* * *
*Talik*
"...Thus, the hero is a person who is not only the center of attention. It is also a person whose opinion is listened to, even by those who would like to get rid of him. A person who is aware of everything that will become of interest to him. An agent of influence. Understand?"
Talik, engrossed in his impromptu lecture, paced the echoing marble corridor.
He finally found an approach to Draga. Before, he had asked her. Now, he gave her the initiative - "as a reward for her faithful service," he graciously allowed her to ask the questions herself.
From there on, the conversation just sorted itself out. It wasn't even a conversation, but rather a monologue. In any case, it was at least something akin to feedback.
Carefully choosing his words, Talik shared with her plans to make contact with the "Head of the Guild " and a punitive raid into the cursed plains. Finally, Talik vaguely mentioned the bone dragon from his visions.
How easy it is to make her hate anyone. Just a hint that this bad boy is hurting me, and she would die but tear him apart.
He managed to coax out of her the reason why she'd stayed by his side in Necropolis. She told him that she, too, had a problem with her "friend-or-foe" identification and that it had begun when he had almost fallen asleep on her horse. She could feel his "true lord aura" fading and then reappearing, flickering and weakening. And when, after passing through the portal, it disappeared altogether, Draga did not lose her head but decided that it was some kind of test. And now she was sure of it for good.
The two hours flew by very quickly. With some regret, Talik interrupted the conversation and got a message from Marius. Archilich and his apprentice were already waiting in the palace.
As a place to meet with Lias, Talik chose one of the many palace chambers. Such facilities are used to provide an administrative bonus to the guild economy. Now they were mostly empty - the Lich officials didn't care where they worked, and their reception offices were set up directly in the city from day one. This trivially simplified access. And Wilhelm didn't want the townspeople to go to the palace as if it were their home on any occasion.
A moderately pompous office, with comfortable furniture - sturdy armchairs, a walnut table, massive patterned shelves for scrolls and books. Thick, soft carpets covered the floor. High, austere windows overlooked the inner circle of the palace - from here the enormity of the main temple was clearly visible.
From what Talik had seen of the world, he figured that such an environment was enough to keep his face in front of any of the locals.
And besides, there were plenty of paper and writing utensils.
While this slacker is having a date in "jail," I can't even organize a meeting. It's good to have everything ready. But I'll have to work on my image because it's getting ridiculous. I am the ruler of everything and everyone, after all. High-quality pathos can save a lot of blood, Talik grudgingly remarked, sitting down at the table more comfortably. He wanted to put his feet up on it, but he resisted the temptation. Draga stood in the corner of the table, where she could intercept a possible attack.
[message]
"Marius, can you feel where I am? Bring him in."
"Indeed, Your Holiness."
"Don't come in yet, we'll talk later."
"Do you not wish a mortal to see the extent of my obedience to the Lords?"
"Glad I don't have to explain."
The archlich's ingenuity was a little unsettling, but Talik had already seen how it could be exploited.
Half a minute later, the door opened and one of the guards at the entrance peered in.
"Your Holiness..."
"Let him in," the "prophet" waved his hand.
The guard disappeared, and Lias appeared. He looked very different from the last time I'd seen him. He was just an intimidated, battered, and unimportant boy.
And Lias, who had entered the office, looked confident, collected. He had lost a great deal of weight, and under his eyes were the dark spots that come from long stress or lack of sleep. He was also white to an unnatural whiteness - even his eyelashes and eyebrows were white.
And for some reason, Lias was wearing the robes of a younger novice. Talik felt slight displeasure at this fact. There was something of an encroachment on the personal. He could not quickly formulate for himself what it was that displeased him.
"Have a seat," Talik made an inviting gesture toward the chair in front of the table.
Lias, slouching and bowing, strolled over to the seat and sat down.
"You've changed since last time. The gray hair, is it from worry or something else? Because of Marius?"
"I cannot know, Your Holiness. Master Marius is very strict and demanding, but without a doubt the best mentor I could imagine. If that gray hair is his fault, I am the only one to blame."
"If studying is so stressful, it can be stopped. I foresaw that it would be difficult for you with Marius, but I didn't intend to wreck you."
Lias tensed up for a moment, then relaxed and lifted his head.
"Your Holiness, I would very much like to continue learning from Master Marius."
"He's not here, and he'll never know the content of this conversation unless you want him to. So answer honestly, do you really want to keep learning from him, and if so, why?"
Lias hesitated a moment, collecting his thoughts.
"Marius the teacher is extremely strict and sometimes punished me for lack of diligence, it's true. But I swear I deserved it. He never hurt me for no reason. He gave me more knowledge than I could get in a lifetime."
"So you were having trouble at first, but now you're generally okay with it, am I right?" Talik summed it up.
"So it is, Your Holiness," Lias bowed deeply.
"You say you've learned a lot, and from what Marius tells me, you're showing some promise. I'm glad to hear that, and I'd like to understand the difference between what you knew and could do before and what you have now. Can you explain it to me briefly, so that I, as an outsider, can understand it?"
Talik saw that with his words, Lias turned pale and covered in sweat.
I could understand him, he obviously wasn't expecting the semblance of an exam. I used to think that being an examiner was cool. I don't feel that way. I'm sorry, kid. But I really need to know what I asked.
Lias, meanwhile, pulled himself together.
"Before I got here, I knew three spells, two rituals, and forty prayers. I had enough power to cast a spell five times, and after that, I could use one spell again in three hours. After a day's preparation, I could perform the ritual and then not be able to use magic for about ten days. With prayers, it was a matter of luck. I didn't know how to fight well, I was afraid."
Talik nodded. He would have loved to know more, especially about rituals and prayers, how they worked, and what effect they had. But asking about such things was likely to damage the image of a mysterious and omnipotent being. Not that it was critical, given the mistakes he had already made, and the ones he would still make. Still, it was worth questioning Marius first. The meticulous and pedantic undead probably already knew everything Talik wanted to know. And if he didn't, then he could sacrifice his image.
"Now I could use up to ten of my old spells in a row, and one more every ten minutes for two hours. It took me less than an hour to get ready for the ritual, and after that, I had enough power for a couple more spells. And I figured out how to control the power without spells."
"That's really interesting," Talik wondered. "I assume Marius knows about this?"
Direct control of magic, the ability to do supernatural things without being tied to a pseudo-game system that does everything for you. It's like getting the source code. The ability to understand what and where it comes from, to discover the laws of physics of this world... How fortunate.
"Teacher Marius knows and helps me in every way to develop this gift. I learned it only because of him."
"That's very good. I thought you weren't happy with the situation, but if you're happy with it, let it go on as it is. I take it you're living at the temple now?"
" Ah... No, Your Holiness, I... I am..."
"So?"
"It just so happens that I live in a guest house. Master Marius let me live in the city of the living and told Lady Rangeso to keep an eye on me, and she dragged me there and left me there, and the teacher let me stay there..."
What the fuck are you talking about, Talik almost asked aloud.
Who the fuck is Lady Rangeso anyway? I'm supposed to know, but I can only assume it's one of the vampires of Necropolis. What the fuck, he could have been eaten! Not that there'd be anything left to resurrect. Well, I'll have to ask Marius that. Somehow he is very independent, in some ways, and that's good, but why did not agree? Okay, the situation is there, so all that's left to do is make the best of it. If you look at it that way, this kid's like a beta tester. One way or another, people from the outside will show up here, and we'll learn how to behave on Lias.
The boy himself was clearly neither dead nor alive. Talik could understand the confusion. For an ordinary man of this world, a guesthouse was clearly unaffordable. Talik remembered the estate of a middle-class aristocrat where he'd stayed with the adventurers.
"Do you like it there?"
"Yes, Your Holiness..."
"Then you can stay there. As compensation for being held here."
"Let them hold me all my life, I'll be only glad!"
"It will be seen. Do you have any other requests?"
"It's nothing, Your Holiness. The guards always look at me like wolves wherever I go. If I'm not with my teacher or Lady Rangeso, they stop and inspect me at every corner. Even those who saw me an hour ago."
"Hmm. Let's see what we can do. I'd also like to know where you got those clothes?"
"It was given to me by the Reverend Nitia, the prioress of the temple where I was employed as an altar boy. She told me that my old clothes were not suitable for visiting the Palace."
"You said Nitia..."
Talik couldn't remember the name at all. Temples were just infrastructure objects with general passive morale and health bonus. When they designed the infrastructure they stuck them everywhere they could, and they ended up with 177 of them, not counting chapels and small altars. Abbots came as part of the package, and names for them were out of the question, just a level 45 buff healer.
Well, they're personalities now, too, with names and life histories. It will be interesting to know more about them. And that Nitia, whether to scold her off for giving the stuff to a stranger, or to praise her for her initiative, Lias is now formally part of her household.
Interesting precedent. And an important point came up because I am, like, the highest clergyman but I have never even spoken to the diocese. Plus the case for the piggy bank.
"Okay. Now, actually, to the main business. I need to write a letter to someone, and there's a little problem - I'm not very good at local writing. I can read it, but if I write it myself, there's a chance I'll make mistakes... That's why you have to take dictation."
Talik moved gilded writing set to Lias. He hesitated, as if afraid of damaging the precious things, and laid them out.
"Dictate, Your Holiness."
* * *
*Jay-Gul*
The shadow slid silently between the two barrels, stepping a step closer to its prey. The moment was right - the breeze stirred the crown of the tree under which the carefree target was dozing.
Another light gust of wind - and the shadow moved on, to the log wall of the barn. It snuggled against the rough wood, merging with it, and listened.
The target snoozed carelessly, snorting lightly and moving its lips.
The shadow restrained itself from rushing toward the target at once, and, in the thrill of its forthcoming success. Step by step, seizing its moments, it moved from the wall to the pile of straw, from the straw to the apple tree, under the crown of which the victim swayed in a pitifully crackling hammock.
Climbing the knotty, sprawling tree without disturbing a twig was a matter of moments. And the moment of truth came. There was a battle cry: "Aha!"
And the shadow swiftly swooped down on the belly, barely covered by a leaky linen shirt.
"Uhu." The target muttered in agreement.
The spectacular success was followed by an equally spectacular failure. The belly suddenly retracted and bulged out.
"Wee!" Annika squeaked as she flew into a heap of thorny straw. "That's not fair, you were peeking!"
"It hurts. You're sniffing so hard I'm almost deaf."
The haystack moved, revealing a disheveled and slightly out-of-breath girl.
"I'm not sniveling!"
"Yeah. I woke up to the fact that you weren't sniffling. And almost knocked the barrel over, too."
Annika climbed out of the stack, shook off the straw, and moved resolutely toward the orc lying in the hammock.
The orc was clearly a lot bulkier than I expected for the suspended bed stretched between the apple tree and the barn. But if the orc had a goal, he'd get it, one way or another. Even if it meant getting into a hammock a little bigger than his underwear.
Annika grasped the dangling, thick and knotty, acacia log-like arm with both of her own and pulled.
"What do you want?" there was a doomed grunt.
"Let's play."
"Let's play hide-and-seek, shall we?" There was a glimmer of hope in Jay-Gul's voice.
"No. You weren't even looking for me last time!"
"That's the point."
Let's go to play, pwease! Aren't you bored just lying around?"
"Nope. I'm on quiet time."
"Let's go!"
"You obnoxious monster, why are you clinging to me? Go harass someone else."
"Orcs are all busy, and adults too, grannies are boring and talk all sorts of nonsense."
"So ?;%: the other children."
"Parents won't let me near the little ones, and the others have boring games. Let's go!"
"I tired."
"You don't do anything all day, you just yell and kick everyone."
"This is the most important job of all."
The village headman, standing in the shade of the log cabins nearby, only sighed as he listened to the argument. Who could have known it would happen this way?
After the ultimatum that had been issued by the intruders, the arguments and scolding lasted all day and had not subsided even by nightfall. Under the roof of the common house, there was not enough space for the whole village, but there was certainly room for everyone whose opinion had any weight at all. Hunters, lumberjacks, the blacksmith, the medicine man, fat Liz, and the mothers of the families. There were several common points of view.
Some felt they had to leave. To the woods, or the plains, or the neighboring settlements. Anywhere was better than living under the monster's rule, risking going into soup with the whole family every day.
Others, the younger ones, thought they should gather everyone they could and give the monsters a fight. They said that one Akuro was enough for a lifetime, and no one needed new "masters" here.
Others offered to surrender. The headman himself also thought that was the best way out, and for good reason. First, the monsters were speaking, and therefore sentient. The fact that they were sentient meant little in itself, and the headman understood that.
But there was a second. The monsters were obviously stronger than humans. So much so, in fact, that they wouldn't need to talk about anything if they wanted human meat or girls. They would have come and taken it. But here they are, making an offer, however crude. And they even pretend to let those who do not agree to go. And about the maidens, Akuro's prisoners, they haven't even touched.
And third. Orcs, wild-looking creatures, had steel weapons. Very good, and made precisely for orcish hands. The headman knew a little about how steel was made. Ordinary savages would never have made such a thing.
The headman had been beaten a lot by life, and experience had told him that if the strongest came to negotiate, you had to give in.
By late afternoon, when the discussion had subsided and boiled over several times, when several fights between particularly dissenting voices had died down, and when the women's hysterics had begun and subsided, he rose from his seat and walked leisurely, demonstratively, toward the exit.
"Where are you going, headman?" voices rang out.
"Go home to bed. It's late."
"Don't you care about the fate of our settlement anymore?!" the fat woman's voice rumbled.
The headman stopped, put his hands on his belt, and shook his head.
"Why, yes, I do care. I can't speak for everyone, but I know for myself that I will stay and surrender. Monsters? So be it. But think of the humans. How did Smokey get on our necks? How's Gutless? Akuro, may his soul go astray in the underworld? Monsters, unlike humans, made an offer and gave us a choice. And I made mine. And you can yell at each other till morning since my word means nothing to you."
The headman's timing and intonation were precise. After all, he had known all these people for a long time. And when the monsters came the next day, they opened the gates without a word.
There were more of them than the last time. They were as big as they looked, arms as thick as a man's leg, lumpy with muscles and scars, and they looked at people with detached contempt. They did not, however, cause the outrages that the headman feared.
The ringleader left some of his men on the gates and walls and told the headman to gather all who could walk on the patch outside the common house.
"Is everyone here?"
The monster's throat was tin-plated, everyone could hear it.
"You've surrendered. I'm in charge now, everything's mine now. Everyone must obey me. If you don't, the first time I'll give you a ";%, the second time I'll kill you. I'm Jay-Gul, the big man, the leader of this gang. Above me is Bun Ironhead, chief of my clan. Above him is Warboss. Above all is the Creator. You're all nobodies. Those who know something useful can become something. War, hunting, craft, that's what's at stake. When we're done here, I'll look to see what's here. Stocks, tools, children, everything. Then those who don't want to be mere peons let them come to me and tell me what they can do. We'll see what good it'll do."
"Except for me, you should all know him. This is the shaman. If you got sick, lice, wolf chewed off the leg, it's for him. With a gift, of course. He'll do even worse for it, and he'll be right. And then there's this elf. He will be responsible for everything that happens in the woods around, he knows all the roads. I've said it all. Now scatter to your burrows and wait."
Then the ringleader really went through every house and barn and thoroughly searched all the poor properties of the settlers. Surprisingly, there was no looting, though there was a fight.
Though it could hardly be called a fight. One of the villagers tried to trick the orc into hiding a box of dried meat. The orc quickly found what he had hidden and, without any ado, savagely beat the head of the family, in front of the whole family. And he said that the next smart guy like him would be disemboweled.
No one else would risk it, and hearing that orcs don't take what they find, the rest of the inhabitants even made it easier for the green-skinned, shoveling all the possessions out for show.
After the search, the ringleader left people alone for two hours. He was apparently waiting for those who could actually do something to come to him. There were no fools. Or rather, it turned out that the village was full of fools.
Toward noon, the orc ordered all the men to be herded outside the fence and forced them to clear the area around it. Some of the orcs headed toward the woods, and some stayed with the men. The men were pulling out the brush and prying up the boulders that the orcs had turned out. The holes from the boulders were backfilled and trampled.
No one gave people a break, and any attempts to even just slow down for a couple of minutes were severely suppressed by heavy cuffing and scolding. Conversations were suppressed no less harshly; one of the loggers was beaten nearly to death for trying to be idle.
Green big men who seemed not to tire at all. They scoffed at the people falling off their feet by the end of the day when a muffled horn sounded from the village.
Hearing the horn, the orcs herded the men back into the village, onto the patch in front of the common house. Quiet curses toward the headman and whispers of despair did not cease for a moment. The ringleader came out of the common house to the crowd and glared at them for a long time as if he wanted to see something hidden. No one could stand the stare; everyone was looking under their feet.
Finally, the ringleader spoke.
"It was only the first day. That's how peons live their whole lives. A peon can't do anything well. Whoever doesn't want to be a peon has to be able to. Is that clear?"
A determined voice was heard from the crowd.
"I know how to make hides!"
"That's good. What's the name?" The orc perked up, beckoning a finger at the caller.
The lad, squeezed out by the crowd, trembled before the overhanging orc.
"Bunch."
Orc nodded.
"Stood to the side. Who else?"
"I'm a good woodsman!"
"Good. What's your name?"
"Ches."
"To the side. "
The "I can do it" and "I am able to do it" cries came one after another. Almost everyone in the village knew how to cut wood or fish, work with hides, or search for honey from wild bees. And the orc made it abundantly clear what awaited the inept and lazy.
No one was sure whether it would be easier to do what they called themselves skilled at. But still, there was at least some chance.
Then there was the "feeding. It was humiliating, getting food as mercy. But no one resented it.
In the morning, the ringleader assigned the men those tasks in which they said they were skilled. Under the supervision of the orcs, of course. And compared to the previous day, life began to get better. The woodcutters, for example, weren't required to do much, marking, chopping, and clearing trunks. The hardest work - chopping and stacking logs - was done by the greenhorns. And it wasn't out of piety for humans. It turned out that orcs, strong as bears and idiotically industrious, are not very good where brute force is not enough. And have a simple way of looking at things - everyone has to do what they can do well.
And if a man is good at marking where to cut, then let him do it. Where only strength is needed, the orcs can do it themselves. They picked up the basics of any new task very easily and were very slow to learn anything more complicated.
Also, the ringleader found out on the second day that fat Liz could brew tough moonshine even from reeds, and this alone raised her authority to an immeasurable height compared to the rest of the people.
The fat one, a cunning and understanding woman, quickly made friends with the thin and baleful orcish shaman. They were just like each other in character, both of them very smart, both of them greedy and heartless extortionists, and both of them keeping their secrets strictly to themselves. Some even chatted about the color of the kids' next spring. Then they stopped - their tongues swelled up so much that they couldn't close their mouths. The shaman turned out to have excellent hearing...
Within a few days, life had settled into a pattern. It made sense to clear the ground around the paling to make room for a new one. Although what the orcs were building could rather be called a full-fledged wall. Not very straight, but very strong. Thick logs were dug deeper than a man's height and reinforced with clay mixed with stones.
Then another shock came: the goblins came to the settlement. It wasn't that the villagers had a bad relationship with them - it was more of cold neutrality. The goblins didn't go where humans hunted, humans didn't go where goblins worked, and that was fine with everyone. Sometimes they even traded with goblins. The forest dwellers traded rare herbs, for which they had many uses, from preservation to banishing insects, for iron objects like knives and shovels, and grits. But trade was always conducted exclusively outside the walls, and goods, women, and children were always watched. And there was a reason for that.
Now the little savages entered the orc-occupied village as if it were their home. They came into sight, sent a messenger, and the orcs let them in quietly. Three dozen nosey and fangy short men led one, a particularly ugly one with a scorched gaunt pattern on his face. Almost all the men were outside the village, and the women were about to quit their jobs and try to hide in the houses. But the orcs didn't appreciate it and forced everyone back to business. The villagers' assurances that letting goblins into the house was a very bad idea were treated with irritated indifference.
The goblins brought with them many sacks, barrels, and crates of salt, steel nails, saws, hoes, and many other household items. Just brought them in and handed them over to the important frowning leader.
The goblins stayed in the settlement overnight, making the locals quite nervous. And the problem did happen. At night, a woman's screaming echoed through the village. Some of the forest runt fell for a local girl, dragged her into the bushes, and, receiving a serious rebuke, stabbed her.
As soon as the alarm was raised, the rapist was handled by his own men, and his belly ripped open on the spot. Jay-Gul arrived in less than a minute to find the goblins huddled together, surrounded by eager orcs. The goblin chieftain held out his rapist's head, and explained the situation in a nutshell. The orc grasped the goblin's ear firmly, lifted it into the air, and roared:
"You're their boss. You are responsible for them. Their mistake is your mistake."
The goblin only closed his eyes in agreement. Jay-Gul drew his knife, and in the balance cut off the ear by which he held the runt. The piece of flesh flopped down next to the fallen goblin.
"Eat!"
The little man silently put the severed ear into his mouth and chewed it. When the ear went to his stomach with a noisy gulp, the orc asked:
"What did you learn?"
The goblin glared at his troops.
"That the boss had mercy. Could have killed us all, his goods were touched. The boss is kind. I will remember."
"What else?"
"I'll be even better at watching who's underneath me."
Jay-Gul nodded and looked around at the crowd.
"What's going on? Let's go home now. There's a lot to do tomorrow."
The shaman healed the injured girl's wound without further ado - only a thin scar was left of the wide wound. The incident was over, and the goblins left in the morning.
After another couple of days, Jay-Gul gang grew noticeably.
Another gang of orcs, with their ringleader, came to the village, already almost completely enclosed by the new palisades. They brought with them large, vicious pigs and oxen, and in return, they took several bales of hides and linen, a dozen baskets of fish, and a barrel of sticky tree resin.
From the beginning, there was some tension between the two gangs. Those who could afford it hid. And for good reason.
The leader of the new gang, as big and stout as Jay-Gul, but trimmer than he was, slapped the boss on the belly at goodbye.
He clearly wanted to say something else, but did not have time - a ponderous fist of the ringleader of the village with a juicy rattle crashed into his face, throwing him back a few steps.
"Are you out of your fucking mind, snotlout?" Jay-Gul asked, making a broad gesture to stretch his shoulders.
"Oh, you !";% pig!" The other orc roared, shaking his head and spitting blood. "You rat, sitting on the edge here, grow up a fat! You're not even worthy to look at a warrior!"
With these words, the out-of-town ringleader pulled his axes from his belt.
Instantly both gangs gathered around. The orcs looked on unpleasantly but stayed out of the fight. The two leaders were surrounded by a ring, so there was a small live arena.
"Am I not worthy to look at a warrior? Are, are, where's the warrior? Are you the warrior, eh, brat?"
Saying this, Jay-Gul kneaded his fists. He didn't carry a weapon in the village, and he regretted it now. But he wasn't about to back down, either.
"I'll kill you!" The second orc roared, swung his ax, and rained it down on Jay-Gul.
But he was clearly counting on this course of events. With an amazing grace for such a heavy body, he jumped toward and away from the attacker. It didn't go very well - one of the blades grazed his face, so hard that for a brief moment the bone was visible. But on the whole, he achieved his goal, knocking the enemy down with his body. The orc did not falter and snapped his fangs into Jay-Gul's face. Before he knew it, Jay-Gul had dug a knife from its sheath on his back. The blade flashed rapidly several times, jabbing into the neck and ear.
Jay-Gul staggered to his feet, took the axes from the dead man, and kicked the motionless body. Then he turned his face, streaming with blood, toward the warriors.
"Well? Who else doubts my strength?! Don't be shy, girls. I'm strong enough for everyone."
Another orc came out of the circle, with a two-handed ax.
"Our boss seemed like a formidable warrior. And he was defeated by an unarmed fat man. Such a shame. I should have challenged him first. I'll have to kill you now."
Jay-Gul silently spread his arms out to his sides in an inviting gesture. The challenger exploded and leaped forward, swinging his ax. Jay-Gul threw an ax at his chest at the same moment.
The weapon was struck back immediately, at the cost of a moment's hesitation. Jay-Gul immediately took advantage of it, jumping up and dropping a second ax on the challenger's head with a jerk.
He reacted and jerked his head to the side. The blade didn't split the skull, but slid across it, removed a thick layer of fleshy skin, and stuck it in his shoulder.
The challenger roared and lunged, not even close to hitting Jay-Gul. Jay-Gul's fist smashed into his jaw, stripping him of his balance, while the ax wrenched from his shoulder and came down again. There was a crunch, and shards of bone with drops of brain and blood flew sideways.
The body fell softly to the ground. Jay-Gul dropped the other ax and turned the first one over in his hands with a hum.
"Will there be a third?"
After long moments of silence, another orc emerged from the circle.
"You called yourself Jay-Gul. I've heard of one Jay-Gul. That Jay-Gul went into battle under the Creator himself. And Warboss himself sent him on the first raid."
"Ha ha, the good old days, yes. And the good new ones. I'm that Jay-Gul."
Orc nodded.
"It would be an honor to die at the hands of such a warrior. They," the orc pointed to the corpses, "didn't realize it, but I see."
"You can die afterward, boyz. Come under me."
He shook his head.
"Rusty Hand said I would be chief under him someday. I swore an oath to him."
Jay-Gul nodded.
"And you can't go under Ironhead's boss now. That's a pity."
The challenger removed the twin axes from his belt loops and came up, stepping smoothly around the Jai-Gul. The latter, narrowing his eyes and cocking his head, watched the challenger's every move carefully.
Seeing that the challenger was giving him the initiative, Jay-Gul took a step toward him with a swing. It was a deceptive move, but the challenger didn't realize it. He tried to pull the same trick with the ax throw.
It didn't work. Jay-Gul was waiting for such an attempt, and he kicked the weapon away. The challenger neither dodged nor swung away from the falling two-handed ax. The first blow was the last.
"You wouldn't be a Boss," Jay-Gul said with a sigh, snatching the ax from the dead body. "Rusty Hand tricked you. Pity, though. An orc gets his brains a lot less often than his strength."
He stared hard at the others.
"Who else?"
The orcs silently drew their weapons, and one by one threw them at his feet. One of them did it later than the others, with obvious reluctance.
"Pick it up," Jay-Gul commanded.
"Whatever you say, "boss," he sniffed.
He stepped forward and picked up his weapon. Jay-Gul immediately swooped down on him, landing a heavy blow. He managed to evade the first one by knocking the ax aside, not the second.
"I don't want any rats!" barked Jay-Gul into the remnants of his face. "No one needs rats!"
Later other orc gangs came in. An average of every couple of days. And there were no such problems - though the tension was felt at times.
The orc, waving the clingy girl away, caught himself in a strange feeling. He told her to go away, but he didn't really want her to go away. He liked to bicker with the rebellious child. He liked being talked into it. He knew he would give in and they would play. And it was as if the child sensed it.
If anyone else had thought to interfere with his rest, the boss would have quickly dissuaded him from such foolishness.
Jay-Gul was about to grab the girl to tickle her and let her escape when he caught the change in the background noise. He turned his head, listened, and sighed.
"All right, little girl, I'll be busy right now. Go take a walk."
The girl, who understood the changed mood, pouted, putting her hands behind her back.
"Go, I said. Go, go, Uncle Jay-Gul is about to do adult things. We'll play later."
Annika stopped sulking and ran away, and an elf appeared from around the corner of the house, accompanied by one of the boyz. The boyz was carrying a severely beaten man in one hand, bound tightly at the wrists and ankles. The mouth of the bruised and blue-faced face was gagged.
The elf was carrying a tattered leather bag and three identical wide belts with daggers in their sheaths.
The orc waited silently for them to approach.
The elf did not report to him directly, he was not part of the usual orc hierarchy at all. But the chieftain said that the wretch must be here. And if the Chief said something, it had to be done.
It was not customary to ask the Chieftains the reasons for their orders, but Jay-Gul took a chance. If tradition was being broken in order, he wanted to know why. Just so he wouldn't get into trouble.
The Chieftain didn't beat him but explained. The elf supreme witch possessed a magic that allowed her to speak to her own, no matter how far away they were. And if anything important happened, she could find out about it and notify those involved much faster than the orcs themselves could.
It made a certain amount of sense. The Orcs, spilling out into the world in an avalanche, faced the problem of communication. A messenger had to be outfitted to deliver important news. And on his own, he could take days to convey what was important right now. Or there was another option: shamans, who were addicted to their powders and potions, could also whisper to each other over long distances. But the shamans had to be in approximately comparable conditions at the moment of communication. And interpreting the results of such communication was a pain in the ass.
And that's not counting the fact that the shaman after the "séance" came to his senses in a couple of hours at best.
So a direct order and an understanding of the obvious benefits forced Jay-Gul to bury his displeasure deeper. Especially since the elf had no intention of angering the boss. Upon meeting him, he pulled the orc aside and proposed an agreement whereby they would not cause each other problems. By this agreement, the elf acknowledged the orc's right to command, and the orc acknowledged nominal equality in status. The orc, after some thought, agreed. It was better than vying for authority with a subordinate of another senior vassal. More benefit and less trouble. So, though the orc did not like the constant presence of the blond lout who was not part of the usual hierarchy, he did not show his displeasure.
The elf, like the rest of his breed, was a good tracker and an expert ambusher. It was a good skill, requiring qualities that orcs could never have - patience, equanimity, and perseverance. He'd slaughtered quite a few ogres and goblins fleeing the forest, unwilling to acknowledge the authority of others, reporting on the fact. And it was strange that this time he brought someone back alive.
As they approached the boss, the orc carrying the prisoner tossed him at the chief's feet. Jay-Gul put his fingers behind his belt and kicked the body squeamishly.
"Where did you get it?"
"Four miles north of here," the elf answered with a slight nod. "There was a party, three of them. Not natives, different speech and equipment, bad though it was, it looked like a standard, they didn't do that here. I forced them to split up and tried to make contact with each of them. They did not want dialogue and in general, did not behave like guests so two I killed, one I decided to bring to you for questioning."
"That's a good decision you made, right one..."
Jay-Gul headed toward the orc house, gesturing for the others to follow.
The whole house was one large room, with only crudely assembled weapon racks and hides. At the very center of it was a vast, stone-sheathed hearth, smoldering in the thick smell of feet.
The prisoner was thrown to the ground beside the hearth. Jay-Gul pulled the gag from his mouth with a sharp movement and gave him a light slap.
"Tell me. Who you are, what you've been sniffing around. Tell me everything."
"We're just hunters," he mumbled with his split lips, frightened. "We've been tracking mon... Beasts."
"So... Just hunters," the boss hummed.
He took the leather bag from the elf and tried to untie the knots. He tweaked it a couple of times with a rough, scruffy fingernail, scowled, and just tore it open. Cloth-lined vials, strips of dried meat, carefully coiled fine rope with a metallic sheen, small pouches of loose material, and a coiled map of thin leather sprang to the tumbled earthen floor.
Jay-Gul picked up the map and turned it in his hands.
"Elf, have you seen this? What is drawn here?"
"I saw it," he nodded calmly. "A map of the area, not very accurate. The village is on it. There is a lake four miles to the west, and it's been dry for thirty years, so it's an old map. The new icons, match the routes of the loyal to Dawn goblins. This route is recent, less than a week ago. There are more signs, but their purpose is unclear to me."
"That's how it is. Wow, hunters. So much watched." Jay-Gul squatted down and hovered over the prisoner. "Could it be that they're not really hunters, but, say, enemy spies, hmm?"
"No, I swear, not spies!" He fidgeted.
"Oh, all right, then. I was beginning to think bad things about you. If you swear, it must be true. Well, it's for the best." Jay-Gul shoved the gag tightly back into the prisoner's mouth. "If you were a spy, we'd have to keep you here alive. Spies know too much, they're more used to us alive. So much hassle. You're just a hunter, you don't know anything, nobody needs you. So we'll have a nice soup for dinner, with some human flesh in it. The boyz will be happy."
He no longer paid attention to the desperate mooing man.
"Well, elf, come on, there's a lot to do," Jay-Gul beckoned the elf to the exit. "Remind me to teach the shaman how to cut the skin properly; he ruined all the fun last time."
" When you boiled the last soup, did the meat die before you put it in the boil?" He raised an eyebrow boredly.
"Yeah, yeah, that time. Remember when he fucked up the laxatives, you know, before cooking? There was shit floating in the soup, can you imagine?"
"Yours even didn't notice."
The silent boyz burst into a frenzy:
"What the %?*( are you talking about, when *?:% such "?;*!..."
He was interrupted in his speech by a heavy slap from Jay-Gul.
"Shut up."
The orc frowned and fell silent.
All three of them came out of the house. Jay-Gul coughed, leaning against the log wall. The boyz frowned uneasily.
"Boss?"
Jay-Gul barely straightened up and turned his twisted, blackened face toward him. Tears oozed from his eyes. He whispered hoarsely:
"Did you see it? Did you see his face? Shit in the soup, I can't..." Jay-Gul coughed in a twitchy cough again.
The elf and Jay-Gul returned to the prisoner after a couple of hours. This time the shaman was with them. Skinny, wiry, and hunched over, with thin hair, he looked sickly and weak compared to the other orcs. Only the look in the shaman's venomous-black eyes, intelligent, tenacious, unkind, made it clear that in his case personal physical strength was the last thing to think about.
"Is it?" The shaman was busily asking.
"It. Get to work." Nodded the boss
The shaman took out a crooked knife and in a few movements ripped open the prisoner's clothes. The way he moved resembled the movements of a spider catching a large fly.
"The skin is ruined, not fit for a drum," grumbled the shaman, pointing to the chest and belly of the prisoner. There were old scars and a tattoo of some bird's wings spread wide.
"And it's kind of skinny. I'll give him some laxative, it'll make him five pounds lighter."
The shaman plunged a knife into the ground next to the poor man's face and retrieved a crumpled wooden bottle from the depths of his robe. Then he tore the blindfold off the captive's face, holding up the gag. He immediately pushed the gag out of his mouth and screamed:
"I am a spy! Spy! A know a lot!"
"What does it say?" The shaman asked unhappily.
"I am a spy of the imperial army, you can't eat me!" The bound man yelled hoarsely.
"You swore you were just a hunter," Jay-Gul leaned over him. "And now you're pissing in my ear about some kind of army. I think you just don't want to go to the cauldron, that's why "?;%"
"It's true! I can prove it!"
"Yes? Prove it. Let's hear it."
The prisoner began to prove. He did so willingly and in great detail. From what he said, Jay-Gul understood the main thing - there was an army of almost a hundred and fifty natives, a day's march from here. Fifty men on horseback, a company of pedestrians and archers, a hundred, and two mages.
It was both good and bad. The bad thing was that there were too many of them, and there were also mages. With a mage, you never know what he'll cast. The good news was that there was finally going to be a good fight. Even if they were wimps, like the ones Jay-Gul fought last time, they were outnumbered.
The question of whether they would even risk an attack, the orc immediately dismissed. First of all, there are many more of them and for humans, this alone is a great excuse. Secondly, they'd need something to eat. Jay-Gul's men could carry ten days' worth of provisions each. They could stretch their supplies by hunting, but it's hard to feed a band of two dozen by hunting alone, and it's good if you can find a bear or a family of boars. And every orc is a hunter.
And there are a hundred and fifty people here. Everybody wants to eat. And anyway, with that many people here, how could they ever get past a fight? Jay-Gul was firmly convinced that even if they didn't want to, he would make them.
When they heard about the enemies nearby, the boyz became very excited. Jay-Gul had to cool a lot of hotheads eager to have an adventure right now.
By the end of the day, he had sent messengers to the lumberyard and fish post, and by the end of the day, the whole gang had assembled in the village. Gathering everyone on the patch in front of the common house, Jay-Gul surveyed the troops.
With the recent additions, it was nearly forty boyz It was far more than the tough guy was used to seeing under his command.
The snarling, snorting crowd was out for blood. Right now, right this second, they needed an enemy. Jay-Gul remembered himself as part of such a crowd, and he knew what to say.
"Shut up ?;%:::!"
He staggered to the front of the hushed crowd with an imposing look.
"The enemy has not yet arrived, and you are already climbing the wall. Tomorrow everything will happen. Tomorrow they will come."
"Why wait?!" an indistinct murmur was heard.
"Because I said so!!! So we don't have to run far. And that while we're there they won't burn down our village. They'll come on their own."
"And if they don't come?" There was resentment again.
"If they don't come, then we'll go after them. In the meantime, let's get ready. The guests must be welcomed with respect."
The evening passed with preparations. Jay-Gul channeled the energy of the orcs, seething with the anticipation of a fight, into a safe channel. The thatched roofs of the people's houses were dismantled. Jay-Gul had a pretty good idea of what would happen if a few flaming arrows or a wizard's fireball hit such a roof. There was no time to convert a thatched roof to a boarded one, so for the time being the frames were covered with hastily sewn soaked hides, which were plentiful.
The ditch outside the palisade was deep and carefully pinned with sharp stakes. Jay-Gul himself thought that the moat would not play a role in the coming battle. If the spy we caught wasn't lying about the number of cavalries, no one would charge against the walls. Cavalry is the main striking force, and it's not very good on the walls.
The elf was sent after the nearest goblin patrol. Small marauders hung around the edge of the great forest, catching the "infidels" fleeing the forest. Ogres and trolls, survivors of the fights, often tried to leave their old haunts on their own. Goblins, having suffered enough at the hands of both, did not pass up the chance to take revenge. The orc God did not approve of the abuse of prisoners, but was quite respectful of revenge and killing the enemy.
Orcs didn't think goblins were good fighters. They were good at stalking, ambushes, and raids, and not much else. Jay-Gul didn't have much respect for them, either. Still, even they could be useful.
After some deliberation, Jay-Gul decided to let the prisoner go. Of course, the spy himself did not know that he had been released. Annika had helped him escape, and the stupid ogres simply hadn't noticed. They didn't make the child lie about something that didn't happen. Jay-Gul didn't like the idea of teaching her to lie. He believed that if the child would hurry up and keep quiet, the man would make things up for himself.
The shaman kept grumbling about the healing potion, which he must have "forgotten" in a prominent place. Without the potion, the prisoner wouldn't have gotten far - the elf had twisted the poor man's hands and feet so badly that his hands and feet were dying off.
* * *