The Southerner felt the side of his face, his fingers tracing the path of the long scar that occluded his right eye and had cut across his mustache, lip, and down his chin. A long arrow of stone, spalled from the collapsing tower at the Damascus Gate, had come within a finger’s width of ending his life. He wondered if he would ever be able to see out of that eye again.
/ wonder if a priest could heal it, he thought, but then he thought of his friends and their mutilated bodies and resolved to leave the scar. His men looked away, seeing his face marked with a deep and abiding anger. It was not wise to look upon the Al’Quraysh when he was in such a state. The chieftain had already slain a man for speaking ill of the dead; it would not do to press him.
Mohammed adjusted the fit of his kaffieh and touched the scabbard of the sword that she had carried into battle. The blade was nicked and badly used, but there were weapon-smiths in his home city who could restore the sword to health again. It seemed that he could still feel the touch of her fingers on his hand, cool and soft, but this coul4 not be so. He nudged the horse again and she trotted out of the shade of the palms into the searing light of the desert sun.
At his back a bare twenty Tanukh rode, all that remained of their tribe. With ibn’Adi dead, they had come to him as he had laid up in a cave miles from the ruined city, slowly healing, and pledged themselves to him. The sands opened up before them, long endless rolling dunes that filled the Waste at the center of the world. Mohammed set an easy pace, for they had many many miles to cross before he saw the doorway of his home or heard the welcoming voice of his wife.
His eyes glittered with fury as he rode, thinking of the news that ibn’Adi’s nephew had brought, of the defeat of Persia and the capture of their great capital by the armies of Rome. A few hundred miles away they had marched, the legions that could have relieved Palmyra. He thought of the treachery of Kings and the sacrifice of a brave Queen and the priest who had loved her.
Purpose grew in his heart, hot and filled with hate, and the horse, sensing his desire, moved a little quicker. There were many leagues to cross, ere he was home again.