âWhat are we doing here?â Asked Loes, the sea breeze blowing at the Princessâ hair, ruining hours of careful brushing; which was probably more time, than her handmaiden had ever spent on preparing hers, Elsanne thought. The Princess felt the moisture on her skin and smelled the sea, the wind blowing strangely hot, as if to chase away the chill of fall. Theyâd left Riverdor with the weather worsening; in fact itâd rained for part of their slow journey and Elsanne expected the coast to be colder.
Elsanne looked around her, using a hand to keep her long white hair off her face. Big weather-beaten boulders sprouted out the golden sand. She touched one; it was warm, where it faced the sea, cold on the other side.
Some details now made more sense.
âThis is the coast of Regia,â She murmured to no one. Her eyes searched for the Prince, spotted him talking with his men, some distance from their carriage. Eight Cofol riders were his entourage, a boisterous bunch. Alas, several days into their journey, Elsanne hadnât talked with anyone, but the Prince. She had tried to apprehend, what they were discussing, but couldnât make out the words clearly, as her knowledge of their language wasnât fluent enough.
I never thought, Iâll need it, she thought, a bitter smile on her face.
The Princess bit her lower lip, to prevent tears from flowing. Breaking down in front of them, wouldnât help her cause. Then again, if she did, it probably wouldnât hurt; but it felt more⦠decent, not to show such weakness from the beginning.
Uher, please show me, this is but a dream. A horrible, awful dream. Iâll even take a nightmare, just wake me up. Show me a sign.
âThere are riders coming,â Loes yelled, face flushed and hair a right mess, pointing with a shaking hand, the other busy trying to keep the aforementioned unruly muddle, under control. Elsanne followed the hand with her eyes, the Cofols all coming alive before them. âThey donât look like Cofol to me,â Loes, for some reason seeing better than her, noticed.
A group of around ten mounted men or women, still half-covered in dust clouds, was approaching their camp. They had kept the carriage next to one of the bigger boulders sprouting out the sand, their horses tied on short pegs on the other, creating a â-shape, the boulder side facing the sea for protection from the wind. Radinâs men gathered at the impromptu âentranceâ to their camp looking nervous, as theyâd realized as well that the oncoming men wore Issirian armor.
Or parts of it, Elsanne observed, approaching the backs of the group of men in front of her, with careful steps, heeled boots not helping on the shifty sandy terrain. The leading cavalryman, a broad shouldered Issir, fully armoured, with darksteel plate covering his chest and sturdy chainmail his arms that reached his hips, pulled at the reins and stopped his horse, less than ten meters from Prince Radinâs guards.
A great mustache dominated his upper mouth, flowing both sides of a long white beard, braided into an elaborate ponytail. He curled his lip seeing them gathered nervously in wait and glanced back towards his companions, a crimson colored sash around his waist showing clear.
Elsanne gulped nervously, feeling a tang of worry in her chest.
Surely, she thought. It canât be.
âSeems, we found us some Cofols lads,â The man said loud enough to be heard.
âWhatever you may think, you found⦠stranger,â Prince Radin had walked out of their group to address him. âYouâre mistaken. I suggest, we all go about our merry ways.â
The newcomer, turned to see who was talking and with a grunt, climbed down his horse and stretched his arms out wide, before answering. His men followed his example, the youngest looking gathering the reins and pulling the horses back, into a separate group.
The Princeâs patience run out.
âAll right then, dear Sirs. I urgeââ
âHeard ye before,â The man said cutting him short. âAlso heard a story, along wit half the realm, about how a Cofol won himself the Princess of Kaltha,â His men, Elsanne counted nine of them, laughed hard at that. âTis a great one. Aye, couple of nobles maimed in it as well. A kingâs son slain. Now the famed Sonny Lindberg, heard the tale also, thought on it⦠another way. Do the High King a favor sort of speaking; help alleviate some of⦠the misunderstandings betwixt âem. Earn himself a pardon in the process. Most of his lads likened the idea.â
In the Crimson Band was his meaning.
Elsanne closed her eyes, the identity of the men clear. âMy Prince, listen to me; donât get involved.â She said breathlessly. Her fate changed with the dawn of each day it seemed, but perhaps this turn might lead to a better outcome.
Radin narrowed his eyes surprised. âDear, Iâm in the middle of it.â
Uh.
âIâm afraid he is,â The man continued, after checking her out, in a very lewd manner. âSee the trouble here is that Sonny bought your ruse, sent the Crimson Band outside Scaldingport, to cut you off. I didnât.â
âWho might you be?â Radin asked, eyeing his men readying their weapons, the atmosphere turning tense.
âKobus Bakema. A mere lieutenant, in the ranks.â The man said solemnly, his eyes never leaving her face. Elsanne realized, it wasnât lust lieutenant Kobusâ eyes held and gasped horrified. âUsed to be married, I did. Kingâs men killed my wife ye see, hanged her up in Pascor for my crimes.â
The Princeâs swollen face showed his disdain. âIâm sorry for your loss,â He offered.
Kobus nodded, his eyes somewhat clouded, staring at his boots now.
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âPleaded for me kids, she did. The Mayor of the city, messaged the King even,â He said miserably.
Elsanne felt her heart race in her chest. She was doomed, the gods have decided.
âWhat did the king say?â Prince Radin asked, a glance at her pale face and trembling hands, giving him the answer, before the manâs reply.
âTogether,â The Prince whispered, so only she could listen.
His words oddly ironic.
âKing Antoon decreed,â Kobus continued, missing their small exchange, steel in his voice now. âA traitorâs offspring is a traitor unto himself and ordered âem both hang, beside their mother.â
Heâd drawn his sword out at that, his men following his example.
âI have nothing against you,â Kobus admitted to the Princeâs men, âGive me the Eikenaar spawn and Iâm satisfied.â
âYou canât have the Princeâs wife,â One of the Cofolâs replied crossly. âIt is an absurd demand.â
Kobus raised his brows surprised, his eyes wandering behind them, to the sound of horses approaching. Elsanne turned her head nervously, her mind dark and confused and watched three more riders appearing behind their carriage. Wearing the same crimson sash. They had advanced following the shoreline unseen, until the very last moment.
âHad my scouts following ye all along,â Kobus Bakema explained, trying to appear reasonable. âI advise you, to reconsider. The numbers are not in your favor.â
âDefend the Prince!â One of the guards bellowed and spears tips were lowered towards the rebels. Outlaws and rebels to the crown. Lowest of the low, criminal scum. I would hang them all, if I could, her brother always said, Elsanne thought, cursing him for putting her in this position.
âHein, Walter. Charge them,â Kobus ordered and moving with lethal finality run through a Cofol that stepped in front of Prince Radin to save him.
The man died with a sob, blood painting the blade, as Elsanne recoiled trying to get away from the sudden violence. She stumbled, hearing Loes screams, seeing out the corner of her eye the last part of a riderâs charge onto the backs of the Princeâs men. Two of them went down, one skewered on his own spear, broken part exploding out of his nappe, the other quickly cut down by the sword of an onrushing Issirian that caught him under the armpit.
Sheâd never thought blood could be so garishly red.
Elsanneâs hands sunk in the soft sand. One of the Cofols, his spear tip bloodied, helped her up and then abruptly shoved her away from the rider that turned on her. She screamed, everything turning a blur, eyes stinging and the huge horse missed her hip by a hair, the gleaming axeâs edge stopped by the guardâs spear, before opening her skull.
The Princess rolled on the wet silt, mire a mix of blood and sand fouling her clothes and hair. Ears ringing, she came to a stop, missing a sleeve. The rider was down, his entrails spilled all over the saddle of his horse that galloped away, leaving a bloody trail behind.
Another Cofol had died, his head not even four meters from where she had ended up, the rest of his body lost somewhere in the bloody scuffle that raged now ferociously. Elsanne counted four Crimson Band members not including the rider that were also down. That left five of them, including the youth, attacking the remaining four Cofol guards and Prince Radin.
The Prince had taken another wound in his right arm, the cut bleeding down his hand, as he was duking it out with a vicious Kobus. The Cofols were mostly using spears and since the fight had started and continued in very close quarters, it hindered their efforts. Some had switched to their long cavalry blades, but again their attention was on saving the Prince and it was costing them in blood.
Another went down, making the advantage overwhelming, for a moment. The Cofol thatâd saved her from the sole rider that had charged on Kobus orders, stabbed a thin mail clad Issir fighter through the eye dropping him, making it even.
Elsanne got up on shaking legs and looked around for Loes, just as Radin charged the leader of the outlaws pushing him back, catching his retreating foot at the shin maiming him. Loes, at least some smart bones on her, had hid beneath the carriage, watching with ogling terrified eyes the battle. Having spotted her, the Princess made to call on the handmaiden to stay where she was, when her eyes rested on the two remaining riders that had appeared last, casually observing the fight from a distance.
They hadnât moved at all, Elsanne thought stunned.
One of them, as if sensing her scrutiny, turned a narrow face her way. White skin, large silver colored eyes, half-hidden under a standard nasal conical helm. His mouth pressed once, as if undecided, whether she was worth the bother.
It was strange to think that, Elsanne decided. Even stranger they stayed away.
âHELL ARE YE DOING?â Kobus bellowed, probably wondering the same thing, she thought. Another one of his men had fallen and what had looked unlikely at the start, now it seemed possible.
Then Radin, whoâd over extended to get to the leader, got a flail on his midriff and went down, shifting the momentum again. Two of his men immediately run to cover and pull the unresponsive Prince away, the others left facing a barely walking, but leering Kobus and three of his men.
âHah,â The man snarled, pleasure replacing anger. âThatâs it. Give it up lads. Tis over.â
Elsanne closed her eyes, despair returning tenfold. Her knees buckled and she went down on them, the fortunately soft sand saving her from injury. She was to die unloved and short of days in the middle of nowhere, forcefully wed, but a maiden, like a cattle.
A voice, spoken in common with an artistry, not expected in the midst of a bloody scuffle, forced her out of her stupor.
âYouâve arrived at a crossroads gentlemen. Choose wisely. Surrender and live. Or die.â
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âThe hells are ye talkinâ about?â Kobus yelled, eyes gawking when his âscoutâ removed his helm and threw it on the ground. It landed with a plop and bounced once before stopping, in front of the leader of the brigands.
âSelussa,â The narrow faced man said calmly. âKill the kid.â
Elsanne gasped in shock seeing the Issir youth, bolt sticking out of his neck, collapse on his face. The rest of Kobusâ men recoiled with curses and one of them still having his shield, lifted it slowly to cover his torso and neck.
âWhat is this?â Kobus, face flushed above his elaborate beard and doubly mad, glowered. âYouâll betray the Band?â
âYou are confused,â The stranger replied. âAnd in shock. Iâve never joined,â He paused and seeing the need for more explanation, he added evenly. âThis armor, I took from your man. Iâm afraid, heâs dead. You see unfortunately, your man was a criminal.â
Kobus spat down and glanced at his shaken companions.
âChanges naught. We can still take âem,â Not everyone seemed to agree.
As a matter of fact most didnât, but were afraid to speak up.
The stranger sighed, seeing it dragging.
âSelussa,â He said simply.
The next moment Kobus was down on his back, a bolt sticking out of his right eye.
His wife and children left unavenged.