Thank you all for reading the prior installments!
To recap: Duchess Sarya is now in Ravenmark, which is in the midst of a civil war between Garnoc and Lucan, rival claimants to the throne. She has also secured an alliance with Duke Lucan and his second-in-command, captain Neryth. With Neryth's help, the barbarian shaman Ketrik has managed to convince a mercenary company made up of his fellow barbarians to turn against Garnoc and aid Lucan.
With the barbarians now on his side, Lucan begins to make his final move to dethrone Garnoc.
This chapter does move quite briskly to set some pieces in motion for what is to come.
***
Sarya and Lucan rode together at the head of his army. The wind rustled in her hair, causing it to dance like the great banners behind them. To finalize and publicize the alliance, Lucan had ordered his servants to craft a flag of Fellhaven, which flew alongside his own banners.
Time and again her gaze flitted back to those banners, and she held her head high with pride at the symbols of the alliance she had forged. Behind the banners of Ravenmark and Fellhaven were the grisly banners of the barbarian mercenaries: great swathes of hide, and poles adorned with the bones of men and beasts alike.
Lucan's regiments stretched out in a great column: several thousand men, all armed, armored and ready to fight and die for the duke and the new alliance. Alongside the neat lines of Ravenmark soldiers were hundreds of wild, fur-clad barbarian mercenaries. They had just abandoned Lucan's rival Garnoc, and now chanted and howled out their hunger for war and glory as they marched against their former employer.
"Damned glorious sight, eh?" captain Neryth said. Sarya pulled her gaze away from the savage warriors and smiled at the woman, who seemed to be in a better mood than usual. No doubt that had something to do with the way she'd been eyeing up a few of the barbarian mercenaries.
Sarya felt a pang of jealousy at that: though she enjoyed Lucan's attentions in the bedroom, something within her still longed for the savage, uncivilized touch of a barbarian once again.
"Indeed," Sarya said with a smile.
"An even more glorious sight will be Garnoc's head on a pike," Lucan growled, his one good eye glaring out in the distance, towards the larger fortress where Garnoc was making his stand.
But it would not be much of a stand: the scouts had reported that since the mercenaries had abandoned Garnoc's cause, many of his other soldiers were deserting him as well. And since the fort he held was in such disrepair, Sarya doubted he would withstand the larger army for long.
"About that, my lord," Sarya said. "As much as I understand your desire to punish Garnoc for his crimes, it might be best to stay your hand."
His eye narrowed, but he did not tear his glare away from the distant fortress.
"Explain," he said tersely.
"Though he lacks a true claim to the title, he is still viewed as a rightful duke by most of the other dukes and duchesses of the Empire," she said. "Killing him outright might undermine your standing with the other dukes."
"So what do you suggest?"
She was grateful that he valued her opinion, and that he hadn't angrily dismissed her suggestions out of hand.
"Keep him a prisoner, under the watch of trusted guards." She thought for a moment, dwelling on the best way to phrase her ideas to appeal to Lucan's stern sense of justice. "That will be a more fitting punishment for him, after all. To live in a dungeon, and to hear of your triumphs and glories, my lord. He can witness as you restore Ravenmark to its old glory, and he shall burn with jealousy and shame as you accomplish all that he could not."
Lucan's mouth twitched into a brief, small smile.
"You always seem to know what to say, my lady."
"You have your sword, my lord, and I have my words."
Lucan finally tore his eye away from Garnoc's fort to meet her gaze. That intense stare softened, then he nodded.
"Very well. He shall languish in a cell, as a symbol of my mercy, and as a means to punish him."
She smiled; it would certainly be easier to win over the other duchies if Lucan's hands were clean of Garnoc's blood.
"Neryth," Lucan said to the captain. "Take a band of scouts on ahead, flank around to the other side. With his men abandoning him and with those walls being in such a poor state, I expect he'll flee rather than make a stand. If he does retreat, I want you and your men to intercept him."
She nodded and turned her horse away.
"Take him alive, captain," Lucan said, before she could ride off.
"Aye, my lord. Not much glory in killing a foolish, unarmed nobleman, anyway." She then grinned. "But will you object if I take any fancy jewelry he has?"
Lucan and Sarya both chuckled a bit.
"Take anything you want, just not his life. Consider it your prize for capturing him."
Neryth nodded again and spurred her horse away. As she rode, she cried out to several of the lieutenants and lower officers, then guided her horse over towards the front ranks of the barbarian column.
"With luck, we'll have this wrapped up by dusk," Lucan said. "And then after a bit of rest and celebration, we'll begin the march to Fellhaven."
Sarya smiled warmly and reached over, resting her hand on his knee. He raised an eyebrow, for that was the first sign of any affection that either of them had shown in public. To her surprise, he didn't glare or rebuke her.
Instead, his hand reached down, gently settling on her wrist for a moment, before she pulled away.
"Thank you," she said softly.
"Thank me when Garnoc is in chains, and when your city is saved, my lady."
"Are you still insisting on telling me what to do, my lord?" she shot back, a faint smile playing across her face.
"Commanding you seems to have been quite enjoyable for the both of us so far. So yes, I will insist."
Her smile turned bright and wicked, then she looked away, lest any of his barons or officers take notice. She squirmed a bit in her saddle, hoping that Garnoc was quickly dealt with, so she and Lucan could begin 'celebrating.'
***
Neryth rode away from Lucan and Sarya, and brought her horse to a halt beside one of the packs of barbarians. Her eyes swept over them, settling briefly on Ketrik. She gave the man a smile and a nod, then looked past him.
Ekwulf and Torvath, the two men she had faced in the duel, walked at the head of a pack of fur-clad warriors. Torvath gave her a nod and a friendly smile, while Ekwulf flashed her a brief, hungry look.