Raising his head, snorting his scorn, the big man stated, “Yes, I’m a free-fighter, but I’d fight for the Witch King - first. Besides, we are sworn bodyguards to the Lady Mara of Pohtahmohs.”
“So be it,” Milo declared, turning the stalh’on and riding back to his nomads. As he approached, two of the archers raised their bows, but he waved them down. He mind-spoke Steeltooth and the big horse sank onto his muscular haunches. Milo stepped from his mount and unslung his iron-rimmed shield, then he stalked toward the soldiers.
When he was closer, he waved his blood-smeared saber at the arrow-quilled bodies of the farmers, saying, “They were treacherous Dirtmen and deserved no better than they received. You two, I’ll grant a soldier’s death. Singly or both together against me, you choose.”
Side by side, the two swordsmen attacked. While fending off the larger with his shield, Milo first feinted at the smaller’s exposed face, then brought the back edge of bis saber up into the unarmored crotch, recovering with a vicious drawcut. The smaller man let go both sword and dirk and dropped, screaming and clutching at his mutilated masculinity.
The larger man was an excellent swordsman, but Milo had had superiority when the soldier’s grandfather’s grandfather’s great-grandfather had been but a whining babe. After a brief flurry of stroke and counterstroke, he found an opening and rammed the center spike of his shield through the mercenary’s eye into his brain. Then a quick signal brought a mercy-arrow to end the sufferings of the smaller man.
After they had fired the emptied stables, Milo galloped ahead of the procession of captured animals—horses, mules, and a huge, twenty-five-band Northorse gelding. House by house, the larger element of the raiding party had rooted out the surviving villagers and herded them into the body-littered, blood-splotched square. As he approached, Milo could hear the women keening over their dead.
The woman caught Milo’s eye the moment he reined in beside the men who were guarding the huddle of prisoners. Although obviously of the same race as the people around her, she constituted a distillation of their good physical qualities, unpolluted by any of the bad. Her features were fine-boned and her light-olive skin, flawless. Her eyes were black and slightly almond-shaped; black, too, was her long, thick hair, so black that the flaring torches gave it bluish tints. Her hands were narrow and long-fingered, her body slim-hipped and graceful. She was quite small for an adult woman of her race, standing but a bare finger over fifteen hands, but the proud upthrusting of her well-formed breasts made it clear that she was no child.
Holding Steeltooth’s head high (the war horse would bite any human he could get his teeth to unless that human looked and smelled like a nomad), Milo rode over to the small, dark woman. Lounging in his kak, he studied her for a long moment. She met his gaze, no fear in her eyes or her bearing, only hate and ill-suppressed anger.
Suddenly Milo grinned, commenting in Old Merikan, “Mad as hops, aren’t you, you little vixen? You’d be highly dangerous to bed, probably claw my eyes out, if you couldn’t lay hand to a knife. But for all of it, I think you’ll be worth the effort.”
He mindspoke the horse and, once more, the golden animal sank onto his haunches. Standing astride the glossy steed, Milo curtly beckoned her. “Ehlahteh thoh!” he commanded, then repeated himself in Old Merikan, “Come here, woman!”
By way of answer, she quickly stooped, her right hand going to the top of one of her felt traveling boots. When she straightened, the torchlight glinted on the steel blade of a small dagger. Still unspeaking, she launched herself directly at Milo. But she had reckoned without Steeltooth. As she came within range, the killer’s big, yellow teeth clacked, missing her by but half a fingerbreadth. Shocked, she swerved, planted her foot in a slimy puddle of congealing blood. The foot shot from under her, and she fell heavily … directly under the head of the palomino stallion!
Steeltooth felt well served. His head darted down with the speed of a stooping falcon and it required all of Milo’s strength to halt that deadly lunge.
In falling, the little woman had lost her knife. She lay, supported on hip and elbow, immediately in front of Steeltooth’s huge, chisellike incisors. Her wide eyes had become even wider. She, who had shown no fear of Milo or the other nomads, was quite obviously terrified of the blood-hungry horse.
Milo spoke in a low, calm voice. “Do not attempt to rise, woman, that would put you in range of him, despite the reins. It’s only my strength against his, for he has no bit. Do exactly as I say and you have a chance. If you understand me, blink three tunes, rapidly.”
Her long, sooty lashes flicked once, twice, thrice, and he went on, “Now roll onto your belly, very slowly … Good. Keep your head and your rump down, use your arms to drag yourself to me. If you try to go the other way, he’ll think you’re fleeing from him, and I’ll not be able to hold him; so come here, but do it slowly, very slowly.”
She followed his instructions and, at length, lay at his right, her fine clothing filthy with dust and grime and well smeared with the blood through which she had had to crawl. Wordlessly, she obeyed his gesture and, when she was mounted before him, he eased up on the reins and signaled the horse to rise. Once erect, the palomino looked about for the small two-leg he had almost had, but it was nowhere to be seen, although its scent was still present. He shook his head and stamped, snorting his disgust.
Milo had one of his raiders bind the captive and place her in the cargo-pannier of the Northorse, while he saw to the systematic looting of the village. Custom required that a slave be returned for each man killed or seriously wounded, so he selected seven of the strongest-looking girls, then two more for Clan Kahrtr. When these had been bound and lashed to kak or packsaddle, when the Northorse and mules had been loaded with loot and the weapons and armor of the dead, when the corpses of the slain kindred had been placed beside Djimi Kahrtr’s mutilated body, Milo allowed shifts of raiders to “test” the remaining Dirtwomen and thus decide which of them they wished to take with them.
While the shrill pleas and sobbing screams of outrage and pain attested to the strenuous activity of the first shift, Milo and the others herded the laden animals to the outskirts of the village. When the third shift had chosen and its well-raped choices were tied across packsaddle or crupper, the remaining villagers—old men, children, and old or ugly or crippled women—were chased far into the stubbled fields. Then, beginning with the headman’s house where lay their late comrades and the two dead soldiers, they fired every structure in the village—sparing not even the privies.
The cross was the only thing of wood left standing, that same cross on which they had found the body of their scout. Onto the bloodstreaked timbers, they bound the cadaver of the village headman. Standing on his kak, Milo gripped a handful of the stripped body’s hair and held its head erect. One of the archers then drove an arrow through eye and brain and skull, pinning the head to the upright.
Milo hung a weatherproof case on the jutting arrow. It contained a roll of parchment on which he had printed a message in three languages—Ehleeneekos, Horseclan Mer-ikan, and the trade language, Old Merikan: This Dirtman and his pack took a man of the Kahrtr Clan by guile and murdered him by torture. Dirtman, behold and be warned! The cost of the life of one Horseclansman is a village and every man in it! By the hand of Milo Morai, War Chief of the Tribe-that-will-return-to-the-Sacred-Sea.
2
Man and Cat and Horse are Kindred, one,
“Neath high domain of Wind and Sword and Sun.