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VIRTUAL WARRIOR
Perfect Heroes #3
Ellora's Cave
October 2013
ISBN: 978-1419946479
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The enemy stands at the border...
Ardra needs a strong warrior to save her fortress...
Neil needs a place to lick his wounds and heal...
he wishes he'd gone to Tahoe!
Chapter 3
Ardra set off up the mountain to Nilrem. 'Twas said the old
man's wisdom included healing. The wind whipped her skirt
about her legs and stung her cheeks.
Ardra found the wiseman sitting outside his hut, eyes raised
to the conjunction. His long gray beard reached his knees.
She thought of the man, naked in the cold, bleeding, and
took a deep, steadying breath. Sense had replaced fear on
her run to the wiseman. Whether the man served the high councilor
or not, she owed him her life. "Nilrem. Please. You must
help me."
The old man started. "Ardra, is it not? Of the Fortress
of Ravens? What are you doing so far from home?"
"Aye, I am she. But, please, my reason for coming must
wait. I need your help. A man is hurt . . . quite badly."
"Hurt?" The old man staggered to his feet. "How
so? Fallen from a horse?"
"Nay," she shook her head and swallowed. "Beaten.
By outcasts. Come."
The old man lifted a woolly brow but asked no more questions.
He retrieved a satchel from his hut and gestured with his
walking stick that she precede him.
Overhead, the spill of light from the rising turquoise orbs
lit their way to the mountain meadow. She glanced over her
shoulder every few moments to make sure the wiseman was still
behind her.
She moved cautiously, ever mindful of the possible return
of the outcasts. Without being told, the old man did likewise.
The man was gone.
Then she saw him, by the fire, near the candles she had
never lighted. "Nilrem. He moved."
For a moment, she only stared. The man had pushed off her
cloak. She had seen enough of men to know many women would
appreciate him. His body was strong, his muscles honed by
war or hard labor. His face was comely too, but she had known
comely men before--and been betrayed by one as well.
The glass roses bit into her palm and reminded her this
man was not some innocent victim. "Look," she whispered,
indicating the man's painted arm, when Nilrem panted up beside
her.
Nilrem handed her his staff and knelt. He paid no heed to
the mark on the man's arm, but instead, ran practiced fingers
over the man's brow and jaw, probed his skull. "You say
outcasts did this?"
"Or rebels."
"Filthy creatures. He is more likely to die of their
vermin than of his injuries." Nilrem searched his satchel.
He drew out a twist of linen and a tiny flagon stoppered with
wood. "I see the candles here. You were practicing the
ancient way?"
Ardra nodded. "I would prefer you not tell anyone.
I never completed the ritual."
She held the man's head while Nilrem waved the flagon beneath
the man's nose. With a groan and cough, he opened his eyes
and began to flail his arms. Nilrem, in a move surprisingly
agile for one of his age, leapt to safety.
She scooted away, but when the man's energy expended itself,
and he fell back with a groan, she edged closer to get a better
look at his face. His eyes remained open this time. Their
color tempted her near. She not seen eyes so dark before,
as dark as the hair on his head.
"Who are you?" Nilrem asked. "From whence
do you come?" The man said nothing, just stare wildly
about.
Ardra knelt by the fire. "He spoke before. Just briefly."
"Who are you? What do you want here?" she asked,
putting a hand on the man's bare shoulder. His skin was as
cold as the rising wind.
"He does not seem to hear us. Build up the fire, Ardra,
whilst I determine his injuries." Ardra did as bid while
Nilrem threw off the concealing cloak and began to examine
the man in earnest.
"Are you able to sit up?" Nilrem asked, and she
could not resist a peek to see if he was able. His bare back
was inches from her, a strong expanse of brown skin . . .
skin that knew the sun. The valley of his spine was lined
with hard muscle and descended to . . . Only warriors looked
so very . . . able.
"Thank you," the man said to Nilrem in a hoarse
voice. The sound reverberated low in her belly. A splendid
voice. Then she looked at the coiled art upon his arm. A serpent.
A mark of evil to all. Shame that she stared overlong at the
naked man made her shift her attention away.
Her fire, lit for ceremonial reasons and badly done at that,
flamed as if she had built it with care and fed it with fatted
pine cones. It was strange and somehow as unsettling as the
man's sudden appearance at the conjunction. She glanced overhead.
The sun had disappeared beneath the horizon.
"Ardra," Nilrem held out her cloak, "I have
several robes I keep for pilgrims that may be of use to this
young man. Fetch one as your cloak will be little protection,
I think, when the winds rise." The winds had risen already.
Trees around them lifted their boughs in nightly exaltation.
Nilrem followed her glance. "Aye. It will grow colder
every hour. With our help I believe this man may walk and
once settled, answer your questions."
Ardra ran up the mountain. The old man's hut needed a good
cleaning. It smelled of spoiled apples and clothing not cleaned
often enough. On a hook she found several long robes of undyed
wool. She snatched one up.
In a trice, she was back with the wise man. "Here,"
she whispered. "Clothe him if you must, but we should
take him to my men. I would feel better with their protection."
Nilrem lifted one woolly eyebrow.
"He wears a mark of evil."
"Then let us take him down the mountain, Mistress Ardra.
I'll not tend him 'til you decide I should."
"Look." She held out her hand to Nilrem, the two
roses sparkling in the fire light. "Why would this man
bear the high councilor's personal emblem?"
"Even more reason to let him lie right here."
But Nilrem made no move to let the man fall back to the ground.
Blood stained the ground where the man had lain--in several
places. She saw again in her mind's eye how he had come to
her defense, an unarmed man against three. "Nay. Deny
him no care." With a sigh she handed Nilrem the roses.
Nilrem held out his walking stick, but it was quickly plain
the man's eyes might be open, but he had no awareness of where
he was. She hurried forward and with Nilrem managed to get
the man to his feet. Strong he may be, and certainly the arm
beneath her hand was as hard as the weapon master's hammer,
yet he stared through her unseeing, moved only when prodded,
took no steps on his own. They stumbled along like a three-legged
mule.
Ardra screamed inside at the slow pace, but clamped it down.
Suspicions aside, the man had saved her life.
"How much did I drink?" Neil sat up and rubbed
his head, then groaned. His jaw hurt, his nose hurt, in fact,
everything hurt. With a glance he took in the hut made of
mud and sticks. Sky showed through a gaping hole in the roof.
"Where's the little pig? And how fast can I move to the
brick house?"
An old man snickered then bent over him. "Ah. You recover
quickly. It is a good sign."
The room spun a moment. Neil swallowed his nausea. When
his stomach settled, he gazed around. Beyond the skinny, mad
Santa who smelled like he'd been wearing his costume since
last Christmas, there were two very intimidating Tolemac warriors.
He didn't need the game booklet to identify them. They wore
black leather breeches, high boots, and white tunics heavily
embroidered in black and gold. They could be Swedish ski champions
from the last Olympics if you traded their swords for ski
poles.
He'd done it. Gone into the game. Then a tendril of memory
curled from beneath the pain in his head. A woman on her knees,
a man tearing at her skirt--the man a walking sore. The memory
slipped away. Where had the thought come from?
"Where're my shorts? And where am I?"
The old man grinned and slapped his knees. The sound hurt
Neil's ears. "You are at the base of Hart Fell, and I
am Nilrem, a simple wiseman."
Nilrem was in the game manual, but little used. Game warriors
didn't ask for advice. They acted. A wave of pain flooded
Neil's head like ten toothaches hammering at one time. He
managed a glance to the roof. "Is this your place?"
"Nay," Nilrem said. "I am not so needy as
to live in such a hovel. 'Tis a shepherd's hut, no longer
used. And who are you?" The man had a smoker's rough
voice.
Neil had thought long and hard about his name in this world.
Had, in fact, thought long and hard about coming here and
all the questions he would need to answer. He had entered
the game to escape everything he was in Ocean City. Everything
he hadn't been. Everything he'd screwed up. Without hesitation
he christened himself anew. "I am Lien."
"Leeee-en? What manner of name is this?"
"An ancient one from my land. It means good fortune."
He'd also learned you needed every break you could get just
to survive--in any world.
Nilrem rose and studied him. The scrutiny was at odds with
the amused smile twitching the old man's lips. "I am
most honored to meet you, Leee-en. Now, off with that robe
and let me better tend your wounds."
"There's a rule where I come from. Keep your robe on
in front of an audience. And where're my clothes?"
The two guards left without argument when Nilrem requested
it. Neil pulled the robe over his head. "I feel as if
I've been beaten with a stick."
"You were--several. I most humbly offer my apologies
for such behavior. The men who accosted you were most likely
outcasts. They live through thievery. As for your belongings,
this is all we could save." The old man held up his hand.
Neil stared at the glass earrings and a broken chain. His
hand shook a bit as he took them from the old man's dirty
palm. "This is all . . . I mean . . . are you saying
everything I had is gone?" What the hell was he to do
now? He stared down at the jewelry; a sick dread churned in
his stomach. So much for good fortune.
Nilrem nodded. "'Tis all that remains. Those were cast
off by the robbers."
He was truly screwed. "You said, 'we.' Who's we?"
"Ah, that would be Ardra. She says you saved her life."
"Ardra." He whispered her name. The woman Gwen
had suggested for Tolemac Wars III. Refrigerator Girl.
So, it had been Ardra on her knees. "Is she all right?"
Nilrem brought a bowl with a gray gloppy substance in it
to Neil's side. "She is shaken, but thanks to you, unharmed."
The old man took up a small stick and began to spread the
goo on Neil's bruises and wounds. The gray paste was cool,
then in a few moments, began to feel warm, like Ben-Gay. The
bandages the wiseman wrapped about his leg were bright white
clean.
"Do you know Mistress Ardra?" the wiseman asked.
"I don't. It's just an unusual name."
"Leee-en isn't?"
Neil pushed the old man's hand away and stood. The room
spun and turned; the bile rose in his throat. He gripped the
old man's shoulder. "No. It's common as dirt where I
am."
"Mistress Ardra will need to stitch you up. Two of
your wounds are too deep for the herbal to heal on their own.
Should they fester . . ."
"Stitch me up? Fester?" Neil said softly. One
cut was on his inner arm, from his elbow to nearly his wrist.
It was already swelling. The other was on his shoulder, near
his collar bone.
"When you have covered yourself, I shall call her."
Neil hastily sat down and drew several of the bed furs over
his lower body. He felt vulnerable without his shorts. He
felt like the morning after a frat party. An all night frat
party. Like the one that had moved to the tattoo parlor where
he'd originally gotten the tattoo on his right arm. Everything
from stepping into the game booth until he woke here in the
hut was fuzzy and vague.
He remembered the attack on Ardra. Maybe. He remembered
a fire. The flare of flames. An electrical odor. Pain. A burning
pain--as if someone had put his head in a waffle iron.
The door opened and in stepped a woman. Ardra. Her green
gown and hooded cloak were embroidered in gold and purple.
She dropped into a deep curtsy directed at Nilrem. Her eyes
never turned to where he sat.
"Mistress Ardra, 'tis necessary you stitch this man's
wounds. I have no talent with the needle."
As he spoke, the old man tapped Neil firmly on the shoulder.
Each touch vibrated down his arm into his hand.
"Stitch? I cannot--" She stepped back a pace.
"Aye. You can. Just think of it as two pieces of cloth,
a simple joining. If you can render such decorations as are
on your cloak, you can do this simple chore, and it would
be better if your women were not involved here. Questions
would be asked you might not wish answered.
Nilrem took her hand and drew her forward to stand before
him and urged her onto a low stool by his bed which was no
more than a pile of clean straw.
She lifted her gaze and met his.
Neil swallowed. Gwen was wrong, the game creator hadn't
captured her at all. Oh, the basics, yeah, the oval face,
the patrician cheekbones, the sensuous lips, but not the eyes.
They were unlike any he'd ever seen--golden eyes, glowing
in the firelight as brilliantly as polished amber.
Her hands were cool when she touched his arm to assess the
wound. "They were merciless," she said, almost in
a whisper.
"Did they hurt you?" he asked.
She leapt up. "Your-your voice. I have heard only one
other speak as you do."
He didn't answer.
"Nilrem," she turned to the old man. "Whence
came he?"
Neil had an answer ready. "I'm from beyond the ice
fields."
"Ardra," Nilrem said sharply. "He needs tending."
Ardra hesitated but a moment, then obeyed. With a sharp
intake of breath, she bent her head, and he felt as if she
had dismissed him from her conscious presence. She opened
her pack and drew out a fabric pouch tied with ribbon. She
unwrapped the bundle and revealed needles and thread wrapped
on small smooth sticks. The needles looked less than sharp.
Don't be a wimp, Neil.
No, he must think of himself as Lien. He was a different
man here. Lien the pauper. What a nightmare.
She swallowed and looked up at him, inspected him like a
piece of furniture she had to refinish. Then she spoke and
with the quiver in her voice he realized she was not distant,
just very nervous. "Forgive me. You came to my aid and
now, I must come to yours."
"Thank you." Lien asked.
"It is not necessary." She looked at him and instead
of amber he thought of old-fashioned fall chrysanthemums.
"Why weren't those guards with you?"
"I-I was gathering firewood." The old man made
a snorting sound, then rubbed his nose on his sleeve. The
young woman impaled the wiseman with a haughty stare. Here
was one thing the game creator had captured perfectly--she
was as cold as the ice she guarded. "You helped me and
I am grateful," she continued, bringing her attention
back to his wound.
She clasped her hands about his forearm and pressed the
edges of the wound together. He nearly levitated off the pallet.
He jerked his arm away.
"This may hurt badly." She poked his wound again.
"Wait!" He covered her hand with his. "I
think I want it washed first. With really hot water. And do
you have any alcohol?"
Ardra and Nilrem merely glanced at each other and shook
their heads.
"Alcohol? You know . . . wine? Ale? Something like
that?"
"Ah. The man wishes to be drunk! A wonderful idea.
He will feel little pain that way." Nilrem cackled in
amusement. He was gone but a moment before returning with
what looked like a wine skin from the hippie era. Lien tugged
off a wooden stopper and sniffed the inside. It was wine.
Ardra pursed her mouth and he realized she did not approve
of the idea he might want to get drunk. After she bathed the
wound in very hot water, she cried out as he then doused it
with the wine. He clenched his fist against the hot flare
of pain as the red fluid coursed along the deep cut.
"Now you can stitch it." He rested his arm on
his blanket covered lap and fisted his hand.
She patted the wound dry with a clean cloth and began. It
hurt like a bitch and he had to bite his lip to keep from
swearing. Bad as it was, it was pretty tame stuff compared
to the jackhammer in his head.
He changed his mind as she snailed through the job. "Can't
you go any faster?" he gritted out when she had neatly
gathered together about half the wound. Cold sweat broke out
on his brow.
"I have never done such work. Perhaps I am going too
fast." She jerked the thread tight and tied a knot. When
she looked up, he saw something in her gaze that told him
she was angry. It took several moments for her to thread her
needle again. His arm throbbed from shoulder to wrist.
"Never mind," he muttered as she slowly began
on the second half of the wound. He wanted to vomit. His stomach
danced. He took a deep breath. She wore an exotic scent he
imagined didn't exist in Ocean City . . . or anywhere else
in the US of A.
"Now, your . . . chest." She leaned forward to
inspect the wound. She bit her lip . . . her very full lip.
Wherever had he gotten the idea she was prissy?
His head filled with a vague buzz. He slipped backwards
and groaned.
"Oh! Nilrem!" Her hands were cool on his brow.
"He is soaked in sweat!"
Nilrem edged her gentle hands away and replaced it with
his scratchy claw. "He is not feverish. 'Tis just he
is not so brave."
Lien closed his eyes and groaned. His funeral ziti threatened
to erupt from his lips. Somehow, the meal and the funeral
seemed a world and millennium away.
The rustle of Ardra's skirt told him she was near. She placed
a damp, cool cloth over his eyes.
"Foolish is more to the point," she said. "He
came after the outcasts with naught but his bare hands."
Even with a head in a vice, Lien knew when he was being
insulted. "I can sit up now." He pushed her hand
away.
"Nay. Remain as you are." She touched his shoulder.
It was just easier to do as she said. He fell back against
the bedding.
Without being told, she bathed his chest wound in very hot
water, repeatedly, then doused it well with the wine as he
had done. He felt the warm liquid soak the cloth beneath his
body.
"Waste of good wine. Give me that, child." Nilrem
took the wine skin and poured a hefty draught into a wooden
cup and slurped it down, smacking his lips and then wiping
his mouth on his sleeve. "I think our Lien needs to explain
this curious mark on his arm."
Lien feigned sleep. Each stitch turned his stomach. He could
feel them and hear them.
As Ardra sewed up his shoulder wound, they whispered about
him.
"A snake is a mark of evil," Ardra whispered.
"Aye. But it coils thrice about his arm and in the
very place a warrior wears his armrings," Nilrem whispered
back. "Perhaps he is a warrior from . . . his place."
"In scarlet and gold robes?" Her fingers drifted
from his shoulder to his upper arm.
They did not touch his tattoo, but he could almost feel
a static charge as he pictured her fingertips hovering over
the art.
Her breath whispered soft as a summer breeze across his
shoulder. "And look . . . the snake markings are not
scales. They are one of the old designs . . . the weave of
eternal goodness found on the cauldrons of the ancient priests."
"Most curious," Nilrem said softly. "So,
he wears a mark of evil, yet it is richly decorated by ancient
markings of goodness. Hmmm. And what of this?"
Lien couldn't resist. He peeked. There dangling from the
broken chain, knotted now, inches away from his nose, were
the two glass rose earrings, the chain running through their
clips.
"They're mine." He reached out with his good hand.
Pain rocketed through his shoulder as he strained to reach
the jewelry.
Nilrem held it just out of his reach and stepped away.
Lien threw back the blankets and side-stepped Ardra to reach
the old man. He hooked the chain from Nilrem's hand, then
dropped it over his head and turned back to Ardra. She looked
a mile away in a gray haze. "Now. Finish the job,"
he said.
Ardra just stared at him, mouth open. He felt his cheeks
flush hot as he realized just how naked he was. Really naked.
He slow-motion walked past her to the straw, sat down, and
drew a blanket over his lap.
This time, she kept her eyes downcast as she stitched.
"Of what significance is the jewelry, young man?"
Nilrem took another deep drink of his wine.
"They belonged to my mother."
"But they are glass. No one may make such a thing here,"
Ardra said.
"They were not made here." And damn it, he decided,
I'm not saying another word. "Yow!" he gasped as
Ardra poked him rather hard with the needle. Sweat broke out
again on his skin. The room tipped and spun. He felt ice cold.
When she finished her work, she coated each wound with the
gray paste, then tore strips of clean cloth and bound both
his arm and shoulder.
"Thank you, Mistress Ardra," he managed.
For the first time, she smiled. Only a small smile, which
died quickly as she caught sight of his tattoo.
"Have you no such marks as these here?" he asked.
Nilrem answered for her. "Once, when men ran about
in nothing but furs, they marked themselves on their faces,
chests, and so forth, but not in such an artful manner . .
. and not in such a place. The place of armrings."
"There are no armrings beyond the ice fields,"
Lien said simply. "Do you have something I could wear?"
Nilrem handed him what looked like a monk's robe. It was
thick and scratchy. So much for sartorial splendor.
He glanced at Ardra. In a swirl of skirts she was gone.
Nilrem offered him a strip of rough leather to loop about
his waist with the words, "I have asked Ardra's men to
collect a few pairs of boots for you."
"Her men?" Lien imagined a small army of warriors,
garbed in leather, armed with sharp swords. Great. He tugged
at the robe that reached only to his calves.
"Oh, aye. Did you think a woman traveled about unprotected?"
"No," Lien said slowly. "I didn't know she
was traveling anywhere."
Nilrem burst into a delighted laugh complete with knee slapping.
When he calmed himself, he finally spoke. "You did not
suppose her to reside with me?"
Lien shrugged. "If I can just have those boots, I'll
be on my way."
"Your way? And which is your way?"
Before Lien could answer, Ardra entered the hut. Behind
her were three large men. Blond, hard looking men. The cold
air went straight up his robe. He was nearly naked, barefoot,
and outnumbered.
"Come. Come." Nilrem waved them all in. The hut
became immediately crowded. Maybe it was the pain in his head,
but the boots the warriors dumped at his feet looked enormous--so
did their swords.
When her guards retired to the outside--gone but close enough
that Lien could hear the murmur of their voices, Nilrem asked
Ardra, "What brings you here to me, Mistress Ardra of
the Fortress?"
Ardra turned her wide tawny eyes not to Nilrem but to him.
She slid her hands into her sleeves and looked not hesitant,
but wary. Lien concentrated on the boots lying at his feet,
tried to appear disinterested. Maybe he'd hear something useful
before setting out on his own. It had been his plan . . .
check out the local politics before settling in any one location.
Nilrem nodded in Lien's direction. "You must speak
before this young man. He is not fit to stand outside awaiting
our pleasure."
Good, the more feeble they thought him, the less of a threat
Ardra might see in him.
She nodded as if coming to a decision. "I fear I must
speak if he is not able to .. . go."
Her hair was loose about her shoulders. The fire's glow
cast a soft sheen on the ripples. He shook his head. What
the heck was wrong with him? It was just hair.
She pitched her voice low, and he pretended to be intently
interested in the boots he was trying on. He tried not to
appear to be eavesdropping.
"Tol is grievously ill," she whispered.
"What may I do?" Nilrem patted her knee gently.
"I have several potions that will ease his pain."
Ardra squeezed the gnarled hand on her knee. She nodded
and for a moment her head bowed. "I accept with my deepest
thanks. The healer has been unable to give him ease."
"Done." Nilrem rose. He opened a wooden cask and
withdrew a stoppered stone bottle. He tapped a small pile
of yellow powder into a square of cloth and folded it as if
it held gold dust. "Here." He handed the parcel
to Ardra. "Four grains only in clear water as he needs
it. Allow him to decide when he needs more. Twice as much
. . . is fatal."
Ardra opened her cloak and Lien saw an embroidered gown
in a deep green. He thought she could be Robin Hood's mate,
all garbed in shades of green as she was. She tucked the package
into a leather purse hanging from a belt at her waist.
"It is not just for Tol's ease I have come. He sent
me with grave news to impart."
Lien settled on one pair of boots and realized he would
miss socks. There seemed to be nothing resembling them here.
With a sigh, he wrapped some strips of fabric about his feet
and became aware that Ardra watched him most intently.
The boots were stiff brown leather, without the distinction
of being a left or a right, but fit him well enough with the
cloth wrappings. He imagined if he walked far, he'd have horrendous
blisters. Where was Dr. Scholls when you needed him?
As he contemplated the sorry and not very clean robe he
was wearing, Nilrem and Ardra continued their hushed conversation,
but she kept glancing at him, worry etched on her face. Lien
decided to fake sleep. He groaned as he tried to shift his
feet onto the pallet. The heavy boots defeated him. He settled
for falling diagonally across the straw mattress and watching
through half-closed eyes.
"What other matter beyond that of Tol's ill health
brings you here?" Nilrem asked.
"Samoht is camped on the border. Did you know?"
Ardra leaned forward and knotted her hands into a tightly
clenched fist.
Nilrem followed her gaze but shrugged. "Is he? Alone?"
"Nay! He comes with an army." She began to pace
and wring her hands. "Oh, 'tis said he comes to await
the birth of his first child." Her tone was sneering.
"His Selaw mate was not good enough to dwell in his Tolemac
palace. Nay, she must be returned to her mother here in Selaw
once she was breeding. He treated her like a mare, taken to
stud. I despise the man!"
Lien wanted to rub his aching temples, but bruises prevented
him--and would alert her that he was awake.
She planted herself before him. "I know you are listening."
He opened his eyes. She was very close and practically quivering
with emotion. "Is Samoht your master?" she spat
out. "You bear his symbol. He comes to take my lands,
my fortress. Some say he covets me as well." Her head
bowed. No color rose on her cheeks but he sensed she was deeply
mortified. Then he saw a single tear run down her cheek. "He
could not even wait upon Tol's death to come."
"Samoht? Tol?" Lien struggled up on his elbow.
What had he landed in?
Nilrem took a deep breath and answered for her. "Tol
is Ardra's lifemate. He is ill."
The short answer said it all. Terminal, Lien interpreted.
"Can't you heal him?"
Nilrem caught his eye and gave one curt quick shake of his
head. If Ardra caught the gesture, she did not react. "What
else may I do for you?" Nilrem took Ardra's hand and
gently rubbed it between his. "I am at your service."
She looked up. As Lien watched, she visibly gathered herself
and took a deep breath. "I cannot lose the fortress,
Nilrem. I cannot."
"Tradition will not allow you to rule, my child."
He patted her hand. Lien winced at the patronizing gesture.
"Tradition!" She leapt to her feet and stood over
him. Staring up at her hurt his neck. "This is tradition."
Her long elegant finger pointed at him. "A rose, passed
from one man to another. Secret symbols to tell one man another
is on his side. Well, I will not be deceived by it. Men may
rule by might, but a woman may do just as well with her wits."
"Whoa," Lien said. "These roses are just
jewelry. Nothing more. I've never met this Samoht."
Her mouth opened, then closed with a click. "One may
serve a master even if one is too lowly to be permitted into
his presence."
"Perhaps he tells the truth, my child." Nilrem
hooked his hands together on his belly. "After all, we
know little if nothing of the lands beyond the ice fields.
Roses may have other meanings there."
Lien mirrored the old man's stance, linking his fingers
and leaning back. It hurt his arm like hell, but he didn't
shift position. "Yeah. I'm from way over there. Where
I'm from roses are just a flower you give a girlfriend."
"Girl friend? You mean lover? One may not have a girl
as a friend. This is nonsense you spin to distract me."
Ardra lifted her nose into the air. "You bear the rose
emblem. It is enough for me."
"Enough for what?" Lien asked mildly.
"Enough to believe in your treachery. Deceit. Licentiousness!"
"Licentiousness? What a great word. I always wanted
some of that." Suddenly, his brain wasn't working so
well. Ardra grew large, then small, shrinking and growing
again like Alice in Wonderland. He fainted.
"I like him," Nilrem said as he hefted Lien's
booted feet onto the pallet and settled his head on a folded
length of cloth. "He can find amusement and still be
in great pain. Lift his robe; he is bleeding somewhere."
Nilrem pointed to a few spots of red.
Ardra sighed and tried for dispassion as she drew the young
man's robe up his legs, stopping with discretion at his groin.
"Does this man walk about naked? His legs are as brown
as a field worker's." The thought caused an uncomfortable
sensation through her belly. She ruthlessly ignored it.
"Here, Nilrem, this wound needs stitching."
Blood soaked one of the cloths Nilrem had bound about the
man's thigh. Together, they removed the strips of cloth. She
touched the needle to his skin and his thigh muscle jumped.
He clamped a hand over hers and sat up, eyes wild and wide
awake.
Nilrem put a hand on the man's shoulder. "She is helping
you. Now sit back."
The man held his hand over the robe bunched in his lap and
watched her work.
"Why is your skin so brown in places, pale in others?"
she asked. The wound was in the paler area of skin. He had
dark hair on his thighs the same color as on his head. Never
had she seen such a color on a person before.
"I like the sun," he said, then moaned at the
tug of the thread on the wound.
When she knotted the final small stitch he slumped to the
side in a faint.
It unnerved her to touch a man so intimately, a man not
her mate, so she tugged his robe down over his legs.
"He has the body of a warrior," Nilrem said, poking
the man's belly. "Look at his arms and thighs."
"As I said, Nilrem, he is a treacherous pretender.
He must be one of Samoht's guard, most likely, posing as a
merchant or some such. It was most unwise of us to talk before
him."
"Nay. He has ancient symbols of goodness on his arm.
Surely, Samoht would not allow such pagan markings on his
guard? And where are his armrings? Nay. I think he is what
he claims, a simple man from beyond the ice fields, one who
saved your life, do not forget."
"With the mark on his arm he cannot be so simple."
Ardra knelt at the man's side. "Have you ever seen hair
so dark? It reminds me of the rich brown dye my women make
from the winter thistle."
"And that only grows in the rock crevasses out on the
ice fields, does it not?"
She rubbed her fingers in the soft hair of his head. "Has
he dyed his hair?"
Nilrem snorted. "Even that on his body?"
A vision of the man, stretched naked on the ground came
to her. "Why would one do that? Who is he, Nilrem? He
appeared in a moment--"
"And saved your life."
Nilrem could say what he wanted, but the man would not bewitch
her. She knew evil when she saw it and evil was the mark on
this man's arm and the red of the roses. She drew off the
braided leather belt she wore looped three times about her
waist.
"This man could overpower many of my men." She
slid the soft leather belt through her fingers. "I have
learned many skills from Tol. He taught me to rule, allowed
me to take the reins of leadership, but this skill I learned
from my women." As Nilrem sputtered a protest, she trussed
the man, hand and foot.
VIRTUAL WARRIOR
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