In that instant, with the woman's silent glimpse into the shadows, Sahaal grasped the magnitude of his problem. This pair were not operating alone, he saw, not a protesting minority amongst a whole. No, they were representatives — great warriors elected to present the clan's discontent to its leader.
'
His rule was not as secure as he had thought.
He
'What heresy is this?' he roared, brandishing his claws. 'What
The two warriors shivered on the floor and he advanced towards them, step by murderous step.
'What pitiful circumstance has brought me to
He shrieked the words until the cavern shuddered and, oh — it hurt to claim such a link to the withered god, but...
But oh, it was
'Kneel!' he bellowed, and the young warriors obeyed without thought.
He would kill them, he resolved. He would behead them so the entire gang could watch, and all of them would know the price of disquiet, the consequence of insolence. They would obey him, or face his wrath.
It was an inelegant ultimatum — he knew that as soon as he decided it. He needed the Shadowkin as his allies — the recovery of the Corona depended upon it — and if he must kill nine in every ten to secure the obedience of those that remained, his army would be small indeed.
But there was no other choice, no option but to let fly his rage, to hack off these two heads — and any other that dared question him.
Yes. It was necessary.
And secretly, silently, a dark portion of his mind giggled to itself and said:
He raised his claws and felt the silence of expectation: a hundred eyes regarding him from the shadows, a hundred gasps burning in his ears. The condemned warriors moaned low in their throats, and—
And a commotion arose across the still waters, faint lights wending their way towards the distant shore.
It was the scouts Sahaal had left in the Steel Forest, and with his vision sharpened he could see they were carrying a survivor.
It was Condemnitor Chianni, and as the rafts slunk out from the rusted island to return her to her tribe, her fevered moans rose in volume to echo through the swamps.
'H-hail!' she yowled, delirious. 'Hail the Emperor's angel!'
It was like a shaft of light, striking Sahaal in his moment of rage. His thin lips curled in a smile and slowly, banishing that secret voice to the rear of his mind, he sheathed his claws.
Obedience could be secured through loyalty as well as terror. Sahaal's master had understood that.
Condemnitor Chianni was loyal to him. They were loyal to her. It was not a complex manipulation.
'Behold the Emperor's mercy!' Sahaal said, inventing wildly. 'He spares those that are wise, and offers redemption to those who are not.' He waved the condemned warriors away, returning to his throne.
'
'You should listen to your leader,' Sahaal said to the warriors' retreating backs, repressing a chuckle at his own good fortune. 'She is far wiser than you.'
Her leg had been peppered by shrapnel from the explosion, and her throat crushed by an inelegant swipe of a vindictor's maul. When her bearers reached the foot of his throne she nonetheless insisted upon standing, staggering as best she could to kneel before him.
'My lord,' she croaked, voice forever changed by the bruise across her neck, 'I am gladdened to see you. I feared the worst when I awoke to find the tribe gone.' Her eyes blinked with joyful tears. 'Emperor be praised that they — and you — are safe.'