SEVEN
SAMARKAND
CENTRAL ASIAN FEDERATION
6:20 A.M.
ZOVASTINA SPURRED HER HORSE. THE OTHER
“Come now, Bucephalas,” she said through clenched teeth into the horse’s ear. “Time to show them.” She yanked and the animal bolted right.
The game was simple. Grab the
An invitation to play
She was the only woman.
And she liked that.
Bucephalas seemed to sense what was expected of him and closed on the
Two of her team closed ranks and battled the three opponents.
A storm of horses and riders orbited the
She’d told her team earlier that she wanted to make the first run around the pole and they seemed to be doing their part to accommodate her.
A fourth player from the opposing team drove his horse close.
The world spun around her as all twenty-four
A horsemen slipped from his mount and slammed to the ground.
No one stopped to help. Not allowed.
Broken limbs, cuts, and slashes were common. Five men had actually died on this field during the past two years. Death had always been common during
She rounded the shallow pit.
Another rider reached for the
Two more riders plunged to the ground.
Each of her breaths came laced with grass and mud and she spat out the sediment, but she welcomed the scent of sweating horseflesh.
She stuffed the whip back in her mouth and leaned down, one hand keeping a stranglehold on the saddle, the other yanking up the carcass. Blood squirted from where the goat’s hooves and head had been severed. She dragged the dead goat up and held tight, then signaled for Bucephalas to sweep left.
Only three rules now governed.
No tying of the carcass. No striking the hand of the holder. No tripping the horses.
Time for a run at the pole.
She spurred Bucephalas.
The other team closed.
Her teammates galloped to her defense.
The carcass was heavy, maybe thirty kilos, but her strong arms were more than capable of holding on. Blood continued to soak her hand and sleeve.
A blow to her spine caught her attention.
She whirled.
Two opposing horsemen.
More swarmed inward.
Hooves pounded the damp earth like thunder, pierced by the frenzied screams of horses. Her
The pole stood fifty meters away.
The field spread out behind the summer palace on a grassy plain that eventually ended at thick forest. The Soviets had utilized the complex as a retreat for the party elite, which explained how it had survived. She’d changed the layout, but a few aspects of the Russian occupation had been wisely retained.
More riders joined the fray as both teams fought with each other.
Whips snapped.
Men groaned in pain.
Obscenities were exchanged.
She surged into the lead, but only slightly. She’d have to slow to round the pole and begin her return to the circle of justice, which would give them all an opportunity to pounce. Though her team had been accommodating to this point, the rules now allowed anyone to steal the
She decided to catch them all off guard.
Kicking, she directed Bucephalas to angle right.
No out of bounds governed. Riders could, and did, venture anywhere. She arced their galloping path outward, the bulk of the
Before any of the others could react to her sudden shift, she hooked left and crisscrossed the field, cutting off the main body of galloping riders, causing them all to slow.
Their instant of hesitation allowed her to sweep ahead and loop the pole.
The others followed.
She turned her attention ahead.
One rider waited fifty meters down the field. He was swarthy, bearded, with a stiff face. He sat tall in the saddle and she saw his hand emerge from beneath a leather cape, holding a gun. He kept the weapon close, waiting for her.
“Let’s show him, Bucephalas, that we’re not afraid.”
The horse raced forward.
The man with the gun did not move. Zovastina stared him down. No one would ever cause her to retreat.
The gun came level.
A shot echoed across the field.
The man with the gun teetered, then collapsed to the wet ground. His horse, spooked by the retort, raced away riderless.
She trampled the corpse, Bucephalas’ hooves digging into the still-warm flesh, the body swept away in their wake.