Oleg gathered some dry twigs himself, made a fire and peered at the dancing flames. He saw distinctly the riders galloping, birds flying, flapping wings of dragons and ferocious faces of warriors, hands raised in begging, the glitter of sabers…
He felt his hair raised with fear. A mortal danger waited for them just at the city gate!
His hair stirred with terror and revulsion. He raised his hands with effort, clutched at his charms, like a drowning man clutches at the tree roots hanging down. His fingertips darted on the tiny wooden figures, searching for a consolation, a salvation, any loophole among the surrounding traps, snares, and pitfalls.
Thomas came back, against expectation, with a huge armful of big thick poles. When Oleg asked about Chachar, he shrugged and pointed vaguely at the north. Oleg boiled a herbal potion. He would collect herbs at any occasion, even stoop from the saddle on the go to pluck flowers. In case of need, he stopped, dismounted, dug the whole plant out, trying not to damage its roots. He filtered the potion to remove scum, let it settle. Thomas lay near the fire with a faint smile: the very smell of the potion was enough to stop his headache, to add some strength.
The shadows cast by nearest trees were growing longer until they merged into a thick black veil. The crimson sunlight moved up the trunks, threatening to fly up over their tops soon and vanish. The light blue sky was turning navy blue. In its right half, a pale crescent showed itself, the first stars flashed. “Where the hell is she?” Oleg said in vexation.
“Searching for herbs,” Thomas replied awkwardly. “Doing her best, sir wonderer. I’m not glad myself that I’ve taken her as a burden, but… it happened this way.” Moaning in times, he climbed out of his armor, put the iron pieces near the fire to fry the maggots of pernicious flies.
“Where did she find herbs here?” Oleg grumbled with a contempt he could not conceal.
“Behind the grove. She wanted to please you. You look so formidable, severe. She’s afraid of you.”
“Behind the grove?” Oleg repeated anxiously. “Too far. Not enough time for her to come back by night.”
“She took a horse,” Thomas said in a guilty voice. “Doing her best! It’s sinful to blame such a sheep she is. That sort is forgiven by God.”
“She’s a featherbrain, Sir Thomas! But how could
Thomas looked aside awkwardly, his cheeks flushed. “Sir wonderer. I was in a difficult situation. I told her about my fidelity to fair Krizhina, and she told me we wouldn’t be seen! I said that the Holy Virgin condemns even sinful thoughts, and she said you were already sleeping. Or busy cooking a hare with those spices that set our blood on fire…”
Oleg sat grim and silent. Thomas’s voice sounded muffled, as if his ears were full of wool. The fire blazed, flames changed swiftly: bloody-dark shadows gathered there, highlighted by orange, almost white flashes. Ghostly riders galloped swiftly, arrows flew, towers collapsed, cities burnt…
“Should we search for her?” Thomas offered feebly but did not stir.
Oleg glanced at the dark sky swarming with stars and shook his head. “Too dark to see tracks. If she’s not back by dawn, we’ll ride to find her then. Summer nights are short here. You can barely have a sleep before the day breaks.”
Chilled, Thomas woke up of cold. The fire had burnt down. Against the lightening sky, he saw a figure of giant carrying saddles, sword baldrics, and Thomas’s lance away. Horses were snorting aside, rich grass crunched in their teeth. Not until the dark figure came to the horses and started to saddle, did Thomas shake his sleepy torpidity off and jump up, shivering and flinching. “She didn’t come?”
“I’ve missed her,” Oleg replied sullenly. “Let’s go and find her.”
“Forgive me, sir wonderer. It’s all my fault… My double fault. We’d better have left her in that house.”
They mounted. Thomas checked himself and thanked the wonderer with a casual nod, as he was not obliged to saddle the knight’s horse.
“Go there. And I’ll ride to the left. There’s a slope down to a stream sided by rich grass. Lots of different roots. Both medicinal and poisonous.”
Thomas dashed to the grove while Oleg drove his horse in an easy trot, watching the grass closely. The prints of deer and boar hooves were frequent, and the green grass blades were trampled down where smaller animals had been lying.
As Oleg rode across a narrow valley overgrown with sparse shrubs, he heard a move behind far branches. Instantly, he rolled off the saddle and on the ground, to escape an arrow shot or a knife thrown at him, stopped behind a thick bush and became all ears.
The valley was silent, except for carefree grasshoppers chirring. Butterflies fluttered everywhere, undisturbed, even over that suspicious bush. Oleg’s stallion remained in place, nibbling with a crunch at the fresh green leaves. His ears twitched angrily, as he drove away a big dragonfly that kept trying to seat itself on their upright hairy ends. In a soft whisper, Oleg ordered the horse to stand still — the master knows better — and started to move in short quiet rushes, stooping behind shrubs, his throwing knife ready in hand.
On the other side of the bushes, a saddled horse grazed peacefully on a green lawn. Oleg returned noiselessly to his own horse, mounted and rode around the shrubs, looking for the rider, either dead or alive.
At the sight of Oleg, the empty horse gave an anxious snort, alerted but did not run away. On the contrary, it went toward him in a careful pace, greeted his stallion with a quite neigh. Oleg recognized the horse of Chachar, stroked the leather of its saddle. His fingers got sticky with blood.
Feeling creepy all over, Oleg seized its reins, spurred his stallion. Both horses dashed on at full tilt. Oleg kept his eyes on the hoof prints, barely visible on the hard ground.
Judging by tracks, Chachar’s horse had been strolling without the rider, stopping to nibble at the grass, then turned to drink from a stream, ate the tops of shrubs in two places. Thick grass was crumpled where the horse had been lying, kicking up and down playfully.
The sky was darkening too fast. Oleg looked up and groaned helplessly: a large dark cloud was coming upon, with bitter brief flashes of lightnings in its black depth. The wind blew in his back.
At a tilt, he stood up on his stirrups, looked around. The wind bent down the blades of sparse grass, the clouds climbed upon each other in many floors. Suddenly a white glare came inside one cloud, a menacing rumble came moments after. Nowhere in the steppes, as far as he could see, no one was lying, sitting, or waving at him.
He had to bend lower, peering at the blurry tracks until his eyes ached. In the dark that fell, he would have not noticed an arrow shot at him, a lasso thrown, or even one jumping onto his horse. The tracks were often lost… Suddenly his blood ran cold: he saw traces of two unshod horses on the left. Judging by the hoof prints, the horses were light and slim-legged, as most horses in this land, and their riders had no heavy armor on. Maybe they wore leather jacks: those would do to block a strike of light saber or a shot of homemade bow.
As traces told him, the riders had taken a brief counsel and ridden apart, searching for tracks of others. Once they got certain of a lone rider on their way, they rode on his tracks about a hundred of steps before they realized it was an empty horse.
Oleg whipped his horse. It was much easier to follow the tracks of two horses, so he galloped, jumped over shrubs. He saw the hoof prints were quite fresh. In some places, trampled grass was straightening before his very eyes, in others the milky white juice was still oozing from grass blades broken by sharp hooves.
In the falling dark, a fearful branchy lightning flashed, dazzling him. If her glare did not illumine the thickening twilight, Oleg would have bumped at full tilt into a couple of Arabian argamaks who stood in a narrow green valley. Somewhat farther in the valley, two shaggy ragged men, knives on their belts, were coming to