Carnelian could see Osidian would not be dissuaded. ‘And the huimur?’
‘You will take them west until you come within sight of the towers of the Great South Road. There you will await my return.’
Carnelian considered the power Osidian was putting in his hands. How easy it would be to betray him. That thought was bittersweet, but he decided he must hold to his strategy: Osidian’s rebellion must be big enough that, in contrast, the part the Plainsmen and the Lepers had played in it would appear diminished. He raised his hand in assent.
When Carnelian woke, Osidian was gone. He rose and the legion came awake with him in the dawn. He could read the Lesser Chosen commanders’ uncertainty in the cast of their bodies, but chose to ignore it and banished them to their towers with a gesture. He sought out his officers and told them they would guide Earth-is-Strong as if he were sitting in her command chair. He assured them they would suffer no punishment for this infringement of legionary law, then he dismissed them, insisting that, throughout the day, they should stay within direct signal range of Heart-of-Thunder. Soon he was mounting the ladder up into Osidian’s tower. Once seated in Osidian’s chair, he sent commands flashing round the ring of dragons. Turning Heart-of-Thunder into his own shadow, Carnelian led them west.
It became hard to believe they were moving at all. Certainly, the grid of trackways gave an impression of forward movement but, every time they reached an intersection, with its identical overseer tower and the ring of the kraal behind it, it seemed they had merely returned to the same spot they had been in before. Dusty hri fields formed dun rectangles edged by the trackways. Sartlar laboured beneath the withering sun. Sometimes he would watch a gang of them jogging along the thread of a track. That would stir harsh memories of slavery and loss. He would turn away, letting the land blur, allowing the sway of the cabin to seduce him into thinking he was bobbing on a gentle swell. The sartlar became invisible to him, merging into the dull monotony of the land. Space lost its meaning. Time alone was perceptible. An eternity of it ruled by the tyrannous sun that made each overseer tower shrink and grow its arm of shadow.
In the evenings the meaningless vastness of the world contracted to the space within the laager. With darkness his world shrank to the smoky interior of his pavilion. Harried by doubt he would seek escape in sleep, but when this came at last he would be drawn down dark paths into the underworld of dream.
On the afternoon of the fourth day since Osidian had left with Morunasa, Carnelian was woken from a nodding half-slumber by his Lefthand. ‘I dared to think the Master would wish to be woken.’ The man glanced at the Righthand. ‘We risked bringing the dragon to a halt.’
‘Why?’
‘Master, our lookout claims to have glimpsed a watch-tower.’
‘Ahead of us?’
‘And to the south, Master.’
Carnelian gazed out through the bone screen. Gridded land stretched to the same hazy horizon he had been seeing for days.
He rose from his chair. ‘Signal the others to fall back.’
‘Master.’ The Lefthand punched the deck with his forehead even as he shuffled aside to allow Carnelian to pass round the back of his chair.
The Righthand scurried to attend him. ‘Master?’
‘I wish to see for myself.’
The legionary looked horrified. ‘Climb the mast?’
Carnelian chopped an affirmative. ‘Bring the lookout down.’
The man hesitated, squinting up at Carnelian as if he feared he might have misunderstood.
‘Go on,’ Carnelian said, softening his tone.
The legionary ducked a bow, then scampered to the staples set into the mast. Climbing them, he opened a hatch and slipped up onto the roof. Carnelian could hear his footfalls above his head. Heard him shouting something. At last, a face appeared in the hatch. ‘He’s down, Master.’
Carnelian left his cloak on his command chair, then climbed the staples. It was a squeeze to get through the hatch. The land spread vast and dusty beneath an immense, colourless sky. For a moment he was lost in all that airy space. Then he looked down; the ground was far away. The wedge of Heart-of-Thunder’s head seemed like a prow. Carnelian focused on the men prostrate on the roof. The Righthand and two others. One was gripping a mechanism Carnelian recognized as a tiny version of a watch-tower heliograph. The other must be the lookout.
He gazed up the mast with its glyph plaques. It tapered upwards like a knotted rope hanging from the sky. Far above was the swelling of the standard. At that height the mast did not look strong enough to bear his weight. Nevertheless, he was determined to go up.
As he climbed the staples running up the back of the mast the breeze was causing it to shudder. Each plaque he passed was larger than a shield. Soon the men looked tiny on the roof below. He could see not only Heart-of-Thunder’s head, but his rump and tail. Glancing up, he saw the standard was hanging huge above him. Soon he had reached it and found there, just beneath the grimacing paired faces of the Commonwealth, something very like a deadman’s chair. He took a firm grip of its hoop with first one hand then the other. Then he swung himself astride the central drum. It threatened to rotate under him forcing a spasm as he thought he might fall. He righted himself, waited for his heart to calm, then gazed out over the land. Wind roaring in his right ear, he located what he sought. The prongs of a watch-tower due west. It had to be on the Great South Road. Two more watch-towers lay to the south, no doubt part of the Ringwall. Makar had to be nearby. Suddenly he felt utterly exposed. It seemed as if the Wise were gazing directly at him. He slid off the chair onto the first staple and began the descent.
The sun was low when a voice like a gull’s caused Carnelian to push past his Hands and hurry out of his pavilion. The cry coming again from the sky made him glance up. The lookout clinging to Heart-of-Thunder’s mast was pointing back the way they had come. It took Carnelian a while to notice anything in the long shadows the dragons were casting, but then he saw two riders approaching.
‘There is no time for discussion, my Lords,’ said Osidian. He glanced around at the makeshift camp Carnelian had made. He had not bothered with a laager, but had stopped the dragons where they stood in their ragged line of march. His pavilion and the others for the commanders seemed coalescing pinnacles of the deepening shadows. The commanders had gathered with Carnelian to welcome Osidian’s return. Morunasa wore his ashen frown like a mask.
Osidian sent the commanders away to get everything ready for an immediate departure, then turned to Carnelian. ‘We must reach Makar before dawn.’ His mask was reddened by the sun. ‘And I do not know how long it will take us to get there.’
Carnelian could hear tightness in Osidian’s voice.
‘We will advance in single file with Marula thrown out in front of us to check the ground.’
Carnelian remembered his experience fleeing with the Ochre raiders near Makar. ‘The ground there is dangerously fissured?’
Osidian turned to look at him and gave a nod, then glanced up to the nearest dragon. ‘We must do what we can to ensure they have solid footing.’
‘We need to talk, Osidian. I want to know what you have seen and what it is you intend to do.’
‘There is no time, I tell you!’
Carnelian could see the crews were already swarming up into their towers. ‘I could ride with you inside Heart-of-Thunder’s cabin.’
‘Who then would command Earth-is-Strong?’
‘My Hands have been doing that for days.’
‘But they are marumaga!’
‘Did you expect me to be in both towers at the same time?’
Carnelian was a little surprised at this prejudice, but then realized that, while his own experience with that caste had been with his brothers, Osidian’s was certain not to have been anything like as intimate.