Foreign Legions by David Drake

“Perhaps,” he agreed, reaching up to caress the side of her face. She leaned down to kiss him, and he savored the taste of her lips. She broke the kiss and started to say something more, but he shook his head and drew her gently down beside him, pillowing her head on his shoulder as they lay on the cushions, gazing up at the sky.

She accepted his unspoken injunction to change the subject and began to talk more lightly of their children—first of Edward, and then of the four younger children born to them aboard their masters’ ship. As far as Matilda was concerned, that was the greatest wonder of all, for back in Lancaster, she’d been unable to conceive again after Edward’s birth, and her children were the one unblemished joy of their captivity. They were Sir George’s, as well, and so he listened with smiling, tender attentiveness, gazing at her face and never once, by even so much as a glance, acknowledging the presence of the dragon-man who had drifted out of the spidery trees. The creature paused for a long moment near the awning under which the baron and his lady lay. It stood there, as if listening intently, and then, as slowly and silently as it had come, it drifted back into the forest and was gone.

The Commander seldom appeared among the men of “his” army, but the demon-jester made a point of summoning them all before him in his own portion of the huge vessel on the day after they’d won yet another victory for his Guild. In turn, Sir George had made a point of seeing to it that none of those men ever revealed how they felt about those summonings, for the Commander would have reacted poorly to their scorn and soul-deep anger. The baron had never been able to decide how even the Commander could be so utterly ignorant of the men who fought and died for him because they had no choice, but that he was seemed undeniable. Who but a fool who knew nothing of Englishmen would appear before those he’d stolen from their homes as his slaves to praise them for their efforts in his behalf? To tell them how well they had served the Guild they’d come to hate with all their hearts and souls? To promise them as the “reward” for their “valor” and “loyalty” the privilege of seeing their own wives and children?

Yet that was precisely what the Commander had done on other occasions, and it was what he did today . . . while dragon-men surrounded him protectively and armored wart-faces stood stolidly along the bulkheads of the huge, octagonal chamber, watching frog-eyed through the slots in their visors. Sir George gritted his own teeth until his muscles ached as that piping, emotionless voice wound its monotonous way through the endless monologue. He felt the invisible fury rising from his men like smoke and marveled once more that any creature whose kind could build wonders like the ship and all its marvelous servitors could be so stupid. It was as if the Commander had read some treatise which insisted a commander of barbarians must inspire his troops with flattering words and was determined to do just that.

” . . . reward you for your courage and hardihood,” the piping voice went on. “I salute your loyalty and bravery, which has once more carried our Guild’s banner to victory, and I hope to grant you the rewards you so richly deserve in the very near future. In the meantime, we—”

“Reward I deserve, hey?” Rolf Grayhame muttered. He stood beside Sir George, his voice a thread, leaking from the side of his fiercely moustachioed lips. “Only one reward I want, My Lord, and that’s a clean shot. Just one.”

Sir George elbowed the archer sharply, and Grayhame closed his mouth with an apologetic glower. He knew Sir George’s orders as well as any, but like his baron, he felt only contempt for the Commander. The demon-jester was far from the first arrogant lordling Grayhame had seen in his career, but he was arguably the stupidest. Secure in the superiority of his mechanisms and guards though he might be, he was still witless enough to infuriate fighting men by dragging them out to hear this sort of crap. Not even a Frenchman was that stupid!

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