NOTE: If at any point you find the geography confusing, there is a MAP you can consult. It can be found at the very bottom of my author's page, under "Illustration Submissions". It hardly qualifies as 'erotic art', but that was the best option available.
*****
I will tell the truth.
I was with Borna from the very beginning. In fact, he chose me as his very first Hand
[1]
, the day he turned sixteen. We had been friends from birth, you see.
- "Why him?" asked his father, the Hospodar
[2]
. He screwed up his face as he said it. "There are others who are stronger. Quicker, more agile. Better warriors."
- "Because Ljudevit
[3]
is bright." said Borna. "He is my friend, and I trust him with my life."
- "You think that will be enough?"
- "There are plenty of strong men, and good warriors. But a man I can trust is a precious commodity." answered his son. "And don't forget his brains: Ljudevit is one of the smartest people I know."
The Hospodar scowled, but let his son's choice stand. Even then, Borna was stubborn.
Is it any wonder that I followed Borna, when he said things like that? Of course, that comment about my brains didn't endear me to the other warriors. I took some abuse for that, I can tell you, and it wasn't just good-natured ribbing. I had to fight, several times - and I took my lumps.
But I knew then that I would follow him until I grew too old to watch his back, or died fighting.
Yes, I will tell you the truth. Even when it is not flattering to me, or to Borna.
*****
- "Something's up." I said, to Borna.
He followed the direction of my gaze, and caught sight of Dirayr, who was examining a horse's shoe. "You're right." he said. "We must be going somewhere."
It was a logical conclusion, if his father's retainer was picking out horses. I say horses, but in Hvad, our mounts are more akin to ponies. Unlike those great beasts the Izumyrians breed, ours aren't very big, and they're not particularly fast. But they're tireless. They can run a long way, carrying a man, even in armour. They'll carry a load of rocks, if that's what you want.
Doesn't pay to treat them as if their endurance is limitless, of course. But you get the point. They're small, sure-footed, and tough.
We don't fight on horseback, anyway. A horse is just to get you there faster. We dismount to fight, with spear and shield, axes and long knives. None of that high and mighty cavalry, like the Izumyrians.
But I'm getting ahead of myself. I didn't know anything of cavalry, or Izumyrians, at that point. It was the day our lives changed, and Borna started to become Borna. He was sharpening a knife with his whetstone - Borna was a great one for sharpening things. I sat beside him, scrubbing a stubborn rust spot off his byrnie
[4]
.
A shadow fell across the work I was doing. It was Antras, Borna's older brother, stepping between me and the sun. If you think that it was accidental, then you didn't know Antras. This sort of petty annoyance was one of his favourite ways to pass the day.
Antras was the elder, by almost two years. He was considerably bigger than Borna, and four times as arrogant as anyone I had ever met. He wore his shirt of chain mail every day, pretending to be a great warrior - though everyone knew that his fighting experience was limited to sparring sessions.
Antras also believed himself to be handsome. To be fair, he was - in a rough-hewn sort of way. His looks had been slightly marred, or perhaps improved, by an angry scar near the corner of his left eye. Antras got that when he was 11.
He had been attempting to drown his 9 year old brother in the stream. Borna escaped his grasp long enough to seize a stick, and tried to plunge the jagged end into Antras' eye. He missed - by an inch and a half. When they were children, the wound had looked horrific. Now that he was a man grown, the scar just served to give Antras 'character'.
Since then, the brothers had tread warily around each other. Borna had me, as well, to watch his back. And Antras had chosen his own Hand. Khoren was a brute. A massive brute, to be exact. He kept the hair on his enormous square head close-cropped. His mouth was forever twisted in a permanent scowl. He was also a head taller than me, and outweighed me by thirty pounds. He was built like a bear, with a brain to match.
There were many more differences between the two brothers. Borna was fastidious, almost obsessed with cleanliness. He bathed regularly, and compelled me to do the same. It was an inexplicable habit he got from his mother, I suppose.
Antras, by contrast, was careless, almost slovenly. He left the care of his clothing and armour and weapons to others. The sheepskin cloak he wore looked dull, and a little tattered. He didn't take good care of it, and so it had lost its original lustre, after repeated washing.
Borna sweet-talked the girls
. All
of the girls. He dallied with quite a few, but he was kind and generous with all of them. Antras, on the other hand, thought that the girls should come to him. He was petty and made cutting remarks about any who didn't treat him the way he expected. What he expected was that they would lie down or bend over so that he could hump them.
Borna was clever and quick-thinking, but he would also listen to others - including me - and then mull over what was said. For example: Borna had grown his hair long, and tied it in a ponytail. One day, Mihran, his father's Hand, grabbed that ponytail and yanked the boy off his feet.
- "An enemy could take hold of that." growled Mihran. "Easily."
Borna was angry, but he wasn't stupid. Mihran was unquestionably the best warrior among us. Advice from him was tantamount to a message from on high. Borna immediately cut off the ponytail, and then shaved the sides of his head, for good measure. He insisted that I do the same.
- "It'll keep the lice out of your hair." he suggested.
- "
Your
hair, you mean. I got them from you." I replied.
The next day, though, Mihran frowned when he saw Borna's partially-shaven skull. "Thick hair can cushion a blow - especially under a helmet." he remarked.
Borna couldn't instantly grow his hair back, so he devised simple felt caps which we could wear under a helmet, as additional padding. They were itchy, and made us sweat - and we looked stupid - but he was quite proud of the idea. Especially when Mihran noted that the pads might have some merit.
Antras had immediately shaved the sides of his own head, and then claimed that the notion had been his all along. He sneered at Borna, and accused his 'little brother' of copying him. Borna was furious, and claimed that Antras had stolen his idea.
Mihran, of course, could have ended this posturing with a few words. But he didn't. He might not have wanted to intervene in a dispute between the brothers. Or perhaps he just didn't want to antagonize the boy who would one day succeed Gosdan as Hospodar. That struck me as very short-sighted. I didn't tell him so, though - Mihran would not have appreciated advice from me. No doubt he would have cuffed me for my presumption.