Jarda took a deep breath. “Look at me, boy.” Glaucus’ eyes slowly came up, and Jarda saw tears in them, but whether they were from fear or guilt, he did not know. “I want you to know that you are the only one of the guilty ones who had the courage to tell me the truth. It does not mean that you will not be punished for your actions, but it does show that you have some integrity and honor in you.”The boy nodded, and his voice caught as he whispered, “Thank you, General. That means a lot to me.”Jarda tilted his head as he crooked his finger toward the shadows. Tero stepped forward with the other three guardsmen. Unlike with Juston and the other three, he merely gestured toward the door, and Glaucus saluted as the first tear trickled down his cheek.“I am sorry, General Mistri,” he whispered as he turned and trudged out the door.Tero started after him, but Jarda stopped him with a hand on his arm.“Let the others take him, Tero. I want to talk to you.”“Yes, sir.” Tero stood at attent
"I know,” the boy said with another heavy sigh. “I heard you and General Mistri talking about me.”Ma’ikel frowned when the boy referred to his father as General Mistri a second time.“Ga’briyel, come here, please.”The boy raised his head and then stood. He slowly walked to the table and sat down when Ma’ikel gestured to a chair. The man knelt down in front of him.“Ga’briyel, do you not consider General Mistri to be your baba? I know he considers you to be his son.”“But he is not my baba,” the boy said. “My baba’s dead.”“Your first baba died, that is true, but could you not think of the general as your second baba?”Frank cocked his head as if that thought had never occurred to him. “Can someone have a second baba?”“If you choose to, yes. You are very intelligent, Anmah, and you have amazed me today, but you are still a little boy who needs a baba and a mama. General Mistri and his wife can be those for you if you let them.”The boy nodded. “I suppose I could let them. Do you thi
Tomas sighed heavily. “Although I am sure that I will not like what I am about to hear, this break is welcome nonetheless.” He leaned against the large gacha wood table in the center of the room and faced the others. “So, what is it?”Jarda told the king everything that had happened that morning, from the fight between Frank and Ricard to the interrogations and confessions to the meeting he, Tero, and Phransa had had in his office.The king grew angrier by the moment as Jarda talked, but he stayed silent until the narrative was complete. By the end, he was pacing the length of the table and clenching his fists. Jarda was glad the scowl on his king’s face was not for him.“And you say this has been going on for a year, Jarda? How is that possible? How did no one know what was happening to these boys?”“I do not know the answer to that question, sire. All I can say is that the boys who did this were very careful, and they scared the younger boys enough that they told no one of the abuse
“Thank you, my son, but I do not think it will be. I appreciate the thought, though.”Elise moved close to them and hugged them both.“Can you do anything to make Baba feel better, Mama?”Jarda grinned when Elise looked at him with a twinkle in her eye.“I will do my best, little one,” she said.“Good. I do not like it when he is upset.”“None of us do, Ga’briyel. Now, off to bed with you.” Elise gave her son a kiss, and Jarda put him down.“Good night, Mama.”“Good night, my son. Sleep well.”When Frank disappeared into his room, Jarda stepped up to his wife.“And just how do you plan on making me feel better?” he asked, running his hands up and down her arms.“By having you focus on something else for a while,” she said, taking his hand and leading him to their room. She glanced back at him and smiled. “Hopefully for a very long while.”First light came with dark gray clouds that covered the sky and sun and cast a deep gloom over the training grounds. In addition, thunder rumbled om
Phransa gazed at Jarda with pleading eyes, but Jarda gritted his teeth and shook his head once. “I am sorry, Captain. I cannot.”“I know, sir,” the captain said, once again trying to pull the boy to his feet. “I understand.”Juston had a strong grip on Jarda, and Phransa was unable to pry him loose. Tero came to help, and between the two of them, they pulled the boy free.“No! No, please, no!” Juston struggled as they dragged him to the post and secured him to it. “No, please! Please, General, please let me go home!”Phransa took a deep breath and picked up the scourge. He released the breath slowly, reared back, and struck. The shriek that came from the boy was heartrending, but the captain controlled his voice.“One.”Each lash produced another shriek, and by the sixth, the boy had started calling for his mama. Jarda looked out over the assembly and saw that most of the Chatra had either turned away or had dropped to the ground, covering their heads with their arms. A sour stench fi
"So,Frank, how were your lessons today?”“Just fine, Mama. I learned about numbers and how letters make words today, but I also learned a little about what Baba had to do this morning. Is he all right?”“He will be,” Elise said, her smile slipping. “He is not here right now, though. He is back at the training grounds.”“Why?”“I do not know; I did not ask.”“Do you think it would be all right for me to go to him there?”Elise frowned. She knew that the ten who had been flogged were currently locked in the stocks, but she also knew that they could not keep Frank away from the grounds for the next five days.“I will tell you what,” she said. “Ma’ikel can take you there, but you must stay outside until he asks your baba if it is all right for you to enter, do you understand? If your baba says no, then that will be final.”“I understand, Mama.” Frank looked up at Ma’ikel. “Is that all right with you?”“Yes, but please wait in the office for me. I need to talk to your mother for a moment.”
Frank stood before the bag, thinking. Then he nodded. “That makes sense. If you did not punish them, others might do the same thing later.”“Exactly. Now, do you want to try the bag?”“Yes, sir.” The little boy’s hands clenched into fists. “Will it be like when I hit Ricard?”“Somewhat.” Jarda gestured toward Tero who was watching two guardsmen practicing with blunt swords. The guardsman walked over to his general and stood at attention.“Yes, General?”“Help me lower this bag, Guardsman. My son needs to hit something.”The corner of Tero’s mouth quirked upward, but he quickly acknowledged the order, and the two men adjusted the chain until the bottom of the bag was just about a span off the ground. At Jarda’s dismissal, Tero left, but when he reached his former position, Jarda saw that his eyes were not on the swordsmen.Suppressing a smile, Jarda knelt behind the bag to hold it steady. “Go ahead, Ga’briyel. Take your anger out on the bag.”The next half hour disappeared quickly as F
“Fine,” Frank said with a huff, “but they had better understand that this is my responsibility, and they will do as I say.”“It will be so, I promise. They already understand that.”“Come in, Mother,” Frank said as he stood, just before a knock sounded on the door.“I will never get used to that,” Jarda mumbled as he joined his son.“What?”“You knowing who is there before you can see them.”“I am still getting used to it,” Frank said with a smile.The door opened, and Elise stepped into the room. Her gaze fell on the half-filled saddlebags, and her eyes filled with tears.“You are really going?”“Yes, Mother. I have to; you know that.”“No, you do not have to, Ga’briyel. You want to. You could stay here, study with Ma’ikel, and—”“And the Asabya would be free to terrorize people,” Frank interrupted her. “They will be free to raid and to destroy and to kill. I cannot allow them to do so any longer.”Elise shook her head sadly. “I am sorry that is your choice, my son. Just remember tha