down, his boot enmeshed in the stirrup. His horse recoiled in fright, burst away, dragging the corpse. Chachar, with her tender heart, galloped after it, feeling pity for the animal half-mad with fear.

Two armored warriors watched it with disbelieving eyes. Before they could stop laughing, there were only two of them facing two strong, experienced, skillful fighters. Even the pilgrim was not the simpleton he looked…

Thomas shared the blanked look with them. “Fast you are… I recall you once ate a boar before we set to dinner!”

“A brave heart wins two boars. May I take the left one?”

“Only with return!” Thomas warned, insulted.

The warriors exchanged glances, drove forward without lesser confidence than before. The first was coming at Thomas, the second, with a saber in right hand and a round shield in left, rode up to Oleg slowly. He kept shifting his light shield. A throwing knife will bounce off like a stone. Anyway. Oleg had no more knives. He unsheathed his huge sword, spoke slowly, “You can leave undamaged.”

Before the warriors could blink, Thomas yelled angrily, “Without a fight? It’s a shame on me, a Crusader!”

He galloped on the enemies, giving them no time to recover. His huge sword glittered dangerously overhead, his armor shone in the bright sun, scattering the dazzle of sparkles around. He attacked the right warrior with a thunder, wheeled round in his saddle to the left one whom he’d left to Oleg. Thomas’s violent blow crushed the shield, which the foe barely had time to raise, in two. His shield arm got numb, judging by his distorted face. Thomas put his own steel shield, large as a door, under the saber of the right enemy, turned swiftly to the left — and yelled with fury: his other enemy had a white swan feather jutting out of his left ear winsomely, while three palms of the arrow shaft topped with the bloody head stuck from his right ear.

“You lent him!” Oleg reminded briskly.

“I had a second thought!” Thomas roared. He saw a new arrow in Oleg’s hand, squealed in a strained voice, “No! Don’t you dare!..”

He clashed with the last live enemy. Both were heavy, rode mighty horses and fought in the same manner: stopped to take a breath, devoured each other with fierce eyes, lurched of own mighty blows. The crushing, thundering sounds of their duel were heard within a mile around, as if mountains were broken by thunderclaps. The foe brandished his sharp saber much faster than Thomas could do with his long sword, but Thomas’s armor proved its value: the saber would only strike sparks out of it and get indented. Cursing, Thomas slashed with his dreadful sword, seldom cutting anything but the air.

Chachar approached, stopped aside. She held the reins of the snorting Arabian horse. A different horse stood at a small distance, moved its ears nervously as it heard terrible clangs of metal on metal bur did not run away. Oleg dismounted, pulled his throwing knives off, wiped them clean.

Chachar’s face went white. She fidgeted in the saddle, begging Oleg with her eyes to help the valiant Thomas who fought the nasty shaggy villain desperately.

“No,” Oleg replied to her mute pleading. “There’s a great difference in… in our worldviews. A Crusader puts the contest first of result! So he dresses the fight into rites, dances, postures, bowing and throwing a gauntlet, while a Saracen… or the likes of his want only to win. By all means! They are ready to wallow in mud, play a mean trick, hit on the back or below the belt… If civilization prevails, this way will be common. No one will be surprised or intrude if a man down is beaten before their eyes. Thomas has no idea that he’s fighting for culture — but he is. He’d rather die than use ill practice! So I can’t interfere: it will be a great insult to him.”

Chachar watched the dreadful fight tensely, trembling and shivering at the violent blows and clang of steel. “And you? Are you Saracen or European?”

“I’m Rusich,” Oleg replied. “That means I am a bit of European, Saracen, Viking, Scyth, Cimmer, Arian, Nevr and many other nations, forgotten by everyone long ago. A Rusich is a very diverse man…”

They heard a terrible crash of iron torn apart. The enemy reeled in his saddle, a broken fragment of saber in one hand, a shield strap clenched in another. Thomas slashed crosswise. The sliced body sank, flooding the saddle with blood. Head and arm with a bit of shoulder fell down on one side, some more pieces of body — on another. The horse snorted, shifted from leg to leg but stayed in place.

Thomas turned to Oleg and Chachar, raised the visor with his blooded hand, still holding the reddened sword. His eyes searched their faces suspiciously for any hints of mockery or irony.

“Why did you take that risk?” Chachar exclaimed indignantly. “He could kill you!”

“That’s war,” Thomas replied with pride.

“But the pilgrim got rid of three at no risk at all!”

Thomas eyed Oleg from head to foot with displeasure. “He has no knightly ardor in him. No rapture of fray!”

“I have none of it,” Oleg agreed.

They gathered weapons, cleaned them, and loaded on the remounts: four added to their number. When Thomas dismounted to dig the graves, Oleg kept him. “Do you know whom to bury, whom to burn, whom to leave as they are? This mad land has all the faiths and religions mixed up.”

Thomas scratched his wet forehead in a predicament. Chachar led a horse up to him. “Please mount,” she offered gently. “They’ll be found before vultures pilfer them.”

“Found by whom?”

“Their kin,” Oleg replied instead of Chachar, with heavy sarcasm in his voice. Honest Thomas wanted to wonder what kin the hirelings could have in this land, but then he saw their faces, scolded himself silently and mounted.

The wonderer kept frowning as he watched the hoof prints. In times, his fingers touched the thread of wooden figures on a long lace. The steppe turned a hilly plain: the open space of low grass was replaced by thick shady groves, dense thorny shrubs, deep gullies. Twice they crossed wide streams. The animals fled from their way in fear: hares, a herd of wild boars, a lone kulan.

Oleg turned his horse often, dodged in loops, dismounted and palmed the ground. At last, Thomas asked with annoyance, “What’s the matter? Gorvel’s escaping! It’s time to get upon him while he thinks us stopped by his fence!”

Oleg dusted his palms off, shook his head anxiously. “We’re not the only hunters in the forest.”

“What do you mean?”

“Someone is following by stealth.”

“Following Gorvel? Maybe they know he stole family jewels!”

“Following Gorvel… or us.”

Thomas gasped, his eyes widened. “Who can be that?”

“In Rus’ I’d have told you. But here… too crowded place. Too many adventurers from all around the world.”

They rode about a mile in silence until Thomas saw Oleg alert. The bow appeared in his hands, he shifted the quiver from the saddle hook to his back, so that the feathered ends of arrows were over his shoulder. Looking at the sullen wonderer, Thomas unsheathed his sword, laid it down across his saddle and rode on, ready for any unexpected thing. Chachar kept behind them, scared, feeling a danger with her female intuition. Her small palm clenched the hilt of a big dagger bravely.

Oleg reined up, said in a lifeless voice, “They were in wait. For us.”

Thomas twisted his head round but failed to get was Oleg was talking about. Chachar galloped ahead. Soon she dashed aside abruptly with a shriek. Thomas seized the sword with right hand, tugged the reins with the left one, rushed ahead with a battle cry, trampling shrubs and grass down.

In twenty steps ahead, he saw a big black spot of a recent fire. The grass around was yellow, ruthlessly trampled. On the other side of the fire, three maimed bodies lay in puddles of clotted blood, their limbs bounded tightly to the stakes driven into the ground. In place of eyes, they had bloody hollows where flies buzzed angrily, fought, copulated, laid their eggs hastily. Only one had his eyes but they seemed unnaturally big. Thomas recoiled in terror: the dead man’s eyelids had been cut away deftly, trickles of blood clotted on his untouched cheeks.

He looked back at the wonderer who gave a sullen nod to confirm Thomas’s frightful guess: the eyelids were cut away to make the tortured man unable to close eyes, to force him to see the terrible torments of his comrades. Skin was ripped off their faces, greenish sinews and tight nodules bulged on the raw red flesh. The white of teeth

Вы читаете The Grail of Sir Thomas
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