THE KING BEYOND THE GATE by David A. Gemmell

‘Explain yourself,’ murmured Rayvah.

‘I think you know what I mean,’ said Tenaka coolly. ‘The one people with enough warriors to trouble Ceska are the Nadir. If I am lucky, I will raise an army.’

‘You would bring those murderous savages into the Drenai? They are worse than Ceska’s Joinings,’ said Rayvan, pushing herself to her feet. ‘I will not have it – I will die before those barbarians set foot on Skoda Land.’

All around men hammered their fists on the table in support. Then Tenaka stood up, raising his hands for silence.

‘I appreciate the sentiments of everyone here. I was raised among the Nadir and I know their ways. But they do not eat babies, nor do they mate with demons. They are men, fighting men who live for war. It is their way. And they have honour. But I am not here to defend my people -1 am here to give you a chance of staying alive through the summer.

‘You think you have won a great victory? You won nothing but a skirmish. Ceska will throw fifty thousand men against you, come the summer. With what will you reply?

‘And if you are defeated, what will happen to your families? Ceska will turn Skoda into a desert, and where there were trees there will be gibbets: a land of cadavers, desolate and tormented.

‘There is no guarantee that I can raise an army among the Nadir. To them I am tainted by round-eye blood – accursed and less than a man. For they are no different from you. Nadir children are raised on stories of your debaucheries, and our legends are filled with tales of your genocides.

‘I do hot seek your permission for what I do. To be truthful, I don’t give a damn! I leave tomorrow.’

He sat down to silence and Ananais leaned over to him.

‘There was no need to beat about the bush,’ he said. ‘You should have given it to them straight.’

The comment produced an involuntary snort from Rayvan, which turned into a throaty chuckle.

Around the table the tension turned to laughter while Tenaka sat with arms folded, his face flushed and stern.

Finally Rayvan spoke. ‘I do not like your plan, my friend. And I think I speak for everyone here. But you have played fair by us and without you we would now be crow’s meat.’ She sighed and leaned over the table, placing her hand on Tenaka’s arm. ‘You do give a damn, or else you would not be here, and if you are wrong – then so be it. I will stand by you. Bring your Nadir, if you can, and I will embrace the first goat-eating dog-soldier who rides in with you.’

Tenaka relaxed and looked long into her green eyes.

‘You are quite a woman, Rayvan,’ he whispered.

‘You would be wise not to forget it, general!’

13

Ananais rode from the city at dusk, anxious to be free of its noisy confines. Once he had loved the city life, with its endless rounds of parties and hunts. There were beautiful women to be loved, men to be bested at wrestling or mock sword-play. There were falcons and tourneys and dances overlapping one another, as the most civilised western nation indulged in pleasure.

But then he had been the Golden One and the subject of legend.

He lifted the black mask from his torn face and felt the wind ease the angry scar. Riding to a nearby hilltop crowned with rowan trees, there he slid from the saddle and sat staring at the mountains. Tenaka was right – there had been no reason to kill the Legion men. It was proper that they wished to go back – it was their duty. But then hate was a potent force, and Ananais carried hate carved in his heart. He hated Ceska for what he had done to the land and its people and he hated the people for allowing it. He hated the flowers for their beauty and the air around him for granting him breath.

Most of all he hated himself, for not having the courage to end his misery.

What did these Skoda peasants know of his reasons for being among them? They had cheered him on the day of the battle, and again when he arrived in the city. ‘Darkmask’, they called him – a hero out of the past, built in the image of the immortal Druss.

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