"I think it's wreckage of a ship. From the storm last night."
It wasn't strange to find ship wreckage on the Cefalu beach, in the kingdom of Akamantis, after a tempest like the one that had raged the previous night.
Two scouts, on their regular patrol along the coastline of the island of Li' in vigilance against the forces of the Prince of Madness, which sought to invade Akamantis, had stopped on the beach, their attention arrested by shattered ship planking and tangles of shredded sailcloth washing up in the surf.
"Shall we hope that it is a ship of the Arameans, even perhaps the flagship of the old mad prince himself?" said the second of the scouts, as they pulled up their horses on the cliff above the beach.
This particular beach had been scouted constantly over the past few weeks, because twice the Oracle at Noto had said the invasion would come here, on the beach at Cefalu. If it spoke the same name the third time, this would be a certainty.
"What ho?" called out the first scout. "I see movement below, in the wreckage."
The two spurred their horses along the cliff front until they came to the winding path that led down the beach.
As they approached, a figure was pulling its way out of a pile of splintered timbers. The young man was slight, but well formed, and brown as the earth in the fields of Li'. No, he was browner, a rich chocolate brown. And he had black curly hair and was handsome of face and limb. As he stumbled to stand and the two riders drew nearer, they could see that his clothes, typical in style and color of the hated Aram ruling family, were in tatters.
The first rider unsheathed his short lance, ready to erase one more Aramean from the earth, but the other stayed his hand.
"Nay, brother, can you not see? He is one of the browns, one of those we call the Nubians. Not a real Aramean."
"Yet he wears the vestments of the Aram and no doubt is part of the invasion fleet. He should be dispatched."
"No, hold," the second scout called out again. "Have you not heard? Have you not heard that the browns are meant for the Sword of Xera? The Sword of Xera hungers for them, and this one appears to be well formed. We will take him back to Enna, to the Sword of Xera. The Sword of Xera will dispatch the lad. This too may be an omen, a favorable omen. We will be rewarded."
The small young Nubian man had come to his senses enough to see the two horsemen bearing down on him, in the livery of King Xera. And in apparent panic he turned from them and stumbled as in confusion and exhaustion across the burning sands on naked feet.
It was a futile gesture. The two scouts bore down on him, and the first scout reached down and lifted the small young man easily and slung him, belly down, in front of him on the back of the horse. Anxious now to pass on the treasure they'd found, the scouts turned the noses of their mounts toward the land and raced up the sand and across the sand dunes to the king's high road.
If they had been more observant and in less of a hurry, they might have looked back to where the young Nubian had risen from out of the wreckage of the ship and seen a second figure, a wizened old man, bent over and stumbling into the brilliant sunlight—and lifting his head to watch the horses disappearing over the rise of the dunes . . . and forming a smile, a pleased little smile, on his lips.
The two scouts were cantering back toward the capital of Enna when a large contingent of horseman approached from the central plains at a gallop.
The first scout, recognizing the horsemen of the king, raised himself up in the saddle and waved his lance back and forth, signaling that they had news. By the time the larger force had drawn up before them, the two scouts were off their horses and on their knees, heads bowed.
From out of the pack of horseman emerged a man taller and bulkier and more majestic than all of the rest. He strode to where the two scouts were kneeling, their eyes cast to the ground, their shoulders trembling as all men in the kingdom trembled in the presence of their king.
"Why do you impede my progress?" the king growled. "Are you not supposed to be on coastal watch? What have you seen? And it better not be a trifle."
"No, my lord, it is no trifling matter," the first scout replied in a shaky voice. "We have seen wreckage, the wreckage of a ship, perhaps an Aram warship, maybe even its flagship, on the beach at Cefalu. As the oracle said—"
"I know what the oracle said," thundered the king. "I speak to the oracle. Only I. I do not expect my scouts to speculate on what they do not know. The storm of last night was mighty. It may have been one of our own ships."
"Beg your mercy, lord," the second scout ventured, "But there is evidence."
"Evidence? What evidence? Evidence of what?"
"We have found a survivor. The tatters of his clothes are in Aram style and color. And, you will be pleased to know—"
"Don't tell me what will please me. Did you leave the body on the beach?"
"No, sire," offered the first scout. "He is here, on my horse. We spared him because we understand the likes of him are for the Sword of Xera. He is African brown."