The Return of Tharn - BestLightNovel.com
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Something akin to fear darkened Garlud's eyes. "My son? What of him?
Surely your sense of justice has not so rotted that you would harm him!"
Sudden rage twisted Jaltor's countenance. "No man speaks so to Jaltor of Ammad and lives!"
Garlud's smile was undismayed. "Have you forgotten, Most-High. I have already been sentenced to death!"
"And by your att.i.tude," Jaltor shouted, "you have sentenced your son to the same fate."
"On what grounds?"
"I need no grounds! I know your son, n.o.ble Garlud. When he hears that you are dead and that it was my order, he will attempt to avenge you. I know the love he holds for you, and it will be that mistaken loyalty which will lead him into an attempt to a.s.sa.s.sinate me. Your power is great in Ammad, Garlud; I helped you gain that power because you were my friend. Because you have won the affection and respect of many warriors they would rise to his leaders.h.i.+p against me. All Ammad might be torn by civil war. For that reason Jotan must die!"
Garlud's face was livid with rage and his hands were trembling. "Then kill us both, you son of Gubo. You have become a fearful, evil old man who hides from shadows and who fears all men--even his friends! Kill us both that we may not pollute our lungs with the air you breathe!"
With an almost casual sweep of his mighty arm Jaltor hurled the raging n.o.bleman into the grasp of the guards. "Confine him to the lowest pit beneath the palace!" he thundered. "Let the rats chew him a few suns before I have him torn to bits!"
Without a backward glance the king strode from the room. He made his way up flight after flight of steps, through room after room of the sleeping palace, until he reached his own wing. Through several long, winding corridors he moved, oblivious to the salutes of startled guards on night duty, until he entered his private apartment. He went directly to his sleeping quarters, curtly ordered his two personal slaves into the next room, then undressed quickly and got into bed.
But not to sleep. For over an hour he tossed on the huge bed wooing sleep that would not come. Finally he rose, drew a richly woven robe about his shoulders and stepped out onto a small balcony overlooking one entire half of the vast city six floors below.
The rays of a full moon bathed the impressive scene. Because of the lateness of the hour no lights gleamed from windows of the box-like buildings and the broad streets were deserted.
Slowly reason was beginning to take hold of him as anger faded. Was Garlud correct in saying that he was becoming an old man fleeing from shadows, suspicious of all men? He went back over the golden days when he and Garlud were young warriors taking their first taste of battle against the then scattered states that today made up the country of Ammad. He recalled the day Garlud had saved his life by leaping in front of him and taking the tearing impact of a thrown spear. Garlud had very nearly died of that wound and he--Jaltor--had remained day and night at his bedside until the crisis pa.s.sed.
And that was the man he had sentenced to death! The man whose friends.h.i.+p had meant more to him than all his kingdom. Surely personal ambition alone could not have driven him into plotting the a.s.sa.s.sination of his best friend!
There was something behind all this that did not meet the eye. Had the would-be a.s.sa.s.sin been anyone other than old Heglar he would have dismissed his involvement of Garlud as a trumped up lie and executed the man on the spot.
Had Heglar lied? Was there some motivation so strong that the old man had been forced into bearing false witness against one of the most loved n.o.blemen in all Ammad? Was all this some intricate plot, with Garlud instead of Jaltor as the real victim?
Jaltor, stern, ruthless and high-handed though he was, was a man with ideals and a strong sense of honor. Also, he was extremely intelligent and a veteran of the machinations of intrigue. The more he thought about this whole business the more certain he was that all the facts were not yet revealed.
For a long time he stood there on the small balcony, staring out over Ammad with unseeing eyes. After a while a slow smile came to his strong lips and he nodded his head a time or two in satisfaction. There was a way....
Leaving the balcony he strode quickly to the room's single door and threw it wide. "Quick!" he snapped to one of the startled slaves, "tell Curzad I want him here at once!"
When the captain of the guards, as alert and bright-eyed as though he had not been dragged from a sound sleep by Jaltor's summons, appeared in the doorway the king bade him enter and close the door.
"Curzad," he said, "you have known the n.o.ble Garlud almost as long as I have. Does it seem likely to you that he would be mixed up in a plot to kill me?"
The iron-faced warrior shook his head impa.s.sively. "No, Most-High. His love and respect for you are beyond doubt."
"You think I acted unwisely in finding him guilty?"
"That is not for me to say, Most-High."
"I _know_ that! But you are not made of stone; you must have formed some opinion."
"It is not wise to hold an opinion which differs from that of Ammad's king."
Jaltor gestured with sharp impatience. "This is man to man, Curzad. Give me your honest impressions of this affair."
"If you command it, Most-High. I do not believe the n.o.ble Garlud had anything to do with old Heglar's attempt to knife you. I think the old one hated Garlud for some reason and named him because of that hatred."
"But you knew Heglar's reputation as a completely truthful man?"
"I do not say he would lie for another's purpose. But for his own ...
that is a different matter."
"But he did not give Garlud's name willingly, Curzad. Only after prolonged torture could we wrest the name from his lips."
The captain shrugged. "Would you for even a moment have believed him otherwise. Old Heglar was no fool, Most-High. Were his motive strong enough for bringing ruin to Garlud he would have planned it exactly that way. An accusation lightly given is usually lightly taken."
Jaltor smote a fist into his palm. "By the G.o.d, Curzad, I believe you've hit it! Only my thought is that the plan was not his. When a man hates another both are usually aware of that hatred--and Garlud was at a complete loss to understand why he was accused."
"That is true, Most-High."
"Very well, here's what must be done." Jaltor began to pace the floor, speaking the while. "I want you to speak with the guards who were with you when I questioned Garlud tonight. Swear them to complete secrecy on the entire matter on pain of death. The same goes for the two attendants who were working over Heglar at the time."
"It shall be done, Most-High."
"Good! Now who in Garlud's household knows you brought him here?"
"We encountered only Bokut, his chief steward, and two guards--one at an outer gate and one stationed at his palace entrance."
"Very well, take those three into custody. Question them as to whom they told of the incident and place _those_ under arrest as well. Leave no one who can spread word that Garlud was brought to the palace at my orders."
"You see what I'm getting at, Curzad? Let us say there is someone whose ident.i.ty we do not know at the bottom of this plot against Garlud.
Heglar makes his clumsy attempt at killing me and fails according to plan. I order him tortured to learn the names of others involved. He gives me Garlud's name."
"Now, if I believe the charge, Garlud is arrested and executed, and the mysterious someone is satisfied. But if I do not believe the charge Garlud remains free, and this unknown person must try again or give up and the matter is never solved."
"But say Garlud simply disappears without anyone knowing what's become of him. Has he learned of what was in store for him and gone into hiding, trying the while to learn who is responsible for his plight? Or have I executed him secretly? Is Heglar still alive and in a position to eventually expose the true culprit?"
"The man we want is going to have to get answers to those questions, Curzad. He'll use great care at first; but when each effort meets a blank wall he'll become increasingly desperate. Desperate men make false moves, Curzad--then is when we'll have him!"
The captain nodded expressionlessly but there was a gleam of admiration in his deep-set eyes. "And what of Garlud himself, Most-High? Shall I have him removed from the pits and placed in more comfortable quarters?"
Jaltor pulled thoughtfully at his lower lip. "N-no, I think not. Let him stew there awhile. I am not giving up my suspicions of him entirely, Curzad; old Heglar's dying statement can not be utterly disregarded until we have proof he was lying."
"And should Jotan, his son, return from Sephar while his father languishes in the pits?"
The king nodded. "I have thought of that. It may be necessary to take him and his men into custody before they reach the city itself. It would defeat my purpose were he allowed to enter Ammad and start hunting for his father. On the other hand I cannot arrest him openly; it would tell our mysterious enemy more than I want him to know."