched on the wall at Bahzell’s side.
“Well, thank the gods,” he sighed.
“Oh? And what would it be you’re thanking them for?” Bahzell inquired, and Brandark grinned.
“For making roads and letting us find one. Not that I’m complaining, you understand, but this business of following you cross-country without the faintest idea where I am can worry a man. What if you’d gotten lost and just led us round in circles till Churnazh’s patrols found us?”
“I’m not one to ‘get lost,’ little man,” Bahzell rumbled, “and I’ll be thanking you to remember that. Besides, it was you brought your precious map along, and how could anyone be getting lost in this piddling patch of woods?” He snorted and looked back over the deserted pasturelands to the trackless wilderness behind them. “If you’ve a mind to get lost , now, let me take you up on the Wind Plain and lead you round for a week or two!”
“Thank you, but no.” Brandark scrubbed at a patch of dirt on his knee, but it defied him stubbornly, and he gave up with a grimace.
“Why is it,” he asked, gesturing at the road, “that I’ve a nagging suspicion you’re none too pleased to see this?”
“I’m thinking it’s because you’re such an all-fired sharp-witted fellow and I’m after being so transparent.” Bahzell grunted. He dug a booted toe into the dusty grass, and his ears moved slowly up and down as he frowned.
“Would you care to explain that? I’m only a city boy, and city boys like roads. They make us comfortable.”
“Do they, now?” Bahzell’s eyes glinted, then he shrugged. “It’s not so complicated, Brandark. It’s three days now since you caught me up; if any of Churnazh’s lads had happened across my trail-or yours-I’m thinking we’d have seen them by now.”
“So?”
“You are a city boy,” Bahzell snorted. “When a man knows there’s unfriendly folk looking for him, rough country’s the best place to be, especially if they’ve no trail to follow. But roads, now. Roads are unchancy things for a man on the run. They’re after going from here to there, d’you see, and they don’t wiggle around while they’re about it. I’m thinking Churnazh’s patrols will be watching them, especially if they’ve had no luck elsewhere.”
“You may be right,” Brandark said after a moment, “but I’m afraid we don’t have much choice but to follow this one.” He tugged on his long nose. “The Esganians are a suspicious lot, and we’re hradani. Letting them think we’d tried to sneak across their border would be a poor idea, and that means we have to cross on a road where we can collect a pass from one of their guard posts.”
“Aye.” Bahzell sighed and rose to stretch, then slid his arbalest off his shoulder, hooked the curved end of the goatsfoot over the string, and heaved. His mighty arm trembled with brief strain, but the steel stave bent smoothly under the lever’s urging.
“I’ve always thought that was an especially nasty-looking weapon,” Brandark remarked as the string settled over the grooved cog of the release.
“It is that,” Bahzell agreed. He hung the goatsfoot back on his belt and set a quarrel on the string, and Brandark gave him a crooked smile.
“Should I assume these warlike preparations indicate a certain degree of concern on your part?”
“As to that,” Bahzell said, looping back the cover of the bolt quiver at his side, “I’m thinking that if your map is good and your guess about the distance to Esgan is right-mind you, it’s a Bloody Sword map and you’re a city boy, so neither of them is likely-but if they are, then we’re little more than a league or two from the border. And if I were one of Churnazh’s lads-”
“-you’d be sitting up ahead waiting for us,” Brandark finished.
“So I would.” Bahzell nodded, and Brandark sighed.
“Well, at least they won’t have nasty things like that,” he said, jutting his chin at the arbalest as he swung back up into his saddle, and Bahzell slapped the weapon fondly.
“That they won’t,” he agreed with a broad, square-toothed grin.
They kept as far to the side of the road’s mountain-range ruts and gullies as they could. Bahzell watched his footing as he strode along beside Brandark’s horse, but few words were exchanged, and his mind worked busily as he considered how he might have arranged things in his pursuers’ place. None of Churnazh’s Guard carried effete weapons like bows or crossbows, and that ruled out the simplest way to deal with embarrassing witnesses. Besides, it was likely they had orders to take him alive, if they could, and keep him so until they discovered what he’d done with Farmah. Which, unfortunately, wasn’t to say they’d have any special interest in taking him in one piece.
He glanced at his friend, and his ears rose as he smiled. Brandark had put his precious balalaika on the packhorse, safely out of harm’s way, and his right hand reached down to unbutton the thong across his sword hilt. It was an almost absent gesture, and his eyes never stopped sweeping their path as he reached back and untied the leads of his other horses from his saddle, as well. He might be the “city boy” he called himself, yet he knew what they were about.