He spoke between clenched teeth, pale to the point of nausea with mortification. His plot in Dustari was in ruins, an unmitigated failure; and all because he had been outmanoeuvred on the field, a thing that had never happened on Kelewan, nor in the Warlord’s campaign against the Midkemians.
The taste of defeat was new and all too potently bitter. Tasaio oversaw the withdrawal of his army, what remained of it; his stomach churned with the realization that he had destroyed his chances to retaliate. He could not remain in the desert to mount a second assault. The desert men he had sent forth as bait would not forgive his betrayal. The tribes would now be set against him, their chiefs perhaps angry enough to swear blood debt. Though Tasaio looked with scorn upon tribal custom and was not in the least afraid of any retaliation the desert men could call down upon his house, he could not discount their retaliations. All the way to Banganok and the ships that would return him to the mainland, he must endure petty raids as the desert men sought to settle blood score against his company.
That night, sitting tentless and tired in camp between a fold of dunes to the east, Tasaio brooded in solitude. He would take no sa wine to blunt the aches left from battle. He shut out the voices of his soldiers, raised in bitter complaint, as they wrapped their wounds and sharpened the chips from their swords. Above all, he would not look to the west, where the afterglow of sunset was displaced by the glimmer of Acoma and Xacatecas victory fires. Soon enough, he promised, those fires would be as ashes. Soon enough would Mara come to regret this brief victory, for next time he matched wits against her, Acoma defeat would be utter and final.
* * *
In the command tent of the Lord of the Xacatecas, surrounded by the soft light of lamps and by hushed conversation between a healer and a favoured wounded soldier, Mara made the bow that was proper from a Ruling Lady to a social superior. Although hers had been the triumph in the day’s rout, she had chosen not to press the acknowledgment of her laurels. She did not wait haughtily in her own tent and insist that the Lord of the indebted house come to her; wisely, subtly, she did not force her new-won position upon a Lord who could potentially cause the Acoma more harm than help were his pride unduly ruffled. Neither did she attempt to ingratiate herself, but passed off her presence as a social visit of little consequence.
‘My Lord Chipino,’ she opened, smiling slightly as she arose, ‘you expressed an interest in my honour guard, and specifically the soldier who betrayed such remarkable cowardice, that Desio’s much praised cousin, Tasaio, was set off his guard.’
Lord Chipino waved away the servant who applied a hot compress to the sore muscles of his back and neck. Glistening with massage oils, and smelling of sweet ointments, he gestured to a waiting slave boy, who slipped a light robe over his body. ‘Yes.’ Chipino fixed bland eyes on a tall figure in the shadows behind Mara, and said, ‘Come forward.’
Kevin stepped forth, dressed in his Midkemian trousers and a loose-sleeved shirt, gathered at the waist with a Tsurani belt of overlapping shell disks. His blue eyes were laughing as he stopped, hands on hips, to suffer Lord Chipino’s scrutiny.
The Lord of the Xacatecas’ eyes widened at the sight of the barbarian slave, whom he had observed often enough in Mara’s tent. And yet, having been told by the Acoma Force Commander that the day’s tactics had been Kevin’s, and that all of them lived and breathed as a result of barbarian logic, he looked more carefully at the man from beyond the rift. Politely he cleared his throat. Since his culture had no protocol for addressing a slave who had been heroic, he settled with inclining his head. ‘Fetch the lad a cushion,’ he told his slave boy.
One was plucked from the master’s own sleeping alcove. Nonplussed, the Lord bade the barbarian sit. Then, satisfied in his paternal way that the fellow was comfortable, Lord Chipino opened what he held to be a most sensitive topic. ‘You are a slave, and so you were able to run from the enemy in cowardice, since your Lady ordered you to do so, yes?’
To Chipino’s startlement, Kevin laughed. ‘Being a slave has nothing to do with it,’ he said, in his booming Kingdom voice. ‘Just to see the look of surprise on Commander Tasaio’s face was satisfaction enough.’
Lord Chipino frowned, then covered his puzzlement by sipping at the tesh that waited on the tray by his elbow. ‘Yet you were an officer in the army in your own land, or so your mistress tells me. Did you not feel shamed to show cowardice?’
Kevin’s eyebrows slanted up. ‘Shamed? Either we tricked the enemy, or we died. I hold shame to be a pittance beside the permanent state of being dead.’
‘His people esteem life far more than we do,’ Mara interjected. ‘They do not acknowledge the Wheel of Life, nor do they comprehend divine truth. They do not understand that they will return in their next incarnation based upon the honour they acquire in this present state.’