«Stop, traitors to Gohar!»
It was Kloret's voice.
Each of the «traitors» reacted at his own speed. Blade was the fastest, the four rebels next, and the Friends of Mythor a bad last.
Blade whirled, drawing his sword and shielding Fierssa. The four envoys also drew their swords, looked up and down the beach, then as if they'd been one man sprinted off toward the west. Before Blade could take two deep breaths the Mythorans were out of sight in the darkness. They must also have been out of sight from above, because Blade heard Kloret's voice again, sharp and angry.
«Don't waste arrows, you fools! Some of you go after them. The rest come with me.»
Two lanterns glowed, showing half a dozen armed men dashing off after the Mythorans. The rest followed Kloret down onto the beach. Five of them were archers, with arrows nocked and ready to shoot. Blade estimated the chances of doing anything, and decided that they weren't good. In fact, the chances of doing anything except taking Kloret with him were small, and he'd have to pick the right moment for that.
Even waiting and watching would still help gain time for the Mythorans. As long as Kloret was dealing with Blade and the Friends, he might not send more men after the rebels. In the darkness, the Mythorans could probably evade or kill the ones on their trail now.
So Blade stood quietly, letting the Prime Minister's men disarm him. It was unfortunate that Goharan clothing didn't provide any secure hiding places for knives, but that couldn't be helped. The soldiers were carrying plenty of weapons, and some of them would certainly be within easy reach when he decided to strike.
Two of Kloret's men stood behind Blade with drawn swords and two others covered him with their bows while their comrades went to work on the Friends of Mythor. The two men and the girl were stripped naked and their hands tied behind their backs. The men were dragging Fierssa forward to strip her when Kloret raised a hand.
«No. Leave her to me.»
So Fierssa had her hands tied, but otherwise she was left alone. She stood just behind her father, head bowed, eyes closed, face pale and sweating. She seemed as much ashamed at being protected by her father as she was afraid of what might come.
With driftwood and branches, the Prime Minister's men built a fire and tossed the clothing from the stripped prisoners into it. The three exchanged uncertain looks, and Blade saw them fighting hard for self-control. They thought the burning of their clothing meant they wouldn't be leaving the beach alive. They were probably right.
However, Blade might have some influence, and if he did he'd better use it now while everybody was still in one piece. «Kloret,» he said sharply. One of the swords pricked him in the back, then the Prime Minister raised his hand again.
«A moment. Yes, Blade?»
«What have these people done?»
For a moment Kloret looked as though he suspected Blade's sanity, then he laughed. «Does it matter to you, Blade?» Before Blade could think of an answer, Kloret went on. «If you don't know what they've done, why should you worry about their punishment? But I think you're lying. I think you know exactly what they've done and that's why you're here with them. So you're as guilty as they are. If we can't learn what we need to know from them-«
At this point the courage of one of the young men broke. He threw himself on the sand as close to the Prime Minister as he could get, sobbing and desperately twisting his bound hands. The other two Friends stood close together, the girl swallowing hard and the man trying to comfort her with looks only. Blade remembered that they were lovers.
Eventually the young man ran out of breath. Kloret gave another hand signal, and one of the guards stepped over to the young man and straddled him. Then he rammed his spear down through the young man's body, so hard it pinned him to the beach like a butterfly on display. The scream he let out was something out of a nightmare. The young woman would have collapsed if her lover hadn't moved so she could lean against him.
Kloret swept the other prisoners with his chilly eyes. «He's going to die slowly, but you'll die even more slowly if you don't answer my questions.»
«Kloret,» Blade snapped. «You're right. It doesn't matter what these people have done. At least it won't matter to you, when the Emperor learns about this. You'll lose your office for amusing yourself this way, and if the Emperor-«
«Which Emperor, Blade?» said Kloret. Again he laughed. It was the most discouraging laugh Blade had ever heard. It hinted at all sorts of secret knowledge that made him the complete master of the situation.
Kloret shook his head. «I doubt if Thrayket will ever learn about anything. He's dead.» Fierssa jumped as if she'd been stabbed, and Blade found it harder than usual to keep his own self-control. «As for Harkrat-Blade, I think you know better than to hope he'll be in a position to take any vengeance for you, let alone these worms here.»
He faced the two Friends. «My daughter has already told me a good deal of what I want to know-«
«That's a lie!» Fierssa shouted. One of the spearmen drove the butt of his weapon into the small of her back. She gasped and fell to the ground.
«You didn't make things any easier for your friends or for yourself,» Kloret told his daughter. Then he turned back to the others. «I need to know certain things about the work of the Friends. First, who were those traitors who ran off into the darkness?»
The two lovers looked at each other. Blade was silent. If Thrayket was dead and Harkrat was likely to be blackmailed into silence by the threat of revealing his secret there wasn't much to be done. His own chances of survival were not going to be particularly good, and the Friends of Mythor were doomed. He'd better keep his mouth shut, since every time he opened it seemed to put a greater strain on the desperate courage of the Friends. There wasn't much left for them except to die with dignity, so he could at least let them do that.
In the end, Blade's keeping silent didn't make much difference to the lovers. Nobody could have died with dignity after what Kloret had done to them. He kept at them even after it was obvious they weren't going to talk, and then until they couldn't talk, only scream. Even after they could no longer scream the work went on, with steel and fire and cords and bare hands. It didn't stop until life was gone and the two lovers were sprawled in the middle of a patch of foul and bloody sand.
Blade felt himself sweating in spite of the chilly sea breeze, and Fierssa was obviously staying on her feet only by a heroic effort. Blade still had one faint hope. The screams of the two lovers must have been audible a mile away. Perhaps Kloret's rank or his armed guards could drive off any inquisitive passers-by. But perhaps not, and in any sort of a fight or confusion, Blade and Fierssa might at least have a chance to escape. They'd be fugitives in a Gohar sliding steadily toward civil war, but that was better than ending up sprawled on the sand like the two Friends.
Then out of the darkness to the west came a gurgling cry. The sound was barely human, and after the nightmare of the last hour it was possible to believe it wasn't human at all.
Some vengeful ghost or monster from the depths of the sea could be on the prowl, awakened by the screams.
Then the cry came again, and with it the sound of shuffling footsteps. A third cry, and a lurching human figure appeared on the edge of the firelight. Two guards ran up to it and dragged it closer.
It was one of Kloret's guards, one arm dangling useless while he used the other to press together a gaping wound in his stomach. His face was a mask of dried blood from a deep scalp wound.