I am Bilal, son of Balam and I have been singing for my supper for nearly thirty five years now. I have sung song after song, told tale after tale, and smoked pipe after pipe. The bard's life has treated me well, mostly. As I feel my twilight years approaching, I am committing my tales to writing, so that there might be something left of me in the world after God calls me home.
They say that one doesn't become a bard because they're good at it. One becomes a bard because they're no good at anything else. I've been a soldier, a sailor, a farmer... and a thousand more. These are tales for other days.
All of this is being told by memory. I have never kept a journal. So the details I tell here will be imperfect. I always believed anyway that a good bard never let facts get in the way of a good story. But what will always be true is the feeling. The fear, the passion, the triumph, those will always be true.
If you can get by singing and wandering as long as I have, you learn a thing or two. Speed is better than strength. Always trust your gut. And tell tales for your audience. Let me explain. When I travel to a village, there are children, mothers, and worst of all, imams watching. I can get away with a bawdy song, but I have to watch myself to keep in the people's good graces. So I tell a story that all of them will like. Of course these, like all of my tales, are wonderful and amazing. But I can't tell them all.
In a shisha den, surrounded by stoned and sinful men I can tell another kind of tale. Village stories have shining heroes and daring escapes. Shisha den stories have cocks and tits and blood and booze.
This is one of those shisha den stories.
The Mountain Queen
This was many years ago, during the reign of Omar, Zeyk's grandfather. Omar was a learned and pious man, as Zeyk is, but that doesn't mean that he was a weak man. This was during the war with Duke Ghostface. That was not his real name of course, but his real name escapes me at this moment. We called him that because in battle he would charge in without a helmet and with his face painted like he was already dead. And that wasn't all. He never took men prisoner. If you were lucky he would kill you and butcher you for his army's provisions. If you were not lucky he would kill you the slow way. He roasted men alive or skinned them.
Like so many young men, I had enlisted and we were sent to Alyuna. It was part of the empire then too, and Ghostface's men were attacking the lands there. I had been on a ship for the first time, and I spent most of the time puking my guts out. When we reached Alyuna I thanked God and kissed the solid ground. Now if you've never been in it, you would think life in the army is all battles and glory. The truth is that it's sailing, marching, bad food or no food, and sleeping in cold tents smelling other poor bastards' farts. Even the battle isn't like the stories.
From the port we marched for two weeks. Ghostface's realm was in the north, beyond the Alyunan mountains. We were marching to meet his men at the border. Alyuna is a hot land, like Kashak. And like Kashak it was a rough and mountainous land. We marched and marched and when we couldn't march anymore then we kept marching. I had learned the qanun at this time, and I would play when we stopped. The other men would have likely killed me, were it not for my qanun, since I was weak and lazy. The army was not a good fit for me.
Finally we came to the northern Alps. It was early spring, but the ground was still thick with snow and after marching for several hours we couldn't feel our feet when we went to bed at night. Many of the men got frostbite. It was an ugly business. There were two thousand of us, including men at arms in heavy armor, mighty noble horsemen, and thick armed archers. I was none of these. I carried an iron-tipped spear, a dagger, and a shield. I wore a gambeson, which at least kept me warm. I also wore a leather cap. They called us the rank and file, and we were the ones meant to stop other rank and file while the cavalry terrorized them by attacking from behind. As I said, an ugly business.
We joined the main force of the padishah's men at the foot of the mountains on the other side of Alyuna's border. It was still cold and there was snow on the ground, but it was not the bitter cold of the mountains. Together we were ten thousand. It was quite a sight, seeing that many men of war in one place. In a few days, though most of us would be dead.
We were in Ghostface's lands at that time, and we marched together, all ten thousand of us, deeper in. An army of that size is a horrible thing to behold. We looted and pillaged villages in our path. I had learned the local language, but I wish I had not when I heard the screams and pleas of the people whose only crime was being in our way.
At last the scouts returned and told us that Ghostface's army was nearby, with Ghostface himself commanding the men. That night there was a stirring of terror in the army. And that morning Ghostface had arrived. There was no way for me to tell their numbers when we encountered them, but I later learned there were twenty thousand of them to our ten thousand.
My unit was in the front ranks, and our harsh sergeant pressed us on. We were almost as afraid of him as we were Ghostface. He was at least ten years my senior and his face was bisected by a scar that had cut off most of his lip. We stood facing the enemy.
I'm sure many of you have heard a bow firing at one time or another. It is a fairly soft twang and then the whoosh of an arrow. We heard a thousand of those sounds, all at once. Then what I can only describe as an immense flock of slender birds pounded down on us. We raised our shields, but wave after wave of arrows fell on us. Men fell one after another, screaming and crying and shitting on the ground. Some cried for their mothers, some cried for God, and some just cried.
"Forward, march!" the sergeant shouted. I picked up one foot, then the other. I heard prayers and sobs around me. At least we were leaving the dead and dying bodies behind us. But new bodies took their places. My shield looked like a porcupine by now, and the sergeant told us to brace. Ghostface's cavalry were upon us, and they crashed into the men in front of me. Their blades flashed. I thought the men being skewered by arrows was the worst thing I had seen in my life, but this had it beat.
Then I lost control. I dropped my shield, screamed like a woman, and ran like Shaitan himself was chasing me. The sergeant shouted my name a few times, but then he made a horrible gurgling sound and fell silent. I was exhausted but I still ran. I ran until I thought I would fall. I ran until I thought I would pass out. I ran until I thought I would die and yet I kept going. I had reached the hills behind our ranks and hoped I could lose the cavalry there. I found a large rock and sat down, putting it between me and the battlefield. I felt like I had used all the wind I would never have, and would breathe in ragged breaths for the rest of my life.
I rested my head against the back of the rock and closed my eyes. It seemed that I had actually escaped. But then I heard hoofbeats. Before I could even react, the horseman was upon me. He was a hulking giant of a man, but was covered from head to toe, including his face. He wore a wolf hide cloak which hid most of his body. I saw the glitter of some kind of mail under the cloak. His helmet was a design that I had never seen, and I saw his amber eyes and nothing else. He towered over me on his horse.
I wanted to get up, but my body was completely spent. I could only stare in terror as the man dismounted and approached me. He rested his metal boot on my chest. The boot pinned me firmly, but not enough to hurt. My breath came ragged and my heart thumped in my chest.
Then, a horrid voice came from the helmet. "What is your name?" It was higher than I expected, coming from such a large man. There was something strange about it I could not quite put my finger on. He spoke Kashaki, the language of the empire, but with an unfamiliar accent. I stared at the helmet, and the boot pressed harder on my chest. "Answer me! What is your name?"
"I am Bilal, son of Balam! Please, spare me!" He could have killed me just by pressing his foot down, as heavy as he was. His dark figure loomed over me. He must have been over six and a half feet tall.
"What do you do, Bilal son of Balam?"
I thought he was scolding me for retreating from battle. He couldn't have been one of ours with that accent and didn't sound like anyone from Ghostface's lands. Who was this? "I couldn't help it," I pleaded. "So many men had died! Fear gripped my heart."
"Stop your blathering, fool! I mean your... talents and profession. What do you do?"
Then it occurred to me why the voice sounded so strange. This was a woman's voice. I couldn't believe that this vision of hulking death before me was a woman. But as I listened, sure enough, it was a woman's voice. "I am a soldier. They pay me eight copper pieces a day. I lived on a farm before and my father raised goats."