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Angus Wells - Novel 04
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YESTERDAY'S KINGS
ANGUS WELLS
To save the world, one reluctant hero
must betray all he knows....
DON'T MISS THESE
OTHER EXCITING TALES
OF ADVENTURE BY
ANGUS WELLS
The Exiles Saga
EXILES CHILDREN
EXILES CHALLENGE
Book of the Kingdoms
WRATH OF ASHAR
THE USURPER
THE WAY BENEATH
The Godwars
FORBIDDEN MAGIC
DARK MAGIC
WILD MAGIC
Also by Angus Wells
LORDS OF THE SKY
THE GUARDIAN
UNSEEN PRESENCE
He came to the forest and found his cottage and knew something had changed. He could sense it, even before he entered the small building.
Some two-legged creature had been there.
He felt suddenly afraid, and drew his knife, inspecting the cottage.
Nothing was missing, so he sheathed his blade and went outside. He sniffed the air and found it normal—all forest smells, and that of the chickens and pigs that came rushing to him in search of food. He stared around and felt as if he were watched, but he could see no one. He paced the margins of his holding, staring at the encircling trees, but saw nothing untoward. Save he felt that odd sensation that eyes studied him, invisible behind the woodland canopy.
“Who’s there?” he called. “Shall you come out?”
There was no answer, but still he felt he was watched. The short hairs of his neck tingled and he felt suddenly wary. He had not felt afraid before—not in the friendly forest—but now. He wondered who watched him.
Or what.
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YESTERDAY’S kings
A Bantam Spectra Book / April 2001
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Copyright © 2001 by Angus Wells.
Cover art copyright © 2001 by David Bowers.
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OPM 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
In memory of Laurence James, my best friend
Contents
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Epilogue
About the Author
One
HE RESTED AGAINST the bole of a massive oak until the squirrel chattering a warning above lost interest and went away. Then he waited some more, listening to the birds that moved amongst the branches and the ferns, before he moved—cautiously—from the oak’s shelter. His bow was half drawn, an arrow set firm on the string, and he knew that the deer he hunted was not far ahead. He crouched, a motley figure, dressed in a homespun shirt and old leather breeches, all melding with the natural shades of the forest, as if he were part of the great woodland that stretched from the Alagordar to the farmlands beyond, where men had taken command and shaped the land to their desires. There were fields there now, tilled and hedged and marked off in orders of possession; cottages that connected with one another along roads of hard-packed dirt, some packed at the sides with dry stone walls. Some even had walls about them in memory of the Durrym raids, before order was imposed on Kandar and the firstcome folk driven out.
The nearest village was Lyth, and that was walled round, as if ancient memories could not be forgotten. There was a wide road leading there, and then on to the keep that dominated the hill above, with stone at its base and great wooden ramparts above, patrolled by Lord Bartram’s soldiery, who wore mail and even plate armor, and looked down on the few who chose to continue their lives in the forest as if they were traitors, allied to the Durrym.
Cullyn could not understand that. He had encountered Lord Bartram’s folk from time to time, and knew that most of the soldiers were from other provinces, or recruited from the fishing villages along the coast; few—if any—had ever seen one of the fey folk. He was not certain he had himself, although there were times he wondered, as he wandered the forest, if he were not watched. It was a curious feeling, a prickling down the nape of his neck, the sensation that something was watching him. Not an animal—that he’d have recognized, for he had lived in the forest all his life—but something else, that he could never quite spot or find. He’d turn around, bow drawn or knife ready, only to find himself staring at shadows, listening to the rustle of leaves and the birdsong, wondering what was there when there was nothing.
He was forest-birthed, and knew the place as few other men did. His father, Mattias, had carved out a clearing and built the cabin where Cullyn now lived. Because, he had told his son when Cullyn grew old enough to understand, he was sick of deceptions. He had fought in the Great War, when men came together and resolved their differences so as to drive the Durrym out of the land. And he had taken up shield and spear to fight the fey folk and claim the country for men. But had grown weary of the slaughter and chosen to have no more part of it. Not least because he had met Cullyn’s mother, who came front Tyris, the fishing village on the coast, and wanted to take her away from the threat of Durrym raids. So they had gone into the forest and cleared enough land to build a cabin and grow vegetables, and raise such pigs and chickens and cows as could keep them alive. It was enough for them, and they lived happy.
Cullyn remembered it. There were eggs for breakfast, and rich pork; milk to drink. At times an exciting journey to Lyth. The cabin was well built, warm against the winter winds and cool in the summer’s heat. There was an order to the seasons: the planting of seeds, and later their harvesting; the raising of animals that were later slaughtered, that his family might eat bacon and beef through the hard time of winter. The chickens tasted good, even when they were familiar friends that had pecked him as a child.
He had no problem with that: it was part of the cycle. But he never could understand why men warred against the Durrym, and when he was old enough to question his father, he had asked why.
“Because they are different,” Mattias had said. “I can give you no better answer, save that perhaps men are foolish and listen to those who’d be king
s and lords and look to vaunt themselves over all others. We came to this land from the west, and found the Durrym here. And our forefathers wanted the land, so they drove the Durrym out.”
“But you fought in that war,” Cullyn said.
“I did,” his father answered, “and now I regret it. The Durrym have as much right to this country as do we, but they've gone away across the Alagordar now and they’ve magic to deny us entry. But remember, they are not evil, only different, and they’ve as much right to these lands as we.”
His parents died as he came into his manhood. He and his father had taken several deer, and two boars, that they intended to trade in Lyth. His mother came with them, intent on purchasing new cloth and threads in the village. It was early spring, and the melt water from the hills set the rivers swirling, running with ice pack and torrents.
It was over in moments: the horse started as a dredge of ice struck. It plunged and fell. Mattias was dragged from his seat by the reins, and carried into the water. Cullyn sprung after him as his mother screamed, but he could not catch his father, who was borne away by the river, tumbling over and over as he shouted and thrust up helpless arms, then drowned. Cullyn struggled back and did his best to comfort his mother. He found the horse, near drowned itself, and they went on to Lyth, drenched and wretched, and traded their forest meat for what the village had to offer. Then he took his mother home, and not long after she died of a fever. Since then, Cullyn had lived alone in the cabin, taking what he needed from the forest, where—perhaps—the Durrym still lived, venturing into Lyth only to procure such things as he could not manufacture himself, like milled flour and salt, well- baked bread; even though he preferred his life in the forest to rhat of the village.
He had lived alone in the cabin since his mother’s demise, rejecting all offers of hospitality, for he could not imagine living anywhere else. Surely not in a place w'here buildings faced one another, with streets between and constant voices. He loved the sounds of the forest: the rustling of the leaves as the wind blew through, and the cries of its creatures, birds and deer and boar, fox song and the grunting of badgers, the messages of owls and the hymning of doves. He could not imagine another life, and when the priest had come, intent on persuading the young man to find a home in Lyth, Cullyn had driven him off with harsh words that he later regretted, for he recognized the priest to be a decent man who sought only to do good. But he did not understand the appeal of the forest. None could. Cullyn thought, who did not live there; and those who did not perceived the forest as magical, the domain of the IXirrym, and therefore dangerous. To them it was an enchanted place, where men became lost and were taken by the fey folk into the unknown country across the Alagordar where the gods alone knew what happened to them.
Cullyn believed some of this might be true. Certainly, he had never attempted to cross the river— why should he? He found all he needed on the Kandar side, and the Durrym had not, in all his eighteen years, offered him any threat. Did they sometimes watch him, as he suspected, he did not consider them dangerous. Curious, perhaps, but no more than that, and so he ran the forest freely, and enjoyed its bounty and his life within its confines. He had no real idea of its size. He knew that it stretched to the high cliffs that loomed above the Southern Sea, and for long miles eastward, and for at least a week's march north—the farthest he’d ever ventured—but how much farther north, or how far east, he had no conception. He was content with his own small piece, and wanted no more. So far as he was concerned, the Durrym were welcome to the farther side of the river.
He shook himself from his musings as he heard the deer stir. It was within bowshot, and comforted by his silence. There was a clearing ahead where he’d guessed it would stop to browse, and he was right. He went soft-footed and crouched through the bracken until he saw the animal—a fine, high-antlered stag—that raised its head at his approach, so that he crouched anew and held his breath until the lofting antlers dropped and the beast set to cropping the clearing’s rich grass again. Cullyn took a soft breath as he drew his bow string and sighted down the shaft. He wet his lips, testing the breeze, and adjusted his aim. He drew the string back to his cheek and rose, loosing the arrow. It flew straight, taking the stag behind the left shoulder, so that the great beast snorted and staggered and went down on its forelegs. Cullyn dropped his bow and charged forward as he drew his knife. Before the stag could rise, even before it had time to wonder, he was on it. He drove his blade deep into its throat, severing the great arteries, so that the stag snorted blood from its nostrils and mouth even as a great gout spurted from its neck. It was slain in moments, falling as Cullyn clutched it and begged its forgiveness.
“I must eat,” he murmured, “just like you. And I could die here like you.”
He was aware of that. For all he loved the forest, he knew its dangers. There were savage boars in the woodlands, and bears, and forest cats—all of which would slay a man for presuming to enter their domain. It was no easy life, but it was what Cullyn loved, and it was all he knew.
He cleaned his knife and worked his arrow loose and then took up the deer and began the trek back to his cabin. The corpse was heavy, but he was strong, broader of shoulder than most men of his age, and taller, worked hard by all his years in the forest. His arms were muscled from hewing wood, and his legs from chasing down prey. His hair was brown as oakwcxxl, and long, drawn back in a tail for want of trimming, and a thick beard grew around his mouth and cheeks. There had been young women in Lyth who’d called him handsome, but he was too shy to heed their calling, and was not at all sure what he looked like, save himself. He knew only that he enjoyed his life, and were he sometimes lonely, there was always the forest, with all its wondrous sights and sounds.
And the mystery of the I'Hirrym.
He earned the deer back and hung the carcass in the butchering shed, where he bled it and carved it, taking enough for himself to cure and keep, the rest to trade. He hacked off the head and set the skull to boiling. Someone in Lyth would likely buy it. Cullyn had no time for trophies: they seemed pointless to him, like keeping one’s own stool preserved for memory.
He thought that when the skull was bleached he’d go into the village. The meat would surely be ready by then, and he could trade sufficient to afford a jug of ale, which he enjoyed no less than the attentions of Andrias’s serving wench, who seemed particularly fond of him. Surely she served him sooner than others, and bent lower over his table, and smiled at him so fondly that he felt himself stir. Perhaps this time, he thought, he’d not collapse into embarrassment and turn his face away. Perhaps this time he’d accept her offer and follow her to her room. Perhaps.
He set a small portion of the venison on the fire and began to cut vegetables, and when they were done he ate, and settled to sleep, listening to the sounds of the forest. As ever, they lulled him into slumber, even though he felt both apprehensive and excited by the prospect of visiting Lyth again. It was like another country, mysterious and enticing, albeit frightening. He was not much used to people.
WHEN the venison was properly cured and the stag’s skull bleached dry, he packed his gear and set out for Lyth. The horse that had carried his parents into the river was long dead, and he had never been able to afford another, so he loaded a cart he had built himself and set the traces about his chest and shoulders and began to trudge the forest paths until he came to the road leading to the village. It was a journey of some two days by foot, but he had no qualms about sleeping on the roadside, and he had sufficient to eat, and water to drink from the freshets that fed the Alagordar. He wore his finest clothes: a linen shirt woven by his mother and breeches that were not entirely stained with animal blood and leaf mold. He had also combed his long hair and tied it with a strap of leather; even trimmed his burgeoning beard as best he could with a hunting knife. He felt ready to face civilization.
The road stretched across rolling farmland after the forest ended, where dales and vales ran toward the plateau that held Lyth and the great
keep. Cullyn felt somewhat uncomfortable there, for he was more accustomed to enclosing timber than this open landscape, but he pressed on, contemplating the reward for his burden, and when farmers offered him shelter, he thanked them and continued, preferring to sleep in the open. At least, until he came on the village.
He found that on the fourth day, by which time even his strength was waning. He halted at the open gate and shouted his name, but no one answered and so he went through, wondering why the villagers maintained their wall if no one guarded it.
Past the empty gate the road narrowed, running through the center of the village. It was flanked by houses, most plain cottages, but some larger, offering hospitality or stabling. Alleyways ran between, out to the walls, like the spokes of a wheel, and at its center was the village square. There was a pond there, on which sat fat ducks and two graceful swans; a weeping willow draped its branches over the water, and grass surrounded it. All around were the finest houses. None stood higher than a single story, but their windows were glassed and their doors set with metal, their porches intricately carved and painted in bright colors. They spoke to Cullyn of wealth, and he halted, his wonder at such extravagance reawakened.
And then, as ever, his eyes were drawn to the keep. That stood atop a knoll that overlooked the village like some immemorial guardian. It seemed to brood over Lyth, like a mother over a vulnerable child, stem and demanding, but ever watchful and protective. Cullyn wondered what it might be like to live there, behind walls. He could not imagine it.