It is three hundred years since the world toppled on its axis and civilisation was destroyed. In this savagely reshaped world ruled by brigands and war-makers, a rider seeks a lost city. Pursuing a dream to calm the violence in his soul, Jon Shannow, the brigand slayer, desires only peace. But from the Plague Lands emerges a fresh terror.
The Lord of the Pit and his hellborn army seek to plunge mankind into a new demonic era. Seemingly invincible, they make a fatal mistake: they take Shannow's woman for blood sacrifice. And find themselves facing the deadliest warrior of the new age. Jon Shannow - the Jerusalem Man.
Release date:
June 1, 2011
Publisher:
Del Rey
Print pages:
336
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THE RIDER PAUSED at the crest of a wooded hill and gazed down over the wide rolling empty lands beneath him.
There was no sign of Jerusalem, no dark road glittering with diamonds. But then, Jerusalem was always ahead, beckoning in the dreams of night, taunting him to find it on the black umbilical road.
His disappointment was momentary, and he lifted his gaze to the far mountains, gray and spectral. Perhaps there he would find a sign. Or was the road covered now by the blown dust of centuries, disguised by the long grass of history?
He dismissed the doubt; if the city existed, Jon Shannow would find it. Removing his wide-brimmed leather hat, he wiped the sweat from his face. It was nearing noon, and he dismounted. The steeldust gelding stood motionless until he looped the reins over its head, then dipped its neck to crop at the long grass. The man delved into a saddlebag to pull clear his ancient Bible; he sat on the ground and idly opened the gold-edged pages.
“And Saul said to David, Thou art not able to go against this Philistine to fight with him, for thou art but a youth, and he is a man of war from his youth.”
Shannow felt sorry for Goliath, for the man had had no chance. A courageous giant, ready to face any warrior, had found himself opposite a child without sword or armor. Had he won, he would have been derided. Shannow closed the Bible and carefully packed it away.
“Time to move,” he told the gelding. He stepped into the saddle and swept up the reins. Slowly they made their way down the hillside, the rider’s eyes watchful of every boulder and tree, bush and shrub. They entered the cool of the valley, and Shannow drew back on the reins, turning his face to the north and breathing deeply.
A rabbit leapt from the brush, startling the gelding. Shannow saw the creature vanish into the undergrowth and then uncocked the long-barreled pistol, sliding it back into the scabbard at his hip. He could not recall drawing it clear. Such was the legacy of the years of peril: fast hands, a sure eye, and a body that reacted independently of the conscious mind.
Not always a good thing … Shannow would never forget the look of blank incomprehension in the child’s eyes as the lead ball had cleaved his heart, nor the way his frail body had crumpled lifeless to the earth. There had been three brigands that day, and one had shot Shannow’s horse out from under him while the other two ran forward with knife and ax. He had destroyed them all in scant seconds, but a movement behind had caused him to swivel and fire. The child had died without a sound.
Would God ever forgive him?
Why should he, when Shannow could not forgive himself?
“You were better off losing, Goliath,” said Shannow.
The wind changed, and a stomach-knotting aroma of frying bacon drifted to him from the east. Shannow tugged the reins to the right. After a quarter of a mile, the trail rose and fell and a narrow path opened onto a meadow and a stone-fronted farmhouse. Before the building was a vegetable garden, and beyond that was a paddock where several horses were penned.
There were no defense walls, and the windows of the house were wide and open. To the left of the building the trees had been permitted to grow to within twenty yards of the wall, allowing no field of fire to repel brigands. Shannow sat and stared for some time at this impossible dwelling. Then he saw a child carrying a bucket emerge from the barn beyond the paddock. A woman walked out to meet him and ruffled his blond hair.
Shannow scanned the fields and meadows for sign of a man. At last, satisfied that they were alone, he edged the gelding out onto open ground and approached the building. The boy saw him first and ran inside the house.
Donna Taybard’s heart sank as she saw the rider, and she fought down panic as she lifted the heavy crossbow from the wall. Placing her foot in the bronze stirrup, she dragged back on the string but could not nock it.
“Help me, Eric.” The boy joined her, and together they cocked the weapon. She slid a bolt into place and stepped onto the porch. The rider had halted some thirty feet from the house, and Donna’s fear swelled as she took in the gaunt face and deep-set eyes shadowed under the wide-brimmed hat. She had never seen a brigand, but had anyone asked her to imagine one, this man would have leapt from her nightmares. She lifted the crossbow, resting the heavy butt against her hip.
“Ride on,” she said. “I have told Fletcher we shall not leave, and I will not be forced.”
The rider sat very still, then removed his hat. His hair was shoulder-length and black, streaked with silver, and his beard showed a white fork at the chin.
“I am a stranger, lady, and I do not know this Fletcher. I do not seek to harm you—I merely smelled the bacon and would trade for a little. I have Barta coin and—”
“Leave us alone,” she shouted. The crossbow slipped from her grip, dropping the trigger bar against her palm. The bolt flashed into the air, sailing over the rider and dropping by the paddock fence. Shannow walked his horse to the paddock and dismounted, retrieving the bolt. Leaving the gelding, he strolled back to the house. Donna dropped the bow and pulled Eric into her side. The boy was trembling, but in his hand he held a long kitchen knife; she took it from him and waited as the man approached. As he walked, he removed his heavy leather topcoat and draped it over his arm. It was then that she saw the heavy pistols at his side.
“Don’t kill my boy,” she said.
“Happily, lady, I was speaking the truth: I mean you no harm. Will you trade a little bacon?” He picked up the bow and swiftly nocked it, slipping the bolt into the gully. “Would you feel happier carrying this around?”
“You are truly not with the Committee?”
“I am a stranger.”
“We are about to take food. If you wish, you may join us.”
Shannow knelt before the boy. “May I enter?” he asked.
“Could I stop you?” the boy returned bitterly.
“With just one word.”
“Truly?”
“My faults are many, but I do not lie.”
“You can come in, then,” said the boy, and Shannow walked ahead with the child trailing behind. He mounted the porch steps and entered the cool room beyond, which was spacious and well constructed. A white stone hearth held a woodstove and an iron oven; at the center of the room was a handsomely carved table and a wooden dresser bearing earthenware plates and pottery mugs.
“My father carved the table,” said the boy. “He is a skilled carpenter—the best in Rivervale—and his work is much sought after. He made the comfort chair, too, and cured the hides.” Shannow made a show of admiring the leather chair by the woodstove, but his eyes followed the movements of the petite blond woman as she prepared the table.
“Thank you for allowing me into your home,” said Shannow gravely.
She smiled for the first time and wiped her hand on her canvas apron. “I am Donna Taybard,” she told him, offering her hand.
He took it and kissed her fingers lightly. “And I am Jon Shannow, a wanderer, lady, in a strange land.”
“Be welcome, then, Jon Shannow. We have some potatoes and mint to go with the bacon, and the meal will be ready within the hour.”
Shannow moved to the door, where pegs had been hammered home. He unbuckled his scabbard belt and hung his side arms beside his coat. Turning back, he saw the fear once more in her eyes.
“Be not alarmed, Fray Taybard; a wandering man must protect himself. It does not change my promise; that may not be so with all men, but my spoken word is iron.”
“There are few guns in Rivervale, Mr. Shannow. This was … is … a peaceful land. If you would like to wash before eating, there is a pump behind the house.”
“Do you have an ax, lady?”
“Yes. In the woodshed.”
“Then I shall work for my supper. Excuse me.”
He walked out into the fading light of dusk and unsaddled the gelding, leading him into the paddock and releasing him among the other three horses. Then he carried his saddle and bags to the porch before fetching the ax. He spent almost an hour preparing firewood before stripping to the waist and washing himself at the pump. The moon was up when Donna Taybard called him in. She and the boy sat at one end of the table, having set his place apart and facing the hearth. He moved his plate to the other side and seated himself facing the door.
“May I speak a word of thanks, Fray Taybard?” asked Shannow as she filled the plates. She nodded. “Lord of Hosts, our thanks to thee for this food. Bless this dwelling and those who pass their lives here. Amen.”
“You follow the old ways, Mr. Shannow?” asked Donna, passing a bowl of salt to the guest.
“Old? It is new to me, Fray Taybard. But yes, it is older than any man knows and a mystery to this world of broken dreams.”
“Please do not call me Fray; it makes me feel ancient. You may call me Donna. This is my son, Eric.”
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