Chapter 31: Loyalty
Added 2023-07-16 07:00:03 +0000 UTCHis partner today was one of his bunk mates. Not one of the nice ones. A bushy eyebrowed, sneering shit-eater, with the overly fine features of the well-bred.
âWatch yourself, Empyrean scum. Today Iâm going to put you in your place.â
It wasnât worth arguing with a guy like this. He was like a smaller, reedy-voiced, uglier copy of Sig. But his foot positioning was slightly off, and his grip on the hilt of his weapon was too tight. Sloppy. After the past couple weeks of training, Ren could beat him.
Probably.
âWhatâs that?â said the boy, staring wide eyed at something behind Ren.
Ren followed his gaze, looking over his shoulder. There was nothingâ
CRACK
Ren staggered back, clutching his ribs. Another swing whistled through the air where his head had been a moment before.
He dodged two more attacksâfaster and more precise than heâd anticipatedâthen stepped inside of a wide overconfident swing, knocking it aside and ramming the butt of his weapon into the shit-eaterâs gut. As his opponent bent and gasped, Ren hooked his leg and threw his full weight into an elbow strike at the same spot. Just like Garam had done so many times to him, Ren sent the boy crashing to the ground.
Ren pressed the point of his wooden sword into the kidâs sternum.
âYou-â he was gasping between breaths and spitting at Ren with each word â-damn- empyrians- always- cheat-â
Ren pushed his weapon down harder till the boy squirmed. âIâm not a fucking Empyrean.â He glanced aside just in time to see the drill instructor turning his way. A quick back-step.
His opponent was still wheezing on the ground by the time the sergeant got to them and regarded Ren. âYouâve come a long way, recruit. Keep it up.â Then he was off.
Ren couldnât help but smile back at the hateful glare that came up at him. His partner was more wary after that and the rest of the day passed without incident, though his ribs still ached as he sat down with Parna after their usual evening session of training together after dinner.
âThat guyâs been needing to get knocked on his ass.â Parna passed him the flask. He had no idea how everyone seemed able to sneak liquor into the base, but his ribs certainly didnât mind.
âI hope I get to face off against him during the trials,â said Ren, his tongue a little loose. âThe shit-eater wonât know what hit him.â
âPretty sure that already happened today. Just watch out for him. You know his kind. Too dumb to make a living, and too proud not to blame someone else for his shortcomings.â
âI can take care of myself.â
âFine, fine.â Parna held up his hands, before stroking his chin. âYou know⊠I could probably arrange that matchup if you really want that. Just got to know who and when to give the right favor to for that sort of thing. But surprising an idiot whoâs got his guard down isnât the same as being a great fighter. Youâre going to have to train harder, or throw him off with one of those Parvethi moves youâve been showing me.â
It was true. Ren lost as many sparring matches as he won, which was a vast improvement, but still, he knew he was no sword sage. On the other hand, heâd yet to see Parna lose a single match. Even against Ramul, he fought to a draw every time.
âKeep in mind that heâs got money and the tutors that come with it. When heâs not underestimating his opponent heâs got some skill. Weâll want to put together some special trick to exploit the weaknesses in his style.â Parna took the flask back and yawned. âIâm gonna turn in. See you tomorrow.â
Ren waved and sat a few more minutes before taking his ney from the case heâd hidden in his cloak and lifted it to his lips. Here on the outskirts of camp, if he played real quiet, nobody bothered him.
âWhat do we have here?â
Ren knew that voice. It was the shit-eater.
âWhat do you want now?â he asked, turning. There were four other recruits with the boy.
Ren stood.
âHey, hey, calm down.â The boy raised his hands like Ren was some kind of mule he was trying to placate. âIâm not here to fight.â
Ren eyed the boyâs followers who were fanning out, blocking his exit routes. Yeah, that was ratshit if heâd ever heard any.
âIâm serious,â said the boy, his bushy eyebrows rising innocently. âLook, Iâm sorry for taking that cheap shot earlier. I know that was a bad move. Iâm actually here as a friend right now.â
âA friend?â Ren should have run immediately. He was surrounded now.
âI know that guy who youâve been hanging around with.â
âYou mean Parna?â
The boyâs smile left his eyes. âYa, thatâs the one. Heâs no good. Dangerous. Used to do dirty work on the streets back home. How do you think he got so good at fighting? Well, letâs just say he isnât the kind of person you should want watching your back.â
âIs that all?â
âWell, we donât want him watching our backs either. What do you say to joining us? We are going to knock him out in the first round of the trials. At the very least we can make sure we donât have to take orders from a dirty street rat like him.â
Ren usually made smart decisions. But anger took him and before he could think about his predicament, his answer was leaving his mouth. âYou know, this would be a whole lot more convincing if you hadnât been antagonizing me since we started bunking together. You might be right about his past, but on the streets you do what you need to do. People like you wonât understand until you get dunked face first into the gutter. He's the only one whoâs extended a hand to me these past weeks. Not you. I may not know a ton, but I know that a manâs actions speak more to his character than his oily rat tongue.â He gestured to the other recruits. âYou come here after insulting and attacking me, surround me, and tell me to be your friend? Only an honorless slug proposes friendship under threat.â
Then reality caught up to him. Right about the same time as the group took a collective step toward him.
A light shone onto them then, cutting the darkness. One of the night guards. Thank the spirits.
The other boys bolted, but Ren stayed. He let the guard take him to the night commander.
âThey said what?â The man had an angry vein bulging on his forehead. It had grown more bulbous with each word of Renâs tale. Hopefully theyâd be kicked out so they couldnât attack Parna. What if they moved up their plan now that heâd said no?
âI swear it sir.â
The man palmed his face. âFucking recruits⊠I believe you. You came without fuss, and my man reports he saw others running away, even recognized some. But I canât do much about it. Do you know who that kid is?â
Ren shook his head. Heâd made a point not to know too much about any of the people who couldnât be bothered to treat him with decency. They didnât deserve space in his mind.
âThat is Recruit Kareem, Councilman Gutariâs son. We canât kick him out without making a serious fuss. Best I can do is a lashing to scare them off.â
Azura burn it all.
#
The next morning, Captain Lurronâs voice boomed out over the complex. The councilmanâs son and his friends were called out in front of everyone.
âWhat does it mean to be a soldier of the Northern Brigade?â His voice was filled with fire. âWe are the bastion of our great republic against those who would destroy us. Who would rape our wive and daughters, enslave our sons, steal our resources and force us to starve and whither. We fight against those who conspire to destroy all we hold dear.â
Whenever the Captain spoke like this, something stirred in Ren. Heâd never felt any loyalty toward Ardus. As far as his memories went, heâd been much happier when his family was traveling the spice road. But these were the words of a heroâin spirit if not in rank. And if Ren wanted anything, it was to be a hero. A hero would be respected. A hero was powerful. A hero was brave and true. A hero could save his family.
The captain continued. âWe do not tolerate conspiracy within our ranks. You need to brawl something out, fine. Weâll dock your pay, but weâre soldiers of Ardus and our blood runs hot. However, planning, sabotage, cold blood like a Parvethi snakeâI wonât have it in my company. Do you hear me?â
âYes sir!â Thousands of recruits spoke as one.
Kareem and his friends were stripped and tied to poles that stood vertically in the square. Ren didnât envy their bare feet on the snow that had coated everything the night before. Their bodies quivered.
Then the lashing began. The first blow drew a scream and blood that spattered crimson on the white ground. Another blow landed, this one crossing the previous wound, drawing out a strangled yelp. The flesh bloomed outward where the lines met. By the fourth, the councilmanâs son was whimpering and shaking, sagging on weak knees, held upright by his bound arms. A red sheen coated his back and buttocks.
Renâs stomach churned. He focused on his breath so as to avoid retching.
Parna sidled up next to him through the crowd. âYou look a bit green.â
Another crack, another scream. His gorge rose even as they untied the boy and moved on to the next.
âThis your doing?â asked his friend, eyes hard.
Ren grimaced at yet another tearing slap.
âIf it was, be careful. You know what they say about loose tongues on the streets.â
Still, Ren refused to meet his eyes. He knew the saying. Heâd seen what happened to those who tried going to the city guard. But this wasnât the maze of Katarn. This was the military. A place of order. It was different here. Wasnât it?
Parna shrugged and disappeared into the crowd.
Five lashes for each recruit, every stroke of the whip splitting and curling the skin it carved.
Had he done the right thing?
One time at Garamâs theyâd received a delivery of molasses rather than ale. Nobody noticed until they tapped the barrel and tried to pour a mug. It passed through the nozzle so gradually they could barely tell if it was moving at all. The rest of the day was like that. Painfully slow. Ren couldnât stop hearing the crack of the whip or the whimpering yelps and sobs. He couldnât stop seeing the splatter on the snow or the look of disgust and disappointment on Parnaâs face.
It was true, less than half a year ago he never would have turned someone in to the authorities. There was a code on the street. A separate set of rules. It seemed like his friend still held to those rules. Ren swore to himself he wouldnât do something like that again. Youâd burn all your trust and respect that way. After all, some dayâprobably too soonâtheyâd all be fighting together.
He grabbed his meal, scarfed it down, picked up his ney from the barracks, and headed to the outskirts again. If he didnât clear his head somehow heâd be up all night.
#
His heart remained uneasy for the next few days, so he leaned into his nightly forays as a way to escape. When he was playing, he didnât have to think about the looks he was getting from the other recruits now that Kareem and his friends had returned to training and told everyone what happened. He didnât have to think about how his friend Parna hadnât met up with him in three days.
The music came out rough and throaty at first, as though his doubt and frustration were clogging the holes. But each note carried away a little of the burden. He started with the Sappling Song of the Autumn Breeze, but every time he tried playing it nowadays there was this feeling, like the song wanted to change with the season. That night, he gave in and let his fingers dance new notes along the stem of his ney. It became an ode to winter, slow and mournful, seeking. Like the tapestry of night, bright notes glimmered in the depths of the song. This one the moment a snowflake lands, that one the smoky plume of breath, another one the crackling of a fire against the cold. The sound of snow crunching underfoot.
Wait, that was coming from behind him.
Comments
The cliffhanger! Agh!
Zephyr Auraeus
2023-07-16 08:59:11 +0000 UTC