The King of the Crags

The King of the Crags by Stephen Deas

Book: The King of the Crags by Stephen Deas Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen Deas
Tags: Memory of Flames
had. You!’ He was pointing straight at Jostan. ‘Go home and serve yours. Serve Queen Jaslyn.’ Jostan blinked and tried to listen, and yet the words seemed slide over him like water over a stone, never sticking in his mind, never quite heard. Hyrkallan clenched his teeth and a shiver of fury ran through him. ‘You!’ He stabbed at GarHannas. ‘Why are you even here?’
     
    GarHannas turned a dangerous shade of red, but he didn’t move. Didn’t speak.
     
    Jostan bowed his head. Hyrkallan had gone too far. Even he knew it. Screaming and shouting at young blades like Jostan and Shanzir was one thing. Screaming at someone like GarHannas only made him look stupid. He’d lost them.
     
    ‘Lead us, Rider Hyrkallan.’ It was GarHannas who spoke. None of the rest wanted him.
     
    Hyrkallan shook his head. ‘No. I’m leaving you. I’m going back where I belong. Where we all belong. I’m going home, and I’m going to serve my queen by making the north so bloody dangerous that Zafir won’t dare lift a finger against a single hair on Queen Shezira’s holy head. You should join me.’ He looked straight at GarHannas now. ‘You can piss about in the mountains all you like, but twenty dragons aimlessly burning peasants in the Spur won’t even get Zafir’s attention. I’m going, and if I ever have to come back, I’ll have the whole fucking horde of the north with me, five hundred dragons and fifty thousand men. That’s where I should be and so should all of you.’
     
    Jostan was barely listening now. Hyrkallan shook his head in disgust.
     
    Semian spoke so softly that it seemed he was whispering, yet his voice was clear. ‘Jaslyn needs a knight-marshal. Shezira needed a knight-marshal, a proper one, not one who could barely hold a sword. A marshal who would lead and conquer, not one filled with so much guile that she was strangled by her own schemes. Lady Nastria is dead, and now you’re going to have what should have been yours a long time ago. You would never have let this happen.’
     
    Hyrkallan’s brow furrowed and for a moment he looked lost and confused. Then he shook it off. ‘Sell-swords. Shit-eaters. That’s what we’re worth to Zafir. She probably doesn’t even know we exist.’ He grinned then and laughed. ‘If you really want to sting her, burn her eyries.’ He spat. ‘Yes, Rider Semian. Go burn her palace. If you can.’ They were all still looking at him in silence. ‘A pox on all of you.’
     
    They watched as Hyrkallan left them, great in his day yet now old and worn. No one said a word. Or maybe GarHannas had said something. Jostan wasn’t sure. They all watched B’thannan fly away into the dawn sky and vanish, and then they stared, lost in thought perhaps, or lost in wonder, or simply lost.
     
    ‘Riders!’ The crack of Semian’s voice jerked Jostan awake. He felt as though he’d been sleeping and someone had tipped a bucket of water over him. He shook himself and looked around.
     
    Next to him, Shanzir almost fell over.
     
    ‘What happened?’ she whispered. She looked confused.
     
    A dozen yards away, GarHannas held his head in his hands.
     
    ‘What have we done?’
     
    ‘Riders!’ shouted Semian again. ‘Red Riders! Hyrkallan is gone. He has left us, but we remain. We are the Red Riders! We were forged together and we will follow our purpose to our death if that is what the fates demand. I say again, we alone remain! I will lead those who will have me, and we will take the fight to where it belongs. We will fly our dragons to the walls of the speaker’s palace and we will make her burn! Stay or go, but do it now.’
     
    Most of them stayed. All except GarHannas and a couple of others, who milled around aimlessly, confused and desolate, only to be herded towards their dragons and sent on their way with rude haste. Semian couldn’t hide his glee once they were gone. He stood with the blood-mage beside him and smiled, nodding. It made Jostan feel sick. And yet I

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