DargonZine | Volume 15, Number 11 |
he impact knocked Gaheris Bochara to the earth. His bow flew off
into the brush behind him as he was spun around and his breath left him
as he sprawled on his back. Gaheris felt his torso go numb around the
arrow protruding from his left shoulder. The ground cover of dried
leaves crunched with his landing, but failed to cushion him. Colored
lights, some near and bright, others far and faint, twinkled in his
vision.
That one moment of inattention was all it had taken. The
consequences of his and his brother's decisions struck truer than the
arrow. Their actions over the last two days surged through his mind.
"Gal, these arrows are going to be the death of me," Gaheris, 'Ris'
to his family and friends, said to his twin. He pulled another arrow
from the rough wooden racks and held it with both ends between his
thumbs and forefingers, bending it gently. He was checking the
resiliency of the arrow's shaft, its spine. Even the smallest of cracks
or imperfections would be magnified under the pressure of a bow, Ris
knew. Satisfied that the arrow he held was sturdy, he placed it into a
second rack.
"Agreed, brother, agreed," Galerth answered, pulling another arrow
from the racks.
The two brothers sat on logs in the archery clearing. Morning
practice had ended over a bell earlier and Sybator, their weapons
teacher, had left the brothers to their task. Rather than picking up
another arrow, Ris quickly scavenged three rocks from the bare soil and
began to juggle them. One of the stones sparkled as it twirled through
the air, flecks of a mineral catching the light as Ris kept it moving in
its spiraling dance.
"Ris! We're going to be here for days if you're going to waste
time," Gal said.
Ris continued to juggle, venting annoyance with his twin. Brijit
Mecammon, the pretty red-haired lass Ris was fond of, had already
scolded him about his decision-making. "Ris, one of these days you're
going to get yourself into serious trouble if you keep jumping into
these crazy plans of yours without thinking them through first," she'd
said.
Ris broke out of his reverie. "Brother, you worry too much. It's
just a momentary break. The arrows are not going anywhere."
"We don't have time to waste. You're the one who told Brijit you'd
meet her at dusk today. At this rate, you'll be lucky to see her at
midnight ... tomorrow. It'll be days before she forgives you if you
break the date. She's already mad at you for trying to pull that stupid
prank. You'll never get that kiss you've been dreaming of."
"It nearly worked. We almost got Dysic," Ris snapped, ignoring the
last of his brother's jabs.
"I don't know. For once, I agree with Sybator. I think we might
have gone to far. Dysic's not exactly my best friend, but what if he had
used those arrows and one had shattered and injured him?"
"Gal, you're starting to sound like Brijit. This wasn't some huge
decision that will change the course of my life. It was a joke. The
chances of the arrow splintering completely were pretty slim. I know an
arrow with a soft shaft can explode, but usually they just crumble into
pieces. And heck, Gal, Dysic pulls like a baby! I doubt he could shatter
one." Ris smiled lopsidedly at his brother.
"Our mistake wasn't the prank, it was getting caught," Ris
continued. The image of Sybator putting heavy-handed pressure on Ris'
shoulder and scowling at the brothers with undisguised anger flashed
through Ris' head. He had caught them early that morning returning
Dysic's arrows to their normal storage spot in the archery clearing. The
memory of Sybator's face caused even the normally unflappable twin to
shudder. "We just had bad timing."
"It was definitely bad timing ... no matter what way you look at
it," Gal answered his brother. "Why did we have to do this with Melrin
approaching? Everyone in Dawnsmist has extra arrows prepared for the
tournament." The arrow Gal was testing cracked under his pressure and he
tossed it aside into a small pile of similar cast-offs.
"Gal, you complain a lot for someone who had no problem helping me
catch the ieonem beetles we needed. And, if I remember correctly, it was
your idea to treat a dozen of his arrows, not just one, like I'd
planned." The brothers had spent the better part of a summer evening
hunting the woods for the ieonem beetles. They had harvested the
creatures -- each the size of Ris' thumb -- from within their nests in
the boles of fully grown ieonem trees. The beetles made their homes by
chewing through the trees' bark and into the heartwood using their
saliva.
The saliva was the reason the brothers had spent so much time and
effort on the bugs, crushing each beetle and carefully draining its
juices into a large bowl of water. They had eventually used this
solution to treat Dysic's arrows.
"What if Sybator comes and catches you juggling? You know how he
feels about your habit," Gal said.
Sybator had long been trying to break Ris of his penchant for
juggling, with little success. In response, the weapon's master had
begun devising more and more unusual punishments to try to break the
habit.
Ris put down the stones and picked up another arrow, a scowl on his
face. He hated to admit when Gal was right.
"That's it for Sybator's," Ris said a moment later, putting the
last arrow fletched in red and white into their completed rack. Every
clan in the valley had a different color pattern for the three feathers
in their fletchings. Gaheris and Galerth both had arrows with two yellow
and one blue, the colors of the Bocharas. Dysic, a member of the
Klefinem clan, used arrows with two black feathers and a purple.
Sybator, not born in the valley, had chosen two reds and one white for
his weapons.
Ris reached for the next row, the Mecammons -- Brijit's family --
in purple and yellow, when a voice said the words he'd been dreaming of
hearing all morning. "You can stop now." Sybator walked up to the logs
the pair sat on. "I have another task for you."
"Can I say, master, that this is the happiest I've ever been to see
you?" Ris said, turning a beatific smile at the weapons teacher.
"I'm not here to save you from hard work, Gaheris Bochara. I have
another, potentially more difficult job for you two." Sybator looked
them over before speaking again. "One that you can do to earn back some
of my trust after your ... joke."
"Anything is better than more arrows," Ris said.
"You don't even know what the task is," Sybator responded. "You
cannot escape the consequences of your actions that easily."
Ris hated when Sybator forced them to consider consequences. He
greatly respected Sybator for how well he taught the fighting arts, but
he could do without the morals in between. Morality lessons were what he
expected from Father Tannuay, a Stevenic priest and their teacher of
books.
Sybator began. "You are aware that Phillip has been shipping bows
and arrows to Kenna in order to sell them?" Phillip was the merchant in
their woodland village.
Both brothers nodded. It was common knowledge in the valley that
Phillip had grandiose plans to make piles of Rounds and Bits by selling
bows and arrows made of ieonem wood. Its elastic strength and durability
made it an ideal material for both pieces of equipment. Yet ieonem trees
were rare and only grew in isolated stands; the valley of Dawnsmist had
extensive clumps of the trees. Not all of the clans were supportive of
the endeavor, but neither brother had done more than watch the heated
arguments Phillip's plans had caused.
"His last two shipments were ambushed by bandits on the way to
Kenna. The first time they let all his people go. This second time all
of them had their throats slit except for one who was sent scurrying
back to tell his story."
"Wait, why would the brigands let any of his people go? Shouldn't
they kill 'em and be done with it? Why leave anybody to tell their
tale?" Ris asked. Phillip typically hired men from Kenna as workers, so
Ris doubted he knew any of them. The thought of the cold-blooded murder
made him queasy, though.
"That is one of the questions. They are either very confident, or
very stupid," Sybator answered. "I don't trust either assumption."
"What do you want us to do?" Gal asked.
"I want you two to scout the road, starting where the ambush
occurred, and try to find the bandits. If they're consistently striking
the same section of the trail, they likely have a camp nearby." With
only one road to Kenna, and that a beaten track at best, both brothers
knew the path Sybator was talking about.
"There's no village in that area," Gal added.
"Yes." Sybator nodded. "But," he added emphasis, "once you do find
the camp, I want you to return here immediately. Stay out of the way of
the bandits. Is that clear?"
"Come straight back. Got it," Ris answered. "Then we'll muster a
party to engage them." Ris stood up with one swift movement, eager to
accept the challenge ... and happy to be getting away from the arrows.
"If necessary."
"But a small group should go first. Too many and we're more likely
to have them run into us than us run into them," Gal continued the
thought. He eased himself from his sitting position, stretching his
shoulders languidly as he spoke.
"I am sending you because I think you two have the most to gain by
performing this task correctly. This is your chance to show that you can
overcome the impulsiveness you often show around the valley in the face
of a real test. Now, get your gear together tonight and meet me here at
daybreak and no later." Sybator turned and walked away.
Gal and Ris looked at each other and then at the arrows and
shrugged.
"The arrows will be here when you get back," Sybator added as he
moved out of sight.
Gaheris and Galerth were approaching Sybator's house when they
heard voices raised in argument. They had decided to check their
equipment with their teacher before they went to bed, both agreeing that
it would be easier to make changes that night rather than the next
morning. So they walked the narrow trail that wound from the village
center down towards the small house Sybator inhabited near the
Mistenbak, the creek that ran through their village.
Ris and Gal both paused thirty paces downwind of the house without
a word, only trading a glance when they heard two men arguing. The
brothers knew both voices well. They belonged to their schoolmasters.
The gruff one was Sybator's. Father Tannuay typically spoke with a soft
voice.
"... only boys, Sybator. You cannot send them on such a dangerous
mission. They are up against bandits. They can and probably will kill
the boys if they catch them. You're sending green fighters against
seasoned veterans. Is that wise?" Father Tannuay was speaking with the
voice he used when angry. Rather than raising the volume he tended to
raise the pitch of his voice, leaving it sounding reedy and thin.
"Are you sure we should stop?" Gal swung his fingers through the
motions of hand-speak. Sybator had taught it to them for times when
silence was essential.
"I want to hear what they say. This doesn't seem like a good time
to drop in," Ris answered.
The brothers kneeled down on a grassy patch along the trail and
stared up at the house. Father Tannuay stood silhouetted by candlelight
in the one window of the single room dwelling.
"I have no choice," Sybator said evenly.
"No choice? Every man has a choice. We've been friends for many
years, but if I weren't a Stevenic, I'd challenge you to a fight right
here. You are holding two boys' lives in your hands, and you choose to
send them off into the worst danger -- alone."
"Who would you have me send?"
Ris felt the tension in the cabin, even from a distance. He sensed
it in the same way he could sense the defeat in the priest's voice as he
began speaking again. "That damned war. It has been over for two years
now and still it haunts us with battlefield ghosts."
"Wars do that."
As Sybator spoke, Ris and Gal exchanged a look in the dark.
"I know, old friend. I'm sorry ... I am just worried for them. I
know He will watch over them, but I worry that I will never see them in
my lectures again. While those two are not my best pupils, the vigor
with which they pursue life is rare. That, and I'm not sure that this
village can suffer any more losses. Are you sure they are the best ones
for the job? I heard about the prank with Dysic's arrows."
"They have the most to gain by succeeding. I have seen many men
rise to the occasion when confronted with a true challenge. Up to now I
have led them in games. We knew someday they would have to confront the
real thing."
"For once I wish I had your faith, old friend. I wish there was a
way to send someone else with them. I know that with all our warriors of
fighting age still somewhere between here and Pyridain answering to the
king, all that is left are the old, like you and me, and the young, like
them. It's bad enough that the kingdom has already taken one generation
to fight for its cause. It's even worse that we continue to train the
next to be its prize scouts."
"I would go," Ris could imagine Sybator glancing down at his lame
leg, "but I would be more of a burden than a help. I could no longer
move fast enough if we got into trouble."
"I know, but you have the experience they lack." Father Tannuay
paused. "I find it strange that the bandits let any of Phillip's men go
free."
Sybator growled a noncommittal response.
Father Tannuay started talking again, "You don't think they could
have a contact inside the valley, do you?"
"I'd thought of that."
"Is that why you're sending the twins? Is it because you know that
with their tendency to disappear for a few days, usually avoiding your
wrath, it'd be nearly a sennight before they are missed around the
village?"
Ris did not hear a response.
"Your decision could get them killed. Is there no other way?"
"Everyone has a test in their life that shows their mettle. Some
succeed and others ... fail."
"Yes, but failure will likely mean their death."
"Death can be a better option than life after failure." Sybator
spoke with a bitter edge that caused Ris to shiver. "We cannot protect
them from death forever, Father. This is not a kind world we live in.
Our job has long been to prepare them for death's face. Mine was to
train their bodies. Yours was to train their minds and spirits."
They heard Father Tannuay preparing to leave. After sharing a quick
glance, they moved hastily back down the trail towards the village. The
morning seemed the best time to check their packs. Neither of them spoke
as they prepared for bed.
The brothers left Dawnsmist valley at sunrise, tracking a few
leagues down the road toward Kenna before turning off the path to try to
avoid any bandit scouts that might be lurking in the area. Choosing a
smaller, less used game trail that paralleled the main one, they
carefully traveled during the morning and early afternoon until they
reached the site of the last bandit ambush.
While Gal circled to check for scouts, Ris scanned the road, trying
to make sense of the proliferation of tracks in the area. With little
trouble he found the trail left by a large group leaving the ambush
site. They hadn't taken much care to cover their movement.
Ris signaled to Gal, using hand-speak to say that the tracks headed
roughly north. The brothers moved off to trace the trail, Gal staying
slightly behind his brother and off to the side about a stone's throw,
attempting to scan through the thick foliage for anybody who might be
watching for interlopers like them.
They followed the trail until they heard the faint clinking of
metal on metal and voices carrying through the trees. Moving with
caution, the two eased forward to scan carefully for pickets. This
proved to be an easy task. The two men on lookout were standing
together, talking casually and only occasionally glancing out into the
forest.
It was simple for the twins to slip to the edge of the clearing
that the bandits used as a base of operations. The camp was set in a
small hollow where a number of evergreens, their branches high overhead,
gave rise to a clear patch in the undergrowth. The clearing was floored
with a soft carpet of pine needles. Dense thickets guarded the camp on
two sides, a rounded, immense boulder on the third, and the sentries on
the fourth, most open egress. The brothers, well-experienced in crawling
through brush, had chosen the thicket furthest from the camp for their
hiding spot.
The twins watched through the afternoon bells until the sun set,
studying the layout of the area, the number of bandits, and the
placement of the evening watches: only one man each at two positions.
The group settled in to tell bawdy tales and drink spirits around their
dinner fire. Again, they did little to protect themselves from being
seen or heard.
As the shadows darkened on the forest floor the brothers prepared
to leave. "I think we have seen enough," Ris signed.
"Yes. It's nearly dark. Nobody should see us," Gal answered in the
same fashion.
Ris was shifting his weight to begin crawling when Gal grabbed his
shoulder and signed, "Wait!" Even in the near dark, Ris could sense the
urgency in Gal's fingers. Ris snapped his head around, throwing his
attention back towards the bandits.
One of the bandits left the group at the center of the camp. The
rest remained circled around the fire as the lone man picked up a bow
and quiver and headed directly for their thicket. The brigand swayed as
he walked. He set the quiver against the trunk of a tree not twenty
paces from the twins as he strung his bow. Both brothers looked at each
other.
"Did he see us?" Gal moved his fingers.
"I don't think so," Ris responded, glancing around quickly. The
bandit nocked an arrow and aimed towards the tree trunk closest to the
brothers' hiding place. Both twins tensed. Ris considered running for
better cover, but quickly decided that running would be suicide that
close to the armed camp. The bandit sighted.
The arrow swished as it left the bow, and thunked as it hit the
wide bole of the tree. Amazingly, the arrow struck less than a finger
from center of the knot the archer seemed to be aiming at.
After a short pause as he fumbled for the second arrow, the bandit
proceeded to shoot another half dozen arrows at the tree. Each time he
fired, the brothers tensed. Although most of the arrows flew wide -- his
first shot proved lucky -- only one of them entered their thicket. It
stuck in the dense foliage at the outer edge of the brush, nearly the
length of two men from them.
Ris felt a hand on his shoulder and turned curiously to see his
brother pointing at the arrow the bandit had lofted into the thicket. It
was a finely crafted arrow, much like those that the two typically
carried. This one was fletched with two black feathers and a purple.
"Klefinem," Gal signed.
When Ris turned back towards the camp, the bandit was picking up
the empty quiver and heading back towards his comrades.
"Vanth, what are you doing? Where are the arrows?" One of the other
highwaymen called as he approached the fire.
"I'll pick them up in the mornin'. It'll be easier to find 'em
then," Vanth answered.
"Vanth, Dinac won't be happy if you lose any of his arrows," the
same bandit called back. In the brush, both brothers looked at each
other.
"They aren't going anywhere," Vanth replied.
Having seen enough, the brothers pulled back to where they could
still see the firelight in the distance, but where they felt they could
talk in low tones.
"I count nine: the two pickets and seven in the camp," Galerth
said.
"I counted nine, as well. Now we can guess why they are so sure of
themselves. Dinac is passing them information ... and likely supplies,
as well." Ris sat on his heels. The darkness enveloped the brothers so
that even though they were only four hands apart Ris could barely make
out his brother's features. Dinac Klefinem was Dysic's older brother.
Dinac was strongly opposed to Phillip's sale of ieonem outside the
village. Ris figured that he had decided to stop arguing his point and
taken matters into his own hands.
"That's a problem, Ris. If we return to the village and report what
we've seen, the bandits could very well be forewarned. It's going to be
nearly impossible to keep secret an armed party leaving the village.
Dinac will hear right away. We could try keeping him from knowing, but
who else of his brothers is involved?" Ris considered the evaluation his
brother had given him. He was correct. Dinac had four brothers and any
of them could be part of the scheme.
"There has to be another option. It seems like it'd be easy to walk
in and take most of them out with a surprise attack. I don't know,
though," Ris answered, throwing his hands up in exasperation. "Those who
were left would be trouble. And they do have some decent places where
they could set up archers and make it difficult for us to get them all.
It would be nearly impossible to sneak into that camp without being seen
... then we'd have to fight our way out."
"Wouldn't the best course be to return to the village and let the
council decide? They could deal with Dinac as they see fit," Gal hedged.
"Gal, not making a decision is still making a decision. Father
Tannuay tells us that all the time. If the council has to debate the
matter, there is no way the bandits will be here when they return. And
it's our word against Dinac's ... and our reputation around the valley
isn't very strong."
"Well, if we could lure them out of the camp we could set up an
ambush of our own," Gal shrugged. "This argument is pointless; we've got
to return and let Sybator know what we've seen."
"Maybe not. You've got the beginnings of a great plan. Imagine if
we could neutralize the whole band and return with all the bows and
arrows. We could redeem ourselves."
"Ris, you know that's not what Sybator told us to do. How often has
Sybator punished us for not thinking things through when we do them, for
being impulsive?"
"We are thinking, Gal. Sybator always says that a soldier is only
as good as his ability to perform in the heat of conflict, including the
time before the fires of battle are fully lit. Sometimes a warrior sees
situations that contradict his orders and he needs to know when to take
his own initiative in those situations. Straight?"
"Yes, you're right," Gal allowed. "But, if we do this we could be
killed or injured. We would have to do everything right."
"Yes, but we can do it. You know that. We could use their
overconfidence against them. They're sloppy. We've been trained for
this. Sybator would have us running to the Coldwell and back for being
as careless as they are."
"Ris, there is so much that could go wrong and we'd be disobeying
Sybator."
"When did we ever let what Sybator said stop us before?"
Galerth looked off into the dark for a few long moments. "You're
right. We can do this." Gal nodded.
The brothers talked about the plan for close to a bell, honing it
to a sharp point. Soon after, they set to work: scouting out the
locations they needed, collecting the materials, setting up the trap,
and finally settling in for a bell of restless sleep -- while the other
stood watch -- before they woke up in the dark to set their plan in
motion.
Later, as the dark gave way to grayness, they quickly checked their
preparations. With his gear all ready and Gal off to relieve himself,
Ris picked up a trio of stones and juggled them to ease his anxiety.
When Gal returned, Ris watched him unstrap his belt, sword still
attached. He stashed it inside the small cave where they had decided to
leave their unneeded equipment.
"Gal, what are you doing?" Ris quickly caught and then dropped all
three stones.
"I'm going. I know that wasn't the original plan, but don't argue
with me, Ris. I was thinking about it while I was on watch. You're a
little better with the bow and I'm a little quicker. There's nothing to
worry about, straight."
Ris did not say anything. He could not refute his brother's logic,
and did not answer before Gal left. As his twin slipped away into the
dark forest, Ris picked up his bow and moved down to the cliff edge.
As the first light of dawn cleared the horizon, Ris kneeled on the
top of a low cliff formed by a ragged, exposed rock face. From his
elevated perspective, he surveyed the small forest clearing where they
had prepared their ambush. Ris forced his shaking hands to be still as
he pulled an arrow out of his quiver and stuck it point down into the
ground. He flexed his tension-knotted shoulders before ensconcing a
second shaft in the moss. His ieonem bow lay strung and waiting by his
side.
Would he ever get that first kiss that Brijit had been so adroitly
withholding from him?
That was his one thought before his mind returned to their plan. He
wondered what Gal was doing. He pictured his brother crawling into the
thicket earlier during the predawn darkness. After that he would use the
strange shadows created by the lightening of the sky to sneak up behind
one of the pickets. Likely both sentries would be drowsy, roused out of
a deep sleep and nearing the end of their quiet watch.
The near one would fall quickly to Gal's knife, hopefully when he
approached the thicket to flush some of the drink from the night before.
Before the other groggy bandit could realize what had happened, Gal
would pull his bow and use a well-placed shot to take him out. The range
would be short enough to incapacitate, but more likely kill the man.
It was probable that the second picket would have time to get a
scream off to warn his comrades. Hopefully Gal would be able to
eliminate at least one or two more from the battle before he would be
forced to run. At that point the hive would be effectively stirred up.
Ris studied the woods again, his bow held at ready. He saw his
first glimpse of a body sprinting and dodging through the trees. If
things were going as planned, that would be Gal. He heard shouts coming
closer and soon was able to pick more moving bodies out of the early
morning shadows.
With a final surge, Gal broke from the edge of the trees across the
clearing. Not a stone's throw behind him, five bandits came running at
full speed. One of them held a poleax, three held bows, and the last
sported a sword. As they had hoped, none of the bandits had been able to
don more than simple leathers before rushing off in pursuit of Gal.
Ris took aim.
As planned, Gal threw himself to the ground, rolled to his right,
and came up, knife in hand, in a crouch next to a rope carefully
concealed in a bushy young sapling.
Ris shot, his aim true, lodging an arrow in the upper torso of the
first man. The one with the poleax fell to the ground before the others.
The bandits stopped at the tree line at the far end of the
clearing, again as the brothers had foreseen, and the three archers
began nocking arrows as the swordsman stalked forward.
Ris took the him through the shoulder with another arrow. Gal
severed the rope with his knife and hopped backwards as the swordsman
staggered his way.
The loose rope snaked up into the nearest tree which held Ris'
leather pack, slit down each side, forming a large tarp. With the rope's
release, the tarp came loose and dumped its watery contents onto the
archers standing below.
Ris, as he nocked his third arrow, watched closely to see what
transpired. One bandit held his bow up to protect his face. The second
staggered, wiping the mixture from his eyes. The third was barely
splashed and began nocking an arrow. Ris fired another arrow but missed
all three. He ducked behind the rock face as the first return arrow from
the driest archer came skidding by. Breathing deeply at the close call,
he decided it was time to move.
Holding his bow in one hand and ducking low, Ris ran off the back
of the rock face, leaping a small drop and jogging over to a waist high
rock nestled in a rhododendron patch.
Gal came running around the rocks as Ris set another arrow onto his
bow string. Close behind were the three archers and the injured
swordsman. Ris hit the lead archer in the throat with his arrow. The
bandit slumped to the ground, his own falling unspent from the bow.
A return arrow caught up in the rhododendron leaves to Ris' left
and ricocheted off to the side. With the two archers focused on Ris, Gal
continued to run, using Ris and the brush as cover.
Shooting off one more quick arrow with just enough accuracy to
scatter the two remaining bowmen, Ris ducked out of the back of his
cover, keeping low. He began sprinting in a crooked pattern towards
their last scouted position.
Ris used fear to push him up the small rise to a large-trunked,
v-notched tree. Another shaft skimmed off an exposed rock to his right
as he scurried around the tree. Below, the first of the two archers set
in his stance at the bottom of the rise. Behind him, the swordsman, arm
held limply at his side, jogged up. The second archer loped further
behind, having fired the last arrow.
As Ris nocked another shaft, he peered between the two branches of
the tree. He saw the first archer loading an arrow. As the bandit went
to pull back, the bow shattered above the hand guard. The force of the
bow recoiling was enough to knock the bandit to one knee. The bowstring
cut an evil gash in his upper arm.
Ris used this distraction to angle his bow between the two trunks
and get off another shot. The barb took the already stunned archer in
the left thigh, toppling him over from the impact.
As Ris' arrow hit, he watched Gal spring up, his bow now in hand,
from a rock-protected position not fifteen paces from the last archer
and the sword wielder. Gal sent his shaft into the swordsman's chest,
spinning him around.
That moment of inattention had cost Ris. He had just returned his
attention to the last archer when the arrow struck him. It came through
the split between the trees and embedded itself in his shoulder. All of
the events of the previous day flowed through his head as he spun to
land in the leaves.
Ris lay on the ground for a moment to catch his breath, before the
adrenaline of battle surged through him and he fought to rise. He was
only able to force himself to one knee before his muscles failed him
again and he flopped onto his side, a jolt of pain lancing through his
shoulder as he landed. With all of his remaining strength, he rolled
himself over to gauge the course of the struggle. He did not want to
leave his brother fighting alone.
The immediate battle was over. The swordsman lay motionless, with
blood gurgling from his chest wound. One archer lay with an arrow in his
heart and Gal was tying up the one with the arrow in his thigh. Ris
remembered they'd left the rope at Gal's last hiding place.
When Gal finished tying, he turned to wave. Ris saw Gal's face go
ashen when he noticed the arrow sticking out of his brother's shoulder.
The fear in his twin's eyes was the last image Ris remembered before he
blacked out.
Ris woke to a bright light shining onto his face. He blinked in an
attempt to clear his vision, but it took a thrash of his head to get the
light out of his eyes. That movement sent a sharp lance of agony into
his shoulder. As the pain subsided to a steady ache, Ris assessed his
surroundings.
He felt the uneven bulk of a straw mattress below his back. A
window in the wall across of him let in sunlight, the beam ending just
below Ris' eyes. He found that if he moved his head even slightly he was
blinded by the overpowering rays. The sun illuminated a small room with
a clean wooden floor and hewn log walls, typical of their village.
Taking stock of himself, he found his arm bound to his torso and could
see a dull dark patch at the corner of his vision on the bandages.
"Ris! You're awake." Ris recognized Brijit Mecammon's melodic
voice. The red-haired girl entered the room through a curtained doorway,
sat down on the mattress and stroked Ris' forehead.
"Brijit, will I be okay?" Ris forced through dry lips.
A shadow passed over Brijit's usually vibrant features and Ris knew
it was not good. "You will live," she started. "But Khalbara is not sure
if you will ever have full use of your arm again."
Ris knew that Khalbara was the best healer for leagues around and
trusted her judgment, but needed to know more. "Will I be able to fire a
bow?"
"She does not know. It depends on how you heal, but she thinks
there is a good chance you will never get enough strength back to pull a
bow."
"Is Gal okay?" Ris could not face that line of questioning any
longer.
"He's fine. He's out with Sybator right now. He carried you all the
way back to the village after you were hit. Ris, I've seen him worried,
but never that bad. He stayed long enough to find out you were going to
live, but he's the only one that could lead the others back." Brijit
paused, looking away. "Ris, was it worth it?"
"What?"
"I've told you many times that you're not very good at considering
the results of your choices and you never believed me." Ris had problems
reading the emotions in Brijit's voice. "Do you see now? Every decision
we make has consequences ... The bigger the decision, the bigger the
consequence. You are going to have to live with this outcome for the
rest of your life. Was it worth it?"
"We succeeded, didn't we? We stopped the bandits without
endangering anyone else." Ris felt a desire to bask in the glory of the
victory, at least while he had the wounds to show for it. Brijit
couldn't refuse him that kiss after their bravery. "Our plan worked
nearly perfectly." Ris went back over the details in his mind. The twins
had spent most of the night collecting enough ieonem beetles to fill the
tarp with a watery mixture of their saliva. They had been close enough
to Dawnsmist to find enough ieonem trees to collect the necessary
beetles. They had known that they would get the best results if they
could soak the bandits' arrows for a while, but that had not been an
option. They'd never considered that the bows saw the most tension and
would respond quickest to even the slightest weakening of the wood. That
had worked in their favor, though.
"You call nearly getting killed perfect?" Brijit stared at him
incredulously. You did kill most of the bandits, but some may have
gotten away. Likely you could have done it without getting hurt if you'd
had help. Ris, how could you have been so reckless? Everyone saw your
brother carry you into the village. Dinac has disappeared and his
brothers say they don't know where he went. Did you think at all?"
"We thought a lot. We did what we thought was best." Ris was
shocked at how the conversation was going. "It was bad luck that I got
hurt. We had the drop on them and a good plan. There wasn't going to be
a better time. What's wrong?"
"That's the second time you've said 'nearly.' Don't you understand
that in life some things are certainties. If you'd been killed there is
nothing that Khalbara, Gal, Sybator, or I could do that would have
brought you back? I sat here all night by your bed, not knowing if you'd
wake up. You 'nearly' died, Ris, and it scared me." Ris could see tears
in Brijit's eyes. "I know you did what you thought was right."
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