Aric remained seated, staying as calm as he could. ‘It’s not like that, Lukien. Raxor is good to her. He doesn’t treat her like a slave or plaything. He’s kind to her. Kinder than you were, probably. And you know what else? She was happy there!’
Lukien was about to erupt, then stopped himself. He reached for his chair as he stared at Aric — and at Aric’s accusations. ‘I’m supposed to trust Raxor now?’ He laughed. ‘I’m surrounded by men like that!’ He looked with disdain at Lorn. ‘Tell him who you are, Lorn. Let Aric have a good laugh.’
Lorn got up from his chair. ‘Sit down, Lukien. You’re drunk.’
‘Drunk! Yes!’ cackled Lukien. ‘All my enemies are here to help me. And why? To kill my best friend!’
‘What enemies, Lukien?’ said Ghost. ‘We’re not your enemies.’
‘Raxor is my enemy!’ roared Lukien. He picked up the sword, and with a swipe of his arm sent the plates and glassware near him flying off the table. The crash of dishes brought the servants running, but Lukien ignored them, pointing his sword — still in its sheath — at Lorn. ‘And this hideous pig of a man — he’s my enemy. He’s everyone’s enemy! I’m just Minikin’s messenger boy, bringing him back to Norvor!’
‘Lukien, that’s enough,’ hissed Ghost.
Aric stood puzzled, looked between Lukien and Lorn. ‘I don’t understand,’ he said. ‘Lorn?’
Lorn, staring down Lukien’s sword, declared proudly, ‘I am Lorn, the rightful king of Norvor. I’m going home to reclaim my throne.’
‘You’re not,’ sneered Lukien. ‘I won’t have it.’
Lorn looked almost serene. His expression infuriated Lukien. ‘I’m the rightful king,’ he said. ‘You know I am, Lukien.’
‘You are a butcher and a tyrant,’ spat Lukien. ‘Minikin must be out of her mind to let you go.’
‘Minikin owes me. I lived up to my part of our bargain.’
‘Bargain?’ Aric piped up. ‘Lukien, I don’t understand this.’
‘Your bargain was with her, yes,’ said Lukien to Lorn. ‘Not with me.’
‘So what will you do?’ challenged Lorn. He stood his ground, looking unafraid of the crazed knight.
‘I should put you down like a sick dog,’ hissed Lukien.
‘You may not find that so easy,’ said Lorn calmly.
‘Oh, I knew this was coming!’ cried Ghost, who jumped onto the table between them. He turned to Lukien, making sure to push the tip of the sword aside. ‘Put it down,’ he directed. ‘You don’t want to fight here, Lukien.’
Lukien’s hand began to tremble as he stared into Lorn’s hard face. The Norvan was icy calm as he returned the glare. Aric hurried to Lukien’s side.
‘Put it down, Lukien,’ he echoed angrily. ‘I don’t care what your grievance is with Lorn. This is Daralor’s house!’
‘Right,’ sighed Lukien, at last relenting. He lowered his sword without ever having unsheathed it, shaking his head miserably. ‘Aric, do you want to know this man’s history? Ask him. He’ll tell you everything. He’s proud of it.’
‘It doesn’t matter,’ said Aric, holding his gaze. ‘We’re all going to Liiria.’
‘That’s right,’ chirped Lorn.
‘Shut up,’ Ghost snapped at him.
Lorn withdrew with a scowl. He began to leave the banquet chamber, then stopped to glance at Lukien. ‘Sooner or later you’ll have to trust me, Lukien.’
Lukien shook his head. He said to Ghost, ‘Go with him.’
Reluctantly, the albino followed Lorn out of the chamber, taking the stunned servants with them. Lukien laid his sword on the table, sorry for the things he had said to Aric, the scene he had caused. Aric waited a long moment before going back to his chair. But he did not sit down. He merely paused there expectantly.
‘I did care about her,’ said Lukien.
Aric nodded. ‘I know you did. I did what I could for her, Lukien, just like you.’
‘When you see Raxor again, you must try to get her free.’
‘I’ll try, Lukien.’
The awkwardness between them was intolerable. Lukien looked at Aric and smiled. ‘I’m drunk.’
They both laughed.
‘King Lorn the Wicked?’ said Aric. ‘Is it him, really?’
‘Aye,’ lamented Lukien. ‘Truly, I am cursed.’
Aric began to laugh more loudly, taking his seat. He licked his lips as if he still had a secret. Lukien eyed him, knowing the man too well.
‘What are you laughing at?’ he asked.
‘Lorn.’ Aric stopped laughing abruptly. ‘Maybe it’s nothing. .’
‘What? Tell me, Aric.’
‘It’s really just a rumour.’
‘What?’ pressed Lukien.
Aric looked around to make sure no one was listening. ‘He’s going to hear it from someone, it might as well be you. I didn’t mention this yet because it didn’t seem important, not until we started talking about Norvor. There’s something you should know, Lukien.’
‘Aric,’ groaned Lukien. ‘Tell me!’
‘It’s about Jazana Carr,’ said Aric. ‘We do get some news here in Nith. Lukien, we heard she’s dead.’
Old King Raxor knelt on the dirt floor of the arena, his face buried in warm, brown fur. Broud, the big male bear, wrestled him playfully, using its powerful jaws to tickle his shoulder and its big, clawed paws to leverage him aside. As Varsha looked on with mild interest, waiting for her own turn to entertain her master, Raxor lifted Broud to his hind paws, then let the bear dance backward, loudly calling out his approval. Broud, who seemed to get bigger every time Raxor saw him, remained upright for Raxor’s pleasure, balancing expertly the way he had been taught. Raxor clapped his hands and laughed, letting the bear fall gently forward, then called his sister forward.
‘Varsha, up,’ said Raxor, and with a wave of his hand brought the female upright. Varsha stretched her muscled body skyward, prancing the way she’d seen her brother do. The bag of treats at Raxor’s side brought a quick reward. ‘Good,’ praised Raxor happily. It would be the last he would see of his two beloved bears, and he wanted to remember them perfectly.
Above the open-air arena, the morning waned quickly into afternoon. Sunlight leaned heavily on Raxor’s weathered face. He sweated in his velvet garments, not at all dressed for a day with his pets. Where he was going, he needed to look the part of a king, but his heart was here with the siblings, and he knew he would miss them horribly. One at a time he tossed the bears the bread balls from his bag, taking his time. He had asked General Moon to wait for him, and the old soldier had relented to the request, yielding to the king’s idiosyncrasies. There was a long march ahead of them and all was ready, prepared for months as Reec simmered from its many loses. Reec was hardly the country Raxor remembered. It had changed so much since he’d returned from Liiria.
‘Why do things have to change?’ he asked his bears. ‘Why do men have to get old?’
Broud and his sister ignored the question, more interested in the treats being tossed into their snouts. Their silence reminded Raxor why he had come to the arena today. Today, he needed the solace of the place, the simple companionship of the bears. In all of Reec a storm was brewing, but not so in this peaceful place. As it had been for so many years, the arena and its inhabitants were a refuge for Raxor. His country had gone mad. Too many mothers had lost sons in Liiria, and too many fathers were crying for revenge. Raxor himself had lost his son, and the heartbreak of that gave him insight into the madness of his countrymen. He had tried to keep a lid on the boiling pot, to wait until Aric and their Nithin allies arrived, but he had heard nothing from Aric in months, not since getting his letter, and the rage of his Reecians would not be quelled.
‘Only blood,’ mused Raxor with a sigh. ‘That’s the only thing they want.’
Raxor himself wanted blood. He wanted Baron Glass on the end of his lance for what had happened to Mirage. For weeks, the news of her death had spiraled him into depression, and when he had awoken from it the lament of his people had become too much to ignore.