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Copyright 2008 William R. McGrath All rights reserved
ASULON CHAPTER ONE PDF FILE (251 KB) FREE AUDIO BOOK SAMPLE MP3 FILE (12.6 MB) TEXT (see below)
PROLOGUE THE
HAWK The
hawk rocked back and forth on a thick limb of an old oak, impatient for the
rising sun to climb the mountainside and create the morning thermals. Judging
the time right, the hawk stretched out its wings, took hold of the air and
pulled itself aloft. Riding the warm rising draft, the hawk began its hunt,
flying high above the valley running between the tall mountain and its
neighbors. A
man looking skyward from that valley would have seen just a speck in the sky,
which he might have guessed to be a bird of prey. However the hawk, looking down
from that height with its superior eyesight, would have known the man for a man
and would even have known a rabbit from a badger, were either at the man's feet.
Now,
far, far below, at the edge of a clearing, the hawk spotted a man moving in a
way that caused the bird to begin a slow spiral downward to investigate... . CHAPTER
1 Seek and ye
shall find… The
Book of Luke 11:9 The
hunter stopped his slow, careful stalk through the shadows bordering the
clearing and knelt behind the roots of a fallen pine. It had taken him nearly an
hour in the faint light of dawn, moving no faster than a shadow across a
sundial, to travel the short distance from the edge of the clearing to the
downed tree. Now he waited patiently, eyes on the deer trail, ears attuned to
any change in the forest's rhythm. On the border between the lowland hardwoods
where the deer fed and the highland pines where they bedded down at Gray
wood ash, taken from his fire pit that morning, covered the hunter’s skin,
hair and beard. Over the ash, he had smeared streaks of black charcoal to break
up his outline. By now, he knew how to blend in with the forest. If he did not
move at the wrong time, he would appear no more dangerous to his prey than a
broken tree stump. He
heard the deer just a moment before it emerged from the dark forest and entered
the dawn-lit clearing. Just a twig snapping, but the sound had spoken to him of
the size of the animal that made it. It was a large, mature buck, but with its
antlers hidden in their velvet covering and only half the size they would reach
later in the year. Not till early autumn would the antlers would be full grown,
unsheathed from their velvet and sharpened by the buck upon the trunks of trees
to become the weapons they were meant to be. Near the end of each winter the
antlers would be shed, the breeding season over, the weapons needed for autumn's
battles then just so much added weight. New antlers would begin to sprout again
next spring, to start the cycle once more. Provided
the buck lived to see the spring, for death was also part of the forest's cycle. The
hunter studied the buck as it followed the feeding trail into the clearing,
grazing as it walked. The buck would take a few steps, sniff the air, lower its
head to graze briefly and then lift its head again to check its surroundings.
The hunter watched unmoving, waiting for the buck to come within range of a sure
bowshot. The buck took a few more cautious steps forward and lowered its head to
inspect a mushroom. And
still the hunter waited. He had no intention of failing on so important a hunt. To
prepare for this hunt, the hunter had not eaten meat for seven days. He had
built a small lodge as a steam bath, first heating rocks to a red glow, then
rolling them into a pit lined with boughs of sweet balsam and quickly pouring
water over the stones until the air in the lodge grew white with steam. By the
morning of the hunt, he had sweated the odor of a meat eater from his body.
Rising before dawn, he had washed himself in a clear mountain stream and then
held his buckskin loincloth and knife sheath over a fire made smoky with green
wood. He wore a flint knife newly made for this hunt, as the bone handle and
sinew wrapping of his old knife would hold the scent of his last meat meal.
Lastly, he had covered himself with the ash and charcoal from a fire pit made
just for this purpose. He knew that if he smelled of anything at all now, it
would be only of the faintest trace of wood smoke; as from a long dead fire. And
so the hunter waited behind the downed tree, his bow in hand and an arrow on the
string, ready for the draw. The
buck's path took it down the trail to a point even with the fallen tree that
concealed the hunter. It lowered its head again to graze upon some tender grass.
The hunter drew back his bowstring, taking aim. Just as he was about to release,
the buck jerked its head up and sniffed the wind, looking back down the trail. The
hunter froze, limbs straining against the heavy bow. He had missed a shot once
when a deer, tense like this one, jumped aside at the release of the bowstring,
quickly enough for the arrow to miss. This buck snorted, unhappy with what it
had scented, and began to trot down the trail, quartering away from the hunter.
Though he could have made such a shot if he had to, the hunter wanted a clean
broadside through the heart that would ruin little edible meat. He parted his
lips just enough to release his breath and made the bleating sound of a fawn in
distress. The buck paused to turn and look back to see if whatever was attacking
the fawn would pose a danger to itself. The
hunter willed the fingers of his right hand to relax and the bowstring leapt
forward. The arrow flew across the clearing and struck the deer just behind the
foreleg, low in the chest where the heart would be. Despite this, the buck ran,
disappearing into the darkness of the forest. The hunter heard it crashing
through the underbrush, then the sound of a large body falling to the forest
floor. The hunter did not move; he waited as his father had taught him, making
sure the deer was truly down before approaching. A
squirrel had been cracking into one of last year's acorns at the far end of the
clearing when the hunter had first drawn his bow. Now it chattered noisily,
alarmed by the crashing of the buck through the brush. A jay took up the cry and
began to squawk. The
hunter leaned back against the fallen tree and waited for the alarm to die down.
He thought how he must leave this wild country soon and that he would miss it.
This was the great deep of the forest and it was very old. So thick were the
ancient trees in the valleys that sunlight had not shone broadly upon the forest
floor there for a thousand years. Mountains, so tall their summits were ever
covered in snow, lorded, like silver-haired wise men, over the woodlands below.
Among the foothills, the underlying granite bedrock lay exposed here and there,
poking out of the skin of the earth, scattered like the broken bones of a giant
fallen from heaven. Mountain-born streams ran cold and clear and fresh here even
in midsummer. There were shy deer in the woodlands and great herds of elk in the
higher meadows. Long-horned wild cattle that need flee from no bear lived here.
Tawny lions prowled the mountainsides and black panthers hunted the deep
valleys. Pacts of wolves, so cunning and swift that even the great cats feared
them, roamed at will here. The wild country was both dangerous and beautiful and
the hunter loved it dearly. After
a time, the squirrel and the bird ended their alarm cries and the sounds of the
surrounding forest subsided into whispered gossip. The hunter rose and made his
way to the buck. It had crossed over the stream that ran just west of the
clearing when it collapsed. It now lay upon the far bank, eyes staring and
breath stopped, but somehow looking less dead then men did when they died. A
dead animal was unmoving, but still whole. A man looked shrunken, deflated
somehow--if ever so slightly--in death. His father said that more left a man's
body when he died than left an animal's. The
hunter looked skyward. "Thank you, Lord God, Maker of All, for this gift of
meat to sustain me, skins to clothe me, bones for my tools and sinews for my
bowstring: that I might hunt again." The
hunter dragged the deer back into the clearing. He would keep an eye on the
trail while he cleaned the deer in case whatever the buck had scented could
prove a danger to him as well. He
drew his flint knife and got to work removing the deer's organs. He worked
quickly so that the blood would drain and the meat would cool. Left in the
animal too long, the organs would spoil and give the meat a rancid taste.
Pinching a bit of skin by the pelvis with his left hand, he inserted the tip of
his knife and made a long cut up the belly, cutting through the skin and
abdominal muscles. He kept his forefinger along the back of the blade so that
the point would not drag through the deer's organs, spilling their contents and
tainting the meat. Next he cut across the throat, severing the windpipe and
esophagus, and then reached inside the chest to cut the diaphragm loose. He
tilted the carcass on its side to spill out the organs. A quick shake and they
fell free of their thin connections to the inside of the body cavity. He
set the liver aside on the grass, for he would eat this tonight. His father
called the liver "the hunter's portion" and, on their hunts, they
traditionally made a meal of the liver before returning home. As he had been
taught, the hunter threw the heart as far downwind as he could. If a lion, or
worse, a wolf pack, were coming up the trail, they would likely circle downwind
to stalk him, stop to eat the bloody meat, and alert him to their presence. The
hunter pulled up a handful of clean grass and began to wipe the blood from the
inside of the carcass. From
the sky far above, a hawk cried. The hunter looked up at the bird for a moment
as it circled the clearing and then returned to his work. But something about
the hawk gnawed at the back of his mind. He paused. Sitting back on his heels,
the hunter looked skyward, studying the bird. The hawk had tightened its path
and now circled the downed deer. "Master
Hawk," he said in a low voice, "you may eat carrion in the winter, but
now there is too much game in these woods for a great hunter like yourself to
wait on another hunter's kill. You do not fly like you are wounded or ill. What
are you about?" As
if in reply, the hawk flew down to land on a tree branch above the deer carcass.
The bird looked down at the meat, then cast a glance at the hunter, shook out
its wings and folded them back against its body. Then
the hawk turned its head and stared down the trail. The
hunter followed its gaze and sent his hearing out to search the forest in the
way of his people. Layer upon layer of sound came to him, the calls of birds,
the wind through the trees, the movements of small creatures. And,
off in the distance, there was …silence. Without
hesitation the hunter stood, left his kill, and slipped into the shadows. Like
the prow of a ship parting the waters, something was pushing a wave of silence
before it, rippling through the trees, moving up the deer trail, quieting the
forest creatures in its wake. Unconcerned,
the hawk flew down from its perch and landed near the deer. It turned its head
this way and that, inspecting the carcass, then hopped over to the pile of
organs and began to tear pieces off the liver with its sharp beak. The
hunter made his way to the pines that grew along the north side of the clearing.
The lower branches of the younger trees stretched nearly to the ground, making
the space underneath each pine a low and shadowed chamber. The hunter had often
hidden under these trees to learn the habits of the deer that came to feed here.
He checked the angle of the sun and judged it would not shine fully on the area
beneath the trees for another two hours. It would be enough. He crawled into the
dark space under the nearest pine and waited. Nearly
half an hour passed before the hunter caught the first sign of movement down the
trail. A darker shadow emerged from the dimness of the forest. As the shadow
neared, it took shape and became a tall man dressed in black traveling clothes.
The wide black brim of a black felt hat hid the tall man's face. A long black
cloak covered his lean frame. A long battle sword sheathed in black leather
rested at his hip. The tall man lifted his head to sniff the air and hawk-like
features emerged from shadow. A long aquiline nose, dark eyes and olive skin
showed the man to be an Etruscan; his thick black hair, bearded chin and
mustache all bore traces of silver. He
moved as a man accustomed to walking in dangerous places, with care and in
silence, stopping frequently to listen to his surroundings. This was a warrior
past his youth, but still strong and swift, wise in the ways of war. But the
wild things did not fall silent at his approach for those reasons. This
man was a predator. They
could see it in the way the man's eyes pierced into the shadows without fear and
in the way his hands seemed quick and ready, even when at rest. The animals fell
silent before him as they would before the coming of a panther, hoping that the
dark stalker would pass them by if only they made no sound. The
tall man made his slow, careful way into the clearing. He stopped opposite the
young pine that hid the hunter and knelt to examine something on the ground. He
drew a dagger from under his cloak, pierced the thing before him and held up the
deer heart the hunter had thrown down the trail. The tall man turned his head to
study the trees surrounding the clearing. The hunter held his breath, fearing
even that slight sound might betray his presence. After a long moment, the tall
man let the heart slide off his dagger. He wiped the blade on the grass and then
came to his feet sheathing the dagger. As he continued across the clearing, a
thin half-smile came to his lips. The
hunter let the tall man get another twenty paces past his hiding place and then
slipped out from under the tree and began his stalk. He moved carefully,
matching his own step with the tall man's to hide the slight sound his
deerskin-clad feet made as they pressed upon the grass. Coming up from behind,
his view of the man’s hands would be blocked by the tall man’s cloak and
this worried him. The
tall man came upon the hawk feeding on the deer liver and halted. The
hunter froze. The
tall man looked from the hawk to the piled organs and then to the split deer
carcass. The
hunter hesitated. He was still too far away to spring upon the tall man. Without
warning the tall man spun around, his cloak falling behind him, a flash of steel
flying from his hand. Quick
as a young lion, the hunter sprang aside as the knife hissed over his head to
strike, vibrating, into a tree. In one fluid motion, the hunter leapt to his
feet, drawing the steel knife from the wood with his right hand and his flint
knife from its sheath with his left, and charged. The
tall man calmly took a step forward to meet the attack. The hunter fell upon
him, aiming a ripping stab at the taller man's throat. Without a wasted motion,
the tall man stepped aside and parried the hunter's arm. As their arms struck,
the hunter felt hard links of ring mail beneath the tall man's sleeve. A slash
with a dagger would do nothing against the tall man's limbs or body. The
hunter drew back, switching both his knives to reverse grip, points down, and
waited, arms outstretched like a mantis. He would use the knives as hooks to
trap the tall man's arms and open the body to attack. Such a grip lessened the
hunter's reach but doubled the power behind a stab; he would need such power to
penetrate his opponent’s hidden armor. The
tall man drew a dagger with his right hand and aimed a low, lunging thrust at
the hunter's abdomen. As the hunter moved to parry, the tall man thrust a second
blade, concealed in his left hand, at the hunter's face. The hunter tried to
trap the man's arm with his own blades, but the older man evaded him like smoke,
then renewed his attack, alternating between slashing and thrusting with his two
blades. At the longer ranges, the older man's experience and greater reach gave
him the advantage. In close, the hunter's young reflexes and strong limbs gave
him the edge. They
clashed once more and the hunter's flint knife snapped in two, the thin, sharp
stone too brittle to take the impact of a fight. The hunter dropped the broken
blade just as the tall man lunged in. The
hunter parried the thrusting arm, caught his opponent's right hand in his left
and twisted it outwards, locking the wrist. He stepped back to pull the tall man
off balance and keep away from the man's other blade, while bringing the edge of
his own dagger against the sleeve covering the tall man's pulse, ready to cut
the wrist. Instead of resisting the lock, the tall man stepped in and threw a
left thrust over the top of the locked arms. The hunter swept the thrust aside
and circled his arm around his opponent's, pinning the tall man's left arm. The
hunter brought his dagger up between them, pointing the tip at his opponent’s
throat. Now the tall man's longer reach in forward grip became a detriment, as
his blade was pinned too far from the hunter's back to reach him. About to order
the tall man to yield, the hunter felt three light taps on his spine. The hunter
looked over his shoulder and found that the tall man had reversed his grip on
his dagger and freed it to work. The
hunter smiled and released the older man. The
man took a step back, sheathed his dagger and bowed. "Well,
having a year's holiday in the woods has not slowed you down too
much," said the tall man. The
hunter cocked his head to the side as if the man spoke in a foreign tongue. "Yes,
Daniel, I understand," said the tall man. "After all this time alone,
another man's voice must come strange to your ears." At
the sound of his name, Daniel broke into a broad grin. "My
ears may be slow to catch your words, but my eyes are glad at the sight of
you!" He
stepped forward to hand the throwing knife back to its owner, resting it on an
open palm, handle first, as he had been taught. "It is good to see you
again, Master-Instructor Moor." Moor
did not speak in reply, but gave the half-smile that Daniel remembered so well,
a smile that never seemed to include the Etruscan's eyes. Moor sheathed his
second dagger before taking the throwing knife and returning it to its place up
his sleeve. He retrieved his cape from the ground and donned it. With its
shoulders capped with hard leather, the cloak needed no clasp to keep it in
place, save when riding at a gallop; yet it could be dropped with a shrug of the
shoulders. That Moor did not need to unclasp his cloak before a fight was a
small thing, but Moor had many small tricks like that: little things to give him
even the slightest edge in a fight. "It
is good to see you also," Moor finally replied. He paused, and then added,
"My prince." "What
did you call me?" asked Daniel in surprise. "King
Absalom died ten months ago,” said Moor. “Absalom being without an heir,
succession fell to his cousin, your father." The
Etruscan studied the young man’s reaction to this news. "Are
my father and mother safe?" asked Daniel. "And the realm?" "The
realm goes better than it did," Moor replied. "And the King and Queen
sleep less with their new duties, but sleep well nonetheless."
Daniel nodded his head towards the downed deer. "Tell me more of
them while I finish with the buck." They
walked to the downed deer, the prince deep in thought. The hawk flew from the
gut pile to land on a tree stump nearby. Daniel trimmed off the piece of liver
the bird had been eating from and tossed it to the hawk. "I
think Theol has left us enough for tonight's dinner," said Daniel
offhandedly as he worked. Moor
made no comment. He had eaten worse things than the leavings of a hawk. "Master
Moor, unless I am off my mark, the summer equinox is seven days away. You have
come for me a week early. How did you find me?" "Your
father ordered me to return you to him earlier than the allotted time. I knew
the stream where you began your journey, and I knew how far you would travel in
three days." He nodded towards the hawk. "Theol led me closer, for he
knows the look of a man hunting and hopes for a share of the meat, as he
receives on my own hunts. After that, it was just a matter of cutting your trail
and following it," said Moor as if it were a small thing. Daniel
finished preparing the deer. He hoisted the carcass up onto his shoulders and
led the way to his camp. Daniel thought back on the last time he had seen his
teacher, nearly a year ago in the dining hall of his family’s home north of
Eboracium. Moor had stood next to his father as his parents gave him their
blessings for his journey. That had been the first day of summer of the year he
turned twenty. The appointed time had come for him to spend a year alone in the
wilderness, the traditional preparation for his travel east across the ocean to
the Isle of Logres, where he would study the art of governing free men with his
grandfather Anak. Four
young men had gone out into the wilderness that year. The ship sailed north, up
the Early
that same evening, at the time that animals come down to the stream to drink, he
took the first of many deer that year. What meat he did not eat that night, he
cut into thin strips and dried over his fire. He made the deer’s sinews into
bowstrings and its bones into fine tools. He took the deerskin, removed the hair
and, using a paste made from the deer’s brain, cured the skin over a smoky
fire. From the hide he cut a loincloth and a pair of short boots. From green
willow limbs he made a pack to carry his food and bone tools. When
he had finished his preparations, he set out away from the stream to find a good
place to make camp. A smaller stream fed into the one that had led him inland
and he followed this north for a day and a half. He made his cabin under a small
rock overhang partway up the side of a hill. Here he would be protected from the
wind by the hill and high enough to stay dry. Animal trails passed further down
the hillside, but not close enough that his camp disturbed them greatly. If he
could, he would do his hunting far from his own camp. Any game living close to
his cabin would be his emergency larder; he would not hunt these unless in dire
need. He
built his cabin from the broken rock that winter's frost thrust up from beneath
the forest floor each year. He chose a place under the ledge with just enough
room to stand upright and scraped off the top layer of soil. He built up thick
walls of rock with mud and dry grass for mortar. He made a fire pit inside, near
the entrance, and built up a bed of logs and pine boughs along the rear wall.
That fall he would also build a small stone sweat lodge to strengthen his body
against the cold. He had water close by and meadows, hardwoods, fruit trees and
good hunting grounds a morning's hike away. This place would be his home for the
coming year. For
the last thousand years, it had been the practice of the young men of the House
of Asher to go off into the wilderness for a year of solitude to strengthen
their wills and test themselves. *
* * * * The
morning after Moor’s arrival, Daniel packed the few things he would take from
his camp. For himself, he kept only a flint knife, a wooden cup and buckskin
shirt, pants and boots. For his father, he would bring back the black bearskin
coat that had kept Daniel warm all winter; for his mother he packed two pairs of
doeskin slippers and a basket of (rather hurriedly) smoked venison for their
table. Daniel
and Moor dismantled the cabin, prying the stones apart with sticks and kicking
the walls down. By spring, a man could walk through what had been Daniel’s
home for nearly a year and not know that any other man had ever trodden there.
Then the two men followed the stream Daniel first used on his journey, back to
the
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