damned quiet,” Javed concluded. “Trees. I hate trees. The forest is an ambusher’s paradise. They can put their scouts in the branches and tell their troops to lie low in the shade beneath them. Get out your hair, Lord Pavek; see if our halfling’s tried to close a trap behind us.”
It was the trees themselves that were looking down on them—at least that’s what Pavek thought. The hair indicated it as well. Its line hadn’t varied since they used it first at Khelo: Kakzim was still ahead of them.
But the two-time Hero of Urik took no chances. He tightened their formation, giving orders to every third templar: “Keep your eyes on the trees ahead of us, on either side, and especially behind. Anything moves, sing out. I’d sooner duck from wind and shadows than have halflings running up our rumps.”
They did a lot of shadow dodging that morning, but they also got a heartbeat’s warning before the first arrow flew at them. Trusting their silk tunics and leather armor, Commandant Javed ordered the maniples together in a tight circle. He commanded them to kneel, presenting smaller targets to the hidden archers and safeguarding their unprotected legs.
“Defend your face! That’s where you’re vulnerable,” Javed shouted, taking his own advice when an arrow whizzed toward him. “But mark where the arrows are coming from. We’ll take these forest-scum brigands when their quivers are empty.”
The soft, smooth silk lived up to the commandant’s claims, and the lightweight, slow-moving arrows failed to find targets time and again. One templar cried out when an arrow grazed her hand, and moments later she’d fallen unconscious. But she was their only casualty, and gradually the arrow flights came to a halt and the forest was silent.
“Mark where you saw ’em. Move out in pairs.” This time the commandant gave his orders in a voice that wouldn’t carry to the trees. “We don’t have to catch them all, just one or two.” Then he turned to Pavek and whispered: “You mark any, my lord?”
Pavek pointed to a crook halfway up one substantial tree where he’d spotted a shadowed silhouette against the branches.
Javed flashed his black-and-white smile. “Let’s go catch us a halfling—”
But fickle fortune was against the heroes. Their quarry dropped down and hit the ground running. Javed’s elven legs weren’t what they’d been in his prime, and Pavek had never been much of a sprinter. The halfling went to ground in a stand of bramble bushes.
Other pairs were luckier. When the maniples reassembled near the body of the unconscious templar, they had captured four halflings, none of whom seemed to understand a word Commandant Javed said when he asked where their village was.
Intimidation was an art among templars. Pavek had been taught the basic skills in the orphanage. Being big, which Pavek had always been, and ugly, which he’d become early on life, Pavek had a natural advantage. The joke was that he was a born intimidator, but the truth was that Pavek didn’t enjoy making other folk writhe in terror or anxiety. He was good at it because he hated it, and now that he held the highest rank imaginable, he intended never to professionally intimidate anyone again. He gave a hands-off gesture and stepped aside to allow the commandant to finish what he’d begun.
“You’re lying,” Javed told the captives who knelt before him. He looked aside to Pavek and began speaking above heads that rose no higher than his thigh. “My name is Commandant Javed of Urik, and I give you my word as a commandant that we’re searching for one man, one male halfling with blond hair and slave scars on his face. He committed crimes in Urik, and he will answer for them. No one else need fear us. We won’t harm you or your families or your homes if you give us the criminal we’ve come for. You will help us—understand that. Dead or alive, one of you will guide us to your homes. Now, which one of you will it be?”
The commandant’s voice had been calm and steady throughout his short speech. By simply watching him or listening to the tone of his voice, it would have been difficult for the halflings to know that he was talking to them, or for them to realize the threatening promise he’d made—if they truly didn’t understand the words he’d uttered. And that was the impression the captives strove to convey: none of them volunteered to be the templars’ guide.
From the side, Pavek knew