Farlander

Farlander by Col Buchanan Page A

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Authors: Col Buchanan
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rules our city.’
    ‘As you wish,’ the captain replied, with a bow of his head.
    The procession stamped onwards.
    *

    ‘I’m bored ,’ announced Kirkus to no one in particular.
    The young priest was merely a guest at this meal, yet he sat at the very head of the table, where he had been downing the heady Seratian wine as though it was water.
    ‘Ignore him,’ recommended Kira to the family who played host to them this evening. ‘He is merely drunk.’
    Belias, the high priest of the city, and therefore its governor, acknowledged this statement with a brief if slightly nervous smile, whilst dabbing a handkerchief at the sweat gathering upon his bald pate. He felt oddly out of place here this evening, even though they were dining in the banqueting hall of his own mansion, where he was playing host to these two arrivals from far-off Q’os, the seat of the Holy Empire of Mann. Maybe it was the way the old priestess kept looking at him, something unspoken in her gaze.
    Once more he wished they would finish eating and retire to their rooms for an early night. Belias needed to speak to his staff, find out if the city populace had heeded his hastily called curfew. Yet for the last two hours he had been trapped at the dining table with these guests, feigning interest in the old woman’s talk while he eyed the rate at which they consumed their food and drank their wine, trying through simple prayer to hurry them up. Surely they must be sated soon?
    By his elbow, his plump wife sat in silence. She was dressed in the finest of farlander silks, and sported jewels extravagant enough for a queen, or at least a minor, provincial queen. Again, she cast a demure glance towards the handsome young priest, sitting like a king at the head of the long table; again Kirkus pointedly ignored her attentions. Belias, too, pretended not to notice. He was hardly surprised by his wife’s flirtations. She had always been drawn to power – it was why she had married him in the first place
    He looked across at his daughter, Rianna. Belias often looked to his daughter when in need of a little support. She was whispering something to her fiancé, a man ten years her elder. He was an entrepreneur of the patrician class, who had finished his food long ago and watched all three priests seated at the table with barely concealed distrust.
    They were a jolly group, for sure, as they dined silently in the draughty hall, listening to the rain gusting against the windows of stained glass, the munching of food and the tapping of cutlery against plates, the occasional civil comment; that and the cries of the slaves squatting out in the rain in the gravel driveway outside.
    Belias had been informed by his chancellor of the occurrences in the streets of Skara-Brae earlier that day. That was partly why he was sweating so badly, and why he had to feign an appetite for the cold remnants of his food. The city folk were in an uproar, by all accounts. They wanted their loved ones back; failing that, they wanted blood. It worried him greatly, these sudden public displays of anger, for Belias understood the Nathalese only too well, and how easy it would be to tip them into open revolt. After all, he was Nathalese himself.
    ‘Are you quite all right, High Priest?’ inquired Kira kindly, though he suspected that any kindness exhibited by this woman was more akin to a cat’s toying with a mouse. Belias tried to compose himself. No, he was hardly all right. This old witch was the mother of the Holy Matriarch herself, and that lout, lolling in his chair at the head of his table was nothing less than the Matriarch’s only son, likely next in line for the throne. It was enough to drive a simple priest from the provinces to distraction.
    ‘I’m fine,’ he heard himself reply to the old priestess. ‘I was just wondering . . . you see . . . why you needed to acquire so many slaves today?’
    The old woman sipped delicately at a glass of wine, fixing her gaze on him over

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