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COMING SOON: The Book of the Broken

ChrisGibson

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Only the sound of crackling fire could be heard, and the falling of a leaf when Wolf went quiet and they all sat before you.

“I didn’t know you had such music in your, brother,” Anson began, and Wolf was about to reply when, instead, he said, touching his sword, “what’s that?”

No sooner had he spoken and Myrne turned around, then out of the bushes jumped men on every side. There was no time to assess them, but Imogen shouted as her wrists were grabbed and penned behind her. Myrne felt hands on her throat, and then heard a death gurgle as Wolf’s sword went over her head and through the shoulder into the heart of whoever held her. As the assailant fell, almost dragging her down, and she freed herself, Ohean stood in the midst of them, and reciting a word, limbs from the trees above fell, a branch swung against another brigand, hitting him on the head. Anson’s sword had gone through two, and Thano and Pol stood behind him.

“Nafat,” Thano cried, spitting into another one’s eyes, and he dodged away, screaming and when Myrne heard it, she said the same thing, turning to spit in the face of a man who tried to come behind her.

Ohean pronounced another word, but he seemed to be standing in the midst of them doing nothing, almost unaffected. However, when he spoke, the brigands became more clumsily, or fell to the ground, or seemed to stumble into a tree that was not there before, in his red mantle, the handsome mage seemed calm, serene, but suddenly he called out, “Anson!”

Out of the woods had come another brigand, and while Wolf struck one with his dagger and another with his sword, the second escaped, coming against tall Anson. His sword was about to come up into Anson’s belly when Ohean pronounced a word and the sword faltered and the man died. He was the last of the men, and now Myrne saw there was a feathered arrow in his back.

“What in the…?” she began.

“Feet!” Wolf cried, still at attention. “Halt! Who comes!”

“Peace,” a voice called out from the night.

At once they all stood still, but maybe it was because Ohean was still. Out of the trees came four men and one woman. Myrne noticed she was about the same age as herself. The men were Ayl but for one White Monk, and led by a handsome fellow abour Wolf’s size. They seemed to be, by the firelight of the night, in brownish green the color of the woods, and the girl was Royan, as red brown as Ohean. Indeed, she was was running to Ohean, when a last brigand came out of the wood and, quick as anything, she ttook out a knife and plunged it into him.

As he fell in the middle of the clearing, the girl with the long black hair embraced Ohean, calling him, ‘Cousin!” and while the rest of the companions looked at this new party, the handsome man—he was undoubtable handsome—who led them, doffed his feathered cap like a young lord and said, “Peace be to all you, I am Michael Flynn, and these are my woods Or, if not my woods, then certainly the woods I keep in safety.”

The trees of this wood were so very old they were wide as several men and bent, twisted by time into forms, many of them, housing all manner of life though the trees themselves were often dead. The shadows they made on the ground while Michael led them had made Imogen and Anson and the others feel something higher than eeriness.

“Lonesomeness,” Wolf said. “Yes.”

“The Ayl,” Michael said, “more than the Hale, though the Hale as well now, have a foot in two worlds. There is the world of the North from whence Eoga and his corsairs came, and this land, the Royan land, which the Royan blood you possess has always known. And so always there is something calling to us. We are home, and yet home is somewhere just over the hill.”

Michael Flynn had led them by paths they had not dared to travel into the depths of Ardan Wood, and now they descended into a deep clearing, large as a castle. Here, in the night there were many more men and not only men but women and children, living freely in the forest like the First Men of the long ago world. Boars were roasting over fires, and boys were jumping over ditches, playing at arms. Still others were, tending horses, preparing food for the morrow or for the late night as if they were, indeed in a castle. They possessed everything but the walls, and walls seemed a thing beyond these people.

“It seemed as if you were working a great magic,” Wolf said to Ohean, “when that last arrow came. “But then it was Rob.”

“Can you not see, Wolf?” Polly, the black-haired companion to Michael Flynn said, “That was a great magic. After all these years do you still expect the power to be like fireworks and balls of flame? It works itself out through the way of things. Why do you think you were unscarred while you fought?”

“I felt myself keener,” Anson said. “I will not say I was a poor warrior before, but I felt myself sharper, stronger, almost untouchable. Was that you?” he turned to Ohean.

“There is magic in you too,” Ohean said. “But it was partly me. As were the trees. As was the clumsiness of the brigands. But for the most part I called out to Michael Flynn and Polly. And so they came.

“You defended yourself most admirably,” Ohean added, turning to Myrne, “with that inventive spell.”

“It was actually a spell to find poison,” Myrne said. “I inverted it. I had no idea how unable I was to defend myself until then.” And then she said, turning to Polly, “and until I saw you.”

“But why do you call Ohean cousin?” Imogen asked Polly. “Are your families very close?”

“Oh, very very close,” Polly laughed. Her eyes were wide and dancing in the night. “I call him my cousin because he is. My mother is Meredith, the daughter of Nimerly, which would make me,” she turned to Anson, “your cousin too.

“My motherhis sister loved to go out into the world so did I, and it was in the world,” she touched Michael’s cheek, “that I met this one, and many adventures came to me because of him, So here I am.”

“One day, love, the adventures will be at an end.”

“Oh, I hope not,” she said, “though I could stand to leave these woods.”

“But how did you come to be in the woods?” Anson asked him.

“The same way as you, Prince Anson,” Michael said, “by the great displeasure of a treacherous king.
 
After supper, the Queen had retired to her favorite rooms in this house, or some of them. Up here where her herbs hung, and glass bottles revealed ground spices and powders, she worked her craft. When Eva came into the room, Morgellyn, leaning over a counter, chopping herbs, looked up and said, “Did you deliver the draft?”
“It’s in the King’s beer.”
“You made sure it was the right one? Not the one for Queen Hermudis?”
“I did, Lady, though I do not see the difference in one sleeping draft or another.”
“It is not for you to see, but to obey.”
“Yes.”
Eva looked so exhilarated Morgellyn made note of this. When she was reprimanded, Eva took an almost erotic pleasure in it. This strangeness made her fond of the girl. There was no other she would have trusted with the delivery of her powders and elixirs.
Now, Morgellyn moved from the counter, wiping her fingers on the work dress she wore when she was retired from court. She caught Eva’s hand and led her along the long wall, opposite the large windows. All along it, at irregular intervals, were old bronze panels and now, standing eye level with one, she opened it and said, “Look through the darkenglass.
“We can see them,” the Queen said, “but they cannot see us. How do you like him? Does he suit you?”
The square of glass looked down from the top of a warmly lit bathing room. Below, Eva could see a tall, dark haired man, much like his father, chocolate eyed with a touch of roundness in his face, strong shouldered, darker than most Ayl, dark as some Royan, his teeth flashing as he spoke to the page boy who began to undress him.
“The Prince Bohemond?”
“Yes,” Morgellyn murmured.
Eva knew from that bath room this window would seem like one of many square patterns in the wall, and as she looked away, to look at all the other panels in the Queen’s apothecary, she wondered what rooms they spied.
“He is good to look at,” Eva said, returning to gazing on Bohemond’s naked body, “much like his father.”
“Go to him if you wish. Tell him you are a gift from the Queen.”
Eva blinked at her.
“Remain with him for the night even. Especially. He is young. He will be done in five minutes, but keep him entertained all evening. Make him work to pleasure you. Tell him I insist.”
“He is your majesty’s future son in law.”
“Linalla is thirteen,” Morgellyn said, matter of factly. “The more you enjoy him and he enjoys you, the more he will remember his first meeting of Linalla as a wonderful night. By the strange alchemy of memory and men’s minds he will forever associate seeing Linalla with the most passionate night of his life. Make sure to take the jug of wine. Yes, that one right there. And you do not wish to have a prince’s bastard when you are not in his household. Take that direweed and boil it into a tea for yourself while he sleeps.”
Having taken the jug of wine and the small bag of weeds, Eva bowed delightedly, and put her hand to the door. Morgellyn was watching as the young prince with his beautiful brown body stepped into the tub full of sudsy water. How lovely he was. How surprised he would be when Eva appeared.
“Will your majesty be watching our pleasure?” Eva said.
“Of course I will,” Morgellyn said. “It will increase my own desire for less than an hour from now when I go to Bohemond’s father.”
As Morgellyn watched the boy washing himself, the water glossy on his skin, Eva said, “While I am making love to the son you will be with the father. It makes me shiver.”
“Off with you, you insolent slut,” Morgellyn said, indulgently, as Eva left the room.
She did not blame Eva, though. She could not. As her nipples rose and her thighs moistened she realized the same thought made her shiver too.
 
Thano embraced Ohean and then Anson. He mounted his horse, shifted his bag over his shoulder, and departed. Watching him leave, Myrne had the strange feeling that something was about to happen, that they were in a sort of preparation and that, when it happened, they must all be together again.
This feeling of anticipation turned to agitation in the end. Myrne was not able to sleep that night, and a little irritated that Imogen did. All she could think of was how much she had felt in charge of her life until now, how she had thought she was able to travel all alone and how she had learned she could fight scarcely at all. The Princess of Westrial was snoring lightly, and Myrne got up and wrapped her cloak about herself, moving through the fallen leaves as quietly as possible to find Wolf. By the remnants of the fire, she saw Ohean talking with Anson. Part of her wished to listen to their words, but she was distracted from this, looking over Wolf, asleep on the ground, his knees drawn to his chest while he made a pillow of his arms.
“Wolf!” she whispered, leaning down. “Wolf!”
“Wha…” he began, and pushing his face into his hands he snored sharply.
“Wake up!” she hissed, almost offended, hitting him in the shoulder.
“What?”
This time he looked up at her sleepily, almost but not quite offended.
“Wake up, damn you.”
Wolf shook himself and sat up, his red hair sticking up. It was red gold in the remnants of the firelight she noticed, as was the prickly hair growing on his face and in the cleft of his chin.
“Teach me to fight.”
“What in the world?” he shook himself, sounding awake for the first time.
“Teach me to fight!” Myrne said. “I saw what you did out there.”
“I’m sleeping, Myrne.”
“Fuck your sleep!” she hissed.
She reached into his belt and pulled out his sword and the sound rang in the clearning.
“Teach me!” she commanded, walking off into the forest.
“Damn you!” he swore, but not entirely with anger. He pushed himself up on his hands and sprang after her, taking up his second best sword.

In the clearing, where swords clashed, Ohean looked away from the fire and from Anson, Michael and Polly.
“Young love,” he murmured, watching Myrne and Wolf in the night.
“Do you think they know?” Polly murmured sitting back on her hands against the tree.
“Not yet,” Ohean said, “though I have a mind to tell them. It might save a lot of trouble in the end.”
“I wonder if she knows how goodlooking he is,” Polly said, and when Michael looked at her, she said, “It’s no need to pretend you’re jealous, and there are goodlooking men all around. But he looks like a red headed version of you,” she said to Anson.
“My lady,” Anson gave a crooked smile, “are you flattering me?”
“I never flatter,” Polly said with her own smile.
“Enough of them,” Michael said, “More of this sword you spoke of.”
“Legend says the Sword of Sevard was left in this wood, was planted in a great tree.”
“I never heard the tale until recently,” Ohean said, as if to dismiss it, but Michael said, “I have.”
When Ohean looked at him, Michael said, “Friend Ohean, you are Royan through and through, but I am a man of Inglad. We know the tale. We even know the tree. A great tree in the center of the wood.”
“But where is the tree?” Anson’s eyes opened wider.
“It is the Council Oak,” Polly spoke this time.
When they looked on her in surprise, Polly continued, One of the children of the forest people and had been plaiting her hair into a crown of berries, and now she kissed the girl on the cheek and, her hand in the girl’s hair, said, “Now for the truth. Now for the reason I came to know Michael.”
“She was searching for that sword,” Michael said.
“And all I ever found was a deep wound in a tree where that sword had been placed.”
“Then…” Anson said. “It is gone.”
“Gone if it was ever there,” Ohean said, and Polly said, “But it was there. And now it has been moved.”
“By whom I wonder,” Anson sat back against a tree, wrapping his arms about his knees while the swords of Myrne and Wolf clashed.
“Damn!” Wolf cried.
“By a mage,” Ohean said.
Now they looked at him.
“If what you say of the sword is true, it was ensorcelled. No mere marauder could have stolen it or, for the most part, even seen it.”
When Michael looked at Polly, Ohean said, “You underestimate my cousin. She is a true mage, and she would have known it. A Royan mage drew this sword, and I even know where he took it. He took in into Rheged.”
“How can you…?” Anson said.
“It is in Rheged,” Ohean said with certainty. “It is in Rheged, and it is yours. All the more reason to reach that land as soon as possible.”
As the smored fire crackled, and dark grey light came from a far, Anson said, “You’re not going to tell me how you know, are you?”
“Not at the moment,” Ohean said, rising, wrapping his cloak about him. “Try not to annoy, and let me sleep.”
 
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