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“He was a warrior, I take it.”

“You apprehend well. A vicious bastard in most ways, but a warrior of the highest order, to be certain. Another Syldoon soldier saw him coming, unlooped his sword and stepped in his path. Neither said a word. Sirk appraised the man, and then threw a blow from the high guard position, but it was a feint, and the blade whipped back down and to the right, cutting deep into the man’s exposed left leg. Before the Syldoon could even cry out the sword reversed directions, up and to the left again, slashing across the inside of the sword arm, cutting cloth, flesh, bone.

“The Syldoon dropped his sword and fell to the ground, unsure which wound to hold, and my uncle walked past him. Another Syldoon with a two-handed axe moved forward to intercept. He told Sirk to sheathe his sword but my uncle ignored him. Seeing his comrade dispatched so quickly, the soldier didn’t wait for Sirk to act. He closed in and delivered a blow straight down that, had it connected, would have split my uncle in two. But it didn’t. My uncle stepped to left and as the axe cleaved air, then moved forward.”

He tapped me on the lower stomach and made me jump. “The point of Sirk’s sword entered just above the man’s right hip and came out the other side. The soldier screamed and looked at his side dumbly. Sirk planted his left palm on the Syldoon’s chest and pushed him off his sword as he pulled it free. The man collapsed and curled into a ball and Sirk stepped over him as if he were a pile of steaming shit he didn’t want to risk soiling his shoes on, eyes focused on the man who had slain his brother. I had never witnessed my uncle in battle before, only having heard stories, but they had utterly failed to capture exactly how efficient, purposeful, and economical he was.”

He said this as if he wasn’t aware how neatly this assessment applied to himself.

“A trebuchet was no less awesome to behold in its controlled fury and mechanical purpose. My uncle imparted little to me, but he told me once that many men rage and scream during combat in the hopes of bolstering their abilities or devastating their foes’ courage, but the finest warriors were those who reined in emotion, who acted only with clean technique and clear purpose. So, in my mind, in that brief moment when he continued on so coldly as if he were walking alone in the woods, I imagined the entire Syldoon army advancing on Sirk, one man at a time, each of them dispatched with as little wasted movement as possible as he made his way casually to his revenge, and I laughed, laughed out loud like a man bereft of sense. And while I had several reasons to hate the man, for that single moment, I loved him.

“But then four more Syldoon moved to impede my uncle, swords raised, and the spell was broken. They demanded he disarm but he continued forward as if deaf. I saw two Vorlu run over to help him, and some Zundovu untied their peace cords to join the fray as well, although who they were going to attack I couldn’t guess. I grabbed a blue bottle then, too late, and ran to help my uncle and my father if I could.”

Quietly, I said, “But you didn’t make it.”

“But I didn’t make it,” he agreed. “I heard a bowstring hum and an arrow sprouted from the back of my uncle’s leg. He made a sound that I can only call a growl and spun around, still holding his bloody sword. I looked back to where the arrow had come from. The Syldoon commander was standing on a table, five archers beneath him, composite bows drawn, arrows nocked.

“The commander shouted, ‘Drop your weapons. All of you.’ All around the encampment tribals and Syldoon were armed and ready to kill each other. Sirk looked at the commander, looked at the archers, spat, and turned to face the Syldoon in front of him again. He took another step, dragging his wounded leg, and another arrow appeared in his lower back. He started to fall forward, planted his sword in the dirt and laid his weight on the pommel, holding the hilt with both hands. The sword bent but didn’t break.

“Soffjian ran over and stood between Sirk and the archers, covering his body with her own. The commander called out again, ‘I won’t say it a third time. Anyone who doesn’t obey will be shot. Drop your weapons.’”

“And did they?”

“It would have resulted in a bloodbath that cut my life short otherwise. Slowly people lowered their blades, slid them into scabbards. Sirk’s sword bent under him and snapped. Soff tried to grab him as he fell, but she wasn’t strong enough and he slumped over onto the ground. I ran over to them, realizing only after I got there that I still held the glass bottle stupidly in my hand. I dropped it and knelt next to them. His breathing was labored. There was a growing circle of blood around each arrow. Soff cradled his head in her lap and cried.

“I heard the commander again. ‘Vorlu, Zundovu, Bandovar. Return home. Return to your homes now. This Sanctuary is over.’ I looked over at my father, started to rise to go to him. He was motionless on his belly, head turned sideways. It’s often said that a gut wound is the worst kind. A man stabbed or shot by a bolt or arrow in the belly could linger for hours, even days, experiencing the most awful suffering imaginable, overtaken by fever, begging for death to claim him or his comrades to finish him off. But there are rare exceptions. Men who survive. Men who die quick. My father might not have been dead when he hit the ground, but something inside was cut deep, and he died fast, his eyes still very much open. And I sat down and wept harder than I have in my entire life as my dead father stared at me.”

He stopped for a moment, hitch-laughed, and said, “So much for black squirrels, eh?”

I didn’t know how to respond, or if he even expected one. So after sitting silently for a while, I asked “So the vow, the first one Soffjian mentioned, that was-”

“Made later.”

It seemed curt and succinct was returning to claim its seat. “Did you vow… to avenge your father? That’s what it sounded like she was talking about.”

“My people have five categories of death. Muli: The accidental death. A child eating poison mushrooms, a man mistaking his foot for firewood and bleeding out in snow. Droos: The natural death. A man dying under the weight of his years, a woman dying in childbirth. Nince: The elemental death. Drowning. Fire. Lightning. Vali: The glory death. Men dying in raids, in personal combat, defending their cattle. And Buntu: Murder. My father being stabbed.”

“But…” I stopped myself.

He looked over at me, the familiar irritated expression also finding its way home. “Yes?”

“Well, perhaps there’s some nuance there I’m not familiar with, but wouldn’t your father be ‘vali,’ as it was personal combat?” His expression darkened, and I unhelpfully added, “Of sorts?”

Braylar gave me a look that could have skinned pelts from flesh. “Personal combat is a duel, or a fight on a battlefield, or even the madness of a raid, between two armed men who know the stakes and willingly enter into the melee or pursue a foe. When one man draws a weapon attempting to kill the other, and the other, inept and hopeless, tries unsuccessfully to defend himself, it is not combat. But murder. Buntu.

“And it’s said that of the five deaths, only Buntu isn’t tolerated by the gods, for it’s the only one they haven’t foreseen. The father, brother, or son of a man murdered must avenge this kind of death, or they’re almost as guilty as the man who murdered. Murder unavenged is called the Twice Murder-Bunturu-as it’s considered twice as heinous and appalling to ancestors and gods alike, and so to the living.

“My uncle tried and was cut down. My sister was forbidden from trying. And while I was considered too young, not yet a man, I was the only one to stand between Buntu and Bunturu. That is why my sister goaded me into making my vow.”

“She also said-”

He slapped the bench. “Enough. You have a job to do, it is high time you set to it.”

I nodded, thinking he meant for me to record the most recent events, and started to rise when he asked, “At the worst possible moment, no questions?”