Child of Flame
Bulkezu mounted the horse and shouted a command. With bows and spears and swords, the Quman charged up the hill. A hail of darts fell among them, but neither Bulkezu nor his soldiers flinched. As the shadow arrows struck, the tattoo beasts and warriors caught and swallowed them, and any harm they might cause. Neither horse nor rider could be wounded. With Bulkezu in the lead, they crested the slope and fell upon the shadow elves.
The battle thrashed away into the trees as the Quman drove off their attackers. Prince Bulkezu was nowhere in sight, a dozen men scurried to corral the spooked horses, and the shaman, rising from the snow, threw his patchwork cloak back on and with a few assistants got busy tending to the wounded, including poor Lord Welf.
No one was paying attention to Hanna, no one at all.
Lady Fortune had a strange way of showering her favor over the hapless. Hanna got as far as the tree line before, amazingly, she tripped over that same damned trip line that had caught her in the first place. She fell hard, wind knocked out of her. Her head ached, and her hands had gone numb. But by God she was going to get out of here. She forced her elbows under herself and began to push up, just as hands grabbed her ankles.
After a moment, she pushed up to her hands and knees, staggered slightly, and stood, aware that about a dozen men had crowded into the pavilion, eager to watch the final tawdry scene unfold.
Bulkezu sat on a stool at his ease, watching her. He still wore his armor, but his wings and his helmet had been set aside and his skin and clothing bore no sign of the tattoos that had protected him. If the fight had discomposed him at all, she saw no sign of it in his posture or his serene expression. He said a few casual words to the interpreter, who like Hanna was still breathing hard, looking relieved to have escaped death.
“His Imperiousness Prince Bulkezu suggests with all politeness that you not try to escape again. He’s quite taken with your blonde hair. If you’re lucky, he’ll like you well enough to keep you to himself for a bit before he throws you to the wolves.”
The interpreter merely snorted, then repeated what she hoped were her words. Bulkezu only laughed as he rose and approached her Miraculously, her cloak hadn’t come unpinned despite all the dragging and tumbling about. He grabbed hold of her brass Eagle’s brooch and ripped it clean off. Her cloak slid down her body to land in a heap on the carpet, all ridges and rumpled valleys. Her tunic, torn, drooped a little, revealing skin.
Bulkezu sighed, lifting a hand to fondle her hair.
“Sorry to tell you,” said the interpreter, who hadn’t moved from his place beside the prince’s stool. “The Quman believe that blonde hair is good luck. I’ve seen a man killed fighting to get possession of a light-haired bed-slave.”
He hadn’t expected her to defy him, and anyway, she’d worked hard all her life and wasn’t a weakling. For the space of two breaths they stood poised there, she holding his wrist away and he gone tense, resisting her. They were almost exactly the same height. This close, she saw a shadow flicker in his eyes, the spark of anger. Something about him changed, his posture, the cant of his head, the tension in his shoulders. The atmosphere in the tent altered completely. The interpreter made a strangled noise in his throat, catching back a gasp of fear.
The ugly scene was upon them.
Bulkezu forced her hand down slowly, slowly. It wasn’t easy for him to do it, but in the end he was stronger although she fought him all the way. He just held her arm down by her hip to prove that he had her, that she’d lost, that nothing she could do would change the fact that she was his now, to do with as he willed. He kept his gaze locked on hers, to drive her into utter submission.