The ground rose under their feet and stones began to rear up out of the earth like the bones of the land come poking through its decaying hide. Their progress grew more laboured, the soldiers with their heads down and arquebuses on their shoulders puffing like fractured bellows. A cloud of tiny, iridescent birds swept through the company like airborne jewels. They flickered one way and then another, turning in unison like a shoal of twisting fish, their fleetness almost derisory. A few of the soldiers batted at them half-heartedly with gunstock and sword but they whispered away again in a spray of lapis lazuli and amethyst before swooping into the canopy overhead.
The stream disappeared into a tangle of boulders and bush, and the forest closed in on them completely. The ground was rising more steeply now, making every step an effort. The men scooped up handfuls and helmetfuls of the water, gulping it down and sluicing their faces. It was as warm as a wet nurse’s milk, and hardly seemed to moisten their mouths. Murad led them onwards, hacking with a seaman’s cutlass at the barrier of vegetation ahead, his feet slipping and turning on the mossy stones, boots squelching in mud.
They came across ants the size of a man’s little finger which carried bright green leaves like the mainsail of a schooner on their backs. They found beetles busily winking in the earth, their wingcases as broad as an apple, horns adorning their armoured heads. Wattle-necked lizards regarded them silently from overhead branches, the colours of their skin pulsing from emerald through to turquoise.
They took a new bearing from the source of the stream and headed north-west this time, as the way seemed easiest on that course. Murad detailed one of the soldiers to blaze a tree every twenty yards, so thick was the undergrowth. They stumbled onwards in the wake of the gaunt nobleman as though he were some kind of demented prophet leading them to paradise, and Sergeant Mensurado, his voice hoarsened to a croak with overuse, hurried the stragglers along with shoves and blows and venomous whispers.
The jungle began to open out a fraction. The trees were more widely spaced and the ground between them was littered with rocks, some as long as a ship’s culverin. The ground changed texture and became dark and gritty, almost like black sand. It filled their boots and rasped between their toes.
Then Murad stopped dead in his tracks.
Hawkwood and Bardolin were farther back in the file. He called them forward in a low hiss.
“What?” Hawkwood asked.
Murad pointed, his eyes not moving from whatever drew them.
Up in the tree, maybe forty feet off the ground. The canopy was broken there, bright with dappled sunlight. Hawkwood squinted in the unaccustomed glare.
“Holy God,” Bardolin said beside him.
Then Hawkwood saw it too.
It stood on a huge level branch, and had flattened itself against the trunk which spawned its perch. It was almost the same shade as the butternut-coloured tree bark, which was why Hawkwood had not seen it at first. But then the head turned, and the movement caught his eye.
A monstrous bird of some sort. Its wings were like those of a bat, only more leathery. They hugged the tree trunk: there were claws at the end of the skeletal frame. It was hard to be precisely sure as to where they began and the skin of the tree itself ended, so good was the beast’s camouflage, but the thing was big. Its wrinkled, featherless and hairless body was as tall as a man’s, and the span of the wings must have been three fathoms or more. The long neck supported a skull-like head, eyes surprisingly small, both set to the front of the face like an owl, and a wicked, black beak between them.
The eyes blinked slowly. They were yellow, slitted. The creature did not appear alarmed at the sight of the party, but regarded them with grave interest; almost, they might have said, with intelligence.
Bardolin stepped forward, and with his right hand he inscribed a little glimmer on the air. The creature stared at him, unafraid, seemingly intrigued.
There was a loud crack, a spurt of flame and billow of smoke.
“Hold your fire, God-damn you!” Murad cried.
The bird thing detached itself from the tree and seemed to fall backwards. It flipped in mid-fall with incredible speed and grace, then the great wings opened and flapped twice in huge whooshes of air which staggered the smoke and blew the plastered hair off Hawkwood’s brow. The wings boomed and cracked like sails. The thing wheeled up into the canopy, and then was a shape against the blue sky beyond, dwindling to a speck and disappearing.
“Who fired?” Murad demanded. “Whose weapon was that?” He was quivering with rage. A soldier whose arquebus was leaking smoke quailed visibly as Murad advanced on him.
Sergeant Mensurado stepped between them.
“My fault, sir. I told the men to keep their wheel-locks back, the match burning. Glabrio here, he tripped, sir. Must have been the sight of that monster. It won’t happen again. I’ll see to him myself when we get back.”
Murad glared at his sergeant, but at last only nodded. “See that you do, Mensurado. A pity the fool missed, since he had to fire a shot. I’d like to have had a closer look at that.”
Several of the soldiers were making the Sign of the Saint discreetly. They did not seem to share their commander’s wish.
“What was it, Bardolin?” Murad asked the wizard. “Any ideas?”
The old mage’s face was unusually troubled.
“I’ve never seen anything remotely like it, except perhaps in the pages of a bestiary. It was a warped, unnatural thing. Did you see its eyes? There was a mind behind them, Murad. And it stank of Dweomer.”
“It was a magical creature, then?” Hawkwood said.
“Yes. More than that, a created creature: not fashioned by the hand of God, but by the sorcery of men. But the power it would take to bring such a thing into the world, and then give it permanence . . . it is staggering. I had not thought that any mage living could have such power. It would kill me, were I to attempt a similar thing.”
“What did you make glow in the air?” Murad demanded.
“A glyph. Feralism is one of my disciplines. I was trying to read the heart of the beast.”
“And could you?”
“No . . . No, I could not.”
“Blast that whoreson idiot and his itchy trigger finger!”
“No, it was not that. I could not read the thing’s heart because it was not truly a beast.”
“What is this you’re saying, Mage?”
“I am not sure. What I think I am saying is that there was humanity there, in the beast. A soul, if you will.”
Murad and Hawkwood regarded the wizard in silence. The imp looked around and then cautiously took its fingers from out of its ears. It hated loud noises.
Murad realized that the soldiers were crowded around, listening. His face hardened.
“We’ll move on. We can discuss this later. Sergeant Mensurado, lead off and make sure the men have their wheels uncocked. I want no more discharges, or we will have Ensign di Souza evacuating the camp behind us.”
That raised a nervous laugh. The men shook out into file again, and set off. Bardolin trudged along wordlessly, the frown lines biting deep between his brows.
T HE ground continued to rise. It seemed that they were on the slopes of a hill or small mountain. It was hard going for all of them, because the black sand-like stuff of the forest floor sank under their boots. It was as if they were walking up the side of an enormous dune, their feet slipping back a yard for every yard advanced. “What is this stuff?” Murad asked. He slapped a sucking insect off his scarred cheek, grimacing.
“Ash, I think,” Hawkwood said. “There has been a great burning here. The stuff must be half a fathom deep.”
There were boulders, black and almost glassy in places. The trees were slowly splitting them apart and shifting them down-slope. And such trees! Nowhere in the world, Hawkwood thought, even in Gabrion, could there be trees like these, straight as lances, hard as bronze. A shipwright might fashion a mainmast from a single trunk, or a vessel’s keel from two. But the labour—the work of hewing down these forest giants. In this heat, it would kill a man.