Elizabeth Lynn - Chronicles of Tornor 1 - Watchtower

VIP免费
2024-12-03 0 0 607.43KB 109 页 5.9玖币
侵权投诉
======================
Watchtower
by Elizabeth A. Lynn
======================
Copyright (c)1979 by Elizabeth A. Lynn
e-reads
www.ereads.com
Fantasy
Winner of the World Fantasy Award
---------------------------------
NOTICE: This work is copyrighted. It is licensed only for use by the original
purchaser. Duplication or distribution of this work by email, floppy disk,
network, paper print out, or any other method is a violation of international
copyright law and subjects the violator to severe fines and/or imprisonment.
---------------------------------
Other works by Elizabeth A. Lynn also availabe in e-reads editions
The Northern Girl
The Dancers of Arun
The Sardonyx Net
--------
The land of Arun is a fictional place, and its people, culture, and
customs bear only inadvertent resemblance to people and histories of our world,
with one exception. The art of the chearis, as it is described, resembles in
some aspects the Japanese martial art _aikido_, created by Master Morihei
Uyeshiba. This imitation is deliberate. Writers must write what they know. In
gratitude for that knowledge, the author respectfully wishes to thank her
teachers.
--------
*one*
Tornor Keep was dead and burning.
Ryke's face was soot-stained, and his wrists were skinned raw where he
had torn them twisting in his chains. His head ached. He was not sure of what
he'd seen and not seen happen. He lay in the inner courtyard. He could see a
plume of smoke from the outer wall, where Col Istor's sappers had breached it
and pulled it down. He smelled the smoke of a nearer burning. Behind him, in the
great hall, something was in flames.
Athor, lord of the Keep, was dead, long beard bloody from the wounds he'd
taken. Ryke had seen him fall, and in the haze of the fight had expected Tornor
castle and tower and walls to waver and fall with him in the shock ... But it
had not happened. The walls were still there. All the men of Ryke's watch were
dead. They lay outside the gates they had died defending, frozen into the
uncaring snow. Ryke pictured the women from the village coming in spring to dig
the bodies of their husbands and sons from the loosening ground.
He was light-headed. He curled into the stone, wondering how many other
men of Tornor were still alive, and what Col Istor planned to do with them --
with him. He had expected to die with the men of his watch. He still expected to
die. He did not want to, but it was hard to summon up a will to live with Athor
dead, with the balance broken, the order of things spoiled. He wondered if Col
Istor had had him dragged inside and chained in order to make an example of him.
The stone was rough beneath his cheek. He shivered. From somewhere in the great
square Keep he heard the sound of chickens cackling, and the voices of the women
rounding them up. The winter had just begun, two weeks back, and he was not yet
cold-hardened. The second big snow had ceased that night. No, he thought
muzzily, the snow stopped two nights ago...
Fitfully, between shivers, he slept. He woke trying to roll away. Someone
had kicked him in the side.
He looked up. Framed against the blue winter sky, Col Istor stood over
him: black hair, black beard, a fat swarthy southerner's face.
"We just got the fire out," he said to Ryke casually, as if he were
talking to a friend, not a chained and defeated enemy. "Those crazed people set
the kitchen on fire rather than surrender." He squatted. He wore mail and a
long-sword. His iron helmet looked like an old pot. He smelled of ash. "You warm
enough?"
"Too close!" said someone sharply from behind him.
"Shut up." He was thick-shouldered, a bulky man. His dark eyes inspected
Ryke as if the watch commander were a goat marked for slaughter. "You fight
well," he said. "You're not really hurt, are you? No wounds except that head
knock. It saved your life. No broken bones. You're young. You're better off than
your lord."
Slowly Ryke sat up. He considered hitting the man with the chain around
his hands, but he did not have the strength left in his arms to swing the heavy
iron cuffs. "Athor's dead."
Col Istor chuckled. "I don't mean the old one," he said. "I mean the
young one, the prince."
"Errel?" Ryke blinked. The smoke stung his eyes. He had not slept in two
days, his head was thick. He scooped up a handful of snow and rubbed his face,
trying to think. Errel, Athor's only son and heir, had been out hunting when Col
and his soldiers appeared at the Keep five days ago. He had not come back. Athor
and the commanders had assumed him safe. Ryke had hoped so, very much. "He's out
of your reach."
"He's among us," said Col Istor. Standing, he beckoned to the man at his
back. "Get him on his feet."
That man stepped forward and dragged Ryke up. He had big ungentle hands.
Ryke leaned against the wall until his legs stopped shaking. Col watched him
with detached interest. The man did not look like a warlord. Everyone knew that
war came from the north. It was born in rock, and it toughened in the constant
strife, now at truce, between Arun and the country yet farther north, Anhard-
over-mountain. Athor of Tornor, watchful for signs of the Anhard raiders, had
paid no heed to the rumors that reached the Keep through the southern traders,
about a mercenary chieftain rising out of the peaceful farms of Arun, the
shining golden grainfields, the Galbareth. Yet this man had warred on wartrained
Tornor in winter, and won.
"Bring him," Col ordered.
They walked across the inner ward to the gate. Ryke had trouble in the
slippery snow. The cold wind half revived him. Col's army was all around in the
bright sunlight, cleaning up the castle. There was a line of corpses stacked
against a wall. Most wore battle gear, but one still wore a leather cook's
apron. There was no way to tell which of the cooks it was.
Once Ryke fell. They waited until he struggled up, and went on.
They went through the inner gatehouse, under the iron teeth of the
portcullis. Guards stood at attention. Several of them wore spoil marked with
the fire-emblem of Zilia Keep, the easternmost of the Keeps, three days ride
from Tornor. Ryke did not know what had happened to Ocel, lord of that castle,
and to his family. He had a big family. Probably they were dead. More guards
swarmed in the outer ward, between the walls. One carried an armful of spent
arrows. He held them by the quill end, spoiling the set of the fletch.
Southerners knew naught of shooting. Ryke wondered if the Keep could have held
out longer with more arrows. The Keep's fletchers had kept the castle supplied
with hunting shafts. But since the making of the truce they had more or less
ceased crafting war arrows.
He decided it would not have mattered.
Over the wall, Athor's banners snapped in the wind, a red eight-pointed
star on a white-field. As Ryke watched, a small dark figure wormed up the pole
and cut the banner down. Ryke looked away, aware that Col was watching him. The
cuffs dragged painfully at his wrists. They walked along the south wall. The dog
cage sat in the sun at the foot of the watchtower. It was a small stockade with
a linen awning shading it. Athor had built it for his wolfhound bitch and her
pups. There were no dogs in it now. Errel lay sprawled across the dung-spattered
stone, covered by a filthy blanket. His face was blue with cold and cut up about
the mouth. His eyes were closed. Only the steady rise and fall of his chest told
Ryke that he was living.
"He doesn't look like much," said the man whose name Ryke didn't know.
Col Istor said, "My men found him on the west road, heading toward Cloud
Keep. He killed four of them with that long bow of his. But he's whipped now."
Ryke wanted to wrap both hands around Col's thick neck. "What do you
want?" he asked.
Col Istor teetered, heel to toe, smiling, cheerful. He wore patterned
leather and over it a linked mail vest. Beneath the leather the linen tails of
his tunic flapped. The mail looked light and strong, as good as anything made by
a northern smith. "I could kill him," he said. "Or make him a servant. A
pigherd. Or I could keep him alive in chains."
"What do you want, thief?" Ryke said.
The other man backhanded him across the face. The blow sent Ryke into the
wall. His head spun, shot through with lights like arrows. He swallowed back
sickness and stayed on his feet.
"Held, let be," said Col Istor. The man so named stepped back obediently.
Col glanced at the sky. "It's clear now," he said. "Is it going to snow later?"
First they had been talking about Errel, now they were talking about the
weather: it made no sense. "What -- "
"Just answer me," said the war chief. He laid his left hand on his
scabbard, not in threat, but lightly, as if the feel of the sword in its sheath
gave him comfort. The leather scabbard was metal-worked. The sword was probably
of Tezeran steel, the best there was.
"In another four or five days. Sooner if the wind veers east."
"We'll have to get food from the village, but I don't want to starve
people to feed the army. What kind of stores did Athor keep?"
"The storerooms are filled with grain and salted beef," said Ryke. He
sucked at his cheek, tasting blood. Held's blow had cut it. "It may not be
sufficient. Athor counted on being able to feed two hundred men, plus staff.
There are more of you." He tried to keep his tone expressionless but did not
quite succeed.
"It galls, doesn't it," said Col. On the wall, the men were raising his
standard: a red sword on black. Held wore the device on the right breast of his
outershirt. "Look at me, Ryke."
Ryke met his eyes. The man had force.
"That's better. The army can eat light if it has to. How good is the
river water?" He referred to the Rurian, the river that fell down the mountains
west of the Keep. Joined by smaller streams, it broadened as it hurried south,
and Ryke had heard that it flowed unbroken to the sea. It curved by Tornor
almost close enough to brush the castle wall: it was the Keep's principal water
source.
"It's snow water; it's pure," Ryke said. "What is this?"
"You asked me what I wanted," said Col Istor. "I want you. You know the
Keep, the villages, the weather, the needs of the country. I want your service.
In exchange for your loyalty, your princeling there stays alive and fed." Both
men turned to look at Errel through the spacing of the wooden palisade.
Ryke tried to ask himself what Athor would do. But Athor was dead as
mutton and could not speak. "Suppose I say no," he said.
Col Istor smiled. "You can watch while Held breaks his hands."
He said it in a normal tone, loud enough for Errel to hear if he could
hear at all. The prince did not move. Ryke watched the lift and fall of his
chest. He too must have been hit on the head. A man can die from a head blow. A
man can die from cold. "How many watch commanders do you have?" be asked.
"Three," said Col.
"Make it four."
Col tugged at his beard. "Four," he said slowly. Beside him, Held stirred
but did not speak.
Ryke said, "Get Errel out of the cage."
Col nodded at Held. The man unfastened the cage door. Seizing Errel by
the feet, he dragged the long body out. Ryke went down on one knee. He almost
fell; he steadied himself and held out both hands. A few soldiers, black-
bearded, curious, stopped their work to watch. Col reached out and enclosed
Ryke's hands in his own. Ryke licked his lips. He would not swear to Col Istor
the oath he had sown at fifteen to Tornor's rightful lord. "I'll serve you," he
said, "with loyalty, as long as Errel's left alone and unharmed."
It sufficed. Col stepped back to let him stand. "Good," he said. He swung
toward Held. "Have him carried to the surgeon." Held pointed at two of the
watching soldiers. They came forward: one took Errel's shoulders, the other his
limp feet. "Tell Gam and Onran to choose out men to make a fourth watch. You
too." Held nodded with reluctance. Col ignored it. He turned back to Ryke. "Come
on," he said. "We'll get the smith to strike those chains."
* * * *
When Ryke walked out of the smithy. Col was waiting for him. They
strolled toward the barracks. Col said, "Your watch is like the other: that'll
bring all of them down to just under a hundred men."
"How many did you come with?"
"Five hundred. We left fifty to hold Zilia Keep, and lost fifty in the
fight." Ryke stifled his pleasure at the news that Tornor had accounted for the
loss of fifty of Col's men. He would have to keep such thoughts from his mind:
he was Col's man now. "I'll announce a new guard schedule tonight at dinner.
You'll have to keep the men working and in trim. In one or two months, after the
worst of the snows, we'll send out parties to harass Cloud Keep. It won't stand
when the time comes to fight."
Cloud Keep was ruled by Berent One-Eye, who'd lost his eye to a stone
kicked up by a running horse in the last of the Anhard wars, nine years ago.
Ryke wondered how Col knew that Cloud Keep was weak. He might have northerners
-- _traitors_, said his mind, and he forced the thought back -- among his
troops who would be able to tell him such things.
"And after Cloud Keep, Pel Keep?" he asked.
"Yes. That will be hardest. Harder than this was. Sironen's no fool.
He'll be expecting me."
They passed the Yard. Despite the snow, there were men practicing, with
knives and swords and axes: Col's men now. Every Keep on the mountain passes,
every large village, every southern city down the Rurian to Kendra-on-the-Delta
had a Yard. Every boy, from the time he reached thirteen, went through its gates
each day to practice. Without this training Arun would long ago have been
overrun by Anhard. Since the truce, Ryke had heard, the training in the southern
Yards had grown lax. It was easy for the farmers to slacken. It was the Keeps
that took the brunt of war.
They slowed to watch the men circling in combat. Once every Yard had had
a Yardmaster, a man whose skill at war was unquestioned, whose responsibility it
was to teach the boys and oversee practice. The custom had lapsed in Tornor. Col
scanned the Yard from one side to the other. His bright eyes missed nothing. The
two men nearest them swung at each other with wooden swords. "His guard's
clumsy," Col muttered. He shouted at the nearer man, who yelled back without
turning and held his shield higher.
Col glanced back at the smith. "I did that," he said.
"You were smith?"
"Yes. So was my father, and his father before him. We lived in Iste
village. Have you heard of it?" Ryke shook his head. "It's a pinprick, near Lake
Aruna on the Great South Road. I used to watch the lords of the Keeps ride back
and forth between the mountains and Kendra-on-the-Delta, wanting to be with
them, jealous of every horseboy on the line. I borrowed my name from it. That
and my father's old battle-axe were the two things I took when I left home." He
stuck his thumbs in his belt. "The men may give you trouble, you being a
northerner, and so late an enemy. Do what you must to keep them in order." And
I'll be watching to see how you handle them, his tone implied. He sauntered
toward the great stone barracks. "They should be gathered by now." Ryke, who had
lived ten years in the building and knew every crack in its walls, followed.
A hundred men lounged in the southwest corner of the barracks: the cold
corner, farthest from the kitchen chimneys. They rose as their chief entered.
The smell of roast ham filled the room, leaking from the kitchen. Ryke's mouth
watered. He felt himself the stranger. Fair-haired, fair-skinned, taller than
the men, he stood out among them like a red fox in the snow. They eyed him
warily. He wondered what Held had told them.
Col Istor said, "This is Ryke, late a commander of this Keep. He'll
command this watch. His authority is equal to that of any other commander's." He
teetered, gazing at the silent soldiers. "Is that clear?" There was a grumbling
assent. "That's all." He turned toward the stairs. As he left, he flashed a
yellow grin at Ryke.
Ryke folded his arms. The men were waiting for him to speak. Sunlight
patterned the faded wall hangings. Grease from the sconced candles made the
scenes of men at war almost unrecognizable. On the nearest panel, archers aimed
their arrows at Anhard raiders. A sword slash marked where, in a silly drunken
stupor, some soldier of the Keep had hacked at the Anhard warriors on the wall.
Under the peaked shape of their helmets, the faces were pale blobs. Ryke
surveyed the living soldiers standing in front of the painted ones. They had so
recently been his foes ... Scattered through the swarthy faces he saw
northerners. He did not know them: they were, he guessed, men of Zilia Keep who
Col had bought or threatened or enticed to his service. No doubt one of them had
told Col who Ryke was.
He walked down the row of pallets till he came to the innermost one.
"I'll sleep here," he said, and nudged the bundle of gear that lay on it to the
floor. A rangy redhead stepped from the ranks. "What's your name?" said Ryke.
This was the unofficial leader of the group.
"Vargo," said the redhead. He had freckles on his face and on the backs
of his hands. He wore an empty axe sheath on his left hip. He faced Ryke
squarely. "That's my bed you took."
Ryke pointed to the pallet next to it. "No, that's yours. You're watch
second."
A murmur of interest and surprise came from the observing soldiers. Vargo
licked his lips, clearly puzzled, having suddenly been stripped of a cause to
fight.
"Col will announce a new watch schedule at dinner. Assemble here before
then for weapons inspection. You have the afternoon to polish your gear. I'll
see what I can do to get us some extra blankets. Vargo, you stay; the rest of
you are dismissed." Slowly they dispersed out the door or to their pallets,
摘要:

======================WatchtowerbyElizabethA.Lynn======================Copyright(c)1979byElizabethA.Lynne-readswww.ereads.comFantasyWinneroftheWorldFantasyAward---------------------------------NOTICE:Thisworkiscopyrighted.Itislicensedonlyforusebytheoriginalpurchaser.Duplicationordistributionofthisw...

展开>> 收起<<
Elizabeth Lynn - Chronicles of Tornor 1 - Watchtower.pdf

共109页,预览5页

还剩页未读, 继续阅读

声明:本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。玖贝云文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知玖贝云文库,我们立即给予删除!
分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:109 页 大小:607.43KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-03

开通VIP享超值会员特权

  • 多端同步记录
  • 高速下载文档
  • 免费文档工具
  • 分享文档赚钱
  • 每日登录抽奖
  • 优质衍生服务
/ 109
客服
关注