There was a mournful cry behind them and they turned to see a man kneeling beside the torso of the young soldier who had died during the charge up the slope. His hands hovered over the corpse, wanting to touch it but repelled by the scraps of hanging flesh where his friend’s head had once been. Finally, he collapsed across the bloody chest and began to sob.
Eperitus wtched as his new comrades, joined by Castor and Halitherses, quickly began the process of digging a grave with the sword blades of their enemies. Once this was done they laid the body inside and threw the swords at its feet, followed by the dead man’s own weapons and shield. Then they piled rocks over the grave, carefully placing the stones so that no scavenging animal could find an easy passage into the flesh beneath.
Eperitus stood silently as they saluted the young soldier three times, their shouts carrying a long way through the cool mid-morning air. Afterwards he helped bury the sixteen enemy dead, digging a shallow pit for the bodies and casting stones on top. The men did not exult over these corpses, nor did they bury them out of respect. They merely put them in the ground so that their souls would go to Hades and not stay on the earth to haunt the living.
By midday the burials were finished. Castor ordered his men to make a fire and fetch water from the nearby stream for porridge, and invited Eperitus to share their rations. A bag of fresh olives had been found on one of the bodies, and as they spat the stones into the fire and drank draughts of cold water Eperitus eyed his eleven new companions in silence.
On the opposite side of the fire was a handsome warrior with a short beard and an athletic build. He held clear authority within the group – seemingly subordinate only to Castor and Halitherses – but his eyes were cold and hard as they focused on the newcomer. Sensing his hostility, Eperitus turned his gaze to the man’s neighbour, a dark-skinned soldier with a head of thick, black curls, a full beard that reached into the hollows of his cheeks, and a chest and arms that were matted like a woollen tunic. He was regarding Eperitus with an icy curiosity, but as their eyes met he offered a quick smile and rose to his feet.
‘We owe you our gratitude, friend,’ he said with a low bow, but as he raised his head and stared at Eperitus the questioning look had returned. ‘Perhaps you will tell us what brings you to Mount Parnassus?’
Eperitus looked thoughtfully into the dying flames. He was an exile, banished from Alybas for resisting the man who had killed its king. Now his only hope – indeed, his only desire – was to become a warrior like his grandfather before him, and so he had come to seek guidance from the oracle. But the agony of his shame was still too raw, and he was not prepared to share this with a stranger. Besides, something in the questioner’s manner told him to keep the details of his past a secret – at least for the time being.
‘I’m here to seek the will of Zeus,’ he said, raising his head. ‘Beyond that, I don’t know.’
Castor raised his eyebrows. ‘That’s a bigger question than you might think. The answer could be difficult to accept.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Zeus doesn’t give his favour lightly, and once he makes his plan clear you have to follow it with a true heart. Do that and honour and glory will be heaped on you, and the bards will sing your name for eternity. But if you fail . . .’ Castor tossed a piece of bread into the flames. ‘Your name will be blasted from the world for ever, forgotten even in Hades.’
Eperitus’s heart kicked with excitement, heedless of Castor’s warning. The thought of his name being put into song, to be revered long after his death, was everything a fighting man wanted to hear. This was the only immortality a man could win, and every warrior sought it. An unlooked-for shaft of light had illuminated the shadowy path to Eperitus’s destiny and in his excitement he decided to depart at once.
‘Castor, your words are god-given. You’ll forgive my haste, but I want to be on my way to the oracle. Farewell, and I pray the gods will protect you all and bring you good fortune.’
He picked up the shield his grandfather had given him, with its fourfold hide and the new wounds that decorated it, and slung it across his back. But before he could pluck his spears from the ground, Castor stepped forward to bar his way.
‘Slow down, friend. We’re all going to the same place; I say let’s go together. We could do with your protection.’
Eperitus laughed. ‘And I could do with your rations! But I can’t wait here any longer – Mount Parnassus is still a three- or four-hour march and the afternoon won’t last for ever.’
Хаос в Ваантане нарастает, охватывая все новые и новые миры...
Александр Бирюк , Александр Сакибов , Белла Мэттьюз , Ларри Нивен , Михаил Сергеевич Ахманов , Родион Кораблев
Фантастика / Исторические приключения / Боевая фантастика / ЛитРПГ / Попаданцы / Социально-психологическая фантастика / Детективы / РПГ