“What is apparent,” Veloc answers. “As for who — does it signify?”
“Not at all, little man — not at all,” answers the Outrager; for such he is. “It’s only that, should we come to blows, it may help you to meet death with less shame if you know that you have been bested by Welferek,† Lord of the Woodland Knights.”
Veloc’s fear is apparently not strong enough to prevent him from scoffing: “Lord of the Woodland Knights … ‘Outrager’ isn’t comical enough for you, eh?” He turns to Keera, his continued laughter indicating that he has abandoned all caution: for this Welferek could easily kill them both, and Veloc knows it. Keera stares at her brother in disbelief. “Tell me, sister,” he inquires, with mock sincerity — and then Keera sees his true purpose: Veloc’s insulting impertinence is distracting the Outrager from the unfortunates on the rocky ledge, who have taken one or two steps away from the precipice, and are watching what transpires near the oak tree intently. “Have we not spent as much time in the Wood,” Veloc continues, “as any Bane alive?”
“Truly, brother,” Keera replies, trying to disguise her emotions and play his game; but it is difficult. “And more than most Bane now dead.”
“Which makes it odd — indeed, passing strange! — that we rarely if ever see any of these ‘woodland knights.’ And yet, here now is a lord of that noble brotherhood, in all his peacock finery!”
Welferek has been steadily losing the tolerance that had first marked his treatment of the foragers; and now, his hand slowly closes on the hilt of his short-sword. Yet he has also taken the bait: for his thoughts have wandered momentarily from the surviving Bane behind him. Veloc has been wise, to gamble on the pride of the Outragers.
Chosen for their exceptional height and strength, qualities that allow them to pass into Broken without being immediately (or in some cases ever) identified as Bane, the “Sacred Order of the Woodland Knights of Justice”—or, in common parlance, the Outragers — are the divinely sanctioned instrument of Bane vengeance, the creatures of the Priestess of the Moon in Okot, who alone chooses and commands them. The violence that they perpetrate, within Broken’s walls or among the villages of that kingdom, is infamous for its suddenness, its cruelty, and the often indirect way in which it is connected to individual injuries committed by the Tall against the Bane. A Bane forager run to death by the dogs of a Broken merchant’s hunting party, for example, or a young Bane woman who is abducted and obscenely used by a detachment of soldiers from Broken’s army, will nearly always result, not in retaliation against the particular Tall guilty of the crime, but in the torment and murder of Broken families in entirely different parts of the kingdom. This is not deemed cowardly, among the Bane — or rather, the High Priestess often declares that it should not be so deemed. Instead, it is reaffirmed on all Lunar holy days that the Woodland Knights of Justice have a divine right to strike wherever they will be least expected. Since the beginning of recorded Bane history, it has been the central secular tenet of the Lunar Sisterhood, from whom the High Priestesses are selected, that only by remorselessly engendering horror and shock throughout Broken can the Bane command sufficient respect among the Tall (even if it must be hateful respect) to ensure the flow of trade between the two peoples, and to keep the Tall from far more serious depredations against the tribes.
The knight now facing Keera and Veloc is a typical example of this philosophy. He is handsome enough, with well-proportioned features and a neatly trimmed beard atop a powerful frame more than five and a half feet in height. But in his eyes is the same chilling aspect that Keera and Veloc have seen in the gaze of every Outrager they have ever encountered. It is the dark scowl of one who has known too much lonely bloodshed in his life; bloodshed, the weight of which is neither eased by the comradeship of warriors in battle nor made somehow comprehensible by the gratitude of one’s own people; bloodshed undertaken at the obscure behest of priestesses; bloodshed that makes of a man something apart, something deadly, and of his soul, something already dead …
“You can have no interest in what takes place here,” Welferek says evenly, keeping his sword sheathed, and attempting to hold his anger at bay. “Continue about your business, and quickly.”
Keera’s resentment at being thus dismissed is great, but she tries to sustain Veloc’s ploy: “And what if we do have an interest? The deep Wood is the realm of the foragers, Outrager — it is we who say what is our business, here. Do you suppose we will submit meekly?”
In reply, Welferek finally draws the short-sword — slowly, to achieve the greatest effect. “I don’t suppose it,” he answers calmly. “I am certain of it. These deaths have been sanctioned by the High Priestess, by Her Lunar Sisters, and by the Groba. Those among the condemned who wish to die immediately may choose their own method of ending their lives. This family chose the Ayerzess-werten, as have others. They were escorted here at spear point by several of my knights” (The careless male voices in the Wood, Keera concludes silently) “and I am charged with making certain they fulfill their pledge. And if they do not, or if anyone attempts to interfere …” He shrugs.
“But—why is it happening?” Veloc asks. “What do you mean, ‘those among the condemned who wish to die immediately’?”
Welferek scrutinizes Veloc with great suspicion. “If you truly do not know, forager, then it’s not my place to tell you. For those sorts of answers, you need to see the Groba when you return to Okot. I’ve told you what my task is, and I advise you again to move along.”
The ugly glare of lethal sincerity in Welferek’s eyes intensifies, and is only slightly mitigated when the Outrager at last remembers his charges on the rocks: cursing both his inattention and the foragers’ interference, he turns away to make sure the man and the old woman are proceeding on the path that the young mother and her child have already taken. Discovering that they are not, Welferek murmurs still more irritated oaths, while Veloc, realizing that his game has run its course, puts a gentle but persuasive arm around his sister’s shoulders, urging her back. But Keera will have none of it, and Veloc, not knowing what recourse is left to him, begins to search first the crag and then the line of the Wood, in the hope that Heldo-Bah will soon offer support.
But he can find no trace of his friend among the Moonlit rocks and tree trunks, a fact that does little to encourage further defiance.
Welferek sends a sharp blast of air whistling through his teeth, fixing his own harsh gaze on the tormented eyes of the two Bane who are, apparently, the last business he has to attend to, at least for the moment. Taking a few long strides toward the Ayerzess-werten, Welferek holds his short-sword aloft, waving it through the air slowly, but with purpose, as his entire body assumes a posture of menace. His message could be no plainer: There are but two choices available to you …
The distraught pair on the ledge reluctantly select their fate: the man throws his arms around the now-weeping woman, tenderly yet very firmly (in the manner of a dutiful son, Keera cannot help but think), and whispers something into her ear that has at least a partially soothing effect. Then, with the last of his strength as well as another plaintive gaze up at the Moon, he guides the woman back to the very edge of the precipice and, with no more ceremony than would be required to drift into slumber, he falls with her from the ledge and into the spray of the cascade, from whence the two — ever locked in that same gentle embrace — hurtle down into the killing maelstrom, which cannot acknowledge these latest of its victims by allowing even a splash to escape its monotonous thundering.