“Get serious or I’ll beat you unconscious. Here, I’ll make it easier.” Sebek sheathed one of his swords. “Now try again.”
Raithe shook his head and spat. Shifting his feet the way Herkimer had taught, he drew in his elbows and then leaned to the right until Sebek shifted his weight. At that moment he spun left, swinging the blade horizontally, and attacked Sebek’s undefended side. He expected to slice Sebek across the chest. Amazingly, Sebek deflected the blade with his hand—his empty hand. The Fhrey slapped the flat of the blade, driving it down and away.
Raithe pivoted once more and swept high. Again, Sebek slapped the blade aside. Frustrated by the ease with which the Fhrey deflected his attacks with a bare hand, Raithe swung harder and faster. Following one stroke with another, he closed the distance between them. Sebek became pressed enough to use both his hand and a sword to deflect the attacks. But then, when Raithe thrust the sword at his chest, the Fhrey caught his blade with his hand, twisted it, and once again disarmed him.
“Your father wasn’t a good teacher,” Sebek said, handing the sword back. “You’re slow, predictable, as graceful as an ox trapped in mud, and have no strategy for attack. I’m surprised Nyphron had so much trouble with you. But I think he wanted you to win. Still…” Sebek nodded slowly, thoughtfully. “You’re much better than I expected. Much better than I would have thought a Rhune could be.”
“Are we done, then?” Raithe asked, picking up Roan’s ax.
“Yes. I got what I wanted.”
“What was that?”
“The truth.”
CHAPTER TWENTY
The Prince
We were foolish to think the Fhrey were gods, but it was insanity for the Fhrey to believe it, too. I’d rather be foolish than insane.
—THE BOOK OF BRIN
As he rode alongside Gryndal at the head of a small column of soldiers, Mawyndul? worked hard to hold a stoic expression. Locking his teeth together, he stiffened his lips, which were constantly trying to betray him. His eyes were wide, but there was no helping that. He had no idea how to be casually in awe. Mawyndul? desperately wanted to appear as the unflappable prince of the realm instead of a sheltered youth seeing the magnificence of the world for the first time. The flaw in the plan was that he wasn’t and he was.
Since leaving Estramnadon, Mawyndul? had gazed dewy-eyed at the great Parthaloren Falls, the marvelous tower of Avempartha, the snowcapped peaks of Mount Mador, the fjords of the Green Sea, and finally the broad, sweeping vista of Rhulyn. The sheer size of everything was incredible.
And the colors!
The sun playing on the barren hills and stony mountains produced a strange beauty. The harsh landscape sang of adventure and secrets. He saw himself traveling the wasteland alone, climbing the jagged ridges, and peering into lost caves. He imagined discovering Dherg treasure guarded by sleeping dragons, which he would slay. Or perhaps the guardians would be a troop of Dherg, the little monsters with their shining metal weapons lashing out from underground hiding places. In every fantasy, he was victorious—although he allowed himself to almost be beaten in a few of his daydreams before making his enemy pay dearly.
When Alon Rhist appeared on the horizon, the sight was beyond boyhood imaginings. Mawyndul? couldn’t have dreamed that big. This was the stuff of legends. The great tower looked like an upthrust spear, punching out of the ground, stabbing the sky. The dome might have been the helmet of a giant, hidden just below the surface of the great hill. Such scale wasn’t possible beneath the trees of Erivan. This was a place open and free, a land of heroes, a home for adventure. Even seeing it from afar, Mawyndul? fell for the romance, the grandeur, and the excitement he imagined as daily realities.
No one is forced to learn how to make string patterns in a place like this. No one needs to practice juggling inside a thrusting spearhead.
Mawyndul? wondered how often Alon Rhist was attacked. Regrettably, the war with the Dherg had ended long before Mawyndul?’s birth. But the little cretins still existed, cowering in their dark places under the earth, seeking revenge and a return to the world of light.
Once a month maybe? Once a month would be good.
Mawyndul? knew Gryndal wouldn’t linger at the outpost long, only a week or two, but he hoped they might be around for at least one assault. As the son of the fane, he would, of course, command a battalion of soldiers. And as one of only three Miralyith on the frontier, he would also command their awe.
Mawyndul? imagined hordes of Dherg scaling the cliffs and walls, emerging like droves of armored crabs or hairy spiders from every cleft and crevasse. Mawyndul?’s troops would be shrieking in fear, but their young prince would boldly step forward and refuse his counselor’s pleas to don armor. Fearless, he would look down at the enemy from the balcony of the—
“Miserable desolation,” Gryndal muttered as they began the final climb toward the outpost. Mawyndul?’s new teacher was scowling—no, it was more of a sneer. “Look at this.” He gestured at the fortress of Alon Rhist. “They practically live in a cave. Little wonder they’ve become animals. This whole land is worthless, the armpit of the world, an empty, forgotten basin of rock. Even trees shun it.” A black scorch mark off to their left caught his eye. “At least some of the vermin have been exterminated.”
“Vermin?” the prince asked.
“Rhunes,” Gryndal replied.
Mawyndul? had seen Rhunes only in paintings. Renowned artists who spent time in Avrlyn had filled the Talwara and the Airenthenon with frescoes. Most were dramatic, sweeping landscapes of the frontier at sunset or sunrise. Others featured impossibly tall mountains and unimaginably fierce rivers. In several, there were images of Rhunes, docile figures wrapped in blankets beside dwindling fires. But some depictions cast them as ferocious savages. While not nearly as frightening as the Dherg, ghazel, Grenmorians, or dragons, they were still scary with their wild eyes and crude weapons.
Mawyndul? was excited by the prospect of seeing an actual Rhune. Since learning about the trip to Avrlyn, he had compiled a mental checklist of things he wanted to see: bears, mountain lions, ghazel, Mount Mador, giants, the sea, the tower of Avempartha, Rhunes, the Great Urum River, Dherg, and dragons. The last two were actually at the top of the list, ghazel at the bottom. The sinister creatures had always scared Mawyndul? as a child, and the prospect of meeting a real one revealed that the fear hadn’t completely disappeared. So far he’d crossed only the mountain and the tower off his list.
Gryndal was nodding. “Yes, Rhunes. One of their villages, I imagine. Petragar was able to accomplish something at least.”
All Mawyndul? saw was a mound of dirt on top of which lay blackened timbers.
“I do apologize for dragging you out here to this rat-infested cellar, my prince,” Gryndal said. “But your father feels you need to suffer indignities to build character. I don’t agree. Such things are remnants of a bygone era—a time before the Art. The Miralyith have no need for such foolishness. We don’t require an understanding of those below us any more than we need to experience life as a snail or ant. It’s this notion that we are still related to them that hinders us from achieving our full potential. The only reason we are not yet recognized as a pantheon of gods is because we can’t manage to allow ourselves to accept the reality that we already are. The absurdity is obvious when you consider how insane it would be to think of ourselves as equal to animals. Can you imagine believing yourself to be merely the most successful tribe of goats or cows?”
Age of Myth (The Legends of the First Empire #1)
Michael J. Sullivan's books
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