Well, Zoe thought, taking Rael's words as a suggestion that the stranger had not only killed, but
tortured her guard,
if I die, I suppose the Crescent Empire becomes someone else's problem, then. It was a cowardly thought, but true all the same.
Least General was a lofty title, but "general of the rear guard" as she knew the role to be hardly put an emphasis on her importance. If Zoe died, one of her five colonels would be raised to act in her role until the First General could formally assign a replacement. Likely Adrison, as he was both the most senior of her five, and the highest born. His tactics were
conservative with an upper-case C, but he had the respect of her men, and if his lack of creativity made his choices a bit predictable, he could always be relied upon to handle tough choices with all due consideration.
As for her family, ten warm bodies stood between Zoe and the throne, and if all of them were to perish the kingdom likely would be facing bigger problems. If the Crescent Empire showed any signs of breaking through the First or Second generals' blockade at either Darland or Sallow's passes, a venerable
flock of swift-winged birds would be sent to warn the royal family to evacuate. Erik and Sabrina would take their two families in separate directions, Casey would do... whatever Casey did, and Jon would likely refuse to be budged from his studies. But with the crown prince and princess both fled with their heirs, only a desperate assassination attempt made deep in Talundor territory would have a chance--
Ah. Right.
And suddenly, Zoe
needed to live. She had to warn her family that the Crescent Empire was sending assassins!
Despite having puked up her last month's worth of meals (or at least it felt that way to the princess), her nausea had only barely diminished. Damn her body! And her limbs felt shaky and weak besides, eyes bloodshot and streaming with tears, nose streaming mucous, from the wretched stretch of retching she'd engaged in. Zoe knew she was a
mess, and her attempts to push herself upright only sunk her sword deeper into the earth. And beyond that, the stranger had backed away (no doubt in terror that she'd assault him with more bodily fluids), leaving her very limited circle of vision to go off and do
something. At least in the little bathing chamber she had no sensitive documents, nor valuables beyond her sword.
Though if he hadn't come for her life (and it was clear, by now, that he didn't intend to kill her), then what did he want?
To kidnap me, and torture me until I tell him what he wants to know, of course.
But did that mean he'd sent friends to do the same to her family in Vernes? She had to assume as such. Better to be wrong, than to leave her family for dead. But that meant she had to
escape, let alone
stand up, which felt to be such a monumental task as to be impossible.
The sudden touch of another's hand over her own made her tense, but fighting against the hand that forced her sword further into the earth would've been impossible. Whipping her head back to slam into his nose and chin was equally unlikely, not with the way her head still pounded, or with how her vision swam. Even the weight of her damp hair, now streaked with both a dead man's blood and bits of upchuck, seemed too much. More than once Zoe had been chided on her one concession to vanity, keeping her brilliant coppery locks in a tight braid that was coiled either at the nape of her neck or secured against her back in combat, rather than opting for ear- or chin-length styles the other fighting women preferred. On horseback and in armor, she'd always assumed that the day was already lost if someone was getting close enough to grab her hair. She had never considered the impediment it would pose both to her mobility and agility if she was caught unarmored, and worse, damp.
Strong, warm hands wrapped around her, and then the world flipped up-side-down as she was manhandled into a field medic's carry. Only the emptiness of Zoe's stomach saved Rael's back from a similar painting as his boots received, but that didn't stop the princess from miserably dry-heaving as the pounding pain in her skull made her stomach cramp and contort. But even as her stomach staged it's revolt, she pounded her fists against the strangers back and did her best to kick and wiggle from his grasp, desperate to be free. He
was carrying her off, and she suspected if he managed his escape, her men wouldn't even find her remains. She would simply have disappeared, and it would likely be a day before anyone thought to send word to Vernes. Far too late to stop whatever second force moved on her family, if they existed, and hadn't already finished the job.
"By the gods! Kyle! Are you okay, lad?!"
Zoe wasn't sure whether to celebrate or despair. Samuel, her chief steward, had no doubt been roused by the commotion in her bathing chambers, and from the sounds of it had just discovered her armsman. But while her steward knew the basics of sword work, he was no soldier, and she quietly prayed for him to run off and fetch
help rather than stay behind and investigate. Indeed, she'd even gone silent and still, hoping that a lack of distractions would lead him to make the
rational choice and go seek backup. Unfortunately, she knew that her most dedicated ally would do no such thing. Samuel had been in her service for years, and anguish choked her as she heard her steward's incensed cry upon sighting her.
Cheek pressed against Rael's back, Zoe couldn't maneuver in any way to actually see what was going on. All she knew was that her kidnapper had paused, and then he began to run, and she kicked as violently as she could in the hopes of stopping the inevitable.
Suddenly, and with no particular notion of how it had happened, the princess found herself in a tangle of limbs that involved Samuel, herself, and even Kyle. Her head rang like a bell, and she squeezed her eyes shut as she rolled away from the pile to all fours, and began again to dry-retch into the grass.
I need to... I have to say something!
But her body refused to obey, and she choked on her words as another reflexive convulsion of her diaphragm forced the air from her chest.
---
Samuel had been in the service of both his general and his princess for more than half a decade. He had helped her catch frogs to slip into her sister's tent, when princess Sabrina had decided to pay an unannounced visit to the then-colonel's outposting to try to convince her sister to accept a marriage proposal from a man twice her age who happened to head a politically-important house. He had seen the general chase a naked man from her quarters while brandishing a treatise on siege weaponry (Zoe, in contrast, had been fully clothed). He maintained not only her schedule but her social contacts, carefully reminding the princess when her parents or siblings or cousins had birthdays, and weddings, and feasts and festivals. He had held her hair while she vomited after a night of too much wine, fed her soothing ginger tea the next morning. He ensured she was fed, and slept at least six hours a night, and tended to her wounds when she received them, and, on the few occasions required, discretely acquired and administered the necessary herbs to ensure that the general's rare indiscretions resulted in no inconvenient quickenings of her womb. His was her governess, butler, handmaiden, and, at times, her confidant.
Samuel thought he had seen everything.
Samuel had not expected to have his charge literally
thrown at him by a stranger, naked, body streaked with blood and hair streaked with vomit. And though Rael was dressed in silken garments, black-on-black with the traditional bird-rising motif sewn on the shoulder, his golden eyes seemed free of malice. At the time, he'd had only a moment to consider the peculiarity of the situation, his hours since delivering Zoe to the camp's best medic had been spent ruminating over what he'd seen. Though his sleep had been interrupted painfully early, he was far too agitated to have any hope of returning to his slumber any time soon.
When General Silidras had regained her powers of speech, her first words had been to plead for Samuel to send word to her family. "If the Crescent Empire sends killers after me, they will send them to my family as well." She had demanded that the stranger who'd assaulted her be apprehended as well, and though she wanted him alive, "I would not mind if Kyle's brothers in arms took their vengeance." Which was when Samuel had explained, with the almost preternatural calm he always seemed to possess in times of crisis, that Kyle was in fact
alive, if knocked out cold.
Zoe had merely stared at him, and such was when Samuel first noticed the princess's pupils were two different sizes.
Only after he'd rushed her to the camp's senior doctor, one Madeleine of the house of Cornwall, roused the woman from her bed and shoved the princess into her care, had he gone to act on Zoe's less pressing requests. Bergent, her second most junior colonel, had been roused and set to the task of tracking down the stranger. A man in his early thirties, painfully handsome with short brown hair and piercing blue eyes, Bergent was both a tactical wunderkind and an absolute fop, modest about the former and utterly unabashed about the latter. Better with a dueling rapier than with a sword, he
normally would've been the last man Samuel, or anyone, would've dragged into action. But he was also the most familiar of her five colonels with the art of hunting with dogs, and his speed and grace on a horse was unmatched by any other in the camp. Zoe's steward had known it would take some time for his counterpart to rouse his own charge from his bed and get the man dressed and ready, but unless Zoe's assailant-slash-rescuer could sprout wings and fly, he was unlikely to be able to get far enough for Bergent to lose the trail.
After, a pair of birds was dispatched to the palace in Vernes, and another pair to the academy nearby. They warned of an assassination attempt made against Zoe by Crescent Empire men, and of the potential for a similar strike upon the rest of the royal family. King Jacob, crown prince Erik, princess Sabrina, and all of their heirs at least would be at the palace and, hopefully, still alive to receive the warning, while prince Jon would be at the academy. Prince Casey was an unknown, but if he could not be found and warned by the king's men, then it was unlikely any enemies could find him either. Regardless, Samuel also sent a messenger on horseback towards Vernes, though it would take the woman the better part of two days while the birds would arrive in mere hours. But redundancy had never gotten anyone killed, and if nothing else, the rider could take the birds
back with her when she returned.
Finally, Samuel had returned to Madeleine's office. He found Zoe asleep, stretched out on one of the doctor's cots, her hair brushed free of debris and in a loose braid, and her naked body covered by a light blanket. A deep bowl, more of a bucket, had been set besides her, as well as a mug of cool and lightly sweetened tea.
"She's badly concussed," Madeleine explained to him, with a heavy sigh. "I've drugged her so she'll sleep, but besides palliative care and observation, there's not much I can do for her short of trepanation. I'd rather not crack open the general's skull unless we have no other choice." If Zoe started having fits, she would have to, but it was a cure that was often worse than the disease. "I'll keep an eye on her tonight, and get one of my apprentices to take over tomorrow. When she wakes up, we can try to move her back to her tent." That her "when" was really an "if" was an uncertainty the doctor tried not to dwell too long on. It was bad enough that someone had tried to kill their general in the "security" of her own camp, it would be worse if she died, not in combat, but in a coma after.
"Alright." Samuel had managed to keep the quaver out of his voice, but he knew all too well the fate of men and women who took head wounds of Zoe's kind. Roughly a quarter walked away from the injury, after a few weeks of rest and recuperation. Half would never fully recover, with some loss of either mental or physical function from the damage, sometimes of the career-ending variety. And the other quarter simply never woke up at all.
The steward was not a particularly religious man, but it was no coincidence that he spent the rest of his evening ruminating on the strangeness of the evening's events with his own, sparsely-read copy of
The Light.
---
"Now, let us find this scoundrel and bring him back to our General! I have a bottle of 487 Blackvine for whoever catches him!" Colonel Bergent's voice was a surprisingly crisp tenor, and he cut a princely figure from atop his black stallion, despite his only middling social status. He flashed a savage grin at his men and women, a handful of members of general Silidras's cavalry with some experience working with dogs, and the cheered in reply. It was rare for Adam Bergent to lead a charge anywhere but across the practice field, but when Samuel had finished explaining exactly what had happened to the princess, he'd nearly gone charging from his tent
without first donning his pants. Only the exasperated efforts of his own steward, a man in his late fifties who'd served the often scatterbrained soldier since his uncle had retired, ensured that Bergent finished dressing himself before he embarked.
They traveled now two groups, six men and women on horses plus four prick-eared dogs who'd been trained to track down enemy spies and escaped criminals. Rael's scent, as well as that of the dead man they'd found in Zoe's bathing tent, had brought three horses and two dogs backwards along the trail of the Crescent assassins and into the brush. But Bergent had followed the other, slightly newer trail, leading his own trio along the path the stranger had fled down. He was still unsure whether his dogs had picked up the man's scent, or merely that of Zoe's vomit, but in either case they followed as fast as the dogs and horses could move in unison through low brush and the occasional copse of trees.
Someone had attacked his general,
his princess! While Bergent would never admit to it, he had once been fascinated by Zoe for more than her military prowess. His inappropriate urges had, thankfully, faded away after six moons of working for the woman, but his affection had transmuted into a fierce loyalty that demanded he
find this man and see that he was dealt with. Adam knew the hot stab of protectiveness, even possessiveness, was not wholly appropriate, but he seized upon the emotions anyway to fuel his body which ached from too little sleep and the chafing rub of hastily-donned armor.