***
The warmth of the Goldorian sun was a welcome companion that afternoon as they flew southwest over the Great Eastern Plain. The northern half of Goldoria was bisected diagonally by the north border road that ran from Goldoria City—far down the east coast of the land—to the city of Keson in the north west of the land.
The four griffons diverted to avoid the market town of Valikshall, a place famed for its many bakers and its huge variety of breads.
The border road was an old Imperial highway laid with white pebble and it crossed the land like an old scar. Hunor noted the abrupt change from the patchwork farmlands to its northeast and the vast grasslands to its south. Herds of sheep and goats were evident far below and it took some skill from the knights to rein in their griffons from swooping and carrying off a mid-afternoon snack.
Minrik flew point. He had remained silent since his admonishment from Lady Orla. Ekra-Hurr flew close by, hoping that the large griffon would distract any observer below from his presence. Hunor was enjoying his least painful day in the air yet, his bonds secured with only a minor degree of pain and not one slap across his face as yet. It also gave him ample opportunity to evaluate the finer points of Lady Orla’s moulded armour.
The thief’s mind was active, constantly barraged with thoughts. He had considered and rejected two-dozen plans for escape since their capture; the variables flitted across his brain like moths at a campfire. The bonds were not a major problem, he had worked on his daily and knew he could slip them if the opportunity presented. The period on the ground was the only time to escape; the two younger knights were getting more relaxed with them, so it would be on their watch. The Air-mage remained the biggest uncertainty; whereas the knights were honour bound to keep them alive, Hunor could see a murderous glint in the wizard’s eyes.
With regards his friends, the effect of the Goldorian Pure Water was restricting Jem and Emelia’s magic. The elixir seemed to require nightly dosing to maintain its effect. For all three of them to escape they would need either Wild-magic or their weapons, tucked away in the saddle bags near his legs.
They would get one chance and it was his role to precipitate it. After all, Emelia was still effectively their apprentice and Jem, well Jem seemed preoccupied somehow. He urgently needed the mage to focus on their predicament.
He returned his attention to Lady Orla. The knight was a strange fish indeed: a rigid vassal of inhibition and arrogance, ingrained with the snobbery of Eerian breeding. Clearly she needed the right chap to unleash her inner rogue, though this would be a challenge even for his famed charm.
Orla glanced back at her passenger as if sensing his thoughts. Hunor grinned and winked at the knight. Lady Orla shot him an icy stare through the eye slits in her visor. She tugged on the reins of her griffon and the creature dropped a hundred feet in altitude. A flash of panic rushed through Hunor as his stomach was left behind and he squeezed his legs into the saddle with all his might to stop himself tipping off.
They made camp that evening in a small dip in the undulating landscape and Sir Robert soon had a fire crackling in its centre. It was a mild night, with a breeze that rustled the grasses of the plain and sent flecks of pollen to irritate the nose.
Sir Minrik tended to the weary griffons whilst Orla conversed with Ekra-Hurr, leaving Unhert to watch over them. He broke lumps of bread from the loaf that the peasant children had given them and fed them methodically to the prisoners, having chosen not to untie Hunor this evening.
“Have you travelled in these lands before, Sir Unhert?” Emelia asked, as way of conversation.
“Erm... no. No, I haven’t. I’ve been a knight seven years now and most of that I’ve spent around the Citadel in Coonor, apart from one tour to take battle to the mountain giants that were threatening the Vale of Girios.”
“Why would giants threaten the Vale?”
“Who knows the workings of the evil creatures’ minds? I will tell you, though, that it’s a test of a knight’s mettle charging down a roaring mountain giant, as he stands forty feet high, brandishing a club the size of a tree!”
“More noble work than this, I’ll bet,” Emelia said. “What exactly will happen to us when you return us to Coonor?”
Unhert shifted his gaze towards the fire. “It is... not really my place as a knight to know. If I was in your position I would try not to dwell on the matter.”
A sneering laughter interrupted the conversation as Ekra-Hurr strode to the side of Unhert.
“You’re surprisingly coy with the prisoners this evening, Sir Unhert. The answer, little witch, is that you will be returned to the Ebon-Farrs, hopefully with their other lost property. What they choose to do, well, that is Lord Ebon-Farr’s business, but I expect he’ll have to make some example of you. Head on a pike sort of thing.”
“Mage, there is no need…” Unhert said.
“There is every need. Don’t be drawn in by her pretty face and twinkling eyes. She’s a common thief like the others. No, far worse, she’s a thief, a Wild-mage and a servant who has repudiated on her contract.”
“You go too far, sir. My honour…”
“Is best left to challenge angry giants, not to make condemned prisoners feel better about their fate.”
Sir Unhert flushed a deep scarlet and for a moment Emelia thought he would strike Ekra-Hurr.
“Your male accomplices will undergo trial by the Eerian council,” Ekra-Hurr said. “If Engin is with them then they may escape with life deep in the rocky prison of Iyrit Crag. If not, then I shall take my front seat at their execution; perhaps sell souvenirs to little Coonorians eager to see some rogue’s head parted from its shoulders.”
“I’ll make sure to bleed on your best robes,” Hunor said.
Ekra-Hurr bent forth over Emelia and grasping her cheeks began to pour Pure Water in her mouth. A surge of anger bubbled to the surface and Emebaka hissed, let us see how the mage likes the taste of his own medicine. She spat the potion full in Ekra-Hurr’s face and he reeled back, spluttering.
Ekra-Hurr snarled and backhanded Emelia. The slap spun her around and she felt the cool grass press on her burning cheek as she struck the ground. Ekra-Hurr frantically pulled out a second bottle from his side bag and washed his face.
Feeling her split lip beginning to swell, Emelia rolled back over and grinned at Ekra-Hurr. She could feel her head pumping with adrenaline.
“It’s clear that Sir Unhert is the honourable one here. Does it make you feel brave having such rough fun with a bound housemaid?”
Sir Unhert wavered, eyes flitting between the pair. Hunor began to rise to rush towards the Air-mage. Unhert drew his sword and pointed its tip at Jem and Hunor, shaking his head.
Ekra-Hurr leered, wiping the water from his face. “So are we playing this game then? Such a jest. I trust you will repeat your infantile actions when I try the next dose?”
Emelia, the defiance of Emebaka rising to the fore, glanced at Hunor and Jem, who watched the scene tensely. She laughed and nodded.
Quick as a flash Ekra-Hurr had seized Jem. Before she could conceal it a flicker of concern came across Emelia’s face.
The Air-mage gripped Jem and then dug his long fingers into the healing burn on his shoulder. Jem gasped in pain as Ekra-Hurr’s thumb tore open the blistered flesh.
“Torik curse you, mage. Stop that!” Emelia cried.
“Another’s pain can often be as exquisite as our own. Any more resistance in taking the Pure Water and I shall drive my rather grubby fingers deep in this burn and as sure as night follows day it will begin to fester.”
Emelia glared at Ekra-Hurr; she could feel the rage burning within her. Hunor’s eyes darted from Ekra-Hurr to the sword of Sir Unhert.
“That’s enough, mage,” Orla said.
The three other knights had approached to investigate the ruckus. Minrik smirked whereas Sir Robert had his hand ready on his sword. Orla strode forth and pulled Jem away from Ekra-Hurr and slid the dressing back over t
he burn.
Orla turned to Ekra-Hurr, her voice clipped. “We are an ancient order that prides itself on our honour and our decorum. I will not advocate you torturing or assailing prisoners in my charge, is that clear?”
“As I recall your honour does not extend to rebellious miners.”
Emelia could hear a sharp intake of breath from the knights. Orla’s face paled to such a degree that Emelia thought the blood had been magically drained from her body by an unseen demon.
Orla’s voice was laced with controlled fury. “Your recall does not interest me, mage. If ever you insult me again then I shall have no recourse but to restore my honour with cold steel. Take this as your warning; there shall be only one.”
Ekra-Hurr dropped his gaze.
“Stop your childish behaviour, girl,” Orla said. “For one who brushed with death but days ago you act with a foolhardiness in keeping with a village idiot. Any more displays of resistance and mark my words I shall seek the nearest Goldorian Godsarm and hand you over as a witch. I am sure your companions will regale you with the quality of treatment you may expect off them. Is that clear?”
Emelia met Orla’s eyes, her jaw clenching and unclenching. The two women locked their stares for several tense seconds.
“It’s perfectly clear,” Jem said. “You won’t get any more difficulty from us.”
Emelia looked aghast at Jem. “Damn it, Jem. Damn you all.”
Ekra-Hurr smugly leaned over her and fed her the drops of potion.
Orla turned now to Unhert, indicating for him to re-sheath his sword. She addressed Hunor. “Thief, I have need of an audience with you. I wish to clarify the details of our journey in greater detail on my maps.”
“Captain, you can’t be serious,” Minrik said. “The dog should simply tell us all he knows, now. Any more foolery and we shall surely deliver Eerian justice sharply and without mercy.”
Orla rounded on the impudent knight.
“Enough! Enough and thrice, enough! There seems to be some misunderstanding here in whom is in command. I am a third lance of the Silver Wing, lest you forget, and am not in the practice of discussing my orders with those of an inferior rank. If I have one more hint of subordination from any of you then I’ll have you on charges. Torik fly me far to save me from prattling wizards, eager to taste my sword’s edge and moronic corporals who feel themselves worthy of my position, hard earned on the field of battle.
“Hunor, over here, and one quip from you—in the tainted version of Imperial that pours from your Thetorian mouth—and I’ll forget the whole mission and head straight back to Coonor, where I guarantee you’ll part company with your pony-tailed cranium!”
The knights busied themselves with any task that did not involve eye contact with Orla. Ekra-Hurr gave the Pure Water to Jem then melted back into the shadows.
Hunor walked over to Orla who then led him, his hands still bound, to her griffon. Her saddlebags were full, at least partly with the weapons that she had procured from them when they were captured. Her knights had done a good job of finding all his concealed arms and picks, tucked away in a dozen secret pockets on his person.
Orla pulled out a bundle of maps and then indicated for Hunor to be seated. She knelt next to him and unfurled a large map of Goldoria and Thetoria.
“I estimate we are here, about ten leagues past Valikshall. With the wind behind us we shall make the Vale of Ukôr south of the river Parok by nightfall tomorrow. We shall then fly over the Silver Mountains that run between Goldoria and Thetoria.”
“That’s the best place to cross to avoid any attention,” Hunor said. “The passes through the Mountains have had garrisons stationed ever since the Summer War. But that route is pretty dense mountains with only a few goblins and bandits.”
“I do not regard goblins as a concern,” Orla said. “Nonetheless your advice is accepted. That takes us then into northern Thetoria, over the Silver Hills and near the town of Silverton. What is our route from there? Cooperation will weigh heavily in your favour when we return to Coonor.”
Hunor smiled and looked at the knight. The yelling at the other knights had put a flush on her marble cheeks and a strand of hair had fallen across her face, like a sliver of the moon.
“I understand, m’lady, and as Jem said you won’t get any more difficulty from us. Silverton is in the lands of Baron Exiki, a fat boorish man whose gustatory excess is matched only by his disturbing love of androgynous young Feldorian singers. The next barony west is that of Latimer—he in contrast is as thin as a pole and has no interest save that of hunting in the deer lands north of Balki. He and Exiki seem to get together every decade and kill a few dozen of each other’s men over some long running feud involving a great, great aunt they share.”
Orla raised her eyebrows at the thief’s prattle.
“Anyway, there’s always a fight to be had in Thetoria as they say. The barony we seek is the in the north-west corner, that of Baron Enfarson. The baron was a fair warrior in his day—he soldered his reputation by culls of the goblins that nibble at his borders like starving mice. His lands are surrounded on the west, north and east by hills and run as far south as Greenford and the Falls of Sork. The bleaker lands have bred a sterner people than most Thetorians. He won’t be a simple man to deal with. Just flashing the shield of a faraway nation won’t have much effect.”
“I pride myself on greater diplomacy than that, thief. Are you certain this is the noble we seek?”
“It was definitely his coat of arms on the seal in Kir. I know it all too well. How on earth are you going to find your crystal if it’s there? I mean, I suppose me and Jem…”
“You and your roguish friends will do nothing save direct us there. Do not think me so naïve as to leave the finding of my uncle’s crystal to pure chance. We will find it if it is there and we shall bring this baron to task! Recall the reach of the Eerian Empire, in days long past, was to the Emerald Mountains. King Dulkar values our trade and treaties far too much to support a thieving nobleman against our demands, should it come to that.”
Hunor shrugged and a silence fell upon them, interrupted only by the crackles of the fire. The thief got an insane impulse to lean over and give those serious lips a nice warm kiss, but he wisely suppressed the urge.
“Do you regret almost executing Emelia, Lady Orla? You don’t strike me as the murderous type.”
Orla blinked at the question and for an instant Hunor saw past her mask. A flash of guilt, a flicker of uncertainty and a spark of anger danced across her face. Then the façade returned as she looked the thief up and down.
“Not that I need to explain myself to a prisoner any more than to my subordinates, but, no, of course not. It was necessary and a totally appropriate course of action. Make no mistake; she is bound by the Statute of Servitude and Eerian law and I would not hesitate to carry out my threat if it became vital to this mission.”
“That’s what I thought, of course, m’lady. A soldier first and all’s fair in love and war, as they say. I’ll make certain you have no recourse to behead my friend at any juncture. Is that all?”
“Indeed.”
Hunor smiled as he returned to sit next to the other two. Emelia nursed her fat lip and Jem his throbbing shoulder. Perhaps the knight’s armour wasn’t as robust as it first seemed.