It was a sight to behold. A reminder of the wonders the world once held before the fall of the gods.
He remembered how he would sit beneath its gilded canopy and pray for his mother after she got sick. The malignance in her chest had killed her eventually, but he had found peace in the comforting embrace of the great tree’s shadow.
Barandas closed his eyes. He remembered sensing something was amiss, glancing up to see the branches overhead rustle in a way that had struck him as strange. On an instinct that to this day he had never fully understood, he had rushed past the Magelord’s Augmentors and knocked the invisible assassin to the ground before he had buried his dagger in Salazar’s back. Their cover blown, the other assassins had dropped down from where they had been hiding in the boughs of the great tree. For those few seconds when everything was pure chaos Barandas had fought off the unseen assailants, taking wound after wound before the knife had plunged into his heart.
I was on my knees, coughing up blood. Salazar uttered a word and suddenly the assassins were there for all to see, their cloak of invisibility stripped from them. The Augmentors waded in, and everything from that point on was a blur.
The Festival of the Red Sun attempt on Salazar’s life had ultimately proved the catalyst for the Culling. A cabal of Dorminia’s most powerful wizards were found guilty of hiring assassins from foreign lands and plotting to murder the Magelord. Something seemed to break in Salazar that day, for later that year he ordered the Eternal Tree burned to the ground and every mage in the Grey City and its dependent territories killed without mercy.
As for Barandas, he had awakened with a new heart of enchanted iron — and the most rapid promotion from Watchman to Augmentor in the city’s history. He sometimes wondered if Salazar had intended the irony. A heart of iron, to bear the burden of duty and not burst with the weight of what must be done.
He reached the front of the manor house. A dog barked at him and then ran off around the back of the estate. He placed a hand on the pommel of his sword and cleared his throat. ‘By order of Lord Salazar, Magelord of Dorminia and rightful sovereign of Malbrec, open this door.’
He waited for a minute or two. Eventually the door opened to reveal a sour-faced old man in a deerskin jacket clutching a pipe in one hand. ‘I already told that armoured juggernaut of yours,’ he said irritably. ‘There’s no one here but me. I’m far too old to be fighting in your damned war.’
There was a cough from somewhere inside, which was quickly cut off as whoever made the noise desperately tried to stifle it. ‘I think I’ll see for myself,’ said Barandas. He pushed past into the entrance hall and through into a plush sitting room.
‘This… this is scandalous,’ the man protested, giving his pipe a furious tug. ‘Do you know who I am?’
‘That’s of no consequence,’ Barandas replied. He looked around at the leather armchairs and the fine rosewood cabinets. ‘You’ve done well for yourself.’
The old man frowned. ‘The mining business has been good to me. I ship a lot of stone to the city. I always pay my taxes. Every copper,’ he added.
‘Who’s that?’ Barandas pointed at a canvas hanging over the fireplace. It depicted a slightly younger version of the scowling merchant. Next to him was a woman of similar age with an equine face. Between them, a teenage boy wore the expression of the terminally bored.
‘That’s my wife, Mildra. She’s been dead these past six winters.’
‘I meant the boy.’
There was sudden fear on the face of the old merchant. ‘Harald? He’s not here. I sent him to Westrock-’
There was another cough. It came from upstairs.
‘If I find you are lying to me,’ Barandas said carefully, ‘I will have you thrown in chains, your estate seized, and your son placed in the very front ranks when hostilities with Thelassa commence.’
The merchant’s face sank and he inclined his head slightly. ‘Harald is unwell. He contracted an illness while we were in Dorminia on business. I haven’t found a physician who has been able to help. He’s coughing up his lungs.’
Barandas frowned. This wasn’t the first he had heard of this sickness. If things got much worse Dorminia would soon have an epidemic on its hands. Still, citing exemption from the draft because of some mystery illness was a claim he heard all too often recently.
‘Send your son down to my man Garmond. He will have a physician examine him. If it is indeed as you say, Harald will be excused.’
The old merchant started to protest. Barandas was in no mood to hear it. He spun on his heels and marched out of the manor, pulling the door shut behind him.
‘How many?’
Lieutenant Toram squinted down at the parchment in his hands. ‘Four hundred and sixteen.’
Barandas sighed in frustration. The sun was sinking into the horizon and he still had an hour’s ride back to Dorminia. His sweep of the hilltop residences had proved fruitless. As it turned out, many of the town’s lords and wealthier merchants had anticipated there would be a draft shortly after the declaration of war and sent their sons away. It was a common story throughout Dorminia’s territory.
The whorehouses and taverns of the Unclaimed Lands will doubtless enjoy a roaring trade for a while, he thought sourly. This entire exercise had been a disappointment. Between Westrock, Ashfall and now Malbrec, they had raised barely half the numbers he had anticipated.
He turned to Symon, his squire. ‘Ready my horse,’ he said. ‘I will return to the city shortly.’
‘Yes, sir,’ the lad replied, and scurried off to carry out his orders.
Toram scratched at his bristly grey moustache. ‘We did the best we could, my lord. If you like, we could do one more round. I’m certain there are malingerers and cowards dodging our recruiters.’
‘It’s late,’ he said. ‘Wait until the morning. If you see anyone trying to sneak out of town-’
‘Sir?’
He turned to see who had interrupted him. It was the lad whose mother had argued against his drafting earlier that day. ‘Do you bring news of your brother?’
The boy looked glum. ‘The physician says he will survive… but he will need months of recovery before he is fit to return to work. Or go to war.’
Barandas nodded. ‘Tell your mother she will be paid the sum of three gold spires as compensation for the unfortunate incident. That should help keep food on the table while he convalesces.’
‘What about me, my lord?’
‘You? You’re perfectly fit and healthy, are you not? Lieutenant Toram will take a few details and then he will see you at noon tomorrow outside the gates. Do not be late.’
‘I’m not fighting your stupid war!’ the boy cried. He backed away a few steps and then turned and ran.
‘You want me to send someone after him?’ Toram asked.
Barandas noticed Thurbal watching him. He had a smug look on his face. ‘No,’ he replied. His grip tightened on his sword. ‘I’ll fetch him. He needs to learn some respect.’ He paused for a moment. ‘You can begin another round of inquiries immediately. Use whatever methods you deem necessary.’
‘Yes, my lord.’ The lieutenant saluted and left to organize his men.
Barandas set off in the direction the boy had fled, intending to give him a good dressing down, when he almost collided with a horse travelling in the opposite direction. The merchant astride the beast immediately hopped down and offered up his profuse apologies.
‘I am terribly sorry, my lord,’ he gushed, wiping nervously at his forehead. ‘I was in a rush. I have been riding for the best part of a day and night.’
‘Indeed.’ Barandas felt his head beginning to ache. This interruption had probably cost him the opportunity to chase down the boy. Perhaps that was for the best, all things considered. ‘Would you care to elaborate on why you are in such a hurry?’