Yet for those who stayed, it was a time of celebration. The harvests were in, and life seemed good.
He soon reached Salandar, with its white adobe walls baked as hard as stones over the centuries. He reached for his warhammer and rode with one hand on it, peering from beneath his hooded robe for sign of an ambush.
The markets were filled with vendors: men with woven baskets stuffed with pistachios, almonds, dried fava beans, pine nuts, chickpeas, lentils, rice, and groundnuts. Others hawked spices: cumin and zatar, sumac and coriander, allspice and saffron. Old women carried pots filled with boiled eggs or turnip pickles on their heads, or baskets loaded with olives, eggplants, or limes. In the meat markets animals hung by strings from their feet: pigeons, ground squirrels, and succulent young lambs.
The streets were filled with people. Nomad women in bright woven shawls in from the desert bartered for goods. Camel traders hawked their wares. Children raced about. Young men and women huddled in the shadows of vendors’ stalls to shyly hold hands. Qat dealers bundled their herbs and sold them in a dazed stupor. Old men played chess by the roadside, fanning themselves with palm leaves. Wealthy men with jewels pinned in their turbans took breakfast on their verandas overlooking the avenues, served by beautiful wives.
Red chickens strutted through the streets, while white rock doves swirled like snow over the gardens at every manor.
Nothing seemed amiss in Salandar.
He saw no sign of the Ah’kellah, and managed to negotiate the streets without drawing attention.
Raj Ahten stopped to trade his horse at the fortress and announce himself. He questioned the warlord in charge, a wiry man from Indhopal named Bhopanastrat, about the Invincibles. Bhopanastrat was a competent man who had served Raj Ahten well—from a distance.
“Some Invincibles did pass through an hour ago, and took fresh horses. Wuqaz Faharaqin led them.”
“Did he name their errand?”
Bhopanastrat shook his head. “He said that they were going to Maygassa.” Bhopanastrat bent near and whispered as if afraid to speak of a secret aloud. “It is said that there is trouble in Kartish. I thought...” He winked his left eye, to show that he knew how to keep a secret.
Raj Ahten seemed to be gaining on Wuqaz, but the man was still an hour ahead of him. He could not yet guess Wuqaz’s mission. He might well have lied to Bhopanastrat. Wuqaz was a portentous name. It meant “Breaker of Necks.” Among the Ah’kellah it was a title as much as a name. He would be a formidable adversary.
Raj Ahten doubted that he could stop the Ah’kellah. If he tried to catch the men, they would fan out like grouse fleeing the falconer. He might get one or two, but the rest would elude him.
He suspected that their report could have dire consequences. Raj Ahten had conquered all the nations of Indhopal, but some of them had been under his dominion for less than a year. They were like spirited colts that had not yet been broken. They bucked and bit at him while he gouged with his spurs.
They would be eager to throw off his rule, and Wuqaz Faharaqin was the type of man to lead them.
Yet Raj Ahten also had to wonder at the “trouble in Kartish.” If a lord at this distant outpost had heard of misfortune, how bad might the situation there be?
He impatiently took breakfast as he waited for Bhopanastrat and a dozen force soldiers to prepare for the journey. He dined on a rich pigeon stew made with onions, and flavored with plums, saffron, and ginger.
Raj Ahten sat for a moment, began rubbing his left wrist. He felt a numbing pain in the arm. He wondered at it, could not think how it might have been injured.
He was, he suspected, alive now only because of the vast number of endowments he’d taken.
He thought of the flameweavers in their balloon, riding the east wind faster than his horse. They’d invited him to join them, to become one of them.
In company with Bhopanastrat and a dozen men, Raj Ahten forged north across the desert borders, racing through encampments and villages named only after the clans that settled them—Isgul, Qanaat, Zelfar.
The desert came alive at this time of year. Small flowers took the opportunity to bloom after every spat of rain, and it had rained three days before. Bouquets of salmon-colored flowers blossomed on the grease-wood, while the ground was strewn with a carpet of white.
Birds were everywhere. Bright yellow bee-eaters streaked across the land like fiery arrows, skimming among the flowers. Lapwings raced away from him on stilted legs, feigning broken wings to draw him from their nests, and filled the morning with their mournful peewit, peewit. Sand grouse by the thousands perched on the banks of streams, looking like round speckled brown rocks until they erupted into the sky.
Everywhere that Raj Ahten rode, the illusion that he’d seen from afar—that the deserts of Muttaya were barren and lifeless—was dispelled.
He stopped once again at a fortress in Maksist to trade his horses for camels. He asked the warlord in charge about Wuqaz.
The warlord said warily, “I did see the men you seek. The Ah’kellah left the village only half an hour ago. Some took camels south, others took horses to the north and west.”
“How many men went south?” Raj Ahten asked.
“Twelve men, O Light of the Universe.”
Raj Ahten bit his lip. He was only half an hour behind them now. If he hurried, he would catch them.
“Give me your best force camels.”
“My lord,” the man said hesitantly, a worried expression on his brow. “Salaam.”
“Peace,” Raj Ahten assured him.
“The camels I have are not worthy of you. The riders you seek—they took my best animals and kept spares for palfreys.”
Raj Ahten began to seethe. “Is there a merchant in this city who will have the camels I seek?”
“I will gather the best animals in the city,” the man said. “Meanwhile, sit at my table, eat your fill. Rest.”
The warlord took a horse and raced from the fortress. True to his word, he came back shortly with thirteen force camels.
“Forgive me,” he said as he leapt from his horse. “These are the best I could find.” He got on his hands and knees, then bowed deeply, so that his white turban swept the ground.
It was the pose of one who offered his life to atone for an indiscretion.
He is a wise man, Raj Ahten realized. If I were angry, I might order him tortured to death. This way, he tempts me to take him quickly.
“You serve me well,” Raj Ahten said. He took the beasts gratefully.
He ordered the captain to get eighty men on horses and take them west and north, to hunt for the Invincibles in that band.
He wished that he knew which direction Wuqaz Faharaqin had gone. Raj Ahten went to the road at the edge of town, and for long moments he tried to catch Wuqaz’s scent. He rode now atop a camel with a dozen other men, and Raj Ahten could not tell from the faint traces in the air which party he rode with.
Raj Ahten could not let him live. Nor could he afford to take the time to hunt the man down.
South, he decided at last. Wuqaz would go south into Taif, or Aven, where the Ah’kellah were most revered.
Raj Ahten led a dozen of his best men south into the desert, heading through old Indhopal toward Kartish.
The first leg of the journey was easy. The ground lay flat and hard.
Baobab trees grew on the verge of the desert, rising up in twisted majesty. During certain seasons, wildebeests and gazelles migrated through the region in vast herds, but this late in the fall only a few dry bones garnished the prairie. Ostriches and jackals loped away as his men approached.
After they forded the muddy Deloon River, all of the watercourses went dry. It had not rained this far south.
The wells at Kazir and Makarang were both dry. It was not until he saw camels tied by a bright red pavilion pitched beneath a baobab tree half a mile from the caravan way that they found water.
The baobab had a trunk thirty feet wide, and an enterprising trader had hollowed it out. The hollow held clay cisterns of precious water.