Fall of a Kingdom (The Farsala Trilogy) Read online




  The commander raised his hand and shouted, and the horn’s screaming ululation was echoed in men’s war cries as the deghans kicked their horses into a gallop.

  The archers lined up as planned, with the precision the commander had struggled so hard to create. The chargers passed between them and swept down the remainder of the field like water from a broken dam.

  The deghans still shouted, but the thunder of the chargers’ hooves swallowed their cries, swallowed the world. If the drums still beat, Jiaan couldn’t hear them. He yelled himself, just to hear the sound torn to shreds as it left his lips. He’d heard the crashing rumble of the charge before, but never from within it, from the very heart of it. The earth shook, and even the pounding of his own heart was lost in it. It was impossible to be afraid.

  Also by Hilari Bell

  THE FARSALA TRILOGY BOOK 2:

  RISE OF A HERO

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  SIMON PULSE

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  Text copyright © 2003 by Hilari Bell

  Maps drawn by Russ Charpentier

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  SIMON PULSE and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  Also available in a Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers hardcover edition.

  Designed by Greg Stadnyk

  First Simon Pulse edition May 2005

  The Library of Congress Control Number 2003114815

  ISBN 1-4169-1434-X

  Originally published as The Book of Sorahb: Flame

  Visit us on the World Wide Web:

  http://www.SimonSays.com

  For Debra

  Sister in truth, as well as in law

  OUTSIDE OF HIS ORIGINS in the time of ancient legends, little is known of Sorahb. We know that he was a brilliant military commander, a shrewd ruler, and a mighty sorcerer—but how can a man so young have been all of these things? Was he a noble deghan? A peasant? Even, as some speculate, a Suud sorcerer in disguise? All this has been claimed, and more, but the one thing all agree upon is that he was a great hero, greater even than his father, Rostam. At least, if the legends are to be believed….

  Chapter One

  Jiaan

  JIAAN DUCKED, and a bronze cup shaped like a ram’s horn crashed into the wall behind him. It didn’t clatter on the floor, since the thick carpets that had already absorbed its contents muffled the sound. He hoped the carpets wouldn’t be too hard to clean. Jiaan knew that some people found it harder than others to fight off the djinn of rage. But he didn’t think the lady Soraya was even trying.

  “Lady, if you’ll just lis—”

  “I have listened,” the girl snarled. Her grip tightened on the second cup. Her loose hair—the straight, black hair of the noblest of noble lines—was disheveled. The tight vest she wore beneath her loose, silk overrobe rose and fell with the force of her breathing. At fifteen, she was probably the most beautifully feminine creature Jiaan had ever seen—so what djinn-cursed fool had taught her to throw like a shepherd boy?

  “I have listened,” she repeated. “But all I’ve heard is that my father—my own father!—seeks to cast me out like some peas—like broken rubbish!”

  Like some peasant-spawned bastard. It was an insult so familiar that Jiaan’s heart hardly flinched. At least she hadn’t said it aloud. That surprised him; most deghasses wouldn’t have given a moment’s thought to the possibility that he might be offended. But Jiaan’s father hadn’t cast him out. Far from it. And High Commander Merahb didn’t intend…

  “He doesn’t intend to cast you out.” Jiaan made his tone reasonable, despite the way her lovely, dark eyes narrowed. “He only means to hide you away for a time, in order to—”

  “Away in some peasant sty…”

  The second cup flew, and Jiaan sidestepped nimbly.

  “…in some dung-sucking outland while…”

  Her groping hand found a niche, carved into the outer wall between the arched windows, and came to rest on a goblet whose glass bowl glowed as blue as the heart of a flame. Its base was chased in gold. Its worth was probably ten times that of Jiaan’s sword, and his sword was more costly than all his other possessions put together.

  The goblet hurtled toward the wall. Jiaan leaped, cursing the carpets that hindered his feet. He caught the goblet with the tips of his fingers, fumbled with it for an endless moment, and settled it into a secure grasp.

  The plate it had rested on, thrown like a discus, struck him full in the chest, bruising him even through the padded silk layers of his armor.

  “Ow!” Had she distracted him deliberately? “He’s only trying to save your life, you…Lady Soraya. The gahn rules all of Farsala. Even the high commander has to obey him.”

  “Dung!” she shrieked. The incense burner her hand fell on next—small but solid stone and bronze—made a dent in the heavy panels of the door at Jiaan’s back. “The armies of Farsala haven’t propitiated the war djinn since Rostam cast down the last djinn emperor. Centuries ago! And he thinks he’s going to exile me for however long it takes to win his stupid war? Well, I won’t—”

  The door behind Jiaan opened. “You won’t have any choice,” said a woman’s voice coldly. “And if you’re overheard by the wrong people, your choices will become fewer—and even less pleasant than exile.”

  Jiaan stepped aside and bowed, the goblet still in his hands. Commander Merahb’s wife, the lady Sudaba, moved gracefully into the small solarium.

  Soraya froze, her hand clenched around the carved wooden horse she’d been about to throw. “Madam my mother, have you heard of this…this outrage? What about my marr—”

  “I imagine everyone has heard.” Sudaba took the goblet from Jiaan and crossed the room to return it to its shelf. “But I see no reason to give them any more information about our family’s private affairs.” Her ironic gaze rested on Jiaan.

  He bowed himself out of the room, but not before Sudaba seized her daughter’s ear and twisted it.

  His own peasant-born mother had twisted his ears, and paddled his buttocks as well. But along with occasional—and usually deserved—punishment, there had been warmth, laughter, and love. Not only from her, but even from the farmholder to whom Jiaan’s father had given her, when he was required to wed a deghass and produce a noble heir. His mother had died of a fever two years after the commander had outraged everyone by taking a peasant-born bastard into his household as a page, instead of as a servant. Jiaan still missed her.

  Jiaan looked around the second-story gallery on which he stood. Intricately carved rails, sanded, waxed, and polished, encircled the courtyard below. Summer was ending; the leaves on the ornamental bushes looked dusty, almost ready to turn and fall, but a handful of late roses still bloomed, and the splash of the fountain calmed his ruffled nerves.

  The home in which he’d lived till he turned ten had rough, log walls, and the plain, plank floors had never seen a carpet—yet he thought he’d been luckier than the lady Soraya.

  On the other hand, all she had to do was go quietly and be patient for a while. Was that too much to ask?

  The door behind him opened, and Sudaba emerged. “Soraya will depart with you tomorrow morning,” she said calmly.

  “Yes, madam.” Jiaan bowed.
She was eight inches shorter than he, but the assurance in her eyes made him feel as if he were the smaller.

  “You should have pointed out that her father is plotting to save her,” Sudaba murmured. “At some risk.”

  The crash of priceless glass against the door made Jiaan wince.

  Sudaba didn’t even twitch. “And however inconvenient it may seem, it’s much better than the alternative.”

  In fact, Jiaan had pointed out all those things. Soraya hadn’t cared. “Yes, madam.”

  “This is just a ploy.” Sudaba leaned on the gallery rail, gazing down at the garden with unseeing eyes. “Another move in the game. But a good one.”

  Jiaan settled back to wait with the ease of long practice, till she noticed his existence long enough to dismiss him. The late-afternoon sun lit the expensive, brocaded silk of her overrobe and the almost equally expensive, fine-woven linen underrobe beneath it. Gold on brown, to honor the approaching harvest. Her hair, as straight and black as her daughter’s, was caught up in a complex coil, twined with silk ribbons knotted with glowing glass beads and the hawk feathers only a deghass, a lady of the noble class, could wear.

  Jiaan’s hair was brown and curly, like his mother’s…and his father’s. Many of the deghans had peasant hair. But not Sudaba. In her youth, the poets had said, she’d been as lovely and imperial as the moon. And as distant, Jiaan thought now, watching her calculate the political implications of her daughter’s fate. As indifferent.

  But then a black-haired boy, his brown skin as naked as the day, burst shrieking into the courtyard and toddled toward the fountain. Two nursemaids, armed with trousers and tunic, hurried after him.

  Sudaba’s frown faded and her eyes lit, her face suddenly, warmly maternal. Merdas, the long-awaited heir, had finally confirmed her status, eliminating the danger that she could be set aside allowing High Commander Merahb to take another wife. But still…Jiaan had served in the high commander’s household for seven years—as page, as squire, and now as the commander’s aide—and he had never seen Sudaba’s face soften like that for Soraya.

  On the other hand, her father loved her best. “The commander of the army must sacrifice the being he holds most precious in all the world,” the priests had said. “Or the djinn of war will give their favor to the armies of the Hrum, who will roll over Farsala like the darkness of the pit itself.”

  Jiaan wondered uneasily which of the commander’s enemies had bribed the priests to say it. And why. No, he didn’t envy his half sister. Even if she was a silly, spoiled she-bitch.

  Chapter Two

  Soraya

  SORAYA WENT ALONE down the stairs to the courtyard. The sun still crouched below the horizon, though the sky to the east was bright with its approach. It was light enough for her to see small puffs of steam when she breathed out. The cold weather was coming; rain, mud, and chills, and she was to be imprisoned in some sty in the outlands? She was fifteen this year—it was time for her to wed! She shivered.

  She’d snarled at the maids who had awakened her to dress by candlelight, but she hadn’t dared to refuse them, for behind the mouse-timid maids loomed her mother’s shadow—and Sudaba was anything but timid. But it wasn’t fear of Sudaba that was making her go. Not really.

  Soraya crossed the garden and stalked down the stone-flagged walkway that passed under the servants’ wing and out to the stables. Her escort waited there, his horse already saddled, his face pale in the gray light. Two of her father’s armsmen, in the black-and-gold tunics of the House of the Leopard, accompanied him—not that all of them together could take her anywhere she didn’t choose to go. Especially when she was on horseback. Jiaan smiled tentatively. Soraya scowled and turned away. She wasn’t going because of him, and it probably wasn’t fair to blame him for being the bearer of bad news, but she didn’t feel like being fair. Particularly to the peasant-born bastard her foolish father had insisted on bringing into his household as a page, then as his aide, just as if he were a noble-born second son or an impoverished cousin.

  One of the mousy maids brought up Soraya’s pack, to be added to the load the mules carried. She waited while the grooms fussed with the ropes, trying to exude regal dignity and not shiver. If she looked regal enough, the servants, at least, might be fooled into thinking the whole thing was her idea.

  Small bare feet made no sound on the stone floor, but Soraya caught a glimpse of the blue-striped nightdress, and she abandoned dignity to swoop down on Merdas just before he darted behind one of the horse’s heels. It wasn’t a charger, but even a placid horse might kick if startled.

  “Merdas, don’t run behind horses! You know better than that.”

  He squirmed in her arms to face her, warm and toddler-firm, pouting, because he really did know better. But Merdas never believed any horse would hurt him. Her brother. Her father’s son.

  “Djinn did it,” he pronounced. At his age she had claimed the same. “Raya, horse!”

  The nursery window overlooked the stable yard—he must have heard the hoofbeats. He had ears like a lynx where horses were concerned. And if there was a djinn who governed slipping past one’s nurses, Merdas had it firmly under his control.

  “I can’t take you riding today, imp,” said Soraya regretfully. “I’m going a long, long way. You’d get tired.”

  “Horse,” said Merdas, who didn’t believe he could get tired, either. Sometimes Soraya agreed with him.

  “Sorry, no horse today. But if you’re good, I’ll bring you a present when I come back. How about that?”

  The dark eyes turned thoughtful. Merdas liked presents, but…“Horse!” He squirmed again, kicking her in the stomach.

  Where were his nurses? She could hand him over to the grooms, but she hated the thought of riding off with him howling behind her. “Horse, horse, horse!”

  “I’ll take him.” It was Sudaba’s voice.

  Soraya spun, astonished. Her mother returned her gaze calmly, every braid in place, as if she always rose at dawn. She was dressed for riding, a modest split skirt beneath her overrobe—unlike Soraya.

  “I didn’t realize you were coming with me, madam.” Soraya transferred Merdas into her outstretched arms, and he settled on her hip, reaching for the feathers in her hair. But for once he didn’t have Sudaba’s full attention. Her lips tightened as she took in the baggy men’s trousers Soraya wore for riding. Not ladylike. Not proper for a deghass.

  But making a scene in front of the servants wasn’t proper either. “I thought it best to accompany you, daughter, in this difficult time.”

  To support Soraya in her troubles? No, to make certain her orders were obeyed. As if Soraya were an infant. Soraya scowled, but there was nothing she could do. The jumped-up page boy, Jiaan, looked startled, but Sudaba would care even less for his wishes than her daughter’s.

  Sudaba’s maids brought out her baggage—far more than Soraya had brought—and several more mules were added to the caravan. Merdas’ nurses scurried out and took him from his mother’s arms.

  “We’re ready to depart, madam,” Jiaan told Sudaba respectfully. He didn’t even look at Soraya.

  Sudaba mounted and set off, the armsmen trotting after her. But Soraya went to Merdas and covered his face with big, smacking kisses that made him giggle.

  “A present when I come back,” she promised, and then turned swiftly to her mare. The groom’s cupped hands caught her bent knee and tossed her expertly up into the saddle. Soraya wrapped her legs around the mare’s broad barrel and took her out without a backward glance. More regal that way. For if she looked back and Merdas reached for her, she might weep. And if he was indifferent to her departure—a perfectly normal reaction for a toddler, who had no idea how long she might be gone—she’d feel cheated. Besides…

  She snickered, and Jiaan, who was trotting up beside her, stared, his annoyed scowl fading into curiosity.

  If he’d been impertinent enough to ask why she laughed, she wouldn’t have said anything, but he just watched her and
let the silence stretch. And he looked almost embarrassingly like her father.

  “I was just thinking that any grief Merdas showed would have been for his vanishing horseback ride, not for me.”

  Jiaan grinned, but his pale, greenish eyes—lighter than her father’s, his peasant blood showed in that—were full of speculation.

  Soraya knew what he was thinking. She’d heard it for almost two years—whispers in shadowy stalls, in the bushes in the courtyard, behind her back: “She really loves the boy. Or seems to. How can she when her mother…”

  But Merdas couldn’t take away affection that Sudaba had never given her in the first place. If anything, she’d come to understand her mother better since Merdas had been born, for the need to be mistress of her own house, to be the first woman in it, had been setting its heels to Soraya’s sides lately as well. And her father’s recent letters had hinted that marriage, a fine marriage, was under consideration. So what was this ridiculous sacrifice business? Certainly the priests demanded sacrifices of gold, but the sacrifice of life, of blood, hadn’t been demanded since the days folk truly believed in the power of the djinn. Soraya sighed. She had to discuss this with her father. Sudaba needn’t have worried that she’d rebel; in fact, Soraya would have gone even if her mother had forbidden it. This was the first important thing her father had asked of her.

  THEY TOOK THE ROAD that followed Little Jamshid Creek, which flowed eventually into the Jamshid River. Sudaba rode at the head of the party, as a high-ranking deghass should. Soraya kept her horse back, but she maintained her dignified silence, answering Jiaan’s occasional conversational attempts politely but not expanding on them. He soon gave up and stopped talking.

  That suited Soraya. It was almost a full day’s ride before the farms of the first village disrupted the sweeping plains of her father’s estate, and silence was the proper greeting for windswept grass and the huge, open sky.