The Barbarian - Book cover

The Barbarian

G.M. Marks

Chapter 2

Mock’s hands were still wet with blood by the time the Paleskin fighters came for them.

“How many?”

“Sixty mounted, maybe more,” Beltho answered.

Mock slithered along the ground, using his elbows to push himself along. He settled beside Beltho and thrust aside the long grass, squinting.

Breastplates glinted. Shields gleamed. Helms glared. Here and there were flashes of red-and-white uniforms. A formidable force, as pretty as maidens in their colorful dresses and cowards’ armor.

Mock dug his fingers into the earth. But let me peel them bare as babes, and let’s see that squishy pink flesh beneath.

Mock licked his lips. “That all?”

“They equal us man for man.”

“You are wrong. We are the Quarthi. They are the Paleskins. One man of ours is worth two of theirs.”

He pushed himself to his feet in full view of their enemy. Beltho looked up at him warily, then did the same.

Though his sight wasn’t as sharp as Beltho’s, Mock imagined those pretty helms turning his way one by one.

That’s right. Look at me. To see the great Mock is to see death made flesh. Come for me if you dare.

***

Fire flared. Smoke billowed. Blood flowed. And the screaming. So much screaming.

Grinda woke with a start in the quiet darkness of her family’s little hut.

Just outside the window, the cow mooed. Somewhere in the distance, sheep bleated. The gentle breathing of her family filled the room.

But nothing more.

“God have mercy,” she whispered into the darkness, wiping away a bead of sweat trickling past her ear. Her shift stuck to her legs and had sunk between her breasts.

She tried to air it out, but the air was so thick with moisture she only sweat more.

Closing her eyes, she tried to steady her breathing. There was no sense in fearing the unknown.

It was the second dawn. The barbarians were likely dead by now, Lord Triston’s brave knights setting their stinking carcasses alight.

She sniffed the air, willing it to be true, but all she smelled was sweat and cow. Stupid girl. They’re leagues away.

Grinda turned over, gazing at the faint mounds of her family: Mother, Father, Kye, Mathew, Dillon, Billy, Jacob, and little Edwin. She repeated their names over and over in her mind.

She rolled over again, images of those heinous men flashing behind her eyes, swallowing up her family one by one with their wet lips and pointed teeth.

Everyone had heard the legends of the savages who once roamed the land of Toth.

“They say they wore the skins of their fallen enemies,” Bella had once told her.

“And drank their blood,” added Eva.

“It is said they even ate their flesh, eating right down to the bone.”

“Where they gnawed and sucked out the marrow.”

“And what they did to their own women doesn’t bear thinking about.”

Grinda shivered in the heat.

The next day dawned hot and bright. Her usual route to the well felt harder than it ever had. She tripped over her feet.

The buckets rattled emptily on the way there, then sloshed heavily on the way back.

Every few minutes, she looked around, watching out for the horde of bloodthirsty savages dressed in their blood-soaked man-pelts, waiting to tear out her throat.

She looked at the creeping black forest of the south, beyond which the Kraken Sea glinted like a diamond far into the distance.

Then to the east, where the seven frostbitten peaks of the Windy Mountains reared high into the sky, so stark and cold against the blazing blue.

Grinda almost wept at the thought of snow, aching for its blistering touch.

Then there was the west, where across the sweeping plains of waving grass rose the great kingdom of Fairmont.

She couldn’t see it, of course, being so far away, but she imagined it: a white pearl against the summer sky, banners waving, all ramparts and towers and gates.

An unbreakable fortress. It would be so safe behind those high, impenetrable walls.

And finally, the north. The north. Grinda stopped to stare. The last tribes of the man-eating savages were rumored to still dwell there, deep within the wild black forests.

The region was so perilous, filled with sucking swamps, black magic, unearthly creatures, and so much darkness and evil only the bravest knights dared to tread it.

Dared to tread—and died.

How could Father not be afraid? Grinda hurried to the well.

***

The village chapel was empty, but it was bright and inviting.

Light poured through the windows, playing against the colorful tapestries and the golden sash of the altar. The saints watched from their stone plinths.

And on the wall at the back, Christ looked down on her sadly from his golden cross. Positioned so it caught the sunlight, the cross gleamed like a jewel.

Grinda gazed at it a moment, then bobbed her head and crossed herself before taking a seat in one of the pews. Bowing her head, she prayed.

The little chapel had always been a source of comfort. She’d sought out its stone walls so often it had become a second home.

Life was hard in the village of Quay, and her sins were many. As a child, she would often hobble her way here after a whipping from her father.

When her brothers teased her, she would rush inside, crying. When she ached with hunger, prayer would help ease her pangs.

As she grew older, her visits were no less frequent, but the reasons for them were very different: guilt over her wandering eyes, absolution for lies and rumors, guidance for her discontent.

And now here she was again, but this time she wasn’t so sure she would find what she needed.

“My good daughter, back again?”

Grinda smiled. She had hoped he would be here. “Sorry, Father.”

“Sorry? No apologies for seeking the house of the Lord.”

Father Joel smiled back. He was still a young man in his early thirties with faint lines around his eyes and mouth. Kindly lines, she thought them, of a man who liked to smile a lot.

Not like Father. As a girl, she would often imagine Father Joel replacing her real father. A sin, of course. A child must always cherish their parents. Another reason for her frequent visits.

He was dressed in the simple robe he always wore. His hands were pale and smooth, the nails clean and neatly cut.

He sat beside her, and Grinda couldn’t help but take a deep breath.

He smelled sweet and wonderful, like the woody sharpness of the timber pews, like the throat-tickling must of the tapestries, like the cool, damp thickness of the stone brick walls.

All that she loved about the chapel was embodied in that simple brown robe and pale, clean skin. How she ached to press her nose to the nape of that warm, soft neck and breathe to her heart’s content.

Another reason she visited so often.

“You seek my counsel?” he asked.

“Am I so obvious, Father?”

“You wear your suffering like a donkey at harvest time. What ails you?”

“I’ve heard tell of the barbarians.”

His smile faltered. “As have I.”

Grinda turned back to the altar and kissed her mouth to her clasped hands, hiding the tremble in her lips. “I fear them.”

“As do I. As do we all.”

“Have you heard if Lord Triston’s forces prevailed?”

“There has been no word.”

Silence fell, an aching, cold silence that clamped around Grinda’s throat like icy fingers. “Then, what now?” She gazed absently at the cross, now little more than a golden blur. She blinked rapidly.

“It is still early yet. All we can do is wait and pray and hope.”

The fingers tightened around her throat. “I fear I don’t have the courage.”

Father Joel laid a hand on her shoulder. There was a rush of heat, melting that icy grip and making her throat swell. Hot tears spilled, and she trembled. “Forgive me, Father,” she gasped.

Warm breath against her cheek, soft lips upon her head. It was a fatherly kiss, a kiss of comfort. “Remember whose side you’re on. We will prevail. We must. Have faith in God.”

Grinda swallowed her tears. “I’ll try.”

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