In a Time of Treason


In a Time of Treason @page { margin-bottom: 5.000000pt; margin-top: 5.000000pt; } SIGNS BEFORE SAILING Durand climbed a greasy stair into a tower some long-dead lord of the Burrstones had cobbled onto the giants’ old walls. The best way into the old beacon tower was a half-hidden door near Lamoric’s own chamber, far easier to reach from inside than out. Around one turning, he found a landing and a crumbling door. A glance through the solitary arrow slit showed him the courtyard a dozen fathoms below the rickety tower. Servants darted through the rain, brown as mice. Durand shoved the crumbling little door wide" "And got a face full of furious, smothering confusion. Dark shapes beat his head and warding arms. Hard hooks and needles shot past him and gushed from the arrow loop behind. He pitched on his shoulder, half-falling from the landing"countless birds stormed between the battlements of Burrstone Walls. Starlings. And he was left, sitting on the stairs as feathers fluttered down around him like snow. śHells,” he snarled. TOR BOOKS BY DAVID KECK In the Eye of Heaven In a Time of Treason IN A TIME OF TREASON David Keck A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK NEW YORK NOTE: If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as śunsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this śstripped book.” This is a work of fiction. All the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. IN A TIME OF TREASON Copyright © 2008 by David Keck All rights reserved. Edited by Patrick Nielsen Hayden Map by David Cain A Tor BookPublished by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC175 Fifth AvenueNew York, NY 10010 www.tor-forge.com Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC. ISBN-13: 978-0-7653-5170-8ISBN-10: 0-7653-5170-6 First Edition: February 2008First Mass Market Edition: May 2009 Printed in the United States of America 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 FOR ANNE Acknowledgments For their timely insight and encouragement, I am grateful to friends, loved ones, and colleagues, including Chris Friesen, Darren Lodge, Howard Morhaim, and Anne Groell. IN A TIME OF TREASON ó Fifth year of Ragnal’s reign on the Hazelwood Throne. ó ó Two hundred and sixtieth year after the Fall of the Burning City. ó 1. A Necklace of Millstones Durand Col peered up into the vault of Heaven. At long last, the weather had broken, and now was his chance to escape. His heart jumping, Durand plunged into the gloom of the old stable. His gelding stood with mud to its belly but still looked fit to travel. He would talk to Coensar. He would bid the others goodbye. And he would go. Beyond the narrow yard of Burrstone Walls the roads were drying. With a little luck, he could put Deorwen and Lamoric and the whole mess behind him. He turned back to the castle yard just as the Heavens opened and the rain thundered down. śHells,” he said. Luck and the weather were not on his side, and so this would be another day to avoid Deorwen, and another hour to keep from Lord Lamoric’s hall. He had a winter’s practice at both. As he stared into the drenching sky, a voice startled him, close and croaking out, śDurand Col, it is the day and hour of the Accounting. . . .” It might have been the Voice of Doom, but it was only Father Odwy, the manor priest. The dour old man scowled up at Durand, rain streaming from a beard long enough to tuck in his belt. He was already turning before Durand could make an excuse. The old devil loved his rituals. śFather, I am sure that one knight more or less will make no"” A piping whistle escaped the man’s nose and he set a pair of prodigious fists on his hips. śYou are the one called Durand, yes? You are part of His Lordship’s household. A knight, I’m told. And every man of the lord’s household must attend before we may begin. It is the Custom. Every man if he must be carted or carried. You’re meant to have been at supper. We’ve already prayed the Sunset. You, sir, are wanted in the bloody hall.” As the fearsome priest spun on his heel, Durand shot a glance toward the castle gates. He could make out a glimpse of light and freedom from beyond the walls"and the guard pacing across it. Burrstone Walls made a man feel small. The locals said there were giants at the founding of the ancient pile: chill kings who slipped off into the Halls of Silence in the days before the High Kings came east. It certainly had the look of a giant’s tomb. Whoever built the place had hollowed a stone hill by the river, and now the gutted heart of the old hill was the castle’s long courtyard"more a quarryman’s pit than a yard. Where Durand stood at the bottom of it all, he might have been a worm on the floor of a stone coffin, squinting up through a crack in the lid. He had spent the winter Moons sleeping on damp rushes in the manor buildings that huddled at the bottom of this stone tomb: the seat of Sir Lamoric, debtor Lord of Burrstone Walls. Shaking his head, Durand followed the priest. THE FEASTING HALL of Burrstone Walls was a dank cavern of a place. As Durand stepped in, the assembled household turned his way: This is what had become of the glamorous knights of last autumn’s Red Knight game. Towering Sir Ouen, built like carthorse, with his gilded leer and haystack beard. Stalwart Guthred the shield-bearer, scowling round the thick knuckle of his prodigious nose. One-eyed Sir Berchard, bald and bearded as an innkeeper, with tales of a hundred battles. Sneering Badan, a balding wolf in knight’s breeches. And Coensar, Durand’s captain"like a father since Durand left home. These were men who had saved a kingdom and caught a rebel in his own trap. All sitting like owls in this dripping barn of a hall, waiting on Father Odwy’s Accounting. At the head of the hall, Lord Lamoric fidgeted, and Coensar raised an amused eyebrow at Durand’s entrance. At least, Durand thought, Lady Deorwen was not there. Odwy had hauled tables into a horseshoe with Lamoric trapped in the lord’s seat at the top and himself standing in the middle of it all. Durand slid onto the heel of one bench by one-eyed Berchard. śStill here, are you?” said the grizzled knight. śAin’t seen you sit down to supper in a fortnight. You"” Father Odwy twisted and managed a hard look that clapped the old knight’s jaw shut as surely as a good slap. Again the priest’s nose was whistling. śIt is time,” he said, smearing the rain from his face with broad fingers. śThe men of the household are gathered. The bailiff and reeves have been feasted, meat and wine.” He turned to three squat men at the opposite table. All three grunted a nod. For a few moments then, there was silence"and dripping. As the silence stretched, the priest raked his sheep-yellow beard and, finally, raised a tufted eyebrow at Lamoric. śFather, don’t wag your bristles at me. I’ve been pacing this old barn since the Paling Moon, and from the first moment"” But Lamoric stopped himself, taking a breath. śIt’s my turn, is it?” he said. śLordship,” croaked the priest. Lamoric covered his face. śHow does it run? What am I to say?” śBy the Silent King of far Heaven . . .” the priest began. Lamoric raised his hand, and turned to the three villagers. śBy the Silent King of far Heaven, by his Queen, by the Warders at the Bright Gates, by the Champion, by his lance, by the chains of the Chainbreaker, by the Maiden of the Spring this Lambing Moon, reeves and bailiff, you must swear to speak no falsehood on this day of the Accounting.” The priest nodded, turning to the first of the villagers. śOdred the Miller, bailiff to His Lordship’s manor of Burrstone Walls?” śAye,” the man grunted. śI swear.” śOdric, dock master, reeve of Burrstone Landing?” śAye, Father. Lordship,” said the next. śI swear it.” śOdmund, formerly quarryman, now reeve of Burrstone Pits?” śAs you say,” said the last. śI swear.” śOdred, Odric, and Odmund, Father?” asked Lamoric. The priest let Lamoric’s question pass and pressed on. They kissed a massive Book of Moons to seal their oaths, planting their lips on a patch of the heavy cover burnished to a high shine by a thousand Accounting oaths. And the muttered account began. It was the Lambing Moon, the eve of First Waning, and so the reeves and the bailiff numbered the spindly additions to Lamoric’s flock and enumerated those that had frozen; they announced that a very few calves were expected; they reported that the winter crop in all fields ś ’twixt Pit and the Burrstone Coppice” had flooded, frozen hard, and would need plowing under for reseeding. It went on. Durand kneaded his face. All winter, Lamoric had been pacing Burrstone Walls like a dog in a kennel. He was trapped and smothered in the backwater fief. They all were. The year before, the young lord had planned to show the great ones of the kingdom that he was more than the spoiled second son of the Duke of Gireth. Fighting as the nameless śRed Knight,” he’d led his hand-picked band of men from tilt to tilt until they were fighting before the king at the cliffs of Tern Gyre. But, at Tern Gyre, there had been more at stake than one man’s reputation. In the end, Lamoric and Durand and the others managed to scotch a rebellion. The king kept his crown, and the rebel duke"Radomor of Yrlac"was left to slink home, looking like a fool. The whole adventure ought to have made their fortunes, but times were hard for kings in Errest, and Lamoric had only kept the Burrstones through weighty loans from his elder brother in Acconel. And with grim winters like these, a hundred years must pass before Lamoric could repay the debt. The game was over. A pauper lord could not keep a troop of knights. The men must spring from him like fleas from a dead hound. śAnd last night,” mumbled Odred Miller, bailiff to Burrstone Walls, śOdwin’s lad Gil saw the frogspawn in the quarry at Burrstone Pit.” Lamoric twisted in his chair. śFrogspawn?” Odred Miller grunted affirmation. Lamoric turned to the priest. śWhy in Heaven’s name would this man"Odmund Miller?"report the carnal activities of these creatures to me?” They had ridden to Tern Gyre. They had fought the Duke of Yrlac and saved the Evenstar Crown for the king anointed by the Patriarchs. śAre we keeping a flock of amphibians for"” śFrogspawn is the customary sign, Lordship. In the pit. Frogspawn being seen, the villagers will make the teams ready for the Plow Chase. The children climb down to look for it. This year the Chase comes later than most, but tomorrow Walls, Pits, and Landing will set their best teams against each other to"” śI see.” śAnd this is Miller Odred. Miller Odmund died in my father’s day, buried with his quern and apron in the last years of old King Carondas.” Lamoric mashed his hands over his eyes. śA man to be envied, that Odmund Miller.” The reeves and bailiff exchanged glances: a slow matter involving much blinking of dark eyes. The list went on. śThe damp spoiled the seed rye in Burrstone Walls, the great quarry at Burrstone Pits has flooded to one fathom’s depth at the place of deepest delving,” said one reeve. śI find that I cannot breathe some days,” said Lamoric. śWe dined with princes and patriarchs. It is like the bottom of a well.” But the Burrstone men did not hear him. They pressed on with plowshares bought, dung carted, millstones to be cut, iron bought for mallets and chisels, and willows felled. śAnd,” said Odwy, śthere is the matter of the king’s writ, just arrived today.” Lamoric shot upright. śYou’ve had a king’s writ waiting on bloody frogs?” Just then something creaked on the landing high over Lamoric’s shoulder. Durand glanced and felt his heart stumble, for Deorwen had stepped from her chambers and stood now above the hall: Deorwen with her dark eyes, her petal lips. Pale as an idol above its shrine she stood. All thought of king’s writs flew from Durand’s mind as he spun in the flicker of her glance. Her hair"the gleaming red weight of it"was smothered in a married woman’s veil. And Durand knew that he was mad, for who but a madman would linger so near his master’s wife and hope to be loyal? Every glimpse of her was treason. He could not breathe. When Durand managed to look away, he found Berchard and Ouen peering at him, gauging his mood for signs of past troubles returning. śThe Writ of the Beacons,” the priest was saying. He fumbled among scrolls and catch-pots, finding a scroll. śHere,” he said. A red gobbet of sealing wax spun on a bit of ribbon. Deorwen was about to slip back through the chamber door, vanishing. śBy the Lord of Dooms, man, what are you waiting for?” Lamoric followed the priest’s glance to his wife. śDeorwen!” She stopped. śI thought I’d"” śYou’re better are you?” She must have come up with some excuse to avoid the feast. śWell come and hear! It seems the king knows where we are, after all. The good father is just telling us what orders have come from the palace. And then, Heaven willing, we will learn more about the matter of the frogspawn.” Reluctantly, Deorwen descended into the hall, while Durand kept his eyes from the twitch of her skirts. śLadyship,” said the priest, bobbing. śGo on, Father. Let’s hear it,” said Lamoric. The priest scratched, and then read, ś ŚTo celebrate the anniversary of his coronation, Ragnal, King of Errest, Bearer of the Evenstar Crown, Heir of the Hazelwood Throne, commands that every beacon from the Blackroot Mountains to the Westering Sea, from the Winter Sea to the Bourne of Jade, be lit so that this good news can march from the Mount of Eagles in Eldinor to every corner of the realm, every prominence crowned with fire, the whole kingdom shining like the stars in the Vault of Heaven.’ ” Deorwen took up her place at her husband’s side, a red wisp curled against the pale skin of her neck. And Durand shut his eyes. With better weather, he would have been on the road and gone by now. A stronger man might have dared flooded roads and cold nights long ago. śFather,” said Lamoric, straightening, śwhat do those in the Mount of Eagles wish from us down here in the damp of Burrstone Walls?” śEvery beacon in the kingdom must be put in order for First Sight of the Sowing Moon.” Lamoric dropped into his seat. śBeacon?” śShould Errest be attacked, a message of fire can stride the high places of the kingdom from the Mount of Eagles to every corner of the realm.” śAnd so Burrstones is counted among the high places of the kingdom. I confess surprise.” śWhite Osbald is Watcher of the Beacon Tower,” said the priest. śThe pale fellow with the pink eyes?” śTen generations have passed since the last invader threatened.” The priest scratched his beard with another faint whistle. śIt may need seeing to.” Durand opened his eyes"and found Deorwen looking back at him. Her eyes trembled, brown and shadowed. He could stay no longer. śI’ll go,” said Durand. Curious faces turned his direction. śI’ll see how this beacon looks.” As he made to step from the hall, conscious of what a fool he looked, a crash echoed in the courtyard: a sound full of iron rings and the clatter of an axe handle. Down the long yard, he saw the castle’s gatekeeper land on his armored shoulders. Someone was coming. Durand closed a hand on his sword’s grip, and"along with every armed man in the hall"braced himself. śAnd,” conceded the priest, śthere is a messenger.” śLord of Dooms . . .” Lamoric said. A blade in his hand, he looked to tall Coensar, his captain. The priest said, śWe could not delay the Accounting any further just because some errand boy"” śAre you mad, priest? You’ve left him out in this rain? Who is it?” śHe has had the gatehouse for shelter. But there was no time to ask his name. The Accounting was already"” A tall figure stalked toward them down the courtyard. 2. The Eagle Summons Lamoric tumbled from his seat while Durand planted himself in the doorway; the stranger could swat village gatekeepers aside, but Durand planned to be a little more stubborn. The towering man stepped over the threshold, the sopping weight of cloak and hood outlining a broad, straight frame. A big, black gauntlet pulled his hood aside. And the man gave his head an absent scrub that set gray hair standing like a fallow crop. Over Durand’s shoulder, Lamoric gasped. śGeridon?” Gray eyes glinted like ice above a wry smile. śLordship.” He gave a nod to Lamoric’s captain. śSir Coensar. Beg pardon for any hurt I’ve caused your man at the gate, but I’d had enough of waiting.” Before them stood Sir Geridon, Champion of Gireth: a man who had laid out some of the best men in the Atthias. Durand had seen him a thousand times in the hall at Acconel. The man had spent a generation keeping drunkards and hot-heads in line in the old duke’s hall. Durand stepped aside as Geridon lowered himself to one knee, a grimace flickering. śWhat does Father want of me, Sir Geridon?” Lamoric asked. śLordship, it’s your brother I’m speaking for.” śLandast.” Lamoric blinked. śYes. I suppose that is always more likely. I hope he does not expect repayment of his loans to me.” He glanced to Coensar. śIf the reports of these Burrstone men are any guide, we shall both be old men before I can free myself of his kindness.” Geridon frowned briefly. śNo, Lordship. Your brother’s spoken of none of this in my hearing. Keeping it quiet, is my guess. It’s other business I’m on. The king’s asked that your father and all the Great Council ride up to Eldinor to feast his anniversary. It’s been five years since he was crowned. Did the writ find you here? Burrstone Walls is on the Beacon Roll. . . .” He saw the paper dangling in Odwy’s hand. śHis Highness asks that in honor of the day these great men come, either in person or through someone who represents their blood, to renew their homage oaths, and Śreaffirm’ that our Ragnal is king in Errest and liege lord of them all.” śAnd my father is not fit to travel to Eldinor?” śNot no more, really. And your brother’s picked up where the old man left off, running this and that. All of these responsibilities? He reckons he cannot leave them unattended.” As the facts took shape in Lamoric’s mind, the tendons stood in his neck. śLet me see if I have you, Sir Geridon. Brother says that I must"must mind you"leave the Burrstones to travel to Eldinor where I must present myself before King Ragnal and his entire court?” A crooked grin spread on Lamoric’s face. śHe’s asking, Lordship,” said Geridon. Father Odwy had both fists in his beard, and looked ready to do himself some injury. śLordship. The Accounting. We must finish.” śAye, best get on with it,” said Geridon, standing. śI return to Acconel with your answer.” He pulled a scroll from his surcoat. śYou’ll find here some words for the king and council, Your Lordship. From your father.” Lamoric nodded, eyes shining. śWe must be quick,” he reasoned. śA boat is the only way, so a small party. No horses. I tell you this will make us once more! The heroes of Tern Gyre: Coensar, Ouen, Sir Durand.” An involuntary gasp escaped Deorwen’s lips. Lamoric caught her arm, giving it a shake. śAnd His Highness will meet my wife as well. We sail for Eldinor tomorrow after First Twilight!” Durand found the mirror of his own horror in Deorwen’s face. The Burrstones would seem like oceans and continents compared to a tiny boat. They would be side by side for weeks. As Durand stared up at Deorwen, he found that Geridon had ducked close by his ear. śDon’t think I didn’t see you there, boy. I heard what happened last year with that land your father meant for you. Still, maybe this jaunt’ll sort something out, eh?” He winked and tugged his sopping hood back in place. śDon’t like to be away. It’s dark times. Keep your eyes wide, and stick by old Coensar. He’s been fighting ages. Knows what he’s about.” 3. Signs Before Sailing Durand climbed a greasy stair into a tower some long-dead lord of the Burrstones had cobbled onto the giants’ old walls. The best way into the old beacon tower was a half-hidden door near Lamoric’s own chamber. The old tower was black as a barrel, and Durand could only grope his way upward, climbing like a child while a stream of rainwater made a cataract of the stairs. Around one turning, he found a landing and a crumbling door. A glance through the solitary arrow slit showed him the courtyard a dozen fathoms below the rickety tower. Servants darted through the rain, brown as mice. If a man stoppered the gatehouse, it looked as though the great courtyard would fill like a horse trough"a good place for drowning. Durand shook his head. It had been a long winter. Their glamorous brawling under the Blood Moon had left Lamoric a lord of pits and hovels, destitute but for his brother’s charity. All winter the young lord had walked the halls of Burrstone Walls unable to sit or sleep, Deorwen looking half-mad. His coffers were empty, his knights must leave him, hope was gone, and the rain and snow had kept the whole lot of them mewed up in a few damp rooms with men like Odwy and the Custom of the manor. Durand thought back to the night when he first set out on his own, and the promises that had been made to him. He’d heard rapping in the dark, and, in a well in the midst of the castle yard, he’d found one of the Powers of Heaven waiting for him: the Traveler. A giant in rags with silver-penny eyes and a forked staff that shook the world. As Durand left his father’s hall, that Power had foreseen love, glory, and a place in the world for him. The winter had got him wondering. Durand shoved the crumbling little door wide" "And got a face full of furious, smothering confusion. Dark shapes beat his head and warding arms. Hard hooks and needles shot past him and gushed from the arrow loop behind. He pitched on his shoulder, half falling from the landing"countless birds stormed between the battlements of Burrstone Walls. Starlings. And he was left, sitting on the stairs as feathers fluttered down around him like snow. śHells,” he snarled. It seemed that the tower was a coop for every starling for ten leagues and they’d all been inside to wait out the rain. Durand pushed his way into a white-crusted room whose every crevice was chinked with straw and feathers, and followed a caked ladder to a trapdoor among the ceiling beams. In the rainy gloom above, dim trees bristled for acres beyond the walls. He had just made out the dark silence of the Maidensbier flowing below when something far too near shrieked to life. Durand tottered on the edge of the trapdoor, fighting his blade into the darkness. Right by the door, a man of some sort screamed like mad, all white forearms, knees, and elbows. It was all Durand could do to stop himself falling down another set of stairs. śHost of Hell!” Durand snarled. But it seemed that Durand’s words"and the hulking shape of Durand atop the dark tower"were too much for the cowering creature. The pale man scrambled for the battlements, looking as if he meant to throw himself over the brink. śWhat are you doing?” said Durand. śI’m Osbald. I’m Watcher!” It took him a moment to remember. śAye. Osbald. Right.” He held out a calming hand"in part to catch his balance. śYou aren’t to come up here,” said White Osbald. śToo late for that.” Durand scrubbed his neck. śHow do you get past the bloody birds?” śBirds?” śDownstairs.” White Osbald grimaced in extreme discomfort. śI’m Watcher.” śYou don’t go down?” śI’m Watcher.” śRight. Daft of me to forget.” He spread his hands and sat on the floor while his heart’s wild pounding slowed. śYou think you could leave me for a while? I’m to check the beacon. Have you got firewood?” śThere.” Beyond the trapdoor, the rooftop was empty except for a massive iron fire basket. The pale man had half-curled himself round one of its iron legs. From the position, the Watcher pointed up at fagots so rotten they looked like rolls of shaggy, gray carpet. This was the firewood. śRight, Osbald. Why don’t you go down and see if you can find us some dry wood? I’ll bet that’s meant to be a storeroom downstairs. We’ll get some dry stuff up here, and it’ll be right as rain.” Osbald had uncoiled a degree or two here and there. śGo on,” Durand said. śFirewood. This here’s older than the Cradle. And we haven’t got much of a beacon without a fire. The king says we’re to light it.” śThe king?” śAnd this old stuff won’t burn.” White Osbald bobbed his head and, with a last, wary glance at Durand, swarmed down the ladder. Durand hauled another deep breath, looking out over the Maidensbier. A stick of the firewood in Osbald’s fire basket"when examined"turned out to be little more than slime and scabs. śI should never have set foot in the Burrstone,” he muttered. After Tern Gyre, he should have put a hundred leagues between himself and Lord Lamoric’s wife. Instead, he filled the dark days riding the hog-wallow tracks around the manor, keeping himself from the temptation of stray glances and chance touches in the narrow passages of Burrstone Walls. A stronger man would have said farewell to Lamoric and Deorwen and the rest back at Tern Gyre and never set foot in the Burrstones. Instead, he would now be trapped in a boat with them all and nowhere to hide. śDamn me for a fool.” He’d thought of talking with Coensar. A man like the captain would have found somewhere to sell his sword as soon as the roads were dry; he’d been fighting in the tourneys of Errest since most knights were boys, and a man felt better riding with a fellow he could trust. Now, though, it was too late for any of that, and he had to wonder if he’d ever really meant to go, if he’d planned to stay here by Deorwen forever, pining love-struck till the dripping Burrstones rotted him away. White Osbald appeared in the hatchway, his pasty face twitching with the effort of hauling a bushel basket of firewood through the trapdoor. Durand took the basket. śHere. For Heaven’s sake.” The beacon’s fire basket would take another five loads. Osbald’s hands, wide as baker’s paddles, were already shaking. śWe’ll get the next ones together, eh? We’ll need you in shape to light the thing when the time comes, right?” When they had finished lugging their baskets to the tower, the hour was late. Durand ordered White Osbald down to warm himself by the fires: he had had some of the kitchen boys start some tallow melting. A little fresh grease would make sure the old wood lit. They would lug it up and get some sleep. Tonight, he was hauling wood and melting grease. Tomorrow, they were heading for the heart of Errest the Old. He pictured King Ragnal, a caged lion of a man, in robes as heavy with gold and jewels as a Patriarch’s Book of Moons. He remembered the hop and cackle of the man’s train of functionaries. He remembered the Lady of Hesperand appearing like a Power to set the Great Council right. He remembered the fury of Radomor, the Hero of Hallow Down and usurper Duke of Yrlac. There might still be gratitude in Eldinor if they searched for it. The winter’s snows had fallen before Lamoric’s men could catch the king and bow before his benevolence. There might be lands and titles waiting. But he wondered: they had handed Radomor a defeat, but he was not dead"and neither were those two black-robed Rooks of his. Durand eyed the deepening gloom. River, bare trees, and naked fields crumbled like a landscape of cinders under the drizzle. Somewhere in the wet Heavens, thunder rumbled. He pulled his cloak tighter. He had only small problems: one fool and one heart. Under the Blood Moon, half the king’s Great Council had cast their votes for Radomor of Yrlac"the kingdom’s troubles might be large. In the trapdoor, something shuffled. Durand glanced, but White Oswald hadn’t poked his head up. Durand wondered what the king meant to prove with this little party and its hilltop candles. It seemed an empty sort of gesture. Now, light rose from the starling chamber. Durand would have to get poor Oswald started down there with a broom: a task that might take the Lambing Moon and the Sowing Moon beyond it. The light moved, and all at once Durand pictured White Oswald"with a candle and a sloshing kettle of running grease with all the clutter in that room. The mooncalf would burn the tower. Durand shoved his head into the trap. And found himself staring down upon a slender young woman. The woman had a candle in her hand, but the flame burned in slow tendrils that clung and swirled as she moved. The light it shed was the murky glow of a pond’s depths. Shadows lapped. At the touch of it, Durand’s nose and mouth were stopped with a stench of stagnant weeds. And the room around her"in the wavering green light"was not the crusted old storeroom. Neat stacks of wood shivered in alcoves where the green shafts touched. Someone had brought a rumpled pallet: the padded canvas rippled in the undulating shadow. There was a wine pot. He could not breathe. He might as well have had his head in the river. He must have made some sound then, for the maiden turned, her hair rippling like a slow streamer in the green light. Her neck was pale as a fish’s flesh. He saw the shape of her jaw. But before her eyes could fall upon him, Durand flinched from the trapdoor. There was no air in the green light of the maiden’s candle. And Durand was glad he had not seen her eyes. It took only instants for him to realize that he was not safe, even on the rooftop. The green shafts of Otherworldly light swelled between the floorboards. Heaven was a black well above him as the light reached higher and higher. In his mind’s eye, the strange woman mounted the ladder and rose in the hatchway. But then the light ebbed away, leaving him in the darkness. For a moment, he breathed in relief, then he remembered where the stairway went: to his master’s chamber. To Deorwen’s door. There was only one stairway down. Mastering himself, Durand dropped into what was now, once again, an empty storeroom. Bird shit crunched under his soles, its acid stink in his nostrils. But the greenish light still brimmed in the stairwell. And Deorwen was down below"and Lamoric and others"all a whisper from that tower door. He followed, finding the stairwell air thick with cool reeds and slime. He chased a long tendril of the woman’s hair as it slithered upon the green air and vanished into the passage before Deorwen’s door. The woman’s tresses coiled before him, alive. And her hand rested on the black face of Deorwen’s door. Durand could neither move nor breathe. The pale dome of the maiden’s forehead dropped against the wood, her eyes closed and streaming tears. Durand had no power to change a gesture. But the maiden seemed to master herself. She turned from the door. Durand shrank away, gulping air in the clammy dark of the stairs. If she returned to the stairwell, the Hells would have him in a heartbeat. But it seemed that she pressed on elsewhere, for the light in the chamber passage ebbed away. Durand followed it onto the landing high above the feasting hall. His mouth opened, and he nearly dropped his blade. The feasting hall of Burrstone Walls brimmed with visions. Long shields and rippling tapestries hung over the bare walls he knew. Familiar men lay on strange floors; wolfhounds curled where cachepots had stood. Spears leaned in bundles, and Durand knew it all for the dreams or memories of the spectral woman who drifted through. Her candle was the only light. Durand saw her falter at the distant end of the hall, her eerie candle held high at the courtyard door. And he stole after her as she stepped into the courtyard and out through the gates of Burrstone Walls. He had to know where she was going. Soon, he was following the flickering image down through the slabs and sagging earth of the Burrstones until the river moved in the dark. Durand made out a new light between stones and willows to match the candle in the woman’s hand: a slender craft along the bank. Durand opened his mouth. He knew this scene. He knew the boat: a pale thing that might have been carved by a harp-maker. He had dreamt it under the Blood Moon. Before him, the maiden caught hold of a willow, a wobble in the candle’s flame sending shivers high into the bare tendrils of the willow branches. They might all have been on the floor of the Silvermere. The woman stepped into the slim craft and sagged back. Her black curls tumbled into the water. Durand knew the tale. On the Maidensbier"then known by some forgotten name"an ancient duke’s young wife, her secret love witnessed by one of the duke’s loyal men. The young bride who drank foxglove and set herself adrift upon the river. She settled, the candle balanced on her chest. One long sleeve dangled in the water. He heard a sigh: the only sound in a mute Creation. He saw her fingers open, and knew, even as the night breezes tugged the craft into the current, that it was finished. It was just as he had seen it when Radomor or his Rooks had set Lamoric’s sister adrift"sending another adulteress to pass her family’s city in parody of this night. Boat and bride drifted downstream, light as a curl of dry leaf. Durand shook his head. Something moved behind him. On the stony bank all around, people had gathered: villagers by the dozen wrapped in hairy blankets. Most were women: mothers and daughters. To his astonishment, Deorwen stood closest of all. She wore only a linen shift, the touch of night breezes pressing the pale fabric close. śWhat are you doing here?” Durand managed. śYou see her so clearly,” said Deorwen. śThis was Vigand’s hall. Duke Gunderic went off to attend old King Saerdan. He left his bride with one of his men: Baron Vigand. They’d been close. They were meant to have won half of Gireth together. It all happened here. Aralind fell for Vigand. She was seen. Poison was the only way. They say Duke Gunderic’s ship pulled into the Handglass in time to see her pass"he among all his men, she laid out as if in a coffin.” Durand looked past Deorwen into the shadowed faces of half a village: squat and stolid women to match men like Odwy and Odmund. Deorwen glowed like a lily among the nettles. The darkness was closing thick around them. śThey see the old duke’s bride whenever there is danger for Gireth"and she’s come to our door every night since the Wandering Moon in deep winter. There is little to do but watch. Lamoric won’t listen, but neither can he sleep.” She closed her mouth a moment. śMost do not see what is right before them.” śWhat was her name?” Durand asked. śAralind, she was called,” she said, wavering where she stood. The winter had been hard. Durand nodded. śAralind.” The village women were looking one to another. śI must get back,” Durand managed. Deorwen looked down. 4. The Bittern and the Bier When Lamoric tramped from the gates of Burrstone Walls, the sopping earth was frozen. His knot of household knights yawned and stumbled after him, frost crunching under their boots. In Lamoric’s haste, poor Odwy had been made to pray First Twilight before he had seen even a trace of light in the mist. Every blade and twig bristled with needles of ice. śI love a misty morning,” said Lamoric in a puff of fog. śIt’s like Creation’s ours: a toy in our hands. We could be on islands with the rest of old Errest fallen away.” Bald Badan bared what teeth he had left, silently snarling from within a hairy twist of blanket. He looked like the wolf who had swallowed the old woman in the bedtime story. Berchard winced with his good eye. śYou’ll have to tell us when morning comes so we don’t miss it, eh? Did you sleep?” Lamoric twitched a smile. śDid you sleep at all?” Berchard pressed. Coensar’s glance was like a glimpse of blade. None of them were too pleased about Lamoric’s mad rush. śLads,” said Lamoric, śthis summons couldn’t have come at a better time. When this moon’s waned, the fighting season will be upon us. And you’d have scattered to the four winds, don’t deny it. We’ve got a windfall. It doesn’t pay to complain.” Big Ouen reached round himself to scrub at fleabites between his shoulder blades, both hands meeting in the middle of his back. He had arms like an ape. The man’s gold teeth glinted. śThere’s been little enough that pays lately.” śWe’ll be led before the Hazelwood Throne,” said Lamoric. śI’ll kneel and place my hands between Ragnal’s. There will be a feast. People will remember you. Ouen, Badan, Coensar, Durand. I hope you’ve all got decent surcoats.” The tottering procession wound its way from the cliff top of Burrstone Walls to the hovels of Burrstone Landing. The livestock was still indoors, but they passed millstones. Of the thousands cut from the old pits, some slender fraction had fetched up along the roads each year, broken. Now, wheels like moldy cheese were heaped by the hundred. Some were cracked, some split, others were lost under carpets of moss and sod. This was Burrstone. śThe blame for delay will not be laid at my feet. We must have a good look at this boat. This Bittern. Odric? Odmund? He’s told us she’s ready. And the river’s free of ice.” A few of the men passed an uneasy glance between them. Lamoric seemed more frayed than usual. Though there were stragglers all the way up the track to Burrstone Walls, Lamoric had reached the pier. A goodsized boat waited there, white and blue on a perfect mirror of still water. Durand guessed it might be forty feet from its high curling stem to the matching stern. The cliffs of Burrstone Walls cut a smooth backwater from the Maidensbier, though both cliffs and stronghold were little more than a dark suggestion in the clouds as they reached the pier. Lamoric strode out, rings shivering across the water from the dock pilings. śYou all know how hard we worked last summer. You know what it cost us. We saved a king of the Atthias.” The men were nodding warily: everyone from steely Coensar to Badan the wolf. A gangplank bridged the gap to the Bittern’s gunnel. Lamoric stepped out. śAnd now we have a message to put in his own hands.” He made to step into the boat. And a storm of birds exploded. An impossible flock of starlings roared from the hollow belly of the Bittern, filling the sky with wings and shrill cries. Lamoric lurched on the narrow gangplank, and then he was falling into the frigid water. Like one man, Durand and Coensar sprang onto the pier, reaching into the spray. Panes of ice clattered and smashed. Durand caught a flailing wrist, and with a few firm jerks, he and the captain had their shuddering lord free. śShe’ll be lighter without the passengers,” Lamoric spluttered. He hauled himself up, taking full advantage of hands and shoulders. There was a look in his eye, wary as a wild animal. śCoen,” said Lamoric, śget things started while I sort out this bloody mess. Find the ship’s master and make sure he’s got oarsmen. The bailiff’s meant to have got us provisions, the Host alone knows what he thinks that means. Frogs, maybe.” Durand tried to swing his cloak around the man’s shoulders. Lamoric scoffed. śKeep it. One of us deserves a dry cloak.” They turned to find ranks of villagers frozen. Scores and scores of men and women stood with their hands in the fist and spread fingers’ sign of Heaven’s Eye. They had seen omen heaped on omen. Lamoric stalked through them, giving them a showman’s wave. Durand watched him go, wondering what was in their master’s mind. AS DURAND AND the others fetched their gear, the village women set to smuggling iron charms aboard and wordlessly painting grease down the long curve of the stempost. Dock-hands swung provisions into the belly of the Bittern. A Burrstone man with a cap of sweat-burnished sheepskin knotted under his beard played overseer. This was Odemar the ship’s master, and he grumbled as knights looked on. He possessed the same outsized fists and squat frame as all his kin. śIt’s early to make the passage,” he grumbled, śand the Maiden’s high.” śWhat were they doing at the prow there?” said Lamoric. The village women were just bustling from the dock. Odemar seemed taken aback that his would-be cargo could speak. śIt’s the grease of nine wrens . . . Lordship.” His voice was like the grinding of stones. Berchard smiled broadly, scratching his grizzled beard. śNever drown, wrens. So they say, but you’re never meant to cause one harm, unless"” śWomen’s business,” grumbled Odemar. śI suppose,” said Berchard. śBut you don’t normally see them at their b"” śIt’s no good thing to rush a sailing.” śHost Below! Is the river free of ice?” Lamoric asked. śWas there silver enough in the purse?” Odemar’s square beard twitched as his lip twisted. śAye,” he allowed. Before Lamoric could say more, Coensar spoke up. The captain had a thumb on the pommel of Keening, his High Kingdom blade. śThen your Bittern’s first load will be men, not millstones, Master Odemar. And we will sail for Eldinor and not Yestreen down the river.” He never took his eyes from the boat. Odemar grunted assent and subsided into silence. And soon four of the men loading baggage abruptly piled into the boat, hunkering down along the gunnels. śWe’re ready?” asked Lamoric. Odemar’s beard bobbed once. śJust in time, I think.” If the man hadn’t been looking to the sky, Durand would have thought he was talking about Lamoric’s mood. Without a further word, Odemar stalked over the gangplank and benches to the stern of his Bittern. Durand and the others followed warily, catching stays and sheets to keep upright. They had no horses, no serving men, and only Guthred to play shield-bearer to them all. Durand sat down behind Coensar and felt his world contract. As long as the Lambing Moon remained in the Heavens, the whole company must live in an open boat forty feet long and a dozen feet wide. Durand snugged his traveling chest against the thwarts to make a place for his heels. Lamoric was still pacing and alternately laughing or cursing. When Durand looked up, he found Deorwen standing above the cool water, pale and beautiful as the moon. Durand stared, he was sure, like an ox over a fence. She, Father Odwy, and a redheaded sexton had come down from the castle together. Old Guthred put his hands round her waist to lower her into the boat, and she took her place beside Lamoric. śJust in time, Father,” Master Odemar grunted. Across the blue Maidensbier, the Eye of Heaven cut a seam above the bank. śWhen have I not known my time, Master Odemar?” the priest said and thumped the massive Book of Moons on the sexton’s chest"as though the boy were a lectern"throwing its broad pages wide to find his place. While the priest started a Dawn Thanksgiving for voyagers under the Lambing Moon, Berchard turned to the ship’s master. śLast sailors I knew didn’t like priests before journeys.” śSeafaring men they must have been. A river’s another thing. You’ll ask the King of Heaven to keep the river-wights at bay, but there’s no power can check the Lord of the Deep at sea, only rile him. Lordship.” The priest climbed aboard, tottering stem to stern as the poor sexton struggled to walk backward and hold the great book where his master could read it. A censor slipped its own sanctuary scent into the mist. When the priest had finished, he handed the rattling censor to his sexton. śCome now, the oil, boy,” he pressed, and the sexton set to juggling hot brass and holy book to dig a glass vessel from under his tabard. The oarsmen, even the master, slid the caps from their heads. śAnd now?” Berchard asked. śOil before water, under the Eye, Lordship,” muttered Odemar, and the priest daubed a gleaming Eye of Heaven on each oarsman’s forehead. Lamoric twisted on his bench. śIt is not as though we are sailing for the Dreaming Land.” But Berchard had untied his cap for a dab of his own before the priest was back ashore. śAre we off?” Lamoric asked. The master squinted into the dawn. śAye, Lordship.” The oarsmen hoisted their sweeps as Master Odemar took hold of the steering oar. śYou lot on the pier, cast us off.” When the boat was drifting on the cove, and gaffed out to give the sweeps room, Durand saw Odemar nod to his small audience of oarsmen"all facing the stern while their master and his passengers faced the dawn. śAll right.” And the oarsmen hauled, driving the boat across the cove, faster and faster, and, as they gathered speed, upstream. śMaster Odemar,” said Lamoric, turning, śI thought Eldinor was north. Do you mean to say I’ve been mistaken? Did old Saerdan Voyager beach his ship in the mountains then?” The ship’s master hardly spared a glance, hauling the tiller in to switch the Bittern’s prow into the current as the big river caught the boat. śOne turn sunwise,” he grunted, śLordship, to show respect to him up there.” Odemar jutted his chin for Heaven’s Eye. But the boat was caught in the fast-moving Maidensbier. They managed a few strokes upstream, and then the master let the bow fall off. The whole vessel weathervaned around the master’s steering oar, and the oarsmen began to pull in the sweeps. Oars clattered as they slid home along the gunnels. śNow, what is this?” Lamoric demanded. śWe never row downstream, Lordship,” said Odemar. Lamoric glanced to Coensar before pressing on. śEldinor is not Yestreen, you realize. It’s some distance.” śNo point rowing downstream, Lordship. Not on Maid-ensbier.” He had shoved the tiller away from himself, picking a course roughly midway between the stone banks. śYou realize that the offense we might cause by arriving too late would be difficult to"” śAye, Lordship.” As Lamoric settled back onto his bench, his wife’s hand on his arm, Durand took a last glance back: the villagers of the Burrstones looked on like boulders on a hillside. This was the second vessel most had seen leave that day. WHEN THE EYE of Heaven was high, Guthred passed around the bread and cheese, and the men fished for the wine. Master Odemar led his oarsmen, muttering, through the Noontide Lauds. Durand watched the blue and stony banks from his spot on the bench. śPuts me in mind of my youth, this does,” said Berchard, unwrapping a round, dark loaf. śUp and down the Gray Road we went, just like this"though the Gray Road’s a broader, calmer old river than this. This Maidensbier, she runs quick and cold. Puts me in mind of my poor wife, before she passed.” Berchard tore the loaf"tough as a knot of rags"while Badan waited. As Badan reached, Ouen’s long arm slithered the bread from Berchard’s fingers. śIt like guarding a merchant’s asses?” Ouen wondered, grinning with every gold tooth as he tore a bite of bread. Berchard produced a leather bottle of claret, but stopped to dig in the puckered flesh of his bad eye. śYes, aye,” he said. śThat’s all it is really. Easier. Goggling up at the woods. Past that March of Skulls. Fellwood. Some nights, you hear drumming in the hills. Summers you stew in your hauberk.” As Berchard made to open the stopper, Badan twisted the bottle from his fingers. śTeach you to keep your good eye open.” After an hour’s silence, Lamoric spoke: śHost Below, you all put me in mind of dinner round my father’s table.” Every eye on the Bittern turned his direction, some quick, some slow. Ouen lifted his thatch-straw beard in the air and again the teeth winked. śGenteel, are we?” he ventured. śNo. Not at all, in fact. It’s my brother you remind me of. Landast always had a longer arm than I. A good man, but I reached for a lot that he got first.” Durand smiled as the rest chuckled. śLikely explains more than it should,” Lamoric concluded. śYou’re younger as well, aren’t you, Durand?” Durand nodded. śMy brother’s got a head start.” Berchard pointed with his bit of bread. śYou’re both younger brothers then?” Durand shrugged. śI’d still be in the mountains else.” śWhat about you?” Berchard asked Ouen. śYou cannot tell me you have a big brother.” śI do. Eight foot if he’s an inch, the bastard.” Berchard held his hand up, calling for order. śA moment, please. Everyone before the mast. I ask you. Am I the only one here who’s eldest? Badan?” Badan scratched the long fringe at the back of his neck. śAye. I’ve an older brother in Andagis.” śHost of Heaven, two of them!” Berchard gasped. śThere’s one younger as well.” Half the men in the crew showed Badan the Eye of Heaven. śAnd you, Ladyship?” Berchard asked. Deorwen smiled: a sighing thing. śYou’ve met Moryn. I’m eldest daughter, if that discounts me.” śWe shall have to take counsel upon the matter, Ladyship,” Berchard said before turning to Coensar the Captain. śAnd you, Captain?” All eyes turned to Coensar, who stood mum for a moment, then confessed, śMy brother’s got a fine hall in Lannermoor. He often asks me up there. When I cannot refuse, I sit on a bench by the hearth fire while his wife hides the silver.” śTo those afflicted with older brothers, then, poor bastards all,” Berchard said, snatching Badan’s bottle. But Lamoric was pointing across the fat, glassy water at the far bank. śThere!” he said. śThat’s a sanctuary tower. What village do you think?” There were shrugs, and a few of the others leaned for the gunnel. Odemar shot them all a stern look as the Bittern teetered. Lamoric was still peering. śCould it be Sallow Hythe?” śA score more towers, Lordship, and up river,” Guthred corrected carefully. The rest threw names around. śRush Landing,” said Odemar, finally. There was silence down the length of the boat. śJust down the road?” śRush Landing, aye.” śThen we’ve hardly moved.” Lamoric spread his hands over the speeding river. śHow can that be?” śMaidensbier’s running quick but she bends . . . Lordship.” śYou realize I’ve no desire to offend the king? That our goal is to do precisely the opposite? A lot of blood went into gaining us the king’s favor.” The ship’s master was silent. śWhy don’t your oarsmen give a pull or two?” śWhere the Maidensbier’s carrying us, we’d best not come rushing. The river’s as full and fast as I’ve seen her, Lordship.” Durand heard a strange noise: a moaning over the water. Coensar peered forward. śThey’ll have to row when we reach the Silvermere,” Lamoric was saying. śAye, Lordship. But there is little sense in"” Deorwen was on her feet in the prow, looking around the high curve of the stempost. Durand heard a peculiar sound: a wild chiming through the belly of the boat. śWhat is that sound?” said Lamoric. The oarsmen were unshipping their oars, all at once and without any signal. śWe should not have come,” growled Odemar. śWhat?” śThe Sleepers’ Cave,” Odemar growled. śI don’t"” The Bittern lurched, sliding down a trough. There were high stone walls all around. śWhen Maidensbier’s high, she swallows the shrine in the rock at Sleepers’ Cave.” Now Berchard spoke. śWhat’re you saying? I’ve seen the Sleepers’. You couldn’t flood"” Sweeping past the gunnels went a row of rock-cut steps that might have led to a shrine’s riverbank door. You could only see the top few. śHost of Heaven,” Berchard said, astonished. śWhen the bells ring, the Maid leaves her bed,” said Odemar, śand takes another.” śI’ve seen those bells,” said Berchard. śThey must be, what? Five fathoms from the floor.” A man at the oars must turn his back on the river and face the ship’s master. Only he can see the course ahead. It is an act of faith. There was an oar for every man, and Durand was not alone as he slid his long sweep out over the water and looked into the master’s face. śPull with the others now,” said Odemar. The boat pitched, skidding two fathoms down in a heartbeat. Some of the knights looked round"they flailed with their sweeps"but not one of the oarsmen turned. śEasy,” was Odemar’s grated rebuke. Durand tried to reach and haul with the Burrstone men as the boat picked up speed, but half the time Durand’s oar beat at spray. The river thundered between high stone banks, faster every heartbeat. śHold fast, all,” snarled Odemar, fists locked on the tiller as the boat stamped and soared through the rolling explosion of the river. Then Durand heard a greater roar, and the Bittern plunged. The master heaved upon the tiller. śTogether! Hard and together. All you have. More if you’re on larboard.” Bittern lurched. Durand’s oar struck some immovable stone in the spray, kicking back into Durand’s chest like a horse. But before he could take a breath, the master was snarling, śNow, for your lives!” And those still with oars in their hands pulled. Durand hauled with the rest. Their blades clattered and flailed. śTogether!” shouted Odemar, then Durand watched the man’s face twist. His eyes were fixed on something over Durand’s shoulder. śTogether!” he screamed. And the Bittern struck. Timbers snapped with a sound like a thunderclap. Every man was on his knees, howling. Durand skidded across the plank bottom as the Bittern jerked like a fish in a dog’s jaws. śWe’re caught broadside. We must get her off the rock!” strained Odemar. Strakes and gunnels flexed like a snapped limb. Durand could see new white wood in long cracks. Coensar looked straight at him. śCome on!” Half the men were on their backsides. Water foamed around either side of a stone the size of a mill. Deorwen had been thrown into the bows. In a moment, the boat would fold around the great stone and they’d be finished. Durand and the captain fought to push the Bittern free, struggling bare-handed, sliding on wet boots till Coensar spotted the long oars floating all around them. śHere!” he said, and catching up one of the long poles, he rammed it between the gunwale and the stone. Durand grabbed hold and the two heaved. And Bittern slid"men sprawling"then she stuck fast again. Durand could feel the planks warping as he heaved. śIt must be now,” said Odemar. Coensar turned on the others. śEvery man get an oar. If you aren’t dead yet, get an oar!” And the men, awkward as foals, scrambled to jam their paddles against the stone. At Durand’s hip, Deorwen appeared, stabbing an oar down like a whaler’s spear. Durand strained with his jaws locked as white rents opened, and he didn’t know whether the Bittern would break or go free. Then she slipped once more. śPull!” Coen roared. And the boat tumbled off. Every fleck of her winter’s paint was left on the great stone as the Bittern pitched into the current, half-awash and beyond controlling. Men sprawled into the boat once more, putting the oars to their proper use. Odemar stood in the stern even still, water sloshing to his thighs. But the Maidensbier had finished with them. The cliff walls fell away, and as the channel widened, the river relaxed its grip. They rode, freezing among floating provisions and splinters, until, finally, Durand heard riverbank reeds brush the Bittern’s hull. Coensar gave Durand a wry grin. 5. The Glen of Idols The backwater cove where they arrived was a meadow at the bottom of a steep glen. Among the pines around the meadow’s edge stood stone figures, neckless and squat as tombstones: the Powers of Heaven with bulging almond eyes and sketched limbs. Under these gray watchers, Durand and the others"oarsmen and knights both"bailed enough icy water from the Bittern that the company could drag her up the bank. Lamoric took Deorwen’s elbow, bringing her ashore. And joined the others, flopping onto the turf and giving thanks to the Host of Heaven for their deliverance. But it seemed as though the Powers answered back. Strange voices hung over the valley. When Durand levered his head from the sod, he saw a row of hooded figures, as gray and strange as the stone Powers beyond them. It turned out that only nine men lived in the Glen of the Idols, and they were anchorites: monks who had shut themselves away from the world. Their knot of stone huts at the valley’s head had no rooms where a man could stand upright. There was no dining hall and no sanctuary. But Coensar persuaded the uneasy hermits to allow their party to use the idols’ meadow as a tenting ground and to cut a tree or two for new planks. Everyone pitched in, and by dusk they had settled around a bonfire Deorwen had arranged. śI reckon our Odemar’s still cross,” said Berchard. The ship’s master was thumping a makeshift plank in place with a lump of firewood. The dull report echoed around the whole valley"as did the oaths he spat when his makeshift mallet missed. These were nearly enough to make even the stone Powers flinch. śWe’ve broken his boat, and now he’s missing supper,” Berchard said. He had a gobbet of wet bread and some slimy cheese. śSay what you like about these horse-loaves. Decent bread wouldn’t hold up to a soaking like this.” Lamoric was standing. He swung his damp cloak from his shoulders and opened it before the heat. śI wonder what kind of time we’ll make now.” śI wouldn’t wonder that too near our friend,” Ouen cautioned, waving a bit of sausage. Lamoric turned the cloak, letting the flames lick steam from the wool. śNo. And he’s right. Another day or two in Burrstone would have mattered little. Now we’ll be spending the time with our stone friends here.” The statues looked down with their protruding eyes. śHusband, you will burn that,” said Deorwen, motioning to Lamoric’s cloak. śWhere did you say this was, by the way?” Lamoric asked of the company. One of the oarsmen answered, śA couple of days from Yestreen.” He remembered to doff his cap. śLordship.” śYour cloak, husband,” Deorwen repeated. śNot very far along, then,” Lamoric said, giving the cloak a swish over the fire. śEven if the boat would float. I suppose there’s little point"” The cloak caught alight: a moment of brilliance and stink beaten out with curses that threw a scroll from under Lamoric’s surcoat. They had last seen the parchment in Sir Geridon’s hand. Lamoric plucked the scroll from the edge of the flames, and then unrolled the page"mottled as a leopard with running ink. He laughed, seemingly on the edge of tears. śI could say that it is unreadable: very nearly the truth,” Lamoric said. śOf course, I had already read it before Geridon was a league down the road.” He looked to the glint of Coensar’s gaze. śLosing the thing in the river, they might have believed. I am not sure about dropping it in a fire. That might have seemed more than accidental.” Coensar had not moved, but Deorwen spoke, śHusband, I’ve seen you with this letter. It clearly plagues you. Why won’t you tell us what it says?” The men from Burrstone climbed to their feet and went to help their master. śYes. This is my father’s business with the king. Although I don’t suppose he’d see it as secret. He trusted it to me, after all.” śWhat does he say?” asked Coensar. śI am asked to present the king with a series of requests. Reasonable things. We are to ask if, after the recent vote at the Great Council, the king might waive any fees or fines due the crown for heirs taking up their birthrights, peers marrying widows under royal care. These fines provoked ill feeling in some quarters before the Great Council vote. To hearten the realm, we are to suggest that he forgive them. śHe asks"on behalf of those who voted to forgive the king’s debts"that the king provide relief from certain military obligations. So that they may defend themselves from enemies on their borders.” Lamoric shook the paper in the air. Durand noticed Deorwen putting one small hand over her eyes. śI am to tell the king, as I read this, that the Great Council dukes who voted to save the king’s own crown have a list of things they would like. He should forgive taxes, he should forget duties owed, he should let them keep their soldiers close and send him none. śMy father is a gentle old man: earnest, forthright, and pious. He will see this as a collection of kindly suggestions to prevent trouble: advice from those most loyal to him. śBut how will a man circled by every wolf in the kingdom see this? Will he note that his most loyal are whispering about his business? Will he see a long list of demands, and how they’ll empty his coffers, and leave him stripped of an army? You have seen King Ragnal. You have seen how hard-pressed he has been. You have felt his temper. How will he react, do you think?” Lamoric looked at those around the circle. śPerhaps now you would have me drop this in the fire?” The flames crackled a hand’s span from the parchment scroll. By the water, Odemar snarled a string of oaths that filled the glen. After a few silent heartbeats, Deorwen straightened. śThat man will need food, the same as the rest of us,” she murmured. śI wonder what survives of our stores?” The Bittern gleamed in the glen’s last scrap of sunlight. At the boat’s flank, Deorwen bent to speak to Odemar. The boat’s master tugged his forelock, caught like a crab against his boat’s hull by this noblewoman’s kindness. Her hair was free to flash in the amber light. Durand sipped from the wineskin as it passed, then handed the bottle to Lamoric. śMy troubles can all be traced to one day,” Lamoric said, taking a quick sip from the skin. śWe were in Evensands on the sea. My father had arranged a marriage for me when a rider tracked me down with another of his messages.” He smiled. śI remember how I was told about my wedding in the first place! Like a ghost, there was Geridon’s stubbled head in my tent as I made to step out of the flap to enter the lists at Beoran. He grins at me and says, ŚWe get to Evensands while the Weaning Moon’s shining, Lordship, and I’ll see you at your wedding.’ From one sea to another in only a few days. śI had to ask him who the girl was to be.” Lamoric raised the wineskin in Deorwen’s direction. śI was fortunate in his choice. But my father was bent on safeguarding his legacy,” Lamoric said. śHe’s not a young man. My mother’s gone. He wanted his kin and his people safe. In the east, he married Landast to Garelyn. In the west, he married Alwen to Yrlac. And I was to marry Mornaway in the north.” This was a tangle of thorns. Durand winced. śSimple enough,” Lamoric said. Gireth would have family on every side. śAnd so I found myself in Evensands, the heart of Mornaway, on the eve of my wedding. If Father had a duty for a wastrel son like me, I reckoned, I would take it with both hands. I would prove . . . whatever I thought I must prove. But then they brought the news.” By the water, the glen’s deep shadow was swallowing the Bittern and Deorwen. Odemar, now, was chatting with Deorwen"at ease and munching sausage and cheese. śMessengers from Ragnal had swept into my father’s hall. It hadn’t been a week since Geridon told me I was to be married, and the Marches were on fire. Mad Borogyn and his Heithan princes had rebelled and the Host of Errest was to assemble on the border. My father could not send Landast, his heir, off to command the peers of Gireth. But he could send me.” He sneered at himself. śSome news for the eve of a man’s wedding! Husband and commander. All of it. All at once. It was only right to mark the event"something of that sort must have been in my head. And a little skittishness on the eve of a great day. śWhen Landast hauled me out of whatever alehouse he found me in, the marriage went ahead. I remember a lot of gray faces looking back at me. śAnd so my father sent the old Baron of Swanskin Down to lead the riders of Gireth. And, in my stead, my father sent the king a bag of silver to hire a good man. I might have gone from wastrel to great man of the kingdom in a morning. Now, here we are.” Durand imagined Lamoric at peace, a man easy with his responsibilities, a man with time and sense enough to know his new wife. A great deal turned on one night’s hard drinking. Lamoric held the wineskin before his nose for a moment, then tossed it to Badan across the fire. śPerhaps a year has taught me better sense.” He drew himself up. śI should have told you. These are my worries, not yours. Message and monarch must meet, but you are not bound to follow me.” He took Durand’s shoulder, a gesture of reassurance, and rose for bed. śI tell you all: there are villages enough nearby, and you will find better men than me in most of them"brave knights of my father’s host. Each of you may take my good word to any of these men. This is my errand. I have been coward not to confess. The long winter has me desperate, I think. But you return home, find some better lord, and leave me to my fool’s errand. We’ll have a laugh about it all when I see you next.” He left with a bow, and the rest soon draggled after him to their own tents and lean-tos. Durand watched Deorwen trail across the grass to her husband’s tent. UNDER A BUNDLE of damp blankets, Durand lay with the cold mist from the Maidensbier tightening knots in his bones. He found himself thinking of Alwen, Lamoric’s dark-haired sister who’d married for peace with Yrlac. He found himself back in that tower over the gloom of Ferangore where he had caught her by the arm. Where he had stared into her desperate eyes"she might have known him from her father’s hall"and then stood guard by her door. He remembered her baby’s wails. The voices of the anchorite monks filled the Glen of the Idols. They did not simply chant the Plea of Sunset or Last Twilight, but wove one prayer into the next from hour to hour. Even after Durand had confessed his part in Alwen’s death, Lamoric had taken him in. Now, he could not get Deorwen from his mind. He should put kingdoms between himself and the man’s wife. But he could not abandon Lamoric in the midst of all this. He resolved to see Lamoric safely to Eldinor and then leave"there must be other women in the world for him. The monks’ voices mingled high above the solitary darknesses of their cells. When Durand opened his eyes, he found Deorwen crouched before him. She was always tinier than he expected. śLord of Dooms,” he breathed. śYou cannot be here.” She crouched with a glance at the darkness. śLast year, in the spring, my mother died. It took a long time. Three years of wasting, hot and pale as candles. I am the eldest daughter. It was my place to care for her while my father paced or snapped at the serving men. I lived with wise women every day. We bathed her with cloths. They spoke of signs and dooms and herbs and dreams. Near the end I would watch her eyes darting like tadpoles under the skin. I dreamt beside her. She slipped back and forth across the border of the Otherworld. It was an open door. I dreamt upon the threshold. You could see her passing. śThen she slipped a final time. It was the Sowing Moon. Suddenly she was gone. And Father said I was to be married.” śDeorwen,” said Durand. śI had seen Lamoric"at a wedding: his elder sister’s, I think. And he was far from ill-favored. I was sick to death of sickrooms and herbs and the wisdom of old women.” Deorwen took a deep breath, staring into the Heavens. śHe was so crushed when his father turned his back. He was a hollow man when his father’s host rode off under another captain. śIt’s been a year since my mother passed,” she said. She seemed very small as she walked off through the echoes of chanting. FOR AN HOUR or more, Durand lay still while monks sang and the earth froze under his shoulder. He might have been in the blackness beyond Creation, so dark was the night. And then the river shimmered. An Otherworldly light played upon the wavelets, spreading wider, until the prow of a solitary boat appeared, as light as a willow leaf. Here was Lost Lady Aralind once more with her warning for the men of Gireth that trouble was coming to the dukedom. He looked away before he had seen more. He needed no further reminders. Sometimes the Powers whispered; sometimes they roared. Lying back, he fixed his eyes on the black dome of Heaven and wondered how the old duke’s wife had managed to get around the tough bit by the falls. HE DREAMT THAT he was sleeping on a blanket spread over a thousand heaving others. Their limbs slithered and bulged against his body. When dawn shone over the far bank, Durand peeled his hair and blankets from the frost and swore. The world was white and glittering. Beyond it all, the monks were still singing; their chant had not ceased for an instant. A cord sandal tramped by his fingers. One of the anchorites wove toward the water, balancing a yoke of buckets"empty by their bobbing. Durand could hear the others singing Dawn Thanksgiving. He tore a green patch from the frosty turf and lurched after the little man. Others were stirring. śYou should not have slept here,” the monk said. śYour huts are on the only other flat patch of ground, brother.” The monk’s path had Durand trailing toward the remains of the bonfire, which suited him fine. The voice of the remaining monks still circled the valley overhead. śDo you never stop, brother?” śWe have found that we can do what we must. The Powers often arrange it so.” If Durand could get a straight answer, he thought he would help the monk with his buckets. Badan"still under a heap of rugs"crouched by the fire, jabbing the embers with a half-burnt stick. śDo you sleep?” asked Durand. śIs not Creation dreaming?” The man stopped and turned to Durand at the edge of the fire ring. His eyes were black as beads. Every inch of his face and neck was as yellow as an old bruise. śThe Wards of the Ancient Patriarchs are slipping. It is all we can do to keep them bound.” śDurand! Did I see someone by your tent yesternight? Thought I heard a voice . . .” said Badan, too loudly. The man’s leer left his eyeteeth standing like a doorjamb round the gap Durand had made for him last year. Nothing had happened, but there were ears to hear him. The monk looked at the ground. śI don’t know what you heard, Badan.” śOh, I just wondered. Midnight visitors. And sweet of voice, I thought, but who"Host of Hell!” Badan snarled, throwing himself from the ashes like he’d prodded a nest of adders. The Bittern’s folk all around the meadow stared. A few had blades in their hands. Durand was baffled, but the man’s game was done, his eyes fixed on the ashes. śI think they’re alive down there!” he breathed. Durand stepped past the monk. They had made their fire, without particular thought, in the center of the circling idols. Now, the scorched patch was a scar in the skin of turf, laying bare what had been hidden. In the hole, he saw gray shapes: a writhing of limbs. He saw fingers and elbows, soft as porridge, stirring. He saw a mass of black hair, turning"and drew back before the face could emerge from the knot of limbs. Lamoric had charged up at his shoulder, but Durand held him back. The monk teetered before them. He stood little past Durand’s belt’s buckle. śHow long have you prayed here?” asked Durand. śThey stepped from the Wards of the Ancient Patriarchs, these folk,” said the little man, nodding. śLong before, Gunderic, Saerdan’s man, fought wild sorcerers here. Creation was violated: deeply wounded. And so Saerdan’s Patriarchs bound that wound, knotting it into the vast wards they stretched across the kingdom, binding it tight"these idols mark the place"and farmers came to the glen. They lived and died here for a dozen generations. Then, after an argument with their priest, they hung that holy man among the idols. śAnd those people?” He gestured toward the shapes in the hole. śCreation is weak at such places. Torn. And with their desecration, these men thrust themselves beyond the protection of the Patriarchs, a perilous thing in such a place. There are a thousand like it in Errest the Old.” śYou’re bloody madmen!” Badan concluded. He looked ready to launch himself on the monk, but Durand got between them. Badan subsided, looking up at Durand and the men looking on. śYou’d best watch yourself,” he snarled. śI know you. I know what you’re like.” But he backed down, and Durand helped the monk throw earth over the writhing shapes. The monk touched Durand’s arm as he tossed a last shovel on. śThe wards are loosening. From the passes of the Black-roots to the Mount of Eagles. Something is on the move in the land.” 6. The Night Leap Not one man abandoned Lamoric. Before Master Odemar had finished his porridge, the knights stood by a loaded Bittern, long oars in their hands like an honor guard of lancers. This was both a show for Lamoric and something to tell Odemar that they were no longer passengers"an idea of Deorwen’s. Every back was ready to row"though Badan had needed a cuff or two from big Ouen. Lamoric clasped each man’s hand; the ship’s master simply grunted and got on board. Despite the men’s good intentions, the afternoon’s delay stretched to two or three days as they bailed the battered Bittern and hauled her out in pastures, by old mills, and among the boats of a fishing village. The forty-foot vessel weighed as much as a yoke of oxen and could be just as stubborn. At the last village, Odemar tramped up among the muddy lanes and appeared with pitch, oakum, and a pair of proper caulking irons. The men decided that he looked pleased. In the quiet stretches, they drilled, pulling starboard and larboard and śgiving way” together. By the end they could even śhold water” from a running start"breaking the boat’s drive by jamming the oars deep"or śtoss oars,” with every oar straight up. Mostly, they rowed hard. In the first hour of the fifth day, the cliffs of the Maidensbier opened and the company of the Bittern saw the silence of Yestreen and the Handglass still beyond. Seat of the dukes of Gireth so long ago, Yestreen’s dark keep now loomed over a fishing village. Durand made out the turtle-back shapes of a few score rowboats upturned below the walls. This was where the Lady of the Maidensbier had ended her journey. At Gireth’s beginning, Yestreen had been the duke’s seat and the staging ground for Gunderic and his Sons of Atthi as they carried their banners to the mountains’ feet. Now, though generations beyond counting had passed since that time, Yestreen still recalled the days before its duke departed, and the evening when its future closed before it. The shell of Yestreen stood where the Maidensbier poured into the cool depths of the Handglass. The Bittern slid onto the bay, carried by the current. Below the keel, they could see blue pebbles that must be fathoms from the surface. The air was still and cold. As the river let them go, every eye turned to Odemar. When he nodded, they rowed. THE LIGHT FAILED as they reached Silvermere itself. Rowing, every man faced Master Odemar and the high curve of the sternpost. Durand learned to read the knobs and bristles of the master’s face. He could see, for example, that Odemar’s black-button eyes were searching the shoreline gloom now, looking for a place to put in for the hours of darkness. He would soon turn the Bittern into the wind. Then the man’s eyes were jumping. His beard squirmed. Deorwen passed Durand’s elbow. Abandoning her position in the bows, she climbed over thwarts and barrels to the stern where Odemar stood with his well-worn tiller. śI know little enough about sailing, Master Odemar,” she said. śI understand that we must cross the mere to Red Winding and follow the Red Winding to Ragnal’s capital. But how is the crossing to be made?” The man hooked a finger in a tight cord he wore around his neck. śA wise man keeps the shore to windward, Ścase the mere blows up. Ladyship.” śAnd the wind’s from the northeast?” śLast while, aye. Ladyship.” śSo, around by the Halls of Silence, then.” The man nodded. śThere’s coves and bays enough to shelter for the night. So long as no one goes ashore, the old kings don’t give no trouble.” Deorwen nodded. śI suppose there are men who live under the eaves of the forest, right now, in Farona. And you’ve lived across the Maidensbier in the Burrstones.” Odemar didn’t smile, though he gave the neck cord a tug under his beard. śI’ve spent many a night in coves along that shore. Saw one of the old ones once. Tall as this mast here.” śWhat is that, by the way?” she asked, indicating the twist of leather at his neck. Odemar scowled. śThis? Cauls! They’re cauls.” śI don’t . . .” He thrust his beard forward. śA man born in the caul don’t drown so long as he keeps it by him.” śAh. And your wrists?” śCauls. Aye, Ladyship.” śYou’ve got three?” śMy brothers, Ladyship. They were ship’s masters before me.” śAnd how did you come by . . .” śThey didn’t drown, Ladyship,” he explained. The rowing had ceased. Coensar leaned on his oar. śYou’ve heard what we’re doing"the message and the oaths?” asked Coensar. Odemar scratched where beard and caul met. śAye.” śThe way we sail, will we see Eldinor before the moon’s out?” The ship’s master stepped out from behind his steering oar"just one hand on the tiller"and squinted straight up into the empty Heavens. śWe might try the night leap,” he said. Some of the oarsmen muttered. śWhat is this Śnight leap’?” asked Lamoric. śLordship. A man sets off by daylight, sighting off the lodestar to keep a straight course.” śOut of sight of land?” śAye. You set your course at Last Twilight, then press through. On the sea, you must hope to sight land then, when the Eye rises, or you’re lost. It’s different on the mere.” śAnd what of shoals and banks"” śBest done in deep water. Should be a broad enough channel west.” Durand eyed the others"Lamoric, Coensar, Deorwen"wondering whether this was what they’d had in mind. Sailing alone in the blackness. As Deorwen nodded and made her way back into the bows, Durand had a feeling she had known exactly what she was asking"and that there was no one else aboard who could have posed the question. śWell, gentlemen. It does not sound like the safe course,” said Lamoric. śI don’t think it would be fair to"” Berchard stopped him. śShut up, Your Lordship. We’re in the boat already, aren’t we?” There was laughter in the gloom. Odemar merely nodded. śStarboard bank, give way together,” he ordered, and the Bittern lurched toward Silvermere. Dimly visible, the last quarter of the Lambing Moon already hung in the Heavens. Soon it would the only light in Creation. śPick up the stroke, all,” Odemar commanded. śSlow and steady. Let’s see if we can’t get the sail to do some pulling.” THEY ROWED AS the horizon’s smudges crumbled into the mere, and stars glittered in the black waves. Before long, they were alone with the sloshing water. Durand could hear, more than see, the breeze playing feebly in the sailcloth. They dragged up some riverman’s chants. Someone was bailing. Durand could hear the comic-hollow scoop of a leather bucket. His back and shoulders ached with the relentless effort of rowing. Behind him, Badan spat and snarled. He swore when Durand’s oar crossed his. When Durand’s blade skipped a splash back at him, he threatened to stick a knife in Durand’s neck. When songs failed them, Ouen spoke. śI’ll tell you about my string of bad luck. The first man I served, I rode five years at his side"until his wedding.” śWife got a look at you, eh?” sneered Badan. śHe and his brother rode off a cliff the next morning, near as we could figure.” Berchard clucked his tongue. śMy wife was a bit like that.” śFog,” said Ouen. śLike you’ve never seen. That one was a good man. He’d been meaning to have me take over a hall and some river land. I thought I was going to be there for life.” Durand glanced over to see Ouen’s teeth wink. śThe next one, I served four years till one day we rode out hunting"too far to get back before nightfall. Rain drove us into a country shrine. And His Lordship didn’t like leaving the serving men outside, or the horses outside"or the dogs. The next day, the shrine was heaped with crap and there was His Lordship, blind and full of"what do they call those?"hives! Hives, he had. All over his body.” śYou don’t make a house of the Powers into a stable.” śOr kennel, aye. We sussed that out right away. I think it might have been a holy day too. His bloody Lordship had been dangling a young widow under my nose, but he didn’t need a tournament thug after the blinding. I remember the widow though. Her hair was that red they call strawberry"a sort of roany chestnut, like.” Deorwen laughed. śHells, Ouen,” said Badan, śyou’ve been an unlucky bastard.” śOne killed his own liege lord"accidentally with a hunting arrow"and wound up across the Sea of Thunder somewhere.” He paused. śAnother choked on a pie of"what was it?"larks, I think. Something like that. Another ordered they build him a ship up in Beoran. I’d managed to fight my way to his right hand. Lost my teeth for him. Called the ship Otter and, sure enough, she rolled over the same hour she left the harbor"just like a real damned otter. His wife, his sons, were all on board. You could see them crawling over the Otter’s belly, I swear.” Over Durand’s shoulder, Badan was cackling. śCareful what you name a ship, eh?” śThe bittern a diving bird?” Berchard wondered, but Ouen kept talking. śEvery time I feel a nice bit of land"a corner of forest, a bit of rolling valley"at my fingertips, no matter how many winters I spend stealing up on it, whisk, something snatches it away.” A cold breeze stirred over the water. The sail flapped, like something fitfully waking, then bellied out"the Bittern heeling. In the moonlight, Durand could see Odemar considering. He might ask them to pull the oars out. They might have a break from rowing. The wind freshened again, pulling creaks of protest from stays and shrouds. The Bittern heeled farther. śBank oars, all,” Odemar said, the sweeps rattling inboard at his command. śHands to the sheets. Let’s brace up. Bring the larboard in.” His eyes darted down the boat. śLet’s trim her fore-and-aft while we can. By my eye, we’re low in the bows. Make fast whatever’s loose. I don’t know what time we’ve got.” Any cheer the men felt at hauling the cursed oars out froze in their blood. The men stared from their benches, but the master scratched under the leather at his neck. There was weather coming on. Badan said, śHells.” Durand met Deorwen’s glance down the length of the boat. He had seen the mere in a storm, both aboard ship and from unshakable Gunderic’s Tower in Acconel. But now, it would be night and in this undecked boat with untrained men. He wanted to lift Deorwen out of it all, to be one of those giants from the Halls of Silence to stride with her across the mere. śHow many, Ouen?” said Durand. śThey called me Ouen of the Nine Masters for a while. Now, I don’t count. Coensar’s been trying longer than I have"but not much. There’s a little poison in hope. You can take that from me.” For an hour, they ran before the spreading wings of the storm, then the Bittern rolled through a deep trough and slipped into blackness as the Lambing Moon surrendered the Heavens to darkness. Another deep trough took the Bittern, throwing men on their knees. The wind snapped in the sail, a cold weight. śEach man, get your oar on a lanyard,” said Odemar’s voice. śIf I could see the bloody oar,” griped Badan, śI’d jam it up your"” The Bittern rose and slewed through the blackness, Durand catching an icy wave over chest and breeches. He blinked at the thunderbolt chill. He wondered how the master could keep the boat on course"then he realized. With a twist in his seat, he watched the last stars blotted out. Odemar was as blind as any of them. The master said, śIf you’ve anything loose, now’s the time to"” Another wave lifted the boat and sent it shuddering down. Durand heard a clatter from the stern, then Odemar cursing"he was likely climbing back to his feet. śWho’s bailing?” the master demanded. Deorwen’s voice answered, śI will,” from somewhere up in the bows. The sound stole Durand’s breath. His oar was alive in his hands, though all but the blade was hauled inboard. It should have been well out of the waves. Above the creak of the rigging and the splash of water, there came a new sound: a hiss across the darkness, at first far away, and then closer. Finally, a wet-gravel sleet slapped down, drumrolling over the sail. śThat’s it! No time to brail up. Mind your heads, I’m bringing the yard down.” There was a clatter of parrel bearings as the yard dropped on the forearms of the men in the boat’s waist. Tents worth of canvas filled the Bittern. śGet it in the boat!” Odemar said. śLay it down the keel.” The Bittern dove; she bounded high. śReady at the oars! And watch yourselves when the water catches them.” As Durand braced to shoot the long oar out over the waves, a tower of black water crashed over the boat. In an instant, he was off his bench and tumbling. Voices shouted and bodies collided. Just as he felt the gunnel under his hand, a weight struck him hard against it: a body. In a sick instant, he knew the body was already going over the side. He heard a voice: a high sound tumbling into the waves. All he could think was śDeorwen!” Blind, he lashed out, groping into waves and wind. The world was dark and full of storms, but there was no one there. His fingers snagged a trailing line. That was all. He hung over the gunnel, feeling his heart beating. Then the line jerked taut. He imagined a cough, snatched by the wind. The line was slithering from his fingers. He caught the hairy rope in both fists. While the others shouted and scrambled around him"all blind, no one seeing"Durand hauled for her life. Then there were gasps and scrabbling fingers. Durand reached deep beyond the gunnel, catching a fistful of cloth, and then they collapsed into the stern. śThank God . . . Deorwen,” Durand gasped. śYou’ve got the wrong girl!” Big Ouen’s laugh spluttered. śBut, Heaven help me, I’ll bloody play along if it keeps me out of the mere.” Now, it was Odemar’s turn. The two men had fallen on him. śGet to your oars! I must get the prow in the wind’s eye. Do as I say!” 7. The Winding Road They wrestled the storm through all the dark hours, rowing by touch while the Bittern flexed and twisted. As the boat crashed over the waves, they heaved, racking their oars like a dying man breathes. The wind or waves would catch the prow and throw it left or right, ready to roll the boat and kill them. Oars and gunnels bloodied their noses and blackened their eyes. Somewhere in the dark, Deorwen cringed under the same coffin-chilled waves, but Durand could not so much as see her. Though the Bittern might carry them down, he could not say a word. He could only row and hope that she would live. Then a moment came when Durand realized that he could see the rain that lashed him. Thick, pale ice hung on the gunnels and rolled on mottled waves. Odemar stood with his fists on the tiller, as he had before the light failed them. He could have been dead. Durand, twisting as he pulled his oar, found that Deorwen still rode in the bow, emptying buckets over the side. Durand shut his eyes in relief. When he opened his eyes, Ouen smacked a kiss in his direction, his beard rattling with ice. śMy hero.” Finally, Odemar’s voice croaked out. śStop. Oars out. Pointless. We could be anyplace.” The man’s breath floated in the air around his head. The swell had died, and now Creation was a still place bounded by mist. Boots scraped in the bottom of the boat as the men looked out. śSome ship’s master you are,” said Badan. There was a rattle among the man’s last teeth. śWhoreson.” śQuiet,” said Coensar. śHold still.” Now that the oars were silent, a faint lapping reached the boat from the fog: a beach or another vessel in the gray distance. śThat sounds good,” said Lamoric. Frost had stiffened panels of his surcoat. śI think we’d better get these men under shelter while it may still do some good, eh, Master Odemar?” śBut where have we fetched up?” wondered Berchard. śThat could be the Fens of Merchion, or the Halls of Silence we hear lapping out there.” śLost Hesperand, more like,” said Odemar, świth all the sternway we were making.” śOh, Hells,” snarled Badan. śFreeze or Hesper-bloody-rand. Burrstone sons of whores.” śThat storm’ll have blown us leagues, and mostly west,” said Odemar. Deorwen was still bailing. Water sloshed high around Durand’s calves, getting higher. The boat was riding low. His feet were numb. śThank you, Master Odemar,” said Lamoric. śWe need to know.” Odemar eyed his boat. śShe’s worked a seam open"more than one by the look of this flood. Best if we could get her out. Best if it was quick.” The invisible shoreline breathed in the fog, and Durand closed his eyes. Beyond the cold water smells, there was something else: wood smoke, and the sharp trickle of latrine pits. He held up his hand. śWhat’re you up to?” Badan sneered. śMen,” said Durand. Other smells joined the stronger traces: a baker’s ovens, fish in market heaps, rubbish pits, horse dung. Then they heard sanctuary bells. śThe boy’s right,” said Coensar, and Durand looked back over a boat full of grins. Every man unlimbered his oar. AS THEY ROWED in, the town became clear. A jumble of buildings and narrow alleys spread at the bottom of a slope. There were stone sanctuaries with squat towers. A river’s mouth opened. Piers reached toward them, dark across the still water. And Durand knew the place. With every stroke, he could see farther up the slope above the city. He made out ring-works under the turf. He saw trees. This was the place he first came after the old Duke of Yrlac set him free. It was here he’d come, knowing Alwen must be dead behind him. It was here he joined Lamoric’s retainers. It was here he met Deorwen in a stream with thugs looking on from the bushes. This was Red Winding at the mouth of the river of the same name. Durand shot Deorwen a look. But Red Winding was also the road to Eldinor and Ragnal’s Mount of Eagles. If it weren’t for the oars in their fists, every man would have made the Eye of Heaven. ONCE THEY’D BAILED and beached the Bittern, the huddled knot of them kissed the mud. Coensar had already found shelter, and Lamoric was already calling for steaming hippocras before his men could tumble into the low room after him. Horn-paned lanterns glowed as Coensar shook his head and smiled a crooked grin. Badan took a day’s worth of the tavern-keeper’s charcoal and tipped it into the grate. Durand sat in the clammy grip of his sopping gear, but the warm prickle of the tumbler between his hands brought him to life. He drew steam deep into his lungs, feeling galingale and cinnamon steam in the stuffy passages of his skull. A hot pie appeared on the table, and he joined the others in shoveling up gobbets of mutton and grease and whatever else with his bare hands. To the dismay of the gaunt tavern-keeper, the tavern room was soon hung with steaming cloaks and surcoats, hose and tunics"with the men, wearing nothing but their breeches, draped over every bench, groaning and cursing. Lamoric paced. Deorwen sat in the damp clouds at the fireside, shaking her head. Someone gave Durand an elbow"Ouen. śHere, look.” Guthred stood in the street door. Lamoric spread his hands. śGood, Guthred. Good. If you could listen a moment, everyone. I’ve had Guthred . . . Well, I’ve had him go round to a proper inn. He’s got you all"knight and oarsmen both"warm rooms, tubs of hot bath-water, and food and drink enough to last a week.” There were puzzled expressions around the room, and Durand looked to Coensar. The Sowing Moon would rise before a week was out. The captain raised an eyebrow. śWhen you’re finished there, you can take the Bittern back across to Burrstone Walls or Yestreen or I’ll pay Master Odemar to take you to Acconel itself. By morning, I must find a boat to get me headed downriver once more, but I"” At this, the men finally shouted him down. śIs this your clever way of telling us we’ve got to leave tomorrow morning?” said Berchard. śIt’s no game. Guthred’s put silver in that innkeeper’s fist.” śWell,” said Berchard. śThat’s coin wasted. Can you get it back off him, Guthred?” Coensar was smiling as Guthred rubbed his heavy nose. śNo.” Ouen filled his lungs. śMaybe someone else should give it a try, eh? What do you think?” śWon’t do no good. I never gave the innkeeper a clipped penny.” Lamoric turned. śGot stopped by an old clothes man in the next lane. He’s got it all now. The stuff’s mostly patchwork, but there’s enough, and it’s dry.” There was a great shout, and again Coensar smiled his crooked grin. 8. To Race the Moon They followed the Red Winding down among the ruddy manors of the lowland lords. Hedgerows and towers, monasteries and mills passed beyond the gunnels while cottars stared, alien as their beasts. To nearly every soul on the river, Lamoric called, śHow far to Eldinor?” and always the distance was a little farther than it must be. They must reach the city by First Sight of the Sowing Moon; they pulled hard. Collapsed on one more meadow bank as nightfall drove them from the water, Durand heard Berchard and Guthred in anxious conversation. The two were peering at the horizon. śNo,” said Guthred. śThat’s where she would rise.” śBut we have another night!” said Berchard. Durand levered himself onto one elbow. Other bodies around the ring were rising from the grass. Deorwen spoke for them all. śWhat is the matter?” śThe Lambing Moon’s gone,” said Berchard. śIt’s calends now. This is the night with no moon.” A few of the men around the ring swore. You didn’t camp between the moons. śAnd we’re about to lose the last of the light,” Guthred added. śAnd here we are bedded down on a riverbank.” The threat was real. On calends night, after one moon and before the next, the Banished were restless. The Daughters of the Hag poked their noses into cradles. Things lurked under blackthorn bushes. Washers lingered by the river. śWe set watchers through those nights,” said Deorwen. śThe Burrstones lit hag fires. We will have to get everyone under shelter.” śWait!” said Lamoric. śIf this is calends, the moon will rise tomorrow! We have leagues to travel yet. We cannot go scuttling under cover now. Why not get back on the river?” Coensar spoke out, soberly. śThere was a sanctuary tower up the hill, if there’s a sexton still about, we should get in.” śI’m willing to find a way in, with or without a sexton,” said Badan. śThey will sight the Sowing Moon tomorrow,” Lamoric declared. śWe must be in Eldinor at dawn the day after. There’s no time. We’ve no chance at all if we don’t reach the Mount of Eagles by then.” The men were eyeing the darkness, imagining it populated with slinking things. śLordship,” said Coensar, śwe’re losing the light.” śAll right,” said Lamoric. śAll right.” They left the boat behind and darted for the hilltop sanctuary, stumbling through black hedgerows and rutted tracks. The small priest who appeared at the sanctuary door darted back in horror as a company of armed men stepped out of the night. He did, however, allow them inside. With a wary glance, the sexton closed the door on them and the sanctuary, allowing them only one smoky lamp"a dozen men in the wobbling pool of one little flame. As the men sprawled on flagstones as cold as winter graves, Lamoric paced in and out of the darkness. śThe king will understand,” Deorwen tried. Lamoric did not even glance up. śI ought to have told my brother to take the message himself. It seems I am doomed to be an object lesson to the kingdom. Mothers will point at my tarred skull: see, children, how vanity and pride drew Sir Lamoric from the safety of his millstones to his shameful end.” śWe could go no farther,” said Deorwen. śThe day was done.” śPerhaps there will be a little pageant.” Lamoric clawed his hair. śThey could work in my ŚKnight in Red’ business. I think I would like that.” śSit, Lamoric,” she said. śRest while you have the chance.” śSorry to have made you wait, Majesty,” continued Lamoric. śBut I have a few excellent notions about how you should king it here in Errest. I think you’ll find it’s just a few simple blunders you’re making. I’ve got a list.” śDon’t worry, Lordship. We will get you to Eldinor in time, you watch us,” said Ouen. śCome dawn we’ll really put our backs in. I’m not sure Badan’s quite been pulling his weight yet.” Badan cursed the big man, showing the black gap of his missing teeth. Lamoric crouched by the flame. śBirds will pick out my eyes.” śWe’ll set out again as soon as there is light,” said Deorwen, śand we’ll row straight through to the docks at Eldinor. That is what these men are saying, husband.” She reached for him, but he stood and paced again. Shaking heads, the rest subsided in the dark, the smoky lamplight picking out the shape of sanctuary idols standing round them: the Maiden, the Mother, the Warders of the Bright Gates where they bracketed the door, the Silent King of Heaven, the Champion with his empty helm. The flicker set shadows quivering in their blank-eyed stares. Durand watched the others: Coensar gave him a quiet nod; Lamoric was restless; other men eyed the idols"Deorwen watching them all. Watching him. Soon the lamp gave out and exhaustion took the men. Sounds reached Durand’s ears from beyond the shutters: feathery rustlings that might only have been night birds, whispers that might only have been willows. He remembered the various fanged and black-eyed things he’d seen. The others breathed invisibly all around him in the utter darkness. A hand touched his shoulder. But, after a prickling instant, he knew the touch for Deorwen’s. And she had curled on the cold flagstones at his back before he could move or speak, knees folded with his knees. She clung, her small arms clutching him, and she breathed sobs of frustration against his shoulder. Anyone might be awake. With so many ears so near, he could not so much as whisper his understanding. Still, he caught her hands and squeezed as though he could crush the wall between them. DURAND WOKE ALONE on that stone floor, friends within inches, and Deorwen watching him across the circle of men. Shaken, he was glad to join the others, as, from dawn, they rowed like the slaves of the Inner Seas, finding within a few strokes an iron rhythm that did a fine job of pounding thought from Durand’s skull. One hamlet ran into the next, the berms and hedges of one village knotting with those of its neighbor. They rowed as the Eye of Heaven rose to noontide and rowed as it blazed low among the chalk hills of Saerdana. The black glass of the river slithered with sunset, and soon the moon must rise. The men stole glances eastward, searching for the first sliver of the Sowing Moon hooking from the hedges. Finally, the Bittern and the eastern horizon, the moon’s slender crescent, winked over the shoulder of some shore-baron’s tower. śThat’s it,” said Odemar. śMaybe, Captain, you can get your men back to rowing. It’s leagues yet to Eldinor, and not so many hours from dawn.” As Coensar nodded to them all, a fire blazed out over the water. A bonfire as big as a hay wagon roared atop the shore tower they had just left behind. Lamoric rose from his bench, catching the mainstay for balance. Durand flinched, just seeing the man. śThe beacon fires,” Lamoric said. śYou can see them up and down the river. That Osbald will be lighting Burrstone Walls. What a sight the Powers must have: the whole of Er-rest the Old crowned with fire.” The light glowed in Lamoric’s face, and glittered in Deorwen’s eyes as she stared down the boat at him"desperate. śRow,” said Coensar. śOr none of it matters.” Durand squeezed his eyes shut and rowed. FOR HOURS AFTER nightfall, it seemed as though they rowed through the Heavens, bare stars glittering in the sky above and the black river below. Their wake set the sky shivering to its banks. Through the haze of exhaustion, great black buildings appeared along the banks. Once in a great while, Durand saw a window glowing. He heard men and animals alive between wooden walls: dogs barked, babies wailed. A door thumped as someone stumbled out to find the latrine trench. śWe must be getting close,” Ouen whispered. The sliver moon barely glinted in the man’s teeth. śWe could be sloshing past the bugger now, for all we know. Mount of Eagles. The King’s Walk. The High Patriarch’s whatever he has. Maybe that’s Ragnal himself, pissing in that ditch back there. We might be rowing right out to sea. Imagine: past Eldinor, past old Tern Gyre, past the Barbican and out on the wide ocean with nothing but the Shattered Isle somewhere there before us, eh?” śWould we use the sail then?” Durand wondered. śI’ve got used to the rowing, me.” śHells,” spat Badan. śBad enough rowing all bloody night. You don’t know how far we’ve come any more than I do.” From the high stern of the boat, Odemar interrupted, croaking, śI haven’t been up this way as often as some, but I’d say pull harder.” śDo as the man says, gentlemen,” said Coensar, and they did. TOWARD MORNING, FOG boiled over the bows. Durand and the others kept up their rowing, but the long sweeps clunked and rocked, heavier and heavier with each stroke. Somewhere some monastery bell tolled First Twilight. If the city wasn’t near now, they would arrive too late. śCome on, boys,” said Ouen and, with a haul, nearly lifted the Bittern from the river. Durand heaved, feeling the collective strength of the crew drive the boat downriver, picking up speed. And suddenly"as if by sorcery"they were passing under a bridge, Creation alive with watery echoes. Soon buildings pressed close along the banks"warehouses, mills, tanneries"water echoed from stone and hairy plaster. śThis’ll be one of the spans between Scrivensands and Turnstone Moss,” said Lamoric, again out of his seat. śWe’re right across the gulf from the Island of Eldinor.” They heard people already awake in the wooden buildings over the Red Winding. There was light glowing in the eastern fog. Soon, they felt the Bittern buck in the collision of currents on the broad face of the Gulf of Eldinor. Ships slept in the mist: dromond warships of a hundred oarsmen, merchantman cogs as tall as towers. Wooden walls rose up and vanished. It was strange backing into a new place, as you must when rowing. Durand imagined the hidden city over his shoulder. For the first fifteen generations of their rule, the Sons of Atthi had governed their High Kingdom from this island, striking bargains with wild chieftains, conquering the powers of the forest wastes, and forging covenants with Stranger kings. In the days of her glory, wealth poured through the treasure houses of Eldinor’s openhanded kings and Eldinor stood like a diadem on the brow of Creation. Now, hundreds of hard winters had passed. The Sons of Heshtar had twice raged over Creation, the heart of the Atthias had gone to Parthanor, so-called Jewel of the Winter Sea, and the High Kingdom had broken. Forty generations lay in the earth, and Eldinor was a widow city of a lost kingdom. Durand twisted. In the bows, Deorwen peered up among the vast shapes around them. And Durand managed to follow her eye. Towers shimmered into being from the mist like frost knitting in the clouds, city upon city rising into the air. He had never been to Parthanor the Jewel, but he could not imagine a place to surpass dowager Eldinor. Here were crown upon mitered crown, shining on the cusp of dawn. Something loomed from the fog. śYou’d best wake up, all of you,” said Odemar. He was working the tiller. śI’ve seen men hurt.” Granite wharves seemed to reach for them, each under a blank-eyed idol. Lamoric climbed to his feet. śMind me!” said Odemar, snapping every man’s attention back to him. They were coming in very fast and pulling hard. The Bittern shuddered into the slick shelter of the ancient quay. śAll hands, hold water!” The oarsmen jammed their oars flat against a hundred leagues’ momentum. The grip of water wrenched Durand’s hard against his ribs, nearly hoisting him from his bench. śToss oars!” Odemar snarled, and the men heaved blades from the water, Lamoric already leaping as the boat skidded home. A trio of tall men stalked up the wharf as men handed Deorwen down. Ouen had the gangplank ready and bowed to Durand. śAfter you, my rescuer.” Durand smiled and stepped onto the pier as Coensar climbed onto the plank. śMilord, Milady,” said one of three strangers. The speaker was a head taller than Durand"more. But the shoulders under his black cassock were hardly wider than a man’s spread fingers. His long skull sported a very few hanks of blond hair. śNo. No one ashore. Not now.” Each of the armored giants behind him wore a masked and polished helm, and carried both an ornate broadaxe and a long, teardrop shield. Durand had never seen city watchmen like these. śWe’ve been ordered to attend the king,” said Lamoric. śYes? Have you? And you are?” śI am Lord Lamoric, son of Duke Abravanal of Gireth.” Now the strange figure nodded from somewhere between his shoulder blades. śOf Burrstone Walls. Second son of the duke by his late wife Truda. One of three surviving. This would be your wife, Deorwen, daughter of Duke Severin of Mornaway by"” śIt is beginning!” Lamoric said. śAnd you must go, by all means.” A wan smile flickered. śBut we are not having armed retinues in Eldinor. No. Not today.” Durand took a deep breath. There was no time for argument. He would climb back in the boat. śNo no,” said the official, now nearly leering into Durand’s face. śNo, indeed. You may come. Yes. Certainly you may come. But three is a sufficiency, I think.” Durand glanced, and saw Coensar still poised upon the gangplank, his eyes dark. śI will give you all a bit of parchment with my seal upon it,” said the official. From the man’s neck dangled a large ring seal, with an angular hawk or eagle upon it. śI would suggest that you leave your belongings to avoid time-consuming inspections and seals for your goods.” While the dockmaster bowed the gray avenues gaped behind him, half of Lamoric’s men were on the point of defying the man. śThe Eye of Heaven will rise in moments, gentlemen,” said Lamoric. śI will ask Coensar to get you all to an inn, and leave a message at the docks so that I may find you. If I don’t . . .” He stroked his throat, and winced a grin. śCheck the pikes around and about. You may see my head grinning down. We’re off.” The captain’s mouth tightened, but then he nodded and stepped down into the Bittern. There was nothing for it. With an apologetic shrug, Durand set off alone with Deorwen and Lamoric. 9. In the Hall of Eagles They climbed empty avenues lined with sanctuaries and hollow mansions. Shabby wooden constructions leaned against the ruined glory of their neighbors, and sometimes the rubble walls of meager dwellings sported stolen masonry. Lamoric had Deorwen’s hand. She glanced at Durand. śWe will have no time to change our surcoats,” Lamoric announced. śSecondhand rags in the Hall of the Voyager King! Though it may do us some good. What will I say to the man? You would think something would come to me. A great deal will depend on the man’s mood. Here we are, threadbare and exhausted. Red-eyed and pale with fatigue. His Majesty may assume Gireth’s come upon hard times. Perhaps there will be pity!” Idols grinned down from every corner, watching each twilit crossroads. Banners had been mounted to every house, blue and gold for Errest’s king. High above, the sky seemed ready to burst with light. śWe must run,” said Lamoric. But then the bells tolled. From every sanctuary tower in the aged city, bronze notes jarred the Heavens and mortar trickled from high places. In the streets it was still twilight, but beyond the marble walls and spires, the Eye of Heaven must have returned to Creation. Lamoric stopped, spinning and staring heavenward, lost for a long moment in the cacophony. There was a good heartbeat of honest despair in Lamoric’s features"Durand felt like a murderer"and then Lamoric tried to smile. śWell,” he said, śI suppose that is"” But at that moment, a sudden change came over the old city. A great wind bowled down the street, lashing heavy banners. Durand caught his cloak before the gust could snatch it from his shoulders. The sky dimmed, and thunder boomed in the north. śThis is no natural storm, husband,” said Deorwen. śWe should find cover.” śHow far can the palace be?” demanded Lamoric, but lightning cracked the Heavens. They could hear dogs barking and asses braying behind the doors of the city. Durand spread his hands. śQuickly, then.” They jogged up avenues and alleys. Faces peered at the storm from shuttered windows. Finally, they darted through a gap between mansions, and stumbled into the great courtyard called the King’s Walk that stretched between the soaring high sanctuary of Eldinor and the Mount of Eagles. Here, armies had mustered in the High Kingdom days. Deorwen was looking at the clouds. śHusband, there is something very wrong.” Heaven twitched in a thousand shades of bruising. Durand remembered the rings he had seen over Yrlac when the river hag broke free. The ranked towers of Saerdan’s Mount of Eagles and the spires of the high sanctuary shuddered in the strange light. śYou must hear me. This is no natural storm. There is a warning in it.” Before the gates, three thousand beggars waited for the handouts likely to accompany a royal celebration. śI must press on,” said Lamoric. śEvery instant compounds my folly. His Majesty will think my father’s turned his back on the crown. A simple errand, and I could bring the Host of Errest down on the old man’s head. I must get in there.” Durand grimaced. They would have to pass every beggar within fifty leagues. There was only one gate. śWe’ll have a hard job getting through.” śAnd worse convincing the gatekeepers to let us in, dressed in these rags. Host of Heaven! We’ll be fighting for leftovers when the feasting’s finished,” Lamoric said. Durand set his teeth. Lamoric did not deserve to be made a fool. But then a roar arose in the old courtyard. Durand joined the others, staring in astonishment. It was rain, falling like a battalion of cavalry. It rebounded from the courtyard’s white cobbles"bouncing"and in moments the whole city was rattling, full of ice and sliding roof tiles. The crowds scattered. śHail,” said Deorwen. śHere’s your sign, Deorwen,” said Lamoric. They chased him across the empty square for the gates. A MAN WITH a face like two jet buttons and a blob of dough led them through the passageways of the rambling Mount of Eagles as the storm clattered above. śCome. Yes. Things are under way. Under way. We are busy here. It is only the Mount of Eagles.” The man waddled, his breath steaming. His bare head seemed to roll around the collar of a cassock. Durand noticed inky blotches. śCan you tell me of His Majesty’s mood?” said Lamoric. The little man flapped his hands. śLate. No help for it. Still. A shame. You will wear these clothes?” They crossed a courtyard of hog-backed cobbles that ran with ice water. Durand listened for the hubbub of feasting, on edge at the idea of standing up in front of the throne, but was distracted when a flock of black-clad functionaries darted across the other end of the yard. Had he startled them? Their guide led them deeper. śWhat about the king?” pressed Lamoric. śThere must have been receptions leading to this one. He will have enjoyed greeting"” śYou might have borrowed a servant’s spares but for the time,” the man grunted. śA shame. A grand design marred.” Lamoric was about to press further, but Deorwen spoke. śI am sure it is a great effort to plan such an event.” The little man fluttered around, stirring the reek of sour bacon in his black garb. śMaster of Tapers, am I.” Lamoric’s mouth opened. śThey sent the Master of Tapers to greet the emissary of Duke"” śI suppose it is a very great responsibility,” Deorwen said. The Master of Tapers bobbed his head. śNot one building, the Mount of Eagles. No. Hundreds. Streets. Alleys. The High Kings, they needed halls for herd-feeding; cookhouses, steam and cauldrons; storehouses; barracks for guards and their iron pots; rooms for the shining winking things; dovecotes crammed with pigeons; armories heaped with bladed things; cesspits for a thousand bowels; cellars; and narrow rooms for those who’ve done wrong. Yes.” śIt seems a very great place indeed. Is it very far to the oathtaking then?” Sometimes a passage opened on the rude flank of some stronghold now smothered in palace corridors, sometimes a grand presence chamber sat under dust. But at the end of every passage, there seemed to be a flock of the king’s black functionaries. The first group they passed were sitting, the next were on their feet, and the next were on the move. Like so many starlings, these black creatures darted off each time Durand caught a glimpse. The castle was thick with them, and something had stirred the creatures up. And the storm mumbled beyond the old roofs. śAnd I must watch that grease is rendered and wicks dipped,” said the little man, śand each must find the court where it squats by nightfall. Thousands they need.” He grinned. śHot work.” śBut still,” said Deorwen, śit must be done, I suspect.” She glanced Durand’s way. śAll of these halls must have light. Is the Hall of Kings near? You must take many candles there.” śA great many. But there are pleasures to be had in the rendering. Cheerful things.” He bared a row of yellow teeth, and snuffled noisily at the air. śThough the children hate it. Hot work, poor sweeties.” śHow will I approach him?” Lamoric said. śThere will be Ragnal on the Hazelwood Throne and kinsmen of every duke in Errest the Old, all kneeling before him. I will give my father’s oath.” He scratched his neck. śPerhaps I can bring up the rest of it later on. Not before everyone. There will be other chances. A man must ask the king’s leave even to depart. Hells. My heart’s in my mouth. I’d rather play with lances.” Sandals and whispers rushed along before them like a bow wave of dry leaves. But Lamoric was already before the throne in his mind, imagining the throngs of noblemen and servants. Durand heard only starlings and thunder. śNear now,” said Tapers. śVery near.” The corridors narrowed, cold as mountains. Now, they were in Saerdan Voyager’s footsteps. But Durand heard the rattle of soldiers on the move"shields and axes on armored backs. Thunder growled. And Tapers led them into an aisle of statues: men made giants; Powers made stone. śHere!” said the little man as he rounded a last idol’s knee. The parade of kings and idols had become the doorposts of a great brass portal. This was Saerdan’s ancient fortress, trapped in palaces. śBeyond is the Hall of the Kings,” said their guide. And there, as they turned the corner, huddled Heremund the Skald. The tiny, rumpled man stood against the gleaming vastness of the doors, slack-jawed and staring. Here was Durand’s comrade of the autumn"bowlegs, gap-teeth, saddle nose, shapeless hat and all. He huddled by another of Ragnal’s functionaries. Dark reflections of the pair quivered in brass above and marble below. The skald gaped. śYou can’t be here!” śI assure you"” began a consternated Master of Tapers. There was a commotion behind the great doors. It sounded more like a riot than a feast. A table scraped on stone. śNo. Not here,” Heremund’s companion stammered. An epic paunch had this man’s cassock short in front and long behind. śUh. You’re what? The chandler?” Their guide flinched. śMaster of"” ś"Ah, Tapers, aye. Uh, no. You’d have had no way of knowing. Who would think to tell you?” After a moment’s hesitation, the man smiled. śI’ll have to take them now. There’s nothing for it.” Someone roared beyond the doors. śI don’t"” began the Master of Tapers. The new starling shook his jowled head. śNo reason you should, friend. They are mine to deal with now.” Heremund got his hand on Lamoric’s arm. śWe must be off,” he whispered. śThere’s no time.” In a moment, they’d put three corners between themselves and the astonished Master of Tapers. The bulky new starling yanked open a door, and they all darted inside. Deorwen stepped in ahead of Durand, and Heremund’s friend slammed the door just as Durand realized they’d stepped into some black cupboard or closet. Deorwen must have turned. Her breath feathered his neck, her chest rose and fell against his tunic. He wished he’d had a chance"any chance"to speak with her. The door shook against his back with the sound of footfalls"full of muscle and armor. He remembered the whetted curve of the guardsmen’s broadaxes. The rumble ebbed away, and the stranger’s voice breathed into the narrow space. śHeremund, you’ve killed me. Host of Heaven. My heart’s pounding fit to burst.” Durand could find no air. Deorwen moved. Her hand slipped into his, gripping hard. śWhat is all this about?” demanded Lamoric. śI’m meant to be carrying my father’s oath to Ragnal.” śIs there a way out of here, Hod?” said Heremund. śAny way these buggers won’t be watching?” śIt is too much,” the stranger answered. śThat pig-boiling goblin back there might have known my face. I’ll end my days guttering on a candle-spike.” śYou underrate yourself, Hod. They’ll make more than one candle from a man your size. Don’t"” There was a furious and invisible struggle that jostled Deorwen hard against Durand. He felt a thigh, the curve of her ribs" śHeremund,” Durand snarled, śon my oath . . .” śI’m opening the door,” said Hod. śHeaven help me, but be careful, all of you.” Deorwen’s hand slipped from Durand’s, and the door opened. They stumbled into the passageway and everyone jogged after Hod. Durand took a moment to shake his head. Hod stumped down a rabbit’s warren of stairs and passages. śIt’s Ragnal,” Heremund said, explaining. śIt’s not,” said Hod. śHe’s thrown everyone in bloody prison,” Heremund said. śHe hasn’t!” śHeremund!” Lamoric said. śI have a duty back there. What is going on?” śThey’re hostages,” Heremund explained. śAll of them! I suppose he had to do something after the Great Council last year.” Hod shook his head. śThey’ve been nattering at him. ŚThe only certainty is blood.’ Nattering in his ear all the moons of wintertide. Drip, drip, drip the poison goes.” They trotted into a black passageway lit by crabbed fans of light from its arrow loops. śOaths weren’t enough for him,” said Heremund, śso he seized every man and woman the barons sent. Sons. Heirs. The Duke of Garelyn came himself!” Abruptly Hod shot his arms across the passageway, barring all progress. Heremund made to open his mouth, but was wrapped in smothering hands before he could make a sound. śWe must stop here a moment, and then proceed with care,” Hod whispered. śI will go first. You all will follow"after an interval. Move quickly and quietly. Follow too quickly and they will have little doubt what’s happening. And try to look as if you know what you’re about. śCertain death.” He raised a thick finger to his lips, then disappeared around the next corner. Heremund turned to the three who remained, whispering, śHe’s seized them all! There’s been no oathtaking. Armed men at the doors, and they the sons of great men. I don’t think his knights liked the plan. It was mostly these commoner sergeants. There was Ragnal on the Hazelwood Throne with the planks of Atthi’s coffer under his damnable backside. He’ll win no friends with this.” śWas everyone there, skald?” said Lamoric. A scuff from somewhere in the passageway behind them made Durand turn and he stepped to get Deorwen behind him. He heard the rattle of mail and took a stride away from the others, making ready to draw his blade. It would be treason. You could not strike the king’s men down. śDurand,” said Lamoric, śI’d back you against half the knights in Errest, but you’re no use against fifty. We’ll have to follow this Hod, no matter how long it’s been.” As the voices closed in, everyone gave their nod"Heremund last"and the party strode around the corner. And into a crowded room. There were tables and horn lamps. Black-cassocked scribes sat at parchments, penknife and quill in stained fingers. Every face turned their way, cocked like mooncalves’ at their arrival. Eyes glittered. Many mouths looked full of ink, blotted black. Heremund thrust his chin into the air and bandied down the long aisle between the scribs’ tables. śI have strummed for many a feast,” he chatted. śBut we’ll need all our players now. The rebec. The viol. The harp and the fipple flute.” The others followed on his heels. But many of the scribes got to their feet, baring all their teeth in sly leers. śIs there one of you who plays the tabor pipe, did you say?” By the time the party had crossed the scriptorium, the room was full of rustling parchment and sandals. The devils were following. On the far side, Hod met their party in a doorway. Durand reckoned they had moments. śI did not expect you so soon,” Hod said. His voice was still. śThere was naught else to do,” Heremund said. Hod shut his eyes and nodded deeply. śIt doesn’t matter now. There are bedchambers in this tower. Princes’, till they grew up. This way’s down.” He raised a clay lamp, and spoke to Heremund. śTell the big brute to shut the door behind you.” Durand closed the door. Down a low and narrow stair they crept, Durand bent between the walls as he chased the silhouettes of the others down. śHod, where’ve you taken us?” whispered Heremund. śA bolt-hole, in case the Mount of Eagles was ever taken. A few of the king’s retainers could bundle the monarch out while the rest fought from the towers.” śWe’re nowhere near the walls yet.” śAh. But that was once-upon-a-time, Heremund. The Mount is riddled with bolt-holes now. Most were swallowed up as the High Kings heaped masonry on the Mount in the days before Parthanor.” He brushed a wall, and a blanket of dust detached itself to tumble over him. śHells. How am I to explain that I am covered in dust?” śThese men, these clerks . . .” Lamoric ventured. Heremund spoke. śHod. You might as well give him your speech.” The jowled head turned a moment. śVenal, dangerous men. Flatterers. Most are newcomers since His Highness was crowned; some I’ve known for years. But it could not matter less. They are changed, and none can be trusted any longer.” śHow have you managed to keep clear of it?” asked Lamoric. śOh, I’ve been a wise man. Wise enough to bite my tongue, no matter what I’ve seen.” Lamoric blinked. śSurely your duty to"” śAh, Your Lordship, but that is the first part of my wisdom. Duty, conscience, honor"all of it, I have cast away. I have watched fierce men steeped in wisdom stand before the king only to be grinned at by these toadies"the rage of great men sweetly tolerated like the shrieking of infant children. But, afterward, they are never heard of again. śTo remain myself and alive, I have made myself perfectly ineffectual. A serpent envies my spine for suppleness; I carry worthlessness as my shield. There is no force so weak that I cannot submit to its might.” śWhat becomes of them, Master Hod?” Deorwen asked. śI do not know, but soon enough they are grinning along with the others. One turns to an old friend and there he stands, smiling as though at an idiot child.” śAnyone would be fearful,” asserted Deorwen. śYou are kind to say it, Milady,” Hod replied. śHe’s hazarded a great deal, talking to me,” said Heremund. śThere’re strange things going on in the Mount of Eagles, and news must get to them who might talk with our Ragnal. I never thought to see this hostage business, mind. I reckon the rebellion’s unhinged him.” śSlanders!” said Hod. śWhat will his allies do?” asked Lamoric. śHost of Heaven, there will be blood spilt in the land when the rest hear. My father must have word of this as soon as it can reach him. He must call the host from their manors. Some of the seed grain should be kept in store against wartime.” Lamoric stopped on the stairs. śWhat will Ragnal do when he has no hostage from Gireth? I will have provoked the king against my father, my brother. My house holds Gireth from Saerdan himself.” His mouth opened and closed. śI must go back.” śThat’s mad, Lordship,” said Heremund. śSkald, great men of my line have given their bodies to preserve the throne of Errest for two thousand years. Will I be the one to dishonor them?” Hod climbed back to Lamoric, raising his lamp and peering close in the young lord’s eye. śLet these toadies trap you here. Let your father swallow the humiliation of seeing his own son shackled to keep him honest and stomach the shame of his king’s mistrust. Do what these creatures wish. See what your father does then.” The man’s face was hard and yellow in the oily light. Deorwen clasped her shoulders. śWas every duchy represented at this oathtaking?” śI don’t think so,” said Hod. śNo. There was no one from Yrlac.” śOf course,” said Lamoric. śGireth was absent. Mornaway,” finished Hod. śI must warn my father,” said Lamoric. śHe’ll need a word with Mornaway. There may be some way they can set this right. The king cannot be at war with his Great Council.” śLet’s start by getting you out of this place,” said Heremund. Lamoric allowed himself to be led. On they walked, following Hod. He opened a door seamed with daylight and they climbed scabbed stairs under the churning storm. They threaded dusty passages hidden in the thickness of a great tower’s wall. They crept along minstrels’ galleries in the rafters high above a feasting hall where starlings whispered in circles. As they returned once more to the darkest bowels of the palace, Deorwen spoke. śMaster Hod, how can you know so many secret ways? I do not think there has been so much as one wrong turning.” Hod saluted her with a wry wave of his lamp. śMy Lady, I was tutor once to the Princes Biedin, Eodan, and Ragnal"and such other young ones as were packed off to court by the great houses of the realm. And so it was my duty, from time to time, to travel these paths searching for my enchanting little charges. I nearly lost my head over Biedin. This is the very lamp with which I searched.” He lifted the clay dish and its wavering flame. śHe was the prince who vanished,” Deorwen remembered. śA little adventure that may well be our salvation, My Lady,” said Hod. He shook his head. śIt is a shame to see the sons of Carlomund at odds. Eodan will not come to court at all; Ragnal sneers at the man, remarking on how their father died in Eodan’s lands. And Eodan is too proud to hold his tongue around his brother. Biedin tries to help, I think: he has ridden three times to Windhover since the Blood Moon. But reconciling Eodan and Ragnal is an impossible task. Eodan would not even come to the Tern Gyre council. It is said that a great man’s children learn jealousy at their mother’s breast. śHere,” said Hod. He bowed, wearing a wistful grin. śBeyond this point, I am as useless to you as I am to my king. Get yourselves free of this place.” There was nothing but a wall of broken stone before them. The ceiling had collapsed, and there was no sign of daylight. śHod?” said Heremund. śUnless you are willing to hop from the curtain wall"and I would not permit you to so mistreat a lady"there is no better way to fly from the Mount of Eagles than this little hole. Biedin was always the most restive and after his mother died, he was always moving. We searched everywhere. I even had the Master of Hounds loose in the rafters with his dogs. But this spot I never found.” The group peered at the rubble. śI believe there is an aperture here.” Hod raised his lamp until one black cavity stood out from the stones. śThe prince appeared in the high sanctuary three days after he vanished, you see. He never passed the gates.” He pointed at the black gap. śBy my reckoning, the high sanctuary is five hundred paces in that direction.” He spread his hands on his stomach. The gap was hardly more than a foot across. śBut I have never tested my theory.” Heremund nodded, scrambling up the rubble. He held his hand out for the lamp, and then peered into the black. śHod! Did you think you were rescuing weasels?” śIt lets onto some vestige of an antique sewer, or a passage for the Patriarchs to the king. I found black threads among those stones. The boy wore a black tunic after his mother passed. He got through.” Nodding, they climbed the stones, Durand’s heart pounding as he saw just how narrow the opening was. It was clear that they must get Lamoric and Deorwen free of this place. The black socket exhaled a steady, cool current of air. śI will go first,” Durand said, mastering himself. It would be like climbing into a pot. But there was a hesitation behind him. Hod stared up from the floor. śCome with us,” Heremund said. śTry.” Hod did not reply for a time. śI stole a bundle of rushlights.” The things were a peasant’s candle: skinned rushes dipped in grease. śI hope your Master of Tapers won’t miss them.” He lit one and passed the rest to Deorwen. śI will be interested to hear if I was correct after all about little Biedin.” The tiny flames fluttered. śSoon, those fiends will realize what has happened. They will be combing the streets for you. There will be men at the docks. śHelp my king,” he said, and left them. Heremund grimaced at the others where they clung around the tunnel mouth"the lamplight dwindled and disappeared. śI met him when I sang for the princes’ father. All the clerks in the scriptorium, the scene before the Hall of Kings: the starlings would know what Hod did. śHod’s a lovely man,” he said. śThey will kill him for this.” Hod’s lamp vanished from sight, and no one said a word. 10. The Dust of Princes Lost The collapsed section was little more than fifty feet long, and Durand writhed the whole way with the brittle, greasy rushlight spitting in his fingertips, cursing the madness of it all. They had rowed across the whole of Errest, and for what? Ragnal had gone mad. The Mount of Eagles was full of whispers, and they were crawling like vermin in the cellars. Finally free, Durand slithered down a rubble slope and crouched in an empty tunnel. The rushlight’s flame lit a dozen paces and left a juddering void before him. śWonderful,” he said. Somewhere above were the cracked-tooth cobbles of the High King’s Walk. He already knew that the ceiling could fall in. The others slithered down to join him. Deorwen had a streak of dirt across her nose. śHells,” said Lamoric, śI hope there’s another end to this tunnel. If we’ve got to turn back, you can bury me here.” Durand smiled. śHow many rushlights have we got?” he teased gently, lifting his. It was already half-burned. śYou have sworn to be my loyal man, Durand,” said Lamoric. śI remember it distinctly. You were kneeling in the muck. Folk were laughing.” Durand nodded. śI do not like this place,” said Deorwen. śWe shouldn’t waste time.” All but Durand could walk without stooping. On the walls, there was no sign of the crusting you might expect from a sewer. śI don’t see why Ragnal would take hostages from loyal houses,” said Lamoric. śMornaway and Garelyn would never have rebelled.” śAh,” said Heremund. śEquality. Everyone the same.” Lamoric’s fist thumped the wall. śHe will drive every fence-sitting duchy into Yrlac’s camp.” śSuch grudging loyalty as they showed? It ain’t far from treason. What’re their oaths worth in a pinch? You’re better off with their kin in your tower. When it’s kin against a man’s word, blood’s more certain than breath. That’s the idea.” A door blocked the passage. Durand squinted at long cracks that jagged across the ceiling stones. He winced at the constant spit of the rushlight. The door stood, stuck shut and subtly twisted, under the weight of the stone above. As he moved closer, his little flame fluttered at a gap too narrow for even Deorwen. A glance showed him the ceiling full of cracks"precarious"with the door maybe serving to prop the load. Durand raised his hand before the others. śStand back.” śMaybe we should try our luck with the guards. If we find the right man, we could walk out the gates,” said Lamoric. śIf there were such a man, Master Hod would have introduced us, I think,” Durand concluded. They had cost Hod his life. śWe must get as far as we can before they know we’ve gone.” He would kick high where the door was caught against the jamb. Heremund touched his shoulder. śIf you’re flattened under fifty cartloads of rock, I hope you won’t mind if we try Lamoric’s scheme.” Deorwen’s eyes were very wide as Durand handed the rushlight to Heremund. He couldn’t tell what she was thinking"just that there was desperation. The smudge was still there across her nose. śA little more room first,” Durand said. The initial kick brought dust sifting down like snow. The second started a rain of sand pouring down Durand’s neck. The door gave way on the third kick, and the ceiling fell in as they ran through. śPraise Heaven,” said Durand as he counted three live people behind him. THEY MOVED THROUGH a space lined with doorways and alcoves. The warmth of Heaven’s Eye had never reached this place. śI reckon these were cut in after,” said Heremund, peering at the masonry. śCells or cellars. Storerooms maybe.” śA long way to go for a cask of claret,” said Lamoric, śthough it’s cold enough.” They were too far under the ground, and the air was thin and dank. śDurand, here,” said Deorwen. On the floor, a collection of litter marked what must have been someone’s campsite. śThese are candle ends. This is no place to stop.” śMaybe it is only a storeroom after all,” ventured Lamoric. śWe know nothing else.” But their party was surrounded by cells, Durand was sure"places to put a man away so that he’d never be heard from again. There were no pretty carvings. Some spots had been rudely walled in. He hoped Ragnal’s whisperers would never hear of the place. śIn any case, let’s hope the path goes straight on,” Heremund grunted. śI wouldn’t like to have to root through these holes.” FINALLY, A DOOR appeared: the passage’s ending. This was no improvised addition to the tunnel. Sinuous lines adorned its marble surface: the Eye of Heaven blazed above a Creation full of elegant trees. A pair of idols flanked the door: the Warders of the Gates of far Heaven. In the stories, the Warders wore coats they’d improvised of iron nails. The carver had chiseled every one. śIs there some magic formula we must say?” Lamoric wondered. Durand raised his rushlight for the others to see, and they all came closer, Deorwen setting a hand on his arm. śPerhaps there is, but I think there’s a handle as well,” said Heremund. śJust here.” An elbow of copper jutted from a tear of green verdigris. śJust as well,” Lamoric decided. śA little room again, I think,” Durand said and took the handle, feeling big cogs turning under his fist. The door broke free. No light. With the rushlight high, he peered through the widening crack, not knowing what eyes might be on the other side. And eyes there were: empty skulls stared back at him. Papery corpses. The room beyond was heaped with bones. śWhat’s wrong with you?” asked Heremund. Sucking a breath through his nose, Durand said, śThere’s no one here. I can’t see if there’s a way through.” With no way around, he pushed straight in, climbing onto the sagging, crackling heap. Swimming, nearly, as dry things slid from their winding sheets and yellow grins rolled against his chin. A plain bronze door beyond the ossuary opened at Durand’s first touch. It might have been another panel in the walls. Durand summoned the rest on, and once free of the ossuary, the group stepped into a chamber of massive pillars where the air hung thick with beeswax and balsam. Lamoric slapped dust from Deorwen’s dress. śPerhaps we were better off to leave the courtly costumes home.” śAll of those people. They were priests and rich men,” Deorwen said. śI saw amulets.” Tangled in neck bones and ribs. śThere was a fat sapphire on one hand. I think the priests have been moving bones here from tombs and graves. If it is like most cities, there is no room to bury within the walls unless space is made.” śMy skin’s alive,” said Lamoric. śLike the fleas are marching over me.” śThis will be the crypt under the high sanctuary,” Heremund said. Durand saw a score of great sarcophagi within the range of their light, the first traces of a vast arc that must circle the whole of the high sanctuary, below the floor. You could wind a good horse, riding from side to side through the dark. Feet rested on hounds, eagles, and Powers. Royal feet. Lamoric spun. śThis is where the new kings must keep their vigil, yes?” śAye,” said Heremund, śI reckon so. ŚThree days under stone,’ they say before they’ll crown Śem. It’s here somewhere that a crown prince bides that time in darkness.” śThey have all lain here. All the kings of twenty centuries,” whispered Lamoric. śWe should be struck dead for trespassing in this place. I am surprised that we have breathed this long.” śAin’t too late,” said Heremund. The floor was chased with sweeping symbols, arcs and rays of gold. The intersecting curves circled a shape cut at the chamber’s heart: it could have been the shadow of a tall man upon the floor. śThere,” Durand said, and all four refugees trailed across the honey-shining marble to find a rough silhouette of a man hacked in the floor: head, shoulders, and the long shape of the body. Durand’s fingers tingled. He raised his light. The cist was deep, penetrating a fathom or more into the stone of the island. Heremund raised an eyebrow. śIt’s here the Patriarchs lay the young prince down, droning their great thaumaturgies, filling the air with smoke and Powers. And finally leave him to darkness and dreams. Half of the old spell’s carved in these stones.” Deorwen shuddered, and Lamoric puffed out his cheeks. śDays in the dark, starving with the kings and Patriarchs rustling in their tombs.” The tombs beyond were nearly invisible. śThere are stories of men consumed,” said Heremund. śMen whose hearts couldn’t take a long look from the Eye of Heaven.” śWho could? Who could stand it?” Deorwen said. śA man must know his heart before the Patriarchs lower him down,” said Heremund. śI have heard that, afterward, the king dreams,” said Deorwen. śHe hears the whispers of his subjects.” śWell. He’s knotted into the Ancient Patriarchs’ old bindings, that’s sure. I wouldn’t be surprised if they creak a bit, those knots. They’re surely pulled tight some days.” śI don’t find myself pitying this king just now,” said Durand. There was always a large entrance to an Atthian crypt, for the priests must be free to throw the place open at winter’s ending"when Heaven’s Eye wins its battle with the long nights of winter. śHere.” Durand spotted the first broad steps of a processional stairs, and they moved off, finding a doorway. śWhat is our plan?” śHmm. A point,” said Lamoric. śThe sanctuary sits at the heart of Eldinor. We’ll be free of the tunnel but trapped in the midst of the city. I suppose the Patriarch knows his flock, and there’s a shrine on every corner.” The flame spat between them. śHeremund,” asked Deorwen, śdid the Patriarch attend this hostage-taking?” śHe did, aye. I didn’t see it all; the man was roaring.” śThe king would never take the Patriarch hostage!” Lamoric declared. DURAND EMERGED FROM the crypt right beside a small man in priest’s robes. Durand got a glimpse of pale, bulging eyes above a cloud of copper beard before the man collapsed, overcome by the sight of filthy, ragged strangers erupting from the grave. Deorwen crouched to check on the luckless priest"and, somehow, looking up at Durand, she saw something more. śDurand, look up,” she breathed. As he looked into the vaults above, Creation spun. A field of gold leaf soared more than thirty fathoms above his head, light as silk banners. Powers gazed down. Pillars ringed the dome, sweeping higher than towers like loops of woven gold thrown to tether the vault to Creation. They had come up in the golden heart of Eldinor, a pace or two before the high altar itself. They stared into acres of leaded glass and forests of pillars. śWhy does Creation seem larger when you throw a roof under it?” wondered Heremund. The priest was shaking his head. Deorwen set a hand on his arm. śI am sorry if we have startled you, but we would very much like to speak to the Patriarch.” The fellow leapt onto his bandy legs. śYou"Madam, who are you?” Eyes jutting, the red-bearded priest thrust the fist and fingers of the Eye of Heaven sign between himself and his sudden visitors. He circled as Deorwen rose. śThere was confusion at the palace this morning,” said Lamoric. śI have to get home.” The priest stopped. śThe oathtaking.” śIt is very important,” said Deorwen. śMay we see the Patriarch?” The priest cocked his head. śMadam, he has not yet"” The sound of determined footfalls drew their attention. A sturdy-looking priest was jogging toward them. śProvost!” the priest called. śThank the Powers I have found you. He is taken.” Their priest seemed to recover in an instant. śWhat do you mean Śtaken’?” śProvost, Patriarch Semborin is prisoner in the Mount of Eagles, hostage"against his will"in surety of our faithful conduct.” śBy every Power of Hell, it’s bloody sacrilege!” The man’s voice returned from polished vaults, and the messenger raised his hands. śKinsmen of every duke but Mornaway, Yrlac, and Gireth have been locked in the towers. Ragnal was in the blackest rage.” The sinews of the provost’s neck stood under his beard. śRagnal was in a rage? By Heaven, we will send word to every king and Patriarch from this spot to the Yawning Gulf! With Semborin in chains, he will hear no more of justice or recovering the marches. He will demand that we carry our treasury to his strong rooms, but I’ll see him stripped and begging forgiveness in the streets before he gets a clipped penny!” śWith respect, Provost, they will kill him.” śWith respect?” the provost stood, crackling. śI will hear that from Ragnal’s own lips,” he concluded. śFather, you are provost of the high sanctuary?” asked Lamoric. The priest rounded on Lamoric. śSir, you will explain how you’ve come to be climbing from the crypt of my sanctuary, and you’ll do so before you dare draw another breath!” śWe are sorry to have startled you, Provost,” said Deorwen. śThis is Lamoric of Gireth, son of"” śGireth?” The man’s eyes flashed. śAnd you have avoided Ragnal’s hospitality thus far?” Smiling, the provost turned to the messenger. śCanon Gilmar, would King Ragnal free Patriarch Semborin for a duke’s son?” He had hardly said it before Durand had his fist on his blade. The canon quavered, śProvost, I am not certain that these people are within our power to give.” śProvost,” said Deorwen. śMy husband is not the heir.” śLandast is the elder brother, yes.” The provost nodded to himself. śAnd so there is no reason to deny His Majesty’s wishes except spite.” śThe king’s men will be watching us, Provost,” said Gilmar. śEvery man in cassock or cowl, I expect.” śHe has Patriarch Semborin.” śThen you must begin by clearing our new friends from this very public place, I think. I find myself in a very spiteful temper just now.” _________ PRIESTLY HANDS PROPELLED them into a tiny windowless room: the vestry. And the three were left to spend all the hours of daylight crowded under heaps of priests’ finery. There was Durand crushed in with Deorwen but unable even to ask her what she had meant by that night in the riverbank sanctuary. All winter, Lamoric had been frantic, and the summer before he’d been playing the Red Knight. But he was not a bad man. He had a good heart. Without Durand playing wedge between them all winter, they might have come together. He stared at the two, wondering what would happen if he let them be. There was no way forward for him with Deorwen, and a wound didn’t heal with the blade still in it. He had to go. It seemed days later"darkness filling the ancient vastness of the high sanctuary"that Canon Gilmar’s head appeared in the doorway. śIt is arranged,” he said. śCome.” At a small door, the provost awaited them. śHave you got a bit of meat pie or something?” asked Heremund. The man scowled for an instant, then pressed on. śIn my novice days, I studied at the monastery of the Warder’s Gates off Farrier’s Street. There was a window in the kitchen-house. The kitchen-house was built in the thickness of the ancient wall. The cooks tipped rubbish to the gulls. There will be a rowing boat waiting to carry you across the gulf to Scriven-sands.” śHave the king’s men abandoned their search?” asked Lamoric. Gilmar laughed: a puff of breath. śNo,” said the provost. śThere are watchmen and sergeants of the king’s guard in every street.” śWe must get out,” said Lamoric. śI have recruited watchmen of my own,” said the provost. śYou will find the first in a shop door by a burning candle. Each has his eyes on one street. You move when the watchman tells you the way is clear. Thus, you will pass from one watchman"one street"to the next until you reach that kitchen.” They would be the only strangers on the move in Eldinor, they knew no one, and a single broken link in the provost’s chain would leave them stranded. This was too precarious to trust. śWe should have gone in daylight with the crowds,” said Durand. The provost’s lip twitched. śThey stopped every soul abroad in the streets today. Everyone was questioned. They stood guards on the grand docks. Nothing bigger than a nutshell’s been allowed to set off since the dawn bells rang.” Deorwen nodded. śWe don’t know these people as well as you must. How will we be certain that none of your watchmen has been caught?” The man grunted a laugh. śOr turned, eh? They will make the Eye of Heaven when you sight them, one finger bent. And they’ve been given a bit of the Book of Moons to quote you as you arrive. Each man has a line, and none should repeat.” śSubtle are the priests of Atthia,” said Heremund, quoting something clever, but the provost fixed the skald with a steady eye. śIf the enemies of Heaven delve deep, we must dig still deeper, skald. I will not put another life into the hands of this king’s sycophants.” Heremund nodded a contrite bow. The provost turned to his man, Gilmar, who put his eye to the crack at the sanctuary door. śI see the candle,” Gilmar replied. śHe shows the Eye of Heaven.” śIt is time,” said the provost, and Durand felt his heart flinch. Lamoric took the provost by his arm. śWe will see this through yet. And I am grateful to the Powers that my poor hide was not fit to trade for a Patriarch’s.” śThe king’ll choke on this,” said the provost. śGo.” With that, they shot from the door, running toward the first candle and a green-kirtled woman in a shuttered cook-shop, sliding to a halt on her doorstep. The woman’s face was broad as a pan. ś ŚPrince of Heaven am I,’ ” she began. ś ŚNeverborn. Lord of Roads. Warder at Crossroads. The Longwalker, I am called, quoth he.’ Come inside a moment, I can’t see what Bacca’s holding up. The priest’s a fool doing this at curfew. Still, it couldn’t be helped.” Durand blinked at the fragment the woman quoted. She slipped a hand between Durand and Deorwen, squinting between them. There was a crowd in her doorway, and they were in sight of a broad swath of King’s Walk. śMadam,” said Lamoric. śI thank you for your"” ś"There it is,” she announced, brushing Lamoric aside. śDo you see him? Bacca? He’s there past where there used to be a fountain. He’s making the Eye. Poor souls. Not even a stitch of decent clothing.” There was, indeed, a small man twenty paces down Sanctuary Street. Nodding thanks to the woman, they set off, running down the rutted cobbles. A burly man in a hairy surcoat met them. śYou must be Bacca"” Lamoric began. ś ŚMy King, My Brother, I have watched as old spirits preyed on young. I have spent an age at your side, no help to give, too far to reach.’ Lordship, Ladyship. Sir. Anno’s at the end of Queen’s Pell. That’s him there, with the scar he got from the foundry. You can’t see it from here, mind.” Lamoric glanced vaguely down a street thick with gloom and peat smoke, but each time these people opened their mouths, Durand heard the words of a dream. All this talk of crossroads. śWait, step in for a bit,” said the man. śAnno’s seeing something.” Durand twisted to see the little figure dancing and waving his hands. He heard boots and armor between the walls. Heremund tugged him inside the smoky darkness of the stranger’s front room, giving him a good hard look. Durand’s head was still spinning. He found himself gazing at the stranger’s silhouette as though he might utter prophecies next. What light there was came from a lidded hearth. After a long spell in silence, the man, Bacca, put his nose out the door, and they were off again. ś ŚYou need not cast me out,’ ś proclaimed the next man, ś Śfor I cannot remain so far from their need.’ ś These words pitched Durand’s mind back to a well in his father’s mountain stronghold. He remembered a figure as large as giants made from scraps of rope and shoeing nails. The instant the man freed them, Durand reeled ahead, weaving down a foul and dripping alley under the privies of a row of houses to a mouselike woman who peered around her door. She stood no higher than Durand’s belt. ś ŚI must walk their long roads. I must wait for them at the crossing places, and offer counsel to the lost.’ ś śMadam, we are grateful,” said Lamoric. The woman confessed that she could never turn strangers away, and gestured. Above her house was a shrine cut from a high corner. A ragged wooden figure under a wide-brimmed hat looked over them. Someone had a lamp burning there, and Durand stepped right into the lane. In the idol’s hand was a knobbed staff. The Traveler. He could almost see the pennies glinting in its eyes. Durand gaped at the omen. A lifetime and two hundred leagues from his father’s hall, this provost had chosen the words spoken to him by the Traveler when they stood together at the bottom of the well at Col. Abruptly Lamoric was at his ear. śBy the Heavens.” There was exasperation in his voice, and he tugged Durand into motion once more. They darted and they hid. They ran along one alley and plunged down a troughed staircase called the Hundred Steps. They passed a sanctuary dedicated to the Nine Sleepers, whose facade glowed with alabaster children, polished by the hands of the bereaved. śI don’t remember it taking this long,” said Lamoric. śWe must be circling the city.” Besides a splinter moon, the only lights burned in shrines and the high windows of the palace above. Down they went. Durand could not help but eye the towered Mount of Eagles as they ran around its knees. Soon, the reek of muck and seaweed mingled with the peat smoke of the heights. śWe cannot be far,” said Lamoric. Finally, they were skidding into the doorway of a tavern on Farrier’s Street. Above the door, a stone king’s head hung in rust-weeping chains. Down the street, Durand spotted the great entrance to a monastery: a fan of sculpture carried by doorpost kings or Powers"all lit, sharp and clear, by a huge fire basket. Soldiers stood warming their hands at the blaze; Durand thought he saw one of Ragnal’s starlings. From the tavern door, a long man in black-rabbit robes was speaking. In that instant, his face was two beads and a knife’s point. śDo you know how many customers I have lost this evening because"” Durand yanked his blade from its sheath. The guards were turning, and this was not the sign. Bracing the cold edge across the man’s gullet, Durand muscled him backward into the room"host or hostage. They weren’t getting Deorwen or her husband easily. Heremund pinned his eye to the door as it thumped shut. śI don’t think the buggers saw anything.” Durand heaved his prisoner round to face the others, the blade flat against his windpipe as the bead eyes goggled. śWhat have you to say?” asked Lamoric. śOh. Host of Heaven! What was it?” the man spluttered. śAh, yes! ŚTake what thou wilt, I shall clothe myself in the castoffs of the road, and this forked tree shall be my sign.’ ś It was more of the Traveler’s rant"Durand freed the man into the gloom. A single clay lamp lit the tavern’s hall"no surprise"but what its flame revealed had them all staring for a moment. Where the courses of the back wall should be, broad foreheads bloomed in the dark. Shadows wobbled in the eyes of kings, queens, and heroes from floor to rafters. One bare-chinned brute stood as round as a barrel. śWhat do you call this place?” asked Heremund. śThe Marbles,” said the tavern-keeper. śI am pleased to be the proprietor.” Heremund stepped to one of the tavern’s big shutters. śThat’s our way out done for. I count two dozen men waiting there.” śThey’ve made it a marshaling point,” Durand guessed. śI think I saw one of the clerks. The others will be sergeants and runners.” śHells,” said Lamoric. The tavern-keeper put long-fingered hands over his face. śI told the priest I was more than willing to be of assistance after all his help during my sister’s illness, but I cannot afford to close my business for an entire night. There are tithes and taxes and regular customers. I have a dispensation to operate past curfew to pay for.” He paced to a second set of shutters. śI cannot be faulted in this. The priests gave me no mechanism to communicate that there might be difficulties.” As the tavern-keeper peered out, Deorwen crossed to the table where the lamp flickered. Durand noted a blob of red sealing wax. Glancing back, the tavern-keeper stalked to the table. śPerhaps you could retrace your steps,” he suggested. śThere might be another way forward.” He idly collected an object from the tabletop, but Durand was well ahead of him. He closed his fist over the man’s bony fingers. śMaster tavern-keeper,” said Deorwen, śI think I must ask you to forgive a little curiosity this evening.” śThere are secrets to every trade, of course,” he explained, but Durand gave the man’s fist a good squeeze, catching one shoulder as well. śYour help has been very valuable,” he said. śWe have nothing whatever to do with the authorities,” said Deorwen. śPlease.” The man’s fist opened to reveal a ring seal"molded with an angular eagle that Durand recognized. Heremund cocked his head. śThat’s the dockmaster’s seal, or a very pretty copy. And I expect, if we popped down your cellars, we’d find the dockmaster’s seal on a few barrels that never made his ledgers. Yes?” The man shrugged, waving his hands. śWhen cost is high or demand low, the dock taxes can be more than any man could be expected to bear. It pains my heart to deprive"” Heremund put his hands up. śI understand. But it strikes me that you’d be a man likely to know how to get something as large as a great wine barrel up from the docks without anyone being the wiser.” śThe dockmasters do not always pay their underlings as they should. There are ways.” Heremund shook his head, wincing. śWe’d have to grease more than a customs lackey or two just now. Hmm?” śThere are other ways, but their value is in their secrecy.” Durand still had the man’s shoulder. śOne"one is not too far. The wall is old. There is a drain under the house of an acquaintance.” śYou said that the priest helped your sister,” said Deorwen. śI know that all of this has made you uneasy, and I would ask you to risk nothing more, but our need is great.” śLadyship, there is nothing I would rather do than help. . . .” śWe can’t afford a wrong turn, and the city is dark and full of soldiers. There is no other way. Please.” śUh.” The man pawed his hair. śHeaven help me, I will take you.” He crossed to the door, daring a quick glance. śAll right,” he said, śfollow close.” With a muttered charm, the tavern-keeper led them from Farrier Street into an alley and off toward the wall. Durand followed hard on the man’s heels as he loped and darted, teeth glinting bare. They saw guards, but never close. Finally, the tavern-keeper skidded to a stop at the mouth of an alley. śLord of Dooms,” he said. A good pool of torchlight shimmered at the other end; a house glowed in the light and its shadow climbed the city wall above. Heremund grunted at Durand’s elbow. śAnd that’s our bolt-hole, is it?” asked the skald. śIt is,” said their guide. śPerhaps it is not the secret I thought it to be.” They breathed in the darkness. Lamoric drew himself up before the stranger. śFriend,” he said, śthere is good reason why we cannot stray far from the monastery.” The provost’s boat would be waiting there. The tavern-keeper threw up his hands. His mouth opened and closed. śThere are other breaches, but nothing near and nothing unwatched.” Durand blinked. They needed the boat; Lamoric and Deorwen had to get free. He drew himself to his full height. He could think of only one chance, and it might be the best thing for all of them. śBe ready to move,” he said. As the knot of fugitives turned on him, he caught Deorwen’s eye and bolted into the torchlight. 11. Tide, Time, and Laughter He met six men: sergeants with axes in their fists and hauberks on their backs. Slithering on his soles for an instant, he ran off down the main street with the big wall rippling over his left shoulder, a vague suggestion against the stars. He crashed through a stone fountain and pitched into black spaces. He reeled over broken cobbles and saved himself by slapping walls. The guards barked that he should stop. With the cold knifing at his lungs, he spotted a stairway jagging up the wall itself. With the men behind him likely blind beyond their torches, Durand took his chance, surging up above the houses on the open stairs. śThere!” someone shouted. Durand cursed. In the streets below, blobs of torchlight shuddered over storefronts and alleys. Three or four parties had his scent now. Finally, he stumbled out onto the battlements themselves. Over the wall he saw nothing: no horizon, no waves. Somewhere, there were likely to be men walking the wall, but, for now, he could still get free. A few hundred paces down the wall, he skirted one tower and threw his back against the next. Behind him, two separate torch parties struggled after him. He lurched onward, rounding the tower. Where another knot of torchlight shivered ahead. In desperation, he looked down. On a city side, there were roofs"far enough to break his back. On the sea side stretched a waveless blackness: low tide, he realized. Wet shapes of mud and stone glinted on the flats. He resolved to try his luck with the weaker gang of guards, but as he made to move, an accident of torchlight threw a fan of yellow out over the flank of the fortress, right through the wall. The light wavered out once more, and then there was blackness. But Durand had seen what he must see: the belly of the next tower had slumped into the gulf. A great, arched mouth was all that remained of its seaward wall. The guards ahead had nearly hit it, and in a moment they would cut him off forever. He sprinted, charging for a tower he could scarcely see down a path no broader than his shoulders. His cloak lashed behind him. He made out helmets"faces"in the torchlight. Durand dove through a blackness in the tower’s flank and plunged down a stair until the great stink of weeds and muck filled his head and the shattered belly of the tower opened onto the Gulf of Eldinor. He watched where the torchlight on the battlements draped long shadows down the stone. He clung to rubble and fought for silence, trying not to breathe. Overhead, two of the guard parties met, surely wondering how they had missed. He could hear snatches of their talk. In silence, Durand picked his way down the grassy slope of stones below the tower. He tried not to think of when the next block might drop out of the stone gape high above him. When the slope pitched away to a sheer drop, he threw himself off the brink"and struck the frigid mud with force enough to spit new stars into his heavens. SKULKING THROUGH THE stones and muck, Durand found no sign of his friends"or of the provost’s boat. Above him, the Heavens were full of stars, and the first sliver of the Sowing Moon glinted like a needle. Once, a party from the walls raised torches over the flats, sending Durand to hide among the ribs of a wrecked boat. Peering out through its swollen planks, he watched the guardsmen stagger in their pool of torchlight. He saw the long trail of pockmarks he’d left in the slime, and swam a winding rivulet when the guards looked away. At a safe distance, Durand hunkered out of sight and considered his position. If Lamoric and Deorwen had found the provost’s boat, they would be in Scrivensands. If they were caught, they would be locked in the Mount of Eagles. He resolved to reach the wharfs at Scrivensands and see what he could. Choosing a likely smudge on the horizon, he struck off across the gulf, leaving his searchers behind. At every step, the muck fought him for his boots. From the northern darkness, he could hear a thousand leagues of black water alive and breathing in its restive sleep. He tore a foot from the mud and planted it again. After all of this, surely, the spark of greed that had sent him trailing Lamoric to court was thoroughly doused. He could not see Ragnal smiling on him soon. The chill of mountain ice and the northern deeps clenched in the ooze, close to freezing. Around him, the masts and tall hulls of ships stood black against the black night. Stiff ropes snaked the flats, while the ships dozed like hogs in a cold wallow. He pulled the slimy, dragging weight of his cloak from the mud and knotted the thing around his waist. Hauling and planting his left foot"now without a boot"he weighed the ties that bound him to Lamoric. There was loyalty: he had sworn oaths to the man. But, more than that, Durand had betrayed his lord"and then been forgiven. Thus were true bonds forged. Durand’s service was half restitution"payment in sweat or blood"for a betrayal he could not confess. A faint sound. Thinking of king’s men, Durand twisted in his tracks, but the torches now flickered three hundred paces back. The sound whispered again, not from behind"from the north. He searched the flats, cursing the feeble stars and sliver moon. And the sound was larger"as though the whole dark sea was quietly waking out there beyond the Gates of Eldinor. Heartbeat after heartbeat, it swelled. He made out a glint as wide as the gulf, rippling silver in the gloom. The whisper roared from shore to shore. The waves of the Broken Crown had crested some clay shelf out there, bulling through the Gates of Eldinor and spilling wide across the gulf: the tide had turned. Durand was locked to the bottom as surely as if he’d been shackled there. Casting about, he spotted the nearest of the ships that waited for the tide. The water slid onward, fast and black and gleaming. The boat seemed ten bowshots away. He wrenched one foot from the mud. He set it down. The rush was almost upon him. In the mud, he felt the hard curl of an anchor rope hard as a root against his shin. And the water struck"ice and lightning. Long arms of weed slapped past him. But he held on. He climbed the anchor rope, feeling it twist as the water seized the ship and wrenched it onto the waves. The boat lurched"suddenly upon him"blundering like a mountainous warhorse. He held on, climbing as the boat floated free. Locking his fists on the big cable, catching with his frozen feet and shins, swinging as the boat heeled in the flood. Finally, he threw one leg over the rail and, with the boat still swinging like a child’s toy, pulled himself onto the deck. For a time, he sprawled there, motionless while the stars bobbed above the mast. Then he heard a sound"tock"hollow and distant above the whisper of the tide. Tock. It might have been a chain, loose and knocking against some rolling hull out in the gulf, but it sounded like the heel of a staff. The shudder that seized Durand’s bones was only partly about cold mud and water. T-tock. The waves brought the sound nearer. In an instant, Durand’s mind was back in that Traveler’s Night when he rode for his father’s hall through the knotted woods above Gravenholm. Once again, he heard the iron-shod staff among naked trees. Tock. Levering himself from the deck, Durand searched the merchantman for any sign of a ship’s boat, but of course, the crew had rowed the thing to some Eldinor alehouse long ago. There was no leaving, so, with the cold choking him, he contented himself with a box of stiff sailcloth. Once the lock was smashed, the mainsail made a serviceable blanket. T-tock. Durand squeezed his eyes shut. Wrapped in his acre of stiff canvas, he resolved that if the Traveler was walking the waves, a Power of Heaven would come plenty soon enough without a man gawking and running in circles. He hunkered down and drove his thoughts back to the puzzle of Lamoric. All winter Durand had meant to put Burrstone Walls behind him, but he had never ridden more than a few leagues from the castle door. The weather was bad; there was nowhere to go; but, when the others were leaving him, he did not stay behind. Instead, he had rowed the man halfway across Errest the Old. Tock. He winced at the cold and the Traveler’s staff beyond the gunnels. All of his loyalty and greed and penitence were lies. He stayed for Deorwen. Until he let Deorwen go, he was trapped at Lamoric’s side, faithful in treason. These were the snares the fiends laid before a man, and they had caught him firm and fast. His fist struck the deck. śIt must end,” he said. śWhoever finds me on this blasted ship can have me. It must end.” And there was silence on the waves. The marching staff"or swinging chain"had stopped. He smiled around chattering teeth, and breathed. He was alone. And perhaps that was best. śThere are a thousand knights sworn to the duke. I am one blade in all that. I must put Deorwen"” He corrected himself. śI must put Lamoric and his wife behind me.” As he muttered these words, a dry sound"like the crack of a banner"snapped above the masthead. Half expecting to see the Traveler perched on a yardarm, Durand flinched a glance up, but for a moment, he saw nothing. Then, beyond the mast and rigging, a black shape flickered among the stars. It wheeled"or Durand thought it did. He stood, squinting into the Heavens, wondering what night birds flew in such darkness. Then the shape detached itself from the sky and caught hold of the rigging. He saw brittle claws clutching the ship’s backstay. A beak croaked: ha! A nasal, hag’s laugh: a rook. And then there was another black flutter in the Heavens. Another shape descended, catching a second line. Two rooks stared down at him, ragged, their beaks black points with naked hilts of bone. These were no natural birds. śBastards,” Durand said. Here were the henchmen and councilors of Radomor of Yrlac stealing away after the king’s moment of madness. Now they laughed like crows upon tomorrow’s battlefield. The sailcloth slid from Durand’s shoulders. śTo the Hells with you!” he said. Ha! the things answered. The sailors had left a long gaff in brackets by the rail. While Durand’s sword wouldn’t reach the rooks, he thought the gaff might. In a single abrupt motion, he snatched the weapon and swept for their reptilian eyes with speed enough to make the iron hook whistle. The birds scattered"but only for a beat or two of their wings. A feather spun down. Ha! And the two rooks turned to each other. As Durand balanced the long gaff in his fists, they lurched into the air. He brandished the pole, but they banked beyond his reach. The rooks spun round and round and their flight seemed to churn a Hellish whirlpool from the mortal night"as black and cold as a winter midnight and full of whispers. Before Durand knew what he was seeing, frost had locked in his hair. His breath stung behind his ribs, and needles of ice reached from every plank and spar on the deck. The rooks shocked the spinning air with their convulsive, one-note laughter. śWhere is friendship?” said a whisper"the sound scurried round the maelstrom. śWhere is honor?” said a second whisper. Durand swung, aimless, but the rooks’ whirlpool snatched at his breath, tugging life from his lips. He gaped as steam spun upward from his lips till he could no longer breathe. His life’s breath gushed from him, coiling into the dark, as he lashed with the gaff. śHostages among the highborn, brother. Such a base policy,” said the first. śBut not a tool to be discounted.” The whispering spiraled round and round, louder than the tide. śA man might make enemies of his friends, brother.” In an instant, Durand would fall. His heart struggled. śWhile another makes friends of his enemy. . . .” But then the churning void collapsed, spinning off into the black Heavens with the rooks. Laughter rang in Durand’s skull. He dropped to the deck. The two fiends flickered, black, against the stars. HE HEARD A sound"tock"conducted through the bones of his skull. He was sprawled on the deck. śOh, for Heaven’s sake,” he said. He ached as though he’d slept a hundred winters. There was twilight in the Heavens. Clunk . . . Clunk. śDurand?” said a voice. After another clunk, there was a heavier concussion. Though uncountable needles of frost tacked his cloak to the planks, he tore himself free. The Bittern bobbed over the gunnel. Lamoric stood in the prow, craning to see him. Coensar stared down the length of the boat. And there were grins even among Odemar’s oarsmen. As Durand blinked, Ouen reached up, and Durand clambered into the boat. śHost of Heaven,” the big man said. śHer Ladyship swore she saw something. I didn’t think you could have reached the ship before the tide hit, but His Lordship wouldn’t hear about turning back until we’d checked.” Beyond the near circle, Durand saw Lamoric"like a man reprieved"and Deorwen, her chest heaving and lips clamped tight. Ouen sat Durand down on a spare bench. His gold teeth glinted. śThe skald’s no oarsman, and we’ll have to pull hard if we’re to make Acconel before the sky falls.” 12. The Leopard Bares His Claws Over Acconel Harbor, gulls screamed against the sunset. Lamoric’s men had rowed and sailed for days, and now the pale city rose like sorcery before the Bittern’s prow. The walls of the citadel soared over Silvermere, and the twin mouths of the River Banderol gaped where high kingdom engineers had parted the waters to moat the old city. In most ways that mattered, this was Durand’s home. And it would make as good a place as any to tell Deorwen and Lamoric śfarewell” and to get out of the mess he had made. As their strokes hauled the Bittern around the jetty tower, Durand heard the thousand-tongued babble of a crowd. He could think of no reason. At a glance, he saw that a mob had gathered in the quayside shadows, though not a soul among them was turned to see the Bittern come. This was no welcome. He wondered what was going on. śWe’ll take her straight in, Master Odemar,” said Lamoric from his oar. śThe whole kingdom’s about to capsize. We’ve no time for signals.” They cut a line across the crowded harbor to swing close beyond the pier ends. Durand stole a glimpse through one mountainous city gate and saw inexplicable mobs lining the road. Red-and-white guardsmen topped the walls and managed the crowd. Durand searched his memory for an explanation while Lamoric scowled and consulted his captain. Odemar sent them past a place in the gatehouse’s deep shadow. śPut her in here,” said Lamoric. Odemar ordered the oars up, and, as they shot in, Durand got ready with the rope to tie off. In that tense moment of landing, shouts and horns brayed from the mouth of the gatehouse, roaring with a sound of a market at full cry. Durand glanced up. Then, quite suddenly, the whole crowd screamed. At that same instant, the Bittern hit the wharf. Durand’s hand went to his blade, and"as though the gate were a portal to another Creation"men and beasts exploded from the city. People ran. They fell. Some were carried straight into the harbor. As Durand stared, a bull wallowed through bodies. It vaulted up the ramped foot of the city wall, flinging people like rag dolls before its weight heaved it back onto its pursuers. The bull’s flanks ran with blood. śHells,” Durand said. And knew what he saw. Every year it was the same: Driving the Bulls. Even when he lived in the city, he always forgot when it came. Tumbling through screams and needle horns, half-naked men lashed the bulls into madness. A tide of wide-eyed brutes scrambled and slashed forward with a flood of citizens around it. Bulls leapt like porpoises, crushing and maiming the citizens in their desperation. At the water"at the quay"the river of flesh split, afraid of drowning. The Bittern was shaking already. For a blink, Durand saw Heremund’s face behind him, his mouth a hollow loop. Then Coensar was roaring, śPush off! For your lives, boys!” Durand took the wharf in both hands, ready to shove, but its timbers came alive in his hands. One monstrous bull was free of the mob with the empty wharf its only channel to liberty. Its muzzle gleamed big as a saddle. Only Coensar’s hand on Durand’s collar pulled Durand free. In a hail of spit and blood, the monster roared over their heads, cracking the far gunnel and bowling into the water. śHeaven’s King!” Ouen breathed. Durand spun. Beyond the boat, the bull was stiffly erect, swimming for open water. Wherever it had touched the Bittern, she had burst like a barrel. The crowd bayed and whooped, swinging their lashes. They splashed water at the bulls and each other. The animals wallowed and swam, most bound to drown in deep water, but others making their way for the beach beyond the crowd. The frenzy of the mob began to falter, then there came an ordered blast of trumpets from the city walls. Men in the duke’s red-and-white had appeared at the parapets. Durand threw whomever he could get hold of onto the wharf. Ouen, Coen, and Lamoric got Durand’s forearms as the boat sank from under him. śWhat in the Hells?” Berchard demanded. His one eye peered up at the walls. In the midst of the guardsmen was a small figure, stooped under the weight of heavy mail. Even squinting up into the red dusk, Durand knew the opaque blue of his eyes. The Duke of Gireth had come. Duke Abravanal lifted a too-heavy sword over the mere. On all sides, his guardsmen produced crossbows. And with a downward slash of the sword, bolts leapt from the stuttering clank of a hundred bows. Durand and the others flattened themselves, but the bolts flickered past to bite deep in hock and shoulder of the swimming bulls. A second volley sent every bull to the bottom. Silence swelled. A small knight set his hands on the parapet. He wore a mustache like fox’s tails, and Durand knew him. śHear the words of Abravanal, third of that name, Lord of Acconel on Silvermere, Duke of great Gireth, mightiest domain between mere and mountains, bearer of Gunderic’s Sword of Judgment!” Sir Kieren Arbourhall, long Durand’s master, paused. śTo the beast of the water, the duke sends his greetings,” he said. śAll hail Acconel!” And the streets roared once more. śWhat was that about?” demanded Berchard. śThe founding of the city,” said Heremund. śWhen our famous Duke Gunderic came from Yestreen, they say some old devil dragged itself from the muck at the bottom of the mere. Rose out of the water like a black bull, running slime and flapping its ears.” Badan grimaced. śThis skald of yours talked a lot of ballocks the last time as well, Durand. You shut him up, or I shall.” Durand had his eyes on the parapet. The duke was turning. He thought he saw the rest of the old man’s family with him: Landast, little Almora, all silhouettes. Sir Kieren lingered an instant to peer out over the quay, fingering the mustache. śIt is the story,” Durand affirmed. śThe duke was a good Atthian; he told the thing to go to Hell.” śAh,” said Ouen, śa diplomat, was he?” The skald shrugged eloquently, allowing all possibilities. śHe had his old Isle Kingdom blade"and a bad mood"on him.” The guards were filing off the parapet. On the quay, the battered crowd was thinning. Lamoric got to his feet, catching a breath. śThere’s no time. We’ll get him in the street.” Coensar nodded, ordering the men to help get Lamoric through the crowd. As they slipped on the blood and muck before the giant gatehouse, Ouen caught Heremund’s shoulder. śWhat did the big bugger do about it?” asked Ouen. śWhen the old duke told him?” śNot a thing,” said Heremund. śWhat?” Badan said. śGunderic had that old blade. But"see that bull up there?” He pointed at a bull’s head thrusting from the keystone of the arch six fathoms above. śEver since they built the walls, anyone going through this gate"the Fey Gates"alone, especially at dawn and dusk, or at night, they’d meet a big black dog. Or calf. Or a man with bull’s shanks. Or a calf-eared giant, hunkered under the gate like a man trying to crawl through a barrel. The buggane.” śThis is a good one,” said Berchard. śAnd those are folk who managed to get away,” the skald added. Badan winced, shoving a finger back toward the water, where the great bodies drifted. śSo, is all that tribute, or are they making fun?” śDepends who’s listening,” Heremund answered. For an instant, there was no one under the old gates but Lamoric and his men. Ouen flashed his gold teeth. LAMORIC WAS ON the march. People mobbed the streets of Acconel. The bull drive was the real start of the city’s year. Townsfolk threw their shutters wide and filled the streets; a fair heaped goods in the markets from leagues around. There was even a good big tournament at the castle. śThere!” said Lamoric. Beyond the end of Lamoric’s finger, the duke’s banners swayed between the shop signs and leaning upper floors. Lamoric’s men put their shoulders to work, getting their master closer. They jostled jugglers, skalds, and clowns. Puppeteers took their wicker stages in their hands. Badan barked laughter as one man on towering stilts reeled past, grabbing shutters as he flattened himself against the upper stories of a shop. At their feet, priests collected anyone who’d let a bull toss them. Bodies and blood drew packs of awestruck children. Heremund elbowed his way to Durand’s hip. śYou were at Acconel, yes?” There were broken limbs and shattered bodies every dozen paces. śWe did it every year: shield-bearers and some of the older pages,” Durand confessed. They fought just to keep up with Lamoric. śYou’re mad,” said Badan. śThe whole lot of you. Atthians feeding bulls to the lake.” śThat’s it, likely,” declared Heremund, waving at the crowd. śIt’s not Atthians. These are the same folk who bribed the old bugger before they’d heard of the Atthias. You Sons of Atthi are just skin on a very old stew.” Durand smiled. śThere was a lot of drinking.” A broke-nosed face in the crowd sneered at Durand, and Durand put his hand on a shoulder without looking. Suddenly, that hand was upside down and in a twist. He felt like he’d stuck his arm in a mill. śYou’re all wet,” said a familiar voice. The big knobby face looking down on him was Geridon the Champion’s. With a cracked-pearl grin, he let Durand free. śDon’t think I didn’t see you coming. Not for a heartbeat.” Durand smiled, and Lamoric slid past him, dropping to one knee before the old duke and the other members of his family. Abravanal stooped under his coat of iron and ducal crown. At his shoulder was Landast: an older, more solemn Lamoric with a mane of syrup-blond hair. śFather, brother,” Lamoric said. Durand and a few others in the front row knelt as well. As he went down, he spotted old Sir Kieren, looking as he had through all the years Durand served him. śLamoric!” old Abravanal gasped. śBy the King of Heaven.” Wisps of white hair curled from under the chain hood he wore. His eyes were an impossible blue. śLady Deorwen.” Deorwen’s look was stricken. śWe have just returned, Father,” Lamoric said. śYou have carried my fealty to our king?” śFather, Ragnal has"” A child darted from the front of Abravanal’s party, several steps ahead of Landast’s wife. The girl’s hair was a long brush of ink. This was Almora, youngest of Abravanal’s children. śLamoric!” She struck Lamoric’s shoulder, swinging tiny arms around him. He had to plant a hand in the muck to keep from capsizing. śMora,” he said, and, after a moment’s hesitation: śI think you’ve grown again.” She tucked her chin. śI have. I have grown. And you never come. I have a horse of my own now. He is brown and he is called Star.” She had his hand, and was tugging her much older brother to his feet. śYou’re soaking. Were you playing at the mere?” Landast’s wife, a fine, tall woman called Lady Adelind of Garelyn, touched Almora’s shoulder. śAlmora, I think you will find that a duke’s daughter does not roll in the street.” Adelind, herself a duke’s daughter, smiled at Lamoric with an eyebrow cocked. śLamoric has something to tell your father, I think?” Duke Abravanal tottered between them under his hauberk and crown. śUp, up!” he said, giving Lamoric his hand. śWe will speak during the feast. And poor Deorwen must have dry clothes. What would your father say of me?” śYes, Father,” was everyone’s answer, and they continued their progress toward the white citadel. Landast stalked alongside Lamoric, his brow clouded. śYou have returned in haste, I think,” he said. Or you never made the journey, he did not add. śIf I never hold an oar again, it will be too soon,” Lamoric answered. śBut there are"” Almora walked nearly backward. śLamoric? Where is your horse?” Lamoric could not be too frustrated. śI have many horses.” śThe knights who have come for the tournament have many horses. All colors. They are camped in the yard. I’ve only got one,” Almora said. śAnd he is a great responsibility for a girl my age.” Adelind touched the girl’s shoulder. śBrother, I was not sure I left you time to reach Eldinor,” said Landast. They had nearly reached the gates of Castle Acconel where the throng of knights and wellborn guests would be waiting to receive the duke. Lamoric scowled. śMy timing couldn’t have been better. If I had arrived a moment sooner, I would not be here now.” Now, Abravanal stopped. śI do not understand?” śThe oathtaking was a trap, Father. Sons of duchies, loyal and disloyal. The Patriarch of Eldinor himself. King Ragnal has seized them all.” The old man’s mouth hung open. śWe will have to summon the barons,” said Landast. His glance took in father, wife, and sister. śLet’s get inside.” As the duke’s procession took the last turn toward the high white gates of the castle, they saw a great blaze of banners and bunting. But in the market square before the gates a dark squadron of mounted men blocked their way. Bared blades caught the sunset, and leopards curled on shields and surcoats. Every sneering man wore green and crimson. At the vanguard sat Radomor of Yrlac, hunkered like some Power of Hell on the back of a monstrous warhorse. Heaven’s Eye painted his bare skull red, and the whole of Creation seemed to balance around his black stare. He didn’t look like the hero who’d saved the king at Hallow Down. śWhy have we stopped?” asked Almora. From her vantage point at Adelind’s skirts, Creation was a place of knees and cobblestones. Durand touched the grip of his sword. Every man in Lamoric’s company had done the same. But if Radomor chose to move, not one of them could stop him. śWho let them in?” breathed Coensar. Big Geridon twisted. śFestival time. I’d’ve had the gates shut tight, me, but who listens to old soldiers?” His grin was quick and crooked. Tack jingled. Somewhere a sole turned on the cobbles. Durand remembered the hall of Ferangore. He thought of how he’d stopped this man at Tern Gyre. He sniffed a hard breath through his nostrils. śMy lords and ladies of Gireth,” the duke’s voice rumbled. Landast stepped out into the silence, Geridon catching his shoulder before he could go too far. śWhat do you wish with us, Radomor?” Radomor’s head tilted a degree or two. śThe tournament,” he said. śLord Radomor, I would have thought you’d had enough of those. Word of what happened at Tern Gyre has reached us.” The duke made no move, simply staring back with his black eyes. śGireth’s appearance at Tern Gyre and your kinsman’s role on that day stand out in my memory. So I have come. You must allow me to take part.” They had spoiled his tournament, so now he would spoil theirs. śI will not stop you,” said Landast. śThere is one thing more. . . .” Radomor rumbled. śName it,” said Landast. śLandast, son of Abravanal, I would face you in the lists. Fight me and learn who is the better man.” Landast’s hands opened in the stillness. Durand had some sense that Landast could handle himself, but few could stand against Radomor of Yrlac. Yet a challenge had been made, and there were many eyes on Landast: knights from across the realm, townspeople, family. śI do not fight in tournaments,” he said. Durand’s own mouth opened, and he heard gasps all around. A man does not lightly refuse a challenge. Horses fussed. Durand heard the creak of his gauntlets, leather caught in Radomor’s fists. And the light dimmed"as though the duke’s fury could squeeze light from the air. śYou refuse me?” he whispered. śLord Radomor, you may depart if I have disappointed you beyond bearing. If you choose to remain, there is space enough for you and your men in the outer ward.” Radomor grimaced in disgust. It was then that Durand noticed the two black Rooks, grinning in the shadows at the roadside. One waved Durand’s way, and bobbed his eyebrows. THEY PASSED THROUGH the pale gates and into the castle’s outer courtyard when Radomor stood aside. And the smothering mass of their guests filed silently in behind them. The pavilions littered over the lawn under the walls looked like the aftermath of a ruined celebration. The duke stumbled along as if tugged on a string. Lamoric’s eyes darted, hardly leaving the ground"never settling on his brother. Almora tried to skip: her brother had come, there were knights and dashing ladies, the outer yard was full of horses, but Durand watched as she gave it up. Radomor followed. As Abravanal’s party passed through the inner gates and into the shadow of Gunderic’s Tower, a few of Radomor’s company peeled off to stake their tents among the others. The petals of a thousand snowdrops lay heaped in baskets, unthrown. Priests ushered a choir of children from the door to the Great Hall, their songs unsung. Heaven’s Eye set beyond the city. 13. Discretion’s Cost Trumpets rang, Abravanal flinched, and the procession filed into the candlelit splendor of the Painted Hall: the feasting hall of Gunderic’s Tower. Tabor, shawm, and bagpipe played them in. śHow can you?” whispered Lamoric. Landast was shepherding his wife and little sister. He ducked close. śI am a lord of this realm, not some vagabond tourney fighter.” śNot me, then,” said Lamoric. Landast shut his mouth a moment, helping Almora up the step to the high table. He whispered, śThis man’s bluster and my pride will not cause me to forget my duty.” Durand could not hear the rest of what passed between them. He and the remainder of Lamoric’s soggy band weren’t destined for the high table. A bowing, balding serving man led them past the long rows of benches to the lower end of the hall and a few spare places by the service doors. Heremund and Ouen sat on either side. śDo you suppose all this is because I said that everything the boy did must come to nothing,” said Heremund. śWhat?” said Ouen. śAt Radomor’s cradle. I should have kept my mouth shut.” The little skald rubbed his chin. śBut this move’s a puzzle. He’ll have heard about the king’s trick, I reckon. Most of the Great Council will by now. There might even be riders in the road already. There’ll be talk. And here’s Radomor in Gireth, playing the clown.” Last of the wellborn, Radomor and his henchmen strode into the Painted Hall, passing the high table before finding their way down the far aisle, Radomor grim and hunched as a bull. His Rooks grinned. śWhat’s his game, eh?” said Heremund. Fresh paint slathered every surface in the long hall. Great swags of cloth hung where trophies, shields, and sconces had been fixed to the stone. High in the crossing vaults overhead, bosses and keystones glinted with gold and firelight. The arms of dead lineages and crusading heroes snarled from their old places. Durand had slept under these ceilings many thousand times. śRado makes this challenge, what follows?” wondered Heremund. When the whole company"two hundred knights-at-arms"stood at their benches, serving men with rods laid table linens, and carried ewers and towels for the washing of hands. śLandast accepts. Radomor thrashes him like an ugly stepchild, maybe. Maybe kills him.” Someone planted a slopping ewer on the table. śThanks, lad,” Heremund said, splashing his hands in the water. śRight there, he’s knocked the hand off Gireth’s tiller. A staunch ally of the king, adrift. Good.” Up the hall, the green of Yrlac’s livery blotted the long table. His whole retinue aped their master’s arms; the two preening Rooks the only exceptions. śLandast says Śno,’ ś Heremund continued, śhow’s he stand with the peers then, eh? How’s he look to those who’d follow him? Not good. Not strong. It’s a sharp bit of politics, this challenge.” The music stopped. At the top of the hall, someone was standing. Tall in bright robes of gold and samite, the Patriarch of Acconel swept the room with his sea eagle’s gaze. His beard shone like a sheet of silver. Heremund narrowed one eye. śLet’s see what old Father Oredgar has to say to these new guests, eh?” The Patriarch filled his lungs. śPeers of Errest. Lords, ladies, and serving men. Sons and Daughters of Atthi, hear one who knows the power of Heaven’s King. śAt the word of his Creator, Saerdan Voyager ordered ships built in numbers great enough to carry all who would follow him from the shattered Isle Kingdom. His own vessel he named Cradle, and he had his Hazelwood Throne set within it. As the Host of Heaven bid him, he set sail and steered for the dawn.” One of Radomor’s henchmen cleared his throat. Durand caught sneers around the grim duke. And the Patriarch turned his piercing gaze on the men of Yrlac. He reached with one long-fingered hand. On the table before the Patriarch glinted the saltcellar nef of the House of Gunderic: a castled ship in precious metals to bear the duke’s salt. He snatched the rattling thing from the linen. śBut the Westering Sea is broad, and the Cradle sailed for many days. It is said that our Sons of Atthi knew thirst. Some despaired of reaching the far havens, their masters turning back for the sunset. Days became weeks. The last crumbs were eaten and the dregs drunk. Some men felt they had been misled, that Saerdan Voyager had gone mad in the wars behind him. More ships fell away"now long past reaching home. But then, at last, when the fortieth dawn rose before them, the Cradle’s watch sighted Wave’s Ending.” The model ship gleamed above two hundred knights-at-arms, and at last the old man clanked the thing on the table before Abravanal. śSaerdan was Heaven’s anointed. The king. We are the scions of the faithful. Our blood is their blood. What became of those who heeded their own diverse masters and turned back upon the Westering Sea, lost upon the deep? What became of those who scattered at the first pangs of hunger? They are lost still. They hunger always.” The men bowed their heads, while the Patriarch stared down on them all. śPraised be the Silent King of Heaven and the dread Powers of His Host,” he said. Though the company murmured their assent; not one looked Radomor’s way. Soon, the procession of platters began. Durand picked bits and pieces from the carvers’ knives. Trenchers were set before him and whisked away. Mostly, he watched Radomor; the man sat like some fiend’s idol. Knives clinked, but only Radomor’s men spoke. Their every sneer and grunt sent ripples through the stillness. At the upper end of the hall, he could make out little Almora. Lady Adelind was helping the girl to cut, counseling her to eat with fingertips, Landast nodding to her questions, more parents than siblings. The world beyond the castle sank into darkness, and soon the constellation of candles was the only light in the hall. śWhat’s this now?” demanded Heremund. Down the lower table, one of Radomor’s Rooks raised his head with an absentminded sigh. Over yards of empty table, a reek filled Durand’s mouth as though he had bitten into something hot and putrid. The Rook hopped to his feet in a flutter of candlelight. śAtthians,” said the Rook, cup raised. śScions of Saerdan Voyager. Knights of Errest.” His gaze danced over the silent faces staring back. śWe are reaching the end of a fine meal. I wish to propose a toast. There are many brave men among you. His Grace, the Duke of Yrlac, will be pleased to fight beside you when the Eye of Heaven rises above these ancient towers. But some of you have been muttering, sitting in a gossip’s judgment on one of your peers.” He gestured with his goblet. śIs it not better to ask our questions? To cease our whispering? Landast of Gireth"setting aside base cowardice"could you explain why you will not test yourself against my master?” Landast fixed his blue stare on Radomor alone. śWhere is your toast?” Radomor’s eyes glinted, as did a few teeth. śWhat is your reason?” śPrudence.” Radomor spoke without humor, drawing each word as deliberately as a sword. śAn old woman’s word.” Landast blinked slowly. At Durand’s side, there was a whisper on the tablecloth. Coensar’s hands had disappeared. Durand shifted his weight onto his toes. The duke continued grimly. śI do not deal in pretty snares of language: you are the heir of a duke who has two sons. I, myself, am a duke. A duke with no sons. Who risks most?” Landast blinked slowly, unmoving. śAre you a spoiled child who fights only when defeat is impossible?” Lady Adelind stood, collecting Almora and leading her from the hall. The little girl looked like she wished to stay, but knew enough to submit. Her feet crunched on the reeds. śYou must draw what conclusions you will,” Landast said, eyes flat as turquoise. Durand saw Kieren’s hand restrain Lamoric. Disgust tied knots in Radomor’s jaws. The second Rook hopped right onto his bench, his cup in the air. śTo Landast then. Astonishing is the blood of Gireth. It has bred a fantastic creature. Never before has the world seen one who is, at once, both a man and his grandmother. To Landast, who"” śStop!” Lamoric was on his feet, slipping Kieren’s grasp. śI will accept your challenge.” The Rook atop the bench quirked his head. śBut, Milord Lamoric, you have not been challenged.” Lamoric fixed his attention on the little man’s master. śRadomor, I am the man who upset your plans at Tern Gyre. Me and my men. And I saw what you are. I name you faithless. I name you murderer. I name you traitor. Now, it’s my blood you threaten. I accept your challenge. You will find that I’ve no chain of duties to keep me from your throat.” Durand watched as Radomor hesitated. There was no advantage in fighting the younger son. A Rook leaned close to his master, pouring a thick whisper into the man’s ear. And Radomor sat, eyes on Lamoric, expression slowly hardening. śA wager then.” Radomor’s voice rumbled up from the foundations. śYou wish to risk more than your life?” asked Lamoric. śBest me, I will remain within the bounds of Yrlac for . . . a year and a day.” śAnd what must I hazard, besides my life?” śIf you are bested"and live"then you must do likewise.” śIn Yrlac?” said Lamoric. Radomor nodded, slow. śI accept.” The duke let one dry puff escape his broad nostrils, and stood. He nodded the shallowest bow over the candlelit table, and then led his company from the room. Lamoric remained on his feet until the last green cloak snapped out the door, and then he too marched from the candlelight. Durand found himself staring into Landast’s face, far down the hall. The man’s eyes fixedly ignored his brother’s angry exit and his father’s worry. Big Geridon’s eyes never moved from the direction of Yrlac’s departure. WHEN THE TABLES were down and the torches out, Durand and the others found some good, big pallets and circled the embers in the midst of the Painted Hall with the scores of loyal men who guarded the line of Gunderic. Each slept round his sword. Though Durand was bone-weary, he stared up into the painted vaults where the smoke curled. With luck and daring, Lamoric had bested Moryn Mornaway, but Radomor was something else. They would be carrying their lord back in a shroud. śI hate a late feast before a tourney.” It was Badan’s voice in the gloom. śNow they’ll start first thing.” śBetter than an early one,” said Ouen. śYou ride on a full belly, it’s all cramps"and Heaven help you if someone catches you in the guts.” śI thought Lamoric had him there,” Heremund said. śTrapped him.” Berchard answered, śTook him aback.” śBut that man of his. The one with the grins and whispers, he had something. Neither of those creatures seemed to mind. One brother was good as the next to them.” Straw crunched around the circle as men shifted. śHells, it doesn’t bear thinking about,” Badan grumbled. śWhat are they planning?” Heremund said. Badan levered himself up on one elbow, his voice hissing from a faceless silhouette. śI’ll tell you why that bald bastard doesn’t mind. It’s simple: he’ll win, and he knows it. You’re as stupid as our bumpkin here.” He gestured to Durand. Durand thought about cracking Badan another rap in the teeth. The fool still had a few left. śSurely,” Heremund agreed. śBut even given he’s likely to win, why pick on younger sons? He gambles his life for nothing.” śIt’s no gamble if"” śHostages,” Ouen declared. śHe must be jealous of old Ragnal’s collection.” Heremund began, śWe must watch"” śEnough. All of you.” This last voice was Coensar’s. The man’s eyes were twin winks of steel"and fixed on the doorway arch. Lamoric was walking down the hall. The young lord walked through the sudden quiet, a pallet hung like a corpse over his shoulder. Deorwen trailed after him. He chose a spot on the floor and the two lay curled in the fire’s glow. śI’m due some luck,” Lamoric said, finally. śMaybe I’ll get the bastard.” No one spoke from then on. LONG AFTER THE others subsided into the tidal breathing of sleep, Durand watched the embers glitter in the stare of Lamoric’s wide eyes"and in Deorwen’s. 14. Death and Dreaming Durand realized he was lost. He didn’t know where he was or how he’d come there. His chest ached. He was blind. He tasted metal and dead leaves. But he drifted, cold as the Gulf of Eldinor. And there, in that clouded deep, he heard a strange mutter, muffled. Someone whispered, and the shape of the words churned the frigid murk around him, pulling at the gloom as an oar hauls the water. His lungs ached. He could not breathe. Durand felt himself gripped in the strange eddy. The sound was a call: a summoning. He felt something stir in the impossible depths below him. There was moaning: a horrible moaning that shot through him, cold and shivering. The thing heard the pulling words, and the darkness moved with its coming"roiled with the great churnings of its alien bulk. It came, roaring its despair. And Durand could not move. He could not breathe. And when its chaos shuddered past he could have cried for relief"until the wake of its passage seized him, catching hold as surely as any jaws. And he was drawn as the lamenting titan surged for some impossible surface. WAS THERE A single gulp of air? IN ANOTHER PLACE . . . He looked over the circle of sleepers by the hearth’s embers: men-at-arms by the score, sleeping light. But he was not in the Painted Hall"not with them. Again, his lungs ached"pressure bulged. Had he died? He hung in space not an arm’s length from some arrow loop in the wall of Gunderic’s Tower. There was a crust of bird shit. Pavilions spread below him, dark wheels, but he hardly looked"a shape hovered at the neighboring slit: a man of smoke and threads, somehow more real than the whole Creation around it. And caught in the webs of its chest hung a fragment of bone, pierced like a whistle and filigreed with alien marks. The bone was a man’s. Mute and paralyzed, Durand shuddered. This was the black thing from the deeps, knotted to the world. The figure’s slender arm"wisps, ink, writhing threads"groped through the slit-window and into the warm gloom inside. Against Durand’s will, he followed, drawn in and pulled behind. He and the billowing thing swarmed the passages of his onetime home without false turnings, deeper and deeper, twitching and flowing. There were regions of blackness. His chest ached as though an ox stood on his ribs. He began to dread their errand, whatever it might be. Passing moonlight or fluttering torches, he tried to glean hints from the drifting horror’s limbs. There might have been robes. Passing a whitewashed wall, a vial winked in the writhing curl of one hand. Light glittered through glass and a blood-dark fluid: wine? The thing lashed and swirled up a spiral stair to pause before a chamber door. Durand tried to call out, but felt his lungs trapped and struggling. He did not know the door. In the shadow’s fist, the handle turned. And the spirit flinched inside, like ink spilled in clouds. Just within, the big, square face of Geridon the Champion glowed dimly in a brazier’s fading coals. He slept against the doorpost. Durand made out the draped planes of a four-post bed. Again, he tried to call around whatever clamped his lips. An ember winked in the vial as the shadow crossed to the bed. It parted the curtains on the intimate space above the cov- erlet. Durand followed, entering that close cell of warmth and human smells. He burned with shame. He wanted to tear free, but could not even struggle. Then the specter dipped toward the blankets. Durand wanted to shout a warning, but could not. It was so dark. A glass stopper came free like a clucked tongue; a vial’s lip clicked against teeth. Durand imagined the foul liquor pouring over lips and tongue. Then there came a piping whistle: a human shriek. A face leapt from the bedclothes; a woman’s eyes flashed wide. And he and the assassin were smoke on the wind. A single gust threw them spinning down the spiral stair, through dark passageways and out the arrow loop window. And the shadow man was rent to tatters. The pale, sigil-carven bone tumbled from the window like a misfired arrow. Suddenly freed, Durand spun above the pavilions, and watched as the spinning bone dropped into the waiting hand of a Rook. Radomor looked on, his eyes fixed on the Rook’s narrow shoulders, resigned and brooding. DURAND WOKE WITH small hands on his shoulders. śDurand!” A slap cracked against his cheek, and he filled his lungs in a single gusty breath. Deorwen’s hair feathered his face. Then the dark hall boiled with curses. Lamoric took Durand’s shoulder. śShe said you weren’t breathing! I could see you struggling.” Durand pitched himself onto his hands; the darkness flashed with every blink. śI saw something. I"” śDurand, you were moaning,” said Deorwen. śI heard it.” The hearth’s embers glittered in her eyes. Around the circle, he saw Heremund, Ouen, Coensar"all looking on. Nightmare memories spun in Durand’s skull, then snapped clear. He grabbed Lamoric’s tunic. śYour brother, Lordship!” The young lord looked from Durand’s face to the top of the hall. He broke into a run and Durand lurched after. Before the door of the bedchamber was a landing. Stopped in the doorway, Lamoric swayed like a hanged man. He wrenched an unlit torch from a bracket on the wall. Inside, the room was as dim as it had been in Durand’s nightmare: one brazier smoldering. Lamoric stepped over the threshold, hesitating as the stone crackled under his feet. Durand could see that the nearest of the bed curtains was down. Lamoric thrust his torch into the brazier, and the air came alive around him, twinkling. The floor where he stood seemed to be covered in crushed sugar. An impossible hoar-frost bristled from every surface. By the wall, Geridon’s body lay crumpled, his eyes two more stiff wrinkles among the folds of his face. Durand followed his lord, drawn on. Lamoric halted again at the torn bed curtain. Durand stepped close, almost past him. Landast and his wife were white effigies on the stone folds of a sarcophagus. Landast’s eyelids were shut: twin curls of icing. Adelind’s stood like fat pearls, still trained on the thing she’d seen alive under the canopy above her. Durand’s tongue felt thick in his mouth. It would have been better if she too had not awakened. She might have seen him as well as the man of shadow in her last moment. Lamoric was murmuring. śDurand, what did you see?” Like filings around a lodestone, each needle radiated from Landast’s lips: fans and flowers of ice. śI was dreaming.” The rest were making their way up the stairs. He would not hide anything anymore. śI saw it. A summoning, I think. Radomor’s man. Lordship, I saw"” A small voice behind them spoke, bright and muddled: śIt sparkles.” It was Almora, come from her father’s room. śI heard people.” The two men turned, but Deorwen was there first, stepping between the child and the bedchamber. She caught the girl’s shoulders, saying something like, śCome away. This isn’t a good place anymore.” Standing in that cave of frost as his wife and sister withdrew and the throng on the stair gazed on, Lamoric said, śI am heir to Gireth now.” śThere was no way to stop it,” Durand breathed. śThis was the whisper in bloody Radomor’s ear yesterday. What have I done?” 15. A Mortal Game Coensar and Durand stood guard on the landing outside the duke’s chamber. śKeep those eyes of yours open,” Coensar said. śWhatever comes, do what you can.” Inside, Lamoric paced with Heremund Skald while the duke sat on the bed. In the next room, wise women tended to the cold shapes that had been Landast, Adelind, and Geridon. Deorwen had Almora. Heremund winced and scratched through his rumpled cap. śThere’s a lot of them down there, all wondering what’s to happen. They’re bickering about whether there will be a tourney this afternoon.” Lamoric paced to an arrow loop, looking down on tents and tiltyard. He said nothing. Heremund grimaced. śI reckon someone’ll have to speak to the buggers.” A fierce voice echoed on the stairs. It was the Patriarch’s. śKieren Arbourhall, you villain, why are all these people gathered? I’ll have your red whiskers if you don’t tell me why you’ve hauled me from the high sanctuary.” Sir Kieren appeared at the top of the stairs. śBe still, Oredgar.” The Patriarch drew up as he reached the landing. śWhat has happened here?” śPatriarch,” said Lamoric, śwe have decisions to make.” śWho has done this?” śCome inside,” said Kieren and led the Patriarch into the duke’s chamber. śIt seems our Durand here had a dream. He saw an assassin of some sort"a shadow.” He explained. Father Oredgar stood very tall. śLandast, Adelind . . .” śAnd Geridon,” said Duke Abravanal. śAnd my Champion, Geridon. What shall I do?” śThe Wards of the Ancient Patriarchs are indeed weak when such a thing can happen in Errest the Old.” śRadomor should hang,” said Lamoric. Kieren grunted. śFor treason to begin with.” The Patriarch turned a skewering glance on Durand. śBoy, you saw nothing with your own eyes?” śIt was a nightmare. Others saw that I dreamt.” But the Patriarch’s scowl only deepened. śClosed eyes do not a witness make. Neither law nor custom permits it.” Lamoric threw up his hands. śWhat is the point of law? They wait for answers. All those men in the hall.” śThere is the tournament to consider,” said Kieren. śThere are the funeral rites to consider,” countered the Patriarch. śHost of Heaven,” Abravanal gasped. śI am no great admirer of tournaments either, Patriarch,” Kieren said, śbut there have been games and bloodshed in Acconel on this day since Gunderic.” śAnd I have challenged Radomor,” said Lamoric. śWould they understand that, those men? My brother’s dead, so I must withdraw? This Radomor likely killed him, and I’d like to reconsider? No, I will not ask. This is my doing, and I will see it through. It may be that we will need no hanging. I still have my sword.” The din of murmurs in the Painted Hall was clear. Heremund winced. śThat’ll be the buggers downstairs.” Lamoric opened his hands before his father. śWhat will we do? These men want answering.” śWhat can I tell them?” whispered Abravanal. śLandast is dead. Adelind was a second mother to my poor little Almora, since my Truda died. The only mother she’s known. How can I tell Duke Alret that his daughter is dead"in my home?” śAlret of Garelyn’s locked in Ragnal’s Mount of Eagles,” said Lamoric. śHells.” He sucked a good lungful of the sickroom air. śDon’t worry, Patriarch. There will be funerals aplenty by day’s end. Durand? Coen? Let’s take the news to that pack of fools downstairs. Radomor will have his little bloodbath. And if the Host of Heaven is with us, we’ll drown him in it!” HERALDS AND CRIERS ran to every street corner of Acconel. There would be a tournament: single combat and a great mêlée to follow. The men in the Painted Hall flooded the outer yard, hunting their war gear. Horses needed saddles. Blades had to be ground sharp. For Lamoric’s men, there was a moment’s hesitation. Who among them had so much as a donkey to ride on? As the hall emptied, Lamoric caught Durand by the surcoat. śMy brother had horses. I remember he had a bone gray. Big bruiser. He’ll do me, I think. You and the others, take your pick.” What would it matter? Their ride into the mêlée would come after Lamoric tangled with the duke. Coensar ordered the men into motion, setting Guthred in charge of the scavenging. Some shook out rust-clotted hauberks from the armory while the others prowled among old friends and bare acquaintances for serviceable gear. Durand sought out the stables, Heremund bobbing after. śYou can feel it in the air,” the skald said. śThe great ones’ll be leaning close now, waiting to see how Radomor’s dice land. It’s all happening now.” A twist in the passageway led toward the thick smell of horses. Heremund stepped through an outside door. śKeep your eyes wide,” said Heremund. śI’ll be among the crowds.” Agents would be thick on the roads to and from Acconel, for here was the opening of the great and fatal game that would catch at the oaths of ten thousand men and drag them into carnage. A storm was poised to break. Durand and the rest of Lamoric’s men were like children. He pushed into the great, dark stables. śI know you, you know,” said a small voice. As his eyes began to make sense of the shadows, Durand saw a woman’s shape by one of the stalls: even in the dark, he knew Deorwen. There was a small face at her hip. He remembered that Almora liked horses. Now, she had a bucket of oats in both hands. This little girl had seen her sister drift under the walls outside; the wise women had laid out the only real parents she knew. Deorwen met his eyes. śWhile he was getting ready, I thought we should find something to occupy our attention,” said Deorwen. Durand nodded. The girl, at least, would need this. śYou say you know me?” Durand asked the little one. śYou lived in my house. In the castle. You were one of the boys,” said Almora. Among the stalls, a horse shook its head. śI was, yes. I remember you too.” He scratched his neck. śI am very sorry about all that has happened.” The little girl’s mouth was a small, straight line. She wrapped her arms around her bucket. śYes,” she said. śYou are going to fight for my brother?” Deorwen had her hands on the little girl’s shoulders. śYour brother is very brave,” said Durand. Lamoric was going to have to fight Radomor alone; Durand could do nothing to stop it. śI’ll do what I can for him.” In the nearest stall, there was a black monster. The thing was looking down on him from the warm gloom. śThat one is Pale,” Almora offered. The brute’s big dark eyes glistened somewhere under the rafters. śLovely,” said Durand. śSir Geridon said it was funny,” Almora offered. śBecause he’s black. The stripe on his nose, that’s a Śpale’"like a fence post. Sir Geridon rides him.” She caught her lip between her teeth. śI’m not allowed. Sir Geridon says if Pale’s tame enough for little girls, he isn’t much of a warhorse, is he?” The door creaked. Ouen, Berchard, and Badan ducked inside. With a look they plucked tack from the walls and disappeared. Durand swallowed, and gave her a nod. śYou’d better get clear then. I’m going to have to lead him out.” śHe’s Sir Geridon’s,” Almora repeated, and Deorwen led her from the stable. śI’ll keep him safe,” Durand said. śI will watch. Father has said. We must all watch. Every year.” As the little girl ran ahead, Durand looked to Deorwen, and she gave him a small nod. The girl should be nowhere near the lists when her brother rode out. And they had an instant alone. She kissed him, deep and breathless with her eyes shut, before tearing away to follow the girl. He walked out with his heart thundering. śHA!”"A HARSH voice, mocking. Durand froze on the threshold of the outer yard. Then he saw. On every side, slate black gallows-birds clotted the battlements, overhanging the courtyard like bloated eaves. Swags of the brutes choked every embrasure above the heads of the uneasy crowd. śHa!” Durand led Geridon’s śPale” out. Under the feathered spectators, every street of Acconel had been poured into the narrow tiltyard and now they watched, gray-faced and cold on the grass bank under the wall. At one end of the lists, Duke Radomor waited. And at the other, Lamoric stood while Guthred tugged at the straps of his harness. Everyone but the old shield-bearer had his eyes fixed on Radomor. The Duke of Yrlac hulked like some cultish idol. A shadow clung to his face, but nothing could hide the glint of his dark eyes. From the man’s shoulders, the Rooks watched, smug and grinning. And there was the Champion: the mailed monster as tall as the stone kings in the Mount of Eagles, his helmed head bent over the bowl of his mailed hands. śHey.” Berchard handed Durand a scabbed bundle. śOuen found a hauberk that should fit you and a gambeson with some stuffing left . . . if we get drawn into the mêlée, after.” śGood,” said Durand. Rust is too much like old blood. But, in hopes that there was a sound ring or two left under the crusts, he set about hauling the stuff over his head. Above them, Duke Abravanal gazed across the crowd with a stare like cold water. By his side were Deorwen and little Almora, her dark eyes more somber than a little girl’s should be. śThey’re pounding the stakes,” Berchard murmured. śThe heralds are at Rado’s end now. I’ve had a word with them.” He pointed down the wall. śThe first stake’s elder.” At the foot of the spectator’s bank, a carrot-headed herald peered up at five thousand feathered onlookers before driving the stake that marked the lists’ south corner. Coensar spoke at Lamoric’s ear; the man was smothered in mail hood, stuffed arming cap, and leather knots. śTake him from horseback, if you get the chance.” śExcellent idea. How lucky I’ve brought lances,” quipped Lamoric. Guthred threw a shield over his master’s shoulder, checking the length of the straps. Durand glanced back at Berchard. śThis elder. It’s a nice, cheery tree?” śThey call it Ścursed’ elder more often than Ścheery,’ as I hear it: there’s a smell, and the heartwood’s soft, soft. But I hear a man can make whistles from the stuff, it’s so easy to hollow. That’s cheery enough.” The herald drove the elder stake with two quick taps"a sound that spurred some malicious croaking among the black onlookers. Berchard scratched his beard. śCursed elder, driven deep.” śMake the passes pay,” said Coensar. śHit him square and you and your name may live awhile. Unhorse him, and he might just spring a shoulder or snap a leg, and this mess is done before it’s started.” Guthred planted a borrowed helm over iron rings and padding, working at the red paint with his thumb. Unhappy, he wrenched the thing off. Lamoric blinked. śHells, Guthred. You’ve done all this six times. I’ve got to live at least until they can start the joust.” Guthred was already rechecking the man’s spurs. The herald and his helper had reached the eastern corner, right at Radomor’s feet. The two Rooks peered on, preening as always. Radomor smoldered in his bit of clinging shadow. The herald drew another stake. śThat there’s the boneyard tree,” said Berchard. śYew.” śLord of Dooms,” said Durand. ś ŚFatal’ yew, they call it.” The herald gave the thing a good whack with his mallet. It didn’t set. At the second blow, the stake split"the crack shooting across the courtyard"but sunk deep. Horses tossed their heads. śThe death tree driven quick,” said Berchard. śAnd cracked.” śWhat follows from that?” asked Durand. śI don’t want to think.” śYou’re a lot of old fishwives,” said Lamoric. śHow long now?” Coensar wasn’t listening. śIf it does come to the ground, Radomor’s a bigger man than you. He’s got guile and power, a long reach, and there’s no quit in the whoreson.” śSo I should wager on him, then?” asked Lamoric. Guthred jerked the man off balance with a tug on his harness, grunting, śYour man’s hobbled, Lordship.” śAye . . .” Lamoric said, recalling. śHis neck. Yes?” The heralds had crossed the long tiltyard, and were ready at Lamoric’s end. śIt’s to be oak in the west,” Berchard said. śA good strong tree,” said Durand. śBut killed in a tempest, this one.” śA windfall then?” said Durand, thinking it must mean good fortune. śThat would be a lucky stroke, but this poor devil was blasted by a bolt from the Heavens.” That stake sank at the first tap, sticking deep. śRadomor’s lands are west, aren’t they?” said Durand. śAye, that they are,” Berchard agreed. Coensar was speaking. śRado’s half-crippled from last summer on Hallow Down, and his neck looks no better than at Tern Gyre. From what I hear, Mad Borogyn’s boys broke that neck. Even healed, it’ll give him trouble.” śWhat are you saying? He won’t be sleeping nights? He’ll have trouble getting a tunic to fit?” śUse your legs,” said Coensar. śMake the whoreson turn. Make him stalk you. Keep moving. Swing a blade for it if you get the chance.” śHmm. A man’s vulnerable at his neck, you say? What else have you been keeping secret, eh, Coen?” The redhead herald and his man crouched right at their feet. śHello, boys,” said Berchard. The pair winced up. Lamoric put his mailed hands over his face, hardly able to find skin. śHow long must I wait? I’ve picked my headsman. He’ll have measured my neck by now. Let’s get it over.” śAlmost finished,” said the herald. Lamoric laughed. Now, Ouen leaned in, asking the herald, śWhat’s that you’ve got now, eh?” The stake in the man’s hand was a long thing, gray as a taper. śWillow.” Tree of grief, of loves lost. He swung the hammer. There was dry chuckling among the birds; some crossed from perch to perch. He swung again. It looked like the rooks had gathered to stare down over their necks. The herald’s man reset the stake. He swung again, and again. Guthred had stopped pulling. Lamoric looked. Every man stopped to watch. No one counted the blows. Radomor still sat in his shadows. Abravanal, Almora, and Deorwen looked on. Durand and she shared a sober glance. śHost of Heaven,” Berchard muttered. Closer to home, something like tears were running down the gray willow stake: water squeezing out of damp wood. There wasn’t a sound among the thousand under the wall. śWe do not want for omens, do we lads?” Lamoric took a shaky breath. śIs it too late for me to reconsider? Would everyone be very much disappointed?” The next instant, trumpets rang under the Heavens. śThere’s my answer,” Lamoric said and heaved himself into the saddle of his brother’s bone gray. A WIND STIRRED under the clouds, jostling the carrion birds and lifting the tails of Lamoric’s borrowed panoply as he rode out alone. Radomor climbed into the saddle of his big black. The animal shied as creaking leathers took the weight of the duke and his mail, and it jittered against the pain of the bit and spurs that forced its obedience. Above the scene, Abravanal stared out from the ducal box. Trumpets flashed, poised for his command, but the old man hardly seemed to see what was happening before him. In a moment, his only son would ride against a man who had single-handedly turned battles for the king. The duke trembled, but, at a quiet touch from Sir Kieren, he climbed to his feet. Deorwen led Almora from the box. The ancient Sword of Judgment rattled from its scabbard, the blade of Abravanal’s long lineage shimmering under the clouds. Dead Landast’s gray stamped; Lamoric’s lance bobbed in his fist. Radomor’s head turned within its shadowed helm. And Abravanal let the broad blade fall. A lance is a terrible weapon. Its blade splits helms and shields. Its impact alone can heave a man yards and leave him forever broken. Throw the force of two charging horses behind the blow, and there is nothing to match it. Stout hardwood splinters. The skin of the lancer tears at the sudden wrench of his own weapon under his arm. Under the eyes of his city and his father, Lamoric charged away from his comrades. As the distance closed, he swung the lance point down, clamping the ash beam in a vise of armored ribs and mailed arm. Durand felt every step as Radomor loomed beyond the sights of the man’s helm. They struck with a thunderclap of splintered lances that stung rooks into the air. And Lamoric’s warhorse recoiled onto his haunches. While Lamoric and his brother’s gray seemed to cower, Radomor’s cloak filled, billowing above his foe"whose horse staggered and lolloped to its feet like a crippled thing. Both men had hit squarely, but both held their seats. And Radomor might have been a dragon with vast wings spread. The men on the sidelines hissed while a hundred rooks pinwheeled back down into the yard, their black claws catching lines and poles. śThe bugger’s a stone tower,” whispered Coensar. Lamoric had hit the man square on the shield with all the force of arm and galloping horse"and the duke simply stormed away, back into his own company. śLamoric hung on,” countered Guthred. Now they were shouting encouragement; Lamoric rode back for a new lance. They could see him working his hand. He made no jokes. Guthred passed a second lance up. They would have three passes with this and then fall to blade work. Again, the eyes of the crowd turned to Abravanal. He tottered above them, then the ancient sword fell, and the trumpets rang. Once more, Lamoric allowed his brother’s warhorse to gather speed, opening into a rolling gallop. This time the tall gray shied before the duke’s onslaught, veering toward the crowd. Still, Lamoric brought the point to bear, and struck. Once again, Lamoric’s aim was good. The point shrieked a flash from the duke’s helm: a prize hit. But even as Duke Radomor rocked, his own point struck. The steel bit through shield to jut three feet beyond. Again, Lamoric’s horse recoiled, his haunch knocking one spectator into his fellows. A thousand rooks lifted their wings. Adrift above the crowd, Lamoric canted in the saddle. Every man around Durand clenched his fists, every eye pinned on the filed blade. Had it gone under the arm? Had it gone through their man? Radomor’s cloak billowed with the black wings all around as he too watched"the snapped haft of his lance still in his fist. But Lamoric did not bleed; he did not open like a barrel of claret. Hands from among the citizens of Acconel reached for him as he lolled over their heads. Men and women lent their strength to his, righting their young lord. And Lamoric managed to face the duke, who cast the broken fragment of his lance into the crowd and made ready for another pass. Lamoric reached his comrades. They could hear his breath whistling through the mask of his helm. śPerhaps it wouldn’t be so bad to spend a year over in Yrlac, eh?” said big Ouen. śAm I dead?” asked Lamoric. He held his arms as though both were broken. Durand could see nothing of his face through the helm, but the left side of his surcoat was a ruin. Fragments of his shield hung from an arm still tangled with his enemy’s spear. śWhen did I ever tell you to hunt a man’s head in a pass like this?” asked Coensar. A shield was the larger target. śI was trying . . . trying for smack in the middle . . . middle of the whoreson’s shield. I don’t know,” gasped Lamoric. śNot used . . . to this horse.” His hands shook. Guthred was tearing and digging at Lamoric’s side; the knight hadn’t left his saddle. śLooks like it cracked the shield, shot over wrist bone, smacked up against that coat-of-plates you’re always carping about, and then out.” śFeels like it’s in my ribs.” Guthred scowled. śWe’ll need a hammer if these plates’re to lie right. Never touched you.” śIs this the last pass? Then it’s blades?” asked Lamoric. śAye,” said Coensar. There was a rush from the sky. The Heavens had filled with rooks, and the men winced at the snap of their feathers and the wheeling shadows of their wings. śAll right,” said Lamoric. śLast lance.” The rooks swooped low, cawing their derision. Lamoric still had to gasp. śThey still up there? Cursed helm. You’d think . . . You’d think these bloody birds could wait for a man to fall down.” Guthred set the final lance into his master’s groping hand. Durand watched as his borrowed helm turned toward the duke’s box. His father already stood, the ducal crown on a tangle of floating gray hair. Lamoric’s wife was nowhere to be seen; Almora could not be abandoned. Across the lists were grinning Rooks, green knights, sneers, and carrion birds. On this final pass, Duke Radomor and Lord Lamoric would ride out and fight as long as their wounds allowed. Abravanal raised the Isle Kingdom sword, then the trumpets rang. As Lamoric spurred his gray on, Radomor erupted into motion, his cloak another part of the feathered storm above the fortress. Durand wondered how many eyes were on them now. How many spies sat among the burghers on the benches. Again, the gray shied off. Horse and rider skimmed the reviewing stand, with Radomor roaring over the turf to swing down upon them. At the last, with all of Radomor’s terrible strength wrapped around his lance, the duke spurred his warhorse to leap. For an instant, beast and knight struck as one, jamming the spear’s point home. Lamoric exploded from his seat. Breast band and doubled girths sprang apart. Lamoric crashed into the screams of the crowd with his boots still in the stirrup irons. Above him, Radomor let his wild-eyed mount kick the air. Lamoric’s blade"all that was left of his shivered lance"stood in the duke’s green shield. Radomor batted the thing aside and swung right down into the mob to finish things. People sprawled to get away. Durand couldn’t see; none of the men could. He thought Lamoric must be dragging himself. Radomor hauled out a war sword, stalking him. śLamoric of Gireth, do you yield?” His voice boomed like the kettle-drums of an army. Durand thought he heard something snarled back at the duke, then the hollow clang of a helm thrown to the sod. śHe’s alive,” said Ouen. śGod help him,” said Berchard. Radomor too threw off his helm, his eyes and snarl now visible in the mouth of his chain hood. śIf you will not yield, then on your feet.” They lost sight of him, then he reappeared, dragging Lamoric upright by his surcoat. The duke’s war sword gleamed in his free hand. At that moment, someone in the crowd must have disliked what he saw. A clod of earth or dung smacked from the big man’s head, and the duke reared up, searching for his attacker and seeing only the mob. Another glob of something whistled from the heaving crowd. And, this time, Radomor lashed out, skipping the flat of his great blade from someone’s skull. The crowd shrieked; there were women and children. Hands reached for the Duke of Yrlac where he stood, poised with Lamoric in one fist and his blade in the other. Lamoric shook himself free. It was at this moment that Durand saw the Champion: that thing of stinking rags and iron mail had come alive. It battered past the marshals and rode. śHells,” said Durand. śThe devil will"” The crowd was heaving over itself. There would already be people dying in that mess. Radomor’s Champion launched itself into the mob, its own war sword flashing. śLet’s get him out of there!” said Coensar, and Lamoric’s men were in their saddles. Durand spurred Geridon’s Pale through the half-sacred bounds of the lists, galloping for his lord. But Coensar thrust a mailed hand across Durand’s path: forty riders stormed into the lists, bristling with spears, Radomor’s retainers making for their master. The rolling bulwark crashed onto Coensar’s party. A hail of blades thundered from shields and forearms. Durand was mobbed. Coensar lashed with a spiked flail. Durand rang his blade from anything near. And the crowd shrieked like a scalded thing. They brawled against a welter of slashing blades and tearing spears. They were caught with eight opponents for every man of theirs. Between blows, Durand made out the Champion beyond the riders. Bodies spun from the thing as if from the horns of the festival bulls. And Radomor stalked up the bank. They were only a dozen paces from Lamoric, but they could neither see nor reach him. Coensar snarled and tore through with a fierce swing that nailed the head of his flail"by its own spikes"to one knight’s helmet. Then Durand lost sight of him. A spear struck him in the mailed jaw, digging"lifting. Iron tore. He hardly saw Ouen before the big man was swinging down with his massive sword of war. The blow hacked the assailant’s helm to the eye-slits, both knights flinching from the hot spatter. When Durand looked again, Coensar had jagged a path to within instants of the duke. Durand’s heart swelled as the hero’s spiked flail shrilled, but then, abruptly, something ripped the captain from his saddle. Durand’s shout was drowned in the riot. Ouen stood in his stirrups, high over the throng. śThe Champion!” They threw themselves against the wall of green riders. Badan, in his black and crimson, spat and savaged anyone near him. Berchard turned and turned his mount, tearing spaces from the mob. Ouen spread chaos with his long sword. But they couldn’t press forward. Kicking and punching, smashing men’s faces with the pommel of his sword, Durand took no time to aim. They were beasts in a pit. Yrlac’s Champion loomed beyond the enemy, hulking like a monstrous spider balled in man’s armor. śDurand?” shouted Ouen. śIt’s hopeless!” The eyes of all three turned to Durand. They could never break through this way. śFollow me! Ride!” Durand tore Pale from the press, and all three of his comrades swung away with him. He knew that Radomor’s gang would be breathing now, the wash of relief spinning through their veins. And they had a heartbeat to sag off their guard. śBack at Śem!” he roared. With wild eyes, Lamoric’s men tore round, spurring their horses for Radomor’s line. Durand swung his sword high, and raised his shield. There was a leg-breaking tangle of horses between Pale and Yrlac. He would only get one chance to break through. Pale was a thunderbolt fit to shatter trees; the brute’s haunches bunched. Durand fixed his eye on the time-frozen turning of Radomor’s head as Pale leapt into the sky. The collision was too quick to dissect. Men sprawled. Almost, Durand’s sword was ripped from his fist. Iron rang. Badan’s warhorse tumbled, man and horse disappearing. Durand landed, pitching against his saddlebow. Faces and flanks exploded past him. And there he was. He wheeled Pale before Duke Radomor, three feet of steel in his fist. Lamoric"streaming blood and dazed"was safe beyond him. Durand extended his hand, and when Lamoric made to protest or stagger, Durand heaved man and iron mail up over his saddlebow. Radomor snarled. As Durand made to take flight, Radomor caught Pale’s bridle; the huge warhorse might as well have been chained to a stronghold’s wall. Durand swung his blade down: he would sever the devil’s arm. The duke threw up his sword. Durand swung again: sledgehammer blows to break the bond that held him. But the duke leapt close and suddenly Durand could not keep pace. One-handed, the duke put his war sword to work. The thing flickered like a wasp and cracked down like an anvil. One jab tore Durand’s surcoat. Another smashed iron links. Giant Pale could not back away. It would only be moments. Then Radomor’s point crunched home in the folds of Durand’s mailed stomach: the duke had reached too far. Doubling over the blade, Durand trapped the sword, and, with a lunge that strained every ligament, he jammed his blade into the man’s neck. The duke’s hands leapt to his throat. Durand swept his blade high and hammered it down on Radomor’s mailed head. The duke sagged. But before the man could fall, a manacle clamped shut on Durand’s neck. He twisted to see the Champion, reaching across Pale’s back, his fist grinding Durand’s neck bones. Light flashed, and he saw the brute’s long blade flicker back. Durand would never bring his sword round in time. Then something struck the monster"nearly hauling Durand down. Ouen had launched himself on the brute. Suddenly, the thing was battered by a sea of knights and horses. Its tomb gray hair burst from its helm in a ragged mane. Durand swung his sword against the arm that chained him. śI cannot!” the monster’s lost voice moaned, enduring the clash of iron. Ouen hauled at the thing, still behind it. For an instant his eyes were on Durand’s: Go! The Champion twisted its head around and seized Ouen. śGet away!” the eerie voice sobbed, as, with just one hand, it lifted the massive man bodily. Ouen gaped. The Champion fought to its feet, and when Ouen began to scrabble at the thing’s helm, it shrieked and lashed him through the air as though he were a man of straw. Durand hacked at the monster’s arm, now truly slamming the blade down on living bone. Pale screamed and leapt back. Badan, a wild man in black, stepped close and smacked the Champion off balance with a blow across the back of its helm. And Durand spurred Pale away. The monster’s fingers tore loose, and, abruptly, Durand was free in the tiltyard. He gulped air and looked back. Before the great mob, the monster laid about with its fists, flinging men and great warhorses around it. A shriek built, as if the monster were a whirlwind in chains. Badan crashed in a heap of his own armored skirts. Berchard toppled as the brute snapped his mount’s foreleg. Rooks wheeled overhead. The Champion straddled Radomor’s fallen body, even lashing out at Radomor’s own guardsmen in its frenzy. śDurand! Durand!” a voice shouted. Coensar wavered among the broken bodies and horrified men of Yrlac. He was alive, though his face was swollen. He reached for Durand, tangling in Durand’s surcoat as he got close. śDurand,” he gasped. śGive him to me. You’ve got to get them away from there. Radomor’s fallen. That thing’ll kill them if we don’t get them clear.” It was all Coensar could do to keep his feet and utter the words at the same time. Durand nodded, letting Lamoric slide from Pale’s neck. śGet them clear,” said Coensar. śI will.” Durand rode past the mob, screaming: śTo me. To me. Withdraw! Get away from the thing!” Faces turned to him, but, unhorsed in the press, they would never get free. Not only was the Champion chewing up anything near him, but Radomor’s staggered conroi was coming back to its senses, flexing like the coils of a serpent to trap their attackers. Before his eyes, a gap opened between Badan and Berchard: a slender, final chance. śHells,” he said, and charged. As he slipped the gap, he dropped his sword and shield and hooked both startled knights from the ground with a force that nearly threw him from his saddle. Air exploded from between his teeth. Sparks flashed. But Pale slewed through the crowd to freedom. As he let his friends loose, he wheeled Pale back for Ouen. And the big horse skittered to a halt. Around the dark bulwark of the Champion, Yrlac’s men clutched a bleeding thicket of spears, scrambling over dead men and horses. Each spear was leveled at Pale’s chest. Blood stood dark on their green surcoats. Durand stared into the blades. Pale would do his bidding. He would leap for that hedge of spears, and there would be a moment while the blades held him in the air before they tore. If Durand had seen only a glimpse of Ouen, Pale would have flown. Durand’s gaze flickered through the dripping shafts and faces. The only weapon left to him was his misericorde: a throat-cutting dagger too short for this work. He saw only the black slot of the Champion’s stare. But Ouen had been swallowed up. There was no blond mane. There was no glint of gold teeth. In the midst of the static frenzy of the green knights, Radomor’s Champion bent to rise again, with his stricken master lifted on his hands, like a sacrifice. Durand trembled on the edge of jabbing his spurs home. He heard people move into line around him: Badan, Berchard, Coensar, Lamoric. Someone touched Durand’s knee. śThat’s all we can do,” Berchard said. śThat’s all there is. We’ve got to leave the lists.” Durand watched for Ouen. He watched for motion from Radomor. The folds of his empty right hand felt greasy in his fist"full of blood. śDurand!” Berchard hissed. Beyond the spears, Radomor finally stirred, a hand pawing his Champion’s iron coat. The monster bent its head still farther. There was no sign of Ouen. Berchard was safe. And Lamoric, and Coen, and Badan. śDurand,” said Coensar. śIt’s time to get inside.” 16. Numbering the Dead You’re alive.” Deorwen breathed the words, standing in the midst of the Painted Hall, frozen, as Lamoric led his battered men spilling in. Only the Queen of Heaven knew the woman’s heart. Almora had been at play on the rushes. A toy Power winked and shimmered in the gloom of the vaults, riding a shy song on damselfly wings. The little girl seemed as pretty as the song. Lamoric and his limping mob of bloodstained men stank like butchers. śWe heard a great commotion,” said Deorwen. Keeping calm for the girl’s sake must have cost her. śI didn’t know what to think.” Lamoric managed a wavering smile. śA riot, my dear. I am afraid Duke Radomor is most upset.” Durand noted Almora, chin tucked and staring from the hearth as the conroi dropped onto benches. He saw her whispering Power dip toward her hands. They said that she had seen a line of gray men creeping through the dark"her father had been traveling to the marches beyond the mountains"and she had held her tongue until the timid Strangers had slipped into the stones. The last to vanish turned and set the toy in her hand: a gift of gratitude. A little thing like a dove and lion, it woke if a tiny hand turned its key. The Power settled into the bowl of Almora’s hands with a snip of wings and a wink of precious stones. śThus am I saved from my own folly. Great is the King of Heaven.” Lamoric sprawled on one of the benches. Blood slicked from a cut somewhere on his forehead. śOnly with a mob and knot of armed guards am I fit to face bloody Radomor.” Berchard croaked around a split lip. śIn borrowed gear, on a borrowed mount, you met him. That’s not nothing.” Coensar looked gravely from his own blood and bruises. śA wiser brute than I, that horse,” said Lamoric. śBut no matter. You all pulled me free. Host of Heaven, that Champion was laying about. Those people with their mud. They’ll have paid dearly.” Coensar returned to business. śNow we must see how Radomor reacts.” śReacts? That son of a whore could die,” Badan said. śOur ox here gave his skull a good tap. Maybe he goes deaf.” śA man like Radomor of Yrlac will not go easy,” Berchard said. There were grunts. śThis will have put paid to the tourney,” said Lamoric. śThere will be bodies enough for burying without further chivalry.” He grunted, touching his face. śFather must tell the marshals.” Deorwen had looked over the company. śWhere is Ouen?” śDid you see the grip he took on that monster?” said Lamoric. Lying down, he could not see the others’ blank faces. śHe could pull up trees by the roots, that man.” Durand’s head wasn’t good: he could still feel the Champion’s iron fingers in the sinews of his throat. And the scabbard at his hip hung empty. His sword was somewhere in the muck under the wall. He took a breath to confess" But Guthred tramped from the stairs with Heremund in tow. The shield-bearer lugged a knapsack of bandages, pots, and knives"and wore a murderous scowl. Durand caught a quick exchange between the shield-bearer and the captain: he saw a question in Coensar’s look; Guthred shook his head. śRadomor’s men have left the yard,” said Heremund. śThe duke was up on his own pins. They think he killed a man who tried to lend him a shoulder.” śDamn fools,” Guthred said. śAll of you.” And squatted by Lamoric with a hooked cobbler’s needle. śOuen might still be all right,” Berchard said. śHe’s . . . he’s a big lad.” Lamoric twisted from Guthred’s grip. śAw, no.” If Durand had seen a hair of Ouen in that knot of spears, he would have thrown himself into the heart of it"he wanted to believe that was true"but there had been no trace. Guthred started his needlework once more: click, snip. His stitches crawled Lamoric’s brow to bury themselves in clotted hair. śWhere is he?” said Lamoric. śIs the man still out there?” Durand turned from the others, catching a glimpse of Almora’s dark eyes as he left the hall. Plunging down the grand stairs, he breasted servant crowds. Above the yard, only a fraction of the rooks still churned the air. The tide of roaring humanity, now departed, had left only the mud and the stricken behind. Bodies lay everywhere, some writhing. A woman clutched a small shape, rocking and smearing a tiny white face. People wailed. Durand could not remember what Ouen had worn: a russet shirt of borrowed mail? The castle’s priests flapped from despair to despair, too few for too many. A senior man was directing that bodies should be dragged from the muck"or be checked for signs of life. Seeing a priest crouched very close to a long form, Durand knocked the man aside to find a stranger’s features: sharp shades of purpled red and silver-gray. The priest tried to take Durand’s arm. Two shield-bearers struggled to corner a limping warhorse that lurched and hopped away from them. They would end its misery. On the bank by the gatehouse straggled a row of gray corpses. Priests or sextons had pulled canvas over them. Durand saw only limbs. He pitched across the yard and began to scramble up the bank, hesitating as he stumbled on a conversation. A bloated little man stood with hands muddy to the elbows. A bent creature in a saffron tabard squatted by a corner of the canvas sheet, squinting up. śSurely. Some’re good, but most’re going to need new soles. I could see giving you, say, three pence. What say you?” When the man lifted the corner, Durand had a glimpse of empty boots. The fat man looked around, his hands muddy from dragging bodies. śHa. What’re the chances you’d be here at this moment, and you a cobbler. Eh?” the fat man spat. śThat’s what I say. Here is the Lord of Dooms providing for you. If you can’t get a penny for each and every pair, you’re a dullard and"” Durand’s eyes moved from foot to gray foot beyond the hem of canvas. Some were as creased as the palms of a man’s hand. One pair was tiny. Some were bent with bunions. Others were stained red and brown with dyes of their shoes or hose. They faced up and down: heel and toe. śA man cannot live on nothing,” the yellow man said. śIf there’s no difference between start and finish, then where’s a man’s life to come from?” Durand climbed closer, on all fours. The two men looked down, startled at the creature"muddy as the corpses"crawling the bank toward them. Their eyes scrabbled over him, marking the rust-bleeding mail. Their mouths opened. A tiny motion of the saffron man dropped the canvas over the boots. Durand’s glance caught the movement. śIt wasn’t my idea, sir, but Ecmon’s here.” The man made to slip down the bank"the gatehouse was a few paces away. There were no words in Durand’s snarl. His knuckles caught the yellow man. The fat partner sprawled"scrambling"onto the heap of bodies. Durand snatched the misericorde from his belt and, almost, launched himself upon them. Other men were still hauling bodies: volunteers, sextons, priests. Voices sobbed from the yard below. And Durand checked the fit of temper. śI have lost a friend,” he said. śYou will help me find him. Do you understand?” They stared: the fat man, his face as yellow as his partner’s tabard; his partner on his knees, hesitating. Durand caught the yellow tabard, jerking the man upright. śYou will lift the canvas. Your friend, he’ll get under there and make sure we can see.” The yellow man balanced between terrors for a moment, then Durand took two fistfuls of the man’s tabard and tossed him into the pale tangle. One by one, they lifted stained heads. Durand watched, blankly noting injuries and indignities. It was hard to judge which had fought for Yrlac and which had been complete outsiders. Finally, the shaking saffron man pulled a long-limbed body free. Before he could grab another, Durand leapt forward, his hand raised. śWait.” At first, the slit eyes and slack skin bore little resemblance to anyone Durand had known. But he climbed among the slithering shapes, taking that cold face in his hands. A blond beard jutted. He felt the massive bones of his friend’s face. His teeth glinted cold between his lips. śOuen.” After a moment, Durand stood while the two muddy fools cowered. śIf I see you again, I shall leave you as you left him.” The men hesitated, too frightened to move. Durand skidded down the bank, slapping the white side of the gatehouse for balance. He heard an order, and a guard touched his shoulder in time that the great portcullis in the gatehouse slammed down without killing him. Rooks"only a hundred now"croaked into the sky below the towers. Durand stepped into the barred gateway, seeing, through two grilles of oak and iron, green surcoats and red leopards massed outside. Radomor’s tourney knights stood in the market before the gate. śSummon old Abravanal! Duke Radomor of Yrlac wishes to parley.” Finding a stairway close at hand, Durand pushed guards aside and climbed to the parapet above the street. Seven fathoms down, Duke Radomor sat on horseback in the midst of his men"and in the midst of a great crowd. His head bobbed like a duck’s egg. If there had been a stone loose on the parapet, Durand could have smashed that skull. He judged by the retinue’s laden pack animals that Yrlac’s liegemen had already struck their tents and quit the castle for good. At a scuffling on the stair, Durand turned"fist on the misericorde"and found Duke Abravanal clambering up the steps. Abravanal did not so much lead the knights as he was borne along like driftwood on the wave of them. Behind the duke, Lamoric gave Durand a haunted glance. The men nearly pitched Durand over the wall as the press made its way to the gatehouse. Abravanal leaned over the parapet. śYou have left before the Feast of the Bull,” he faltered. śIt is unlucky.” Radomor’s answer was a leopard’s rumble. śYours has been a treacherous hospitality, Abravanal. I will not suffer it again.” Duke Abravanal blinked his wide blue eyes. śThis has been a grim time for my family.” He tensed. śWhy do you summon us from our grief?” Radomor cocked his head. śHalf the kingdom grieves under the yoke of that fool in the Mount of Eagles. The business of living men cannot wait on a dotard’s moaning.” Lamoric lurched forward. śRadomor! This is the house of your wife’s people. How have you come to this?” He pointed down on them. śYou are the vilest in a menagerie of horrors.” Radomor’s tall horse jigged between his heels. śYou are quick to speak, child of Abravanal!” He twisted blood from the warhorse’s mouth, and the beast shuddered still. śAnd behind stout walls, you are brave.” The air shivered, hot, from the bald duke’s skull but he did not shout. śI will have what is mine. Your brother has learned, and now you all must learn. I will have what is owed me. It might have been a surgeon’s cut, but now you have forced my hand.” Radomor jerked his horse around, and with his men bulling the crowd from the way, he spurred for Acconel’s Gates of Sunset and the road to Yrlac. Abravanal turned from the wall, about to say something to the son who had always been at his right hand. When he found Lamoric instead, he faltered. śMy barons. We must send riders. They must have warning.” Lamoric stood blankly, shaking, then nodded śyes.” 17. The Shadow of Black Wings Two-score desperate messengers galloped over the roads of Gireth, hoping to reach the halls of every baron in the dukedom"and any court in Errest the Old that might send aid to Acconel. But despite the demands of sanity, there was a feast in the Painted Hall of Castle Acconel that day. At the high table, only Almora moved"from Deorwen to the duke, the others sat in silence. Durand looked down the empty benches. The great host who had populated the tiltyard had fled in a thousand directions. While the few dozen who remained stared in the hall, the knights in the outer yard were striking tents and slinging their belongings over their horses. The hollow-eyed men who remained cringed and twitched in the long silences. Burghers filled some of the empty places; men who brought their wives and elder children. These were guild masters and citizens; they could not flee. The tiny children wondered at the constellations of beeswax candles turning in the huge wheel chandeliers over their heads. The oldest pretended not to notice. When a deeper hush flowed down the half-empty tables, Duke Abravanal stood before the skeleton crowd, his voice like a leaf’s dry flutter. śOn this night we feast the honor of Heaven’s King. His Champion. The Warders at the Bright Gates of Heaven . . . Lords of Heaven’s Host.” The old man stared out over the hall, his eyes fixed on some faraway point. When his silence had stretched long enough to start eyes shifting down the table, Patriarch Oredgar touched the duke’s sleeve. ś ŚWe remember. . . . Śś śWe remember,” Abravanal said. śYes. We remember though it was Gunderic who . . . who rebuked the beast of the mere, that it is only with Heaven’s strength that we may defy the darkness. His victory was the Creator’s victory. śIt is in this knowledge that I repeat the old words: ŚYou defy Heaven at your peril.’ ” It should have been a roar. His tongue ran across his lips. śWhile the Silent King reigns, this land . . . this land is ours.” The faint syllables died in silence. At the bleat of a tardy fanfare, straining servers wove into the hall, pallbearers for a platter and the hairless, steaming thing it supported. Durand marveled; it was a monstrous, muscular head. Horns curled from a mighty brow"the head of a bull, seared bald. Rashers of bacon curled in semblance of a forelock. Its eyes suppurated with candied fruit. Abravanal sank into his seat. As the platter skidded heavily onto the high table and its burden glared over the room, it could not have looked more like Duke Radomor. AS ONE COURSE followed another, Sir Kieren appeared at Durand’s side, swinging his legs over the bench. The man seemed very small. śSir Kieren,” Durand acknowledged. śDo you know where I’m from?” Durand frowned. śWe went to Arbourhall more than once when I was your man.” śArbourhall is my wife’s, really. Abravanal arranged it for me when we were both young men. A young widow. I’m a Garelyn man. My father had a patch of ground under the mountains.” His foxtail mustaches jumped. Both men knew of Durand’s own ancestral home hard by the mountains. śAnd no room for his youngest son. śWe’d go down to see the duke at Bederin. The castle’s right on the Deep. There’s the gate, like a chain of silver towers. There are mountains before and behind you. It was me talked that old Duke Aymar’s son into sending a daughter to our Landast. They say our Adelind raced a water-horse on the dunes by the Deep. Outrode it. And she beat an heir of Beoran in the tiltyard.” And now she’d be entombed in Acconel. śA good foster-mother for poor Almora, I thought. When the little thing’s own mother passed. Now, the girl seems to have attached herself to Deorwen.” Serving men and pages came to take a course away. Durand could not have said what it was. śI deserted you,” Durand said. śI’d sworn an oath to serve you.” With a smile under his mustache, Kieren said, śI would have let you go. You are a young man. What else could a young man do?” Durand stared at the wreckage of the seared bull, recalling Radomor’s great rage. At the high table, the solemn marshals of the tournament were speaking. Every year, they scattered honors among the men for valor and skill. What would they do for riot and murder? śEven without you, I made it home,” Kieren said. śLost a good horse getting down from your father’s hall. We will have to make certain that whoever holds Gravenholm tends those woods.” Durand sniffed a laugh. Gravenholm, his onetime patrimony, seemed very far from Castle Acconel. Someone on the dais said Durand’s name. śDurand!” Berchard hissed, his good eye darting. śDurand, you ox. It’s you.” śWhat?” Kieren was swiveling. śI was on the point of warning you.” Coensar slipped out and stepped to Durand’s side. Everyone had gotten to their feet. śYou’d best get up,” said Coensar. They marched up the hall to the high table where the Patriarch, the old duke, and his surviving family sat: Lamoric, Deorwen, and Almora. Durand felt the eyes of the company squeeze like deep water as he reached the table’s edge. Coensar whispered from behind him. śThey’ll expect a bow.” Durand nodded low, eyes on the duke, while one of the marshals gave the old man a medallion. The thing dangled from the duke’s fingers on a bit of ribbon. śHe was in the stable,” declared Almora. Lamoric stepped in for his father. śThe voice of the company has spoken. For your actions on the field this day, my father names you the Bull of Acconel, highest honor of this feast day.” Deorwen looked on. Reading a gesture of the young lord’s hand, Durand crossed to the duke’s side, kneeling for the duke to dangle the medallion high. The face of a bull winked from its loop of silk. This was the sort of thing that champions of Coensar’s ilk won after long summer’s days in the lists. Durand shot a look at Lamoric"a ribbon for riot, a medal for murder. śI had to make a decision,” he said. śWho else?” But there was Ouen, now dead. And Lamoric himself. Both had done more. The duke lowered the medal over Durand’s head, and then seemed to master himself. The blue eyes blazed like moons, and he brought Durand to his feet. As the new Bull of Acconel turned to face the assembled company, every knight raised his blade in a somber salute. He had left one friend to die while he saved a man he betrayed. Here was a hollow glory. AFTER SEEING THE feast out, Durand abandoned the Painted Hall, stalked through the inner courtyard, and into the muddy yard beyond it. The shadows had crept from the cracks and filled the field. One last group of knights was checking saddles and preparing to take the road. In a few hours, two hundred men had folded up their shield-bearers, tents, and grooms. Every coward would be leagues away by morning. He eyed the bank where the crowd had watched. He remembered the spears and the screams. Near the gate where the bodies had lain, a row of tall carts stood under the eyes of murmuring priests. Each cart leaned heavily under sheets of gray canvas that obscured its load. Durand felt the Bull medallion thump against his chest. He could hear the sounds of men loading horses across the grass. The light that had left the yard would soon abandon the sky as well. Durand took the bull from his neck and walked to the carts. Eventually, the priests allowed him to search for his comrade. He pulled the medal over tangled hair and knotted beard, then muttered a few words to the Host of Heaven. Eventually, a voice interrupted: śA man shouldn’t stand too long in the night air. Especially here.” Durand turned to see Coensar hitching through the gloom toward him. His head was bound. śThere’s a spot by the gate,” he said, indicating a sentry’s stone bench in the shadows. There was a long sigh as he sat down. śHow old are you, boy?” śI’ve seen twenty-one winters.” śAs many as that?” Coensar said. śTwenty-one winters’ve passed since I won my spurs, I think.” He swept his blade, Keening, from its scabbard, and Durand could hear the high, eerie song of its shadowy blade on the night air. śI won Keening the first moon, and fought seven years thereafter to catch the eye of the old Duke of Beoran. śAnd the very next moon.” He clapped his hands. śIt was Cassonel of Damaryn on the stairs at Tern Gyre and down I went. Fourteen years since"fifteen, now.” Durand tried to picture a lifetime of night watches, wild tourneys, and campaigns in the south. He had been a knight less than half a year. śAh, watch now,” Coensar said, suddenly. Coensar gestured with the singing blade across the dark grass where shadows stirred like ink in the ruts and pockmarks of the yard. They were too thick, stretching with stubborn viscosity, seeming so dark that there must be traces left in the morning. Durand raised his fingers in the Heaven’s Eye. śDo you see?” And, noting the fist and fingers, he answered his own question: śYou must. Death and soldiers. You can’t help but see after a time"they are Lost souls,” said Coensar. śJealous for blood. Berchard or your Heremund would tell you more. A conjurer will dangle a bowl of the stuff under their noses.” śHost”"a convulsive ripple passed through the strange forms as though the word were salt cast over leeches"”of Heaven,” Durand finished. And Coensar chuckled as the the slack shapes knotted, long gaping to break like rings of smoke. śWill we end up like this?” Durand said. His head swam with the shame and longing of the past days. śWho am I to say what a man will lose? It’s a long road we’re on.” Durand jerked the hem of his cloak free from one sniffling spirit. śKing of Heaven.” Breathy screams whispered, and Durand realized that they must soon be breathing dead men. Some of the packhorses across the way were nodding now, sensing the Otherworldly crowd. śThey are only the dead, Durand. Few who’d grovel at our feet could do us much harm. The strong take; they don’t plead.” What sort of life did these things have, slinking the ditches, starving; trapped in the seams of Creation while whatever made them human wore away? The knights and their uneasy packhorses were clopping near, ready to pass under the gates. śI saw what you did with that medal. And I tell you, watch how you tie yourself to the dead,” Coensar said. śHate and grief and guilt’re binding things.” He narrowed an eye at Durand, ignoring the spirits’ coiling. śAnd don’t brood too long in the cold night air.” This last was a sigh. Above them, the party of knights had stopped. One of them was Berchard, leading a pair of saddle horses: a roan and a sturdy blue dun. He had an armory sword over his shoulder. śNow,” said Coensar, śI’d say that while Radomor’s ridden off, he’s hardly finished with us yet. I’ve spoken to Sir Kieren. We need a man to scout across the river toward Yrlac while we’ve still got a chance. You’ll cross the bridge with some friends of mine, in case you’re watched. Go and come back tonight with news. You must get back how you can.” Berchard nodded. THEIR BORROWED COMPANY left by the same streets the doomed bulls took the day before, and soon they were through the haunted Fey Gates, half sure the stone bulls were watching them. Durand followed Berchard’s lead and mingled among the others with their plain horses and rough gear. Rather than leaving by the docks, their company swung north for the quayside road, the lower city, and the north channel of the Banderol. The Dukes’ Bridge soon loomed under the fading Heavens. A light on the far bank threw shadows down the span. Berchard allowed himself to duck close. śYou see them?” He nodded toward the far end of the bridge. A bowshot away, three statues towered over the road, tall as sanctuary towers. These were the Dukes, and this was where three roads"and three lands"met below the granite wasteland of the Warrens. Among the stone folds at the giants’ ankles, however, were bonfires and a cadre of armed men. śIf the bugger’s got forty men down here, what’ll he have on Fuller’s Bridge upriver?” śJust as well we didn’t risk it,” said Durand. Only two spans could take a man to the Ferangore Road: the Dukes’ crossed down by Silvermere, but upstream, the Fuller’s Bridge led nearly straight to Yrlac. Anyone heading to Yrlac by either bridge must pass it. Berchard glanced at Durand. śHunch over and try not thinking so hard. We might still slip past them going north and then cut back for the Ferangore Road beyond the Fuller’s Bridge.” Berchard grinned and touched the patch over his eye. śMaybe I’ll tuck this patch under my collar. Best if we’re not the festival bull and his mate just now, I reckon.” The water gleamed heavily under the Dukes’ Bridge, the men muttered, and, slowly, the Warrens bank hove near. Durand made out crossbows and saddled horses"forty men in mail. Three great ways of ancient times diverged at the statues’ feet: the Acconel road lay behind the party, the road to Lost Hesperand to the right, and the road west into Yrlac on their left hand. Above them all towered the founding lords of Gireth, Hesperand, and Yrlac. They were comrades of Saerdan the Voyager. Durand knew Gunderic by the great bull device charged on his shield. Eldred of Hesperand wore the Peregrine Crown borne by his successors, and Thrasimund of Yrlac carried a curved axe long as a ship’s mast. Their hands met at a great fire basket above the road. It was three fathoms to their knees. Down below, Radomor’s men were sneering over two dozen crossbows. A twitch on any tiller would stamp a bolt through an armored chest. The fact that Durand had served Duke Radomor less than a year past had likely slipped Coensar’s mind. As Durand’s blue dun raised its hoof over the far bank, Coensar’s friend was already speaking with the captain of Radomor’s watchmen. They got a late start, he said. Someone had stolen a horse. They were traveling north to his brother’s land, a patch between Silvermere and the Warrens"a fishing village: Herons. They were taking the Hesperand Road before things cut loose. Durand reached the bank and felt Creation shudder. The patch of torchlit stones was a dungeon cell between the giants. The ground was ash, and the Warrens, walls of cinders. A lean man in Radomor’s leopards jammed a torch into Durand’s face, peering with yellow eyes and a thin-lipped grin. śI know you from somewhere?” Durand swallowed hard. His head filled with Ferangore towers and barracks halls, but he blinked and forced himself to give the soldier a bored shrug. And the man moved on. And soon, the man’s captain let them ride away. Durand gripped the saddlebow like a drunken man, feeling eyes on him from every side. The watch fires must have been well behind them when Berchard dropped through the ranks. śAll right?” he said. śWe’d best do this.” He nodded their farewells to the rest while they stopped between broad Silvermere and black Warrens. A wind shoved Durand’s hair. śYou think they knew us?” he asked. śI think I’m going to be sick.” Berchard pulled the patch out of his collar and cinched it round the bad eye. śI’m too old for that kind of game so soon after supper. Coensar and I are going to have words.” Durand hauled in a deep breath, eyeing the dark and knotted hills. śYou reckon they’d see us if we steal round through the hills?” The land mounted against the sky as jumbled as heaped boulders. Berchard grimaced at the great bales of juniper and thorn on the high stones by the track. They could never get through on horseback. śWe’re not carrying the horses,” he chided, śso put that out of your head.” Durand managed a grin. śWe won’t get far scouting on foot. We’ll have to see if we can’t lead them through.” He hopped from the saddle. Berchard swung his leg over and grunted to the ground in a jingle of mail. śThey say there are a thousand paces between West and Dukes’ Bridges"though they’ll be counting by road. Come on.” With that, he took the reins and suddenly took the lead. With a headshake, Durand followed. The two men pitched and scrabbled through the granite hills, finding deadfalls or cliffs up every blind ravine. Berchard grunted curses, but sometimes a laugh or oath would shoot over the hills to freeze them both. Durand kept his eyes on the trees and hilltops. He flinched at the passage of an owl. Berchard’s every slip clattered like a tinker’s cart. Durand considered his spot with Deorwen and her husband. He wondered if it might still be possible to get out from between them. If not now, then after Radomor’s fury was spent. Gireth’s allies would sit the man down"dukes did not wage war alone and Abravanal had friends. He could see that, with one thing and another, Lamoric and Deorwen had hardly had a chance. There was plenty in each of them that was good. They needed time and peace to find it without some fool crowding in. Yet his heart would not be ruled; he wanted to get her out. They had walked an hour or more of bramble and briar. Durand shot a whisper over Berchard’s roan. śShould we cut back?” He was not sure how far they’d come. śThat might still be firelight up there, but I can’t be sure.” Something glimmered in the highest branches down where the road must lay. śThere could be two hundred soldiers right over the hill.” śIf we feel the bolts raining down, I suppose, we’ll know"Uh, Host of Heaven!” śBerchard?” Durand spun, searching the trees, sword in hand. The old man’s breeches and leggings came down as he squatted. Struggling with flaps of armor, Berchard forced a wet flatulence into the bushes. śOh, such relief, despite the timing.” śHells, Berchard.” While his comrade strained, Durand put his eyes on the hills off toward the road. The river was out there, and he could still see light among the branches. He weighed the rusted armory sword in his fist. But as long as Berchard strained, the shadows held their places. No one came. Berchard stood, tying his waist cord. śAh, I’m all crossed up,” he whispered. śThirty years, this gear always goes on the same way.” He squinted up at Durand. śLeggings first . . .” Durand loomed in the dark, teeth clenched. śIt’d be tempting fate,” Berchard tried. śIf I have to watch you taking all that gear off,” Durand said, śyou’ll ride the rest of the way in your breeches.” śAh . . . If there’s no help for it. I must simply hope for the best.” He stuck his foot in a stirrup, and hauled himself into the saddle. śThis ravine’s wide enough to ride, I think. These two brutes have eyes like foxes. Little, whatsit, Almora? She pointed them out.” Durand grunted surprise. śAnd the crossbows?” śWe must be a league past them, and those boys’ll be looking for us on the bridge.” With a wet tsk tsk, the man rode off. And with hardly another step, they dropped into the road"not a league past Radomor’s guards, but scarcely twenty paces from sixty armed men in Yrlat Green. Here was the great span of the Fuller’s Bridge with a mighty inn presiding. A caravan yard called Tenter’s Field stretched where daylight traders would wait to pay their tolls. Every inch was alive with bonfires and voices. śHells,” gasped Berchard, and they froze in the lucky few shadows that held them concealed. Dice clicked while the fires crackled. Men debated which whore was best in Ferangore. Durand fought an impulse to jam the spurs in and ride for it. He waited another heartbeat. śQuietly, I think, eh?” Berchard concluded. A breath. With the least nudge, Durand started the dun walking westward. With every heartbeat, he waited for a clatter of crossbows. Slowly, the darkness stretched behind them. They heard less, and, finally, Durand let himself exhale. He made to jam his sword back down his scabbard’s throat, but a kink caught it. śHells.” He felt very shaky. It had been a long day; there had been many long days. Berchard slipped his roan alongside Durand, smiling. śYou shouldn’t throw a good sword away.” Durand gave the blade a twist and the thing shot home. śWhen I plucked you from Radomor’s men, I can’t remember if I hooked you with the shield or the sword hand.” śDon’t mock your elders. It remains wise practice to hang on to a sword. You never know.” śYou never know?” śWell, you might not think it, but this blade of mine’s enchanted.” Durand laughed. śLook here.” Berchard swished the wide blade into the moonlight where it shone like a weave of gray syrup. śIt’s welded. Old, old, old. Those old smiths used to knit a blade from bits of stock, tasted and chosen for bite or bend. It’s all lost now.” śProper steel likely helps.” śI won this one from the last scion of a noble house. One of them families what have every dusty ancestor since old Saerdan a-moldering in the family vault.” Not so very unlike the Barons of the Col. śThe way I reckon, this sword’s kept me alive since I won it from the last man who owned it.” śWhat happened to this onetime master, then?” śI’ve given the matter a thought or two over the years, and I’ll tell you: I think the blade has a taste for blood. The last owner wasn’t worth much in a fight, and before him it’d been hanging on the wall since before the Crusade. Generations, waiting. Think of it. My only worry is that, just maybe, it’s the reason that I can never quite get out of fighting. It’s been thirty years since it came to me.” He held up the blade once more, letting the moonlight curl in the liquid weave of the steel. śThey tell me they used to name these . . .” He pointed at the stitched metal. śThese patterns. This one was the Śladder’"helps a man up to the Bright Gates.” Durand laughed. For a league, they traveled the narrow way between Banderol and the looming Warrens, their road cut below the roots of bushes. Cautiously, they entered a crossroads where their track met a similarly deep channel. Something foul hung on the air. Above them, a shape dangled over the road. As they plodded near, Durand tried to make sense of what he saw. Ropes creaked. There was a long form in strap-iron. At the bottom jutted what seemed to be the root-ball of a fallen tree. He was very near before he saw fingers and the white ring of a hollow eye. He grimaced. The reek stirred in the passages of his lungs, and dead limbs seemed to sway toward living horses and riders: reeds in some invisible current. śWise to hang a man at the crossroads,” pronounced Berchard. Durand looked from the reaching hands and let the crossroads fall behind. ś ŚSpecially if he died innocent. The Lost can’t find their way to your throat. But a man’s got to be careful. Crossroads Śre in-between places. You hang a man at a crossroads, he’s neither here nor there. Not one road or the next. Seams like that will let things in.” Durand threw his cloak around himself. śWonder what brought them to this.” Berchard turned in his saddle, smiling archly. śSpies, likely. Sneaked past the sentries at the Fuller’s Bridge. No mercy on spies!” The Warrens drew back from the Ferangore Road, and Durand guessed that they had left the no-man’s-land: this was Yrlac rolling under the vault of Heaven. Silent cots and hamlets lay in the distance. Soon, they saw a black copse of trees squatting like an island in the fields to the south. A track forked from the road, offering a route. Durand kneaded his shoulder. śKnow anything about the wood?” śJust a thicket, I suppose. But I tell you, I’ve had enough riding for one night. There’s something . . . I don’t know"What say we go that far and then head back?” They’d spent an hour beyond the Fuller’s Bridge and seen nothing but hanged men. śCoensar should know about the men back on those bridges, but aye. That far.” Slowly, they closed the distance to the bristling gloom. On its threshold, elms billowed overhead like a storm. Within, thornbush stood taller than a mounted man, but the track led straight in. Berchard looked up at the trees. śWe said we’d come this far, yes?” śAye.” There was something about the dark. śBugger it,” said Berchard and nudged his mount under the trees. As Durand’s dun stepped under the first bough, Creation heaved once more. Even with the branches bare, the forest was black as a well. The air sopped with mold and last year’s leaves. Durand clenched his teeth against the urge to haul Berchard out. The pale backs of his hands were nearly invisible on the reins. śBlast.” Berchard cursed from somewhere ahead. śLet’s hope the horses know the way back home.” Durand nodded. He put his hand on the hilt of his sword"the borrowed sword’s pommel had petals like a blunt iron flower. śYou remember that madman at that village?” said Berchard. śWhat was it? Ydran? Where they’d all gone off and left him.” śThe Steward.” He remembered a man with long mustaches in a village where no one lived but a few pigs. śAnd the whole village’d gone off into Hesperand. They’d had a look at what was coming.” Durand heard the man sniff. śI wonder how the village fares.” He felt uncertain distances opening up around them. They rode into wood smoke. śBerchard!” Durand whispered. śShh.” Durand listened. The smell of a recent fire was strong and mingled with soft horse dung. He heard nothing. śBerchard? What?” For a moment there was nothing, then Berchard’s voice said, śNever mind. I thought I heard something shift. Scream if something drags you off.” Durand eyed the blackness, hoping that anything lurking would be as blind as they were. śWhen we come back, let’s see if we can find a few more midnight woods to traipse through. Yes? At my age, I need a little excitement after dark.” śAs you please.” He heard Berchard’s tsk tsk, and the man’s stolid roan clomping away. He followed. They plodded through the disorienting blackness, smelling horses, green timber, and even excrement. Finally though, they had a bit of clear heaven overhead. Durand could see Berchard’s silhouette hunched in its saddle. śThat’s better,” Durand sighed. śAye . . .” Berchard sounded distracted. He dropped into the track with a jingle of armor, squatting low over the road. śHells,” he said. śHells!” And he turned his wide, good eye to the wood. śWhat’ve you seen?” said Durand. śHere. Tracks.” The trail under Berchard’s hand was churned and rutted. He scrambled up a low bank into the glade. śEverywhere.” Durand swung down. In the slanting moonlight, he could see dozens of tracks. Hundreds. A multitude had trampled the mud. śIt’s all fresh,” Berchard breathed. śTravelers to the festival?” śThere were never this many people at that festival, Durand.” His eye was on the wood, and he hardly breathed the words. śIf I were hiding my army near my neighbor’s city, I’d keep a cold camp: no fires.” śWord would get out.” He heard sounds around them as if the trees were drawing breath. śIt would have to.” śIt’s not a secret that would keep long.” But nothing had passed them. Nothing had left the wood, Durand thought. śAnd you’d have to shed an awful lot of blood,” Berchard murmured. ś"Oceans,” said a voice"a slithering voice, like a tongue darting in Durand’s ear. A figure had stepped into the clearing: a man in short, black robes. His face was the pale round of a skull; sleeves dangled to his ankles. His twin bobbed into view, a long finger over his lips: shh! And now a soldier"a sword flickering. The darkness throbbed with deep-throated laughter"hundreds of voices. Thousands. Here was Radomor’s fist and fury, curled in the darkness, and they had blundered right inside. They had ridden into an armed camp. Durand pulled his sword, but the two Rooks only grinned. At a tilt of their heads, a hundred soldiers stepped into the glade. Durand heard the idiot laughter of carrion birds. śRide!” Durand spat. In a moment, he had thrown himself back into the saddle. Berchard followed, swearing. With spurs and a madman’s lashing, Durand stung the poor dun into full flight. He heard the stuttered snap of crossbows. Manic hooves pounded. Someone screamed, but he punched through blades and reaching arms into the thick dark again, shooting like an arrow for the Fuller’s Bridge. At first, he heard only shouts and Berchard’s hoofbeats behind him, but then a rumble swelled and the whole wood shook under the thunder of hooves. It was so black. He felt as if he and his horse were careering down a swinging wire. A stumble would throw him blind under an avalanche of horseflesh and steel. But they tore into the fields. As the rolling swell of open land stretched behind him, Durand twisted to catch Berchard bursting free"and the whole of the black wood rising in a multitude of carrion birds: the smothering leaves of a forest’s empty branches. Under their laughing cloud, a battalion of horsemen exploded into the field. Durand fought for balance and cursed his mount onward. They must reach Acconel; the city was not ready. Abravanal’s vassals must ride the leagues from their countless halls to answer his summons. Just the horsemen in the track behind him would outnumber the guards on the walls this night. In heartbeats, Durand hit the Ferangore Road"hanging low as the dun’s hooves bit the bank on the corner. Somewhere ahead, the crossroad gibbets swung. A league yawned between Durand and the bridge. He glanced back through and saw the horsemen closing around Berchard and the sky full of rooks. The gibbet cage loomed close, and Durand took the only chance he saw: with all the force of arms and back and speeding horse, he swung his blade against the chain or rope that hung the cage. Blade, cage, and lashing corpse exploded with the shock in Durand’s arm. The blade was broken. The cage was free. Berchard was through. Then hooves and screaming horses met rolling bars of strap iron, and a few hundred paces of darkness opened behind the Acconel men. A feathered storm swarmed past them. Durand shot under the shadow of the Warrens, riding hard and praying his horse could see. He marveled at the brute. The animal he’d taken for a plain workhorse stretched out like a racer, its great lungs heaving between Durand’s knees. Almora had chosen well. As the road wove between the Warrens and the river, Durand saw the Fuller’s Bridge fires wink across half a league’s darkness. Black wings lashed at him. Every rise took them closer. śHells!” shouted Berchard. Durand remembered crossbows and blades and Tenter’s Field full of soldiers. At the last, he swung the dun onto the verge, hoping to dull the sound of its hooves. The black-feathered torrent burst over the yard ahead. There were no clever tricks. Radomor’s men were climbing to their feet under black wings, while Durand cursed the poor dun on to greater speed. Behind him, he heard snatches of prayer from Berchard. And then they were among the villains. Durand shot through firelight, slewing across the yard, eyes on the bridge. Men flew to every side. Crossbows clattered, sending hissing bolts to join the storming wings. Durand’s mount gathered itself underneath him and he shot for the ancient bridge, leaping bonfires and sprawling soldiers. Into the madness of this moment, Radomor’s battalion exploded. Sentries screamed and fouled the legs of flying coursers. Crossbows snapped at the dark. Durand landed on the deck of the Fuller’s Bridge with Berchard howling after. They had half-crossed the Banderol before Radomor’s soldiers could muster another shot. śDURAND!” On the far side of the Fuller’s Bridge, Coensar reached as if to catch the dun’s bridle. The town of Fuller’s Bridge huddled where a patch of Acconel’s lower city clung to this westernmost entrance of Acconel Island. On the bridge, a score of Acconel’s guards warded off anyone who would continue the chase. śCaptain!” said Berchard. śWhat have you done?” Coensar demanded. Durand caught his breath. śWe must get men into the Ferangore Road. It may not be too late.” śWhat are you talking about?” śWe drive them from the bridge. We make a stand between the river and the Warrens,” said Durand. śBuy time. We might summon help. Mornaway, Garelyn would come.” Coensar’s mouth opened. śBerchard, how many?” śGod knows, Captain. I’d guess thousands or more.” Durand’s dun skittered under him. śOnly a league or two. We dig in on the road, hold him there. We fall back to the bridges when he’s too much.” Just then, a bolt clanged from the bridgehead. Coensar looked over Durand’s shoulder, hauling Keening into the air. śIt’s too late,” he said, already spurring toward the clash of steel. śWe’ll stand here to delay him, but Radomor will have the bridge before the hour is out! Berchard, ride for the castle. We’ll need every man they can spare. Come, Durand!” As Berchard spurred east for the citadel, Durand wheeled his dun rouncy and hastened back toward the bridge. While a score of Acconel’s guardsmen teetered on the near end, horses flashed in the torchlight beyond. Men shouted. Squads of crossbowmen snapped bolts through fire and darkness. Horsemen jounced into the fight. Someone in the chaos had taken charge. Now, this stranger would wrest victory from the madness, unless they could turn the tide. Durand did not have so much as a dagger. Into the line of defenders, Coensar rode, his blade singing on the wind. śKeep low! Lap shields!” Coensar roared. A small band could hold a bridge, but this bridge was broad, the only fortification a stone tollhouse lost on the far bank. Peering round, Durand thought that if they could get Acconel bowmen on the banks and warehouses around, they might make the bridge an open grave for their attackers. A bolt zipped through the space between Durand’s wrist and his horse’s neck. He saw two men fall with bloody arrows in their throats. śCoensar, we must do something about the crossbows!” Neither of them was armored. No one was ready for an assault. The captain snarled, lashing with the singing blade. But the line of shields was buckling around them. Yrlaci knights roared out of the night, crashing home amid shields and torn defenders. Bolts chopped down in volleys. Dread was like sickness. And Durand found himself caught with the dun spinning like a dory in a flood. He ripped an Yrlaci spear from someone’s hands. śFor the gates!” Coensar roared. śFor the Gates of Sunset! The bridge is lost!” And the defenders broke around him. But Coensar caught Durand’s shoulder. śNot us, Durand! You’d best not go yet! We’ll give them something to think about, you and I, before they go running our comrades down. Stick close, and don’t let them guess you’re shitting yourself.” Durand beamed as the captain’s sudden blade sent hair and a gleaming bowl of helmet sailing. Durand jammed his spear into a lancer’s teeth. The dun was nearly wild with terror. And Durand and Coensar lived only because the press had grown too thick for archery. Finally, the captain shouted, śAll right! Enough!” And they flew from the bridge and its knot of warehouses and inns, pelting past wide-eyed townspeople, roaring, śFor the city! For the walls!” Ahead, where the road broke into farmland between bridge and city, the defenders had already thrown the stock pens wide. Cattle bawled in the dark. Durand and his captain sped through moments before the brutes flooded across the road. Lamoric and a few dozen more from the castle guard met them as they reached the lower city. śRadomor’s revenge is swift,” said Coensar. śAlready he has taken the Fuller’s Bridge.” Bells rolled above the dark streets of Acconel. THROUGH THE NIGHT, they regrouped three times, fighting by the light of blazing shops and warehouses. Knights and blinking volunteers fought in the stinging dark undaunted, but Radomor’s men were too many and too well led. Soot-smeared and bloody, Durand followed a gang of knights shambling under the gate to Castle Acconel’s inner courtyard. Somewhere, Kieren, Lamoric, and Coensar wrangled over wild and hopeless tactics, but Durand was done for a time. Soon, they would fall back. The outer yard behind him was a makeshift infirmary, and, somewhere in the old city, the priests were murmuring their First Twilight. Something rushed past Durand from the shadowy precincts of Gunderic’s Tower, dim as moths, nearly skipping him from the walls. Hooves clattered. Durand had an axe now. One of the other knights, Badan, whipped a chained flail from his belt. śAlmora!” It was Deorwen shouting from the yard end of the gatehouse tunnel. The girl stopped, jittering bareback on a black pony. The knights opened their hands, embarrassed. Badan wheeled. śWhat do you mean riding us down, you daft girl? It’s the middle of the bloody night!” He made to move toward her, the chain rattling, but Durand caught him, heaving the man"mail coat and all"against the wall. śEnough,” Durand breathed. śLeave them alone.” Badan’s eyes glinted near, very wide for an instant. ś ŚAlone with you.’ Is that what you mean?” Durand twisted his fists in the man’s surcoat; there were three knights looking on. But Badan only sneered. śI’m watching.” He wrenched himself free and stumbled away. Their small audience bowed to Lady Deorwen and left Durand standing under the gate. He could not read their faces. śYou promised to be careful, child,” Deorwen said. śI am. I am.” There was a wet catch in her voice. śThe cook, he said, he’s boiling water as fast as he can boil it and there’s no sense hounding him. And he says a lad will be along.” Durand wanted to get his hands on Badan. Deorwen’s voice was soft. śThat’s fine, Almora. That’s fine.” The black-haired little thing peered past her, trying for a good look at the straggling infirmary or the smoke drifting from the pyre of Fuller’s Bridge. The bells still tolled above the streets. śGood,” said Deorwen. śGood. Now, see if you can get the house steward to hurry with the blankets.” Now, Almora’s head bobbed sharply. śHurry with the blankets!” The wheeling pony nearly bashed Durand into the wall once more. śAnd carefully!” Deorwen rubbed a hand over her face. śShe cannot sleep. It’s been a trial inventing errands. She prefers that they involve her pony.” Durand laughed"a cough of a thing that nearly started the whole weight of the day and night crashing down on him. He put a hand on the wall. śWhat was its name?” śStar, she’s named it.” The animal could not have been blacker. Deorwen’s fingers touched her brow. śHe’s got a white mark on his forehead,” she explained. Just like Geridon’s śPale.” Durand panted another soundless laugh. śI’d like to keep her away from the worst of it,” Deorwen said. Durand nodded. She was very close, and, for a moment, they were alone. śI would like to get us all away from here. Somewhere far away. I can’t think"” She kissed him in that archway, her arms snaking round his waist, under his cloak. He caught her up in his arms. He felt her tears on his face. śWhat is happening between us?” he managed. śI don’t know.” She smeared at her eyes. śWe are ridiculous.” There were voices close, and Durand remembered Badan’s warning. He swallowed. śI want to take you away from all this. I want"” śIt can’t be like this.” She looked back to the makeshift infirmary. śWe must think. What good thing can rise from betrayal?” There was an army near and fighting on the island itself. śBe careful,” he said. He could not think. DAWN PROPELLED SERVING men into motion, prising their heads from the straw in the cold corridors and storerooms of Gunderic’s Tower. Heaven’s Eye sent great sheets and blades of light to probe the Painted Hall where the knights lay, sprawled like dead men. A priest would be making the tower’s shrine ready for morning prayers. The kitchens would be sawing at bread and cold pork. He saw Deorwen coming with a bit of bread, but slipped from the hall before she could reach him and searched out a place to get a look west from the city walls. He stalked through a citadel hushed and strange in the chill. He nodded past the guards on the wall, and climbed into bright dawn on the battlements"as far from the Painted Hall as he could travel. His shadow sprawled a hundred paces over the crooked rooftops of the lower city where he could see men hauling strongboxes and bed frames from their houses. Carts stood under towering loads. Pigs ran in the streets. He heard geese and crying. There were worries aplenty in the city without his. Men had already died. Friends. And Lamoric had shouldered his brother’s burdens, rallying the citizens. Durand could not trust his heart with Deorwen near, but neither could he abandon the city and his friends"not now. He would just have to keep clear of her. The family would be trapped in the castle, lucky to step from Gunderic’s Tower with Radomor’s thugs so near. Durand resolved not to set foot inside. A bent shadow joined his among the rooftops. Heremund Skald grimaced, puffing a little steam. śYou walking the walls as well, O knight of the mountain hall?” śThere’s an army on the doorstep, friend skald.” śLook at them down there!” His stubby hand darted over the refugees, out of his cloak only a moment. śThey’re betting on these old walls. Would the buggers be safer in the hills?” śI’ve never seen a city under siege,” was all Durand could answer. The ancients had girded Acconel with high walls and strong towers, but there were precious few soldiers to man them. Heremund hauled his cloak tight, puffing. śYou remember us two riding double on that poor bay of yours? You remember the woman who blocked that road? Villagers shying stones? That’s what they’ll meet out there when they run. There’ll be some battles when the villagers try to turn them back.” śIt’ll be wild inside or out.” In the distance, Fuller’s Bridge town was a smudge of smoke and charred timber. Radomor’s men had gouged a line of earthworks around their beachhead. Any who hoped their assault was just a raid knew better now. The skald clawed the back of his neck. śI’ve been at this a long time. Traveling. Better part of forty years sleeping by other men’s fires.” A finger darted out of his cloak to tap his broken nose. śAlways curious.” Durand looked at the little man. śForty years is a long time, I think.” śYou’re not wrong.” Along the Ferangore Road, mists and snatches of smoke rippled, perhaps veiling the march of an army. śYou’d think I’d know how to watch out for myself,” said the skald. śStaying when a siege is closing round. There’s enough sorrow in any man’s life without such follies. Mael-grin Skald wrote about the fall of Perantur. Said ŚThe Writhin Men tell us that hunger is a fire. We, the citizens of Perantur, have seen this. In its stalking, hollow flames, all things are devoured"faith, love, hope. Before hunger, Creation is a thing of husks and dry grasses.’ Doesn’t seem wise to stick by when a man can step aside.” A skald was a traveler, not bound by vows and a knight’s foolishness. śWill you leave?” Durand asked. Was that what had the little man nervous? He flinched a smile. śI find that I can’t.” śAh.” Durand tapped his own nose as the skald had done. śAye. Bloody Radomor, Duke of Yrlac"if he’s killed his father"has been in my head since first I clapped eyes on him in that Ferangore cradle: a naked thing with his mother dying. Was it I who set him on this path all those years ago? ŚEverything he does will come to nothing.’ I can’t guess what fiends flattered me into spitting out that one.” Again, he flinched his quick smile, lips folding into the gap of his missing teeth. śI knew the lot of them in Yrlac,” said Heremund, śthough you don’t tell a man his son will come to nothing, and then beg a roof for the night.” He knuckled his oft-broken nose. śAnd poor Alwen. Such a lovely girl. And I knew Aldoin Warrendel. I remember an old skald chuckling about the town house Aldoin bought by the citadel. The Maiden and the Mother either side of the front door, proud as whatever"had been a bawdy house in times gone by: convenient for the baron with an itch of an evening.” As it turned out, Aldoin needed the house so he could be near Radomor’s young wife, waiting for her to whistle from her tower window. Durand had stood by while the man drowned in Radomor’s well. He had stood by while Alwen and her child starved in her chamber. śAnd now I’m tied to Lamoric’s misfit band. Here’s you: a stray come to my door. You lead me to kings and princes, wars and sorcerers. The Red Knight will be Duke of Gireth someday. And you? You’ve bulled your way to the head of the line. There are men who’ve fought twenty years but here you are, hero and festival bull.” śFor all the good it’s done anyone.” śWell, think on it. You’ve drawn their eyes now. Geridon held his spot a long time.” Durand looked back westward. śNone of that was on my mind.” He was certain now: something wavered between the Banderol and the Warrens, as though the boughs had come alive. Heremund joined him, taking a long look. śThat’ll be our Radomor riding to overturn the kingdom.” He sucked a deep breath. śIt’s a marvel what one man’s folly can do.” From the towers of the citadel, great horns moaned over the lower city: they’d sighted Radomor’s army. Heremund scrabbled at his cap. śWhat a teacher is the world; what lessons there are in a man’s life. You be careful.” Durand saw the glint of helmets on the Fuller’s Bridge. They had to hold the walls. When he looked down, the skald had gone. 18. The Red Hour As a ragged squall tumbled in from the mere, Radomor’s host crossed the River Banderol. Durand moved to the mighty Gates of Sunset, scrounging a meal among the towers. Thousands crowded the arch below, struggling to carry their lives to safety. Radomor’s soldiers shouldered past the Fuller’s Bridge like a rug hauled through a knothole. Their numbers brimmed the Fuller’s Bridge camp and flooded the fields toward the lower city. They made no pause. Durand saw knights beyond counting and ranks of spearmen glinting like the sea. Engines of war arose like outlandish battleships, rocking in the wake of oxen. Durand looked back. Dominating the square beyond the Gates of Sunset was a white idol of the King of Heaven himself. Masses heaved around the feet of the solemn giant. śHells, now it’s raining,” Berchard griped. The old campaigner climbed to the parapet, a crossbow on his shoulder. śRain plays merry hell with these things.” He nodded to Durand. śWe’re all up on the walls, now. Coensar has the conroi scattered in twos.” He managed a crooked grin. śHe’s got Lamoric, and he had me looking for you. Guthred’ll be sitting on Badan somewhere. I think I’ll be in charge of our division, eh?” Durand flashed a few teeth, but nodded his chin toward the advancing host. śHells.” Berchard grimaced after a good look, his face curling like a fist around the patched eye. śNow why did I want to see that, eh?” śI’ve been watching it since dawn.” śThat’s not just his own boys and sellswords that Radomor’s using. I’d wager there’s a lot in plain green surcoats who’ve left their Beoran gear at home.” Durand nodded. A man would need half the knights in Er-rest for an army that size. The advancing host looked like a city come adrift"carrying its towers and derricks along for company. Under the patter of rain, Acconel changed color: silver thatch and pale walls darkened, the citadel’s courses shining like slabs of clay. śGod.” Berchard shook his head, whispering, śShe’s root-bound, Acconel. Once, I’d wager you couldn’t force the Banderol with all the Sons of Heshtar. Now, there are strong stone bridges on every side. This lower city? From what I hear, it was a bald killing ground for generations. They dug ditches to keep you off the walls and packed the towers and the battlements with espringals and ballistae. If some poor devil got over the river, he’d come up to the wall and hell would pour down on him. Now, those engines are dust and houses crowd the walls.” Berchard managed a quick grin. śThat’s peace.” While the two knights watched, the Yrlaci columns slid into the tangled roots of the lower city. Engines of war stole among the rooftops. Nearer at hand, sullen crowds of townspeople struggled to pass the Gates of Sunset, filling the streets before the wall a hundred deep. śHow long can they keep the gates open?” Durand asked. śYrlac is in the streets.” śThey should have had time to spare,” said Berchard, peering toward the hidden battalions. śThis is mad. Your Radomor’s got half the blades in Errest and we never heard a whisper. He must have had an army of carpenters just to build those engines. Even if the barons said nothing, think on how many throats they had to cut. Every fool who gaped at a crossroads. Every shepherd on a hill. Imagine the blood.” The clamor under the gates swelled louder, the crowd surging. Someone had likely spotted Radomor’s towers or heard a war horn out among the shops and hovels. ś ŚOceans,’ ” Durand recalled. śLady Deorwen was asking after you. You’ve been up here all day, then?” śLittle chance of any of us spending much time dining in the Painted Hall now.” śI expect we’ll be busy, at that. I got the sense she wanted to tell you something.” The man looked at Durand very carefully. Just then, a group of the guards drew the two men’s attention. Some of the guards had moved to the battlements, peering down at the surging masses. With a grunt, Durand got up to join them. Down below was a knot of carts, with something thrashing among them"a hopeless tangle. śCome on,” said Durand. śThere’s no time for this now.” And the two knights descended into the chaos. A mob pressed on every side, and, in the midst of the tumult, they heard something screaming. Durand waded into the throng, Berchard close after him. The pressure of fear and desperation had jammed poles and cart shafts into a knot like a wicker fence"and each cart was stacked higher than a man could reach. Under the heap, one snapped pole had speared a bay carthorse through the neck. Durand heaved with the rest. Voices rang under the deep arch; they were like people trying to get out of a storm. But soon there were enough hands in the right places. Guards and townspeople jockeyed carts free. A hundred arms whisked bundles and strongboxes from the street. Someone gave the carthorse mercy, and it was soon hauled into the square below the King of Heaven. Durand sweated and puffed, but found such stern joy in the work that he stayed on, helping townsmen onto carts, guiding beasts by their bridles, keeping children near their mothers"working like spokes and gears to get them through. śDurand, what’s that over there?” Berchard squinted past. Someone was calling from the low city end of the great vault: a tall man with cracked green eyes and a shock of white hair, waving vaguely. śHello? Can anyone spare a moment? Hello?” The man wore a tabard of undyed wool"and stood near the head of a long line of men in the same plain garb. Durand nodded to Berchard and fought the current to the tall man’s side. They found him with one hand on the shoulder of an adolescent monk. The little monk winced up at Durand in dismay. śHello?” said the tall man. śIs someone there?” His green eyes were wide and empty. śNovice Gamel, someone here’s breathing like an ox.” śI am Durand, sir. A knight in Lord Lamoric’s retinue. There’s little time for talk.” śNovice Gamel, hadn’t you better ask him?” The young man blinked up at Durand, gaping. There had to be twenty men behind him"all in the same gray tabards, all with the same vague gazes. śI see,” said the tall man. śOur pilot Gamel here is a good boy, but we seem to have run aground at the very mouth of the haven. He has led us from the hospital, but I"” With an army nearly in bowshot, Durand caught the man’s hand. śAll right. Take hold of me, and I’ll see you through.” He slapped the man’s hand on his shoulder and bulled his way into the crowd. People shouted, śLet them through. They’re up from the Sleepers Mercy.” And the crowd made way, Durand leading the line in the wake of a heaped cart. As they emerged from the gatehouse tunnel, Durand found himself face-to-face with Deorwen. Almora was riding above the crowd on her pony, Star. Deorwen had the animal’s bridle, and an anxious guard trailed behind. śWhat are you doing in this mob, Ladyship?” Durand asked. śAlmora and I were talking, and Almora was concerned that her brother had not been seen in some time.” śHe hasn’t,” the girl declared. śI thought there wasn’t much harm in taking a look. Seeing that he was all right. And how brave he is,” said Deorwen. The little girl was scowling at the mob from under her bangs. śYou shouldn’t be here,” Durand said. śNeither of you.” It was already ugly. śI think it’s better to deal with these things rather than to run off and pretend nothing’s happening.” śThey are seeing Radomor’s men in the streets outside these gates. People aren’t always themselves when"” The tall man touched Durand’s elbow. śMilord, we’re very grateful.” śI’m sorry,” Durand said. He had nearly forgotten about the stranger. The tall man nodded to Deorwen and Almora. śThere was no one but young Gamel here to lead us. Father Abbot finally found a cart. They needed every able hand to clear the infirmary.” At this, Durand discovered that the sturdy, redheaded woman who’d been driving the heaped cart was peering down. śHere,” she said. śDo you mean to say there are folk still in the Nine Sleepers? There must be a hundred men in the infirmary.” śI imagine,” the blind man began, śthat everyone thought someone else had"” śThey ought to be ashamed. How many carts did you say?” śThe abbot’s man was grateful to have found the one he did"” śOne cart?” the woman said. Durand glanced west. The army was too close. śWhere’s the hospital?” The blind man opened his mouth, but the outraged woman beat him to the answer. śThe Sleepers Mercy backs on farmland. Yrlac will stumble on it anytime.” śHow many men did you say are loading this one cart?” Durand demanded. śThere are five orderlies.” śFive will not be nearly enough for such a place,” said Deorwen. śMany won’t have left that hospital in years.” There wasn’t time enough. Durand imagined Radomor’s wolves coming upon a hospital. śThey will have one more anyway!” he said. A few others had been looking on, and many gave fierce nods along with him. Berchard blanched. śRight.” The woman on the cart shouted, śCome on, you lot.” She looked back at a cart piled with cupboards and benches and linen. śHelp me drop all of this in the square.” As many hands seized the accumulated possessions of the woman’s life, the blind man got Durand by the arm, his green eyes flashing. śI’ve got a strong back still, I know where you’re going, and, I think, a blind man has as much chance against an army as anyone.” śCome then,” said Durand. He turned to Deorwen. śI am sorry to leave you so soon, but there’s no time.” Deorwen slapped Star’s reins into the guard’s hand. śAlmora will return to Gunderic’s Tower. Sir Durand, you will need more hands, and I have two.” The woman on the cart shouted, śThe dogs will be on them anytime!” THEIR COMPANY"MOST in the empty cart"juddered into the deep stillness of the lower city. Doors and shutters hung open in the rain. Belongings"those too heavy to carry"stood heaped at doorways. Here and there geese or pigs wandered. Durand winced at the grating echoes of the cart’s axle, shooting looks at Deorwen. She was mad to be here. He wanted her locked in the farthest tower of Castle Acconel. This was such a risk. And so he walked while the others rode. He couldn’t have sat still. Berchard, bouncing on the back of the cart, peered up among the empty rooms, whispering, śLady Deorwen, it’s not that I don’t enjoy your company, but I’m not sure what I think about your choice of outing. If Radomor knew you were with us, I think he’d take an interest.” śThe city is surrounded and caught without provisions or defenses. My husband is ranging the walls within sight of Radomor’s archers. Abravanal is mad with grief. And, I am told that I am to sleep in the chamber of my late brother-in-law to night.” śSo you’re safer out here?” śI would prefer not to be useless.” Berchard scratched his beard. śI can see that.” Durand waited for a troop of green knights to storm into the street. śNow, Durand,” Berchard said. śI was meaning to hand this over to you.” He fumbled under his cloak, revealing a sword. śI told Coen that I’d cost you another blade. He said you should have this. Some carrion crow tried to sell it to Guthred.” Scowling, Durand took the sword and pulled it from its scabbard. The blade was a hand’s span longer than any of Durand’s lost swords had been. Rainwater tumbled off the edge. śThis was Ouen’s.” śWe reckoned you should have it, and I thought, if we’re all riding out under Radomor’s nose again, I’d rather you had it now.” śQuiet!"Your Lordships,” said the redheaded woman from her bench. The rumble of the army’s march poured from a hundred alley mouths. śWhat’s your name, madam, by the way?” asked Berchard, never looking from the streets. śBercta. And I’m no damsel for you to sweep off her feet.” Berchard risked a glance. śI wouldn’t have a damsel, ma’am. Not at my age.” śI’m Hagon,” said the blind man perched beside her. Now Bercta turned. śHagon Leech? You’re not Hagmund Cobble’s brother?” Hagon raised his finger. śThat’s a name Hagmund doesn’t like.” śIt’ll be that wife of his put you away in the Sleepers Mercy, I’d wager. Wasn’t it?” The blind man shrugged loose shoulders. śThe inmates needed a man with some"” A slam in a passing street shut all their mouths: whether it was wind or dogs or God knows, they all stood silent for a dozen galloping heartbeats. Durand pulled Ouen’s sword, thinking Deorwen shouldn’t be there. śHagon,” Berchard whispered. śHe lays cobbles, does he, your brother?” Bercta put a hand on the blind man. śIt’s the way he lets that wife of his walk over him makes them call him Cobble. You can see why the soft bugger don’t like it"his wife likes it even less.” In Durand’s hand, Ouen’s long blade beaded and gleamed. If their party met outriders, he would send Deorwen and the rest down an alley, and see how long he could bottle the end of it behind them. He watched for movement down every road. śAnd she’d make sure you knew it!” said Bercta. They hesitated on the threshold of a broad street: Greensmith. It allowed them a long look through the veils of rain toward the army on the Fuller’s Bridge Road. They’d be in plain sight. śThe hospital’s that way,” said Bercta. śHells,” breathed Berchard. They could do nothing but hope that no one happened to look. Durand set his teeth. Bercta twitched the reins of her old gray carthorse. Berchard squinted from the back of the cart. śMadam, I don’t suppose this fine animal has a gallop in him.” śMaybe if you pulled and he rode?” śAh. A point.” Berchard, Deorwen, and everyone else who’d been catching a ride splashed into the roadway. śThat’ll give the old fellow a fighting chance.” Overhead, a black bird tumbled between the storefronts. None too quickly, they ducked from Greensmith into a narrow lane under the outsized facade of a stone sanctuary; there was no room for the place in the alley. śThis is it,” said Bercta. śThe Sleepers Mercy.” At the foot of the entry steps was a tall cart and stolid carthorse. The great tympanum above the door carried the alabaster likenesses of the Nine Sleepers and the Queen of Heaven. They looked real as bodies in winter. On the sanctuary doorstep, they met the orderlies and the abbot: monks and lay brothers gleaming from the effort of shifting bodies. The abbot was short and round-shouldered as a mole, but he was working hard. śWe’re here to help, Father,” Deorwen said. śWe’ve one more cart and a half-dozen able bodies. There’s little time left now.” Past the sanctuary was a plastered hall with beams as twisted and dark as something dried in a smokehouse: the infirmary. Carved screens kept the inmates’ privacy. Hagon grinned at Durand. śIt ain’t such a bad place really. The brothers treat a man well. There’s prayers and decent food and clean clothes. I get to play at my old leechcraft when an inmate’s afflicted. And it’s convenient for the boneyard when a man’s finished"unlike something in the walls where they’re packed in and buried standing.” There was a war horn sounding beyond the shutters. śYou’re thinking we’d best get at it,” declared Hagon. śYou’re right,” said Durand, and they set to lugging inmates into the drizzle. Most weren’t so much ill as ancient or infirm. The peace of the Nine Sleepers wasn’t for the screaming wounded. Deorwen directed their efforts outside while blind Hagon was good as his word, taking front or back end of any litter, moving with certainty, and never missing a stair. Deorwen followed the pair into the sanctuary. śThere are birds again. Like yesterday. But the first cart is loaded already, and I’ve sent them off.” Hagon could not see the pleading look she gave Durand. śGood,” said Hagon. śWe’ll have the second filled in no time.” He shook the handles of the litter, smiling. They were about to part company when a mad yowling came down the range. One of the orderlies called, śMaster Hagon? Could you talk old Giseler round? He doesn’t know us, he says. But you helped him with his oppressed liver, didn’t you?” śFor all he thanked me,” Hagon said, stalking off with one hand thrust before him, already calling, śGiseler, what do you mean you don’t know these fine fellows, eh? They’ve only been changing your bedding these past dozen years since your son stopped sending that woman round.” Deorwen pulled Durand back among the idols of the little sanctuary: blank-eyed children, all. śYou’re making decisions for me, Durand.” śWe’ve no time.” śWhen else? I’ve had enough of people taking charge of my troubles. I want my reins in my hands. You must speak with me.” A pair of orderlies tramped through with yet another inmate. śAnd what can we do?” said Durand. śWhat decisions are there for us to make? It’s mad what’s happening between us. What can we do?” śA man doesn’t just leave a woman without a proper word spoken. You don’t leave me standing alone.” Another stretcher team passed by, and Durand pulled Deorwen into the deepest shadows the place could offer, but even that brusque touch was too much for them. He caught her. Her hands played over his back and face and neck, conjuring walls of lust around him. They kissed like drowning. śDurand? That’s old Giseler settled, I think. We’d better get on. Durand?” Hagon stood in the sanctuary, turning in place. Durand took a step from Deorwen, trying to breathe. His hands were shaking. śHere I am,” he faltered. śRight.” There was an army. śLet’s get to it.” Soon, they had crowded the alley below the stone children with litters and crutches, and were lugging a last man over the rear of the cart as the abbot nodded. Durand looked from Deorwen to the mouth of Nine Sleepers Lane, thinking that there would be half a thousand soldiers there in no time. The birds were sleeting past. śThat it, Father?” he prompted. śThey all out?” The abbot blinked. śOne left.” śAll right,” Durand said. śWe’ll get him out, and then we can get out of this madness.” With Hagon in tow, Durand marched back through the sanctuary. For a moment, they were alone with the empty eyes of the child idols populating the sanctuary. Beyond the windows, black shapes laughed. Durand stalked through into the infirmary. śIt’s only birds,” Hagon said. śAye,” searching the alcoves. Hagon cocked his head. śThey say a blind man can see more than others. Which is right"and wrong. What’s between you and that girl, eh? It’s that kind of thing gets me wondering. You couldn’t tell her no. And you can’t stand her here.” A black shape rattled against shutters; Durand flinched. śThere’s more than birds on your mind.” Durand stalked past murky alcove after murky alcove, reaching the last screen. śI see it often,” said Hagon. śHaunted men. The worst here"Well. You’ll meet"” Durand rounded the last black screen. śGet away!” spluttered a voice. śYou see what I mean,” Hagon finished. Durand could make out little more than a shin and a pale hand. śI’ve suffered enough!” said the voice, wet-edged. śI saw one man, his foot. Another his eyes. Throats cut. Bones like branches. Blades at hands, mouths. I fought at Hallow Down. It was enough.” śFriend, we’re getting everyone to safety,” said Durand. The stranger leaned into the light. Someone had struck him a fierce and rising cut to the jaw"axe or falchion. For an instant, his eyes were clear. śYou are a fighting man,” he said. śThe army of Yrlac has crossed the Fuller’s Bridge. They’re in the streets. We’re leaving now.” śToo much!” Once again he was ranting. The man threw himself from his bed, hauling his body along the floor, short an arm and a leg. Thinking of Deorwen and Berchard and the armies on the doorstep, Durand ducked close and swung the madman over his shoulder. They were soon stalking down the range. śI saw things on Hallow Down I knew I could not see and live!” the man wailed. For a moment, he clutched Durand like a spider. śThey threw me in the wrong tent: a common man with lords and masters of physic. On Hallow Down. My face!” He twisted, spitting a hot whisper into Durand’s cheek. śI’d be dead now if the savages had spared it; I’d stolen some lord’s mail coat. I could have been him. How could the bearers know with me all blood?” śThey’re going to drop the gates on all of us,” said Durand. śI can’t lift you if you’re twisting.” Durand saw a flash of the man’s wild eye. śThey carried a great lord in,” the man confided. śFull of mud, he was. The surgeons, they had their knives. But they were clucking their tongues. The great man doomed. A hero, his back broke. His eyes rolling.” Durand ducked into the sanctuary. śBut two men: clerks by their black gear. They wheedled at him as he lay. There were things that might be done. Bargains made. They said that dreams had drawn them north to Hallow Down. Whispers. Black as ravens.” Durand clapped onto a sculpted head, tottering. Could the man be talking of the Rooks? But wings flapped at the high windows, and there would be riders in the street any moment. There wasn’t time. śI heard him through the night, catching breath and catching breath. A hero, dying. A great lord. And sometime in the dark, them wheedlers came back.” Durand made to step into the lane, but the stranger caught the door frame. śI did not mean to hear!” he spluttered. śThe next day’s fighting, Mad Borogyn has the king cornered. But our man comes with his vanguard and nothing but a cricked neck.” Durand pulled at the man’s hand. śLet go!” śIt was them two, I tell you!” Durand lurched onto the sanctuary step and into wheeling birds. People were batting them off, afraid for their eyes. Durand saw Deorwen cover one of the sick men, but the soldier caught Durand’s neck. śWhat did they do? None of his men came back! How many shining comrades did His Grace send to"” Now, one of the wheeling shapes struck the man full in the face. Durand flinched. Another swooped close. People were screaming. Durand swung at the things, torn between the maimed soldier and breaking for Deorwen. The stranger wrenched his arm, fighting. śThey’ve come! I didn’t mean to witness. It was my face!” Wings beat the shrieking air. Beaks whistled past like knives and hatchets, throwing everyone to their knees but Durand. He could not hold the man as the stranger lashed at the storm. Durand reached, blood stinging his eyes between the wings. And just as it seemed the man must drop, the crows caught hold" In a moment of impossible horror, a hundred beating pinions lifted. The maimed soldier struggled, his limbs twitching in crooked angles, but the gallows-birds tore him from the street, swinging him beyond the roof peaks. A sandal slapped from the rooftop into the lane. Bercta stung her carthorse. śRun!” THEY PELTED FOR the Gates of Sunset. Those who could walk, ran. Every able man had the poles of a litter. The cart carried a dozen men more, heads rolling between ankles. Durand’s head was full of dark bargains and sorcerers. He had dragged Deorwen into the Hells. Now, more than the dull roll of an army’s heels on pavement, they heard voices. As they rounded one corner, the street burst with clattering hooves: a green-cloaked outrider swung onto the scene. Berchard wrenched his crossbow from his shoulder"and snapped a bolt into the face of the man’s horse. śBloody eye!” Berchard snarled, disgusted at himself. They swarmed the downed rider before the horse could fall. śHe’ll be missed,” said Berchard, and so they rushed onward, taking the smallest lanes their company could manage"ducking upper rooms, throwing debris aside, both hubs grating over shop doors. Durand breathed through his teeth, jogging ahead"blade in hand"ready to launch himself at whatever he found around each corner. This was not what he meant when he thought of taking Deorwen away from the fighting. But, finally, the Gates of Sunset stood before him. The mob heaved, knowing death was behind them. Still, someone saw the gray hospital tabards of the men from the Sleepers Mercy and people made way so that soon they were inside and the army had not caught them. As Durand saw Deorwen walk into safety, he nearly fell to his knees. THEY HAD HARDLY pitched through the gates when Lamoric rode into the square. Coensar, Kieren, and a conroi of knights followed, all armed. Badan hunkered over his saddlebow, cocking his eyebrow at Durand with Deorwen at his side. Lamoric was the knight-commander. Without a glance, he called to the captain of the gate, ten fathoms above the crowd. śIt is the order of the duke that the great gates of Acconel must stand open! All who wish to flee the traitor Radomor must have their chance as long as it is in our power to grant it. You, the garrison of His Grace’s Gates of Sunset, are commanded to hold the portal wide until Yrlac’s ladders touch the walls, or his host is massed in the streets before you.” High under the clouded Heavens, the captain of the gates bowed low. śAs His Grace commands, Lordship!” A cheer arose among the mobs, and Lamoric saluted them all. He had seen the hospital cart, and approached, still waving. śThey wouldn’t cheer so loud if they knew how little time that’s bought them. The siege is on us. Radomor has outriders within bowshot. He’s seized the bridges on both sides of Acconel. But old Sir Kieren tells me these gates drop in a heartbeat.” śMore will get in if they don’t panic and crowd the way,” Deorwen said. śIt’s what Kieren said. You have been lending a hand?” Deorwen looked up. śI could not stand by.” śGood, good. I suppose with Durand watching over you, you’re safe enough.” Durand set his teeth, he couldn’t meet the man’s eyes. When he glanced up, he met Badan’s stare. śI never dreamed Radomor could bring so many, or so fast,” said Lamoric. śOur men have seen trebuchets. They’re throwing the things up in half a day. It’s taking us longer to hand the townsfolk weapons than he requires to ring the city. He’ll launch the first assault in"” A great bell tolled. Knights twisted, and a hundred other bells joined the first: a slow, heavy tolling that trembled in the air. Lamoric pawed rain from his face. śThat will be the high sanctuary. My father calls us.” For a moment, the others avoided his face. There was family to bury. AN URGENT TAP summoned Durand into the darkness of Gunderic’s Tower. The bodies lay, shrouded, in the Painted Hall. Men and boys shuffled and stared. And a serving man led Durand to his place: he was to shoulder one of the long poles of Lady Adelind’s bier. He glanced over the woman’s draped profile, thinking of that dreaming moment above her bed when he had seen her wake"and seen her die. Deorwen shot him a glance over Almora’s shoulder. With a rattle of censers and relics, the crowd in the Painted Hall drew itself into a solemn file. Priests walked before the draped bodies, chanting under golden standards. The family followed behind. Durand’s hands trembled. He’d had little sleep. In the castle courtyards, mobs of knights huddled in the rain waiting to join the march and play honor guard. On every side were unshaven men who’d been dragged from the walls"all in armor, all searching for glimpses of their posts. They’d emptied the battlements with Radomor in the streets. The solemn procession unwound from the castle yards. They passed files of townsmen in the market beyond the gate"bakers, weavers, stable hands"lined up in the drizzle to get what blades and bows the armory could give them. Most of these men smeared their hats from their heads as the cortege passed. Many fell to their knees. All wore the same look of horror: who was left on the walls? Radomor had five thousand swords. In a single glance back, Durand saw Abravanal’s numb eyes. Tiny Almora seeing her mother. Lamoric gaping at the size of the honor guard. In the rear of the train, pages and shield-bearers carried the warlike relics of House Gunderic: shields plundered by crusading dukes, banners of forgotten houses, the alien charges of lake and mountain peoples lost to time. Some had hung in the Painted Hall two thousand winters; now solemn boys carried these things in the rain. Soon, the pinnacles of Acconel’s high sanctuary appeared over the rooftops. In the streets, people hung from their windows to watch them pass. Even as serving men scattered alms among the silent onlookers, the people counted the knights in the procession. Finally, the cortege drew up before the great doors of the sanctuary, ranks of haloed icons waiting above gilded priests below. Oredgar the Patriarch spread his arms at the threshold. But before the fearsome old man could offer his greetings, the Heavens opened. The weight of rain drove man, woman, and priest through the sanctuary doors. AS THE RUPTURED procession splashed into candle smoke and incense, Durand peered around Adelind’s pall. He had pictured an empty sanctuary. But now, hundreds"thousands"of hollow-eyed faces looked on from among the sinuous pillars of the ancient place: refugees driven by the storm. Priests summoned order and the throng parted, leaving an avenue of wet stone to the high altar. Durand swung into step. Beyond the staring crowd, priests prayed, nose to the wall, punctuating their whispers with rapid nods and genuflections. At the ground and high in the clerestory, their mutterings puffed clouds of steam up the polished stone. śLet the fallen be laid at the heart of the sanctuary,” said the Patriarch. Durand and the other pallbearers set their burdens before the altar, then joined grieving family, honor guard, and brandished heirlooms as they followed the course of Heaven’s Eye, walking solemn rings around the dead, one ring within the other, turning like the chambers of a lock. As Durand’s empty hands dropped, he felt the sanctuary come to life. The great mass of priests and townspeople beyond the funeral party took up the march, and so many moved that the great sanctuary seemed to come unmoored above them all: a polished Heaven turning over the chanting sea of the masses. So many stricken people, so many afraid"they grieved with their duke, whom they could hardly know. They grieved for the lives that had been torn from them. They sang for the losses they knew must come. Thousands marched. Thousands sang. In the midst of it all, the Patriarch stood, bright as a flame in his shining robe. With a solemn nod, he summoned the family from the churning multitude. Lamoric, still in stained and soaking war gear, looked to his father, his wife, his sister. He stepped into that dizzy heart of stillness and, after a moment’s blinking hesitation, set his hand on his brother’s shoulder. In that heartbeat, Almora slipped her minders and darted between the long shapes, joining her brother. Someone had found her a bunch of daffodils and she stood with them, frozen like an animal. Lamoric touched her shoulder while Deorwen crouched at the little girl’s side. With profound self-possession, the tiny thing got on tiptoe to peck her brother and her surrogate mother on the cheek. Daffodils shivered as she reached high to set a flower by each. Lamoric lifted her from the scene, clutching her to his chest. Next, Abravanal stepped between the two bodies, hands clasped. He looked to Almora, as if astonished that he hadn’t helped her. śMy son . . . His wife . . .” The words creaked from his heart audible only to the very nearest ears. śHe was the support of my old age. I had seen the future in them. It still hangs before my mind’s eye.” He glanced at Almora. At Lamoric. śI do not know what doom will"” The stones rocked. The air shuddered. A thousand candles swayed. Every foot stopped. North. śThe Fey Gates,” Lamoric said. The crowd was looking now. There was another great boom: south. śHarper’s.” Lamoric passed his sister into Deorwen’s hands. śThat was the Harper’s Gate coming down.” A final boom slammed: west toward Yrlac and Ferangore. śAnd Sunset. The Gates of Sunset are down. Any who come for shelter now come too late. Radomor is at the walls.” Carrion birds stormed past the tall windows over their heads. 19. The Night’s Messengers With Lamoric and the duke’s guard, Durand sprinted up the lofty Gates of Sunset. The gatehouse parapet hung like the prow of a vast warship above deep ranks of Yrlaci soldiers. They filled the streets, brimming in each channel like the city was in flood. Kieren shook his head, muttering, śThey’ve used all the green dye between here and the Dreaming Land.” The old duke blinked, a robe like a great rug around his shoulders. In the vanguard of Yrlac’s battalions stood a tight squadron of knights. They rode under a new banner: Yrlac’s red leopard under a jagged crown. In their midst, Durand saw the hulking Champion, the two grinning Rooks, and"most monstrous of all"Radomor, bald and bearded in his green war gear. All the carrion crows for a hundred leagues were heaped upon the rooftops, greedy for the coming battle. As Abravanal set his hands on the battlements, Radomor rode out, clattering into bowshot. His charger was nearly wild under the wings of his mantle. śDuke of Gireth! Your time has come. Submit to the rightful king, or perish a traitor and a fool.” śYou are the fool, Radomor!” Abravanal shouted. He stuttered. śWhat do you gain with this madness?” śI gain the realm in strength. The people in safety. The crown must be wrested from this, the most stunted branch of an ancient lineage.” śYou are mad! Gireth has allies. The king will ride with his host. He will teach you your folly.” śMy poor cousin has much to teach of folly, but you will not soon see him here. Not for you who denied him his hostage. And your allies? I grant you Garelyn, but Ragnal keeps him penned in the Mount of Eagles. The rest will watch us play our game. They will watch, but you are alone.” Abravanal’s fingers clamped the stone. śI will not bow!” Crows shifted their wings. śSquander time and blood in defiance of your rightful king and I will put the city of your ancestors to the torch!” The sinews of Abravanal’s neck stood like a web of bow cords. śI will not bow! Not to you. Not to your minion fiends! You will not have Gireth from me!” Kieren caught the old man’s shoulders before he could fling himself from the gates. Radomor drew a great blade from his scabbard. To Durand’s eye, wings of shadow pressed about the man; almost, he could make out shapes shuddering close as the blade flashed cold above. Durand wondered if anyone else could see it. śOn your head, Gireth,” rumbled Radomor. śThe blood of Gunderic is at its end. His house is fallen. How many will pay for this last folly of a dead line?” A final sweep of his blade sent an infinity of black wings to choke the Heavens, and the men of Gireth dragged their lord from his battlements. BEYOND THE GATES of Sunset, Radomor drew his battalions behind the screen of buildings. Durand thought of a cocked fist or crossbow. Dark eyes glittered from tenement windows of the lower city. Engines moved in the narrow places. Rain fell, and still Durand watched. He watched as the light bled from the clouds, and dusk settled obscurely. Peering from the battlements, he thought of Sir Agryn and his sundial. The man’s prayers were often thwarted by a clouded Heaven. With a grunted greeting, Berchard joined Durand atop the gatehouse, spying through an embrasure into the lower city. śHost of Heaven, I hate waiting. What is he"Hells.” He ducked back as soon as his eyes could focus. Monstrous espringal-crossbows sat like adders in the streets, trained on the battlements, their crews watching for the glint of helmets. śThey picked anyone off yet?” śNot that I’ve heard. They haven’t loosed a bolt. Radomor’s poised out there like a headsman.” śWaiting for the rain to break. I saw a crew shoot an espringal once that had got itself soaked. It leapt up like a scorpion. Whipped ten men blind. Took a dozen arms.” He laughed. śTacked a friendly sergeant to the neck of his horse.” Durand tried a smile, but he could see Radomor’s men moving, squads jockeying through the rain. Berchard shrugged. śRadomor’s had a good look at this place; there’s a reason no one’s taken it. It’s still a stout old fortress. Nobody’s daft enough to try.” śExcept without warning.” Berchard dug a knuckle under his eye patch. śOr with engines of war.” Now Durand laughed. śI watched them drag one up this way.” He pointed into a long street where a machine stood like a fiend’s windmill. Its throwing arm was a cedar as tall as the citadel. śIt was a near thing.” The streets were narrow and twisting. Berchard pulled his sodden cloak around him. śTrebuchet. I’ve seen one of the buggers throw stones it took an ox team to haul.” śRadomor’s got more than the one.” Rough wooden towers poked through the lines of rooftops. śI’ve lost count.” Berchard shook his head, blowing out his cheeks. The sight made the old campaigner pale. śHells. Let’s hope he doesn’t choose this spot to start.” But several of the big engines were aimed their way, and Durand had watched battalions jockeying through the alleys, massing out of sight. The siege engines would pound the Gates of Sunset and the army would bolt over the rubble. This was where the blow would fall, and this was where they must throw Radomor back. śWhat is it?” said Berchard. śDurand . . . ? What are you"” Some dark humor tweaked Durand’s lip, and Berchard clapped both hands over his face. śAnd this is where you chose to stand?” The grizzled knight shook his head and shot a glance back through the embrasure. A group of Radomor’s men scurried. śHells, you are green.” śA man has to stand somewhere,” said Durand. Berchard grunted at this. śGreen as grass. I wonder if there’s time to get an extra mail coat. Maybe another helmet or two. I’ll need to be wrapped up like a turtle just to stand near you.” He shook his head. śI had a message for you"seems a waste of time now. Coen says we’re to get rest while we can. I’m not sure how much sleep a man would need to start catching the stones from trebuchets, but it’s your turn. With this sky, the buggers will likely hold out until dawn.” Durand made to protest. śWhen Radomor comes knocking, I think you’ll know,” Berchard said. śDon’t worry. You can come fight him then.” Durand looked at Berchard awhile, then nodded. He went to find a dry spot under the walls. IN A TOWER storeroom nearby, sleep came suddenly. Durand sank deep"into that place between and below men where the deepest dreams sometimes take them. He sank"with hardly a tremor of recognition"into a midnight sea that stank of clay. Strange words moved in the dark. The cut and pull of the strange syllables stirred the leviathans of those frigid depths. Not one. Not two. Vast shapes churned toward a gray surface. And Durand followed in their wake, remembering only a dread of what might follow. He rose from that well through a complicated darkness of roots and soil to emerge suspended above a strange clearing. Some distance away, the watch fires of a citadel rose from ramshackle tenements. This was some grassy wasteland between a river and the outermost streets. Here and there were broken bits of wood, stones, and smashed crockery: middens. The grass stood in tussocks. As he looked over these, his gaze fell on the black sockets of new graves. Heaps of fresh earth were mounded nearby. More unnerving than these open graves, twitching shadows swung above this wasteland graveyard. Dozens of shapes circled a steaming fire, stirred by strange words. As he looked on, Durand felt as though he were truly hanged. He could neither breathe nor move and could almost feel the hangman’s knot pounding at his throat. Through this dream of shadows, living beings moved. A huddled pair squatted among the graves, bent over close dirty work. Durand thought of tubers and paring knives. Firelight gleamed on bare scalps and blotted hands. They wore black robes"pendulous sleeves. A dozen paces away, two figures watched: a mighty warrior, twisted and glowering in cloaks and mail. A step behind him, a giant in a battle helm, the gray-silk threads of his beard flowing in the same current that stirred the shadows. Durand struggled to draw a breath. śThis is a terrible thing,” growled the warrior. And the smeared men glanced up: twins"Durand knew them though he could not remember how or where. Each had a fistful of smeared white twigs in his hands. śYet it is necessary,” said one. śYou have told us so, yourself, or we would never risk it.” The other smiled, his face spattered. śNo, never.” śThey did not deserve this,” said the warrior. Each twin smiled"spasmodic expressions. But the shadows surged near, slavering over the dark flecks that dotted the men’s skin and clothing. The lashing shapes tugged at the bundles in each man’s hands. Durand saw their pale skin flatten under the pressure of lapping tongues. śBack!” spat one of the smeared ghouls. The twin shook his head, rocked. śBack, by the Eye, by the Lance, by the Coat of Nails. Back, by the Calends Hag and the dark of moons.” Each word shot a twitch through the crowding shadows. Durand could not even struggle; even a hanged man could lash against the rope. And the two ghouls leered. The twigs might have been birch rods or candlesticks, splattered with tar"but understanding dawned: they were bones and midnight blood. One had been pried from each opened grave. The smeared twins found slim knives, and set to work on the bones like scribes. śYou have told us that your army must take the city before the garrison is relieved.” A pale, glutinous blob splattered one face. Both smiled. śEven against so few,” growled the bent warrior, śhundreds would fall before we could make a breach.” One of the twins spread his hands. śAnd who has chosen this but the old duke? What are we but instruments in his hands?” śBut these men you exhume were not felons hung at crossroads.” śBut murderers all they must be, Lord. Or they could not be bound to do murder again.” The ghoul’s grin might have been conciliatory had it not been quite so splattered; he raised a fan of fretted bones. śIt is done already.” He bowed toward his brother. The twin lifted an ewer from the turf, and raised it high. Upturned, the vessel disgorged its contents over the blade of his jaw, his lips, the dark cloth of his tunic, and down his gullet. Durand could not blink; he could not turn. It was far too thick for dark wine. Wiping his chin, the ghoul set the vessel down and grinned. To the night, he said, śCome.” His back straightened as he breathed deep. The hanging souls swayed while the sorcerer-ghoul’s bloody lips twitched through the words of an inverted incantation"every word a drawn breath. And, one at a time, the fiend dragged the dead into his swelling chest. When it was over, his face twisted with the simple effort of containing all he had consumed. His brother licked his lips, lifting one of the greasy bones. With a grin like a market-day conjurer, he twisted the thing in his fingertips, saying, śNow, each soul to its house of bone once more: murderers for murder.” He held the bone to his brother’s lips, and the twin breathed once more, the bottled soul blooming round the bone like a dark flame blossoming round a pale wick. Soul after soul, the two repopulated the waste with spirits. As he strangled on the periphery of this mad ritual, Durand became aware that he was not the only anonymous bystander in the wasteland. Shadows flickered among the tussocks, and behind the legs of the standing men. Was he like them? Was he dead? He felt the bands tight around his chest, and gagged on a tongue he could not move. śGo now,” the ghoul was purring. śGo where sleeps the family of the duke. And we shall see how long the limbs struggle when the head tumbles.” He raised his crabbed hands, and the tenuous black things turned for the firelit city, swinging into the clouded Heavens. It could not be. Durand’s lungs ached as though the hunger for air would wrench him in two. They were leaving him behind. He tried to master his thoughts. He heard grumbles from Radomor and soothing words from the Rooks. He could not let the things run from him. Spurred by this one solid thought, he moved over the tussocks and over the grisly work site. Bodies had been tumbled from their shrouds, each bearing the signs of mortal violence. Worse, each body had been torn again. Purple wounds gaped in white flesh. He saw the marks of axes, knives, and pliers, and broken ends of bone. Then he saw a face lolling above a ruin of meat and splintered bone. The hairs of the beard stood pale as ivory around a wink of gold teeth. A bull medallion gleamed. śNo.” And Durand felt the cold air round him"through him. śNo.” He was a thousand yards away, breathing the word into a space of darkness. He was a living man. This was a dream. And he woke. For a moment, all he could think and feel and see was blackness. But then the dream was upon him"the faces, the rushing specters"and he pitched himself to his feet. The Rooks! Were their sendings passing the wall? Were they flowing down into the streets of the citadel? He must reach the Gunderic’s Tower first. He scrambled through darkness. Hard corners battered him, but he soon tore free of the tower and ran into the streets. The city guard had set watch fires against the night. Durand ran blindly between these islands of light, flying past sentries. He stopped for no one, and gave no explanation. One guard tried to block his way, but Durand laid him out with a mailed shoulder. One sounded a horn. He could almost hear guards at a hundred crossroads shaking themselves into vigilance and readying crossbows or rusting blades. With clenched teeth, he pelted for the next confluence of alleys. And stumbled into a guardsman leading a horse. Durand skidded to a halt, and the guardsman rounded on him. śYour horse,” Durand said, already yanking the reins from the man’s fist. śWhat in the name of"” Durand rammed his knee into the man’s groin, and vaulted into the saddle, riding a trail of sparks. A crossbow clanked, but steel and feathers hissed past in the dark. Durand looked up between the rooftops. Inky shapes flickered against the vault of Heaven"not crows now but ragged grasping shadows. He leaned over the horse’s neck. The castle gates pitched into sight. But the marketplace before the gates was suddenly crowded: heaped with sacks and packs and mounds of cloth. The horse screamed, and Durand flew into the air. He crashed hard enough to ram flashes behind his eyelids. Watchmen on the walls lifted torches, darting and raising bows. Horns sounded. Then the market bundles all around him came to life"they were refugees. Durand scrabbled to his feet, spinning. His head was full of the unburied dead and racing spirits. He stumbled into a woman: a creature of flesh and blood, shaking with cold. śWhat are you doing, boy?” Durand stumbled back. Here were a thousand mortal refugees of the lower city. With a blink, he was off again, ducking past the curious and the sleepy. Beyond the great gate, he saw gatekeepers. śI must get in.” śThere’s some kind of trouble in the city,” said one man. A small man, he wore a mustache like the tails of two foxes. śHells, Kieren! It’s me,” said Durand. śWhat?” śThey’re after the duke.” The moment the gate’s long teeth left their sockets in the roadbed, Durand was under and running. He sprinted the passages of Gunderic’s Tower, blind except where light slipped through cracks and windows. He passed shadows colder than the wells in Hesperand. The Painted Hall came to life in his wake. Finally, he vaulted the stairs to the duke’s landing, skidding in front of Coensar and a guard"two crossbows trained on his heart. But a ragged shadow loomed. Behind Coensar, the duke took half a bleary step from his door. And the shadow darted. Durand ripped his dagger free of its sheath"a crossbow snapped"but he was throwing. The sending wailed, its mouth wrenched wide"and froze. Silent, the thing hung like a still image in smoke, already lifeless and drifting. The dagger clattered to the floor, transfixing a white fragment of bone. By Durand’s ear, a bolt had splintered against the wall. Coensar’s hand was on the guardsman’s bow. Lamoric was downstairs. As Durand bounded into the Painted Hall, he found the room motionless. Already, a living shadow stood over a place of sprawled knights like a dark blaze reaching nearly to the ceiling. At Durand’s blundering arrival, the thing twitched toward him. Lamoric lay prone at its mercy. He saw, high in the figure, what looked like a wild hillman’s beard floating about a dark face. The black flames of the sending’s hands swung toward Lamoric. śOuen,” Durand said. And the sending froze. The rushes crackled on the floor"vermin pouring from their hiding places. The thing reared to the painted vaults. Its hands hovered at Lamoric’s throat, a ring of black fire not quite closing. śOuen, no!” Durand slid Ouen’s sword of war free of its scabbard. The hearth fire sputtered green against the stones. Ouen’s bound soul shivered above them, lashing from its grip like a bonfire in a gale as mortal will fought sorcerous compulsion. Lamoric’s life was poised between them. Then the shadow surged. Durand shot the tip of the dead man’s sword through the bone at the shadow’s heart. He felt the contact, ice and lightning leaping his arm. Ouen’s howl rent Creation, a shriek that loosened the teeth in Durand’s jaws. But it was already an echo. The shadow had frozen. Tied by the long blade, Durand watched the shadow come apart, rags and ribbons of it slipping into the thousand crevices of stone vaults and stars. śWhat have I done?” Durand said. For a heartbeat he saw the wide eyes of Acconel’s knights staring up at him, then he collapsed into darkness. DURAND OPENED HIS eyes to see a pair of dark orbs glistening a few inches from his nose. He reared up. Almora looked down on him, all alone. He saw the criss-crossed vaults of the castle’s shrine. And people were turning. śThe King of Heaven smiles upon us,” said a quavering voice. Coensar’s voice said: śThe boy’s lucky we didn’t shoot him.” śThat knife! Right at my door.” Coensar stepped close, as did the Duke of Gireth, draped in his coverlet. Durand subsided onto whatever bench they had laid him on. śLamoric? The others?” śLamoric’s just come round,” said Coensar. śWe rushed everyone into the sanctuary after we understood what was happening. The sendings carry the grave’s own chill with them, but they aren’t much interested in anyone but those they’ve been sent against.” Coensar looked around as if the threat was not long gone. There was a railing between the shrine and the Painted Hall. Rows of armored men watched. Abravanal leaned in with his flat blue eyes, faltering. śThey are of an old line in the Col. They had that land of my many-times great-grandfather when the forests rang with the shouts of the Banished and wild men.” The duke fumbled at Durand’s shoulder, then turned without another word to be at his son’s side. śKieren asked after you. Bolted into the hall on your heels. You’d better try that arm.” It took Durand a moment to realize that he was meant to perform. The arm was stiff, as though he had spent a long day in sword practice. He held his hand before his eyes and watched it tremble. śThe thing was blue-white when you dropped that sword,” said Coensar. śMost of the guards fell at a passing touch from the thing. No one managed to bring a blade to bear.” He sniffed a quick laugh. śYou’d be little use with just one arm.” śNo,” Durand agreed. Coensar leaned close. śDurand, how did you know they were coming?” Durand frowned. śAnother dream.” Now Coensar nodded. He had Durand’s good shoulder. śLike the Lost in the courtyard. There’s something about being so close to death so often. It opens a man’s eyes to"” Coensar let go. śDurand!” Beyond the wall of people around Lamoric’s sickbed, the young lord was on his feet, hands restraining and supporting him. Through a rent in the crowd, Durand saw Deorwen"and met her eyes. śIt was Ouen,” declared Lamoric. śIt was Ouen, but you stopped him, Durand. I could see him, fighting.” He waved a hand. śI"He is free now, in any case.” Durand thought of the dead man’s howl and the rags of shadow after the blade struck home, but said only, śYes, Lordship.” Lamoric was pale, his lips bloodless. Deorwen looked on. Durand saw clenched teeth and tears. He wondered what it must be like for the girl, her husband and her lover right there. Lamoric took spasmodic hold of Durand’s surcoat. śIt doesn’t matter what abomination Rado throws at us. He hasn’t got us yet! He and his"” A great boom shook dust into the candlelight. It could have been thunder. Durand felt the shock conducted through the bones of old Gunderic’s Tower: a great weight of stone dropping from the Heavens onto high walls and cobbled streets. There were screams from the marketplace beyond the castle gates. Coensar grunted from the back of the chamber, his eyes glinting like steel. śHe comes,” the captain said. 20. Sunset Falling Through the night and all the next day, the army of Yrlac surged against the walls. Arrows hissed and sprang from the battlements. Five hundred hooked ladders flew up in the west, only to be followed by five hundred more in the north and south. Defenders swung gaffs and garden bills. Battering rams and siege towers rolled. The espringals with their twisted skeins of maidens’ hair flashed their śtongue”-spears at the heads of guardsmen. And all the while great trebuchets cartwheeled boulders against the walls, carrying ancient halls into their cellars under the weight of stone. All day, Durand ran. There were no ditches to foul the approaches and few bows to hold the storming parties at bay. Each fresh assault triggered sudden, hideous battle on the parapets. Tottering high above the streets, men savaged each other rather than fall, cutting throats and clawing under the lash of Radomor’s crossbows from the rooftops. Bolts hammered mail to bone. When the horizon bled and blazed, the roaring battle knotted round the Gates of Sunset. Durand and the others fought atop the walls, hurling broken masonry onto shields and howling faces to the beat of an Yrlaci ram swinging in the belly of the tower under their feet. Espringals and mangonels dashed men from the heights while the trebuchets beat the walls"each projectile swatting parapets over the streets of the citadel. Durand and the Acconel men fought and scrabbled on the high rubble while the foundations shuddered below. They threw everything. Men flashed and burst from Creation all around him. There was blood in his teeth. He heard his name. Coensar wove across the pitching tower, cringing low. śCome!” he said. śLamoric wants you to run an errand.” Like a pit dog lifted from the fight, Durand swayed a moment. Stones bounded between them, but he followed Coensar down to the crowded yard under the gates. Lamoric, not daring to look from the fighting beyond the gate, seized Durand’s shoulder. śDurand, we’re done for here. We won’t hold the gate more than another hour, and the citadel falls with this gate. śBut we can’t give in! If we cling to the walls, Radomor will shred us before help can reach the city. If we’re to have any force remaining, we must abandon the walls now and save as many as we can before the bugger knows we’ve run.” There were stones clattering across shields and cobblestones. śAcconel will fall,” said Durand. śHe will destroy everything.” śDurand! You must think. We’ll need an army if we’re to survive! Radomor’s thrown his three battalions at this one gate. Everything he has. It’s here he’ll breach the walls and come pouring through. Tell my father"or Kieren"whoever will hear you. Tell them to order everyone back to Castle Acconel. Throw the Fey and Harper’s Gates wide for all I care. Let the townspeople out. But I’ll hold the bugger’s eye on the Gate of Sunset. He’ll see my bull banner till the walls are bare and the castle full and laughing. And I’ll make him pay to win through. śGo!” Lamoric shouted, and Durand ran through the pitching streets of the city to Gunderic’s Tower. AS DURAND LURCHED toward the Painted Hall, someone caught his sleeve"Deorwen stood in a dark passage. śYou’re alive!” she said. He could hardly believe it was the same world. The nails on his left hand had been torn away. A narrow wall was all that divided peace and madness. śWe’re holding them, but it can’t last. I’ve a message for His Grace.” A crowd surged by, shoving Durand close, and he found himself mashing a kiss against her lips, shutting his eyes. She curled her fists in his bloody surcoat, her breath hot against his face. But there was iron mail between them. śDeorwen! I’ve been sent with orders,” Durand said, pulling free. śI cannot stop. Hells, be careful.” He tumbled into the Painted Hall, blood and desperation winning the argument for him"with one exception. ORDERS WERE SENT, archers filled the buildings on the road from Sunset, and from every corner of the citadel, soldiers pelted back to the high towers of Castle Acconel. With his message, Durand wove between pitching buildings, blade and shield in his fists, ready for squads of Radomor’s men to have broken through while his back was turned. Arrows clattered down around him, scattering like straw over the street. A squadron of soldiers ran past, gathering baskets-full. The memory of Deorwen was still in his hands. Still pounding in his heart. A great block dropped out of the Heavens, carved with finials and proverbs in High Atthian. It bounded through a wall and a crowd of running soldiers. A second great stone landed in an explosion of white marble, and leapt straight for Durand: a idol’s severed head grinning. As he tumbled, the thing leapt high, slamming the wall of a house behind him. In one jolt, the building shed five hundred years of plaster. Durand choked. It would serve him right if something smashed him flat. There were pinned men all around. Men levering stones. Men transfixed by the śtongues” of espringals. He rounded the corner on the Gates of Sunset as a great stone burst the top of one tower. Men fell under the hail of masonry. In the midst of it all sat the Silent King of Heaven, staring westward from his throne. Hundreds of soldiers fanned across the square at his feet, every eye fixed on the great gates. With each thunderous boom of Radomor’s ram, blades of sunset flashed from the huge gates. It seemed as if the doors held the Eye of Heaven itself. Durand swept the crowd for some sign of Lamoric, and heard the man’s voice cry out: śArchers nock. Loose the moment you see a green shirt under that gate.” Durand spotted the black bull of Gireth flapping over the mob at the gate. He shouldered his way into the press. Coensar had a long shield. śLads,” Lamoric was saying, śthe walls of Acconel have stood since . . . since Gunderic crossed the mere. We have never been taken.” People cleared their hair from their eyes. śThe duke asks us to hold this gate with our lives, so our comrades may live through and help reach our loved ones.” The ram boomed, and Lamoric sneered. śRadomor tries to take our homeland"our heritage. He can come and come and come again! But knights of five hundred halls are riding to our rescue. We will throw this upstart back till the hooves of our comrades thunder on every bridge, then we will ride through Ferangore. And Radomor will bleed for every drop of Atthian blood he’s spilled in our city!” His sneer glinted in hundreds of hard bright eyes. Yellow teeth gleamed. śHeap them up between those gates, boys!” The crowd shouted. The gate boomed. Durand wrestled close to Lamoric, and the man glanced up. śHe has mangled the outer portcullis with that bloody ram. Now he works on the leaves of some carved door . . . an ornament. He’ll be under the gate and at the inner portcullis in no time.” A stone swatted broken masonry across the square: a scythe to cut men screaming. Durand blinked. śI have word from His Grace.” śIs everyone all right? Almora? Deorwen?” Durand swallowed; he had the excuse of catching his breath. śYes, Lordship. And Kieren’s done as you asked. There’ll be no one left on the walls in no time, and they’re throwing the Harper’s and Fey Gates wide open.” Lamoric nodded, sighing. śWe’ll stand him off here as long as we’re able, and half the army will be safe and dry behind us.” śNo, Lordship.” Durand touched the man’s shoulder. śYou’re to flee for Gunderic’s Tower at once.” Lamoric batted Durand’s hand away. śI cannot abandon the field before the men who"” At this instant, the Eye of Heaven flashed over the faces of Lamoric’s men. Timber crashed"the outer portal wrecked"and Radomor’s vanguard roared through. Lamoric turned to his mob"”Shoot! Shoot!”"sending a hundred arrows to dim the sunset. But Radomor’s vanguard struggled on. They braced oxhide shields against the murder holes’ torrent of glowing sand and scalding water. As screams seared the air, the hard men of that vanguard snapped arrows back through the portcullis grille, to lash Lamoric’s defenders. One arrowhead flashed in the shadow of Lamoric’s shield. śLamoric, the gate will not hold,” snarled Coensar. śWe must get you out!” śWe must hold them!” Another bow hammered a nail through Lamoric’s shield. śWe must get you free of this before it’s too late,” said Coensar. śHorseshit,” Lamoric said. śLordship,” Durand pressed. śI’m charged to tell you, and to bring you back.” śNo!” He panted. śNot after the tournament! Not after what happened. This time I stay.” He looked at both of them, his eyes dark and frantic. śWhere did you swear your oaths? To me or my father? My father’s concern for his children will not keep me from doing what must be done.” He waved at the archers and foot soldiers under shields. śThese men will die here. Under my command. Do you understand? On my honor, I will be the last man of Gireth alive in the square before I leave it.” Coensar bared his teeth. śKing of far Heaven. We have heard.” He looked Durand square in the face. śAnd we’ll hold you at your word, Lordship. Durand and me.” As Coensar spoke his oath, there was a great rush from the gateway arch. Radomor’s men wrestled their ram into the choked archway. Scalding water poured down. Flaming straw. But the hide-shrouded ram still swung in its chains, shrugging off steam as its iron beak crashed against the cage of the portcullis. Eighty men clutched its sides. śAnytime . . .” said Coensar. Durand and the captain put Lamoric at their backs as smoke and screams snatched the air away. Arrows flickered up the murder holes, and the gate fell. Through the narrow rent, a battalion shrieked. Durand saw men screaming against the grille as the mob’s weight drove the giant dragon through. A footman in green sprinted up and raised a woodsman’s axe, but Durand shot his blade through the fool’s coat. He and the captain fell back tight against Lamoric. And as the pressure settled on them, some part of Durand thought: Here is Deorwen’s husband and I’m fighting to keep him alive. But the mob pressed, and Durand and his comrades hacked and stabbed whomever got near. Coensar was savage, the Champion’s blade flickering like a needle to ruin faces, shins, and groins. There was no chivalry, but there were still soldiers running home behind them. śThat’s it!” Coensar shouted. The men of Gireth could hold no longer. The press pitched the defenders against the white statue of the Creator. Durand killed untrained men, shearing through padded canvas and bone with fury. He had trained a lifetime, but he could not be quick enough. Blades hammered down. When a mounted axeman wallowed toward them, Durand threw his masters against the ankles of the Creator. The stone folds of the giant’s leggings jammed against his back while the weight of the whole mob balanced on his chest. Then they were reeling through the crowd. Durand thought of some children’s game: three girls arm in arm across a market. He gulped for air. He chopped a man down. He felt the press of green shields. A blow rang from his skullcap, but he stabbed into the flow with fury and speed, pulling the blade, jabbing it home. Lamoric roared. The man’s face was stiff, anchored by will alone against the roaring tide of men and fear. There were still living men of Gireth in the square. He would not leave. Coensar fought and stumbled, bleeding a red slick over his face. He shouted into Lamoric’s ear. śSound the retreat! Order them out!” Coensar snarled. śWe need every man.” Lamoric tried another glance over the heads of the mob. Coensar grabbed him. śBy the Hells, we will follow them out if that’s what it takes to move you.” Gulping, Lamoric stood. śRetreat, lads! There’s no more for us here! Back! Back!” Coensar counted heads at a glance while Durand fought on. They would run the instant the last man left the square. Durand gutted a spearman who had never learned to parry. He chopped down axe-wielding villagers and laborers with spent crossbows in their fists. Between gulps of air, he killed and killed the men Radomor drove into the square. A hand caught his surcoat. Coensar was turning away. śNow!” he snarled"and they were running. Between the walls of the narrow streets, thousands screamed. Soldiers ran past on all sides while archers bounded along the rooftops like apes. Doors broke. Women shrieked. Coensar shoved at the backs of soldiers and refugees, reeling. Durand caught Coensar and, in another few strides, took up the lead. Coensar bore a great number of wounds, and Lamoric was distracted. Durand threw friend and foe aside as he fought to get Lamoric back to Gunderic’s Tower. Men skipped from storefront shutters. He felt bones break over his elbow. Lamoric and Coensar ran in the gap behind him. They surged at the castle gate, the marketplace crushed with men and women, standing without room to lift their arms. Their wailing was louder than the cry of the armies. But, in the lofty stone gatehouse, Durand saw the end of everything: the gate was down. Durand felt Lamoric and Coensar stumble into his back as he came to a halt. He was just another head in the crush. There was nothing he could do. Coensar was suddenly an old man. His face was yellow and bloody, and Lamoric’s shoulder was all that kept him from the cobbles. Durand’s head shook in frantic disbelief. He tried to think. śLamoric, do you know a way into the castle? Is there some secret way?” Lamoric’s face was blank. śSecret way?” Seeing only incomprehension, Durand swore. Sergeants and guardsmen pleaded for the crowd to run for the far gates before it was too late. If they winched up the portcullis, the mob would flood the castle. And with throngs inside, Radomor would starve them out in days. Durand couldn’t believe they’d got through the attack at the gates only to die at the castle wall. He cast around"and saw a narrow chance: the soldiers still outside might be able to hold the crowd off long enough to get Lamoric and Coensar inside. śWe’ve still got a few men,” Durand said. śLordship, you must order your men to hold the gates,” Durand panted. śTo the gate! Soldiers of Gireth, to the gate!” He seized shoulders and slapped faces, hammering the men into a wall that might hold the mobs off. As he muscled close, the guardsmen beyond the oak grille stood, horrified. The crowd crushed Durand against the bars and he shouted, śI’m Lamoric’s man!” And it was Kieren who looked up, hollow-eyed. śIt doesn’t matter, Durand!” he said. śLamoric’s here!” Kieren’s mouth opened. He was shaking. śIt’s too late.” Kieren would be picturing Almora and Deorwen on pikes. The old duke cut to pieces. Every hall across Gireth hung with corpses if he let that throng inside. Maybe he should leave the gate. śHe’s the duke’s son. He’s the heir!” But he knew there was no hope. Durand shoved himself a space in the crowd. He glanced up at the grid of oak and iron. He would make a way. śWe’re coming in!” The dozen survivors of the Gates of Sunset snatched incredulous looks at him. śTake hold of the bloody gate!” he said, and, at a second roar, they did, catching hold of old oak and iron. Now, Durand was face-to-face with Kieren through the bars. śDraw the bolts,” he said. śAll I ask is draw the bolts, and we’ll hoist the damn thing faster than your windlass can. It’ll be up and down before anyone else can get under.” śIt’s too late,” said Kieren. Durand felt the weight of the crowd against his back. It was all that kept Coensar on his feet. Lamoric was shaking his head. śDo as you must, Sir Kieren.” They heard trumpets in the streets. Arrows from the castle. Kieren pulled the long bolts that held the portcullis. And Durand grinned a wolf’s grin. He turned to Lamoric’s mangled rearguard. śEverything!” he said. śEverything you have. We are dead men if you can’t haul this from the ground. Take hold!” Lamoric took a place at his side. śNow!” How much did such a thing weigh? A ton? Two? Durand heaved. His bones locked. Hardwood corners dug. He pushed, instantly sure that a man could squeeze himself fully out of Creation, the weight of muscle and bone jamming him down into the blackness under the world. Monstrous sounds escaped his throat. But the portcullis moved. Iron and oak rocked. The thing’s teeth sucked from their cavities in the roadbed. Durand’s soles slid, but he bulled forward. He pushed. Rung by rung then, he and Lamoric’s dozen men pushed the portcullis up into its own rattling chains. Though he heard shouts and prayers, Durand couldn’t look. Something battered his knees"desperate people"nearly upsetting his balance. He fought to hold on. Coensar said, śDurand.” His voice was calm. Durand found that he couldn’t open his eyes. śWe’re through, Durand,” said Coensar. śThe others have the gate. You’ll have to come under, and you must do it now.” The force balanced on each of his joints would crumple him if he shifted. But, with an effort of will and a gulp of air, Durand tore himself free and he tumbled under the sagging gate. In an instant, he’d joined the men on the other side, and took his share of the weight once more. Lamoric was shouting at the scrambling river of bodies. śGet clear! The gate must fall!” But the flood of people would not stop"they would never stop. śGod, I must shoot the bolts,” said Kieren. śIf they all come, we won’t save a soul.” The mobs battered Durand’s legs as he held the gate, straining men on either side. Radomor was behind the crowd. Coensar or Lamoric must give the order: Drop it. Each of them was ready to shoulder the blame. Before he heard the words, Durand opened his hands and the boom shook the market. Blood sprang from the pavement. śAgain,” Lamoric’s whisper said. śAgain you have saved my life. I would be gone now ten times over.” CARRIED ALONG WITH the mob, Durand fetched up in the back of the tiny sanctuary where he crouched among the duke’s inner circle, breathing and staring through a cordon of bloodied soldiers at the throng in the Painted Hall. A silent multitude crowded out there between the walls: porters, prostitutes, beggars, shopkeepers, and a thousand more gaped without a word. In the vaults over their heads, the howl of the city rang like a living thing"no man could speak in the presence of such despair. The duke’s sanctuary was as black as a family crypt. Spattered with blood from the gate’s hard fall, Durand could hardly think, and his gaze settled on a pair of large dark eyes in the gloom with him. He realized he was sitting inches from Deorwen, packed in with loyal men and family. Her cheek was smooth as white petals; her breath stirred against his jaw. śHow long can this castle stand when the city has fallen, Sir Kieren?” gasped Abravanal. Several men flinched at the sound of the duke’s voice, including Kieren. śIt has never fallen, Your Grace.” śNo one has ever taken the citadel until today!” snapped Abravanal. śBut now this man is in the streets. This man who slew my daughter. Who slew my son! Now he has my city. His fiends stalk the passages of my castle. He comes for us.” There were glances from among the men as the duke clawed his chest, but he subsided. Deorwen’s hand gripped Durand’s knee, and he remembered things he wished he had forgotten: her skin under his sliding fingers. Other things. Lamoric was right there, pressing Kieren. śHow many men do we have?” śFighting men?” The aging knight shook his head, distracted. śTwo hundred sixty. Three hundred. That must be all.” śHow many has Radomor got left?” You could still hear the city’s echo. śEh?” said the Fox. śHow many has Radomor got? The citadel will have cost him a thousand.” A baby was crying somewhere in the throng beyond the cordon of soldiers. śThousands,” said Kieren. śAs many as four or five.” Kieren was staring at the mob. He had allowed them in"he and Durand: too many to feed or house. śSir Kieren,” Lamoric pressed, śhow many can we raise? If we buy them time to reach us? And with the Duke of Mornaway’s men?” śTwo, Lordship. It might be more.” śAnd how long?” Kieren looked to Heaven. śHow long?” śThe roads are a mire. There are distances. If the Duke of Mornaway is on the sea at Evensands, he won’t learn of this. Not for days. Our own men will be quicker.” If they came at all when the city was lost. Deorwen was looking up into Durand’s eyes, ignoring anyone else who might see. A thousand lungs breathed the stale air. Her fingers dug into his knee. A ripple passed over the crowd in the Painted Hall, drawing eyes. śMaybe there’s a way we can strike back. Something at night before he’s settled in. I can’t believe this is possible. What is"” The duke climbed to his feet and forced himself through the ring of guards. Had the howl of the city vanished? śFather?” said Lamoric, but the old man continued into the throng. Lamoric darted after his father, and Durand wrenched himself to his feet. He had to move, and so he followed. Every head they passed was turned toward the outer gate: two hundred people in the entry stair, five hundred in the narrow inner court, a thousand more in the tiltyard muck, a few hundred who could fight. He even spotted blind Hagon Leech, listening. Tatters of smoke flew over the walls. In the high tunnel of the castle gate, Durand caught up with Abravanal and his son. The bright exit hung in the gloom before the old man, twilight caught in the portcullis grille. Durand could see little more of Abravanal than his scarecrow silhouette. The duke and his son had both stopped where a line of guardsmen and refugees stared out through the bars. Durand stepped onto the blood-slick cobbles. In the market square beyond the gate, a giant figure stood like a shipwreck. Arrows jutted from the thing’s hulking shoulders, and a patriarch’s beard tumbled from its battered helm, black with blood. A sword touched the cobbles, its point dragging and clinking with the wind and distant screams. There were a thousand soldiers on the other side of the square. Abravanal smeared wisps of hair from his face. śThis is what comes to speak with us? This is how he parleys, the man who married my little daughter?” Across the cobbled square, shadowy men clambered on roofs and upper windows, their hands busy. Lamoric strode toward the portcullis"ready to snarl. But as the young lord moved, the Champion wrenched its dread blade into the sky. The motion triggered a sudden inferno across the square. The heat"the light"knocked every man a step. But something was visible in the blaze: obscene letters scrawled across the captured buildings. śSurrender the duke and his blood,” they said, śand live.” Abravanal pivoted, looking into the firelit faces of guards and beggars and townsmen as the whisper of what they’d seen shivered over the back of the shadowed mob: thousands trapped in smoke and stone. Beyond the tiny duke, the army of Yrlac unfurled leopard banners to lash in the firestorm, the great Champion moaned, and a howl arose in the Tower of Gunderic. Each letter of Radomor’s offer was smeared in broad strokes of blood. THEY RETURNED THROUGH dark courtyards and passages populated with staring eyes. But Durand couldn’t face the little sanctuary again. For space and air, he clambered up through the tower, pitching past shield-bearers, pages, and lady’s maids all whispering in the stairwells. The wailing howl swelled as he climbed. He breathed it. It trembled in the stones under his hands. A last step took him from stony darkness to blazing battlements. Beyond the castle walls, Acconel was aflame. Torch parties rode the darkness, throwing torches through open windows, and the inferno bloomed in street after street as throngs pressed for the gates. Any townsman who thought to hide himself would soon be sucked from his cellar by the fire. Durand blinked into the smoke. If Radomor had beaten Lamoric or carried him back to Ferangore, the streets of the old city might have been asleep now. If the king had shut Lamoric up in his Mount of Eagles, or if Lamoric had died before the gates, Radomor would not have bothered with the city. Durand wondered how much of this disaster could be laid at his feet. He had done his share of rescuing, and he now wondered at the cost. It didn’t bear thinking about. The howl swelled, drawing Durand’s eye. Crowds poured through the Fey Gates to race the blaze to the harbor. But in the space of a breath, the flame was leaping the harbor road and"before Durand’s horrified gaze"swallowing the gates entire. śHost Below,” Durand gasped as a gust of smoke snatched the scene away. When the wind gave him another glimpse, he could see only a strange ripple down the mere wall"like laundry flapping over the battlements. As this ślaundry” dropped into the water, Durand understood: he was watching men, women, and children. They dropped from the high walls. They lowered each other as far as arms could reach"but the fall was ten fathoms or more, and who knew whether there was water or a stone quay waiting below? Durand remembered Radomor’s grim offer. How many lives could they save simply throwing Abravanal and his kin over the wall? That was another idea that didn’t bear thinking about. Durand heard a door slap shut, and, when he turned, he found Deorwen looking out over the billowing sky. śHow is Almora?” asked Durand. There was a half smile. śShe is very concerned about babies and horses just now. And who’s looking after them.” śI don’t think horses will fare well.” śI have maneuvered the Patriarch of Acconel into explaining.” śOredgar? That old priest could turn a man’s hair white with that stare of his.” śAlmora has latched on to him. I think she believes he has answers.” śThat old man just might.” Deorwen was walking toward the parapet. śThe fires spread so quickly.” śDon’t look.” She stopped when the firelight touched her face. From the shadows, Durand said, śI remember when I first came to Acconel. I’d only seen seven winters"every one in the mountains at my mother’s skirts. I came down with one of my father’s knights. It would have been spring, like this. I was bundled up on the back of this half-stranger’s horse. I remember the Banderol"so wide in that green valley. I remember Wrothsilver like a snowcap on its hill. And finally Acconel on Silvermere. High walls and sails beyond it.” All of it was dark and fire now. śMy mother and father told me I would be serving the duke, and I had skald’s songs in my mind. But my father’s man dropped me in old Gunderic’s Tower among fifty scrapping boys"mostly older and all from shining lowland halls. I think I was very lonely for a while"plenty of black eyes and bruised knuckles. śBut the city! Everything had been standing a thousand winters: the hall, the bridges, the walls, the gates, the high sanctuary. There was someone who could tell you when every well was dug, who dug it, and why some Lost maiden could be seen sometimes on windy evenings.” A gust blew stinging smoke across the rooftop. Staring out, Deorwen tucked a stray lock under her veil. Firelight glittered in her eyes. śRadomor will turn his might against the castle. When the fires have cooled, he will bring up his engines. There is little food to ration. And, with the city lost around us, the people’s will is fragile.” This seemed like a very pretty way to describe oceans of dread and terror. śAbravanal’s barons may come soon.” She kept her eyes on the distant fires. Embers spun into a black Heaven. śIt’s easy to turn inward,” she said. And then, after a space of ages: śHard to see over one’s own small troubles.” Durand could hear the howling from the streets. śLamoric has stepped into the heart of the city’s defense,” said Deorwen. śHe has been the great commander.” śIt’s everything he’s struggled for, landed in his lap unlooked-for.” She kept her wide eyes on the flames, the light glowing on her skin. śWhen we were fleeing through Eldinor, your skald said there was no one from Mornaway at the Mount of Eagles,” she said. śJust in passing. It is strange how such a brief mention can occupy one’s thoughts. Where was my brother? My father would have sent Moryn, I think. Was there an accident upon the road? Did he simply row up to the island an hour after we did? Did he catch wind of Ragnal’s trap and save himself? Has he died on the road? He is my brother and I don’t know.” Durand blinked. śAbravanal’s sent riders to Mornaway.” She nodded without glancing. śMoryn seems so stiff, but when I was a girl, he would appear at my father’s hall"where I was chasing the dogs or playing at needlework. There he would be with his riding gloves and his great blue mantle and I would know that he had come for me. He hardly spoke, but we would ride, the diamond banners of blue and gold flying behind us. Rain or fair weather. He clutched me tight and we tore away from the walls and serving men and ladies waiting. We would fly for the forests without a word, riding until there was no air left in me or the poor horse. Somehow there would always be a stream. And he would have a knob of cheese or sack of apples. He hardly spoke. But he listened. It was magic to me. Alone with my brother.” In a brief flash of Deorwen’s eyes, the spear-straight Moryn Mornaway was transformed for Durand. śYou’ll soon be able to ask the man himself,” he said. śI’m sure. But it has disturbed my dreams these last weeks. I cannot believe he is safe. But I am so often with Almora, and there are few women at court. I see him in darkness. It has been a job just to keep the poor girl occupied. When can a woman speak of such a thing?” Weeks, she had said: weeks without a chance to talk over the loss of her own brother. She gave Durand a long look, then lifted her chin. śI came here to get free of the crowd. To breathe. But this is no place for any of that.” She looked up into the clouds. śMany have joined the Lost to night. They are in the air all about us, storming with the smoke and embers. I can feel them pressing in. More and more all the time.” śDeorwen.” Durand tried to take her by the shoulders, but she twisted away from him, vanishing into the tower. He could hardly chase his lord’s wife through the crowds. śHells,” said Durand. He stood in the fiery dark, listening to his heart thunder, and he punched a good stone wall. THAT NIGHT THEY knelt in the belly of the deepest Hell, the murmur of prayers thick in the air. Deorwen sat by Almora once more, the little girl more sober than any of them though the old castle moaned like the dead were at the arrow loops. Abravanal stared and panted: somewhere else in his head. Durand eyed the throng in the Painted Hall"hundreds looked back, no doubt weighing life against little girls and loyalty as dread sank in. Deorwen reached to set her hand on Lamoric’s, but Lamoric was already rising to his feet. śIt’d be just Radomor’s sort of trick to storm the walls tonight when we think we’re safe behind these fires of his,” and he was off to check the sentries. Deorwen watched him slip from the sanctuary. He had only just got back from some similar nervous errand: checking how arrows had been divided among the bowmen. Someone in the Painted Hall was crying. The metal Power in Almora’s hands clicked while she sucked her upper lip. At one window, the Patriarch stood. śThirty thousand souls chased from their city into the fields. Four thousand dead already.” His long silver beard shivered with the motion of his lips. śIn the black water below the walls or brittle in their cellars.” He stopped himself. His high sanctuary, built in the days of the High Kingdom, now stood beyond the castle walls, the delicate panes of its windows falling in tears of running lead. Almora spoke. śWe will have the city back. Uncle Radomor will be punished.” The tower whistled like a pot in a kiln. His expression lost in shadows, the Patriarch said, śAh, Almora. Radomor has only one soul to balance all he’s taken.” Almora cocked her head. śThey go to Heaven. You told me.” The room stared up at the holy man. śYes. So I did. But it is hard to be as wise as you. There was a man: a wise man. Marcellin they called him. He warned that we should trade pity for hatred and forgiveness for vengeance, or we might find ourselves in the same Hell as our enemy. But it is hard.” The old man turned toward the dark glass of the eastern windows and knelt there. Little Almora stepped to his side, and they were nearly eye to eye. śMarcellin was born in the Dreaming Lands,” he said to her. śI have seen his crabbed writing with my own eyes. Tiny letters he used. An old man showed me when I visited the Library of Vuranna.” Almora blinked into his gleaming face. śThey all have black hair in Vuranna"like yours"and even the plowmen drink wine.” The girl knelt at the old man’s side. Her Power fluttered its damselfly wings. LAMORIC DID NOT return. Durand watched Deorwen staring over Almora’s shoulder as the little girl dozed and then slept. For one hour and another, she stared. Deorwen waited, but Lamoric never came. Her eyes never closed. Finally, in the near total gloom, Durand got to his feet. He stepped between sleeping forms, invisible as a spirit, and crossed to the woman. śWe’ll talk,” he said. śI think there’s one place left in this old keep.” And he led her through the blind multitude, past sleeping friends and strangers to an old room he thought no one would have claimed: a storeroom above the keep’s door where a windlass used to be. They sat among old hangings and broken tables; an arrow loop overlooked the fires of the city. And she leaned against him. He felt her shoulder and her forehead, half-nestled, half-collapsed. He felt her hand touch his thigh, hanging on more than anything. And so he held her. It was like teetering at the peak of some high hill. He tried to imagine sitting through the whole yawning night, so close and never touching. But, more tired and alone than he could understand, he did not turn from her. His hands slid over her body and they kissed until, together, they hung on with the firelight flashing in Deorwen’s eyes and the smoke of the city in their mouths as they gasped and grappled through the night. ONLY THE GREATEST exhaustion could have brought sleep to Durand in that storeroom. He awoke sure that there were knights on the stair or Radomor at the door. He was still with Deorwen"she struggled: fighting, dreaming. It took a moment to find his balance. She was caught in some sort of fit. śDeorwen,” he said. śDeorwen!” Now his head was full of his own past premonitions. He lifted her, trying for a look into her face when a great gush of foul, icy water vomited from her mouth. Durand recoiled. Deorwen’s eyes rolled big and glassy as those of some ancient pike from the bottom of the mere. He would have to carry her downstairs, screaming for help. śDeorwen!” he whispered, now shaking her. śCome on!” Then she woke, retching and gasping in the narrow space. He had her shoulders. śGods,” she spluttered. śGods!” śWhat’s happened?” Durand asked. How loud could their voices be? śI’d only closed my eyes. I was somewhere else. Someone else. Cooking. A great stew pot on an open hearth. I could see out the door and the air was cold.” Durand thought of his own visions. śI was about to fetch a few bits out with a holed spoon,” Deorwen said. śMy feet were bare. We were talking, I think. Then there was some commotion down in the road. Hooves beating"we don’t often hear that on our lane. There were soldiers. Men on big horses.” She hardly sounded like herself. śThen they were coming in, down and ducking through our front door. I tried to get others behind my skirts. Children! I was telling them Śthe window!’ out the back. Then the men caught at my shawl. But I got clear, tumbled out the window. There is a ditch. It’s where we throw what we want rid of"it runs to the river. And I think they won’t follow. But they’re coming round. There’s water in the bottom and I slide. I hear screaming.” Durand gave her a sharp shake. śThat wasn’t you!” śI remember splashing"falling into water.” śYou’re safe!” śShe’s dead, Durand.” Durand searched his mind, glancing over the city beyond the arrow loop. śIt all sounds like the lower city. Something there.” śThe air is too full of ghosts,” Deorwen breathed, and Durand could nearly see them: mad souls who’d lost too much too quickly, unburied or unknown. There’d been thousands pitched from Creation that day, and few had seen wise women and priests to ease their passing. Many must be Lost now, and one of these had surely found Deorwen between death and sleep. śI’d hardly closed my eyes,” she faltered. Durand lifted her"half-sopping with ditchwater. śThe sanctuary.” It had stopped Radomor’s sendings. śWe’ll get you snug by the altar and see if any of these spirits tries to pass Father Oredgar. I wouldn’t if I came haunting.” She managed a nod. He might have stayed by her side until the duke’s men came to prise him loose and throw him over the wall, but now he helped the shaking woman to her feet and led her through the black passages of the keep. 21. A Shell of Stone The Eye of Heaven returned to a black hall. Soot caked every surface in Gunderic’s Tower. Every face was black, except for the flash of eyes. Almora was playing. Deorwen threw Durand strange glances"they couldn’t speak. Was she all right? And right beside her was Lamoric. Durand swallowed and clenched his eyes shut, wondering what he was doing. Meanwhile, the knights in the sanctuary weighed their chances while tearing at bits of breakfast bread. When would the barons ride? How long must the castle hold out? They spun out their arguments until old Coensar spoke into the silence, cold and certain: śIt’s from Radomor we’ll learn the truth. If he comes on with a mad charge and throws his ladders at the walls before the embers are cool, he has seen your men and they’re near.” Even the duke’s wide blue eyes were on Lamoric’s hired captain. śBut,” said Coensar, śif Radomor comes on slow and bides his time, then we know there’s no help nearby.” Durand joined the others as they climbed the battlements of wall and tower, watching. As the first day wore on, the only sign of Radomor’s army was the collapse of tall and distant buildings in clouds of soot. Sappers and soldiers worked on the wide roads, clearing rubble for the passage of Radomor’s engines. And the advance continued that way for seven days. Soon, each cautious step was another point in an argument long settled. There was no help on the horizon. Durand suffocated between Lamoric and the man’s wife. When night’s chill gripped the hall, the refugees squabbled over blankets"and even the old hangings in the winch room. In the hall, they argued over bare patches of floor. They were soon hungry, and Durand was among the men who distracted young Almora while other men butchered those horses not fit for war. Deorwen fought to keep up with Almora. The little thing circled her, like a little black hawk on its jesses: never far, reporting everything in a bright earnest voice. Each day, Durand resolved to make an end of it. Once, he came down the stairs to find the Patriarch awake: his bearded face as grim and silver as some king on an old coin. The old man had little Almora sleeping against his knee. Swallowing unease, Durand whispered, śYou are good with her, Your Grace. All she’s been through at her age.” The old man smiled for an instant. śShe is good for me, I think. It is hard for a man to watch his city burn and still cling to the truths he’s rattled off in fat days of peace. ŚWhere is the Host of Heaven in all this?’ I will think, and she will answer.” But Deorwen grew pale, and so, each night, Durand stood, spiriting Deorwen from the silence of their strange prison, and they held each other like the last man and woman alive. The dead were with her when she closed her eyes: men and women dying by sword or fire or flood. He heard story after story, but soon she wouldn’t say a word. All the while, Radomor tightened the knot around the castle, each night renewing his fatal offer: the Champion in the market square, the fires, the bloody scrawl. The duke’s men were watchful as the last barrels were emptied and filth steamed in the corners. ON THE SEVENTH day, Radomor’s mighty engines ringed the old castle in a great crescent and commenced to rain stones down on the walls. Castle Acconel was strong, but each blow shook the blackened fortress to its cellars. And there were many hard eyes staring back from the crowd as the duke’s men continued their scheming. Toward dusk, Almora tottered around the sanctuary asking men questions and getting nervous answers. When the little thing heard children crying in the hall, she took a notion that they might be thirsty. She and Deorwen were soon walking among them doling out water. Durand watched Deorwen, knowing how tired she was, watching her indulge the little girl. He thought he should get up and help with the bucket. But, among the old gang, Berchard gripped his sleeve. śI don’t like seeing the girl out there. It’s like watching her skip through a pack of dogs. I mean, there’s loyal and there’s hungry. With the duke knocking outside, this is no game anymore, and these folk aren’t belted knights bred to bloodshed.” śThis is my father’s city,” said Lamoric, śand remember it’s heroes and belted knights who’ve turned traitor out there. They’re the ones riding against the king.” Durand didn’t like to hear words like śtraitor.” Heremund Skald was rubbing his mouth. śThere are many siege stories. Hunger does strange things. Sickness comes. You hear of debauchery"and piety. Madness among the desperate. Some folk stand firm beyond reason and others turn on each other like wild cats.” Coensar was nodding. śRadomor’s shrewd. We might be wise to look for a room with a strong door, Lordship. One of the mural towers, if we could"” Lamoric shot to his feet. śEnough!” he said, drawing the attention of half the old hall. He swung his hand to the west. śOur enemy is out there! It’s Radomor who’s put the knife to our throats. It’s he who’s burned and slain our friends and countrymen. Who could put his faith in such a man? A kinslayer! An oathbreaker! We’ve seen these things he’s conjured into his service. This squabbling is what he wants! He’s planted this poisoned hope in our hearts. But what mercy can a man hope for at the hands of such a fiend? śIf I cannot trust my people, what is my life worth?” He got Durand’s shoulder and gave it a shake. śI am leaving this nest of whispers to look my real enemy in the eye!” Lamoric pushed past their guards and into the Painted Hall, ready to keep his word. And Kieren caught Durand’s sleeve. śA couple of you’d better go with him; he’s likely to hurdle the walls and go meet the old bugger!” Durand nodded, slipping through the huddled crowds to mount the stairs to the outer battlements"and wondering all along whether he should be trusted. He was surprised to find Badan on his heels. śI’ve sworn the same oaths you have,” the man snarled"and he might have done a better job keeping them. A wind slapped grit into Durand’s eyes as he topped the battlements and spotted Lamoric. Durand wished he hated the man. They passed guardsmen crouched as the stones of small engines cracked against the battlements. Even in this mood, Lamoric kept his head low. He smiled at Durand. ś ŚLook him in the eye.’ I’d be bloody lucky to see him at all, this enemy of mine. He’ll be in some great tent with a cask of wine and those creatures of his crouched on either hand like some chieftain’s dogs. This is no way to fight. There is nothing but fear and squalor.” śAnd the crowds are a pig,” Badan said. śThey’ll be washing that stink out of this old fort for a hundred years, whoever wins.” śYou’ve got a gentle heart, Sir Badan. No one could say otherwise.” Beyond Badan’s grunted reply, Durand heard a groan and swish as one of Radomor’s monstrous engines lobbed some great block of masonry into the heavens. Lamoric turned to the yard: a heaving morass under black walls. śIt’s more crowded now than the festival day . . . with no hawkers to come peddling pies and"” A great stone smacked the inner wall, rebounding into the tiltyard. Between two men, it bit deep into the muck, narrowly missing both. Dead shapes sprawled under many others. śThese bastards will hammer your castle to dust,” said Badan, swiping a lank ribbon of red hair from his face. Another trebuchet groaned. śIt’s like wrestling in some backstreet gutter"all blood and twisting bones,” said Lamoric. śHe is killing Sons of Atthi!” śLordship, he is"” Durand began, when the battlements exploded between them. The walkway was dropping from under their feet. For an instant, as Lamoric skipped clear, his head crested the battlements. Durand saw whole units of Radomor’s bowmen rise in the streets. śLordship!” Durand leapt for his master while a storm of shafts dashed itself against the battlements. Durand’s drive knocked Badan sprawling"but tackled a living Lamoric to the walkway. Durand closed his eyes, saying, śI’d wager there’s a fat reward for the first man who puts an arrow through a man like you.” They levered themselves apart, Lamoric dusting the big Gireth bull’s head emblazoned on his surcoat. śShooting for the bull’s-eye.” Durand sat back against the wall, laughing as stones sailed by. Badan’s spittle struck his cheek. śYou son of a whore!” Badan’s fist was on his blade. śI nearly ended up with a broken neck, then.” The sound could have been coughing. śYou touch me again and I’ll gut you. You’re not such a riddle as you think. I’ve had my eyes open, and I don’t sleep as sound as some, eh?” Durand flashed cold, blood like ice. Badan punctuated his threat with a shove to Durand’s chest as he stood up and left bodyguarding behind. Durand could only stare. He’d killed a man over this in Tern Gyre. But Lamoric was shaking his head and still chuckling"Durand couldn’t remember why. śA charmer. You watch your back.” śAye,” Durand managed. But Lamoric merely glanced out an embrasure. śThese whoresons see me stand for a moment: whack. Watching for weakness. Very eager to jump on it. I’ll have to think about that"maybe we’ll get a last chance.” Durand glanced out the same gap and saw men heaving at the spokes of a great windlass under one of the towering siege engines, hauling a load of stones to swing above the street. Once they had the weapon’s big arm cocked, the thing would whip another boulder into the castle. When Durand glanced back, he found Lamoric smearing tears from his face. The man panted a quick laugh. śI shouldn’t have been so hard on Berchard and the rest. The hour’s coming when the crowd will have to turn. This isn’t some holy war. Radomor’s a thug. And Ragnal? He’s a kidnapper. But we’re caught between. I’ve given my word to Ragnal. Five winters back, I put my hands in his hands, and swore with all the lords of Errest that I was his man.” Durand remembered kneeling in the mud before Lamoric, knighted and bound, all by the bank of the River Glass: Lamoric’s sworn man. śThe Patriarchs crowned him,” said Lamoric. śI vowed to defend him"my father and brother beside me.” He managed a twitchy grin. śI stood clear-eyed before him. Who’d trust the man who betrays such a vow?” Durand kept his mouth shut. He would tell Lamoric"not that the man was a cuckold, but that his wife was alone. He would mention Deorwen’s nightmares. A crow fluttered over the wall, its wings snapping close. A raven followed. śAlready, we’re starving,” said Lamoric. śI don’t think my lady wife has slept since we shut these gates. People are ill. I’ve had men dropping bodies over the mere wall.” Another carrion bird flashed past, swinging toward the top of Gunderic’s Tower. Lamoric winced. śI won’t force them to hold on beyond.” śMy Lord!” cried a voice. In the tiltyard where the stones were landing stood Deorwen. śYour father’s gone to the rooftop.” Both men looked heavenward. Gunderic’s Tower loomed twenty fathoms above the yard. Durand could see the tiny form of Abravanal of Gireth picked out against the sky, black shapes spinning around him. He had something"someone"in his arms. Lamoric stared, but Durand got the man’s shoulder. śCome on!” They charged from the walls, ducking through gates and vaulting the crowded stairs of the fortress until they stumbled out upon the rooftop among the silent crowd of the duke’s men. Hanging half above the long fall, Abravanal teetered in the embrasure between two stone merlons. Ravens and jack-daws and rooks and crows churned in a ragged whirlwind around the battlements. The old man clutched Almora to his bony chest as if she were an infant child. The crows were laughing. Kieren met Lamoric as they stepped from the stairs. śThank Heaven. We have told him that there’s no reason. What Radomor’s done cannot stand.” Lamoric grimaced. He opened his arms and stepped out toward the old man. śFather,” he said, śit is too soon.” śThey are dying down there,” said Abravanal. śDying because of me. My house. My line. I must defend my people.” Lamoric was stepping closer. śThey chose this, Father.” śI will not cling until my own men must bundle me through the gates of my father’s hall, and roll me at the feet of the man who slew my daughter"and my son.” His blue eyes bulged. śWhat sort of coward would I be if I forced them to that choice? I must choose my own time.” śAnd Almora?” said Lamoric. The duke strained his neck, peering up where the black birds flew. śHow can I deliver her into that monster’s hands?” śAnd your son?” The old man’s fingers twitched like a crab’s limbs in his daughter’s black hair. śYou will do what you must do.” śYes . . .” said Lamoric. He had cried upon the wall, marking the despair coming to the multitude. Now, he walked beyond the reach of his comrades, hands falling empty to his sides"drawn on by the brink. Durand was too slow. No one moved. śI am so sorry,” Abravanal was saying. śThis was never a doom I saw before us.” Lamoric was very close. śNo . . .” śThere has been so much death.” And with terrible suddenness, Lamoric smashed his father in the mouth. The old man tottered, high above the yard. But Lamoric was savage, catching hold of his sister’s hair and heaving. śYou bastard!” he snarled. The old man crashed back onto the rooftop, falling in a tangle sure to snap bones in a man his age. Deorwen bolted forward as Lamoric tore a screaming Almora from his father’s arms. He bent over the old man like he meant to keep up the beating. The crows were storming, shrieking. śYou didn’t think of me at all, did you? You were going to give it all up. Throw my sister to the stones"and you’d forgotten I was alive! There are a thousand people downstairs who would swear that the girl died if Radomor came asking. Before we threw her down! You’d have killed us all! All our sworn men"what do you think Rado would do with them when the gates opened?” Lamoric’s shoulders heaved with the working of his lungs. śYou’ve been asleep too long, Father.” He stood, looking to the spent faces of friends and family all around him. LAMORIC’S EYES WERE mad and flashing as he tramped back into the tower stair, marching past Deorwen and Almora without a glance. Ashamed, was Durand’s guess. The little girl looked after him as he vanished. Durand joined the others in the crowded stone spiral, wondering what would become of Deorwen. He imagined tomorrows where they were all free of the tower. Durand would ride for the farthest corner of Creation. Deorwen would have peace from her spirits. Lamoric would stand still long enough to learn just whom he’d married. Durand stepped off the bottom stair to find the whole of the Painted Hall looking back at him: every man, woman, and child up and watching. Lamoric stood before them, alone. To Durand’s astonishment it was blind Hagon who stepped to the fore, scratching at the white shock of his hair. śAh,” said the man. śYou have returned?” śWhat is this?” asked Lamoric. His hand moved toward his blade. The blind man grimaced. śWell. I have been asked to speak for the rest here. We have come to a decision.” śHave you . . .” Durand watched Hagon, wondering how long a few knights could hold a thousand men, even in the well of a winding stair. śLord Lamoric, Duke Abravanal. We are hungry. Some of our number are sick. And there is great fear. A deliberation has been forced upon us.” śI am here,” said Lamoric. His father said nothing. Hagon hauled a good breath through his nostrils. śI know, Lordship. By the King and Host of Heaven, these are hard days. But the men and women of Acconel trapped here have talked it out. And we’ve sworn to stand by you and yours against whatever comes, no matter what it costs. And that’s an end.” A real grin was spreading on Lamoric’s face. śBy the Lord of Dooms,” he breathed. śJust so,” said Hagon. He turned to the crowd and they stared on, fierce and grim. There were nods and scattered smiles. Eyes flashing, Lamoric stepped forward, clasping a surprised Hagon’s hand. śHere is loyalty that the lords of this realm cannot match, and courage that its knighted warriors might envy.” Durand stared on. This was where he’d meant to be knighted, to swear his oath in new linen so many leagues ago. He spoke: śWe have lords and Patriarchs enough for the taking of an oath, My Lord.” śYes!” said Lamoric, and then to the crowd: śYou are the equal of any belted knight in the Atthias, and I will not stand by until you have been granted your due. Gather about Father’s throne! Today, I’ll see you all made knights of Errest. And before we’re done, you’ll each have fine halls in the domain of Duke Radomor!” WHEN THEY HAD finished swearing in the men and women and boys"knights giving each their slap or tap"Duke Abravanal took his son by the arm. The old man had Gunderic’s Isle Kingdom blade: the Sword of Judgment. And, in a shaking moment, he pressed the heirloom into Lamoric’s hands. śI will not wear it,” said Abravanal. śI will throw it in the mere if you won’t take it. It has been the sword of our fathers since Gunderic.” There were tears around the hall. BUOYED UP BY their fresh oaths, the starving Knights of the Painted Hall"men, women, and children"swayed into motion. They picked the yards for spent missiles, they broke down a bake house and sheds to gird the inner walls with hoardings and erect a set of light engines to pitch stones back at Radomor’s lines. Inside, men and women shoveled sliding mountains of filth from castle corners and pitched the reeking stuff into the bay. Almora chased whatever passing crowd caught her eye, lending her heart, while Lamoric darted and climbed from battlement to basement, holding the castle together as Radomor’s engines beat upon the walls. All the while, Durand felt Deorwen losing her hold. He wanted to grab Lamoric and make him see that his wife was slipping under, drowning. Each night, he told her, śWhen we are free of this place, these spirits will leave you.” He held her in the secret moments of darkness, but she faded, farther away and farther away. The distance grew in her eyes, until he knew that he could no more cut her off than he could cut her throat. He swallowed honor and shame and betrayal, saying that it would be murder to set her aside. Murder to give up the scent and touch and wonder of her. It was a devil’s argument, and the shame blazed of it on his face whenever Lamoric grinned his way. IN DAYLIGHT, HE stood in the archway where the hall met the family’s sanctuary, standing in neither one place nor the other. Deorwen and Almora were back among the listless crowds with their pail of water. Durand’s fingers curled in the fluted arch. He resolved to do what he must. He swore to catch Lamoric and make him understand: she was so alone"she had the dreams. He would step back to let her husband in. He had to stop himself. He would tell Deorwen. Just as he stepped into the hall, the world shifted. He nearly stumbled. No one else seemed to notice. Across the hall, Almora was asking, śWhy can’t I see him?” while Durand stood, hands spread and frozen lest his next step bring the tower down. śYou wanted to help with the water,” Deorwen answered. śAfter, then, Aunty. Star is my horse. He will want water too.” śStar. He is busy.” Durand blinked; he felt as though Creation’s heartbeat had caught a hitch, but he’d be damned if he could say why. Then another stone struck beyond the hall"and he understood: after countless ringing blows, the old walls spoke a different note. Somewhere, the stone shell that saved them was broken. He looked at Almora and Deorwen"and the whole trapped multitude"then bolted down the stairs and for the flawed sound. He pitched into the crowded tiltyard between the inner and outer walls, landing up at Lamoric’s side. Every hollow eye in the yard was fixed on the same spot: a great crack that hung like dry lightning in the high outer wall over all their heads. Then a new missile struck, and the courses bulged. Fathoms above the yard, the men on the outer wall ran from twisting battlements. And another stone fell. Durand imagined Radomor’s engineers heaving their engines. The whole siege would bear down on that one flaw. Throughout the city, Radomor’s captains would be lashing their battalions into motion, every man charging for this spot. Another massive block fell from the Heavens and the crack jagged deeper. Durand caught his master’s sleeve. śWe must throw some props against this. Get the men down.” śDown? No, Durand! That’s the last thing we want.” He flashed a savage smile and turned to the crowd. śQuick as you can! Listen sharp and no questions!” Then they were running. IN A FURY of roaring and running, Durand and Lamoric’s captains packed the outer walls and towers all around the breaking wall"even as Radomor’s stones hammered down. Every soul pushed himself on with sheer will, but they were all spent. As Durand drove men up one open stair, he stole a heartbeat to wonder whether anyone had the wits left to play the game Lamoric had in mind. Scarcely had Durand formed the thought when Creation filled with stone and thunder. For a moment, it was all he could do to hang on, then a thousand hardened soldiers roared from Radomor’s lines. Everything would be lost if Lamoric’s forces didn’t answer. Durand leapt into the yard and sprinted into the thunder. Though the battlements were still crashing into the cleft, the men of both armies howled in. śHe’ll be like a man with his fist round a wolf’s tongue!” Lamoric had said. Now, Durand and the fiercest men in Acconel crammed the gap as blades flashed from the dust. Green shirts crowded through the howling din. Then they were lashing at each other. The weight of two armies met in a space no broader than a doorway. Durand felt his boots slide and his ribs creak as he gulped"and gouged with Ouen’s great blade. In moments, dead men lolled, caught and standing among the living. In snatches, Durand saw hundreds of Radomor’s men heaving in the market yard beyond the breech. Durand and a couple of dozen other fools couldn’t hold back a mob like that. Soon, they would push through. And so, somewhere behind"high on the inner walls"Lamoric was watching for the moment. The longer Durand and his comrades held, the worse it was for Radomor. While the bear-pit struggle knotted in the breech, hundreds would be dying as Lamoric’s archers lashed the back of the battalions under their wall. Far from retreating, every man looked down on the fight, flinging whatever death he could find on his enemy’s heads. Here was vengeance for every soul in Gunderic’s Tower. But they could not hold. Durand saw a man swatted down. And another. The mob outside was pushing hard. It might already be too late. With flashes bursting in his eyes, Durand nearly missed the call to retreat. Trumpets rang from Gunderic’s Tower. Lamoric would be shouting his order, and Durand caught threads of it: śBack! Back!” Above and on all sides, the garrisons of the mural towers and outer walls abandoned the fight. śRadomor can have his wall,” had been the order, śbut he won’t get a man of our garrison.” And so, with Durand’s force faltering in the breach, the defenders fled the outer walls. In front of Durand, the green soldiers were gaining ground. A defender flew from a razor uppercut. Another Acconel man crashed through his fellows with a blade in his throat. They must hold until the walls were cleared. The garrison couldn’t stand to lose a single man, and, as Durand was pushed back, he could still hear the boots of defenders slapping down the stairs behind him. Hundreds could still be caught. Desperate, he set his boot on a belt, swinging Ouen’s big sword high. He warred with two hundred men. Then a howl struck from behind. Familiar men battered past him, swamping the broken rearguard: knights meant to be at the inner gates charging forward. A hand grabbed his shoulder, and there was Berchard spluttering, śWe’ve got archers! Let the first wave catch it! Run!” And so, with a last wild chop, Durand tumbled free, into the space between the walls. Above the old tiltyard, the garrison was thundering through the hoardings atop the inner walls. Every man from the outer walls had pelted up those stairs, and now their arrows flickered down as Durand reeled into the gatehouse, and"when the rearguard was free"the big portcullis fell behind them. Beyond the crowded inner yard, Creation boiled with Radomor’s screaming killers"thwarted, trapped, and under a new hail of missiles. Durand smeared blood from his face, staggering into the clammy shadow of Gunderic’s Tower. They’d pulled a score of horses into the yard. Hundreds of people stared back. After days of grinding resistance, the garrison had surrendered the outer walls and tiltyard in the space of heartbeats. Creation had locked around them like a fist, but they were still alive and making Radomor bleed. Everywhere he looked, people smiled like savages. They would hold the next wall, and the next if they could. The keep would be packed now"without a single empty corner for a man and his friend’s wife. No matter what Durand’s honor or his heart demanded, Deorwen would be alone with her dreams. IN THE AFTERMATH of the retreat, Abravanal’s inner circle made plans. With the throng from the tiltyard now squeezed into Gunderic’s Tower and the narrow courtyard at its foot, people could hardly sit or breathe. Radomor’s engineers shifted their aim, and soon it was the inner walls and Gunderic’s Tower itself shaking with the thunderclap of great stones. Radomor’s Champion appeared once more, standing on the market cobbles. Abravanal’s household climbed Gunderic’s Tower to stare down upon him. Carrion birds settled all around the battlements in leering heaps too deep to scatter. Standing guard among the lords of Abravanal’s dwindling domain, Durand expected the brute to roar or unveil another bloody scrawl. Instead, the sound came from all around the castle, arising among black feathers like the whisper of wind in forest’s leaves. śSo alone . . .” Durand and the men of Abravanal’s household drew blades, Durand, at least, wondering what he could do with one sword. Abravanal leaned from the battlements like a captain at the prow of his ship. śTo the Hells with you!” he shouted, but the whisper pressed on. śWhere is your precious king, do you suppose, in all of this? We have heard there is rebellion in the north. His noble brother, we have heard. There are riders calling loyal men to the banner of Ragnal the fool. They remind Ragnal’s lords of their poor sons, hostage in his Mount of Eagles. Brother tears at brother. The realm collapses. The people"” A door swung wide at the stairway door, and wild-eyed Patriarch Oredgar stood under Heaven with his arms flung wide. śBegone, fiends of the Hells!” And the birds were rising, shrieking into the wind. śThe Eye of Heaven has not left us yet. It is not yet time to mock in daylight!” And the things stormed and tumbled all around, battering every man before they swung off over the city, leaving the Patriarch slashed bloody by beak and talon. THEY DID NOT die in the first hours. Deorwen played riddling games with Almora. Plaster fell in great white shards, and the Knights of the Painted Hall slipped their dead into the cold water of the mere. Lamoric moved among the crowd. śRemember,” he said, touching a shoulder, smiling into a gray face, śthis is our plan, not Radomor’s. While that madman struggles to beat us down, we are biding our time. The barons of Gireth are on the roads. They are riding. Radomor does not want us to stand. He does not want an armed battalion behind him when the knights of my father’s barons come pouring over the bridges. The traitor has an adder by the throat and wolves at his door.” But his speech could hardly open their eyes. People nodded. They leaned against each other. śJust wait,” said Lamoric. There were too many people, and their strength ebbed with every hour that the great stones clubbed the tower. Duke Abravanal sat near Deorwen and Almora, watching his son"the only moving being in the hall"understanding something of the man now and fearing the knowledge had come too late. Lamoric returned to the little sanctuary, gray and wavering though he smiled. He found an arrow loop and peered off in the direction of Radomor’s army. As Kieren and Coensar both looked on, Heremund joined the young lord at the window. śI remember a time up in Highshields,” he said. śI’d carried my mandora to some baron’s hall. One of those forts on a crag. Nothing but goats.” He made a dry sound. śI was teasing the old man’s young wife, and she smiled too much, I guess. Then the old man’s kicking me down a passage to a guardroom, and I see this ugly grate in the floor, and these grinning thugs. And down I went. A prison pit: an oubliette. For a blink, I was sure it was a well, it was that narrow. I couldn’t sit or lie down. Couldn’t reach the grate, couldn’t climb. A couple of days in, I’ve got my knees on one wall with my face above them, crumpled and cold and sore as I’ve ever been. And then they swing the grate open.” He shook his head, remembering relief. śI tell you,” he said, śstrong or weak, brave or craven, it doesn’t matter when you’re in a spot like that.” Kieren and Coensar were still watching. śDid they send you?” Lamoric asked. śRadomor’s boys? If you meant to take our minds from our sufferings, I’m afraid your tale has not hit the mark.” Coensar’s eyes glinted in the gloom. śSickness moves among us,” he said. śThe people are weak. There is hardly water. We must think.” śNo,” said Lamoric. śThere can be no bargains.” A stone struck the ancient tower; a great crack flickered across the vault above their heads. Kieren scrubbed plaster from his hair. śWhat will Radomor do? He’ll want everyone dead, no matter what he’s written on the walls.” śWeakness would stiffen his opponent’s necks,” said Coensar. Kieren glanced Almora’s way, and spoke softly. śHe might accept our surrender. It would show his nobility.” śI will not hear you speak of this,” said Lamoric. An odd sound drew Durand’s eye to one glazed arrow loop in the dark: the debris of some fallen battlement raining past. śIf anyone’s to leave this place alive,” said Coensar, śthey’ll have to hand us over.” The captain’s steely glance found Deorwen and Almora, playing. Kieren leaned closer. śWe must get them out of here somehow.” Deorwen pushed herself up. śNo.” Kieren spread his small hands. śIt will be all right. The girl will need"” śYou cannot send me off. I don’t deserve"” She stopped for a moment, a grim calm passing over her face. śRadomor will never believe it,” she said. No one said a word. śTell them, Durand,” she said. Durand wanted to believe that they could spirit her from the place. But this was Radomor, a man who’d listened to his best friend drown, who’d slain his own father. He could only stare back at her. A stone struck the upper stories of the fortress, jarring another rain of soot and plaster from the ceiling. Almora was looking up at them all. Durand wished they could all slip over the back wall and swim out across the Bay of Acconel, leaving it all behind. śDon’t worry about that,” Kieren said. śThere’s always a way.” śHe won’t break us,” said Lamoric. śOur allies must have time. Our people will hold out as long as they must.” But what if there was no one riding? They had seen the city burning. The smoke would have traveled a hundred leagues. Who would ride to a ruin and throw his life away? Many would bend their knees to Radomor if it meant they could keep their lands. Abravanal was staring at his son, shaking his head. Durand thought he saw pride and regret and despair in the man’s face. Durand looked away, back to the arrow loop"as its leaded casement exploded into the room. Picturing fiends on the wind, Durand charged to the narrow window, sword drawn, glancing down over black and gleaming stones of the harbor wall. He peered out into the night breeze, ten fathoms to the twitching obsidian of the mere. A white hand waved from the water. YOU COULDN’T HAUL a man through an arrow slit, but they found a larger window and many hands soon had the casement out and a dripping stranger shuddering in their midst. Patches of copper beard jutted from skin like snow. Every eye in the Painted Hall peered in. Coensar put Keening at the stranger’s neck. śWho are you?” The man opened his eyes with effort, shaking. śI’ve come from the b-barons of Honefells. Sallow Hythe. Mereness. Swanskin Down. His Grace’s vassals. They’re g-gathering.” The duke had come near, his head tilted and his eyes nearly glowing. The man blinked up. śA raft,” he added, by way of explanation. śHad to wait f-for dark. The bastards are watching the water.” śWhere are they?” Lamoric demanded. Durand imagined this army gathered just over the fields, south. śNear the f-fens.” But there were no fens"not within leagues of the city. The messenger coughed. śWhat fens?” Coensar pressed. Lamoric crouched, raised a calming hand. śYou mean across the bay: Merchion.” It was leagues across the bay. śAye,” the man gasped. People around the great hall were passing their blankets forward, and the messenger shivered in a hairy cocoon of the things. Like a man trying to kindle a fire, Lamoric bent near. śWhat tidings do they send?” śHis G-Grace. His host. It’s no match for Radomor’s n-numbers. But the ranks grow. Knights riding from the mountains . . . Swanskin and Honefells command. No Garelyn, no Mornaway, no king. But I am to tell you that they will ride five days hence.” Lamoric looked back into Durand’s face. śWe cannot hold five days. . . .” It was almost a confession. śIt will take two days to round the bay,” said Coensar. It was time to concede. śThen,” whispered Durand, śthey must come now!” śLordships,” said the messenger. śRadomor’s host, it’s twice our size.” Lamoric’s mouth opened without a sound. For an instant, he was the image of his father. śAfter so much, is there nothing we may do?” śLordship,” said Durand. śThis is why you’ve salted all these men away.” He lifted his hand toward the multitude of smeared faces looking on. śThere’s half an army in this tower.” śWe are sick. Radomor is strong. What chance do we have?” Durand gestured to the eggshell cracking of the vaults over their heads. Deorwen and Almora were looking on. śA better chance than we do of holding seven days more.” śYes.” Lamoric covered his face. śIt cannot be seven days. We must take our chance. They must ride for Acconel at once.” A wry smile was starting as he looked up at Durand. śAnd there is only one way to reach them in time.” The sodden wretch who’d just paddled the bay shuddered between them. His eyes rolled back in his head. śYes, Lordship. . . .” said Durand. 22. The Banished and the Lost Durand slithered down, barking knees and shoulders against the mere wall as he spun like a fisherman’s weight. They were looking down on him: Lamoric, Kieren, the Duke. In another window, he saw Deorwen, her eyes alive with dread. And then the rope ended, slipping through his knees to drop him into the frigid grip of the mere. He clamped his jaw against the urge to hiss at the sudden cold. There were archers on the nearest pier; the splash was enough without cursing. Casting round, he spotted the raft"little more than wreckage"and, with the thing firmly under his ribs, he kicked himself slowly out of bowshot. Never a great swimmer, now he was hampered by Lamoric’s parting gift: a token no man of Gireth could ever mistake: the Sword of Judgment, now slung like an anchor around his neck. For the better part of an hour, he kicked. Muscles locked in wandering spasms as he aimed for the black horizon. The yellow loops of the castle’s mere wall dwindled over his shoulder, though he was still nearby when the last refugees in the old fortress sank into sleep and left him alone in the dark. Soon the waves were his horizon. He could see no more than a few yards in any direction. Overhead, mists of thin light drifted among the hard points of the stars. With difficulty he found his way among the Lords of Heaven with their shields and spears until he came upon the lodestar around which all the others turned. With the lodestar on his left hand, he kicked his way eastward. He thought of Deorwen behind him. He wondered how long she had watched. Rhythm closed around him. He beat his feet. He scarcely felt the blind squeeze of the mere around his legs or the drag of his long linen undershirt billowing. He fought an urge to climb up on his few planks to see how far he could see: they’d never hold him. He might have been alone under the Heavens. Then something splashed. Durand froze. Two broad leagues from any land, something stamped water into spray: hooves. He had expected to drown, for the cold and dark to beat him, the rivers were still whispered full of ice. The Banished had always stalked the wastelands between man’s firelit circles. śHost of Heaven,” he gasped. Ranked waves walled him in, his breath loud between them. Hoofbeats circled, flashing spray. Then there was a liquid thunder, as though some sea-beast was hauling a warship down by its anchor ropes. śHost of Heaven,” Durand swore and kicked with all his strength. Something was rising before him, black with rot. Rushes hung. He saw a broad curve like the stern rail of some sunken ship, but, as the water streamed away, he understood: it was a massive sweep of horns and a broad brow of hair. A bovine head broke the surface before him, rotten and bulking greater than the whole carcass of a festival bull. The milky globes of its eyes shone like pale lanterns, while its nostrils disgorged torrents of bottom clay. Durand clung to his raft. His stare took in the drumhead hollows of its muzzle and the gray rings of its nostrils. And suddenly he thought of the Fey Gates. śThe bull of the"” ś"Bole?!” the monster boomed. Now, the vast head soared, carried skyward by the eruption of a monstrous neck and shoulders from the mere. The brute’s chest and vast belly followed, rivulets lashing in the coarse hair. The monster climbed atop the waves, now tall as a sanctuary bell. śNo bole, I,” it said. Its milk-lamp eyes swiveled. śNoboll!” it tolled. śLord King God of Silver Mere, am I!” Durand fled like an animal in terror, striking out between the monster’s black legs. The thing twisted. śNobollord. Kinggod!” it thundered. Head down, Durand swam, cursing himself and Creation. He was meant to be saving Deorwen, the duke, and Acconel" or drowning in the attempt. Drowning ought to have been hazard enough. But, even wild with terror, a man can only kick so far. He clawed the water while the giant stalked beside him. Soon, it was all he could do to lock his fingers onto the planks with the sword’s old angle across his back. The monster ducked near, his breath close and putrid. śNoboll I . . .” śNo b-bull,” Durand managed. When he risked a shaking look, the thing’s head was swiveling, scanning the line of the horizon. It dripped fragments. śWho are you to trespass here? What does this mean? Long have I waited the fall of these shore-priests. Long have they kept Heaven’s Eye upon my cool waters. But now, my traitor children are burnt from their city. The last sons of my enemy are penned in their stone house. The old chains, they hang slack. Nearly, am I avenged. And now?” The monster stooped, its rotten head swinging low. śOne worm splashes from my stolen shore with the blade of my ancient enemy round his neck. Do they make an offering?” It snuffed air through its soft nostrils, and shook its great head. śLong was I king over the men of the shores"fat with blood.” Its tongue slid like a curl of gray excrement, savoring some remembered pleasure. śThe firstborn of man and beast they slid down to me. Cool bodies to comfort me in the dark. But now my traitor people cringe at my enemy’s heels.” A great belch of indignation erupted from the rotten giant: a stink like foul egg. śLong now has mockery been my meat. ŚBull’ these Sons of Atthi called me, and bull they send me, riddled with their darts of iron.” The thing blinked its lamp eyes, the bulk of its great head reeking and dripping putrefaction. śYou wore their bull talisman. I smell its stink on your neck. I’ve had my fill of mockery.” It flashed teeth like a row of hog’s ribs. śTwo thousand winters have I cringed in the slime with the whisker-fishes! Like some toothless elder, I’ve supped on watered blood from the sailors’ flagons.” The thing hammered the water with one knotted fist, and Durand rocked on his few planks. If he could not reach the far shore, Deorwen would die. They all would. And so Durand sucked a breath through his nostrils, and snarled, śYou must let me pass.” The monster cocked its putrid skull. ś ŚMust’?” And then it was moving. Durand snatched Gunderic’s Sword of Judgment free, but the monster was swifter. An iron grip caught his shins, pulling down"the waves slammed shut beyond his fingertips. He thundered fathoms deep, the weight of the dark stamping air from his lungs. He had a moment before drowning. In the milk-light of the fiend’s gaze, gray dunes rippled under the twitching ceiling of the waves. The monster leered with Durand in its fist; the great globes of its eyes pulsed. śWhat did he tell you, the walking God?” said the monster. Durand struggled. He remembered the Traveler"the strange encounter he’d had, the promises the Traveler had made. It had saved him from drowning. In a cloud of rot, the great teeth were bare once more. The gelid fires of the monster’s eyes flared again: midnight lightning that flickered over a forest of unwholesome shapes, far and wide: bloated corpses tethered by ankles and wrists. Soft men in sailor’s garb. Blue maidens in billowing shifts. Knotted with black weed. Bulls dangling toward the waves. Then the grip was gone, and Durand burst back into the air. śYou are not for me to steal from Creation. Not yet. Even now, the Eye is upon you. Powers above and below, they watch you. śBut you will not gloat long, I think.” The thing bared teeth. śMen are greedy. Men are fools. Men are treacherous children"they hoard slights in their darkest hearts. Even now, the fools wrangling for the Great Seat prise at the long chains your Patriarchs set upon this realm. The bonds are slack, and soon I will have outlasted the spawn of my enemy. Two thousand bitter winters, mocked, forgotten.” The thing grunted. śYou are dangled under my nostrils, but I will not bite. I will not call the great Powers down on my head for you and that blade. But I will leave something with you as I have been left here. Something for your darkest heart. śDo the wise women still play their Firstborn game? For every babe, a forefather from the First Dawning"and a doom to share across the gulf of ages.” The monster flashed its rotten grin. śFor you it must be Bruna, Bruna of the Broadshoulders. Bruna Betrayer, Bruna Betrayed. Your soul reeks of treason.” Durand grimaced. He had heard the name in the mouths of blind savants, Green Ladies, monsters, and mad abbots. A long-ago lover who betrayed and was betrayed. The monster made a show of sniffing the air, before bending close"this was no giant now, but only a black calf stretched over a man’s bones. śAnd I scent the man who will turn on you.” Durand blinked. śYou flinch, I see,” said the Banished thing. śHow should you be treated, traitor? And I see the hour and the hand. And he is known to you. This one who strikes you down; he has struck you before. Yes. Well you know him, this traitor to traitors.” The brute sneered, a twist of its half-bovine features that cut deep creases across its muzzle. śBetrayal is bitter, but it is the savor of the day. And soon you will drink long of it.” Durand’s fist clenched around the grip of the old sword. He wondered how the brute would like the bite of steel. The monster leaned close, almost daring him to strike. śThe next to paddle in my mere will not be so fortunate. And you . . . when this kingdom falls, see me then and I will treat you to a proper welcome.” With that, the thing slapped a scythe of water across Durand’s face, and fell back into the waves"dark lightning diving deep. DURAND LOOKED UP when coarse reeds brushed his knuckles. His legs settled to the bottom sand. Through panes of ice caught among the reeds, he dragged himself ashore and lay shuddering on the sand. The dark hummocks of upturned boats indicated that he had come up near a fishing village of some kind. For a moment, his eyes fell shut despite the urgency of his mission. His every muscle was as flaccid as the organs of a man’s belly. Then a light blazed around him. Soldiers in the liveries of Gireth’s houses stood around him. śBy the Powers,” they said. The Eye of Heaven had split the pale horizon. Light lanced into the foggy passageways of Durand’s skull. He winced. The picket soldiers dropped to their knees, touching their heads to the ground as though Durand were one of the Powers of Heaven. śWhat’re you doing, eh?” A sturdy man, bone white and gray-stubbled, had tramped up to the guards and now gave each a good boot"Durand took him for a captain. The man turned his attention on Durand. śI’m not sure you’re much of a spy, friend. Get up.” Durand climbed onto his knuckles. śNow, what are you up to?” The grizzled captain knelt, looking hard into Durand’s face. He had an old sword in his fist. śI’ve come from the d-duke,” said Durand. The captain narrowed one green eye, lifting Durand’s chin with the blade. śRight. Which one, eh? That’s what I’m wondering.” Slowly, Durand reached for the Sword of Judgment. śCareful,” said the captain, but Durand didn’t draw the blade. Gems winked in the man’s squinting eyes where some long-ago smith had worked the Gireth bull into the cross guard. Now the man winced, tired or disgusted. śIt’s awful bloody early. Their Lordships won’t like to be wakened.” śTh-there’s no time.” 23. The Relief of Acconel While the others ran news of Durand’s arrival across the camp, Durand followed the grumbling captain through a maze of chill shadows, guy ropes, and latrine pits to a blue and gold pavilion: the Baron of Swanskin Down’s tent. It was striped like a child’s toy. Dripping, Durand thought of the streets of Acconel and the days of choking smoke. śHere, boy,” grunted the captain. śI’d wager they’ll be here soon enough.” With that, the man left. A page stood staring up at Durand. Durand dripped. śI have come from Acconel.” śYou are Durand of the Col,” said the page. Thinking that the boy must have been told, Durand managed a quick nod. The page stared into Durand’s eye"almost insolent. śYou’re the baron’s son. The one who left after the Traveler’s Night last year.” The boy looked ten years old. His hair was dark and roughly shorn. He wore a surcoat to match the baron’s arms. śYou fought Duke Radomor at Tern Gyre,” the boy continued. śAnd his Champion. You were with Sir Coensar at the River Glass and at Hesperand.” Only fatigue kept astonishment from Durand’s face. Watching the boy, he waited for his frozen mind to supply some explanation, then the boy’s serious expression reminded him: śThe Col. The clerk’s boy. I met you in the courtyard of my father’s hall when you were throwing messages down that old well.” Durand still had a tiny dimple in his forehead where the boy’s lead petition had struck him as he climbed the well stairs from his meeting with the Traveler. The boy had been just as inscrutable then. śThey say the duke named you Bull.” Durand laughed, a puff of air. He blinked slowly to find strength. śHow do you come to be here of all places?” śYour father. My father approached him. I am to be a knight. The baron sent me as page to the hall of the Baron of Swanskin Down.” It was not possible. śBaron Hroc is making landless knights?” śMy aunt has some noble blood.” The clerk must have asked at just the right time; Durand couldn’t grudge the boy a chance. He took the page by the shoulder. śI must see the baron.” The clerk’s boy pulled open the flap of the pavilion. His eyes never left Durand. śYour father is in camp,” the boy added. THE BARON OF Swanskin Down was a stout man with a silver brush of a mustache. At Durand’s entrance, he climbed from his cot and scowled, wrapped in his bedclothes. śLord o’ Dooms,” was all he said. Bald on top, the man was otherwise pelted in white curls from the tops of his feet to the ends of his ears. Soon others made their appearance. The Baron of Sallow Hythe slid into the pavilion looking like some villain out of a child’s play from the arch of his brow to the end of his pointed beard. Bluff young Baron Honefells strode in smiling, and laughed out loud at Swanskin in his bedclothes. The baron of nearby Mereness, a small fellow with curling red hair, took a place by the tent wall. As did Durand’s father, Baron Hroc of Col. Despite shudders, Durand managed to set out the situation, and give the gathered barons their orders. Sallow Hythe spoke through steepled fingers. śWith our numbers, an attack is unlikely to break the siege. We are no match for Radomor’s strength. I had hoped to hear from Mornaway.” Swanskin grunted. śBy rights, we should have had word from his bloody Highness. It should be his host putting Radomor back in his place.” Sallow Hythe raised an eyebrow. śCousin, while the king bridles at his rebel brother’s border, do you think he will send his battalions to us? Now that Prince Eodan has pulled Windhover from Errest, Ragnal will not step one foot from his brother’s border.” Durand smeared his eyes. Here was the Rooks’ rumor confirmed. The kingdom was coming to pieces. śPrince Eodan’s pride will be our ruin,” Swanskin grunted. śWhile the royal brothers wrangle, we must consider sending an emissary to Radomor,” said Sallow Hythe. śHe might agree to terms. It is possible that for the right price we might ransom those trapped within the castle.” Now, a true cold shot through Durand. It was impossible. Swanskin nodded. śRadomor’s always been an honorable man, though sullen. I saw him ride on the Hallow Downs, battering back those bloody savages.” Before they’d even begun their haggling, every man, woman, and child in the castle would have died waiting. śYou do not know the man,” said Durand. The barons swiveled. śSir,” said Swanskin, śI served beside Sir Radomor in the King’s Host. While he led the contingent of Yrlac, I led that of Gireth. I have known his noble father and seen him wedded to His Grace’s daughter. He is"” śThey are all dead!” snarled Durand. śAll those you mention. Alwen. Duke Ailnor, Radomor’s father. Even his own son.” Blood thundered in Durand’s ears. He was going to wind up on his face. Meanwhile, blotches had bloomed over Swanskin’s cheeks. śSir, by Heaven, you forget yourself!” Durand shook his head, wavering where he stood. śThe Radomor you knew is lost. I’ve seen him since Hallow Down. His own father knew. He and his pack of fiends have written their terms in blood. Silver will not buy him now.” It was getting harder to stand. Now, the smiling Baron of Honefells stepped forward, setting his hand on Durand’s arm. śHe’s not a friend, then, eh?” The blond stubble on the man’s big jaw twinkled as he grinned. He was hardly older than Durand. śThe duke knew our numbers?” Durand took a breath. śAye, Your Lordship. He knew. Kieren knew. Lamoric. Before you could bargain them free, they’ll all be dead. The order was Ścome at once.’ ” With a broad and shrugging smile, Honefells said, śThat’s settled then.” Swanskin grunted. śAgreed,” said the Sallow Hythe. śWe try for the city.” Astonished, Durand happened to catch his father’s glance: Baron Hroc, though closemouthed, scowled at these carryings-on. Baronies like Swanskin Down, Sallow Hythe, or Honefells dwarfed the Col. And the bear-like mountain baron, himself, seemed smaller here than on his own lands. The Baron of Sallow Hythe rubbed his jaw. śOur force will require a day’s march to reach the city"even with our pack train behind. If we strike camp and march within the hour, we could never reach the city before twilight.” śMarching up in broad daylight,” said Honefells. śAnd arriving too late to fight.” śYes.” Sallow Hythe’s expression was sly. Honefells clapped broad hands. śSo. You’d have us hold off, then. Is that it?” Sallow Hythe’s answer was a small tilt of his head. śI suppose. If we set out at dusk,” Honefells allowed, śwe might reach the city at dawn, or before.” śWhat use is an army that’s marched all night?” grumbled Swanskin. Baron Honefells shrugged wide. śIt won’t be easy. There are seven leagues of cart tracks between here and the city. The ground is wet and the ruts will be knee deep if my Honefells is anything to go by.” Sallow Hythe smiled once more. śBut we may achieve surprise.” śThat we’ll need for certain,” said Honefells. śIf Radomor guesses we’re near, he’ll dig in. And if our friends from Yrlac so much as foul the gateways, we’ll be outside with no engines, no engineers, and no time to build.” Swanskin grimaced, raising his hands in exhaustion with the bantering debate of the younger men. śSo be it, then. If we’re to have any hope of shaking Yrlac loose, it will be at dawn: one day’s time. I’ll give the orders.” He shook his head. śBloody King Ragnal. Garelyn’s in irons. Prince Eodan and his lands of Windhover have broken loose. Heaven knows what’s become of Mornaway. The king should be here himself.” śClearly, it does not seem so to His Highness,” said Sallow Hythe. śIn any case, we had better notify Duke Abravanal of our intentions.” Honefells nodded. śAye, it’d be a shame to come bowling into Acconel with the garrison asleep in Gunderic’s Tower.” Now, Swanskin snorted. śWhere will we find another fool to swim the mere, you mean.” ś"I’ll go back,” said Durand. He remembered the rambling threats of the fiend upon the mere. Another man would not get past it. And Durand was tired of these men. Honefells put a big hand on Durand’s shoulder. śI suppose, friend, we might just be able to find a more exhausted man. . . .” śSend him,” Swanskin grunted. He may have muttered something about fools. Durand glanced at his father"who looked ready to snarl at Swanskin. śLordships, if I’m to get past Radomor’s men, I’ll have to come in after nightfall. I’ll put my head down for a few hours, and then be on my way. That should give me time enough.” Sallow Hythe spread his fingers. śHe has made the crossing once. . . .” Durand thought he saw his father move to say something. DURAND WOKE LOOKING into his brother’s face. The moons of the last winter had left no mark upon it. Hathcyn was precisely the same man that had worried over Durand at the Col. Beyond him, a golden light bloomed against the west wall of the tent. śThey tell me it’s time,” said Hathcyn. śYou’re to cross as soon as you’re ready.” Durand had spent the day on the straw floor of a borrowed tent, rather than seeking out his family"something more a collapse than a decision. śHathcyn,” Durand said by way of greeting. Hathcyn forced a gentle enthusiasm. śNews of your exploits has reached us all the way up in the Col. I heard you even pulled Lamoric out of the Mount of Eagles: a perilous place to be hostage now that Ragnal is summoning his barons into"” śI am wanted at the mere,” Durand grunted. Someone must have given him a blanket. It seemed that every muscle in his body had been torn during the events of the day before. śFather is outside,” Hathcyn said. Durand had already stepped out. The camp he’d found at dawn was gone now. His was the only tent surviving of a thousand others. Durand’s father stood with arms locked over his chest. Behind him, the Eye of Heaven gleamed low over a mere now more gold than silver. śDurand,” he said. Durand nodded. śYou’re at Acconel?” Durand nearly laughed. śAye.” śMm. With Lamoric.” This might have been disapproval. śThe heir now,” Durand reminded him. śAye.” His father nodded. The two men stood in the warm brilliance, saying nothing. śYou’re carrying messages for the duke?” Durand looked his father in the eye. śAye.” The baron scratched his bearded neck, eyeing the ground between his son’s boots. śYour mother mentioned you"spent time on her knees praying over one thing and another since you left. She wouldn’t know you were in Acconel now, of course.” śI must go back.” After this deep and thoughtful conversation, the baron nodded. THEY RIGHTED ONE of the rowboats and shoved its nose onto the gilded flash of the mere. With a couple of nods, Durand was off, rowing out as his father and brother squinted from the bank. The Vairian’s boy watched as well, the Eye of Heaven glowing in his face. Durand watched the three dwindle as he hauled the oars. And grunted at a pang of loneliness when, long past waving distance, he saw them turn from shore. GUNDERIC’S TOWER STOOD like one pale tooth in the black sweep of the moonlit shore. He’d heard the buggane, but the thing had never come near. As Durand rowed nearer the ruined city, however, shapes bobbed in the waves all around him. Some resolved themselves into casks and boxes. Most, however, were the swollen forms of corpses urged into the bay by the flow of the Banderol. More than once, the tip of Durand’s oars fingered some yielding bulk under the waves. If he glanced, a face might roll into sight before sinking away once more. He muttered charms. Watching the city walls, he edged as near as he could to the harbor mouth without drawing the eye of Radomor’s sentries. Finally, he could hear voices and see the glints of helmets in the moonlight. And so he put the oars overboard, laying them on the ripples and sloshing down into the cold himself"every gasp and splash sharp over the water. The empty boat skittered away like a nutshell. For a few moments then, he clung to the oars, waiting for a next breath full of arrows and razor points, but nothing broke the stillness. With a narrowed eye, Durand struck off, swimming into the pull of the Banderol. For a time, he swam hard with his head down. He blundered past a barrel and a corpse. Heaven knew how many of the things tumbled around him. When he glanced up to check his bearings, he found that the tower had come no closer. His abandoned rowboat had scudded off like a bit of thistledown on the current, and the water was very cold. There was nothing for it. Seeing the wall falling away from him as the current dragged, he set to work once more. A body bumped past him. He felt his fingers snag in long hair. But he kept swimming. Radomor’s fools must hear him soon. He couldn’t keep quiet. Then he heard a splash"very close. And he froze; his heartbeat shuddered out through the water. Gunderic’s Tower was dark against the Heavens. He was glad he couldn’t see the bodies. He pictured the buggane looking on. It occurred to him that he might easily have imagined the sound. A thrash shattered that thought. Durand twisted. It could have been a fish leaping, but Durand couldn’t see the length of his arm. Whatever had made the sound would be on him before he knew what it was. At the sound of yet another splash, Durand vowed that he would at least make a race of it, and lit out for Gunderic’s Tower. His fingertips jabbed a wet bulk like a bladder of lard. Before he could flinch, an icy hand had raked his ribs. The waves erupted all around him as he swam. Empty faces thrust forward. Here were men he had seen in the streets, women, the children who played in the crossroads. Vagrant spirits had taken up each shape. And now, though every eye was like a bead of gray glass, every hand was reaching. He did not get far. Dead hands curled in his collar and clamped his wrists. His mouth filled with water, but fists threatened to rip him apart before he could drown. Everywhere were white faces whose eyes bulged with blackness. They pulled him down. He thought of the garrison in the castle, waiting for word of an army. They must be ready. Suddenly, the mere was full of light. Every blue visage twitched toward the surface where an impossible daylight had touched the dark with crystal brilliance. Overhead, the bow of a ship rocked on the glassy waves, light throwing blades of shadow down. A man’s voice tolled within the bones of Durand’s skull, deep. śGo mockers! Leave what you have stolen. In the name of Warders, I command you. By the light of Heaven, I charge you: Go!” At this last word, the revenants twitched as if they were about to rush away"then water seemed to catch them. Each body hung slack, abandoned. Durand floated where they had left him, watching the rag-doll corpses adrift. The body of one child hung in a gray skirt that flared as if it were the cap of a mushroom. Her dangling legs looked as pale and soft as curdled milk. Durand kicked for the surface. The light had dimmed by the time he reached the air. Strong arms pulled him from the mere. Tall men surrounded him in a pocket of sudden mist. SOPPING WET, DURAND stumbled from a window into the Painted Hall, aided by calloused hands that smelled of incense and candle wax and dead man’s balsam. The strangers hadn’t uttered a word since the confrontation on the mere. And, though pale light shimmered in the links of the strangers’ hauberks, not one of Radomor’s sentries had spotted their climb from the boats. In the Painted Hall, the crowd shrank. Forty white knights had appeared from the darkness. They could only be the Holy Ghosts, the Septarim, the Knights of Ash. If half the rumors were true, the duke might find himself chained to an altar while the Holy Ghosts sharpened their knives. The staring crowd parted as the duke tottered from his sanctuary beneath a mountain of bedclothes. śWhat in the name of Heaven?” At this, a giant knight stepped forward. Over a chest like a cask balanced on its back edge stretched the battlemented blazon of the Warders’ Shield. Heavy-knuckled hands lifted his helm to uncover a face all knots and hollows under hair like gray wire. One eye stared down from this face of crags: blue as a child’s sky. Abravanal wavered in his tracks. śGreetings, Lord of Gireth,” the one-eyed giant said, his voice the rumble under Silvermere. And he bowed in a whisper of iron rings. śWho are you?” breathed the duke. śMy brothers and I are newly come from the Court at Eldinor,” he said evenly. śI am Conran, Marshal of House Loegern. Servant of the Warders. My brothers and I have come to aid your cause.” śI had begun to think the king would send no aid to Gireth,” Abravanal murmured. They had sent no hostage to Ragnal’s oathtaking. The blue eye shivered like a blade’s point. śRagnal moves against his royal brother now: Prince Eodan has withdrawn his lands from Ragnal’s rule, declaring himself sovereign in Windhover. Archers steal among his trees. The king summons his host to flush his rebel brother from his forest fastness, but the barons are slow to answer Ragnal now.” Abravanal closed his eyes. śThe sons of Carlomund . . . Brother wars against brother.” śNeither will relent.” śBut Ragnal sends you, his Knights of Ash.” śNo, Your Grace. The king cast my brethren from his side. The court is a web of whispers; for the first time in all the rolling years since my order was founded, a king of Errest marches to war without his sworn guardians.” śLord of Dooms,” said Abravanal. śWhom must we thank for your coming?” śBiedin, youngest of Carlomund’s brood. The prince stole a moment as we rode from the court. He must march with his brother Ragnal; a whisper was all he could offer.” The old duke’s fingers fluttered at his lips. śFor that much we are grateful, Marshal Conran, for it is more than his brothers spared us.” śWe have slept too long,” rumbled the marshal. śAccident, fire, and war have thrown down high sanctuaries in Ferangore, Acconel, Beoran, Lawerin. Soon, only Eldinor by the Mount of Eagles will stand. I tell you power works to shake the Wards of the Ancient Patriarchs: to loose the bonds that tie crown, Banished, men, and land. On the mere we met an old buggane of the water, making free as in former days. And we have heard whispers of these dark twins who walk with the Leopard of Yrlac. Errest comes apart around us.” Abravanal glanced to his councilors: Lamoric, Kieren, Coensar. His lips met. Shivering half out of sight, Durand remembered Landast and Alwen and Adelind. There had even been a grandson now lost somewhere with Alwen. He wondered why the Septarim had chosen to act only now. Wings flapped at the black windows. śYour Grace,” said Marshal Conran. śThese twins work their sorcery even now. Radomor has been still too long.” People around the hall raised the fist and fingers sign, looking to the arrow loops. śWe will mount the battlements and watch from the high places.” Abravanal’s voice, when he spoke, was hardly louder than a whisper. śOnly a fool would refuse aid at such a time. Do as you see fit. I . . .” He swallowed. śI commend your courage in joining us at this dark hour.” Marshal Conran bowed deeply in another whisper of steel rings. And, with that, the one-eyed knight directed his men to the stairs. Every soul watched the strange company file out"leaving Durand, dripping, alone at the head of the hall. Someone gasped across the hall; he found Deorwen’s face in the multitude. He could see the wet glint of her eyes. śHost of Heaven!” This was Kieren the Fox, gaping around his red-silver mustaches. śDurand! Have you been there all along?” Durand stirred himself from the shadows. The cold had him stiff as a palsied old man. śYes, Milord,” he managed. After the shock of the Septarim, the crowd was done with silent gawking. Now they chattered. Lamoric took Durand by the arm. śWhen we saw nothing by nightfall, Coensar had me thinking you were done for. Is the army with you?” śNo, L-lordship.” They’d be slogging south of the Bay of Acconel now, or just swinging north. śOh, no . . .” breathed Lamoric. Coensar pressed: śDid you find them, boy? Is there an army at all?” Durand waved a hand. śI"it’s Sallow Hythe, Captain.” He tried a smile. śThe plan’s to march on the city by night. They are coming.” Lamoric wheeled slowly as comprehension dawned. śSallow Hythe . . . Him I knew from the Burrstones. That man never walks a straight path if he can find a crooked one.” śThey were camped just where that messenger said they’d be,” Durand said. śWe must make ready. By dawn, they should be on top of us.” A broad grin was spreading on Duke Abravanal’s face, and he seemed about to speak. Just then, a strange sound became audible. As they stood, bewildered, the sound grew louder until the monotonous syllables of a chant had risen up all around the hall. All the knights, Durand included, had hold of their swords. Coensar narrowed his eyes. śAnother attack?” But Abravanal spoke then. śNo. Listen. It’s priest craft.” And the eyes of the crowd looked from the walls to each other. The chant sank deep roots through the stones of the old keep. It seemed that Durand could almost feel the brush of lips at his ears. Abravanal was shaking his head. śFather,” said Lamoric. śWhat is in your mind?” śThat man. Conran. When I was a page in Eldinor"under old King Carondas before he set his crown aside. Before Bren, his brother, before Carlomund the son and now Ragnal. There was a marshal of the Septarim standing guard at the Hazelwood Throne, always there. I am sure he was called Conran. I remember he was so big.” The old man was blinking, staring off into memory. śAnd that eye.” The old man smiled. śWe must prepare the garrison or Sallow Hythe’s plan will be straws in the furnace.” His eyes flashed Durand’s way. śAnd it would be a shame to waste two cold nights on the mere.” AT A NOD from the revitalized duke, men stole up the battlements, keeping lookout over the southern approaches to the city. Hauberks, gambesons, and blades were passed from hand to hand, and every tower whispered with the hiss of whetstones. Before Durand could join in, Guthred, Berchard, Heremund, and Kieren had cornered him and were working him over with rugs and rough blankets, having stripped his soaking clothes. śThere’s no time for all this,” said Durand. śHells,” grunted Guthred. śDullard.” And Durand was blinded by a hairy fistful of blanket. śHey, Badan, you bugger,” said Berchard, śthere’s still a bed frame and at least one good trunk up in Abravanal’s chamber. Lug Śem down and we’ll have some heat.” And somewhere beyond the woolen rasps, Badan was spitting oaths. śHe can work some of that out of him, busting up the furniture, I reckon.” śI’ll be all right,” Durand said. śShut up,” said Guthred. śYes,” said Kieren. śWe’re all glad to see you back.” śJust help me find my gear.” śEveryone will hear how you crossed the mere and brought back the army when all the lords here had given in.” śMooncalf,” said Guthred. śYou’re cold as a Harskan’s arse, boy,” said Kieren. śAnd the man whose raft you borrowed? We lost him two hours after you pushed off.” śStone dead"and I reckon he’ll keep till midsummer before he starts to go off, poor bugger,” said Berchard, pouring out something thick from a red pot. śAnd he wasn’t making a habit of the crossing.” śFool,” said Guthred. śI’ll take Lamoric’s old blade off you. And then it’s by the fire with you"when we’ve got one,” ordered Kieren. śAnd shut up,” said Guthred. His four nurses nodded, the Fox peeling Durand’s fingers off the Sword of Judgment. śLord o’ Dooms,” said Kieren, shaking his head. DURAND SQUATTED BY the fireside as long as he could hold still. He felt like a bull in a bin full of darting mice the way the castle folk swarmed past him. Finally, he stole a corner from the scurrying mob to wrestle the weight of a gambeson and hauberk over his head. He blinked at the reek of it, but it felt good to have the gear on. The wait would soon be over: one way or the other, it would all be done before long. As he hauled his surcoat over his head and then the heavy layers of mail and padding, he found someone giving him a hand. He turned to find Deorwen tugging his surcoat down and sliding his belt around his waist. śDeorwen!” Durand said. śThat’s better, I think,” she muttered. śSoon, this will be over.” The woman caught a fistful of his surcoat, looking up at him. For an instant, it seemed as if she didn’t remember him. Then she blinked hard. śDurand.” When he peered close, her eyes darted. śYou’re still seeing them?” he said. śIt’s hard to sleep.” She seemed as pale as the things in the mere. śHells, Deorwen. Soon, I’ll have you out of this place. I found the army. And they’re coming for us now. They’ll give Radomor a good shock, no matter how many sellswords he’s bought. We may get ourselves free of this place by noon.” It was all muddled. He couldn’t serve Lamoric and love Deorwen. But he couldn’t let her die. He squeezed her shoulder, but felt her start in his grip. He thought of his hand. śI know it’s cold"” śWhat is that sound?” she said. Across the Painted Hall, dozens shifted uneasily, looking round. śHeaven knows, Deorwen. There’ve been engines, and prayers, and"” Durand began, but he faltered. For there were whispers. śI hear . . .” he said. And he knew the sly sibilance. He’d heard the same whispers across a prince’s table at Tern Gyre while the Rooks preened and grinned at him. śYou are tired,” the whispers said. śIt has been a valiant stand. Who could fault you?” Each hissing syllable chased the next round Durand’s head, beating in circles like a thick plague of moths. He saw others around the room catch at their hair; he pitched against the black wall. śCome with us,” said the whisperers. śYou have done so much. It is time to rest. No one could expect more. It is time, I think. Yes.” Deorwen was staring back at him, the only one not clutching"or falling. śDurand,” she said. He saw her lips moving. But the room around her was shuddering. Pale flames shivered at the lips of every soul in the long hall. Creation itself twitched before his eyes. And, while the whispers stormed, he thought, That’s what I’m seeing now. The world from the pale flame. Deorwen was catching him as he slid to the floor. She shoved at his mouth with her bare fingers"ramming his soul into his body. She might have been screaming. He tried to mouth a word" But another voice spoke with his, louder than he could imagine. śNo.” The word shuddered through Creation, and the whispers shrank. śBy the Host of Heaven, by the King, Queen, and Warders.” It was fearsome Conran on the rooftop, and each slow word drove the whispers back. śBy the Champion, and the Maid of Spring, Errest is not yet fallen. And the Eye reigns unconquered.” Durand felt Deorwen’s hands on his shoulders, pulling. He shoved himself from the floor, meaning to give her a word or two of comfort, but she was quickly on her feet. śAlmora!” She was off for the girl. They found the Patriarch of Acconel sprawled like a fallen eagle in the duke’s sanctuary, overcome. Almora sat beside him with her dark eyes full of tears. śDon’t worry,” said Durand. He gave the little girl a squeeze. And, together, they saw the old Patriarch’s eyes flicker open. Durand smiled. Tonight, they’d scotched the Rooks. Tomorrow, they’d fix their master. After that, Durand’s doom was his own to work out. IN THE NARROW stone lane that was the inner yard, Durand found two hundred men in greasy gambesons and rust-red hauberks. Some were still making the Eye of Heaven. Lamoric had the whole garrison of Acconel crowded there. On the walls above, archers crouched in the predawn twilight. Above them all, the Knights of Ash stood like carved icons atop Gunderic’s Tower, motionless except for the wind in their surcoats. Each man stood with his hands on the pommel of a bared sword. And their chant rolled on. As Durand took in the scene, a wry smile"mirroring the expression dawning on his own lips"spread from face to face in the garrison. A few nodded his way. It was as though they had been waiting to share their joke with him, the Bull of their festival. He breathed deep and saw the wild edge of his own smile gleaming back at him in the teeth of two hundred men. He climbed the battlements to join the lookouts. AS TWILIGHT GLOWED in the Heavens, they watched the misty curve of the bay from the battlements of Gunderic’s Tower. śThey are coming,” whispered Lamoric. Durand noticed something strange about the motion of the waves along the beach. śKeep low . . .” Abravanal cautioned. śWe can’t be seen watching.” śIf only it were a darker day,” Kieren muttered. The Heavens were already blue and clear. śIf they’re seen, it’s all useless.” śYou’ve got to look close,” one-eyed Berchard said, jabbing with his finger. And Durand squinted out the nearest embrasure. Tiny horses pounded through the shallows, and miniature footmen stole along the bank above the shore. Battalion after glittering battalion marched five abreast through the surf. śIt’s like a vision,” Lamoric said. śAfter all this time.” The duke crouched close, a new blade on his hip. śHells, I still cannot see.” śWith the breaking of the waves and the sun on the mist, they are cursed hard to make out,” said Lamoric. śThat Sallow Hythe is a dangerous man.” The duke peered. śWhat makes you so certain it is he?” śWho else among your barons is so sly?” The duke nodded. śI cannot see old Swanskin daring a thing like this. Sallow Hythe likely has that big Honefells lad leading the way.” The old man glanced to Coensar. śAll right, Captain. How many are there?” śMore than a thousand, Your Grace.” ś"More like fifteen hundred,” Lamoric declared, though such estimates were the baldest guesswork. Now, the duke turned to his oldest counselor. śSir Kieren, how does our garrison stand?” śWe have two hundred and sixty fighting men,” said the Fox. śWhat would you say Radomor has?” śFour thousand, Your Grace,” said Kieren. śAt least.” SOON, THE EYE of Heaven broke over the mere, and Radomor’s men were stirring in the mists and long shadows of the ruined city. One party of engineers had even set up flinging stones. Under the anxious eyes of Abravanal’s household knights, the Host of Gireth flashed and glinted in the waves. Durand could see Radomor’s men stumbling through the long shadows here and there in the ruined streets. On the distant Harper’s Gate, he saw helmets wink, turning. Durand closed his eyes. śWe’ll never get an army close enough. There are thousands of eyes.” Lamoric quirked an eyebrow. śYou remember that day on the battlements? The big stone and the archers all trying to shoot me the moment I put my head up?” śAye,” Durand said. śCoensar and I have got a little show planned that will turn poor Radomor’s head. Ah. Coen found a little fellow who"Here’s the man now!” A muddy commoner climbed onto the parapet, crouching as low as he could manage. śMaster Torold,” said Lamoric. There was a white flash of teeth. śIt’s prepared, Lordship.” Lamoric nodded. śMaster Torold’s from Highshields. The mines.” śTin, Lordship,” said the man, bowing. śAnd I’m hardly my own Śmaster,’ Lordship.” śHe’d only been in the city since the Blood Moon. What did you say? In-laws are wool merchants?” Under the mud, the man looked forty or fifty. śAye, Lordship.” He winked, all wrinkles and curls when he pulled his cap off. śGood to toil out under Heaven. Spent long enough grubbing underground.” śHis wife and daughters are in the Painted Hall. Knights now.” Durand gave the man a slow nod. śWhile I’ve had you on the mere, Sir Durand,” said Lamoric, śI’ve put Master Torold to work on our north tower.” It made little sense. śShoring up the walls, Lordship?” śMaster Torold and his volunteers have been digging. They’ve got the whole edifice balanced on a couple of props by now.” śIt’s about that bad.” Torold nodded. śI think we’ve pulled all we can without the thing coming down on our heads. The kindling’s heaped round the last few now, and we’re ready for your order, Lordship.” The crouched nobles of the court peered southward. It seemed impossible that no one had shouted. Still low, Lamoric drew the Sword of Judgment. śBring it down, Master Torold. They’ll be spotted anytime.” THE TWO HUNDRED in the yard watched smoke billow from a pit below the north tower, knowing that an army was waiting to leap upon them. In the stone bowl of the inner yard, they chanted prayers and old songs: śDawn Thanksgiving,” śThe Young Princes,” and śPraise to the Powers of Heaven.” For the last hour, the thing had burned while the men wrung the handles of their weapons. But the props held, and Torold paced. Durand crouched near Torold like a man peering down an oven. śHow long, Master Torold?” śThere’s a thousand tons on a few charred spindles now. I’d have bet my life.” He eyed Gunderic’s Tower behind them. The man’s wife and children huddled with the others inside. He’d bet more than his life. Durand gripped the man’s arm. śI know.” śSir Durand!” A chain of whispers called him to the battlements where the noble lookouts still peered south. He nodded up and left the onetime miner, squeezing through the grim soldiers to climb the open stair to the battlements. The impact of one of Radomor’s missiles had him staggering against the stones, but he found Lamoric where the lord bent close to his captain. śRadomor’s sighted the barons,” Coensar said evenly. śThen . . . I can’t be too late,” Durand breathed. Lamoric’s lips were pale. śThere are messengers riding from battalion to battalion. They must have seen something.” The army of Gireth was still strung out a thousand paces from the Banderol. śHas he dug in?” asked Durand. Coensar was shaking his head, when his eyes flickered to the beach. śAh,” he said, śSallow Hythe’s scouts have seen.” śIt must be now,” Durand said. If the stubborn northern tower didn’t fall, Radomor would turn his whole force against the Host of Gireth. And the beach seemed to shimmer, as though the mere had leapt the shore. Durand heard a dislocated rumble of hooves. Rank after rank vaulted from the shoreline, charging past the shells of upturned boats. As Durand tried to gauge distances and imagine reactions, the castle yard behind him erupted in shouts. Durand saw what he took for a brawl at the north end. But it was Torold. The miner broke from the grip of the garrison. In his fists, he had a maul. It took only a heartbeat, but, in a few quick strides, he had plunged into the flames below the tower. Durand stood"in plain sight of a thousand Yrlaci archers. Arrows whistled by him; he faintly noticed startled curses from his comrades. But by the mere, horsemen were outracing a ragged scythe of infantrymen. Shields and trappers in every color shouted their owners’ name and line: men from the far corners of Gireth. śDown, idiot,” Coen said. But then the north tower was falling"in the blazing depths, Torold had done his work. On the battlements, every man caught hold of the rock as the mighty tower tore free of the curtain walls and thundered into the outer yard. In a thousand years, there had never been such a sound on the shores of the Silvermere. Dust billowed with the shock; the world heaved under their feet. Durand bared his teeth. With his last glance, Durand saw knights sweep for the Banderol bridges. Then, he and half the knights on the battlements had charged into the boiling cauldron of the yard. Coensar bellowed into the dust, śLap shields! Front ranks down!” As Radomor’s battalion hit the breach, a hundred soldiers dropped to their knees, shields locked, and spears jutting into the dust. Radomor’s men skidded down the rubble, shrieking glee and hatred"but falling on lances or rebounding from shields. Durand saw one green soldier pitched over the front rank on the blade of a lance. Crossbowmen snapped bolts past the ears of their comrades, and scores of green killers howled through the breech, off balance and dead before they knew what faced them. Coensar had planned it all. The men of Acconel roared and shook their lances like the jaws of a single monstrous animal. Trapped in the rear, Durand pictured the scene beyond the blank walls. Radomor would be roaring to heave his divided army through the ruined streets. A wild mob had surged for the broken tower, but Radomor must fling the rest at the charging barons at the Banderol. It would be chaos"Durand only hoped it would be enough. A scream called Durand’s attention back to the narrow yard: an armored wedge of Yrlaci heroes bowled down the rubble, Acconel arrows glancing from the shields in their fists. As they struck the front rank of lancers, Yrlaci axemen surged through the attacking line, blades swiping heads from shoulders. High on the rubble, archers leapt into the gap, chopping further breaches in the line. With a furious roar, Coensar spurred the garrison at their attackers. Durand leapt into the surge, swinging Ouen’s blade and feeling blows and arrows bounce from his hauberk. While Coensar stood bellowing and laying about with blade and flail, one great brute broke through"unseen in the wild press. As he flashed his axe round for Coen’s neck, Durand reached"almost too far"and shot his blade through the fiend’s bearded jaw. In a hard minute’s work, they’d mauled every man of the latest onslaught, and Coensar was roaring to bring fresh soldiers forward. They’d never hold long enough if they couldn’t keep fresh blood in the front line. Durand made to leap into one gap when Coen caught his shoulder. śI need to know what’s happening out there!” And, when Durand gaped, śGet up to the wall!” Astonished"half-furious"Durand staggered, then left the fight. śThey’re holding?” asked Kieren. śFor now,” said Durand. From atop the wall, the din below rang like a hundred foundries. Durand joined Lamoric, peering south at the Host of Gireth. śThey came through the Harper’s Gate like swallows from a hayloft,” said Kieren. Now, the riders of Durand’s homeland looked more like a boiling river as they rushed to strike before Radomor could draw his host together. Knights thundered after the banners of their commanders, bolting down the channels of the ruined streets. Before Durand’s eyes, the first conrois struck, tearing into confused knots of Radomor’s army. Across two hundred paces of broken streets, the hosts locked together in a collision like a hundred tourney charges. Durand watched Yrlaci commanders urging their men forward. But, even shocked from their beds, there were too many soldiers in Yrlac green. Abruptly, Lamoric started. śHells.” śLamoric?” the duke asked. Lamoric’s finger jutted down. The greater part of Radomor’s army was still swinging round to crash into the Host of Gireth. But Radomor’s turn was heavily lopsided. Confusion or fear of the archers high in Acconel Castle left the flank below the castle’s wall weak. śAnd Sallow Hythe’s seen it,” said Lamoric. From their vantage on the battlements, they could see a sudden flood of men"squadrons of flying lancers"rush against Yrlac’s weak flank. śHells!” Lamoric swore, hands in his hair. śIt is too much, too clear.” śLamoric,” said Kieren, śSallow Hythe’s pouncing on Radomor’s weakness.” Radomor’s flank was indeed crumbling under the onslaught of Gireth’s vanguard. śNo, he’s taking Radomor’s bait,” said Lamoric. śI’m sure of it.” Before Kieren could argue, Abravanal had raised his hand. śShow me,” he said. Lamoric stepped up between the merlons, teetering over the streets. śThere!” His arm struck like a snake. śAn alley between stone walls,” said Abravanal. śHe’s herding our riders there.” Radomor’s retreat led to a channel between two stone ruins. Durand saw movement among the black and jagged ruins. śCrossbowmen,” said Abravanal. śHundreds. Radomor’s rushing our men straight into them. We will be destroyed.” The old man shook his head. śRadomor is the ablest commander of his generation. . . .” Lamoric took a deep breath. śI’ll be damned if I let him spring his bloody trap! How many horses did we save?” THEY WERE GOING to ride out. Lamoric would lead them. They couldn’t talk him down. But Coensar and Durand would ride on either side. They pulled the last eighteen warhorses from the stables"Durand on black Pale"and mustered under the gate. No one knew whether they could break through the outer wall. Lamoric wore the iron slit of his helm as though it were his own expression. Men were poised at the portcullis. Coensar ducked close. śWe are ready, Lord.” Lamoric’s nod was crisp. Durand curled his toes in his boots, shifting his lance for balance. This was a good way to get killed. Beyond Lamoric, he watched Coensar seat his azure battle helm. śNow,” Lamoric said, and though it was no more than a murmur, two dozen soldiers from the castle heaved the portcullis high. Eighteen knights charged out into the instant before five hundred heads turned. Durand saw the press at the fallen tower, but Lamoric spurred for the castle’s main gate"abandoned in the chaos"and the conroi shot through into the cobbled market beyond the walls. Durand’s head spun in the eerie emptiness as he rode at Lamoric’s side. Shattered masonry, ladders, and abandoned engines of war littered the market. Durand could barely keep pace as Lamoric flew over the dangerous ground. In moments, they saw the stone alley of Radomor’s trap. The ruins were full of archers, and a shield wall was set to catch and hold the men of Gireth. Lamoric lowered his lance, launching the whole conroi into a headlong charge at the back of this wall: two hundred men in iron. Durand caught a last breath as Badan took up a high shriek. śWait!” Coensar shouted, but the captain might as well have been snatching for a flying arrow’s feathers. Lamoric’s men were already on top of Radomor’s line. With only a heartbeat’s warning, Lamoric’s conroi hit the hundreds packed between the broken walls. Radomor’s men had nowhere to run. Lances, hooves, and horsemen hammered bodily into the mob of soldiers. Sane horses threw their riders at the madness of it. Other beasts leapt, vaulting onto the cattle-pen crush between the walls. Durand had an eye-corner flash of Lamoric flying into the ranks"unhorsed and plunging into the mob like an iron missile"just as Durand’s own lance stamped home, the shock nearly wrenching him limb from limb. Beyond Lamoric’s flight, Coensar had leapt from the fight. His warhorse struck, but he sprang, like some boy acrobat, straight from his saddle and onto the jagged wall of the ruin above them. As Pale pitched and bobbed under him, Durand made out Sir Coensar bounding among fifty bowmen. The devils would have foiled Lamoric’s rescue, but now Coensar tightroped into that den of assassins as bows snapped, Keening flashed, and the archers were defenseless before the fatal captain. But, down below, Lamoric was lost somewhere in the seething multitude. Big Pale managed to stay on his feet, buoyant as a barrel. Men fought with swords and teeth and the edges of their shields, screaming under lashing hooves and the press of braying soldiers. Durand wrought havoc with Pale and Ouen’s big sword, trying to get to his master"who never surfaced in the press. Lamoric was dead or dying under the mob. A deafening blow clapped one of Durand’s narrow eye-slits shut. He swatted the attacker down. He couldn’t get through. Ahead, Badan flailed at the masses; Durand fought to see from his mangled helm. śBadan, is he there?” Frantic, Badan lashed at the crowd around him"Durand couldn’t get by the fool. He hacked and kicked, pawing at his helm. Lamoric had to be in the throng somewhere. śBadan! Do you see him? Badan, you whoreson!” Lamoric was Durand’s to watch. He had to see. śOut of my way, idiot!” he roared at Badan’s back. Skipping toothless Badan against the wall, Durand plowed by, scarcely hearing the last crossbows clatter in the stone shells above him, or the bolts pegging hips to saddles and helms to heads. Badan was screaming: śYou son of a whore! You nearly killed me!” But Durand didn’t care if he’d thrown the man onto a dozen swords. Durand reversed Ouen’s sword, clawing men aside as he drove Pale onto the heap of soldiers. Lamoric was down there somewhere, and Durand clawed men aside by hair, surcoat, and whatever else he could catch hold of. He heard Coensar. He fought to draw air through his smashed helm. And rage carried him up in his stirrups, blade high. A hundred faces turned, and he wrenched the thing from the air. Again and again. There were eggshell clops and metal clangs. Durand’s face was a clenched fist. Then, for a moment only, he saw Lamoric’s red and white surcoat at the bottom of it all. In an instant, he reached through the chaos to pluck the boneless form from the street and fling his master over Pale’s neck. Durand was finished with the battle. This had been his mission: keeping Lamoric alive. And what had he done? He spurred Pale for the gates, back on the market cobbles, bolting past the high walls and clear of Radomor’s men. Hoofbeats rang on the stones behind him: some of his comrades. When he might have turned, Pale was jumping something in the rubble. Durand fought to hold Lamoric as they landed. And the shock brought a gasp from the body over the saddlebow. Alive! Durand thought. He had done it. A wild grin knotted his face. A hundred Acconel defenders met Pale as they crossed the old market. They stopped the throng of Yrlac’s men peeling away from the castle’s face to catch Durand. Arrows from the castle’s archers picked at the stalled battalion like crows on a wasteland corpse. Free, Durand wrenched the smothering helm from his head. He had done it. Or so he thought. 24. A Broken Victory Durand drifted. He might have been a corpse at the bottom of some bog, dead a thousand winters. He did not know where he was. He had no memory of how he had come to be there. Creation had come adrift. There wasn’t a trace left in his head. Something hissed: a dry shrilling that swept the image of black water from his mind. He tried to listen, but the sound whispered away. Then, after a time suspended in the distance, it swung closer: crisp and bright above the murk. And it brought with it a sea of noise: men howling, people roaring orders, madness. Durand fought to peel his eyes open. There was pain"big sick waves of it"and only one eye answered his command. But he caught sight of a brassy glitter swinging under a blackened ceiling. For a moment, Durand fixed his attention on the twinkling thing as it floated by on a blur of damselfly wings. It was gone before he could remember it: a little thing as plump as a pigeon. It sported a lion’s head and a glint of gemstones. śPale didn’t get hurt,” said a little voice"so close lips brushed his ear. śI saw him. Some of those men brought oats. They didn’t comb him. I wanted to, but he’s not a horse for little girls. śI don’t know what happened to Star. But Pale came home.” And Durand remembered: Almora. There were screams all around. She shouldn’t be in this place. Durand tried to remember what had happened to him: he had a sense that it was very bad. He tried very hard to answer the little voice, to raise his head" He heard only a hopeless bleat from his lips before the blackness thundered back in. ANOTHER LIGHT DAWNED over the dark, and Durand heard voices swell. It seemed to him as though feet were landing round his ears. And the pain! Like he’d fallen from a tower into a barracks hallway"with his face nailed to the floor. The thought of even a single accidental kick from all the trampling feet sent a shot of nausea through his guts. There were shouts and groans all round him, but from somewhere much nearer came a familiar voice. śHurry, man!” Only one eye would open. Durand was looking up from two men’s ankles. The pair straddled a bench. It was Berchard sitting nose-to-nose with a rough-looking barber-surgeon. The room was full of howling, but old Berchard glanced down to smile. śYou’re alive, are you?” The man’s face was bloody, his beard appalling. Durand managed a wet croak meant to be śAye.” He’d done something to his mouth. śHere!” called Berchard. śHe’s alive after all!” The old campaigner tried to wave someone in. But the barber-surgeon yanked his bloody chin around; the surgeon was tugging thread through a ragged gash above the old knight’s good eye. Berchard scowled at the surgeon. śAre you sure this ain’t dangerous? I mean, a fellow hears the evil’s got to be drawn out before you stitch up. And you’re"” The surgeon clopped the old knight’s mouth shut with a tug of his bit of thread: Berchard could have been a puppet. Wincing and blinking, Berchard kept up his wave. śHere. Durand’s come round!” The knight tried a wink"full of blood and stitches"confessing, śOne of Radomor’s bowmen rang a bolt off the old dome. But I keep telling the girls that they love a good scar"and the bugger missed the good eye.” The eye blinked up: śAh, here they are. Looks like some folk’ve got a moment to gawp at you.” Just the twitch of muscles as Durand tried to grimace nearly put his lights out again: he’d done something ugly to his face. When Durand blinked his good eye clear, he made out someone else nearby, crouching close: a face like his own under a mop of black curls. śHathcyn?” he said, the sound mostly spit and gurgles. A pale grin flickered over the face of Durand’s brother. śOh, good. Good. You should try to drink.” The brim of a jug clicked against Durand’s teeth, gushing bad wine. And every splutter as he choked shot skewers through his bones. It took Durand several heartbeats to wince his eyes back open. But, when he looked up again, his brother’s face was gone and his father’s beard loomed above him. śHells, boy. What made you take your fool helmet off?” śFather?” Durand half expected his mother, the king, and half of Burrstone Walls to pop up next. śYou could have killed yourself,” said Baron Hroc. Durand forced his mind back into the fog, managing to croak a half truth like, śCouldn’t see.” But even saying that much hauled memories from the mist. He could feel the weight of a man"Lamoric"lying across his saddlebow. He thought he’d taken the man to safety, and now . . . He strained to look around though the pain was terrific. As he fought to keep breathing, he managed to croak something he meant to be, śHis Lordship?” Baron Hroc’s eyes darted. śI’ll fetch one of these leeches,” he said, and disappeared. Durand felt a wave of dread. śWhat’s happened to"?” But Hathcyn leaned close. śLamoric’s right here. You could reach out and touch him. He insisted on it. He got a good knock on the head, but he’s suffered less than you, I think. After the fall, your good captain got him clear.” Durand sagged back, gasping. Memories were rising around him like ice from deep water: the siege, the charge out the gates, the ride across the market with Acconel’s men all around. śWhat’ve I done . . . to myself?” he managed. śThey were saying that you fell from your horse,” Hathcyn explained. śHit the market cobbles.” ś ŚFell’?” he grunted. How could he fall? It had nearly killed him"nearly killed the man he’d meant to be saving. It was hard to get air. śIt doesn’t matter,” said Hathcyn. ś"Aye,” said Berchard. śDoesn’t matter. We’ve knocked Rado’s rebellion on the head. Routed the bugger! Hero of Hallow Down or not.” There was a groan from the floor off in Lamoric’s direction; Hathcyn continued more quietly. śSallow Hythe and Honefells ran over Radomor’s weak side and hit his center hard enough to slaughter most of the duke’s commanders. Father and I rode under young Honefells’s banner. Men from the Col all around us.” śJust mauled Śem!” said Berchard. śRolled Śem up and ran Śem down. Not moderate, exactly, but if they didn’t have it coming, who did, eh? There are still fights swinging through the city. Coen made me come in.” He waved his hand at the blood over his face. śCouldn’t see out the good eye. Yes. Anyway.” Durand put himself to the effort of nodding, then mumbled something he meant to be śRadomor?” Hathcyn shook his head. śNot yet. He was on the run. We saw men kill horses out from under him. He’s a fiend with that sword of his, but I’m sure I saw him stabbed.” śI saw him shot,” said Berchard. śHis host jumped off him like fleas when we hit. Fear-mad buggers bolting into the Banderol, mail and all. Knights treed like cats. But we’ll find Rado soon enough, I reckon. He’ll be at the bottom of some heap or other, hatching maggots.” They were still dragging wounded men down the hall. Durand let his eyes"his eye"close on the chaos. Acconel was free, though he was sure they’d all be happier with mad Radomor’s head tarred and spiked over the gate. Even his good eye didn’t want to open in a moment. Scores of wounded men groaned all around on the rushes of the hall. Hathcyn touched Durand’s good shoulder. śWe have them on the run; they say Abravanal will name your captain Champion to replace old Geridon"the one who died with Landast?"and your Lamoric has a good chance.” Berchard stood up, saying, śYes. Well. It’s been a fine day. And I must let you talk. There’s work to be done in the streets.” Coensar had finally won his way back from Tern Gyre. Durand thought of the faraway castle over the sea where Coensar’s journey had begun. śHow’d I fall?” Durand slurred. Hathcyn nodded. śSomeone caught you with a chained flail"your helmet.” Durand grimaced"a painful thing. But he couldn’t quite make sense of it. He had been clear of the mêlée. Or nearly . . . He had a memory of hoofbeats. He had assumed that he was clear, not checking. Some rescuer he was. His tongue moved over a row of broken teeth like knife edges. śWho?” he asked. Hathcyn glanced around the room, finally saying, śWith a whole battle churning round and knights bolting in a thousand directions?” śRight,” said Durand. He remembered Coensar leaping from his saddle to crash through the nest of archers. He remembered Badan"shoving the man"Badan’s face, snarling and savage at being thrown off balance while fighting for his life. It was becoming difficult to fix his mind on the subject. śThe leech put sssomething in the wine?” Durand mumbled. śPoppy, morel. That sort of thing, I should expect.” Blackness rose. WHEN NEXT DURAND came around, he was in the dark: Gunderic’s Tower was silent"or nearly. Night air moved around him. He became conscious of whispers: dry sounds that scrabbled around his head. He peered at the gloom" A black shape crouched upon the reeds beside him. Durand imagined the Rooks"with him pegged out and helpless. But it was not their whispers he heard. Lips brushed his sweating brow. A hand caressed his cheek. śSurely, we don’t deserve such pain.” Durand took a whole breath for the first time in hours and a stupid tear caught him by surprise. śI had to see,” said Deorwen. śHells. But, Durand, I’ve been walking the streets.” Her śstreets” would be smoking wreckage, torn bodies, men wild with blood and fear. She shouldn’t be out in it. śI found the place where she fell. The woman?” śWha"?” śThe dream. The woman in the ditch? Do you remember? With the soldiers coming? She was still there in the weeds, shining under the moon"and I brought the wise women down. You should have seen them.” Wise women in a latrine ditch. śWe set her on the bank, and the old women said the words. śAnd now I think she’s gone. We’ve sent her to her rest.” She scrabbled at her head. And Durand remembered the first of Deorwen’s nightmares: the barefoot woman at the cook pot as the soldiers came, the gush of ditchwater from Deorwen’s mouth. He reached for her, gripping her fingers in the reeds. śWe’ve found six more since,” she said. śFollowing them to their dream’s ending.” Searching for the dead in a burned city. She would be muck to her knees and soot to the top of her head. And what she must have seen. He wanted to tell her śStop!” śSoon we will all have peace,” she said. śThese dreams. They were calling to me.” Finding the Lost of a ruined city. It would be a task greater than a war. śI’ll walk wherever I must.” A new voice croaked. śWha? Host of . . . Deorwen, you shouldn’t be out there.” The voice was Lamoric’s. śIs . . . izit the middle of the night? What are you doing awake? I’ve told you, you need sleep. You’ll worry yourself to the Gates of . . . Iz the middle of the night.” śYou are awake, Milord,” said Deorwen. Her fingers slipped from Durand’s, and, with a little hesitation, she stood. Durand smelled cold mud on her dress, it slid like a wet brush over his bare wrist as she crept to her husband’s side. Durand heard Lamoric mutter off into delirium. IN THE MORNING, Durand woke to the whack and scream of surgeon’s hatchets and the hiss of their cautery irons and began a day of straining to hear how the battle progressed. There were dozens of men"dead and dying"sprawled on the floor all around. Servants ran with ewers of water, blankets, and bandages. Nothing was over, that much was clear. After a lull in the night, there were too many armed men on the run. From his spot on the floor, Durand could nearly catch the drift of conversations between Abravanal’s officers at the head of the hall. Beside him, Lamoric lay"not conscious since Deorwen’s visit in the night"but Durand couldn’t even turn his head to look at the man. He was comforted, however, by the sound of the man’s steady breathing. Lying there as so many other men ran, Durand groped at the fragments of his memory, trying to piece together what had happened during his charge for the castle gate. He had been sure that the enemy was far behind him"dismounted in the street. But he should at least have turned"or kept his bloody helm on his head. He might have seen whoever swung the blow; he might have avoided it. Now, he could only guess. Shifting his hands, he found a dry, smooth, round some-thing in each palm"like a stone. His fingers were caught. Threads tied them round each hard roundness. He turned his hands over and grimaced in confusion, but couldn’t even manage a look at his own fists. Then he glimpsed Heremund’s bowlegs from the corner of his eye. śHeremund!” The sound was more a croak than a shout; Heremund was already out of sight. śHells.” Then Heremund bobbed back into view, upside down and grinning. śGood morning.” śWhadz"what’s hap’ning?” asked Durand. śAh,” said Heremund, and, with a conjurer’s flourish, he snapped the threads and produced a pair of hen’s eggs. Durand, even with his jaw locked and full of broken teeth, managed to gape. śHere, boy,” said the skald, finding a basin and smashing the eggs. The reek seemed to leap down Durand’s lungs, and the mass that flopped from the shells was as thick and gray as mucus. śHells, Her’munn . . .” The skald smiled. śBetter in these here eggs than in you, I reckon, eh?” śLeechcraft . . .” Durand said, appalled. He tried to gesture with his broken head: śLamoric?” Heremund looked over at the sprawled heir of Acconel. śStill breathing. There was a little muddled shouting when Coen carried him in, but he’s been out since: wise enough after such a rap on the skull. If he didn’t have a good hard head, Abravanal would have talked him into a feather bed"not lying sprawled here on the reeds with the likes of you, eh?” Durand swallowed. śCoen?” śMmm. He’s still in the streets, fought like a hundred madmen, they say.” Durand blinked hard, picturing the captain in the city. śLed the garrison out. All blood. Scourging the devils from Acconel.” śHow do we fare out there?” Just as Heremund was about to answer, a long, rattling sigh issued from the stranger sleeping at Durand’s right hand. Heremund frowned. śAh,” he said, and took a moment to pull the blanket up over the man’s eyes. śWell.” śHells,” said Durand. śAs to the world outside,” Heremund said. śIf you can’t be bothered to mind what’s going on around you . . .” śMen are still running. Swanskin’s cursing.” śCoensar led a squadron of Acconel men who rode over the Banderol an hour or two back and got their noses bloodied. Radomor’s boys ain’t done.” śShould be out there,” Durand managed. śAye, right. You’d do our boys no end of good right now. We drag you out and you’d show Śem what becomes of brave men, eh?” One of the physicians turned to Durand, peeling a dressing back: the poultice writhed with a gray mass of worms such as a man might find under some forest carcass. With a narrow expression, the graybeard physician gathered up the corrupt thing and Heremund’s basin. Heremund wrinkled his saddle-backed nose. śI’m not sure I truly understand leechcraft either. But they’ll have the priests work those over before they toss Śem out,” said Heremund. śThey’re still fighting,” Durand pressed. śThat’s what you’re saying. . . .” śAnd you’ve got more snapped bones than’s good for a man. You should let it take what time it takes. The barbers’ll have done some tugging when they dragged you in"matched the ends up, like"but I’ll wager they ain’t sure now with all the swelling. There are ways to force such things, but the buggers might leave you worse than you started.” śFair enough.” And it was. If a man couldn’t roll over, he wouldn’t be much use in a fight. śI should let you rest,” said Heremund. śWhere you ain’t purple, you’re a nasty shade of green.” Durand reached with his good hand. śWait, Heremund. Get me closer to the head of the hall,” Durand asked. śIf I can’t ride . . .” He took a quick breath, thinking as quick as he could manage. śTell them, Lamoric. He should be up there.” Heremund raised one eyebrow. śHe should be at the top of the hall. And you beside him still . . . Easier to hear up there. Aye. I’ll see.” DURAND GOT HIS wish and was soon lugged to a spot near the dais steps: a painful process that he had cause to regret for some hours after the move. Still"laid on his face to save his shoulder"he was privy to the barons’ talk of how many barrels of bacon had rolled in, how many carts were caught in what mud, and guesses at how many bolts of canvas the refugees would need for tents. Oh, it was worth the pain. Soon, he would wish for boredom. He could see only a foot or two of bare reeds"and the rise and fall of a new stranger’s chest beside him. As the light bled from the evening hall, however, this new bedfellow gave out a fearsomely long sigh. Durand found himself listening, straining for the next breath. He called for help, but neither physician, leech, nor surgeon could bring the poor soul back. As the medical men drew the dead man’s cloak over his face"an act Durand could only see the edges of"a heavy stride rumbled down the Painted Hall. The shadow of several knights passed over Durand, followed by the crash of mail skirts as a troop of armored men knelt before the dais. śYour Grace”"Durand knew Marshal Conran’s rumble"śthe carrion birds have returned to the city.” Durand heard a goblet clatter on the dais steps. The cup"winking jewels"bounced to a halt in the reeds beyond Durand’s dead bedfellow. śHonestly,” the blond Baron of Honefells answered, śBrother Conran, friend, the crows will still be finding men and horses for"” ś"This is no vague omen! Something stepped from hiding as the Eye left the Heavens. It is on the move in the west, My Lords: a thing new to us. And black wings rage before it as the storm cloud swells before the thunderbolt.” śI’d say Radomor will not be found among the bodies. . . .” was Sallow Hythe’s wry conclusion. Old Swanskin grunted. śWe were lucky to drive the fiend off. We must call our battalions together and mount a defense at the Fuller’s Bridge.” As the barons rumbled assent, Durand felt something crackle among the reeds under his ear. The hall’s contingent of vermin was likely on the prowl with so much fresh meat abroad, but they would have to wait for him. Durand heard Conran rise to his feet. śNo. It has crossed the Fuller’s Bridge and moves among the ruins of the city.” Durand could hear the Ash Knights drawing their blades. śVery near . . .” śThe children should go into the sanctuary,” said Abravanal. śFather Oredgar, mind them.” śOur friend Radomor is not infallible,” Honefells said. śHe played his game with Acconel, but could not break her. We took him unawares and snapped the prettiest snare his wit could fashion.” Durand heard a shy murmur: śFather, must I"?” śAlmora, join the pageboys with old Oredgar in the sanctuary, please.” The carpet of reeds under Durand’s cheek came alive: earwigs, woodlice, and uncounted other crawling things erupted over Durand’s wincing face. śHurry, Almora,” said the duke. The girl’s metal Power zipped through the sooty vaults. Then a great shock caused the little Power to jump. Somewhere a door"a portcullis"thundered against its frame. A second slam was full of splinters and torn metal. Bodies crashed and slid. But Durand could see nothing. At the duke’s dais, a few tardy blades whisked from their scabbards. The blond reeds on the floor at Durand’s side silvered impossibly before his eyes. śWhat’ve they done?” Abravanal rasped. Something had entered the hall, Durand was certain. The mighty scrape of its passage shivered in Durand’s broken bones. śCome no farther!” thundered Conran the Marshal, but the dragging progress continued, the sound grating louder and louder. A metal goblet clopped shut. And a clawed hand slapped the rushes a step from Durand, turning the gray reeds wet-black at the touch of its split nails. Durand saw copper wire glinting in knots of white bone, and mail swinging in sheets. Then the horror levered its bulk forward"as huge and dry and dead as a team of warhorses from a chieftain’s tomb. Durand undid a good day’s mending as he twisted to see more, but if this horror had come to kill them all, it didn’t matter. Jutting before a torso like whale’s ruin, the thing’s head swung: a knot of tusks and spidersilk. Across its eyes, an old helm had split, leaving an iron eye-slit like a blindfolding shackle. A serpent, a thicket of bones, the fiend dragged its bulk forward. Somehow, Durand knew it: in the line of its shoulders and the style of its ruined war gear, he saw Radomor’s bloody Champion, transfigured. It faced the duke and his officers. śHost of Heaven,” Abravanal whispered. The Septarim ringed the duke. śBy the Lord of Dooms, come no farther!” Conran warned. But Radomor’s monstrous Champion subsided in its own time, a long tail of bone knobs and wire lashing across the rushes. Durand felt a panicked animal’s yearning to get away. He heard the man beside him trying: heels dragging on the reeds, fingers clawing. It was several heartbeats before Durand remembered that the man was meant to be dead. śStop!” roared Conran. All around the Painted Hall, a scrabbling defied the Master, rising like whispers: all the dead men on the floor of the hall squirmed. Lungs wheezed in stiffened chests, hauling air through gray lips all around. And, all at once, they spoke: śHis Majesty, Ragnal, King of Old Errest, bidss you greetingsss, Abravanal, Duke of Gireth. Yourz izs the victory, yes-s-s. But you will not long s-savor it. His Majesty, Radomor, has sent riders to every baron, banner knight, and man-at-arms, summoning all to his host. This will be no meager army gathered in secret. No force stirred by whispers-s. His Majesty comes for you with all the liegemen due his royal blood. Gather whom you will to oppose sense and justice, you will not save your gray head, Duke of Gireth. These knights of the ashes will not preserve you.” There was a faint chuckle among the dead voices. śThere will soon be many more to sing in this grave chorus-s-s-s.” Durand tore his wounds to twist and see the gray faces speak. And"as if in silent homage to this Champion"the gray dead sat up. The horror nodded low, spreading its great hands. Then there was a snarl at Durand’s ear: śSlave! Slave of Traitors. Stop!” Lamoric climbed to his feet. Now, he faced his enemy over Durand’s back. The Champion heaved, upsetting a table with an eerily fluid slither of its knobbed tail. Poised right over Durand’s smashed shoulder, it faced Lamoric, larger than bulls. With Durand’s one peering eye, he could see up through a vast, hollow basketry of bones in mail and silk and dusty coronets. A shrill whine issued from somewhere among the brittle arches. Lamoric snarled on, panting. śTell your master: tell him we’ve bested him once. He needn’t trouble himself to march on Acconel. We’ll come for him!” The whistle in the Champion’s bulk seemed to swell for an instant, then the monster dropped into a crooked bow that brought the spidersilk of its beard spilling down over Durand’s clammy neck. After an instant of this misery, the monster leapt up and swarmed from the hall, flying with the sudden agility of an eel in a stream. Its clawed hands smacked soot from the ceiling, and then it was gone. Durand remembered the Rooks’ words: Lamoric would be drawn out, undefended. The Heir of Acconel collapsed. 25. Path of Ashes When Lord Lamoric ordered his physicians to get him back in the saddle and his barons to prepare the host to march, the whole court of Acconel came alive around Durand’s ears. Lamoric would make Radomor choke on his threats. They would chase the demon Champion back to its master. They would throw the Host of Gireth upon the would-be king before a single traitor could rally to the Leopard Banner of Yrlac. Boots tramped round Durand’s head. War gear rattled and the officers bellowed. Durand ground his teeth in frustration. He could do nothing more than listen"and squint at the ankles of the excited throng with his one good eye"for he lay among the blind, the dead, and the victims of the doctor’s axes while trumpets called through the dark. The gathering roar of hundreds boiled in the courtyards beyond the arrow slits of Gunderic’s Tower. It echoed in the great mouth of the courtyard stair. And Durand pressed his eyes shut, his thoughts knotting around memories of his last ride to the castle gate: Lamoric on the saddlebow, the breath of clean air when the helmet came free, Acconel men all around him. But, of the last moment, he could recall nothing. Who had swung the blow that knocked him flying? Who had broken his jaw and ribs and shoulder? But, even when dawn glowed in the arrow slits, no memory came. With the army marshaled somewhere outside, Berchard and Hathcyn climbed back to the Painted Hall"Berchard with his eye glinting, Hathcyn with a hard gleam of teeth. Each man ducked close to say he’d be back before Durand knew he’d gone, then they were bowing and sprinting for the courtyard stair. Durand could do nothing but snarl at himself. Finally, Lord Lamoric himself appeared at Durand’s side in every stitch of his crimson war gear. It could have been their Red Knight days again. The army was ready. Every ox was creaking in its harness, hundreds of horses stood in their saddles. śLordship,” Durand said. Lamoric’s hair bobbed in his eyes as he bent with a sheepish smile. śMy head’s still ringing,” he confessed. śTell no one. These leeches will have me back on the reeds.” śHells,” said Durand. He didn’t like to see how badly Lamoric was hurt. śYou did well enough to get me free of the battle,” said Lamoric. He mashed his eyes with one hand. śBut I’d be happier if I could keep anything down.” śI should have been watching,” Durand said, but Lamoric was already on his feet"not steady. Lamoric’s lip twisted. śFear not!” he said. śI’ll bring the devil’s head back and pike it on the Fuller’s Bridge.” And a crowd of Acconel men roared from the courtyard stair. śTo Yrlac!” And, in moments, Lamoric was gone. Their shouts echoed till the hall was silent. Scarcely a fighting man remained. Durand’s broken ribs kept each breath short and panting. He fixed his will on slow, regular breaths in the silence. śHells,” he said. IN THE DARKNESS of the hall-come-infirmary that night, Durand still lay sprawled on the reeds, trapped under his broken shoulder. Durand’s father and brother would be marching west. His lord. His captain. He could imagine a thousand black dooms for the army, but there was nothing for him to do but wait. They’d pulled a cloak over the nearest man to Durand"the dead man. The corpse’s silhouette stood against the greater darkness of the distant walls as still as a mountain. Durand tried not to picture the poor wretch under the cloak, gray and stiff. His good eye followed the ridgeline of the man’s silhouette as though it were the mountains above his father’s hall. Then the silhouette moved. śGod,” said Durand. The folds of the man’s surcoat bulged. Under caked layers of wool and linen, something scrabbled, making wet sounds. With the Ash Knights in Yrlac and the Patriach among his people, Durand could only hope for rats; there was no one to ward off the darkness. śGod,” Durand repeated, and tried to move. It was no use. Something dropped in the putrid reeds by Durand’s chin. It blundered against the wool at his throat, reeking enough to choke him. Another shape thrust against the surcoat of the dead man, before a rancid voice snapped Durand’s attention back to the thing at his chin. śS-i-r D-u-r-a-nd.” The voice sizzled from the darkness between the dead man and Durand. And something feathered past his eyelids. The second creature won free, standing on the breast of the dead man where Durand could make out its shape: black wings scissored above spindly legs, scattering lice or maggots into Durand’s face. śYou are not asleep?” the new creature said. The bird"a rook"hopped to Durand’s smashed shoulder. Durand felt a stab of pain as though a spear had been jabbed through the length of him. For that instant, he was paralyzed by the rook’s mortal touch. Then it tumbled onto the floor at Durand’s back. śSo easy now the Knights of Ash have gone. We are more free to speak.” Durand shook with the memory of the thing’s touch in his muscles. It peered at his eyes and ears. śSleep can be elusive.” śPerhaps he is plagued by dreams, brother.” śLike the dreams that called us to these misty north-lands?” śPerhaps.” Durand wondered if he could get an arm free to make a snatch at one of the devils without tearing himself to pieces. Just the tension had him fighting for air. But he couldn’t do so much as lift his chin from the floor. śTo the Hells with you,” he said. śYou are not the first to suggest such an outing.” The beak razored across his ear, sending another flinch of agony through his lungs. śBut not before we play out our little game.” Durand gulped air. śLamoric will put an end to that soon enough.” śAh yes, Lamoric’s march. Such trouble to arrange. As a man of brawn and daylight, you would have no idea. Even with the Wards of your Ancient Patriarchs so threadbare and the high sanctuaries all a-tumble, it was no easy feat for our messenger to reach Lamoric here. Was he not splendid though, our emissary?” Durand blinked at the miserable reek and snarled into the reeds: śYour master. He’ll be well paid for your troubles. He’s brought the Host of Gireth down on him. Our men will be in a bloody mood when they get hold of him.” The creatures were still breathing close, and he gasped at the foul air. A long skull tilted. śBut surely we can be forgiven our little threats. An invitation is no invitation unless one believes that it might be accepted.” Durand grunted. śWhat?” śOur messenger applied the goad,” the bird sprang onto Durand’s broken shoulder in a rain of crawling things. Its touch stopped his lungs, his heart"it threw lances of pain down every crack in his bones. The rotten beak caught at his ear. śNow your master brings his army to us. We may, one hopes, be forgiven a moment’s rudeness.” Durand grunted, suffocating in the open air. He desperately wanted to get one of these devil birds into his fist. Through knotted jaws, he croaked, śYou lie.” śBrother, how can he doubt us?” one bird lamented. Broken teeth creaked in Durand’s jaw. The rook on his shoulder loomed in Durand’s eye, blotting out the room. Vermin writhed audibly in its feathers. śEverything is prepared, friend Durand. Fear not. The fires are lit. We have spared no pains.” śAh, brother! What a shame it would have been if Lamoric had stayed at home. So many dark hours wasted.” Durand grunted into the reeds. The spasm had lifted his knees from the floor. His fists and feet had curled into knots of bones. If the rook didn’t release him, its devil’s touch would crack his bones or choke the life from his chest. But his mind fought. What had these devils driven Lamoric into? What sorcery did they work in the dark hours? He pictured the army marching west, blind and deluded. Certain that they’d got Radomor running"that they were striking in time. śChildren’s stories,” he gasped. śYou waste your breath.” śNo, Sir Durand. For you, we would take great trouble and never count the cost. You have played such a mighty role in our past encounters,” said the voice at Durand’s ear. śIt is a shame.” Blood thundered in his skull. He wondered how long he could keep breathing. Then, with a flap, the first rook joined its brother on Durand’s shoulder"the simple hop ramming a dozen more lances through Durand’s bones. The spasm wrenched his creaking jaw from the reeds. He twisted while the devil peered down the blade of its beak into his eye. śAnd this one will be missed, I think, brother. Here was Lamoric so long secure among the crowds of his followers with his formidable bodyguard at his side.” ś"And the Patriarch to pray for him, and the Knights of Ash all around.” śWho could touch such a man? How could an enemy strike at him?” śEven if there were some turncoat among poor Lamoric’s men"a traitor"waiting only a whisper from his true master, how could he dare to strike with so many loyal men pressed close?” The birds circled, claws and dagger beaks darting around his eye and ears. He had only heartbeats more. śThe frustration! The waiting, brother! Always, His Lordship was surrounded. Always, he was watched. The poor traitor would be sharpening his dagger, hoping only for the very first lonely moment in which to strike.” A beak slipped close. śRiding into that solitary heartbeat when an army’s back was turned? His poor master draped over a saddlebow?” śAye. Well, brother.” Both birds now trickled their words straight down into his ear, stepping from face to neck to shoulder. śSuch a fleeting chance.” śThe very first!” Durand gasped, bent like a trussed deer. He saw the picture the two devils were painting: a man planted close to Lamoric waiting for his chance to strike their lord down. A man turned by fear or pride or silver, praying for an unguarded moment in which to strike Lamoric down and slip away. Such a man, undiscovered, would not wait long to move again. One of the creatures flapped to catch its balance as Durand rocked on his belly. śWhat will happen now, in the hurly-burly of a marching army?” A talon needled Durand’s broken cheek. śWhere even the walls are canvas.” No one had spoken of an assassin"not a word. Lamoric was marching his army into some snare of these fiends’ devising, and, all the while, a traitor had his knife poised at the man’s throat. And here was Durand, pinned by his broken bones to the floor of the Painted Hall as they slid further into disaster. One of the birds stepped too close to Durand’s grasping hand. Despite the iron bands of suffocation and paralysis, Durand lashed out. And felt greasy feathers and cracking bones in his fist. Living things lashed around his fingers, and, for a dozen harried heartbeats, the thing thrashed its wings against its captor, shrieking its life out. But he could breathe again. The little corpse burst into stinking gobbets between Durand’s fingers. The surviving rook alighted on Durand’s dead friend as the commotion drew running feet. The crowd trampled near. Durand gasped against the ground, śI will come for you.” śHa!” was the only answer, and the bird pinwheeled through shins and warding hands, off into the night. Heremund was first. śDurand! What’s going on? God!” He snorted at the reek. śAre you"” Durand locked his slimy fist on Heremund’s wrist. śHeremund. You said I ought to wait, that I shouldn’t rush while the bones knit.” śAnd so you"” śThey must be warned. Called back. The time for waiting is over.” The skald wrenched his hand free of Durand’s fist. śHells.” AFTER AN HOUR’S wondering, a scowling Heremund appeared with Hagon, Kieren, and the Patriarch of Acconel himself. They set something in the reeds where Durand couldn’t see. śIt’s too much for these masters of physic,” said Heremund, śbut I’ve found a man.” Blind Hagon grinned down. Kieren’s fox mustaches twitched in disapproval. The fearsome Patriarch scowled at Durand. śYou are a bloody fool, but ask and we will do what can be done.” śWho did they leave behind who could make the journey?” Durand said. The Patriarch grunted, but gave the others a nod. And so, in a bright constellation of sliding broken bones, the three men rolled Durand onto a litter and lugged him from the castle. AFTER A JOLTING age of delirium, Durand recognized a web of high, naked arches swinging above his bearers: the wreck of the high sanctuary. A slanted light poured through. Knight, skald, Patriarch, and leech grunted along until they reached the head of the old nave where the three rolled Durand out once more"they might as well have dropped him over a harrow. śDon’t worry,” said Hagon, śthe hard part’s over.” He grinned at the others. śI always tell them that. It won’t hurt a bit. Or me more than you, anyway. Eh?” Durand saw the blind man’s teeth. śDon’t worry, close your eyes and breathe. You’ll have your wind back soon enough.” Durand grunted. śDurand,” said Sir Kieren. śThis pigheadedness is going to kill you. There’s an army riding at Lamoric’s back. What’s one more man in all that? If anything goes wrong there’s no one but old men here.” śUnless one of them can catch the army and turn it back, I must go,” Durand managed. Hagon turned his face to Durand. śNow, you’ve been told there may be a price to pay for all this, have you?” Durand didn’t answer. A smile flickered. śAll right. I am no court master of physic, but I’ve worked two winters for every one you’ve been breathing"and there are too many folk too battered for any of the masters to attend you. So, you and I will work the Sunwheel through, dawn to dawn, friend Durand.” śA day . . .” Durand pictured the army tramping west, a step farther away with every heartbeat. śKeep breathing. It’s always this way with ribs"should be a year. As it is, you’ll see men spell me, I think.” The man had set a satchel at his side, and now his long fingers plucked pots from its depths, breaking seals and peeling back lids. śSome fine remedies here. Best I’ve had my hands on.” There were herbs and organs and Heaven knew what else. śAnd your high sanctuary is the best place for this sort of work: holy ground, I hope. Even now.” śDon’t stray far from the altar, leech,” muttered the Patriarch. śThe Wards of the Ancient Patriarchs are falling, one end of Errest to another. The Strangers march upon the Bourne of Jade. The Banished are restive in the shadows. Some dark hand is on the move. Soon, the trembling realm will be given over to the Banished and the fiends. The oaths of ten thousand lords will scatter like breath on a winter"” śBut here, yes? It’s holy enough. So we’ll see what we’ll see,” said Hagon. The blind man turned to Durand. śNow, you’re certain you want this? I’ll make these three lug you back if you’re not. I don’t mind.” Durand blinked up at the pale empty Heavens beyond Oredgar, Kieren, Hagon, and the skald, feeling that the army was rushing away from him like a tide"thinking that Lamoric had a knife to his back and didn’t know it. Some man in Lamoric’s host had struck his lord down. śHagon, if there’s only you, I’m grateful.” śFair spoken,” said Hagon, śfor a man with a battered head. So, begging Your Grace’s pardon, I’ll get started.” Patriarch Oredgar stood. The hem of his saffron robes was black with ashes. Knight and skald shook their heads. And Durand was left alone. Hagon’s pale features settled below his blank blue eyes. He lifted his long hands. śSorry, friend, but I must know the lay of the land.” And the strong fingers pressed deep"not pleasant. śEye, cheek, nose, jaw, teeth, collar, ribs, ribs again.” The hands lifted. śNow, you just try to get some wind in you. Hang on. Breathe.” Durand did nothing but try to get air in his lungs. Hagon’s hands worked over the scattered pots. Heremund left a fire, and Hagon sang. śBone to bone, blood to blood, limb to limb,” he chanted. He called upon the Host of Heaven. He warned the agents of decay. śAs Heaven’s Champion thrust his lance in the earth that he might not fall, so may these bones stand fast. As the Warders of the Bright Gates knotted iron coats of nails to fight at Farandell, so may these limbs lock and link and grow strong. May you worms of darkness drink deep of disappointment. Bone to bone, marrow to marrow . . .” The Heavens rolled over Durand’s head, Heaven’s Eye lancing through high clouds. A squall tumbled in from the mere, washing Durand and the city in cold rain. He woke from crawling nightmares only to learn that the creeping sensations did not vanish when his eyes opened. Hagon’s chant drifted through the Noontide Lauds, the Plea of Sunset, and the Last Twilight. The Heavens filled with stars, and the waning Sowing Moon glinted like a new-honed blade. Blind Hagon chanted on, cursing and praying, binding and damning. In the dark, battles shot through Durand’s memory: the amazement on spattered faces, the dread of sudden wounds. He remembered Sir Waer on the cliffs of Tern Gyre; Sir Gol on his back in that Hellebore Road; Cerlac: a man like him at Bower Mead"all dead. He could feel his mind coming adrift under the pressure of Hagon’s leechcraft. For a time he was back on the cobblestones at the gates of Castle Acconel, blind with blood and astonishment. Suddenly, Hagon’s voice was a cheerful whisper. Durand lay on his back with the man looking down on him, ruddy with firelight. śAll right,” the leech said, śI’ll just take a moment to tend the fire then. There’s some of this is better hot, they say. It can’t be long, mind you, but I understand these things, eh? No one can say I don’t.” śWhat?” Durand winced in bafflement. Hagon stepped away, and a bright garden scent filled Durand’s nostrils"and there was Deorwen, her face swaying in the firelight just beyond his nose. The dark glitter of eyes searched his face. Almost, she touched him. śNot so bad?” Durand tried. śYour hair,” she said. Then, her fingertips touched the bare scalp Durand hadn’t noticed. The leeches must have sheared him to make their stitches. śYou’re out again. At night,” he said. śI liked the curls.” śYou are better?” Durand marveled up at the black shimmer of eyes, and she laughed"just a flash"before looking up where the moon hung. śYou’re going to follow him,” she said. śIt doesn’t occur to you that it might be madness?” Durand wet his lips. śHave you slept? Does it let you sleep? Finding them?” Again, the merest flicker of a smile. This one came nowhere near her eyes. śDo you remember that I spoke of my brother? I’ve found many of the others. But he is still there. One call rising as the other voices fade.” Her eyes flickered toward Hagon’s fire. śTwisting in darkness, Durand.” Durand tried to shake his head"there was pain. śNot dead.” She cast her glance west across the charred bones of the sanctuary. śHe hangs in”"she made a grasping gesture with both hands"”a ribbed blackness. Bound there. They are cackling round him. He can neither fight nor flee.” She took a quick breath. śThat is the dream I have of my brother.” Durand’s mouth was open before he spoke. śThey’re not all omens, Deorwen. Even these dreams of yours. These are grave days, but they’re passing. No surprise he’d be in your mind. We’ll do what we must. We’ll set it right.” śThese wise women . . .” She glanced from the firelight to a gaggle of women scarcely visible beyond the rubble. śThey say that I’ll do the most good here. That nothing can come of a wild journey to God knows. That a woman understands what must be borne and bears it, what can be mended and what must be suffered, what can be kept and what we must give up.” śWe’ll find Lord Moryn. Fix Radomor. The king, he’ll come round.” He gripped her hand hard. śWhen it’s over, we’ll have a chance to think and breathe.” Deorwen glanced back to Durand. With a twist, Durand made out the women watching from beyond the sanctuary flagstones. A few had shovels in their muddy hands. Deorwen bent very near. śWhen this is over,” she breathed, and she pressed a kiss hard against Durand’s snapped teeth. All of this madness, and Durand wanted nothing more than this woman. He pictured a small hall somewhere where he could be master and she his wife. Her hands ran over his broken face, clutching and caressing. A hot tear struck his neck. She caught her breath. And, in a moment, she was bidding Hagon good fortune. IT GOT WORSE. There were times when he couldn’t help but twist and arch against the ground"the pain as bad as the Rooks’ grip. He’d drop from consciousness as though he’d never lived. He’d wake sweating or desperate. Hagon held him like a wrestler or wrote upon his skin or smeared his limbs with reeking fluids. Leechcraft was madness. Past midnight, Durand became conscious of a new sound rising beyond Hagon’s chanting: a hollow knock upon the flagstones of the sanctuary floor"and another. Tock . . . tock. . . . The stone’s chill touched his heart, for he knew the slow rhythm: a staff’s brass heel, closer and closer with each empty rap on the stones. Hagon rocked and mumbled, seemingly as deaf as he was blind. But Durand flinched at the course of the man’s muttering. śBy the Traveler’s whisper that cast a Power onto the roads and set Creation in the hands of the created, I set bone to bone and marrow to marrow!” With this for a fanfare, a being stepped across the flagstones in a great swirl of chill air"a being huge as a gallows tree with a wide pilgrim’s hat caught as high and dark as a black moon. A fist of bone and twine clutched a forked staff. Durand ceased to breathe. The giant loomed at Hagon’s side"and high above"while Hagon mumbled on without a glance or shiver. Durand struggled, too shattered to move as, with a creak like a ship’s rigging, the giant began to bend. The black moon of its hat swung low, blotting out sanctuary and Creation and the Heavens beyond. A breath like winter ditchwater flowed between the peg teeth in that void. At the wink of one bright-penny eye hardly beyond Durand’s nose, Durand tumbled from the world. HIS NEXT VISITOR came as dawn’s twilight first touched Heavens. Durand heard wings"feathered landings. A twist of his head brought him a look across the plain of moonlit rubble where thousands of dark birds tumbled from the air, hopping and twitching just beyond the broken walls. At first, he thought of the Rooks and their minion birds, but these were small, jittering creatures. The chatter that rose from their tumbling clouds was incredible: clicks and trills and whistles like a whole forest poured into the streets. Starlings. Starlings like storm in the beacon tower. Like the flock that pitched Lamoric into the Maidensbier. Durand cursed the morel and poppy in his skull. Something was looking in on him"on all of them. Something wanted to see what Hagon was doing in his circle of firelight. _________ śI THINK THAT’S done it,” the man croaked. śThe Sunwheel right through.” Durand lay for several heartbeats on the cold stones with Dawn red on his eyelids, and he set the night’s madness behind him. It was time to put Hagon’s work to the test. Opening his eyes, he took a few thoughtful breaths, stretching the long moment before hope met whatever the truth must be. He levered himself up. śRight. You can move,” said Hagon. The breeze played with the white thatch of the man’s hair. śSlow.” Durand worked his shoulder, and, amid pops and winces, he rolled onto a pair of very numb feet; it had been days. He took a deep breath. He lifted his bad arm and worked the hand. He turned his head and flexed his jaw. It all took some gasps and hisses, but it would serve. He could move. With a fierce grin, Durand took Hagon’s shoulder. śHagon, sir, I am grateful.” He swung his arms, wincing and puffing when he had to. śTruly.” With a fierce nod that he regretted, Durand started toward the castle. śHere!” said Hagon. śYou’d leave a blind man behind in all this?” 26. A Leopard by the Tail Gunderic’s Tower seemed like a house of spirits, empty but for the groans of the sickest as Durand tramped back to collect his things. Heremund called him mad and wished him luck. Kieren could not leave the business of the struggling city. And among the sleeping bodies crowding the passageways, Durand could find no sign of Deorwen. He pulled together his few belongings, found Pale tethered in the yard, and rode out, hoping that a lone rider"battered but determined"could overtake an army. His head was still spinning. Finally, Durand rode up to the pitted tooth of marble that marked the border. Beyond, he could see the rolling country of Yrlac. Behind him were the hardscrabble Warrens"and scarcely a single soldier between his back and the Painted Hall. Unless Durand could catch and turn Lamoric, the Host of Gireth was lost"and every life in the dukedom with it. Durand took a pull from a skin of drugged claret Hagon had given him and then urged Pale on, gritting his teeth at the big brute’s jarring gait. As Pale set foot in Yrlac, Creation shuddered. Durand clung tight as the big brute shied. A knock was rolling through the sky above and around them. Before his eyes, the Heavens curdled. śHells,” said Durand. Low clouds knotted, squeezing the light out of the world. Durand gripped the big stallion and watched as this false twilight settled on the Yrlac. śGet up,” said Durand, and they rode on. HE TOOK ANOTHER long pull an hour later when great sheets of rain dropped from the sky. Every step had the big horse lurching to get his feet free of the rutted muck. Durand’s bones wouldn’t last long. Durand snarled, śMidnight at noon.” And smeared water from his face, trying not to notice the tremor in his hand. śWe’ll pick up the pace.” He forced Pale south and east, splashing down sunken tracks. They skirted the looming wood where the duke had concealed his army and rode deeper into an Yrlac where loaded gibbets swung over every crossroads. Pale lashed his head. Each field and barn Durand passed was a charred wreck, and soot ran black in the roads. In a bit of ditch-deep road, Durand caught sight of yet another creaking bunch of corpses, and hissed between his teeth, śIs this what the devil’s left of Yrlac now?” Again, he remembered those few long days in Radomor’s hall, and the impossible silence of the man’s fury. This load of black shapes dangled from the gnarled elbows of a bloated beech tree, its foot hidden by the curve of the deep track ahead. Durand had visions of steaming ruins from Mornaway to the mountains, league after league hissing in the rain. Pale stamped. śHe’s burnt everything. These’ll be his own plowmen he’s hanged. What a kingdom he would rule!” But a more calculating part of Durand’s mind wondered just how Lamoric would feed his army. They couldn’t march far on smoke and ashes, and there’d been no time to load weeks of salt pork. He winced at the hideous remains up the track. Despite the twenty or thirty rainy paces between Durand and the dark shapes on the tree, he could see plenty of blood. As Durand made to spur on past the gibbet tree, Pale balked, half-turning in the deep track. His ears had shot toward the rigid shapes on the tree where now even Durand made out a strange scrabbling. Stroking Pale’s muscled neck, Durand got up in the stirrups to get a good look over the banks of the road at the beech’s swollen foot. Low shapes slunk around the tree. They were dogs. A whole pack of lean-looking brutes slavered below the stiff and dripping toes of the corpses. One big devil hopped against the fat tree, straining upward. Durand didn’t like the thought of bringing live prey through such a starveling pack. śWe’d better let the buggers eat in peace,” Durand muttered"and spurred Pale up the roadside back into the field. But, as Pale wallowed up the bank, the dogs swiveled their long skulls in his direction, their lips writhing back in a collection of very human leers. Just as Durand froze there above the road, another rider splashed into sight. Coming up the track in Durand’s wake was a boy on a donkey. He wore a sopping blue hood. Durand and the dogs spotted the stranger at the same instant. Every head swiveled, man and dog. śHere!” Durand called. śThis way!” The pack was on the move, shooting down the track. Just as the first dog struck the donkey, Durand caught the wrist of the rider, hauling him out of the road. With a twist that nearly sprung his ribs, Durand set the boy on Pale’s back and rode for it. The pack snarled around the still-kicking donkey, pulling out of sight in a hail of kicks and lean bodies. THEY RODE AT a ground-covering canter as long as Durand could stand it. Pale bounded like a bear. Finally, somewhere on the high back of a trampled field, Durand found himself lolling over Pale’s neck, rigid. It hurt. He could hardly think or see. Then the stranger’s voice moved at the nape of Durand’s neck. śDurand.” But it was Deorwen, her breath warm on his neck. śYou must breathe,” she said. Durand flinched around. Suddenly, he felt every inch of the woman pressed against his back, his hips, his thighs. She’d thrown on a boy’s surcoat, cloak, and tunic. Beads of rain stood on her cheeks. Her lips. What was she doing here? In the rolling country ahead, he heard some tributary of the River Rushes burbling. And the sound gave him something to catch hold of. śThere. Pale will need water.” And over the next rise, a shallow stream ran by the track, swollen with the rain. Durand lowered himself from the saddle with as much speed as he could manage, then stood with his hands on his knees waiting for Creation to hold still. Deorwen was moving around him, seeming nimble as a squirrel. He reached out, catching her sleeve. śWhy? Why are you here?” śWho’s left for fool’s errands now?” Her grin snatched Durand’s breath. śYou must go back.” śI’ve left Almora with the wise women. And I will learn what’s become of my brother.” śYou’ll be killed.” As Creation stopped spinning around him, Durand resolved to get a drink of cold water. He must think. Shining water ran over green reeds with a few flat stones to make a ford. He set his cupped hands into the mirror glint, and"just as the water touched his lips" śDurand!” Deorwen caught him by the shoulders, pitching Durand into a splash of icy water. The shock of the water on his half-broken bones was like falling flat off a high roof. Durand wallowed back out of the water. śLord of Dooms!” Durand spluttered. Deorwen was pointing upstream. Through the glassy shimmer of clouds on the water, Durand picked out something pale: a long shape, and then another and another. He made out the fork of legs. śHells,” he said. Deorwen sat on the bank with her knees up in the boy’s long hose she was wearing. śSomeone’s tied them into the rushes along the streambed: bodies.” Durand watched open hands trail like swimming fish below the surface. śHemlock’s dear and dead men cheap.” Deorwen didn’t shrink. śThere was a woman in my brother’s lands. Her man’s family had a well behind their house, still they made her walk half a league to the village to draw water. Then their sow had a litter of piglets. She strangled them, one by one, and plopped the little things down the well. Moryn had to hang her.” Durand squinted from the gray corpses to the gray skies ahead. śYou must go back,” said Durand. śI must catch Lamoric. I must reach the River Rushes before the day’s out.” He couldn’t carry Deorwen into this nightmare. Deorwen stood very straight despite her sopping blue cloak, her hair running in strings. śWe are five leagues from my husband’s city, Sir Durand. Will you send me back on your Pale, here? Or shall I walk? You have ten leagues to cover by nightfall, I’d guess.” Durand blinked at a momentary vision of arriving too late"finding a scorched field of sprawled bodies. Banners trampled in the earth. śMadness.” He could not leave Deorwen; he could not abandon Lamoric. śI will not be wise.” She had sat by her mother’s side. She had tracked her fool of a husband. She had taken care of Almora and the laying of the Lost. śNot yet.” At that moment, Pale tossed his head, nodding a rolling eye. A low shape shuttled along the track behind them. śLord of Dooms. They’ve trailed us,” Durand said. Deorwen followed his glance. Her mouth opened. śBut they are dogs.” śIt is too much. I cannot think. We must go on,” said Durand. He sprang aboard the warhorse, whisked Deorwen from the track, and together they crossed the ford of corpses. _________ SOUTH AND EAST, they pushed on, Pale jogging through narrow places that the wary army they followed had avoided to gain a pace or two every league. This was, in part, the country where Durand had ridden with Captain Gol and Duke Ailnor"very likely the last ride old Ailnor ever took. Now, as Durand clung to his saddlebow, he recognized very little. The people had been driven off, their store houses burnt, and everything lost. This would be the legacy of King Radomor if the devil won. He ached over his decision to bring Deorwen. She’d been mad to ride into this mess on a donkey; a boy’s costume would hardly have saved her. But he could think of no way to turn back and no safe place to set her down. She must come with him. Behind him, Durand saw further signs of the silent pack on their trail. Once some great brute slouched atop a high ridge. Later, flowing forms loped across a scabbed hill’s flank. Durand wanted to tell Deorwen that he would save her, even if it cost the army and the kingdom both. He wanted to carry her to the Dreaming Lands or the Shattered Isle beyond the Westering Sea. He wondered whether he could still work a sword. And Deorwen clutched him tight. From time to time, her grip on his ribs had him gasping"though he worked hard not to let on. śWolves will stalk an army,” she said. śThey saw it on Hallow Down. Like gulls after a fishing boat. Looking for scraps. The wise women speak of it.” The things on the hillsides leered. They kept pace through burnt gorse and torched field. śScraps is right, I’m sure,” said Durand. śThese will be strays. If they’re used to butcher’s bones, they’ll be hungry now. The roads must be full of strays between mere and mountains these days: men and beasts.” He tried a blithe smile. śThe country’ll be teeming with folk making their way to distant kin.” At that moment, he glanced up to find the first pack of curs ahead of them. The things curled round some lump on a nearby hill, a good stone’s throw off the road. śLugging their tools to new towns,” he continued. śPrince Eodan and the king growling at each other.” As they passed below, Durand made out the cocked angle of a limb where the brutes were working: a horse lay curled on its back. The dogs worried at its bowels. Saddle brass winked. śErrest must be patient with strays for a good long while.” What might have been the torn shape of a rider"something in blue wool"sprawled nearby. It couldn’t have been dogs. śThey might have found him that way,” Deorwen tried. But, at her words, the whole hilltop pack raised its muzzles, all leering down on Pale and the two fools on the big stallion’s back. Durand set the spurs. REAL DARKNESS SPREAD over the wasteland. Durand rode, knotted around Pale’s saddlebow while the pack closed in all around. Deorwen told him: śBreathe.” And it was all he could do to manage it. The brutes ranged down hollows and flowed over ridges in numbers far larger than ever prowled around one gallows tree. As Durand bullied Pale onward, he saw mastiffs with cinder muzzles; staghounds and boarhounds and butcher’s dogs"some whip-lean, others as thick as bulls. Every one ran with a hitched gait, as if their bones had been joined by a loom-maker. Durand no longer doubted that these ghouls could snap up a mounted man if the mood took them. Deorwen pointed out packhorses, scraps of tack, and even an iron helm trampled in the road to prove it. Deorwen clung to his back while, beyond the clouds, the Eye of Heaven failed. śDo you hear that?” said Deorwen. śHuh?” He peered around, hearing only the click and thud of paws on stone and roadway. śI hear nothing.” The long line of the pack swept like great wings closing over them as the last light ebbed away. śDeorwen, King of Heaven. We must make our stand.” śThe devils are whispering!” Deorwen pressed. Durand blinked. And he heard it. Another sound hissing up like waves upon a shingle beach"a whisper that swelled into life, alive and scrabbling before the pack. śLike the Rooks,” Durand said. It swelled around them. śI can almost make it out,” Deorwen said. Durand spurred Pale into the blackness, sure that teeth would flash from the dark at any moment. Long shapes flickered beyond shocks of gorse and bracken as the dogs swarmed over every rise and bounded on every side. Durand could stand no more. He thought of throwing himself down"stealing Deorwen a few extra heartbeats before Pale stepped in some hole"when Deorwen shouted out, pointing over the hillocks to a pale shape cut out of the darkness. śThere! Durand! A bell tower! A sanctuary!” And they charged through a place of walls and dark lanes for a high white tower. There was a gate. With the pack all around, they pelted through and rode for a black door in the tall sanctuary wall. Durand threw himself tumbling down. He flung his shoulder at the door, but the thing was standing wide"a trick of light"and he plunged through with Deorwen darting in behind him. They were on holy ground in the house of Heaven’s King and the road was behind them: safe! But no sooner had he breathed relief than the first dogs shot through the door to bowl him backward into the sanctuary. śDeorwen!” In the dark, Durand struck some immense and hidden timber. The animals struck from every side, filling the dark with teeth and flashing pain while the sky gaped open above the sanctuary"the ruin. Then the timber at Durand’s back gave way. In a heartbeat, a tower’s weight of rafters, trusses, and beams plunged down on Durand’s neck, battering him and the first curs senseless. He thought of Deorwen. Then, with a lethal flicker through the dark, a great solid shape plunged after the debris. Its impact"hard on one edge and a breath from Durand’s fingers"rang a fierce pure note shuddering through Durand’s skull. The sound"the clang of a stout bronze bell"shot through the pack, knocking the devils sprawling, hoisting the things from their feet, and blasting their whispers into the high darkness. Durand staggered, pitching over the broken timbers to roll in clenched rigidity. He wanted to find Deorwen, but he couldn’t even say her name. Someone crouched over him. śBreathe, Durand!” He felt the warmth of her as her boy’s cloak opened around them. Around the room, he saw that every icon had been toppled. A few white shapes stood headless. śOh, God. Try to breathe,” said Deorwen. śWhere is that flask of Hagon’s?” Durand tried to get his hands down underneath him"to fish for his blade. But even as Deorwen’s fingers darted over him for the leather bottle, Pale was already shrieking outside. The whisper of the devil dogs was pressing in once more. śRadomor’s men have defiled the shrine,” said Deorwen. śI wonder if there’s still a shrine standing in Yrlac. These will be the Wards of the Patriarchs, picked to thread.” All to clear the way for the Rooks’ midnight labors. śDurand, you must give me your sword.” Durand bared a few broken teeth in misery. There was a clatter at the door. Black Pale stumbled in while the pack churned in deep circles around the yard, edging nearer and nearer as its courage built. Now, the mad words of the whispered chorus were plain. śBeyond the empty Hall of Heaven, Heaven’s Queen rankled at the silence, her king gone to his Creation while she stayed behind. Nearly she relented, but one of her own people stole upon her from the outer darkness: the Hag, hungering now with the small souls, vanished away. ŚWhere have they gone, cousin?’ simpered the Hag.” śThe Book of Moons,” croaked Durand, astonished. It was a story from the beginning of the world: the Queen of Heaven betraying her King. It was hardly spoken of. śIn the mouth of dogs,” said Deorwen. One great mastiff stepped over the threshold, pausing to leer up at the ruined walls. Its stink cut the air. Another dog slunk into the sanctuary, and another. They moved with the misjointed hitch of puppets. ś ŚWhere have they gone, cousin: the bright souls, the small ones?’ ” came the shivering whispers. ś ŚSo dim is the darkness without them. So alone are we now. I would see them once more. Where have they gone?’ ” This was the Hag’s part as she wheedled the secret of Creation from Heaven’s lonely Queen as she pined for the Creator King who had gone to dwell in his Creation. Deorwen plucked a rough cudgel of charred timber from the floor, squaring with the worst of the brutes. There was no way they could fight the things off"not with Durand on his back, not with so many. His eyes found the bell and a few new words from the Book of Moons cast around its waist: . . . come hale the new day. He fought to force his thoughts in order. The leering brutes poured their flat whispers rattling into his skull. Greenish light flickered in their eyes. ś ŚThis dream of his. This Creation. It is a plaything that has taken him from us, your King, your Consort.’ ” This was the Hag wheedling favors from the Queen of Heaven. ś ŚHe has gone off with the small ones and left us to the darkness. Where have they gone, pray tell me, O Queen?’ ” The Hag was hunting souls. She was bringing death and the Creator’s treacherous Son of Morning to Creation. śAnd the Queen of Heaven knew jealousy. In that moment, she turned to the Hag, the Devourer, and revealed Creation. ś ŚAnd this is where he has taken them? Well, it will warm my heart to see them once more,’ said the Hag, and she smiled.” He would not let the dogs have them. To start, Durand plucked his old belt dagger free and"just as the devils made to leap"rang the pommel off the bronze letters. The dogs flinched from the brazen note. And, although the creatures had moved only a few steps, Durand took hold of this slim chance. Devils didn’t like sanctuary bells. Despite the wreckage of his ribs and shoulder, he surged onto his feet. Deorwen wouldn’t die here with him on his back. Blinking back the flashes in his eyes, he wrenched the old bell right off the floor while one big cur leered up at him. Durand heaved the great bell straight into the pack. By the time the bell had clanged and clattered through its wild carillon of bounding notes, the fiends had all lurched from the yard. IN THAT DARK place, they clung to each other. Durand found space where he could crush the dark from his skull, pulling and tearing at Deorwen’s tunic and leggings, pressing her to the floor of that ruined shrine. He did not want to let her go. He did not want Creation to move another moment forward. FAR TOO SOON, the whispers returned, and the two fled into the night, Pale dragging the bell from a bit of rope lashed to his saddle. The scrape of stones and the bounce of the clap-per seemed to make enough sacred racket to keep the dogs off, though the fiends were forever on the move. Only Deorwen’s murmurs kept Durand alive. Somewhere in the black of night, he felt the chill of the River Rushes boil up in the darkness before them. He heard Deorwen trying to work out some way to keep the bell ringing with both of them asleep, but there was nothing to do but press on. śWe will come through this. We will smile at the thought of it. And when we reach the other side we will be together. Moryn too,” she said. śDoubtless,” said Durand. Down the Valley of the Rushes they dragged their bell through night and day until the holy scrawl round its waist was ground to smudges and the devil dogs were sniffing close. Where the valley wall shouldered them nearer the river, they saw the great town of Penseval spread on the far bank. Durand focused his whole being on hanging on. When he wavered, the saddlebow creaked under his fingernails. If he fell, they were dead. Deorwen murmured at his ear. śThere is a famous well in Penseval: the Well of the Spring Maid. And ten sanctuaries. My father took us before she was ill. The baron’s castle was red as a cockerel’s blood. They say the city has seen two thousand winters.” Before Durand’s eyes, its towers lay in heaps. Pale plodded past a bridge to the great ruin that stood in the Rushes like a row of broken teeth. And Durand began to think he should climb down. The horse couldn’t go much farther"he might walk farther with just one rider. śDon’t think of it,” said Deorwen. Somehow she had read his mind. śYou’re twitching like a sleeping dog. If you drop, I will not go another step.” Overhead, the clouds had dimmed from pewter to old lead"and darker. The dogs’ whispers gabbled faintly under the scrape of the worn bell, and their lurching shapes were back on the move among the thornbushes and tall grasses along the river. śYou are a contrary little thing,” Durand said. For the first time in hours, Durand turned and looked into Deorwen’s face. Even pale as ice, she dazzled his eyes. She raised a hand to wipe something from his face. śWe are well matched,” she answered. And the whisper of the dog asserted itself. The things were now so near that Durand was sure they were playing games, filling the dark to watch the slow flight of their certain prey. śA person could grow tired of hearing these verses,” said Deorwen into the growing darkness, her voice hollow. śI’m surprised that the Queen of Heaven lets these devils ramble on. She cannot like to hear the old story told. Repeating the slip that looses the Hag on Creation. She must be livid. Incandescent. Though perhaps she suffers willingly. The shame of that old betrayal.” śPerhaps she’s hard of hearing?” Durand said. Deorwen laughed"just a puff of air at Durand’s ear. śIt might explain a thing or two. The King of Heaven, silent. And His dear Queen, deaf. What can we expect of our prayers?” Durand did not answer. They were rounding a gloomy shoulder of land that pushed them nearer the current. śSoon enough, poor Pale will falter and the bell will go silent,” she said. śThese fiends will keep up their whispers. Perhaps I will lead us into the river"we will float away like the lady of the Maidensbier.” Drowning as sure as they were born. śPast Ferangore to the sea. I do not regret leaving Acconel. śMy father’s hall is on the sea,” she whispered. Durand’s eyes stung. śDeorwen, I would give the world to see you away from"” Pale took another dragging step. Beyond the near shoulder of land, a valley opened: narrow, steep, and towering fifty fathoms above the river road. Three thousand wide-eyed soldiers glared down the blades of glinting spears and swords and axes. Some crowded the road. Hundreds more watched from the terraced walls. Durand saw stone tombs high among the ranks and campfires, step after step of a high necropolis like some giant’s amphitheater. The nearest men seemed frozen: fifty or sixty soldiers with their eyes wide and their fists creaking tight on their crossbows. Durand pried his crabbed hands from the saddlebow and raised them for the mob, knowing how easy it was to knock a crossbow’s bolt through a man. And soon he heard hoofbeats. A horse pelted down the terraces, flashing through alternating gloom and firelight until its cloaked rider could bull his way through the lines. At the last, Durand spotted Coensar’s blazon of white terns on blue. The man’s charger was dancing. śSir Coensar,” Durand croaked. It was like a dream. Impossible. He mashed a stray tear from his eye, trying to remember his errand. He had found the army. Deorwen was safe. He blinked hard. śI must speak with Lamoric.” Coensar, new Champion of Gireth, stared down"the gleam of his eyes unreadable in the gloom. Beyond him, the fist and fingers of the Eye of Heaven sign spread among the multitude encamped in the valley necropolis. They knew Durand’s voice"and likely remembered how they’d left him: broken in the Painted Hall. śSir Durand,” said Coensar. śYou’d best come on.” EVEN COENSAR WAS silent as he led them up between the ranked tombs. And, though there were three thousand soldiers upon the steps of that terraced valley, Durand could hear the crackle of every campfire. Living faces stared from between the monuments as gray and still as the dead. śOh, no, no,” breathed Deorwen from her hood. Durand saw men flinch from his glance as he fought to stay in the saddle. In their eyes he saw himself scarred, hunched, shaved, and blacker than cinders: a specter from Radomor’s burnt wastes. But Durand had ridden uncounted leagues through dark and death and devils; he could not give himself time for vanity. He gripped the saddlebow, fixing his will on staying upright long enough to speak his piece to Lamoric. As Coensar led them through a shadowy switchback corner, Durand felt Deorwen’s whisper at his neck. śDo what you must, Durand. But I will not see Lamoric. Not now. I must find my brother.” She hopped away, unintroduced in her boy’s hood and surcoat. With a pointed look, she disappeared between two white tombs. Durand nearly fell from the saddle. Before Durand could curse or rein in, Coensar was speaking. śWe are here.” Pale clopped out upon a gloomy terrace, and Durand faced a cadre of Ash Knights, for all the world like a ring of mortuary statues in their silvery mail and ashen surcoats. Beyond the wary circle, Durand made out Lamoric’s pavilion slung like a market stall between the two mightiest mausoleums, and he swung himself down. The barons of Gireth shoved their way out of the pavilion, some with blades bare. One by one, they stared up in various shapes of horror. Durand tried to smear some of the soot from his sodden coat, but the hands he raised were black as a bear’s paws. As he glanced back, Lamoric followed his horrified barons, saying only, śLord of Dooms . . .” śLordship.” Durand settled onto one knee, grimacing at the waves of fatigue that threatened to toss him on his face. śHow have you done this?” said Lamoric. śHow have you come to this place? I’d half took you for some messenger from the Otherworld. God.” He stepped closer. Saffron circled the young man’s eyes. Durand teetered on his knee. śLordship. Take the host out of Yrlac. You must"” Lamoric raised a hand. śSir Coensar, what’s this man doing here?” śWho could stop him?” Coensar murmured. śIt is a trap, Lordship.” Durand mashed his eyes tight a moment. śThe Rooks. Radomor. They have tried to kill you.” The ride across the market cobbles flashed before Durand’s mind’s eye. śThey are not finished.” Durand noted Berchard looking on with some bafflement, his eye still bristling with stitches. Badan glowered at the man’s side, his thumbs were hooked in a chained flail he’d knotted in his belt. As waves of exhaustion beat at Durand, his eye fixed on the chain. Every knob and corner. A thing like it had smashed his face and thrown him down. He could feel each link in the bones of his face: lock and key. Was Badan Radomor’s man? Durand could think of no more likely traitor. He pressed on. śAnd the army. The host. This march is what Radomor wants.” śSir Durand!” said Lamoric. śWe must pull the army back. They’re laughing. Licking their"” Lamoric snapped his hand up. A wind battered the hundreds of campfires against their coals, and Lord Lamoric clawed his hair from his face. śSir Durand, we cannot carry you. The land is laid waste. The men are shaken. Already, our horses are failing. And there are these dogs at our bloody heels.” His eyes glittered as red as his surcoat in the firelight. śIt’s death to carry on.” He heard his voice echo from the tombs and down toward the river. śHells, man.” śWe’ve put our head on the block.” śDurand!” Lamoric caught Durand by the surcoat. śShut up. Conran’s got us camped with the dead. Radomor’s got the dukedom in cinders. And we’ve lost every man who’s ducked behind a bush to yank his breeches down.” śLordship"” śHere you are, black as cinders, riding hunched over your saddle on a great black horse straight from the edge of your own grave. You’re bloody lucky we didn’t cut your throat or sick the Septarim on you. How in the Hells did you manage to break through the cursed dogs?” Durand found he couldn’t keep his balance. In a wincing swoon, he fell from Lamoric’s fist. Face in the turf, Durand tried a crack-toothed grin. śA bell,” he said. śTook a toll on the dogs.” He felt hands on his shoulders. śGet up, man.” He struggled, but he couldn’t clear his head. śDurand?” Lamoric demanded. Then he was shouting elsewhere. śGet this fool into the tent. They’ve burying grounds enough round Acconel. He could have saved himself a journey.” And then his tone caught a wilder edge, śDurand? Get Guthred! Where’s Conran? Someone get Guthred!” Durand let them find him a place to close his eyes. DURAND WOKE IN a strange tent. The straw was damp. He heard voices outside. The nearest was old Guthred’s. śDon’t doubt there’s a dark hand back of all this. It don’t take no lord to think it through, neither. Does it start with our Radomor? Five years back, someone slays the old king a-hunting in Prince Eodan’s woods up there. But it’s Ragnal that takes his father’s throne, of course. Being eldest. But who’ll trust either son after that? And then Ragnal can’t keep a penny in his pouch. And there’s war in the marches. And Ragnal hazards his crown for a mad loan, and then these hostages. And Radomor? He rides in the van of the king’s host, but gets himself struck down. And these damned Rooks find him just as he falls and they start with their whispering just as his wife betrays him. Now, Eodan’s pulling his Windhover from Errest and King Ragnal’s marching to put him down. And the sanctuaries are falling, one after another. The Banished go abroad. And more and more sanctuaries fall, pulling the wards of them old Patriarchs with them. So there’s no ties between king and land and the lands coming apart. That’s what you’d do if you could stand to lie your three days under stone. If you wasn’t fit to rule. If you didn’t have a drop of royal blood. Ain’t it? Now, get to work. I’ll see if our sleeping prince is ready to take the air.” And Guthred poked his heavy nose in from a dawn both vague and wary with mist. śLads got to roll up this here tent,” grunted Guthred. śMost of the army’s down the road. You’re with me in the baggage. We’ve got a cart for"” Durand lurched to life, surging past the old shield-bearer only to find the army vanishing all around him: the valley was a cauldron of mist with tombs bobbing like fat in a stew. Backs and horse’s backsides disappeared into the clouds. Already, the vanguard would be at the riverbank far below. There were only carts and carters left behind, maybe a man or two to ride rearguard. There was a cart waiting for him and Lamoric’s damned tent. Turning in place, Durand cried aloud for a horse. śYou ain’t gonna catch Śem!” called Guthred. But Durand spotted a liver palfrey, neat and nimble. śI’ll catch them, and I’ll turn Śem back!” Durand snarled. And snatching the palfrey from its groom’s hands, he plunged down the tomb valley and into the mist. DURAND GOT NOWHERE. The track was narrow. With three thousand men, hundreds of horses, and scores of mules and oxen all wallowing down one riverbank track, Durand could not reach Lamoric. The slope climbing above the river was too steep to pass: all steep banks and rubble. An hour after beginning his chase, Durand was still trapped a bowshot from his master"and from any hope of turning the host back to Acconel. Every step of the palfrey had him wincing. He rode, curled up like a fist around his bad ribs, and resolved to catch Lamoric the first time the army halted: food or water, he’d bolt up the column and get hold of the man. And the plan gave him a chance to breathe. He would turn the army back. King Ragnal would summon his host against the upstart in Yrlac. And with the Kingdom safe, he might find a way to untie the knots in his heart. He would confess it all to Lamoric, and lay himself at the man’s feet. He would run for the world’s ending. She would call him mad. Whatever might happen, everything depended on getting them out of Yrlac. He risked a painful twist to search for Deorwen"she would be somewhere among the staring masses marching east. But as Durand had wrestled his way forward, he had not caught sight of her blue cloak. He tried to remember the dreams that had led her east. Wherever she rode, she was safer with the host than she was alone with him on horseback. The dogs still ranged the valley. Men jumped at every noise, and even the outriders clung to the column. This last fact had Durand scowling. With the scouts drawn back, the host was like a blind man groping with a stick: the whole army could see no farther than the tallest man; at any bend in the river, there could be ten thousand swords. If Radomor chose to block the valley in a narrow pass, fifty men could bottle up a thousand. If he dropped on their backs as they crowded between the river and the valley wall, he’d cut them to pieces. Again, Durand twisted in the saddle. All of this was just what Radomor would want: the host caught blind in a valley as narrow as a horse trough. It was more trap than an able commander would need. He scoured the ridgeline above them. A battalion could fall on their necks at any moment; they were blind and strung out for half a league. This was how Radomor would take them. He would not wait for a convenient halt. Durand looked up and down the column: three thousand men strung in the narrowest chain. It could happen any moment, and every doom he could imagine would collapse on him. With a pang of desperation, Durand spurred the palfrey straight into the mob ahead of him. He barged between the knees and hindquarters of ten ranks of cavalry"and got nowhere. Frantic, he craned his neck"and spotted a way. He could see stones out beyond the riverbank. With a fierce grin, he spurred the little palfrey from the mashed track and straight into the shallow Rushes. All along the army he rode, spray flying and hidden pits catching at the horse’s legs. But, by luck and force of will, he brought the palfrey splashing to Lamoric’s side. Lamoric raised an arm against the spray. śLord of Dooms! You might have killed that poor devil.” śThis is Radomor’s trap, Lordship,” Durand panted. No one could stop, so the palfrey was still diving and splashing. śWhere’s Guthred?” Lamoric glanced back down the long line of nodding men and beasts. śI thought we had a cart to haul you.” śLordship, the army’s going mad back there. These valley walls closing us in. Without our scouts and pickets riding, Duke Radomor can drop on us whenever he likes.” śDurand, I’ll have you sent back in irons, dogs or no dogs. Bring the damned horse up here. You’ll kill it.” Durand vaulted the bank, jostling in among Lamoric and his officers. śI’ve tried to warn you. The Rooks. They came to me in the Painted Hall,” said Durand. śWith your head full of poppy and morel and God knows, you’re so sure, Durand?” śThen forget the Rooks, Lordship, and only look at what’s before you. We stand in the track the duke has made. That Champion was a goad to start us moving.” He blinked hard. śNow, he has us blinded! Our necks stretched. How long till"” Lamoric’s barons hissed like snakes. Swanskin spluttered, śBy Heaven, who is this man?” They had an audience: knights in the next ranks were looking on"knights who likely had all the dread they needed with the dogs and the gibbets and the burnt acres all around them. But Durand had not ridden alone into Yrlac just to ease his countrymen into Radomor’s trap. śHow long till the Rooks, the Champion, and Radomor’s host come tearing down the valley? We’ll be slaughtered, and the way to Gireth will be open behind us.” Sallow Hythe raised his bearded chin. śThe traitor has missed his guess before.” Big Honefells flashed a row of white teeth. śWe set off damned quick!” śIndeed,” said the Baron of Sallow Hythe. śWe may yet find his snares half-strung, his pits half-dug. His men amazed.” Honefells waved one broad hand. śIf he’s set a trap to catch an army, we’ll bring him a bloody thunderbolt. Eh, Sir Durand?” Lamoric raised his hand, wanting no thin good humor. śThe sooner we can force Duke Radomor to battle, the better.” śLordship. This is just what the devils hope we’ll believe. While your barons argue that Radomor’s devices cannot be ready for us, the devil’s already tied a blindfold on your host and burnt a dukedom.” They had to turn back. Lamoric glanced to Coensar and his officers, Sallow Hythe among them. Honefells didn’t know where to rest his gaze. śWe’ve discussed reconnaissance in force,” said Lamoric. śFair enough, but . . .” śThey have not returned,” said Lamoric. His officers now wore darker expressions. śWhat do you"?” śThey rode, but there’s been no sign.” Durand set his broken teeth together. śHells,” he said. śHow many?” śThree fighting conroi. Two score and eight. They rode out an hour ago,” confessed Lamoric. śLord of Dooms, we are just where the devils want us!” Uphill he could see the top of the rise rippling against the leaden sky. He swung his arm across all of it. śHis road, his valley, his plan.” Was it too late? Now, Lamoric paused a moment. śThat we could change.” There were glances among the officers. śWhy not take the high ground?” said Lamoric. Through his mustaches, old Swanskin Down spluttered the obvious objection: śAnd be seen for five leagues in every direction, plain as day!” śAye,” said Lamoric. śSeen for leagues, but we’re marching up a path Radomor’s rolled out for us. Every man here knows it. And these are his creatures we’ve got ranging around us on every side. By now, the whoreson knows just where we march and precisely our number.” Lamoric stared into Durand’s face for several long heartbeats while the company plodded deeper into Radomor’s duchy. śI will not turn tail. I will not let Radomor build his strength. Let him do his worst. A man might catch a tiger in his net, but does he know what to do once he’s got it?” śRadomor knows,” said Durand. śEnough! I have said my piece. We knew it would come to fighting. We knew what we faced in Radomor. Not every man will ride home. Now, stop trailing after me like some toy on a string. You will ride in my guard. Take your post by Sir Badan, I think our poor old Berchard’s tired of the devil.” Durand managed a grim bow. If Lamoric meant to go on, Durand must follow. He could not abandon Deorwen. He could not abandon Lamoric. He must urge his countrymen back to safety or share their doom. THEY CLIMBED, RIDING the broad spine of Radomor’s dukedom, farther from escape and with Deorwen in tow. Dogs took three more men as bowels and modesty drove them from the line. The ride over the bare back of the high ground was rougher, but the men could breathe a little more deeply with the black walls drawn back and a few leagues of open country around. Honefells got some of his liegemen singing, but, despite the army’s longer views, there wasn’t an unclenched jaw in the armed line that teetered along the valley top. Radomor would have foreseen all this: an army willing to march blind would have been too much to hope for. But Durand had no doubt that Radomor would have taken advantage of the chance if they’d given him much longer. śHey!” Durand twisted"too fast for his aching ribs"and found Badan sneering at him. The man hauled his mail hood down in a rusty gesture that left his forehead bulging, bald as a dead man’s backside. śMuch better,” he spat. śYour idea, this riding on the ridge.” Their horses lurched up some farmer’s berm. śThe boys loved the climb, I’m sure. They all needed a good stiff scramble after the rain and the soot and the mud. And there’s no road to worry about up here. Just lovely peasant berms and ditches. It’s a wonder.” But Durand was looking at the old chain flail knotted round the whoreson’s middle, and feeling the knobbed aches in his skull and bones as a man might finger a sharp knife’s edge. śYou carry a chained flail,” he said. Badan winced. śWhat of it, mooncalf?” śYou weren’t happy in that alley back in Acconel. Were you . . . ?” śWhat? That push of yours? Huh. Maybe someone will give you a good shove at the wrong time, eh? Teach you a lesson.” śMaybe,” said Durand, śthey will.” Maybe they did. He could almost see the sneering whoreson in front of him, chasing him from the battle at Acconel, old flail rattling like a sack of nails. He could feel every leather strip round the grip of Ouen’s sword. Then there were shouts; somewhere alongside the column one of the devil dogs trotted a gully, orange and streaked as old iron. Durand hauled Ouen’s blade from its scabbard, but, before he could spur his palfrey, crossbows were clanking and snapping death from every side. As the column looked on, bolt after black bolt flickered through the bounding devil. śHells,” said Badan, śthey’ve missed. Must have.” And finally, the brute bobbed over the next rise. The barbs of razored iron might have been sticks and pebbles shied by plowmen’s children. Still, Lamoric drove them deeper and deeper into Yrlac. While the officers spoke of strategy and the lay of the land toward Ferangore, Durand twisted with an agony beyond bones and bruises. They had to turn back. With Lamoric and his commanders all determined to march on, he could do nothing but keep his eyes open, and ride beside Badan at the back of Lamoric’s guard. Riding got no easier. Hagon’s bottle was soon dry. Durand’s winces merged into a long, drifting time when he might have been on the waves of the Broken Crown. Or tumbling in the cold grip of Silvermere. He woke when a brittle weight snatched him from gray dreams like a stroke of lightning. Needle claws held him, his muscles twisting, and black wings battered his jaw. Durand could neither flinch nor fall to escape. He had a rook on each shoulder. One dagger beak poured its long whisper into Durand’s skull, śAt long last, the hour draws near when all dooms must be revealed.” The sound skittered round and round. śKing or carrion for our poor duke,” said the other. Maggots crawled over the feathers beyond Durand’s nose, while his head crawled with the damned whispers. He hoped the duke and his creatures would soon be carrion. Since Durand had dozed off, the army had become a thing of shadows and soft voices. Whatever the hour, the clouds and drizzle had nearly choked the daylight. śHow long have we waited, brother?” śI would measure since the first whisper that called us north.” śThe dream! Three moons before Radomor’s battle upon the Hallow Down.” Durand had choked down enough of the Rooks and their games, but, twisting between pain and the confusion, there was little left to him but fury. śA bare smile in darkness. Night after night.” śHave we told you, Sir Durand?” Durand grimaced, snarling, śWhat are you talking"” śA smiling man. Waiting. Locked in a stony night.” śWe never spoke of it?” śSwathed in webs. Cloaked in dust. He whispered. We could not quite hear.” As the cursed whispers scrambled round Durand’s skull, he caught fleeting images of the two sorcerers, three hundred leagues south. Berchard had told stories of fallen priests, skulking among the tombs and desert places, drawn to murder and rebellion: the Rooks. śHow could we not come nearer?” said one. śYou’re mad,” snarled Durand. What devil would summon these fiends? Not Radomor. By their own words, they set out for the north when Radomor was still a hero, a married heir riding at the head of the Royal Host. The gray sky pitched beyond the column of shadowed soldiers. He ached to breathe. In the grip of the damned claws, he could drown in the open air, with a thousand men around him. śImpulsive, perhaps"and curiosity has long had the most fervent grip on our hearts. But hardly had we reached the northlands when we were greeted by the sounds of battle: the red flight of kites and the black of crows.” śThe rightful king lying stricken on the field!” śHappy doom after happy doom has befallen us.” As they bragged and prattled, the vault of Heaven flashed with the beating of Durand’s heart. The sorcerers’ grip held him like skewers. His lungs convulsed. śDevils,” said Durand. śAnd we have been faithful in our curiosity, plucking up each jolly bauble laid in our path. Rightful kings to play with! How could any man doubt such a providence?” Durand snatched another half breath: śYou will pay.” śAh, Durand. Such surprises await you. You will never guess. Not for us, the life of the dull herd.” śTo the Hells with you!” He could hardly prise his teeth apart to say it. śPlease,” purred one Rook. śWe were speaking of dreams.” śWhere,” said the other, śis that little dreamer of yours, by the way? Is it possible that Lamoric’s lady has been bundled up in the baggage train?” śNo,” said Durand. They had eyes everywhere. What had they seen? The Rooks laughed. śWe are so happy you have come.” śOff! Off! Get off him!” Someone was shouting"the voice familiar. Both birds hopped into the air. And, with a gasp, Durand was free and nearly pitching from his saddle. As his head cleared, he heard the Rooks cackling into the low Heavens. He had to find Deorwen. śHere, here. Easy, boy. They must’ve taken him for dead!” declared a rougher voice. And, in a clumsy whisper: śYou can’t blame the devils. Look at the state of him.” śDurand,” said the first voice. And now Durand caught hold of the sounds. He saw Deorwen staring back at him from her blue hood. She had been there all along. A fat man in a red cap sat with her on the same pack mule. ś. . . That’s Sir Durand who fought with Lord Lamoric,” Deorwen finished, drawing a veil over her accidental intimacy. Durand caught her eye for an instant under her boyish blue hood. Durand heard the wooden thump and squeal of cartwheels and the gusty breath of oxen, and he understood that he’d drifted back from the head of the column to fetch up among the baggage. Badan would have watched him doze off and half an army would have passed him, sleeping. He didn’t like the thought. śBastard. The Rooks,” he mumbled. śGloating.” Red-Cap put a hand to his mouth, trying another hamfisted whisper. śYou’re sure it’s him? A fellow’d hardly know the poor devil! And he’s nearly killed himself to get out here"I’m just saying"maybe a man’s got to know when he’s"” Just as Durand made ready to knock the cap off the man’s head, a strange whisper sizzled to life. The sound came from everywhere and nowhere: familiar verses from the old Book of Moons. At once, Durand flashed Ouen’s blade into the gloom, though he saw nothing but carts and packhorses. Tall brown grass swept the horses’ bellies. śHere,” spluttered Red-Cap. His face gleamed with sweat or grease. śThere’s no call for anger, Lordship! The lad! It was the lad! He was just curious. Saw we was passing you, like. And the crows, and"” "The tall grass boiled, full of dogs. The horses screamed out. All around, the dogs tore through the column, leaping and snapping at men and beasts. Scores of the things. Pack upon pack. While Durand clung to his spinning palfrey with spurs and fists, men all around him leapt from carts to save themselves as their animals ran mad with fear. Durand twisted in his saddle, catching a fistful of ear and bridle to hold Deorwen’s mule; the fool beast made to bite him. All across the eerie darkness, he saw snatches of flying blood"and soldiers staggering into wild-eyed knots, their weapons aimed at the grass. The baggage train was tearing itself to pieces. Carts tumbled at the heels of wild oxen. As quickly as they’d come, the dogs were flowing off through the tall grass like pike under the skin of a pond. Somewhere, an ox bellowed on and on. Anyone pulled from the cavalcade was dead. The brutes had waited for the first stretch of tall grass. With a glance that nearly left him flat with relief, Durand saw that Deorwen had survived"though her companion was missing. He loosed the twisting mule. And shouts nearby summoned his attention. A few paces away, her red-capped comrade had turned up: he had caught one of the brutes. Durand gave Deorwen a glance, then jumped down into the marveling circle around the body of a ruddy mastiff. The thing lay spitted on the end of an old boar spear in Red-Cap’s fists, motionless but for a mass of flies. This was how close the things had come to Deorwen. The wind ran over the high grass as the circle of men muttered charms against evil and held their hands in the Eye of Heaven or tight on the hafts of their weapons. The fields were still alive beyond the column, but they had one of the creatures before them. Deorwen spoke. śHadn’t you better give him some room, Braca?” śNo, here. Look, boy!” Even Durand flinched as red-capped Braca abruptly hoisted the dog from the turf, scattering flies and worse over the onlookers. His old spear could have been a pitchfork. Durand and the ring of common soldiers gaped: the stiff shape could have been dead a month. Durand felt the faintest trace of the dogs’ whisper"as though over leagues of grassland. Someone rode close; the jingle of tack turned a few heads from the carcass. Lamoric and his officers rode down the flanks from the column’s head: Conran, Coensar, Sallow Hythe, and the rest, ready to drive off the dogs or assess the disaster. Now, they found the circle around the dead creature. As Lamoric dropped from his saddle, the soldiers made way"Lady Deorwen retreating a step faster than the soldier crowd. A bow neatly hid her face. And there, Braca stood alone before the mighty, autumn tufts of stubble on the greasy bladder of his face. śLord of Dooms . . .” murmured Lamoric, coming closer. Braca flinched a dyspeptic grin. The red mastiff’s limbs stood stiffly. śNow, we’ll have a look at the bastard. Here"” He reached to take Braca’s spear. śA moment, Lordship,” Coen said. In a smooth gesture, he drove old Keening through hide and gristle and into the turf below. Piercing the thing, again, provoked a nasty reek, but Coensar only muttered and gave the blade a good twist. Durand heard the earth grate under Keening’s point, though there was never a twitch from the carcass. The thing’s reddish hair fluttered in the wind. Coensar bent, marveling. He looked to Braca. śYou’re sure you saw"?” As Coen’s knee touched the turf, the faded whisper in Durand’s skull returned with the force of a thunderbolt. In a flash of teeth, the carcass twisted. And only a sudden blow from Durand knocked his captain from the thing’s reach. Staggering, Durand made to sweep his own blade down on the thing, but Conran the Marshal had stepped into the circle. śAh!” The giant knight stood over the fiend-dog, with his solitary eye flashing, and the point of his sword through the monster’s neck. Now, the thing writhed. Though it might ignore Keening, it could not pretend to sleep with the marshal’s blade in its gullet. śDays now, I have waited for you,” Conran rumbled. Each baron had found his sword, and the blades ringed the marshal as though the men were ready to dance the Turning of the Year. The dog snarled; Durand’s head shuddered with the Book of Moons: śShe looked upon the waste her delay had caused. She saw the pain brought by the Hag and Son of Morning: death, hunger, want, jealousy. She looked and her Tears fell upon Creation.” Its tongue flapped and curled. But the marshal held the monster. His knuckles bulged as thick as ankle bones. śSee what your games have cost you now, vile one! By the King of Heaven! By the Warders’ shields. By the Champion’s lance! By the Traveler’s crooked staff!” Now, the dog shrieked"a whistle. It kicked and beat the ground. But Conran only leaned on his great blade, pouring out invocations until the very clouds curdled over the heads of the army. The Heavens changed. Men gaped at the churning cloud. They tottered in circles as flickers of yellow light slipped through the gray ceiling to fall upon marshal and monster. For a league or more across the fields, the giant knight’s voice rolled. śCreeping thief!” he roared. śYou are helpless!” His free hand shot into the sky. śUnder the glance of Heaven, you are destroyed!” At his word, the Eye flashed down upon the ancient knight and crooked dog. Beyond Yrlac it must be noon, for the Eye blazed, kindling Conran’s blade. And the rotten creature split. From its hide, a shadow burst into the sky, towering in an instant higher than a stand of oaks over the army. The men shrank against the earth, among the roots of the stinking cloud, breathing foul air that frayed the soul. But the darkness could not endure the Eye of Heaven. The long blade of the Eye turned through the heart of it, and soon the shadow faded and was gone. Durand peered out across the high ridge, where there was nothing but breeze and empty air between the host and Heaven. But the clouds were knotting overhead, and Conran slid his blade from the carcass as the gloom returned. śHmph. The Tears,” the great man muttered. Lamoric and a hundred others looked into the crags of Conran’s face. śI don’t"” śThe Tears of Heaven’s Queen.” The giant took a moment to wipe the length of his blade in a pinch of his cloak. śA man might find it all in the Book of Moons, but I will tell it. The King of Heaven wrought Creation, dreamed it, made it turn in the Heavens. Only late did the Queen join her King here in his Creation. As he left, she revealed Creation to the Hag. And she mourned the grief her act and absence wrought among us: the death and fear the Son of Morning and the Hag brought. śOne such creature runs the land for every tear she shed when, finally, she joined us here"and understood what she had done.” He brushed a spatter from the hanging sleeves of his mantle. śIt’s the story the devils whisper,” said Durand. The man raised one snarled eyebrow, fixing Durand with a glance. śAye. Some can hear a few words. Sour old devils they are, traveling like foul breath on the wind. Feeble things.” Now, Lamoric gaped. śFeeble?” he said. śThey would not allow my brothers close enough to know them. Wary, slinking things they are and loath to act. What power is in them, they have stolen"a drop of the divine for each"and they fear to lose it. A glance from Heaven’s Eye is more than they can bear. Without such borrowed carcasses as these, they could not act upon Creation at all. śI’ve not heard of their being met in such numbers before this day. Not in Errest the Old. Not in the Atthias at all.” The man squinted westward toward the heart of Radomor’s dukedom. śOur rebel’s black-cloaked friends will have bound or bribed them to this little rebellion of theirs.” Durand was not alone in feeling a shiver at this. Conran looked round him, the glass-pale eye glittering in his stony face as he noted the wary ring of blades around him and the empty carcass. He smiled. śIt will not bite. Not now.” Lamoric raised his hands. śPut up those swords, gentlemen,” he breathed. śWe will trust the marshal, I think.” Old Swanskin scowled, slipping his sword back into its scabbard. śWho are you?” śBrother Conran, Baron.” śBut what are you? You Septarim. Why’ve you come?” the baron pressed. śSome force is picking at the Wards of the Ancient Patriarchs, freeing every devil to walk the land.” The giant cocked an eyebrow. śYou would rather we left, Baron?” Swanskin snorted, though from him it seemed a note of reconciliation. śLord of Dooms. I won’t count the teeth in a gift horse’s jaw.” He looked back over the column. śAye. I’m more worried by the pack train. There’ll be more tears shed when the men mark how little bacon these dogs have left us. They’re none of them blind.” Broken carts and torn oxen were scattered for a bowshot in every direction. śThe choice was men or meat, Baron. My brothers cannot be everywhere.” Lamoric peered over the carnage. śI am content with the marshal’s choice.” Durand scrubbed his aching shoulder and wondered why Radomor would bother with the pack train. The sleeping dog might have beheaded Lamoric’s army, but the baggage meant only that the army would be hungry if it managed to survive another week or so. Whatever Radomor planned, the dogs and gibbets and charred fields chilled the marrow of every man. Was it fear alone that Radomor intended? While he might believe it of the Rooks, he knew that Radomor was too pragmatic to bother with such petty victories. What was he planning? Durand found Deorwen’s brown eyes in the uneasy crowd and wished more than anything that she had stayed with the wise women in Acconel. HOW MANY AND how far? These were the questions on Durand’s mind as he rode the ridge through soaking drizzle. Radomor’s army was still abroad. Durand had found Pale among the bags, and felt strong again with the thickset black bounding along under him. They had slain one dog, and Radomor’s army was out there in the rain somewhere: the teeth of the trap. It was an hour later that the vanguard of Lamoric’s watchful army rode into an area of churned earth. And Durand was out of the saddle before Coensar called a halt. They’d stumbled into a broad, bowl-shaped basin above the Rushes. Durand stalked out among great, matted swathes of grass and thistle. Berchard and a few of the others from Lamoric’s group were ordered to follow while Marshal Conran sent a ring of his pale knights to take up positions facing the fields and valley. Each flattened rectangle conjured battalions in Durand’s mind’s eye, sellswords and renegades all hunkered low on the ridge. Durand turned to the valley side only to find a sheltered slope rolling straight down to the river track, perfect for a sudden downhill charge. This was where Radomor’s host had slipped close, sharpening its blades in wait for Lamoric’s slender column to snake below. The thought touched him like cold fingers. He could taste their sweat in the air. This was the spot where Radomor would have destroyed Gireth. But a shift in Lamoric’s tactics had dislodged Radomor’s army, and now they were on the move again somewhere beyond the veils of rain"not quite omnipotent, it seemed. Berchard grunted. śCould have been a city camped here,” Durand murmured; he could see signs that a great many tents had been pitched in the basin. There were fire pits. śHard to guess how many.” But a good count would be the closest he had come to clapping eyes on the enemy. They were not infinite. Badan picked across the place, a sour look on his face. śKeep your eye out for dogs, mooncalf. While you’re sniffing.” Berchard laughed. śFear not, brave Badan. We’ve got our Holy Ghosts to watch over us.” Durand glanced at the backs of the still knights as he limped over the rumpled ground. śHoly Ghosts.” Old Sir Agryn from back in the Red Knight days had nearly joined their number"except that a woman had drawn him away. Durand wondered what they could really do. And what the Rooks had planned for them. Berchard’s beard split in a wide smile. śServants of the king since the High Kingdom they are"and the bravest of knights to a man.” He glanced at their pale and silent circle, then pitched his voice for only his comrades to hear. śI drank with a charcoal burner from near the Knights’ House at Loegern one rainy night. We sat in his moldy hut while the old oaks dripped, he told a story about climbing the great curl of a beech limb near the Loegern walls"as a boy, you understand. And seeing a squadron of these Holy Ghosts stretched out on long slabs, pale and dead in every stitch of their war gear. And, being a boy, he couldn’t resist slipping down among them. So, there he was, stealing along the white aisles of them, prodding cold flesh and fondling buckle-brass and iron ring, says he, when a great blade of ruddy light swung into the place: the old Eye of Heaven had sunk low enough to slide through the west windows, and the dead lads were up. Rising from their slabs!” śBerchard . . .” said Durand. Berchard was making a vow, hand raised. śIt’s the truth as I was told it. The man was called Kausi. We shared his hut and my wine. Up on the Red Winding.” He peered at the ring of pale knights. śWhen the knights started up, our little Kausi Charcoal legged it.” śI wonder what the Rooks have fixed for them.” Durand had already limped by tent sites enough for a thousand men. He peered through the murk, guessing that there were as many more matted patches ahead. That was one question answered: Radomor was outnumbered by a thousand men. Now, Durand wondered where they had gone. śWell, I’ve heard some tales about these Ghosts that would"Uh. Yes.” Berchard stopped, straightening suddenly. śAnd I suppose these campfires will tell us when the devils left camp. Maybe.” Durand glanced up at this sudden change of direction to find that Lamoric’s officers had joined the examination while the halted column looked on"the stony Marshal Conran among them. śAye,” said Durand. He stooped painfully by the nearest fire pit, sliding his hand deep into the wet ash and feeling heat tingle in his finger bones. śThis morning. They’re still near.” He pictured the hideous Champion and could almost feel the Rooks prowling in the shadows of the tents. They would be somewhere within a few leagues. When he looked up, he found Lamoric staring down. Conran and Coensar stood at his side. śIs this what’s left of Radomor’s trap?” Lamoric asked. He looked hard in Durand’s eye. śI think it is. I think he had his dogs. He had his lovely ambush just as you said. But, Durand, we have slipped both.” Durand climbed to his feet, not sure what to believe. śPerhaps, Lordship.” The young lord turned from his commanders to gaze down the neat slope that ran to the dark curl of the Rushes. śI wonder what the battle would have been called. Radomor has left no fields to name it by.” Durand opened his mouth, but it was Conran who answered. śBy my reckoning, they will name it Ferangore.” His glinting eye did not bother with the valley or the trap. He fixed his gaze on the western horizon. śHells,” said Durand. He had seen and done dark things in Ferangore, but one man’s private dread was nothing compared to what an army would face. A half day west, Ferangore stood behind high earthworks, ranked walls, and a moat of rivers that would hold them for seven moons. śIf Radomor shuts his gates against us,” said Coensar, śwe’ll be hard-pressed to open them without engines or supplies.” It was time to go. They would turn back. śNo,” said Lamoric. A light seemed to dawn in his features even as Durand peered up from the mud and rain. śI read a different doom in these signs. Here we have Radomor’s trap, abandoned. He meant to catch us here"pinning our column against the Rushes, charging from the heights and raining missiles down"but he’s left it behind and flown for his walls. Radomor doesn’t like the look of us"not without his tricks and traps.” He flashed his teeth. śI say Radomor’s lost his appetite.” Durand became conscious of the great cavalcade of men, splattered and exhausted, but gathered like a tournament crowd, every one of three thousand watching. Radomor’s camp was Lamoric’s stage. śWe will feed our Radomor what he’s so hungry to escape. These fires were burning this morning. If we set out now, we will catch him before he makes the walls of Ferangore.” Durand saw hard grins spread among the multitude of splattered soldiers. And Lamoric stood taller, spreading his arms. śMen of Gireth, we have flushed Duke Radomor from his hiding place and now we will ride him down! His rebellion ends today!” With force enough to wobble Durand and Berchard where they stood, three thousand soldiers roared. Durand scanned the vague region where the rain obscured the more distant hills, and wondered if Radomor could hear them. Part of him hoped the whoreson could. FROM THAT SPECIAL misery of riding with half-broken bones, Durand watched the gloom twist thicker around the column as they lurched deeper into Radomor’s ruin. Carrion birds tumbled through the rainy dark, and the dogs played at the limits of vision. But, all along the men flashed wolf’s grins, for they stumbled over wrecked carts and helmets left in the clay by their enemy. Could he truly be on the run? It seemed so. Though the signs were fresher with each hour, every man knew they had little time left. Somewhere in the rain, the ramparts of Ferangore were perilously near. From the back of his high-stepping gray, Lamoric spat curses into the rain. śWhere are the devils? We must overtake them before they reach Ferangore.” śWe’ll smell the city in a heartbeat,” muttered Coensar. śWe’ll come up against the army or the walls soon enough. It can’t be long.” As Durand looked on, the man pulled his hood over his face. śHells,” said Lamoric. But there was nothing the man could do. Ox carts and footmen could go no faster. śThey’ll have bolted every door in Ferangore, and we’ll be caught under his walls, half-provisioned with our backs to a wasteland. It is no good.” Lamoric turned to Marshal Conran. śAnd surely,” he said, śit is plain folly for Radomor to seek the throne after all of this.” śLordship?” said Conran, his bristling brows climbing. śShould he best us here. Should he rally all the dukes to his cause. Should he ride through Eldinor to the sanctuary itself. All of these shoulds. How can he face the rite? His lands are steeped in the blood of the blameless. He has turned these necromancers loose upon the land. How can he lie his three days under stone and join the kings of Errest the Old?” śSome men do not know their own hearts, Lordship,” rumbled Conran. śBut there exists another possibility: the wards are breaking. One after another, they fall. A moment may yet come when a devil can take the throne. But I fear that it is a game that risks the prize. For the realm may not endure defenseless. It was no whim that pushed the Ancient Patriarchs to set their wards upon Errest the Old.” śI had half thought of letting the fool have his coronation,” said Lamoric. śNow, I see we’d best not risk it.” śWhen my brothers and I rode to Silvermere, the denizens of the byways prattled of the Banished. Pale figures moved beyond the borders of the Still Kingdom. Riders from the mists of Hesperand. Green hags teeming in the millponds. A worm in Heronleas. A giant of the Halls of Silence prophesying the doom of men in the tongue of priests.” śHells,” said Lamoric. After flinching at Conran’s mention of Hesperand, Durand searched the gloom for the devices of the enemy. He peered into the torn clay of their enemy’s path, and shot long looks at every hill and ditch they passed in the dark. With the wrist of one long gauntlet, Sallow Hythe smeared a bit of muck from his brow. śLordship, if this is a race we must lose, we might rest the men. This is a killing pace. There may yet be store houses beyond this wasted path. If a siege must come, we must prepare.” śRadomor will have burnt everything within leagues of the bloody city,” declared Lamoric. But for the sodden wasteland grasses, they’d seen nothing green in Yrlac. śWe must catch him before he can reach the city, or we will pay with blood. I will not let cowardice or despair give Radomor a chance to rally!” śIf we must besiege Ferangore,” Sallow Hythe reasoned, śthe few barrels of bacon we are dragging behind us will do us little good, Lordship.” Lamoric twisted to retaliate, but stopped. Some inspiration dawned in his face. śThen let us be rid of them!” said Lamoric. The older, wiser men around Lamoric leaned in their saddles for a good look at their lord. The animals tramped up spray. śWhat nonsense is this?” spluttered old Swanskin. Lamoric wiped mud and spray from his face. śIf our barrels are too few, then leave them! The dogs can have our pack train. We will run the devil down. I say, every man who does not wish to stay with the dogs should march with the army. Every knight will put his palfrey into common hands. And the rest can run!” His grin was fierce. śWe will catch him yet!” Despite Deorwen and the Rooks and all, Durand grinned at this. _________ WILD-EYED COMMONERS CLUNG to the last palfreys and cart horses as the company spurred itself away from the howls of their own oxen and the Queen’s savage Tears swept down on the poor devils. The host rode in a storm of flying mud. They blinked at it. They felt it in their teeth. And they could see little but blinding mist and clay. On their left hand, the valley slope dropped away, leaving a steep precipice, and the wild host of Gireth careered along the brink, hooves tearing clods from the cliff’s edge to fall from sight into the Rushes. Durand couldn’t breathe for agony. Big Pale bounded by a set of huge crescent gouges in the edge where some beast in Radomor’s Host had plunged from the bank only moments before. Just as Durand flashed by, something jarred Durand’s hip, and Pale’s hooves chopped sickeningly at the brink. śJust keeping you awake, Moonface!” shouted Badan. The man rode close at Durand’s side, his flail jangling from his fist as he barged through. Nearly, Durand caught hold of the fool. But then, the whole track plunged from the high ridge and Durand could do nothing more than hold tight while he bowled down into the valley with three thousand others, all on the verge of tumbling. Before them, the Valley of the Rushes opened like a cavern of clear air under the cloud. And, on the broad floor of that valley, struggled a sprawling darkness. This was Radomor’s army. Durand saw flags and limp banners bobbing above the mob as it fought to cross a long stone bridge. śWe have them!” shouted Lamoric. Beyond it, Durand saw green ramparts rising: moments beyond the bridge, the city of Ferangore mounted into the clouds. śCome on, lads!” howled Lamoric. śThey’re caught and can’t turn! To the bridge!” The whole of the army set its spurs, surging down the valley wall like all the charges of all the tournaments in the Atthias together. Badan’s flail shrilled near Durand’s ear, while Durand hauled his own blade into the thundering air. They could have been a wave falling. As Durand and the first lancers swept down, they leapt the carts and slaughtered mules left to foul their hooves. They crashed down on the bridge, flinging the last rearguard aside. Durand gaped in joy and wonder; Radomor’s rebellion would end in moments. But then, just as Durand and Lamoric and every man he knew exploded onto the bridge, a second thunder roared up far louder than the storm of their hooves. Pale skidded. Durand felt great blocks sliding in the bowels of the bridge. While Lamoric and half his barons looked about in horror, columns of water exploded above the bridge all around them. Durand glimpsed huge stone rollers bounding out over the waves, launched by the sliding weight of the span. Someone was screaming: śMiners!” The whole bridge had been transformed into one enormous pitfall. Durand saw Lamoric, Coensar, Berchard"all within an arm’s reach and all a moment from a dragging oblivion of water and stone and iron mail. The bridge was collapsing into the Rushes. Then, impossibly, the stone caught"it held. While men and beasts gaped, wide-eyed, the thunder rolled out under the low sky. Foam closed over the great blocks that had fallen beneath the span. And the bridge hung naked, swaying like a thing of ropes. It was impossible. Radomor’s host stood with their cheers caught in their gullets, and both armies held as still as painted figures. Above the eerie stillness, Durand heard voices"chanting. Hardly daring to turn his head, he spotted Conran’s Holy Ghosts. Each pale knight stood stiff as a forked branch, head back and palms up. Some stood in their stirrups; others swayed in their saddles. The sound of their chanting seemed to twist the air around the bridge into something like thick glass. It boiled with warmth and cedar oil. In the face of this miracle, no man dared move"until Lamoric shifted. Across the bridge, Durand finally caught sight of their enemy: Radomor of Yrlac sat a tall warhorse, his bald head bare"he’d snatched off helm and mail hood to gaze at the hanging bridge. This was no fool’s gaping, but an inward look that Durand could not read. On the bridge, Lamoric stood a dozen paces from his foe"this man who has slain his sister, his brother, his nephew. And countless friends. With a call to charge, the Host of Gireth could crash down on Radomor’s force. They could win. If the bridge held long enough to let them over. Coensar caught his lord’s arm. śThis can’t last: any moment, the bridge’ll fall as it should have done. Radomor’s been waiting. The mad flight, the axemen, it’s all been a game. We won’t get an army over. If the bridge falls, Radomor has us.” With a nervous glance at Holy Ghosts and Heaven, he finished, śMiracles or no, you must turn back.” Lamoric met Radomor’s stare. Durand half expected the force of Radomor’s attention to stir the air like a storm. But a man could feel the strain in the Septarim’s chanting. And the scent on the shivering air had twisted from cedar and sweetness to something scorched like incense. Debris sifted into the Rushes. śLordship,” said Coensar. śWe retreat or we put our heads on the block. Forward or back. It must be now.” Lamoric closed his eyes. śGive the order,” he said. śBack us off.” Radomor watched them go, holding his army like some monstrous huntsman with a pack beyond counting. With Lamoric’s vanguard safe on the far bank, everyone made ready to retreat from Radomor’s glare. Just then, Coensar caught Durand by the surcoat for it seemed that the Septarim had not moved. The lot of them were frozen where they had first begun their chanting while the wavering air above the bridge darkened like honey over a fire. Everyone else was safe when Coensar stepped back on the bridge. śCome on,” he said. śLet’s get them off!” Durand slung himself from the saddle"feeling the deck of the old bridge give under his limping steps. But knights from the vanguard and common men all round skittered out, catching hold of bridles to lead the wild-eyed horses of the Holy Ghosts from the crumbling span. Radomor watched in silence. And, for a moment, bent Durand was the last on the deck"but for the marshal himself. Durand tottered out to the man. The scalded air stung his eyes and the stones revolved under his soles, but he took hold of the great man’s bridle and led the giant toward the far bank. The strange man’s rigid face could have been the axle around which the Eye of Heaven turned, but the bridge dropped away stone by stone as they left it. When Conran’s horse left the bridge, the marshal’s head sank with an ox’s loose sigh and the last cobbles thundered into the water. Across the river, Radomor and his two thousand men turned from their foes and resumed their retreat. The ranked earthworks of Ferangore loomed through the fog. A man could just make out the stained dagger of the sanctuary spire above the coiled walls. Just then, Durand could not imagine that men could build such a mountain. śNow we must prise them out of their shell,” Lamoric said. He eyed the feeble glow of the sinking Eye of Heaven. śAnd we have neither time nor means to do it. . . .” NIGHT DESCENDED AS Lamoric drove them to a sprawling ford a few hours back up the Rushes. In the coal-sack blackness, the exhausted army blundered through the icy spring flood and its invisible stones, knowing that some splashes meant that men were tumbling off into the black torrent to pass lifeless below the ramparts of Ferangore"or to lie pinned to the bottom by the weight of armor. It was pointless to reach or hope. The Holy Ghosts seemed to walk under a moonlight that touched them alone, and, in the depths of the night, the watery glow of their backs was the only light bobbing in a black Creation. The bleary soldiers marveled. The traps were finished now. That much seemed clear to Durand on that blind night of weary agony. Neither army had a trick left worth playing. Lamoric was simply going to throw his force at Radomor’s and hope that courage and numbers could break the devil’s walls. Radomor would sit grimly in his city, waiting for the men of Gireth to starve. Somewhere in that great shifting column, invisible between the Holy Ghosts, Deorwen would be riding. He could not search for the girl. His only hope to find her would be to call out: to call out for his master’s wife hiding in a hostile land. And he could not. So he set his broken face against Pale’s neck and prayed she had not been among those to fall in the black Rushes. 27. The Empty Storm With the return of light, Ferangore appeared from the gloom like a monstrous thunderhead. The city’s ramparts mounted where the River Rushes and Bercelet roared together as the mighty Branche. And, somewhere beyond the thickest walls were Radomor, his Rooks, his Champion, and an unknowable throng of sellswords, liegemen, and rebels from across the kingdom, sharpening their blades. Below the lowest rampart, the Host of Gireth stood in long dark ranks, shivering only a bowshot from the city while Creation stood as still as a sickroom. Durand peered up from the back of Lamoric’s guard, big Pale shivering like a drawn bow. The beast was mad. Durand could make out the needle of Ferangore’s black spire high above them all"while his breath whistled at the iron face of his helm. Around him, the barons wrangled over the last plans, but Durand only wondered where Deorwen had gone. Lamoric was throwing everyone at the city, leaving not a soul behind. Where could Deorwen go? Risking a painful twist in his saddle, he searched the ranks through the slits of his helm. Lamoric’s footmen stood at the front of the formation, dark, drenched, and facing the city with their knuckles shining white against the spears and axes in their fists. She could not be among them, surely. The barons finished their conference and scattered to play captain to the men of their own lands. Durand swallowed against the straps of his mail hood and stared up. Over the dented helmets of the infantry, he could see the first rampart, steep, gray-green, silent, and topped with stone battlements. This would be worse than Acconel. Bloodier for the men of Gireth. They would be breaking walls, not holding them. It would be murder. Deorwen could easily have been swept up. No one was to be left back. He prayed that she’d found some spot in the rear"perhaps behind that red-capped fool with his boar spear: Braca. A man that size could, at least, stop an arrow or two for her. She was no fool. Durand twisted once more"only to find Deorwen peering up at him from the back of a dun pony. Her chin hardly came to his belt. śHost Below!” rasped Durand. Lamoric was only a few paces away. śThere is nowhere to hide,” she replied evenly. She clutched Braca’s spear: the thing seemed heavy as a fence post. Her face was pale. śYou can’t be here,” said Durand. śI have had enough cowering. Where will I be safer than caught up in Lamoric’s guard?” śHave you ever met your husband? Safety has not been among the man’s priorities.” A few horses forward, Coensar twisted for a look at the source of this chatter. Durand gave the man a nod. Coensar only blinked and stuffed the azure helm down over his head. śDeorwen, this is more than courage. They’ll fill the sky with arrows. They’ll fight like devils for every step. You think blue wool and linen will turn a blade?” śI must either be with those men about to storm the wall, or with the mounted men back here. If it makes no difference where I stand, I’ll stand where I choose and not where I’m driven.” Lamoric rode out before the army on his brother’s tall gray, drawing every commander’s eye. śDon’t worry,” whispered Deorwen. śI’m not mad. I’m no tiltyard hero to face an army on my own.” The hours of darkness had allowed battalion-large raiding parties to scour the countryside for timber and provisions. Though there had been little enough to find, rough siege ladders jutted from the ranks of infantry. Breath boiled in the chill. śI can ride, I’ve hunted a thousand leagues, slipping branches,” she said. śI’ll make them work to take me.” Durand wondered whether he had time to haul her from the line. But Lamoric stood in his stirrups, hauling his blade from its scabbard. The entire host leaned toward Ferangore. śDurand,” said Deorwen. He didn’t want to argue. He would watch her as best he could. It was madness, but there was no time. śDurand!” she pressed. She was looking down; the sopping grass under their feet moved. Then, with a shriek from the horses, the plain came alive"worms and rats, mice and wood lice. All the vermin of a city spilled down the ramparts of Ferangore, spreading like wine over a bare floor, sliding over the hooves of the horses. Lamoric fought to control his big gray. Then, with every man eyeing his boots, a call rose from the heights above them. The blackened spire of the high sanctuary seemed to twitch as the army’s glance found it"black to bone gray"and every man realized that the old tower was neither stained nor scorched: it was the roosting place of every carrion bird for a thousand leagues. An infinite maelstrom rose over the city"beyond the flocks at Acconel, beyond anything seen in Errest the Old in all its two thousand winters: a high and rising storm of carrion birds to empty forests beyond counting. All across the front, Conran’s Ash Knights threw their arms wide, braying out prayers that once more filled Creation with a boiling cedar wind. The storm broke over Lamoric’s lines, diving in waves like a plowman’s scythe. But flocks split above the army like waves against stone as the Holy Ghosts roared the wrath of Powers. śLord of Dooms!” shouted Lamoric. He wrenched his helm from his head, snapping every eye back to the fight. śEnough! It’s past time. Let us drive this fiend from his lair!” With the wind snapping in his mantle, Lamoric stabbed his blade high over the army and"with a headsman’s downward slash"unleashed the howl of three thousand voices. Gireth’s infantry charged, ladders bobbing like straws on a flood tide. A storm to answer the storm of crows. Durand fought to hold Pale back. The ranks of horsemen all around him clutched at their reins as that tide of foot soldiers rushed out. Coensar shouted, śHold!” For heartbeats, the vulnerable army sprinted at an empty rampart. Then, with the whole rushing throng under the battlements, Radomor’s archers stepped into every embrasure over their heads, hundreds strong"snapping lethal arrows down with strong bows of yew and sinew. Soldiers curled around sudden arrowheads, their ladders crashing to the turf. The men in Lamoric’s guard hissed and swore. Finally, ladders slapped the bank, blackening the green earthwork with swarming men. Arrows flickered up and down. Gaffs threw ladders back. Axes split helms. Pale danced in Durand’s fists. śHold!” shouted Coensar. At the crest of the rampart, knotted duels rose, struggling over the crowd. The two armies seemed ready to lift each other above the city with the force of the struggle. Finally, the stalemate broke and the foot soldiers of Gireth poured over that lowest rampart into the streets beyond. Horns brayed. And the army of Gireth vanished over the ridge. Durand looked from side to side. For an instant, the cavalry were alone on the plain. Some men made the Creator’s fist and fingers as best they could in the iron bags of their gauntlets. Durand glanced at Deorwen, her eyes shut. Then, with a return of all the cacophony of battle, the lower gate of Ferangore flew wide. Every knight surged forward. AS THEY TORE their way inside, Durand clung to Lamoric’s flank, hacking his master’s way through the ebbing throng of the enemy, and hoping to tear a broad enough wake for Deorwen to follow, riding sidelong into enemies. But after a few minutes of savagery, the men of Yrlac showed their heels, leaving the street empty. Durand watched Coensar give chase"and found himself at Lamoric’s side in an abandoned street between one rampart and the next. This was all there was: one street, one step on the way up Ferangore. Shops stood on either side. Pale and Lamoric’s big gray nipped and kicked at each other. The street was as noisy as a horse market. And every storefront along the road was crowded with men and beasts taking cover. śWhat is this?” Lamoric wondered. Storefronts stood empty, and above their rooftops you could see the top of the next tier and the empty parapets atop it. śCan it be that we’ve beaten him?” Durand had been kicked and punched and horse-bitten, with his breath coming in gasps and blood spinning from the tip of his sword. At a glance, he could see a dozen men writhing out their last breaths. Comrades hauled some into shelter. śRadomor beaten? I would like that,” said Durand, and earned a glance from Lamoric. He had to switch Pale around to get Deorwen under cover. śRight enough,” Lamoric began, smiling, śbut it’s"” A torrent of black wings dropped from the storm above the rooftops, bullying every man against his horse’s neck. Some of the creatures bounced to a landing among the dead and dying, while the rest tumbled and brayed for mad heartbeats over the street and then vaulted back into the storm. On the heels of the devil birds came the first arrows and stones from above the rooftops. Stones clattered into the street. Almost as soon as this weird rain had begun, a bolt smacked from the brow of Durand’s helm. śThey’re pulling themselves together. We’ll be safer under these shops,” Durand said. Riders up and down the street were pulling their horses out of the road; the archers above couldn’t see past the roofs right below them. Durand set his spurs and Pale bulled Deorwen and Lamoric’s animals under cover of a potter’s shop. śTie the horses here, Lordship?” Durand squinted past the crowds and up a littered road, fouled with the gory wreckage of the route. śWhatever comes next, there’s no room for wild charges.” He watched Deorwen hop down beyond the horses. śRadomor should have pulled these things down. A roof makes a better shield than a man could carry on his shoulder.” śIt’s not like him,” Lamoric muttered and slipped from the saddle, watching for Coensar. Durand dropped painfully into the roadway. A few paces away, a raven peered into a man’s eye and rasped, śHa!” And Deorwen began muttering. śQueen of Heaven,” she said, plain as day. śWhat is this place?” But Coensar was already charging back through the mobs and wreckage, trailing Sallow Hythe and bluff Honefells. As the pack of them barged under the narrow cover with Durand and the others, Coensar dropped from the saddle. śLordship, they’ve fled"a full rout"through the gates and up into the next bloody tier. Swanskin’s trying to force the gates.” śWe’ve treed the devils,” said Honefells. The stubble on his chin glittered like a dusting of glass in the blood gleaming there. śI’d never have guessed he’d give us the first rampart so easily,” Lamoric said. śThey’re marshaling upstairs. They may like their chances better with us bottled up in this"” Coensar gave a sharp glance Deorwen’s way. Rather than keeping out of the way, she had begun tottering in small circles"that threatened to take her out under the eyes of Radomor’s bowmen. śWhat is wrong with the boy?” said Coen. śHere,” said Durand, and he dared a step out of cover to play shepherd. śUnder cover.” But Deorwen was murmuring, śNo, no, no.” śWhat’re you thinking?” he whispered, but as he brought Deorwen in, Durand caught sight of something on the rampart above the street: a hooked black smear between one building and the next. Lamoric was speaking, śIf I could have saved the boys this, I would. It’s more than anyone should see.” Durand picked out black smears both on the wall above them and on the inner face of the rampart they’d already conquered. The outlines of what might have been strange symbols seemed to shift in the shadows between the shops, high and low. Honefells grinned and wiped some blood from his chin. śThe lad’ll be fine. It’s not every day a boy rides against a walled city. And on a pony! When other pages squint through their fingers at the crash of a good tiltyard bout, he’s won his first battle. At this rate we’ll have Radomor drawn and quartered by noon. Maybe he’ll give in"save a few of his men.” śLordships,” said Durand. śWhat do you make of these markings on the ramparts? I swear, they’re nearly moving.” śFriend,” said Honefells. śYou have a morbid turn of mind. I"” śNo,” said Coensar. śWhat do you see?” The captain"the Champion of Gireth"closed his eyes, then tried to follow the direction of Durand’s gaze. But, just then, the whole city moved: a jolt in the roadbed shook crows from a score of corpses. Around Durand, blades flashed up. And every man scanned the roadway. śThose were boots,” purred Sallow Hythe. The sound came from beyond the streets. śMen on the march.” śAye,” said Coensar. śSounds like bloody battalions,” said Honefells. They could see nothing but sky between the buildings across the road"across the killing ground. But Durand thought the shop’s upper floors would make a better vantage point. śHere,” said Durand and put his good shoulder through the latched door and led the others up into a dark third-story bedchamber that seemed to look out over the plain. As each man reached the unglazed windows, he stuck there like a fly in honey. Durand was last, or nearly. Crows and rooks and ravens sailed past. But, between two buildings leaning across the road, he could see down over the city wall. An army swarmed over the wasted acres beyond the battlements. They had come down from the north, fording the Bercelet, as the men of Gireth had forded the Rushes from the south, and now they trooped in to block the only escape from Ferangore. There was no way out. śIt is six to one, at least.” Honefells scarcely breathed the words in the stolen bedroom. śWhere have they come from?” Coensar murmured. Through the screen of burgher’s roofs, they saw hundreds of knights in mail"more men than Durand had seen at any tournament"perhaps more than two thousand men in the saddle. Beyond them marched nine thousand foot. Sallow Hythe set his long fingers on his face, his tone was marveling. śThere are not so many men fit to bear arms in all of Yrlac. And no man could hire so many. There is not coin enough in the whole kingdom. Where has he found them?” Durand stepped into the window, closing his fingers over the raw wood of its mullions. At the front, the men wore the even green of Yrlac. Toward the rear, however, the battalions lost their uniformity, breaking into the party-colored confusion of any host among the Sons of Atthi. There were so many. Then, in the midst of it all, Durand saw a broad banner he recognized: at the head of Radomor’s new army floated blue and yellow diamonds. Durand remembered the bewildering pattern"he knew it from fights at Red Winding and High Ashes and Tern Gyre. śThe diamonds . . .” he said. Faces darkened, squinting. A voice breathed, śHost of Heaven . . .” Then, Durand heard Deorwen speak. śIt’s Mornaway,” she said. One by one, the men turned to face her, the blue hood of her cloak now down about her shoulders. śMoryn of Mornaway rides under those colors,” said Durand. He remembered the Rooks taunting him about śfriends and enemies” back on a boat on the Bay of Eldinor. Here was Deorwen’s lost brother, found at last in the worst of places. Lamoric came adrift from the window and the war. śHow have you come here, Deorwen? Now, at this, of all moments?” śLord Moryn would not do this,” said Sallow Hythe. śHe is his father’s son.” Durand remembered old Duke Severin, Moryn’s father. The venerable Duke of Mornaway had lived seventy winters without a broken word, and Moryn would be no different. śMoryn did not come to the Mount of Eagles,” said Durand. In a dead tone of impossibility, Honefells murmured the only conclusion, śMornaway has turned against the king.” Deorwen was still. The little room had a sturdy bed. The walls were primrose yellow. śWhat are you doing here?” said Lamoric. śI don’t understand.” He looked at his wife as though he had never seen her before. śWe must get you out of this place. We will throw ourselves on Radomor’s mercy. He would not kill you with the rest of us.” Deorwen took a step, setting a hand on her husband’s face. And Durand looked away, dizzy. He saw gray slices of the rampart stone between the shops and houses. He had seen these before, but now, with height and distance, what had seemed like smears became the tall letters of a barbed script that ran in chains behind the buildings, all very easy to see for a man who didn’t care much about the army beyond. The brushstrokes circled the whole ring of Ferangore’s walls, above and below that seemed uncannily like an audience of taloned shadows circling them round. Something creaked on the stairs. As the whole room twitched around, Conran ducked through the low doorway. śThey’ve marked out this city in heart’s blood,” he rumbled. śCarrion crows snatch at the gasps of the dying. The streets drink our lifeblood. Only now in all the years since the Cradle landed. Only with the old wards in tatters could this be done! Radomor has brought the Hells into Errest.” śNo,” said Lamoric. śWe are upon his altar and the fires are lit, My Lord.” Lamoric looked to Deorwen. She had set her hand upon one bedpost, standing straight but small. There would be no parlay with a man who would turn his city into a shrine of devils. No mercy for any. Sallow Hythe stepped from the shadows. śLordship, there remains one avenue of escape.” He was neither stroking his narrow beard nor tenting his long fingers, not now. śWhat chance do you see?” pressed Lamoric. śWhat chance has you swallowing and avoiding my eye? Speak its name.” śYour wife. She is Mornaway’s daughter.” He glanced, for an instant, to Deorwen. Lamoric’s face was chalk, but Sallow Hythe was no coward. He pressed on. śI am not proud to have conceived the notion; however, it must be said, a bargain might yet be struck. We have his daughter. The old man could refuse us nothing.” Lamoric looked from the baron to his wife. śWe would hold her hostage? I would send my herald. Sir Durand, perhaps? He would tell Duke Severin: Free us from this snare, or His Lordship, Lamoric of Gireth, will kill your daughter? My lady wife?” Sallow Hythe bowed another fraction. Lamoric stepped closer to the baron, moving closer with each word. śDurand could carry her ear as proof that she was with us. Or we might dangle her from the battlements as Durand made his announcement.” He turned from the man. śWe are not beaten. We have come through Acconel. Before this ends, it will be Radomor who feeds the crows!” He turned on Sallow Hythe. śAnd Deorwen is not here. Do you hear? Not with such talk already on your lips. I will kill the man who speaks of her, do you understand? We will roast bloody Radomor on his own bloody altar and be done with the devil once and for all!” 28. The Tiers of Ferangore Lamoric charged into the street, howling, śTo the upper gate! To the upper gate! With our bare hands, we’ll take them!” And the army rose from its thousand resting places, charging up the street. The fiercest men of Gireth surged forward with great axes flashing over their heads"though torrents of scalding water and great stones shuddered down from the battlements. The street seethed, and Lamoric’s liegemen staggered for footing on the flesh and bones of their fallen comrades. The lords of Gireth roared commands, and storms of Gireth’s arrows lashed the teeth of the upper battlements, rebounding over the crowd, splintering against stone, or catching in the flesh of Yrlac’s men. All the while, the Septarim prayed even as arrows struck them down and the shadowy glyphs writhed upon the walls, bearing eager witness. Behind the scrambling men of the vanguard, Durand staggered at Lamoric’s side, trying to keep up as pain snatched his breath away. He carried a great shield he’d stolen from a dead man and the thing now kept Lord Lamoric safe from the hail of arrows"Lamoric cared little for his own safety as he watched the upper gate stand invulnerable while Coensar ranged about the narrow battlefield throwing men into the fight like a madman. The street between those upper and lower ramparts was like a canal. And they threw wave after wave into the same slaughter. śYou can’t break iron bands with axemen, Durand,” Lamoric howled in the midst of the maelstrom, his voice loud under the arrow-studded shield. Radomor’s bowmen nailed helms to living skulls. śI’m a fool. I drove us in here. I rushed and roared and spurred us every step from Acconel. And I should have heard you when"” A feathered creature checked its flight in both men’s faces, the snap of its feathers spraying live flecks in their eyes. śDevils!” Lamoric spat. He struggled for air, smearing his face with both hands as birds tumbled in rapture everywhere. śWe’re caught, and we’re not going to tear free. Mornaway should be on our backs already. It’s all"” Lamoric railed and the men in the back ranks turned"catching their master’s despair. Before another head could turn, Durand took Lamoric by the coat and threw him back into the shadow of a blacksmith’s shop. śWhat does any of that matter now? You reckon Radomor will stop? He’ll come whether we fight or lie down, Lordship. We cannot stop. You cannot.” He had the man by the collar and, for an instant, Lamoric looked like a green pageboy, gulping at the reeking air. śRight,” he said. śGod, let me go.” The man shook the clouds from his skull. śSo where is Mornaway? Why don’t I answer that before I run shrieking through the streets, eh?” Suddenly, Lamoric was on the move once more, pushing past Durand, nearly shoving his way out of the shelter. śWhere’s our bloody lookouts? There!” Across the road, one-eyed Berchard clung, tucked up an alley under a bit of roof where he could look down over the lower battlement. The Rooks’ sooty glyphs bent and stretched up the wall like slow black flames reaching for his backside. śBerchard! Berchard? Are the devils still down there?” The man twisted a fraction"careful, lest some archer skewer a precious haunch or shoulder. śAye, they are, Lordship! Great mute ranks. Battalions numbering in the thousands. A good deal of praying.” śPrayer? What Powers would answer them? They refuse every call to parlay. My wife’s people! The devils are bent on slaughter. What are they waiting for?” Lamoric demanded. śCan’t say, Lordship. Moryn himself ain’t out there; could be they’re waiting on him.” Lamoric spat a curse. śAnd there’s the mystery. Where is the man?” Berchard knuckled his bad eye. śI see the old duke plain enough. Poor man’s like a rake the way the armor swings from his bones. But there’s no sign of the son.” And Durand began to wonder. The man had never seen the Mount of Eagles. And there were Deorwen’s dreams of the man trapped. . . . What had happened to Lord Moryn? śThey’re all in the saddle down there, whatever they’re up to,” said Berchard. Lamoric smeared palms over his features. śI cannot fathom this: it can’t be the old Duke of Mornaway. Durand, you know my wife. We’ve both seen what Moryn’s like. Could the man who raised them turn traitor? Could old Severin"” śLordship!” Berchard called their attention back to the rampart as a hundred dull-throated trumpets moaned. śThis’ll be it!” The old campaigner scrambled to curl tighter under his corner of eaves. The trumpets bleated. śDamn me. I must see!” said Lamoric, and he bolted for Berchard’s spot, Durand chasing him with the big shield bouncing over their heads. In a jostling instant, all three men crammed the sheltered corner to look down on their new enemy. Upon the fallow apron below the walls, old Severin of Mornaway’s commanders held their swords high, calling their vast army to a stillness as tight as a bowstring. There were so many; more than Durand had ever seen in one glance. Helmets and blades glinted like waves on a solemn ocean. And Berchard’s little hidey-hole was where they would strike first. Durand glanced up and down the wall. Wherever a rooftop gave shelter from Radomor’s archers in the upper city, a paltry knot of Lamoric’s archers fitted arrows to their bowstrings, muttering charms. Here and there, swordsmen, knights, and plowmen-soldiers spit in their hands, making ready. But there weren’t nearly enough, not by thousands. And the tide of Mornaway’s ocean would carry every man before it. śI had best not tell you what I’m thinking,” Lamoric breathed. śYou’ll have me by the collar again.” śNot this time,” said Durand. But as Durand spoke, he happened to glance into Lamoric’s face"where he saw a strange glow. A hundred shimmering sparks glittered in Lamoric’s wide eyes. śThat devil!” he said. Durand twisted in time to see torches tumbling down over the street behind them, bouncing upon thatched roofs. A blaze was already crawling in the thatch of the blacksmith’s shop. śHells,” said Lamoric. śWith all the burning in this dukedom, he ought to be out of torches! It’ll be a furnace. And I’ve got Coensar rushing from gate to gate, trying to hold both doors to the oven. We must break out.” A hiss from Berchard snapped their attention back to the field below the wall: the blades of Mornaway flashed down in a blaze of mirrored fire. And the Host of Mornaway advanced. śDurand,” said Lamoric. śGet to my wife. Watch over her. God. I’ve never been much good to her, she won’t die for my damned foolishness here.” Above them, the flames leapt over themselves, already sealing the street under a vault of fire. śLordship"” Durand protested. But Lamoric caught him by the back of his neck. śI won’t have her held ransom by my own men! I won’t have her dead. Who can I trust if not you? Save her if you can. Swear it!” And, when Durand could only gape at his lord: śGo! Durand, go! I have business at the gates!” Lamoric snatched Durand’s shield and leapt into the alley, darting uphill. Berchard’s eye was on Durand’s face"with more grim scrutiny than a man could endure. śBy Heaven, Lord,” he called, śI swear it.” And, half in horror, he threw himself from Berchard and lurched into the street. Who can I trust if not you? He flinched from the bloody words. Once more in the street, Durand threw himself into motion. Beasts and cinders, birds and soldiers, churned in the narrow channel, but he fought toward the potter’s shop where he’d last seen the girl. Tall men stood along the battlements, sweeping attackers down with huge blows of their axes or swords. The fire at their backs snatched arrows away like straw in a furnace. śDeorwen!” he shouted. The Rooks’ sigils slithered in the parching heat like a crowd pressing in and rubbing its paws. The army was set to tumble down the Hells already aflame. śDeorwen?” he called. śShe’s here!” It was Coensar who answered as he pitched through the chaos of beasts and cinders. śDurand, where’s His Lordship?” Durand could hardly meet his captain’s eyes. śHe’ll be at the upper gates,” Durand said. Smoke boiled, and horses charged in circles, vaulting over one another and leaping at the walls. śHe’s sent me for Deorwen.” Coensar cursed. śThat potter’s shop. Here!” In a few moments, they made the shop, Durand catching hold of the door frame and spotting a crowd of priests, pages, cooks, and grooms"all wavering between the crushing violence of the horses and the heat of the mounting fire. Deorwen stared back at him, frantic and only half-disguised. śI’m to watch you,” Durand said. śI’ve been a child,” she said. śHow did I ever think to find poor Moryn?” Durand had almost forgotten. Abruptly, Deorwen’s eyes widened. śWhere’s my husband?” śHe’s gone to the upper gate,” said Durand. She touched her face. śAnd he’s sent his shield-bearer to me?” Before Durand could answer, another pack of mad horses bolted through, buffeting him against the storefront"and against Deorwen. For an instant, he balanced between agony and"he wanted to hold her; he wanted to carry her from this burning world. But he pushed himself back. The effort of will nearly shut his eyes. Coensar was looking on; Durand could only guess at what that gallant captain saw. Lamoric deserved better than a faithless servant groping his wife. As Durand rallied his muddled thoughts, a soldier barged in among the muleteers and camp followers cowering all around. śBastard cowards! Every man with ballocks and backbone to the walls!” It was Badan. śOn the walls, they’re butchering men on your account,” he said, throwing boys and old men into the cauldron of fire and wild horses. śFind what you can and mount the bloody rampart or I’ll gut you sure as ever will Mornaway or Yrlac!” Old men and boys scrambled as Badan darted back and forth, barking and snapping. Suddenly, the fool was snarling at Deorwen’s arm. śCome on you! You’ll fight or I’ll"” Though Coensar moved to stop the man, Durand was quicker"in an instant, he’d sent the whoreson sprawling. śGet your bloody hand off!” Badan swarmed up with bare steel already in his fist. śI’ve had a bellyful of your shoving, mooncalf! Host of Hell, I have!” And there was Durand squared off with the whoreson, a crowd on one side and the churning street on the other. And Deorwen looking on. In pain and fury, Durand snarled, shoving the point of his sword flashing at Badan. śYou’ve had your own back for that push, haven’t you? Your bit of petty vengeance! There’s Lamoric sprawled on the stones! Me, half torn to pieces!” His broken teeth, his hitched shoulder, his battered face. Though Badan ought to have been distracted, he found a moment to peer closely at the supposed stranger Durand was shielding. And, in an instant, his baffled anger had hitched itself into a leer. śOh!” His gaze darted over hidden curves, spotting the dark eyes of Lamoric’s lady looking back at him. śI see now, I think. Who’ve you got under your wing, Sir Durand, eh?” The answering flash of Durand’s blade sent Badan skittering back across the burning storefront, dancing clear. Durand ignored shouts and reaching hands, stalking Badan through the flying cinders. śThe damned city might have fallen for your vengeance. Your pride nearly put Radomor in Gunderic’s Tower!” He swatted Badan’s shield, two-handed, once and twice. śDid the Rooks give you silver? Or did you do their work without fee?” Coensar shouted; he had Deorwen by the arm. But, fighting at the limit of his strength, Durand could not answer. Every switch of Ouen’s old sword was nearly enough to tear the thing from Durand’s grip. The blade struck rust and sparks from sword and shield and iron mail as he battered Badan back. Then, at the door of the potter’s shop, the fool slipped. His bald skull cracked from the door frame and Durand made to finish him. But as Durand lunged over the threshold, the fire had finished its work among the upper floors of the shop. And, somewhere in the heart of the old building, a great beam gave way in the heat. In a crashing instant, the weight of four floors thundered down, the blaze shuddering through the wide door, filling Durand’s throat, the street"and searing the faces of the crowd. As Durand tottered, eyes stung, the black shape of Badan bulled from the wrecked door. Durand swished Ouen’s sword high, hoping only to" But suddenly Coensar landed on Durand’s shoulders. Upon the burning doorstep, the master swordsman grappled with Durand like a child, saving Badan for the moment, and leaving Durand to stagger free, facing both men. Deorwen looked on. śWhat do you mean by"?” śDurand,” Coensar reasoned, śyou cannot kill a"” śThis thing is no peer! What liegeman seeks to slay his lord? What do I owe him?” Scarcely clear of the fire, Badan capsized. śHe’s thrown his master in the street before his own citadel.” Durand hoisted the point of the sword up, angling toward the wretched traitor. śWhat pain does the devil not deserve?” Hands caught hold of Badan, pulling him free of the inferno’s verges. The man’s head lolled and Coensar grimaced in the chaos of the street. All the while, Deorwen was watching. The fierce captain squeezed his eyes tight. śGod, boy. The fool did none of those things!” Durand wavered, his glance flickering to the dome of Badan’s lolling head. śWhat?” The captain covered his face. The childish gesture shot through Durand like ice and premonition. śHe’s not the man!” Durand shook his head. śWhat do you"?” śHost of Heaven, you fool boy!” the captain shouted over the firestorm. śThere was nothing else. . . . Half a thousandmen I’ve fought.” The words had him twisting. śThen, Radomor’s fiends took Geridon.” The Champion. śNot since I was a boy had such a chance fallen within my grasp. Not in a lifetime. And I was the hero of the hour, remember, scattering that nest of archers above the city! Freeing our last hope from Radomor’s bloody trap. There were smiles on a hundred hard faces looking my way, and I was Champion, near as damnit. But when I wheeled about, there you were: you had our Lamoric slung over your saddlebow and you were riding. Snatching him from death. Hells, you were on bloody Geridon’s own horse, Durand!” The point of Durand’s sword touched the mud; the thing might have been leagues from Durand’s hand for all he felt it. He could scarcely see the mad street around him. śNo.” But the fires flashed in Coensar’s eyes. śLook close, Durand.” Durand saw gray hair, bruises: an old man. śA duke cannot cast his champion out, lame or broken. Not with honor. How many other chances would I have before it’s too late?” A chained flail was twisted in Coensar’s belt, the spines of its urchin head matching the marks in Durand’s bones as neatly as the teeth of a key. It had always been there. Over the man’s shoulder, Deorwen wavered, her eyes wide with God knew what. The street burned. Wild horses crushed men or carried them into the ranks of the enemy. Axes clopped in helms on the ramparts and every man would be dead before the Eye could burn another hour. Durand found the captain’s soot black face. Badan hung between a muleteer and a priest, an arm over each shoulder. The blackened cloaks of the whole lot struggled as if to fly. In the Heavens, Radomor’s sanctuary spire stood like a blade in the maelstrom’s heart. Durand pictured the Rooks laughing in the empty sanctuary while the storm of wings and the fire churned round and round. He pictured the ribbed darkness of its vaults high above the mad house city. And his mouth opened. The image brought back a memory; a memory of Deorwen’s dream. Here was Deorwen watching him. And before his eyes was the ribbed darkness she’d seen. Cackling. Where would the devil Rooks be but in the high sanctuary, defiled? What had they said in the muddy Gulf of Eldinor when he’d been half-dead on the deck of a stranger’s ship and they had croaked down from the masthead? śHostages.” They had laughed"hostages who made enemies of friends and friends of enemies. Now, here was Mornaway, playing friend to the devils. śHow else could they have brought old Duke Severin to their side?” For an instant and without meaning to, he met Deorwen’s eyes. śI will end it,” Durand rasped, and, without one word more, he lurched from girl and frozen men. There was rope among the horses. Some must have belonged to engineers. He found a grappling iron and he pitched down the burning street, his eyes on high gaps between the rooftops"past the gawking shadows of the Rooks’ dark sigils where Radomor’s men walked the battlements. Wild horses darted round him. Finally, Durand staggered between two burning houses. He’d seen an empty parapet. Radomor’s fools would all be at the gate. Deorwen nearly skidded past him and the alley. He seized the woman’s arm. śGo back.” There was hardly room for two people to stand in the narrow alley. Around him, the plaster walls were as hot as fresh loaves. She was too close. His bent back had them standing nearly eye to eye. śIt’s the sanctuary, isn’t it?” she said. Smoke boiled around them. śNo.” But he wasn’t sure what question he was answering. Deorwen could not be in his mind. Not now. śHe’s there. And you’re going for him.” Durand gulped a breath of air and mashed his eyes shut. śYou must stay. Stay with bloody Coensar.” He turned from the girl and swung the grapnel slithering to the battlements. The first ten feet were a high slope, the rest was an old wall. He stamped one boot on the bank and started to walk himself up the line. He breathed in gulps. To end all this, he would pull the city down with his hands. She called from behind him. śDurand, you can’t"” śLeave me.” His back and shoulder twisted as they took his weight. śNo,” she said. But Durand was gone. Hand-over-hand, he climbed the mud slope and then started on the stone wall atop it. The Rooks’ devil figures pressed shadow faces against the stone, but they smeared and eddied at the touch of Durand’s boots, erupting into flies. The nearby fires licked his coat of mail. But he reached, wrestling with the parapet’s overhang and, finally, heaved himself through an embrasure with pounding blood ready to burst from his skull. Coensar and Lamoric and the whole world were below him now. The city was above. He could concentrate on Moryn and the Rooks. Only as he spilled onto the parapet and his shaking hands and knees did he notice Deorwen: nose to soot-blackened nose with him. She’d slithered up behind him. śBy God, how did"” he began, but an inexplicable terror flashed over her face. He twisted, and a crossbow’s bolt hacked at his mailed arm. The thing could have struck Deorwen. Only a few paces down the battlement, a sentry stood, his crossbow clattering as he scrabbled for a mace at his belt. And the man fell with Durand’s grappling iron in his jaw. Durand followed the iron hook in the next heartbeat, mashing the man’s mouth shut and whipping a dagger across his throat. Deorwen was gasping. But even before Durand could roll away, some bit of the mad darkness overhead seemed to tumble free. It swooped to dart between Durand’s wrists and snatch at the dying soldier’s lips. A raven, the thing flapped in just as the poor devil breathed his death rattle, then it was away. śHells! It’s taken his last breath.” Durand rocked onto his haunches. His hands were greasy with blood, shaking. Coen, Badan, Deorwen"feeding this damned soldier to the crows. He could stand nothing else. śDurand,” Deorwen said. śDurand! There isn’t time.” But Durand could only shake his head; her voice was too much. śThere are others on the wall.” She touched him. śPlease.” And Durand fought his thoughts into order. He forced himself to give the battlements a good look. Fires in the streets below the parapet threw high shadows. But faces glowed here and there where sentries peered down into the inferno"one no more than a dozen paces away, a few more beyond that. Deorwen was looking up into Durand’s face, and Durand understood that he must have been staring. śDurand, we cannot stay here. Wipe off your hands. I didn’t scale a building to die on the first landing. We must leave this place. They’ll find us.” They covered an open stretch of gleaming cobbles before the first building. Durand could hear Radomor’s men roaring over the ramparts, sprinting with messages, and fighting at the gates. In this poorer quarter of the city, there were even a few poor fools still cowering at their windows. As they lurched onward, Durand struggled to get command of the spinning through his aching head. He’d been a fool not to understand how hungry Coensar must be. He’d been a fool to stay so near the wife of his lord and master. That was enough. Now, he would break Radomor’s hold over the Duke of Mornaway and end the fight if he could. Below the second rampart, Ferangore was a single street. Above, the city began to sprawl. Without Deorwen leading, Durand might have blundered anywhere. But, as it was, she led him ducking through gutters and alleys till they came up against the third rampart. And, in an instant he knew that although he had been to Ferangore, he had never really paid attention to the third rampart. Now, it loomed above his broken head and shoulder like a storm cloud. The earthwork at the base stood as high as a castle mount, while the curtain wall atop the bank soared like the walls of Acconel. Deorwen had the grapnel in her hands. śDurand, can you throw so high?” Durand thought of the men dying in the city behind them. Carrion birds zipped above the wall and rooftops overhead as he opened and closed his fists. śHells.” śGod,” said Deorwen. śAnd I think that’s shouting.” Durand heard the howls of alarm. śThey’ll have found our friend. There’s no place to hide here. We’ll have to find another way onward,” said Deorwen. Already he could hear the boots in the alleys behind them. śDurand! We will find another way. There will be a longer rope or a drain or a doorway or just"” But Durand had seen something as he stared at the rooftops and the sky. Some of the crooked rooftops stood very near the wall. śNo,” Durand said. śFollow me.” With a bound into the street, he found the tenement door and was groping his way up narrow stairs and passageways, even as the aged building shifted and creaked under his feet. He barged through door after door, sometimes startling whole dens of wide-eyed children in dark and musty cells. Higher and higher. Deorwen whispered after him: śAre you all right?” The thin walls thrummed like a drum skin at the touch of rough voices outside. Durand heaved himself to the stair’s creaking end and a last meager room. The racket of horsemen rang from the street below the tenement. Durand found neither smoke hole nor rear windows. The room was hardly broad enough for two people to stand. He heard shouts. śThey’re right outside,” Deorwen said. śIt’s up or nothing.” ś ŚUp or nothing,’ ” Durand repeated, seeing no way up. But, as he made to turn in the narrow space, his aching shoulder brushed what he had taken for another patch of scabbed plaster"and outdoor air spilled into the room. He’d blundered into a hairy curtain of wool. śThey’ve draped a window!” said Deorwen. Durand tore the thing away, but found only a construction of pine boards thrust out above the alley. A sad twist of wire held a dry spray of pennyroyal above a hole in the floor. śA privy,” said Deorwen, close. śWe are trapped.” The tenement was already shaking to the din of new boots on its rickety stair. śNot yet.” Durand ducked into the creaking perch, his shoulder powdering the flowers. Walls and ceiling were nothing but dry pine. With a quick crash, Durand was looking at the eaves of the tenement, only a few feet away. śHere,” he said. He took big handfuls of thatch in his fists and, despite the protests of every bone, hauled himself up. In moments, Deorwen was crawling on the black straw beside him. Even on the very peak of the roof, the battlements stood five fathoms over their heads. He unlimbered the grapnel and, tottering on the rotten straw, managed a fierce throw that caught the battlements at the very limit of his reach. There were soldiers shouting in the pennyroyal room. Durand caught Deorwen up and jumped into a crushing pendulum swing that slammed his elbows into the masonry. But he climbed, strangling with Deorwen’s arms around his neck. ATOP THE WALL, the bulk of the upper city loomed. Here were the empty mansions of the sensible rich and the abandoned halls of the craft guilds. Durand took it all in with a weaving glance. The heart of Ferangore stretched from the battlements behind them to the final rampart, a sixty-acre jumble. Above it was the last tier. Durand could see the citadel and sanctuary spire, bone gray without its cloak of ravens. śOne last hurdle and we’ll be up with the Rooks and their sanctuary,” he said, and Deorwen touched his cheek. śNow we must be moving,” he muttered"and hauled himself into motion once more. There were soldiers between the rich men’s walls. Once, a horse’s clatter drove the pair into a vaulted doorway. Next, watchmen’s shouts had them skirt a square of open flagstones. In the end, they ran a zigzagged league to cover a stone’s throw of the city. Finally, though, Durand pitched into a broad, cobbled street. Above him towered the last and most fearsome of the ramparts: the wall of the citadel upon which stood Radomor’s keep and the high sanctuary. śIn a thousand years, our host could not have climbed so high,” Durand murmured. All the walls below were toys beside the one that guarded the citadel. Under the churning crows, this gray wall soared twenty fathoms from the street to its rude crown of timber hoardings. Durand imagined standing in those wooden galleries with the whole city small below one’s feet. He felt the rope in his hands, hairy, rough, and useless. śIt is too much,” Deorwen murmured. Even on Durand’s best day, the climb would have been impossible. The wall stood easily twice the height of the tallest mansion in the streets below. śI’d do better trying to hook the moon.” A creak from the hoardings hinted at the presence of sentries in the high dark"an arrow from that height could end the climb in an instant. Durand and Deorwen slipped through the black door of a nearby building. As bent, trying to catch his breath, he realized that he and Deorwen had stepped into the front room of a proper inn with long wooden benches and a flagstone floor"and that it was all very familiar. śHells,” he said. śI’ve been in this place.” The smell of the dining hall took him back half a year"back to an evening when dust had sifted from the ceiling at the street-side windows as he’d peered through shutters up at Alwen’s tower. śWith Radomor and the Rooks and that bloody Gol Lazaridge.” He opened and closed his hands, thinking that there’d still be blood in the creases. He had killed Gol just as he’d killed the soldier on the wall down below: with a knife across the gullet. śThis is where we waited for poor Alwen to play her tune. They took Radomor upstairs to witness. The stairs will be back there.” He waved at the gloom. śI don’t"” murmured Deorwen. śShe played to call her lover.” śOh.” śAldoin of Warrendel . . .” Durand began. But he stopped, remembering: Aldoin had known a way into the keep. śDurand, you make little sense. I"” śHe was swimming for the great hall, Deorwen. Aldoin waited for Alwen to play from her tower window"and then he found some way. There were cisterns. Something under the city. A well.” Though he’d heard it all from the Rooks’ crooked mouths, the story had been true enough to drown Warrendel under Radomor’s keep. He could almost hear the murderous duke creaking on the floorboards upstairs, almost feel the brooding man about to charge down. The place swelled with memory. śAldoin had a house,” Durand gulped. śA bawdy house. Or so Heremund said. Once. The Maiden and the Mother at the door, I think it was.” Deorwen spoke into the empty room. śDurand, we’ve just passed such a place.” And Durand caught her arms, ignoring her flinch of pain. He wanted very much to get out of Radomor’s inn. śCan you remember where?” They pelted back into the smoke once more while the sanctuary spire peered down over the shoulders. _________ HER PATH TOOK them very near Radomor’s main gate"and so near the fifty mailed soldiers on guard that the garlic on their breath stung Durand’s nostrils as he panted by the stone Queen of Heaven at Aldoin’s doorway. The doors on the other side of the Queen’s hip were locked and studded with iron. The house was strong. A quick glance showed no ground-floor windows in the stone walls that a man could slip through. And Durand could think of nothing but to try his remaining strength against the doors. A running start might do it. Deorwen raised her hand. śWait!” śThere’s no time.” But Deorwen was right. At Radomor’s gate, some of the guards were hopping off their backsides. There were hooves clattering closer up some other road, and the men were jumping to the windlasses to haul the gate high. Every man was distracted. As that providential rider swung through the gates, Durand lurched into the street"free to be seen by any fool who glanced"and bowled into the doors with all the weight of man, mail, and madness. The doors cracked and Durand reeled. Instead of walls and floors and furnishings, he pitched into a house of broken beams, landing in a deafening clatter of debris where the ceiling was open to the carrion birds wheeling above. Behind him, Deorwen pushed the broken doors shut"or as nearly as she could. śWhat happened here?” Deorwen gasped. Durand crushed his face with both hands. Stone walls and gloom had conspired to make him forget. śThe Rooks. A fire. Radomor set the place ablaze when Aldoin swam. Quickly!” śHe couldn’t swim back. . . .” He could see the thought trembling in her eyes. śThere must be a cellar door or a wellhead here somewhere.” Durand scrambled off among broken beams and scorched walls. Joist ends stood like blades from the walls ringing the place. But Deorwen had slipped through to an interior courtyard, knowing better what a nobleman’s town house should be. śIt would have been here, I think.” She heaved back a knot of joist or rafter to reveal a narrow ring of broken limestone. śHere,” she said. As Durand ducked close, sure enough, he felt the chill of dank air curling up from that dark throat. Once more, voices reached them. As he made to pull one timber loose, swaggering talk flickered over the ruin. The jingle of mail coats and harsh laughter told him that an armed patrol was nearby. Remembering the half-broken doors, Durand ripped the black throat of the well open. śHow deep?” Deorwen said. Durand shook his head. He was already shucking off his iron coat; the thing was so loud, like a rain of coins. Boots scuffed in the street just beyond the broken door. He dared not even whisper. Deorwen peered around the broken courtyard. śWe will have to tie the"” But Durand caught her close, breathing his words into her ear. śDeorwen, when the battle’s done, you’ll look for a wise woman.” She struggled, but he crushed her tight. śMake your way to your father’s people.” He didn’t want to tell her that the swim was madness"to face the duke alone was madness. He was leaping into death. śPlease. I swore to Lamoric.” śHere. What’s this?” said a voice"just outside. Deorwen pushed him back, just far enough to see: nose to nose. In her eyes, Durand read a thousand moods. But the door was opening. śHide,” Durand said, and threw himself into the dark. IF HE’D HAVE landed straight, he’d have snapped both legs. As it was, he tumbled backward in the long, black plunge before he slapped the water. Every splash echoed through leagues of dark vaults, and the light of the smoky world above fell in one dancing circle upon the black water. Beyond this, a man could see only rumors of low arches hunkered over squat columns of stone. Durand had just begun to stand when Deorwen flashed through the light. He broke her fall with a slap of open hands. Agony was like lightning. śGod.” But he gripped her hard, and felt her muscles against him. She was mad. She was a fool. They would both die and no one would know where or why. śThey’ll have heard us,” she spluttered, her lips against his jaw. Right overhead, the well hung like a moon in the dark ceiling. Their fall had taken them through a massive stone vault and now they waded in a cistern that had hollowed the hilltop. A man looking down might spot them. śCome on,” she said, shrugging to strip off her woolen outer layers until she stood in nothing more than a boy’s linen shirt and breeches. śWe must get away from the well. I don’t know what they’ll think up there. Which way?” Durand took his eyes from the girl, peered up at their patch of sky, and did his best to guess. In a moment, the wellhead rang with shouts. COLD WATER IS a crushing thing that twists the muscles tight and squeezes the marrow in a grip of creaking pain. As Durand sloshed out of the light, he picked out fanciful creatures snaking around the capitals of each stout column. Fiends leered and plowmen danced. He pushed on into a gloom without shape. śThis is where Aldoin came,” breathed Deorwen, her voice all shivers in the dark. śHe’ll have been the last man to walk this way, I’d guess.” There was a moment’s breathing hesitation. śI wonder: Did Alwen know where her man went when she called for him?” śI wouldn’t think so,” Durand said. He hardly needed to think. śImagine what would have happened if he’d told her.” If Alwen had known, she would never have summoned him to drag himself through. śHe’ll have kept his trap shut.” The frigid grip of the water worked higher round Durand’s chest and soon he was swimming awkwardly and fighting to breathe. He heard skitterings among the bright and hollow sounds of water, but could see nothing. Finally, his paddling fingers struck a stone wall"blank, without seam or flaw. For an instant, he shut his eyes. Deorwen sloshed up at his side, scrabbling in vain for purchase. śHow did he get on from here?” she asked. śGod knows.” Durand felt her foot flutter against his numb shin. śAre you sure you’re up to this. I can hear you breathing"” śThere’ll be some kind of pipe,” Durand said. śThere must be something.” With an awkward kick, he pushed off along the wall, scrabbling at the clammy stone until his fingers juddered over something under the surface like a lip of pottery. śHere!” he gasped, groping around an empty ring. śIt is the right way,” said Deorwen. śGods. I think. I see the wellhead behind us. We might have come anywhere. I don’t know how much longer I can keep swimming.” Durand felt a rim of pottery"a curve above and below"and he thought that the tunnel the two arcs described might be broad enough to let him pass. Just. śAn opening. Big enough, I think. We go under,” Durand breathed. And with luck they would come up in the keep’s well. śYes?” śUnder. Yes. Queen of Heaven!” Durand closed his eyes, steeling himself for the duck into the frigid black. śDon’t think, ŚHow many conduits must run from this place?’ ” said Deorwen. Durand reached out. He wanted to only touch her, to know that she was more than a voice in the dark. Or so he thought. At the touch of her skin, he could do nothing but crush his cold lips to her cheek, her brow, the gasp of her lips. When he shoved himself clear, he gulped deep and dove below, a traitor to the end. HE KICKED THROUGH a space tighter than barrel hoops. He pulled at black joints where sections met, his damned shoulders lodging and forcing him to twist. In these frigid confines, he closed his mind. There wasn’t space to turn back. He already felt the ache of drowning in his lungs. But he clawed onward. And yard after yard, he came upon nothing but more of the narrow conduit. Dark thoughts shivered up like bubbles: if this Aldoin swam like a water rat, Durand would drown. If Aldoin had been slim as an otter, Durand would drown. An omission as simple as either of these from the story would leave him jammed in a clay pot coffin with Deorwen behind him"and she unable to turn back. He remembered the bodies tied in the Rushes under the twining crystal of their river tombs. He squeezed his eyes shut against a sudden ache for air. Yard by yard, he struggled on until his heart thundered and he clenched his face against the prying force of the water’s black fingers. Bubbles burst between his teeth. It was then he struck a wall"and couldn’t turn. In a flash, he pictured himself, a fool swimming up some long-blocked conduit the builders had forsaken. And he scrabbled at the wall mindlessly until his splayed fingers fell into a void. It was no wall, but a sudden bend in the tunnel. He’d spent nearly every instant of his air in panic. Now, he lashed, twisting fit to burst his lungs and snap his bad ribs. Ouen’s sword clanked and rang. Rising up, he clawed upward: a race between what was left of his will" "And he tore clear air from the black skin of the water. His own gasps and splashes clattered back in his ears; the racket would be heard by any fool for leagues. Every breath was like a kick in his sides. The great veins of his neck leapt against his jawbone while he gulped and shook. Fathoms above him, a faint disk of gray ceiling hung like another moon. When the shuddering elation of clear air let him free, he clung along the wall so that the water might settle while he waited for Deorwen to break the surface. And he waited in that well, shaking. He waited so long that the sloshing water grew still as midnight glass"as still as a pond after a drowning, shivering only with the beat of Durand’s heart. A legion of cold images flooded his mind’s eye: Deorwen trapped, Deorwen thrashing and dying, Deorwen silent in the black"all down below his bare feet, beyond reach. śHells.” He couldn’t go back for her. He imagined the cost of meeting her in that narrow pipe. But then, hands and a hard head collided with his beating legs, and Deorwen burst into the air, gasping and splashing. There was hardly room for both the swimmers and their elbows. But Durand beamed liked the war was won and caught the girl in a bear’s fierce grip, spluttering, śUh! Thank Heaven.” Deorwen laughed, or gasped. śYou’ll drown us!” she said, shuddering through the length of her body. śIs it the right place?” Durand looked up. How could he know? śIt must be.” śSwimming under Radomor’s stronghold. Gods. Quiet.” śAye. Right.” śNow, how did Aldoin get himself up? I see neither rungs nor rope. Are there handholds?” she asked, but it was not a well with tidy stairs or a neat ladder. śWe’ll have to think,” Durand growled. He could not imagine having swum so far only to drown like a child in a well. śHells.” The shaft was three feet across and lined with neat courses of masonry that gave no purchase. The crushing chill had them like a torturer’s vise. Deorwen gave a scoffing laugh. śWe’ll freeze and drown here while they roast and choke below.” śNo,” said Durand. He slapped his hands against the opposite walls, trying to hoist himself up. Pain lanced through his back; he could never climb that way. śNo good.” śYour legs. Try with your legs.” Stirring around in their frigid cauldron, Durand set his feet against one wall and again drove his back into the opposite. śRight,” he grunted. śMaybe.” It was the only way. Braced between the walls, he lifted himself. śI remember,” said Deorwen. śI used to climb the chamber doorway. I could get near to the lintel.” It was a child’s game, meant to be played by agile children for a few feet up a doorpost. Now, there were four or five clammy fathoms over Durand’s aching head. He tried to think of something to say to Deorwen, but nothing came and thinking was a dangerous pastime for him just then. He had no desire to remember who had smashed his teeth, broken his shoulder, scarred his face. With gritted teeth, he walked his wet boots up one wall, twisting his shoulders up the other. It was easier than thinking. śGo on,” said Deorwen. śThere’ll be rope,” Durand grunted. His shirt slid up his back as he twisted his shoulders higher. His sword belt tangled round his shoulder. He slid an inch for every inch he gained. śYou have it,” Deorwen called. śYou must be near.” But Durand found that it helped if he held his breath. Soon, the drops tumbling from his breeches had far to fall. His legs burned. śYou must be there. You must be.” And Durand cracked his head on something hard"his heart shivered. śWhat was that?” Deorwen’s voice demanded from the depths. Durand twisted his neck and reached up, scrabbling at a barrier of hard corners that stretched from wall to wall across the well mouth. The castle had dropped the grille over the well. It was a siege; this was a way in. They’d dropped the same grille that had drowned Aldoin. śDurand?” Deorwen’s voice echoed around him. He shoved and the grate clanked against its fittings, barred tight. His boots slid like wet bladders. And the flinch of catching himself snatched his breath away. śDurand?” śA moment,” he managed. The only light above came from around the well chamber’s door"the faintest thread. But he could see large holes and, when he crammed himself as near to the bars as he could, the well’s windlass. Somewhere there would be a bar or latch to pin the thing down. Deorwen pressed him: śWhat is it?” śThe grille,” said Durand. śBarred.” And Deorwen’s answer was slow in coming. śQueen of Heaven,” she breathed, finally. He could feel her eyes on the dark tangle of him struggling under the bars. Aldoin had died when these bars dropped. There had been no way out for him: a young man in good health. What did Durand have that Aldoin lacked? The man had been fit enough to swim the pipe and cistern. No one could snap iron bars. Durand scrambled for advantages. They’d left the rope in Aldoin’s burnt house. They’d left the hook with it. Abruptly, Durand realized that he did have one thing Aldoin had lacked all those moons ago: the damned sword knotted round his neck. Not waiting an instant, he fed the clattering thing up through the grating, feeling with its steel tip across the irregular grille beyond his sight, hunting for hinges and bars while his back slipped and his hams burned. But it worked. Twisting with his fingertips, he felt the blade catch against a sliding bit of bent iron. With a gasp of air, he scrabbled and jabbed, trying to slide the bolt one way or the other at the very edge of his reach and strength. Finally, it jerked free. IN COMPARISON, PULLING Deorwen up was simplicity. As he held the shivering girl to his chest, she looked up past his chin. śI’ll tell you one thing that’s certain: Those harlots of Heremund’s never swam up that thing. I don’t care what the fool skalds say.” DRIPPING AND HALF-NAKED, Durand set his ear to the well room’s door, wincing at memories of the keep beyond it. He would rather have been anywhere else in Creation. śIt is a crooked path to the sanctuary,” he muttered. Memories of the hot silence of the hall shouldered back into his thoughts. He remembered Radomor squatting on his father’s throne and Alwen locked in her tower. All of it waited beyond the door. But he forced himself to turn the handle"and stepped into a passage echoing with voices. Not too far away, a bench scraped on stone. There were still men in the duke’s hall. He had hoped the place might have been abandoned. śFollow me,” Durand whispered and led Deorwen swiftly through the darkness of the keep, putting distance between them and the dark hall. He thought of the puddles left behind them as slams and drags echoed from upstairs. śMost of Radomor’s army must be in the streets, but someone is on the move in this place,” Deorwen concluded. Durand kept his blade in his fist, knowing that any corner could hide a guard or God knew what. They dripped and hobbled and shivered down into the depths of the keep until"after wet ages"Durand found the slender passage between the foundation stones to the tiny sally port. There had been a man on the little door the last time Durand had come this way: a small man who’d tried to extort a few pennies from the new boy trying to slip away. But now the dank passage was empty, and when he glanced at his hands, the blood was gone. śI killed a man here,” he said. śOpen it,” was Deorwen’s answer. THE INTRUDERS SLIPPED into a cold alley under a ceiling of carrion birds. They stole between keep and curtain wall, taking only a moment to reach the keep’s ancient shoulder for a glimpse of their goal. The high sanctuary of Ferangore soared gray from the pavement to spires now lost among the wings that tumbled through high windows and choked the Heavens. The West Portal of the edifice"two doors like standing warships"stood flanked by rows of lofty kings and Powers in stone. Durand cared little for the artistry of the ancient place; he thought only of distances: fifty paces of open courtyard stood between him and the building, right at the heart of the enemy’s citadel. śWe are here,” said Deorwen. śNow, if we can only"” Durand fixed his aim on the portals between their old kings. Whatever the commotion inside the keep, outside, the entrance to Radomor’s fortress was still. Durand set off running. Twenty paces into his breakneck charge, however, there was a strangled yelp at Durand’s heels"Deorwen had followed him. She pointed up at the dark mouth of the covered stair of the keep’s entrance. śI don’t"” Durand began, but stopped when he heard a rumble pouring from the mouth of the keep stair. Deorwen had heard it first, but Durand knew the sound as well as any in Creation: armored men thundered down those stairs. The two invaders stood in the midst of an open yard. For a moment, Durand was sure that he had killed them both, then he saw the narrowest of bolt-holes: among the feet of the sanctuary’s portal kings were shadows. śRun,” said Durand, even as the hinges of the keep door began to squawk. In a headlong rush fit to break bones, they pelted toward sanctuary. Durand knew the door was swinging wide behind them. He dove, throwing Deorwen, and the two tumbled into a heap at the royal feet a pace from the great portal’s steps. Durand fought not to howl like an animal at the bruises left by the cobblestones. śVery still, Durand,” said Deorwen. śAnd breathe.” And she was wise, for the armored men came marching and only the merest film of shadow covered the intruders. The path of the soldiers took them within paces of the sanctuary. But as they came, Durand realized that these were not merely a few laggard men marching late to the battle. Between the two files of grim soldiers, he saw the green wings of a lord’s mantle gaping as wide as if he might climb into the flocks above the city. Here walked Radomor of Yrlac himself. In an openmouthed moment, Durand saw that he might end the siege with one flash of steel. Through the whole long assault on the citadel, he’d kept his sword. Radomor’s boys would be flat-footed at finding an armed enemy in the heart of the citadel. But there were so many guards. And any movement must draw the eyes of more men than he could hope to stop. His eyes twitched to Deorwen, imagining what would become of the girl. So he watched, shivering as coldhearted as any of the carved things on the flank of the sanctuary porch, numbering the bodyguard, feeling Deorwen’s fist on his arm as she read his strangled thoughts. Radomor marched near, then, just as he would have passed, a voice croaked from the sanctuary steps, hardly a pace from the long gray portal kings. śHighness!” it called, and like a flash of claws, every blade was bare among Radomor’s guard. Radomor, himself, did not turn more than his bald head. śDo not seek to check me in this, sorcerer.” His eyes glittered like black glass in a furnace. śOh, Your Highness, never! It is only that I am surprised to see you venture forth,” continued what was clearly one of the simpering Rooks. Durand heard the devil’s black sleeves swish upon the steps, the fiend bowed so low. śThere is little need.” Radomor’s guards had not sheathed their swords. śThere is every need,” Radomor rumbled. śThis boy Lamoric championed Ragnal’s cause before every lord of Errest the Old. Now, Acconel is burned and I am driven even from its ruins.” śBut he must die in any case,” the Rook reasoned. śThe boy is caught in a snare of your devising; his death can hardly be prevented.” As Durand shivered by the sanctuary step, a thick reek seemed to flow around him. The guardsmen winced and swallowed while the birds stormed round. śThere are times when death does not suffice,” said Radomor. śI must end this with my own hand. You know little of kingship if you imagine I can do less.” śYours is the blood of kings, Highness. My brother and I, we are but servants. It is only that, had we realized what you intended, we might have made your Champion available to you. But we are caught up in our little explorations just now. Harvest time, as it were. It is all a bit of a jumble, Highness,” he added confidingly. śPlay your games if you must, but I grow weary of the reek. I do not need those old bones to watch over me.” The man’s head sank the smallest fraction. śI will do as I must with or without him in attendance. I am not a child.” śNo, Highness.” Again, the Rook’s sleeves slapped the sanctuary steps. śWe will await news of your triumph.” Durand watched as the Duke of Yrlac turned from his sorcerer and stalked toward the battle"and Lamoric. He tried to convince himself that there had been nothing he could do. A sniff and chuckle hissed from the sanctuary’s porch, and the sorcerer’s soft footfalls retreated into the great nave. Durand twitched up from the pavement. And, with Radomor’s men still jingling for the gates, two intruders in clinging linens slipped into the reeking sanctuary of Ferangore. BEYOND THE MIGHTY portals, the sanctuary gaped like a gutted mountain choked with carrion birds. Columns dripped like the ribs of some putrid leviathan. Every surface seethed with worms. Durand could scarcely breathe, and gales of black wings spun through the light of the sanctuary’s greasy candles. śA ribbed darkness,” Deorwen said under feathered din and again at Durand’s side. śThe resting place of Radomor’s people back to the dawn of ages"some interred here sailed with Saerden Voyager.” Stone tombs crowded the pillars. śIf he heaps these atrocities upon his ancient kin, what will he have done to my poor brother?” she wondered. śThere,” Durand said. śThat is where they’ll be.” He would not play guessing games about the depravities of the Rooks with Deorwen; they would soon learn more than either of them could stomach. śThere are so many here. Lost. So very many. Hundreds. Thousands. The air is thick with them. These devil birds.” Durand turned to her and found eyes spinning. śDeorwen!” There was no time. śEvery mouth is full of howling. So much despair. Durand, I cannot think. Hopelessness to the ceiling. To the sky! It is too much. I cannot see.” Almost, she fell, but Durand caught her shoulders. At the very moment Deorwen fell, a scrap of laughter issued from the putrid warren of one side arcade. And Durand was trapped, feeling as though he’d been left alone without warning. Deorwen seemed beyond reason, overwhelmed by the necromancers’ stinking hell. Filth smeared every inch of the floor under Durand’s feet. Birds wheeled. śI can feel them all"every snatched breath. Their dreams, uprooted. Devils!” Durand pressed his hand over the girl’s mouth. Whatever her wise woman’s sight revealed to her, she could not see him. śFor the world, I would not drag you farther, but I cannot leave you here,” Durand said, and tugged Deorwen down the aisle. He raced through a hundred desecrations: relics smeared with feces, Powers hung by their heels, choked with rags, or robbed of their heads. Still, he pressed on, barefoot, till he spotted the bent shape of their quarry flapping round a distant pillar, vanishing down. Durand pulled Deorwen into a loping run"he would not lose his man"and found a twist of stairs curling into the sanctuary’s bowels. He had no doubt that he must find Moryn with these fiends, and this had been the Rook’s destination. Though Durand could see the putrid air standing before him as thick as a stagnant pool, he forced himself to duck low and descended. The birds from above now spun through a crypt that stretched like a sunken forest, choked to its horizons with mounds that glistened abhorrently. The birds lit upon these wet heaps in a frenzy. Durand’s Rook capered around one such pile to make his way toward the rotten head of the crypt and out of sight. śWhat have they done?” Deorwen said. śWhat is this?” śShh,” Durand said. śI am here.” And lifted his slender blade between them and the madness. Oily stalks crowded every niche in the walls and every sarcophagus on the floor. Durand’s bare toes slithered, and, when the knuckles of his sword hand glanced across something bulbous in the muck, he found a skull grinning back at him. Someone had packed the thing’s eyes with red muck. And white-edged knots of bloody symbols had been cut in the raw bone. Before Durand could shudder back, a crow lit upon the thing. The bird seemed to whisper in the skull’s ear"its stony beak dabbling"then the creature flashed back into the dark. Durand thought of the raven who’d landed on the dying sentry back on that first parapet. Here was the errand of every crow and kite in the city, flying from the mouths of the dead to this cavern of hollow, painted bones. śLost,” breathed Deorwen. śAnd bound here. Poor Moryn!” śPlease,” said Durand. Again he covered her mouth with a shaking hand while her eyes started. śThey will not have done this to your brother. A hostage must live.” He hoped it was so. He might have said more, but now he heard the Rooks’ voices. śBrother,” called the nearest. śIt is as you suggested.” From somewhere at the head of the crypt, a voice answered, śHis Highness cannot resist.” Durand could hear the wet clicks of vigorous work with a knife. śHe is a slave to appearances.” śThere are many eyes upon a king.” Durand gestured to Deorwen that she should stay where she stood"resting against a pillar"and stole toward the voices, silently closing the gap like some back-alley murderer as the nearest Rook pressed on. śThe common man must see strength if he’s to believe it. Radomor is not a complete fool.” śEyes. Many eyes . . .” The wet clicks continued. As Durand limped closer, the nearer Rook came in sight, standing, his fingertips playing over one mound of skulls as he chatted below the altar’s ruin. Durand reached the flank of the last squat pillar, wincing as the wet floor popped and sucked at his toes, unable to keep memories of the paralyzing touch of the fiends from his mind. What would become of Deorwen if they caught him? They had pulled the life’s breath from helpless men before his eyes, but Durand had no choice. He must find Moryn. śThe preparations are complete?” Durand leaned from his hiding place and spied the second Rook perched on the flank of the greatest bone heap in all the dark sanctuary. It mounted up beyond the ceiling to the ruptured sanctuary floor. With a slender knife, the perching Rook worked upon one wet skull. A last flick of the blade’s tip finished his work and he held the bone"eye to eye. śWhat shall we do with them all? An army? Radomor’s poor Champion? What can we not do, brother?” śPerhaps our Whisperer will tell us soon. We have come so far at his behest. He must greet us before long.” Durand scowled at this. He wondered who could have summoned such creatures into Errest. Meanwhile, the carver fished two fingers of ruddy clay from a pot and smeared blobs into the eyes and nose of the skull before him. śThere. What do you think?” he said. He had to swat away one of the storming crows. śBold things!” śThe life’s breath bound in death. It is a pretty vessel, brother. But His Highness rides to battle, naked but for a coat of iron.” śYes, yes. You nag like our poor mother. I will only be a moment, and what would we do without these pretty vessels, eh? I can scarcely keep up.” The sorcerer finished briskly, flipping the skull, nicking his finger, and letting a fat drop tumble inside. śAn embarrassment of riches sealed in heart’s blood. We have been greedy.” The carver answered his brother with a splattered grin and a wet kiss on the skull’s yellow teeth. śThe purest madness.” śMadness. Yes, I begin to wonder, my brother. Now, on to His Highness.” And the two nodded into motion. Before Durand could flinch, the carver had snatched a gulp from a bloody ewer while the second Rook popped the plug from one wet skull. Out from the hideous container poured a sudden swarm of flies. They boiled into the air, flapping the heavy wings of the Rooks’ cloaks and flickering through Durand’s hiding place to force him back into the shadows. It was all he could do not to bolt, but he steeled himself, thinking that the Rooks were not his business: he must only find Moryn"lost somewhere in the acres of this reeking hell"and escape this place of death and flies and crows. But no sooner had the necromancers filled the dark than they were pursing their lips and sucking down the bizarre swarm. And the flitting things spun in. In swirling eddies and ropy clouds, they darted down the necromancers’ throats until the chests of the two men had swelled like balloons and the crypt was empty of the darting things. And the two men grinned and drooled like boys eating berries. Is this what had become of so many dead men? śUgh! Too many,” croaked the carver Rook"a few flies escaped his lips. śLet us begin,” was his brother’s grunt. Now that they had decanted the raw material of their trade, the pair raised their spattered hands. śLife to life we bind you,” they said. śHeart to heart and marrow to marrow.” Now, the viscous swarms spooled from their mouths once more, but weaving and climbing, not wild. śBlood to his blood, bone to his bone, we knot and join you. Your life to his life!” They spat to clear their lips. Durand’s glance followed the swirling flies and shadows up the crypt’s old pillars and up the mountain of skulls until they churned through the ruptured vaults and into the sanctuary above. And as Durand looked into the choked and lofty dark, he saw a white figure suspended among the shrieking crows high above. śOh, no. It cannot be him,” breathed Durand. The Rooks had stretched a man across the great east window of the sanctuary"binding him pillar to pillar, strung up like some desecrated icon from thongs knotted at his wrists. The insect things were marching upon him. Marching up the thongs. And Durand knew the face when it looked down, though a long winter had passed since he had seen it last upon the fields at Red Winding and Tern Gyre. When the gaunt and ravaged face looked down, Durand knew the eyes that found him: this was the Lord of Mornaway. śHer brother,” Durand said. The Rooks had wrapped Mornaway in their hooked script and now Durand could see the shadow-things teeming up the knotted tethers and spidering over every figure among the maze of sigils on the man’s jutting bones. It could not be good. Had Durand only looked up, he might have plucked Mornaway and fled without setting foot in the crypt. Now, they were deep in the rotten place without reason. His head pounded. He turned to catch Deorwen’s arm. And found her already on her feet and stepping from her hiding place. She had seen what the Rooks had done to her brother and, already, the Rooks had noticed her. śWhat is this?” said a Rook. śBy Heaven, it cannot be! Lady Deorwen?” Whatever Deorwen had intended for that moment, Durand threw himself in the way. He would rush the devils, his sword swinging, and see what evil they could work in bloody pieces. As Durand lurched from the shadows, the nearest Rook laughed. And, with a deft sweep of his hanging sleeves, the fiend summoned the whole storm of the carrion flock battering down through the broken ceiling. They packed the air in Durand’s path, crashing through the riven sanctuary and striking Durand like a herd of stallions that bowled him backward over mounded skulls. He tumbled and righted himself with a clank of his big sword some two dozen paces from the grinning Rooks. It felt like he’d just fallen from his damned horse again. And, as Durand spat maggots and feathers, the fiends took up courtly postures, half bowing in mockery of Durand’s lady. śSons of whores,” Durand snarled. śMarvelous!” said the carver Rook. śHer brother. Her lover? And the lady herself. Oh yes!” said the other. śWere we quite finished with our little bit of magic before we were interrupted, by the way, brother?” śI think,” began the carver, śthat we were very"” As Durand steeled himself to rush the devils once again, a hollow thunk and a shout sounded above their heads. An arrow jutted from Moryn’s naked ribs. There was even a drop of blood. The gleaming point stood as though the shot had come from the wall or the perfect panes of the window. There was neither space nor place to have shot from. śI had been ready to say Śvery nearly’ but it seems that we were quite finished, brother.” śAnd thus, Ladyship, we see the merit of sorcery for all that it is decried by skalds and priests!” said the second Rook, peering up. śMonsters,” said Deorwen. śHis Highness would have been little pleased by that unkind dart,” said the carver. Durand saw Deorwen’s posture shift"as though she would launch herself on one or other of the Rooks. And, once again, he charged to save her from herself and the fiends. This time, the Rooks’ blast caught Durand like a broken dam. His feet left the floor and he tumbled amid wings and claws, kicking in space until he crashed down, not in the crypt, but sprawling in the sanctuary nave. His blade skidded and clanged, and he felt his knees smacked near to breaking. śEnough of this, I think,” chattered a Rook. śCome now.” As he fought to breathe, Durand heard slithering where the great gulf lay in the nave. He set his hand on the great block of some old tomb, struggling to his feet and daring the flocking crows to steal a glimpse through the gap. Shapes moved upon the sliding heap of skulls: the Rooks were climbing"while above, Moryn jerked at his bonds, tied and living still. Durand gritted his teeth and tottered on through the churning birds. Deorwen was mad and half-blind and down with the fiends. śHurry,” nagged one Rook to his brother. He had to shout against the storming feathers. śHas it ever helped to rush me?” Durand found his sword once again, wrenching the blade from the slime. Creation spun with the devil birds and he could scarcely see. Between one flock and the next, Durand saw that the two sorcerers had plucked up skulls; their arms were full. Moryn kicked against his bonds, having seen this before. śCarefully,” said the tidier Rook. And while the birds shot past, the Rooks raised the skulls to their lips like oyster shells, tipping treacle-shadows down their throats. Durand fought forward like a sailor in a gale. He heard the sorcerers’ voices as soul after soul slid past their teeth and they bloated with the effort, their skins shining like drowned men’s. śWe must begin,” croaked the carver. Their necks ballooned with dead men, bulging at the blades of their jaws. śToo many. Too much.” Their chests swelled their robes. śBefore it is too late!” And with a spasm like vomiting, both men poured out thick souls. Shadows splashed into blowfly droplets; they flew high under the vaults. And the birds flew. Durand batted at the hell before his eyes. Could he but reach the devils, a single thrust might have burst them like bladders, but the rising storm of black feathers threw him on his hip and flipped him on his shoulder. The birds moved with new purpose. As the sorcerers conjured, the flocks shot across the nave like pouncing fiends. Under Durand’s hand, a tomb jerked into motion, caught in a mass of claws; and across the sanctuary slabs shrieked under the mauling of the lunatic birds; long stones swung high or slid like shearing blades. The birds stormed, tearing up webs and winding sheets to pluck the dead from their resting places. Under Durand’s knee, a basalt lid pitched up. In the depths of this wild storm, Durand knew they were finished. He was caught; it was too late for Moryn. He could only hope that Deorwen had the sense to fly while the devils had their minds elsewhere. Talons snatched up corpse after dry corpse, sweeping them from their niches and spinning the flying fragments toward the Rooks. A pitching Durand fought the birds and caught glimpses of the Rooks heaving like stricken drunkards in the grip of their spell. He saw corruption flop from their mouths, bursting into flies and maggots. He saw the dead’s dry limbs spinning around the men, caught up by the crows and ravens in a frenzy that saw bones weaving in the air. In the midst of it all, a figure took shape. At first, Durand perceived a tall man, stooped in a flapping coat of mail: a sad and half-familiar form. But soon the hail of long bones tangled in the space about it"clattering. Copper wire spun in black beaks, knotting bone to bone. Durand watched as birds and bones plucked up and dismembered that sad man, spinning his limbs and ribs and a multitude of rags until the lonely, wracked figure was torn and lost within a greater frame more massive than a team of oxen. Limbs woven of a hundred limbs bore the monstrous weight. A tail of a thousand bones lashed out the brute’s pain. The helm of the stricken man burst around great tusks and swung over a beard of cobwebs"until, finally, the stooped figure had become the Champion of the Painted Hall: a hundred tombs upturned in a storm that left a monster. With a silence like an ebbing sea, the carrion birds alighted. And now, in their breathing stillness, the Champion seethed, rocking like an anchored ship as its iron mask turned"turned toward Durand. And Durand knew the terror of the mouse in the den of a tiger. Once more, the Rooks took up courtly postures, now poised comfortably behind their creation. śThis is marvelous indeed,” said one. śA fitting doom. We stand on the cusp of destroying the truculent Host of Gireth. And you, Sir Durand, Bull of Gireth, are here at the last to face us. And the Champion of Yrlac.” The storm had left Durand alive with a blade in his fist. An army was dying in the streets; Moryn must be freed. To reach the Rooks, he would have to cover sixty feet. And pass the Champion. Durand resolved to let the devils bait him. Let them gloat and threaten. While they talked, he would ravel up the distance to their throats, step by step. It was as he moved the first careful inch that he spotted motion beyond the Rooks: a pale shape darted behind one of the pillars near Lord Moryn. Deorwen had left the crypt. Durand staggered the next step not knowing whether to curse or sob. śIt seems a shame to end it, but we must move on,” said a Rook. śYes, brother. And, in time, this whole struggle will seem little more than the fanfare that announced the arrival of King Ragnal.” śMy brother has a poet’s soul,” explained one of the stinking necromancers while the rhapsodizing Rook favored his brother with a sly smile. śIt is possible, you know. There have been so many.” Durand fought not to let a glance or look from him betray Deorwen’s movements. He wondered whether she had recovered her reason; the crows and their cargo of souls had nearly finished her. But now, somewhere, she had found a knife. Durand tottered nearer, limbering Ouen’s sword. It took a great effort of will to fix his gaze only on the sorcerers. The Champion creaked as tight as some engine of war, ready to obliterate him. The nearest Rook raised an eyebrow at Durand’s stealthy progress. śBut there has been preamble enough, I think. Doom cannot be delayed. A hero must face his end"and in its proper time.” The sorcerer glanced at his monster. śLet that time be now, Champion.” The little man stabbed a finger at Durand. Durand’s breath stopped. But nothing happened. He was not torn like a child in a bullring. The monster did not swarm over him. It did not move. Instead, thin words hissed from the ruin of its helm. śFree us-s-s-s.” The hiss was still in the air when Durand leapt for the sorcerers. Both Rooks sprang back. One of the creatures shielded his bald skull, but"in the instant before Durand could bring his blade down"the other snatched at the air: a crabbed gesture that jerked the Champion to life. The thing’s bony fist lashed out like the slap of a catapult’s arm. And Durand was torn from the ground. Yards away, he smacked a pillar hard enough to smack sparks into the darkness. He struck and fell to lie, winded, at the pillar’s foot. While he gulped, a Rook was speaking. śDo not tarry when we call, Your Grace. . . .” For the first time in Durand’s hearing, there was anger in the Rook’s voice. Who would the Rooks call śYour Grace”? He thought of the tall, sad figure at the heart of the monster. śFree me,” breathed the dead giant. śThese sad entreaties ill-suit your dignity, Your Grace. You are ours. You have been ours since your deathbed. Ours as your bastard Śgrandson’ has been. Now, I direct you to recall the particular nature of your bonds; it seems to have slipped your mind. Recall that what pains are inflicted upon you must also be shared by the child. You are joined in this.” The mountain of bones writhed against the floor. śPoor mite,” said the second sorcerer. śFor the sake of the child, Duke Ailnor, accept your doom.” And, even gasping for air on the brink of annihilation, Durand remembered tall Duke Ailnor of Yrlac: the sober lord he had met at the Well of Noontide among gray guardians, the son of kings who would hear no talk of rebellion, the old man who had commanded Durand to flee from the hill at Fetch Hollow. Who must have died in the hours thereafter"shortly after his grandson. Durand twisted, trying to fill his lungs once more before the Rooks blotted him from Creation. He spotted the sorcerers just in time to see one of the two men twitch his fingers in the air. That was all: a twitch. But the howl that rose from the old bones as the sorcerer squeezed his taloned little hand stung the dark and sent the thing that had been Ailnor lashing fit to fly to apart. The Rook danced at a just-prudent distance and called over his victim’s howl: śIf you had done as we asked, we might have stopped with you alone. But you were obstinate and your obstinacy has inspired this twist of poetry: treacherous father and bastard son bound forever.” A shrill wheeze wailed over the sanctuary: śA babe in arms,” the monster said. śAnd usurper, Your Grace. There was our master, stricken by betrayal"and you sought to raise his wife’s bastard above him.” A second note shot through the old man’s spectral howl: a piping cry that shimmered through the darkness, sounding for all the world like the wail of a child down some forsaken well. Durand could not stand to think. Deorwen was climbing with the knife in her teeth, working her way up a carved pillar to her brother’s bonds. Durand was hearing Alwen’s baby. It could only be that child. He remembered the cry from a tower room and a locked door in Radomor’s keep. Now, that same voice was somehow trapped in the sorcerers’ abomination. śYou have been ours since you breathed your death rattle over my brother’s tongue,” one Rook was saying. śSave the child pain. It is time.” With his grandchild’s wail still in the air, Ailnor turned to Durand. And Durand caught up his sword. Only Moryn mattered. Only Deorwen and her knife; she could still save Gireth, so long as the Rooks didn’t look up and behind them. He would have to dance awhile to hold their attention. With a little luck, he might live long enough to see Moryn free and Deorwen running. The Champion sprang, and before Durand could step, the monster had snatched him from his feet and thrown him crashing into an explosion of heaped skulls. Black souls boiled free, flashing in visions of night and darkness as they leapt past his eyelids and fled for their vile masters. śUh! Watch what you do, fool!” groaned a Rook. Durand was pleased to cause the devils some indigestion. But the Champion crashed down among the rolling bones and a blow sent him sailing once more, his temple brushing the crisscrossed ribs of the aisle vault. He landed at the crushing end of the creature’s throw with bone heaps bursting around him. He heard the Rooks curse, and his sword rebounding from the flagstones, rippling like a ribbon in the air. This time, the Champion swarmed over him. Lashing with its clattering tail. Spinning him with its talons, the raging monster tossed and smashed him like millstones. And all the while, souls spun through the air, blinding him, choking him. Durand saw Moryn hanging beyond the Rooks. He saw Deorwen"so small and pale"high upon the pillar’s flank. Mad. He saw the great shadow of the Champion now prowling near, shivering with darkness. Coming slow. Weeping. Raging. Durand hoped the Rooks were choking on the stray souls he’d scattered. He hoped Deorwen had got her knife on Moryn’s bonds. His fingers slipped round the grip of his sword, and he began the long climb to his feet before the prowling horror"at least he would try to meet death standing. But the thing that had been Ailnor rushed in with a sound like a thunder of dry scrolls" And stopped a breath from Durand’s chin. Durand wavered where he stood with his gorge rising, and peeled his eyelids open. śChampion?” called one of the sorcerers. śWhat is this now? Finish him.” There was a gulping sound from the man, a belch"choking, Durand prayed. śDo you know how many pots you have upset? Kill him, by God. Now!” Wings of shadow were folding up around Durand. He couldn’t tell whether they were the Rooks’ doing, or artifacts of the battering his skull had taken. He looked up at the Champion. The monstrous thing loomed over him like a wall of bones. Its stench filled his throat, but he could see the iron band of the thing’s eyes. śAilnor,” he said. Maybe it was because he was on the verge of death himself, but Durand could only think of the old man, still there and as trapped as Durand and Moryn or any of them. śAilnor. Moryn must be freed. His father holds the Host of Gireth to the flame of your son’s armies. If we are destroyed, the kingdom will fall. It will all be like this hell. Rot and madness. From the mountains to the sea.” Shadows slithered over the Champion like black flames, like Ouen’s sending. Teetering on the edge of death, Durand understood what he saw: here was soul upon soul bound to these dead bones, all stinging to drive the monster on. An eddy in the dark flame drew Durand’s eyes to an unusual shape within woven bones. Beyond the cobweb banners and rusted finery, he saw a tiny bundle swaddled tight in rags. Right at the heart of it all. The great distorted head of the Champion swiveled, staring down upon Durand. śPlease,” said Durand. Somewhere one of the Rooks spluttered in frustration. śOh, how tedious!” The sorcerer reeled into view, literally bulging with the load of souls Durand’s throes had scattered. The sorcerer’s hand leapt up, and the soul-fires blazed upon the Champion’s bones, standing like the hackles of a mad dog. But Ailnor scarcely moved. Durand’s eyes darted between the swaddled shape at the heart of the monster, and the iron mask that bound Ailnor’s dead face. He remembered finding a bit of bone at the heart of Ouen’s sending, but this wrapped shape was no fragment of some man’s shin. The necromancer’s bloated face soured, and his fingers curled. The baby’s sob whistled out on the air, and Durand saw the swaddled bundle twist. The soul-shadows blazed now, standing a yard from the monster, sending spines of ice through the slime upon the floor. Durand closed his eyes, setting the brittle points of his teeth together. But Ailnor spoke: śNot for blood. Not for one child only.” The bearing of the old duke transformed the monstrous shape, the frame of bones rising despite the blaze of souls on its kindling limbs. Durand saw the blood of kings in the distorted figure. And the slot of the ruined visor stared level into Durand’s eyes. The monster’s arms began to open, the baby screamed in the midst of the black flame. Bones popped like firewood in an agony beyond endurance. Meanwhile, the swollen sorcerers struggled with their creation, flies darting loose with every grunt. Durand wondered how many dead men one sorcerer could contain. He wondered how many had been bound up in the spell that gave life to the Champion. Durand looked up at the old duke’s mask. He saw the swaddled child. And he drove his sword home. IN THE HIGH passes beyond Durand’s native hall, there were winter days when whole white mountainsides might slump from their stark heights to fill Creation with ice and thunder. At the touch of some traveler’s staff, a whole village might vanish but for fragments to be found in the moons of springtide. The touch of Durand’s blade was like such a traveler’s staff. In the moment when his point found the Champion’s swaddled heart, the whole of Creation came down. Souls beyond number burst from their bonds while the bones of dry generations flew like a hundred storms of arrows, rattling from the ceilings of the old sanctuary. The hellish explosion threw Durand flat and battered him into some dead man’s tomb. As he scrambled in that stone socket, dark shapes raked the air over his head. He heard screams fit to stiffen the blood. And then the place was silent. Deorwen had been out there. He burst from his grizzly shelter into a soft rain of feathers. Every candle was out. Every heap of bones, upturned. He found the broken shape of the old duke at the heart of the destruction. The withered form of the old man clutched the broken bundle to his hollow chest. Both figures were as dead as the winter moons should have left them and" Durand hoped"gone to the Gates of Heaven. Something moved beyond the gray wreck of the old man. Still weak, Durand stole through drifted feathers to find a splayed shape of blue-gray flesh. As he approached the broken thing, he slowly made out its shape: here were cocked arms, here bent legs. Between these features, however, Durand found flesh, both white and blue. One of the Rooks had been blown open to his belt and laid bare to his ribs and chine. Small bones crunched under Durand’s feet. Already, worms teemed upon the carcass. He left the thing and called, śDeorwen?” stalking over crackling bones to the space beyond the high altar where Moryn had been hung. A cool wind thick with pitch and timber stirred the feathered wreckage. Durand imagined the girl thrown from the pillar and crashing down. But the first motion he saw was a small dark bird. śYou are not one of ours,” wheezed a voice. Durand rounded a pillar to find the second Rook sprawled upon his back and torn as though a pack of dogs had caught him, his fingers chalk white against the blue loops of his bowels. The bird bounced near his pale skull. It was a starling, jittering and iridescent. The sorcerer seemed not to see Durand at all. śHow long have you been among our flocks, looking on, eh?” The Rook spoke to the bird. śAre you one from our Whisperer? To see how we progressed?” The starling hopped, its brown eyes flickering like flint chips, as the Rook reached vaguely toward it with one bloody hand. śWe’d been expecting . . . we’d expected to hear more. We had come so far"” A fit interrupted the sorcerer. His dark eyes rolled and his tongue scrabbled at his lips. Already, pale worms were crawling over him. Thick clots teemed. śAh well,” he said, and the trailing wheeze of his final breath spluttered out as the first of the worms went in. Durand made the Eye of Heaven and shook his head. A few moments later, he found Moryn in a heap beyond the altar. The impossible arrow still jutted from the man’s bare shoulder, but Durand ducked close enough to see that the man’s lungs still labored. There was no sign of Deorwen. Through the shattered east window above, Durand could hear the clangor of the fight in the streets. He smelled the fires. Men were dying every heartbeat, and he’d found Moryn. He turned back into the darkness, shouting, śDeorwen!” desperate. His voice rang down the length of a silent sanctuary where black feathers still sifted down. The place needed priests"Patriarchs. Legions of Holy Ghosts. And somewhere in the midst of it all was Deorwen, unable to answer him. Durand could hardly breathe with the dread of losing her. śDeorwen?” He hunted frantically among the columns on either side of the altar, and then his glance fell upon the chasm in the sanctuary floor only a few paces farther on. śHells,” Durand said, and hurried over crackling bones to the stairs. He left Moryn and the clash of the battle behind. At first, the stairs were blocked; Durand had to heave the lids of a dozen tombs aside to scramble down. Finally, he reached the putrid dark. Without even the sickly candlelight, he could only feel his way between the pillars by memory. He prayed. He named every Power in Heaven, begging that he not be parted from Deorwen. That she was somewhere in the dark, safe. That he would not lose her. It was all so silent as he hunted through the blackness that the sound of the battle seemed to follow him"a nagging whisper haunting him as he fumbled deeper through that charnel ruin. But he could not leave her even as he felt the time rushing away from him. Finally, on a third or fourth passage through the dark pit, he heard the whispered edge of faint breathing. The sound caught him like the touch of lightning. śDeorwen?” he called, and he clawed his way to a place under the high altar. Skin and linen glowed against black feathers, and Durand skidded to the woman’s side on his knees. śThey’re dead,” he said. śThe Rooks. And the Champion. Moryn"your brother"he’s alive. Deorwen?” He couldn’t hear the breathing. śAw, no. No, no.” He searched the girl for obvious wounds. He lifted the girl’s head, looking down on her eyelids, but it did no good. He bent close enough to kiss her, even as smeared with death as he was. He had to feel her breath; he had to know. He had seen plenty of men knocked from consciousness, and knew that it might mean anything. śHost of Heaven, don’t take her from me. Let her be with me.” He was not sure she was breathing. śDeorwen? I am begging,” he whispered. The girl’s eyes fluttered open. śUh.” śDeorwen? Oh, God.” With a grip that had killed a dozen men, he squeezed her for being alive. And the touch of her stirring in his arms overwhelmed every oath he’d taken, pitching him into great, deep, gulping kisses that forgot everything in Creation but the girl and the feel of her living body in his hands and the traitor’s joy in his racing blood. FINALLY, DEORWEN HAD to convince him to let her go. śThey are gone,” she said. śThe Lost. The birds.” śYes.” That much, at least, was true. When he crashed into the stables, sweating and shaking with strain, he found a bony gray nag that kicked for the ceiling at the death-house stink suddenly in her stall. But Durand couldn’t carry Deorwen and her brother both, and he gave the horse no choice. śAnd now the ramparts again,” murmured Deorwen. Durand lifted her"light as a rabbit"behind his saddle and hauled her gaunt brother over the horse’s withers. śYour father must see his son,” said Durand, and he spurred the horse into the courtyard. The last man who’d passed this way was Radomor himself, but Durand was almost drunk with elation. As the citadel gates swung into sight, Deorwen caught hold of Durand’s tunic. śWhat do you mean to do?” She was waking up as he drove for mighty grates of oak and iron and stone turrets higher than the walls. śThey’ll never open!” But Durand’s blood sang. He kicked the gray to greater speed. And saw the gatekeepers boggle at a rider coming from the citadel. He pictured himself stained and hunched and black and scarred"all in rags and storming from the sorcerers’ citadel. A few shards of teeth glinting, the flash of eyes. śDurand!” Deorwen demanded, but Durand only gritted his broken teeth and hoped the whoresons would think śdevil” or śmessenger” and get out of his way. The men scrambled as the stolen gray sparked the cobbles and they careened for the portcullis. But the gates flew wide, and as they plunged into the empty alleys beyond, Durand thanked his creator. They stormed another gate that same way, and then the smoke was thick in the streets and they were bearing down on the ramparts where Gireth and Yrlac fought for the wall. He swung the gray toward what should have been a mighty gatehouse, shut fast against an army and packed with soldiers. What he found, however, was a gate that gaped wide"like the mouth of a forge packed with the black shapes of Radomor’s men. The Duke of Yrlac had thrown the doors open and leapt into his own blazing trap. Durand blinked at the smoke as the nag danced. Only in these fires would they find Severin of Mornaway. Somehow he must crash through the rear of Radomor’s army and win through to Mornaway’s lines. His heart hammered. He pictured a wild leap. The horse driving. Hundreds of men, startled"maybe. He tightened his grip and squared the skittish gray, ready to spur for the gates. But caught him. śDurand! What are you thinking?” she demanded. śI think you’ve done enough plotting for one day. Get down.” Durand boggled, pointing through the gates. śYour father’s through there. If he sees his son, all of this is finished.” śThat’s Radomor’s army you’re waving at. Get down, damn you.” She caught his sleeve and, leaping down herself, hauled him staggering from the saddle. śThat’s not the way,” said Deorwen. Durand blinked and pulled Moryn from the gray’s withers while the man groaned his agony. śDamn me,” Moryn said and tried to get his feet under him. śI know you from somewhere.” He turned the great baffled hollows of his eyes upon Durand’s face. śWhat is this nightmare? What is my sister"?” But there was no time to chat, not twenty paces from an army where any of half a thousand men might glance and wonder at the strange trio in ragged linens. śBrother,” said Deorwen. śDurand must carry you. Our father’s spilling half the blood of Gireth for your sake. We must finish it.” śGod. The fool,” Moryn said. śDamn him.” But Deorwen didn’t wait to listen. She shot for the battlements"darting near the throng in the gates and scampering the steps for a look over the top. śDurand. Get me to my father,” said Moryn. And Durand followed, lifting and dragging Moryn past the backs of an army. His eyes pulsed with stars. Finally, he joined Deorwen in an embrasure where they could peer into the blazing oven of the street below. Durand’s eyes were drawn to the battle at the gatehouse. A few dozen paces down the parapet, he could stand on the gatehouse, right on the heads of two armies. śLamoric’s men will see us up there.” śThere are soldiers between"” Deorwen began, but Durand was off. He heaved the Lord of Mornaway across his hitched shoulders, and staggered down the parapet. śAre you mad?” Moryn grunted. But Durand could not even grunt for fear of collapsing, and every instant down below was snatching lives away while they could stop it all. Durand rushed up against one of Yrlac’s men, bowling the devil tumbling into the fires. A second soldier fell the same way"no one expected to meet an enemy on the wall. śWhat will this achieve?” Moryn demanded. śDuke Severin must know you’re free or there’s been no point prying you from the sanctuary. I left friends in those fires.” Thousands surged in the press at the gates. Durand strained in the smoke. Pain was breaking him down. He must catch someone’s eye soon"without getting himself shot in the process. As he peered down and staggered nearer to the fight, he spotted the dark hair of a man in red and white and a sword sparking in the firelight. The glimpse touched him like a tongue of lightning. Here was Lamoric himself. The man seemed hard-pressed by some champion of the enemy. Durand wanted to leap the distance. He had to stop the battle. śDurand, no!” said Deorwen, but Durand was already shouting. With luck, he might be able to heave the man down onto friendly hands. He couldn’t be sure where Gireth ended and Yrlac began. śI have him! Lord Moryn is free!” ignoring a gasp from Moryn to wrestle the man above the parapet. śBy the King of Heaven, I have Moryn!” But not a soul looked up from the deadly work in the street. On the gatehouse itself, however, men heard him. In an instant, three dozen of Radomor’s wolves had spun in a flash of eyes and blades and teeth. śHells,” said Durand. As Durand ran, half the gatehouse poured down on his heels. He blundered past a fallen guardsman and flinched under flights of Gireth arrows, catching Deorwen’s hand and pulling her into motion. He had to get her free. A soldier appeared in their way, swinging a heavy spear, and all Durand could do was leap from the walk up to the high merlons of the parapet, hauling Deorwen in long strides over fire and empty space with a premonition of arrowheads pricking at his back. And he knew he was running away from every chance of turning the fight. Worse yet, he could not run fast enough with a man on his neck. They would have Deorwen in an instant. He could feel the blades of a dozen soldiers swinging nearer. Twenty more soldiers vaulted the steps ahead. śThere,” grunted Moryn. śThe banner!” Through flames and shadow, Durand glimpsed the men of Mornaway hunkered in solemn lines, Mornaway’s blue diamonds flapping in the furnace"out of reach. And after days and hours of fighting, Durand stopped. Despite a hundred wild victories, the string of improbabilities was at its end. Then he felt a tug from Deorwen’s hand. They had only heartbeats. She looked him squarely in the eyes, and Durand let Moryn’s feet to the ground. śIt’s better,” said Moryn. And the three leapt into the flames, vanishing from the battlements just as the charging men of Yrlac crashed together behind them. THERE WAS A flying moment of flame and distant screams. Then Durand’s heel struck some joist or truss high in a burning building. He managed a wild running step before the impetus of his fall pitched him into a breakneck somersault. Curtains of flame swung up around him and beams snapped at the touch of his hands. When the plunge met its crushing end, Durand was left to gulp at the bottom of an inferno. He blinked up into the rippling complexity of flame where timbers twisted like the wicks of candles. In another instant, he would have died. But a tug at his hand brought him to his senses. Deorwen. And, if she was alive, he could not lie down. He heaved with the last of his strength, feeling the heat peel away as he pulled them all into the street. And straight into kettle-helms and the backs of armored men. This was the army of Mornaway, and every soldier twitched back from Durand as if he were a fiend who’d burst from the earth. śGet me up,” said Moryn. śBy Heaven, get me on my feet.” Durand wrenched Moryn upright. Something devilish had happened to the man’s shoulder, but he stepped among the soldiers. Horror and bewilderment warred in the men’s expressions. Durand struggled to wedge himself between Deorwen and the uneasy mob. None of this was safe. śThis is Lord Moryn,” he said. He could see the pack of baffled soldiers cocking weapons. He caught one man’s tunic. śLet us"” and a gauntlet knocked spikes through his jaw. Durand tore the man down, snatching a mace from the fool’s hand before he fell. The mob erupted. With a grunt, Durand had Moryn’s weight on his good shoulder and the mace was flying. It skipped from helmet and shoulder, cracking collarbones and crumpling helmets. He used its spikes like claws to climb. He drove, bulling men and boys aside with Deorwen lost behind him as he bludgeoned anyone who wouldn’t move. śMoryn! Moryn!” he screamed, fighting against the thrashing undertow as he hauled the heir of Mornaway into the mass of his kinsmen. Flesh and bone slid under his soles. He would maul every knight of Mornaway if it would get him to their bloody duke. Finally, a flash of blue diamonds rippled above the heaving line: the duke’s standard. Durand had almost reached the man. He swatted one man down and found himself staring into the grief and despair of old Duke Severin of Mornaway himself. The frail duke sent an unthinking blow whistling from his tears, but Durand parried, roaring Moryn’s name loud enough to open the duke’s eyes. At first, revulsion wavered over old Mornaway’s hollow features. Durand couldn’t know what the man thought or saw. śFather!” said Moryn and tore himself free from Durand to stand, gaunt and bloody, before his father. Apprehension dawned on the old man’s ravaged face, and in that instant among those grim soldiers, every bond that held Mornaway’s host in Ferangore flew apart. RADOMOR WAS NO fool: he knew that a reluctant ally needed watching. And so, to lend his borrowed host teeth and backbone, the Duke of Yrlac had set fierce squadrons of his own men in the van and rearguard of Mornaway’s host. Now, the men of Mornaway unleashed their rage and shame on these startled men, and blood flew. Durand launched himself like a thing of teeth and talons. He couldn’t think, or he would stop or die. Against the gates, the battle was slaughtering Gireth, and so Durand tore into Radomor’s men like a true savage, armored in rags. He opened a path with cruelty, smashing throats and hammering joints and faces. He stole shields where he could, fighting under one man’s colors and then the next as wood and leather split before the driving battalion. He hardly recognized the attempts of knights to yield. He swung from agony, sure the time was slipping from them. From the battlements, a man might have seen the shape of the fighting, but in the midst of it, there was nothing but smoke and the press of screaming faces. There was a thumb in his eye and a blade slick against his ribs. But somewhere ahead, Berchard and Guthred and Lamoric and all of the Knights of the Painted Hall were at the heart of the mauling. Durand could do nothing but claw onward. Finally, they tore through the last of Radomor’s vanguard and the battle seemed to fly apart. Startled and overwhelmed, the mercenaries under Radomor’s leopard blazon scattered before the gateway. And soon, all that remained of the army of Yrlac was a bloody ring of Radomor’s fiercest liegemen hunkered under in the very teeth of the gates. And the sound of one last scuffle. Durand tottered out alone between the armies. By some unspoken signal, the combined hosts of Gireth and Mornaway had stopped. The ground was slick under Durand’s bare feet and the fires snapped among the rooftops. Before him, the faces of Yrlac’s last knights shone with sweat and soot and blood"and from beyond their ring, Durand heard the clang and stamp of the last duel in that tortured city. He saw the men he knew, exhausted among the soldiers of Gireth: Guthred, Berchard, even Coensar. All of his comrades; all of the men he’d fought with"all but one. Through the screen of surcoats and armored limbs, he saw two figures circling under the gates. He saw snatches of Gireth’s crimson and Yrlac’s green. Here were Lamoric and Radomor, fighting on. śGod,” Durand said. Nothing was finished; Lamoric was still trapped with the monster, Radomor. Durand shook the cobwebs from his skull and threw himself upon the heavy ring of Radomor’s last knights. He swung his stolen mace, beating shields and shoulders. But they sent him staggering back. And not one man of Lamoric’s host joined his attack. Durand saw glimpses of Lamoric. The young lord leapt and scrambled as the hunched duke lashed with his blade, his beard jutting round a purple scowl. Durand looked into the faces of Lamoric’s army. Their eyes glittered. Weapons hung in slack fingers. He gaped in astonishment, in fury. Someone was saying, śDurand.” But Durand would not hear, and he launched himself once more at the barricade of Radomor’s soldiers. Beyond reach, he saw Lamoric’s shield twitch and spin like a curl of parchment under the mighty strokes of Radomor’s blade. The powerful duke threw himself into every attack, sometimes spinning and leaping like a fairground tumbler, carving every hope of attack and escape from Lamoric’s world. Durand threw men aside. After a hundred narrow escapes, Lamoric staggered, his sword wavering high just as the circle broke under Durand’s fists. Durand saw Radomor lunge inches beyond his fingers"only an instant too late. And in that instant, the duke shot a straight and sudden blow through Lamoric of Gireth. The broad point punched through mail and surcoat to stand in the fabric between Lamoric’s shoulders right before Durand’s eyes and had Lamoric’s own blade wavering over their heads. Creation had stopped and the blade hung there, glittering in the flames. Durand had been too late only by heartbeats. He’d climbed the city, he’d swum its wells, he’d fought the devils in its churches, but he’d been too late"too late by moments. Hands caught at Durand’s tunic. There were blows. But he thought only of Deorwen in his arms and how he’d stopped to hold her while the army burned in the street and the man who’d brought him from starvation fought for his life. Durand had prayed to have her, and now Lamoric was dead. Back in the street, Radomor crouched with both fists still on the skewering blade. Lamoric’s sword wobbled over his head, trembling to the last beats of his heart. Lamoric could have seen no friend. But as he tottered there on Radomor’s blade with his last strength giving way, a final spark of resolve caught light in him. Before Durand could blink, the man’s slack fingers clamped tight on his sword, and in a single mighty spasm, the blade flashed down. Radomor was without defense. What could he do with his sword trapped? Blood sprang from the steel, and the Duke of Yrlac pitched. The two lords were falling together. A piggish eye widened in astonishment, seeing God knew what. Lamoric swung the gleaming edge a second time, but it did not matter. Radomor of Yrlac and Lamoric of Gireth fell to the bloody street. NOW, RADOMOR’S MEN relented. Durand was freed to skid to Lamoric’s side and to throw the duke’s still-heaving corpse from his master’s body. śLamoric! Lamoric!” For an instant, the young lord’s eyes only drifted darkly, but then they snapped around, and the man managed a tight smile. śDurand!” he marveled, grunting the name. śAye, Lordship. God. I tried to reach you. Moryn is free. Deorwen lives. This war is finished. I"” ś"You saw. You saw. You must have!” Durand wrestled with the man’s surcoat, thinking that he should shut up and do something. śYou saw?” Lamoric gasped, trying to catch Durand’s wrists. śI did,” Durand admitted. He probed the gash in the iron mail. śI could have had him that first day.” Bright blood welled from the wound, filling the folds of his surcoat. Radomor’s blade had caught one of the vessels in the man’s guts. Durand pressed his hands into the mess. śI could have had him,” Lamoric repeated, wincing. Durand pressed, doubling over. śI’m certain.” śWhile the cities stood. And all"” he winced. śAnd all the banners were flying.” The hopeless gush came warm over Durand’s wrists, and Durand shut his eyes. He wondered how much death a man could stand. He felt Lamoric’s hand bat at his jaw. Then the man’s bloody gauntlet dropped. His face was white and still as wax and his breath rattled out into the empty air above Ferangore, safe now from Rooks and ravens. There was not a sound in that city of armies but the crackling of fires. 29. Homecoming Among the prisoners, the barons of Gireth could find no greater lord than a red-haired youth called Leovere of Penseval to offer the surrender of Radomor’s followers. Penseval had fought in the last knot of Radomor’s liegemen, standing in the ring that had kept Durand from Lamoric’s side. Before the man could stammer submission, Durand pushed into the mob and joined the silent men already gathering the dead"keeping far from those who knew him as the smoke of the day gave way to the chill darkness of the night. He had no wish to think or speak. And he could not see Deorwen. Not then. The gruesome drudgery of the work pushed Durand beyond thought and pain and exhaustion. Through the evening, he dragged cold, slack men beyond the walls. And, in the darkness thereafter, he fumbled at the rigid absurdity of stiffened limbs. Durand spoke to no one. Men found barrows and stretchers, but mostly they carted the dead by ankles and armpits, shuffling without words through gates and into the dark. Badan had died. Durand learned that as he dragged another armored man through the gates. Shuffling backward past a scrap of torchlight, he saw a gleam of bald forehead and lank red hair hanging behind. Durand wasn’t sure which of them felt more numb as he brought the body to lie among the others. For much of that night, he was scarcely more than hands and eyes. AT DAWN, A hundred carts waited in the clay below the city gates. It seemed that the dead were not to be left behind, and so Mornaway’s men had ransacked a hundred leagues and pillaged every farmer’s cart. Durand and the rest of the mute laborers had simply turned to the task of sliding their chill comrades high between cart rails. And when Durand could find no more bodies waiting on the field, he climbed aboard the cart where he’d laid his last corpse"thankfully, there was room on the bench beside the driver. Rain fell and the carts labored away from Ferangore in a column that seemed to straggle leagues along the River Rushes. Oblivion snatched at Durand as he rocked beside the driver. The horse’s head nodded under the jumbled tomb of the lurching cart before them. AS THE KNIGHTS of Ash intoned the Eventide, the column curled into a broad basin by the Rushes. Durand’s driver slipped down without a word and freed his horse to crop the sparse valley. Already, men had kindled fires against the grass some distance from the gray muddle of carts. Durand watched men settle around those fires"feeling no great longing to join them as the darkness settled quick and cold and dim expanses stretched on every side. Mornaway’s men trundled barrels from their supply wagons and the serving men had pots and tents ready. The camp looked like an island of color and firelight in the gloom. Where Durand stood, peeping like a stranger at a window, he could see the long shadows thrown by the men at the fires. And a familiar movement in the dark where trenches and potholes brimmed with the living shadows of the Lost. The things shivered to life all around, opening like midnight flowers into Creation and swimming over the turf to sniff for blood and life. It had Durand thinking of the dead behind him. And so, Durand flinched when a voice called his name. But this was not some utterance from the Otherworld. Not far down the row of charnal carts, Deorwen hurried from the firelight; she had slipped from her family. She looked no taller than a child as she struggled through the wet grass. śWhere’ve you been?” Durand avoided her touch. śHere.” He couldn’t stand to have her so close, and now she hugged herself tight"cold and alone only a step away. He held his ground. śMy father, he has been walking,” she said. śAll these leagues since Ferangore. He’s cropped his hair with a dagger’s blade and will wear neither shoes nor mantle. ŚNot a man of Gireth is to lie under the sod of Yrlac,’ he has said. And now we must cart the bodies. There is ice in the ruts until noon and he has seen more than sixty winters, Durand.” Durand only nodded, a coward among the shadows. But Deorwen stepped close and cornered him against the cart. śI won’t ask why you’ve hidden yourself here with the dead any more than I’ll ask my father why he works so hard to join them in the ground. I will not do these things, but neither will I pretend that you are a thousand leagues from me. Not now.” What another heartbeat might have brought, Durand would never know, for another figure had left the firelight and come marching toward them, calling out. Durand thought he heard the girl’s name. But she grabbed his cloak. śDurand. Lamoric is gone. My father is mad with the shame of his treasons. Please.” But before she could say more, their new guest called out, loud and clear: śDeorwen!” The fellow had come close enough now that Durand could see the hitched way the man walked and how he clutched a long cloak at his throat with one hand. śDeorwen? By Heaven, where are you, sister?” Here was Moryn, walking despite his wounds. śMoryn! What are you doing?” said Deorwen. The man winced. Even in the gloom, Durand could see the man’s eyes shining with fever. śI realized you’d gone, sister. Walked off. This is no safe place.” Around him, the shadows were climbing the carts. śAn armed camp at any time. And this.” While Moryn had the girl’s attention, Durand stepped free, agreeing, śAye. And the fires will be warmer than here, I’m sure. And hot food before long. His Lordship looks as though he’ll need a shoulder to get back. This is no place for any of us.” And instead of offering his help, Durand left the girl standing there with her brother. She couldn’t follow, not with Moryn lame and feverish. Not her. Durand hobbled through the death-carts toward an empty sweep of river. Here and there, he saw old Conran’s Holy Ghosts standing vigil, looking lonely as candles in their clean white gear. Lamoric had deserved a better liegeman: one who could leave his master’s wife alone and keep the oaths he’d spoken. But, instead, Lamoric had been left with Durand Col who couldn’t master his heart, who delayed with lives waiting in fire and siege. As he put the high walls of the carts behind him, he noticed the sky. Last Twilight glowed above a black valley, and the clouds were strange. They soared like a milky ceiling of ice"a remote, giant’s Heaven. And amid these strange clouds, Durand perceived great movements: folds that crossed the Heavens, curling into mighty eddies, distinct in their pearl edges and as clear and colossal. They hung in the distant north, two enormous curls, each like an upturned mountain. And Durand had nearly stumbled into Conran. śThe king makes war and we, his servants, are far from him.” The man’s voice was scarcely human; a cartload of dead men could have breathed on Durand’s neck. Now, the ancient giant’s single eye held the light of those northern clouds and did not turn as Durand stopped. In that valley at that moment, the king seemed very far away. śHis brother,” Durand recalled: Prince Eodan of Windhover. Lord of the wood where their father, Carondas, had died. śEodan is nearly the king’s match in pride.” The man’s voice was like the creak of an oak. śHe declares his lands free of his brother’s rule, free of Errest the Old. And here we are.” Durand peered at the hanging mountains. They might have been stone or glass, they were so clear before his eyes"north, over the forests of Windhover. Durand’s answer was little more than a whisper. śWhat could you do if you were there with so few men to turn a great battle?” śOur king sent my brethren and I from his side. He clutches fools and flatterers close and wages war upon his brother where his royal father died.” At this, a light flashed"a light flickering beyond the clouds. But this was not a thing of the skies alone. This was nearer at hand; Creation itself twitched. And in the shocked moment afterward, Durand heard something on the move over Yrlac: a breeze careered through the land like the ghost of horses, sweeping down the Rushes to batter the light of a hundred fires against the valley floor. śAnother high sanctuary!” hissed giant Conran. śBy the sea.” And there was a strange scent of salt air on the wind. Salt and fire. śIt can only be Evensands. And now there is only the king’s high sanctuary in the heart of Eldinor.” Tendons leapt in the man’s neck. All around, it seemed that the shadows bulged. śAnd here,” he said, ślook what watches. Soon they will be free.” Where Durand had not noticed a tangle of blackthorns near the bank, now he saw crabbed figures with needle claws. The Lost moved in the long grass. And on the crest of the far valley, a figure as tall as a sanctuary tower slipped back into hiding. śThe Banished wait while we run in our circles,” said Conran. śThe wards are breaking, strand by strand. The king wages war within his realm. Ferangore and Acconel are in ruins. The Septarim scattered. The high sanctuaries have fallen. And Errest has not been so bare to the night in twenty centuries. These things do not come singly or by chance. Someone plays a dreadful game in Errest the Old, and even the least part of it is dark to us.” As Conran spoke, the Banished spirits settled back into the gloom. śBut Radomor is dead . . .” Durand breathed. Conran’s glinting eye was on the move lest fiends pour from some unobserved quarter of the horizon. His men held their blades against the dark. śAye, Durand Col. And his sorcerers with him. But our king fights in Windhover while his barons cower behind their walls. And here we stand. śIn the fastness of the shadows a hand is moving, and none but the Silent King can know from whence our doom will fall!” WHILE THE PORTENTS roiled in the northern skies, the column lurched for Acconel. Time and again, Creation flinched and Durand caught glimpses of shadowy watchers along the roadway, of giants on the ridgelines, of spirits in the trees. Until, quite suddenly, Durand’s driver called out, śWhoa!” Durand knew the damp odor of the River Banderol in the weeds. They had crossed the bourn of Gireth, their column had halted, and now a stout rider jounced between the roadside and the riverbank breathlessly puffing, śHis Grace stands before the Fuller’s Bridge and waits upon Abravanal of Gireth. His Grace stands before the Fuller’s Bridge and waits upon Abravanal of Gireth. His Grace stands before"” This breathless knight was Berchard of the One Eye and jolted to a stop at Durand’s side"before his horse could pitch him in the river. śDurand?” Teeth flashed in the man’s beard. śThat’s enough, I think. The rest will get the message. I’ll be damned if I get myself washed into the mere to tell them. śHere. Listen to that.” The sound of hammers hung upon the air, and there was green sawdust on the breeze. śThey’re awful quick to rebuild.” Durand thought of Conran’s portents. śConran’s not so sure we’ve won anything yet.” śI’m not sure I like the look of the Heavens either. And I’ve seen a thing or two in my day.” He jostled his mount alongside Durand’s bench. He scrubbed his puckered eye. śI ever tell you about this damned thing?” śWhat will Abravanal do?” Durand muttered. śAbravanal? I’m waiting for old Severin. Every knight in his retinue has black-barred his colors. Should be a show. He’s up there, a duke in linens! Muck to his hams. Not a cloak between him and the wind and the rain. And I must say, he doesn’t seem himself"though I suppose I don’t know the fellow so well that I can be sure. In any case, as I was saying, we were pulling thieves from the bushes down in Aubairn. These whoresons, they were hiding in the Fey Wood, playing on the infamy of the place. You could always blame a missing caravan on the Lost or the Banished and who’d know different? That was the dullards’ bright idea.” Durand blinked. Somewhere beyond the carts ahead, the head of the column must be in the Tenter’s Field yard before the Fuller’s Bridge. Before his mind’s eye, Durand saw the ancient Duke of Gireth walking through a city of soot and sawdust, his heir a girl-child of six winters. śWe were trailing one pack of fools who reckoned no-body’d notice that some flitting forest pisky was crashing through the woods on eight warhorses and sleeping round a campfire every night"when every trace of the whoresons just up and disappeared. śWe should have known better than to go poking around. But we started. And we ran across this old woman. śSome of us had these arbalests"the really heavy crossbows.” He tapped a fresh scar on his forehead. śBigger than the bow that bit me. And this old woman blundered out in front of us. And I must’ve touched the trigger. And it was so quick. Snap! and the bolt was gone"like a wasp for the crone’s gray head. I just stared. I’m no crack shot with a crossbow, and I hadn’t taken aim. It could’ve gone anywhere. But she flopped on her backside, and the bolt clattered off half a league through the trees.” śBerchard . . .” Durand raised his hand. All around ancient Acconel, the sound of hammers and axes died away. One man somewhere in the vast ruin persisted, and a man could hear the sharp chop, chop, chop. But Berchard pressed on. śAye. Abravanal will be coming soon, I’m sure. But, back in the woods, there she was: this old woman in the track. And the quiet. And I’m thinking, here’s somebody’s grandma. And I bent down over her to see if"maybe, God help me"the bolt had just grazed her. But she’s lying like a sack of corn and there’s this bloody great hole where her eye ought to have been. śI was just about sick, her white hair floating all round this bloody slop.” śBerchard . . .” śI’m nearly there, boy. You see, the old hag gave a sort of twitch. All I could think was: ŚUgh! And there’s nothing for it but to finish her. And what a day I’m having.’ When, from nowhere, the old bat’s hand snaps out, adder quick. And whack! she’s got hold of my eye! Same one as I’d shot out of her head! And I could feel her knobbed old fingers curling in there as though my flesh and bones were made of clay. No pain. Just these fingers moving, and a sound like scooping up sand.” There was no one speaking for a league in any direction and no sound but the river and Berchard as he leaned close. śAnd she spoke to me. ŚI’ll have what I’m owed,’ she said. And I couldn’t move with her hand. And my mates were too stunned to move. Just as well, though, probably. śThat’s what I reckon happened to the other bunch, by the way. Think on it: I put her eye out. Imagine if I’d come for her with a blade! I would hate to think if I’d whacked a bolt through her heart. śFunny thing is, though, I still see a thing or two sometimes with the other eye. Mostly trees and branches. Dark paths winding through the Fey Wood down there. Sometimes a cellar full of crocks and skulls. Sometimes other things. But I can’t complain. She was owed. And settling scores is a tricky thing.” A hollow fanfare moaned from somewhere downriver past carts and the naked dead. śAh here. That’ll be old Abravanal coming out, poor devil. They sent riders ahead to hint, maybe. Poor Deorwen, she and some of the other women cleaned the boy up. He could be sleeping.” He sniffed and looked up at the cart’s load. śThis cold is God’s mercy.” Here was the gray homecoming of Durand’s lord. Durand had ridden and rowed and marched and killed and betrayed in the man’s service. He wasn’t waiting. śHere, where are you going?” Berchard demanded. Durand swung himself down from the bench while Berchard gave clumsy chase on horseback. Durand heard the clack of hooves upon the Fuller’s Bridge. All around Durand, men wiped their caps and hoods from their heads"and he pushed forward until, finally, he stood in the first circle of that solemn crowd where Abravanal and Severin faced one another. On the bridge, Abravanal sat a pale horse, bent and fragile under the heaps of his regalia. His guard included Kieren Arbourhall and"Durand noted with a flinch"Durand’s father, hunched on a sturdy warhorse. Severin of Mornaway tottered out before them all and bowed low at the muddy bridgehead. śAbravanal,” he quavered, śDuke of Gireth, I, your cousin, Severin, Duke of Mornaway, bring you greetings.” Abravanal’s flat blue eyes did not blink. ś. . . Your Grace. I . . . I am come from Ferangore in the land of your enemy. Your host has fought a great battle. Between the Rushes and the Bercelet where Radomor the Usurper set himself against your host with devices mundane and supernatural, but . . . But the courage of your liegemen. He could not resist. śVictory is yours.” Abravanal was as still as the stones of the Fuller’s Bridge as water churned around the piers below and the wind sighed over the Warrens. Severin knelt. śBut this is not the end. What would I not give if it were? The Barons of Errest have looked on from their strongholds while Gireth sent its sons against our common enemy, friendless and alone. Cowards watched and weighed the best course while your liegemen spent their blood. Of all these craven lords, I . . . I am worst! In terror of losing my own son, I have stood against your house with the enemy of our realm. To the shame of my line, I have attended the slaughter of your liegemen and sacrificed your flesh to save my own. And now"immortal infamy beyond forgiveness or remedy!"your son is among those lost before the gates of the enemy. Bravest of the bravest race! Brightest of the Sons of Atthi, he fell alone, slaying the enemy of our kingdom with his last breath. śMy crime is beyond forgiveness,” said Severin and the thin old man lowered himself into the ruts and puddles while Abravanal stared down with his flat blue eyes. Finally, Abravanal spoke into the silence: śI will take you at your word,” he said. śYou have said that you would give much, and I know what I would have of you.” Durand felt his neck prickle in the airless moment as Abravanal breathed. The man blinked his pale eyes. śWith your own bargain, you will repay me. Your son for mine. And you, Severin of Mornaway, I will hold for his murder. śBind them! I will not have them wander free while my son is bound in death. Creation will not suffer them to see another dawn!” DURAND CAME LATE to the shocked feast that followed, mounting the entry stair through silent ranks of servants. No man could wish to feast at such a time. But the Powers must be thanked, even with the world at its end and the victory so costly. And a man of Lamoric’s retinue could not escape without offending his master’s memory. As Durand stepped into Abravanal’s Painted Hall, he found a room as deep in madness as Radomor’s hall in Ferangore. He had entered at the bottom of the feasting hall, and, though hundreds sat at the long tables inside, not one man uttered a word. Every face was grim, every eye in motion. And, at the hall’s distant head, Duke Abravanal sat in dull finery, his barons arrayed on each hand, everyone sitting in the wary glitter of his hauberk, a sharp blade at his hip. One thing explained the unease of that place: like beasts before some dark altar, Severin and his son lay chained in rags before Abravanal’s high table while five-score knights of Mornaway sat among the guests. Gunderic’s ancient Sword of Justice gleamed upon the cloth before Abravanal’s seat. Durand shook his head. Had he torn Moryn from the Rooks, had he freed Mornaway from Radomor’s trap, only to watch them battle here? Near the entry arch, Berchard had saved a place and Durand stole to it. Heremund Skald took him by the shoulder as he sat. The little man ducked close to whisper, śSeems little call for players this afternoon.” Durand’s answering glance should have killed the skald like Berchard’s basilisk, but the fool merely shrugged his apologies. On the benches, the long rows of Mornaway’s troops sat with their mouths shut tight. Not one had so much as an elbow on the table. And no wonder. There, under their very noses, lay their liege lord shackled to the floor, and there was his heir. And the men of Gireth were armed. Heremund was looking too. śThe Patriarch has his beard in knots over the signs in the north. He’s standing like a sailor with the deck awash, waiting for the end. The old spirits stirring. The wards of the Ancient Patriarchs parting"everywhere there are stories of things unseen in ages now abroad. Errest is as deep with monsters as the sea, and if the last ward passes, we shall all meet our dooms. But I’m not sure we’ll live so long. Oh, and I’m pleased to see that you’ve not got yourself killed, by the by.” śThe lad did his best,” muttered Berchard. śHe really did.” At Abravanal’s right hand, a seat stood empty: for Lamoric or Landast or both. At the duke’s left was little Almora. Already, the girl had found Deorwen. Almora sat with her chin scarcely over the table, chatting with wide eyes. Deorwen’s eyes darted from the little girl to her own father, her own brother. Durand wondered what the child was saying. The feast should begin; they needed a priest to start it. śAbravanal spent every instant staring from Gunderic’s Tower,” said Heremund. śWatching, with the child playing round him like a robin. Kieren has been Lord of Gireth in his master’s absence; and your father, its marshal. I suppose, together they"” Just then, every head turned to the entry stair and Oredgar the Patriarch stalked into the room. The tall priest scowled, disapproving of the gathering. Grease and soot streaked his beard. And he wore no fine vestments. But still, he stalked to the top of the hall and stood by the high table. śPeers of Errest. Lords, ladies. Serving men. Sons and Daughters of Atthi. Praised be the Silent King of Heaven and the dread Powers of his Host,” he said into the silence. śA great victory has been won. And we are wise to render the Powers their due thanks.” The tall priest swiveled his sea-eagle’s fierce gaze over the tables, and men of both dukedoms mumbled gratitude. For a moment, he closed those piercing eyes and clamped his mouth tight shut, then he began as Durand had heard him begin before: śThe Westering Sea is broad, Saerdan’s Cradle sailed many days, and the Sons of Atthi knew thirst. Some despaired of reaching the far havens, turning back for the sunset, though the brave pressed on as days and weeks crept by upon the empty ocean and the last crumbs were gobbled down and the hairy dregs drunk up. But I will go farther. Madness crept among those aboard that ship. The weak slept to their deaths, and poor bleeding wretches died staring at the Heavens.” He raised a woolly eyebrow and scanned the crowded hall once more. śI think of that packed ship now"alone upon the broad back of the ocean,” he said. śOf the hold, empty. The barrels, dry, and the bleeding gums, the weeping sores. And the secret doubts of every man who knew he’d sailed his family onto the empty deeps beyond hope of return. For that is what Saerdan’s story means; do not be deceived!” Oredgar looked over the room as if daring some fool to deny it. śBut then! There came a last day upon that still-empty deep when the Voyager sounded the fathomless sea"beyond hope of land and with shaking hand, he heaved his leadline out and"at the very last fathom with the last wisps of line in his fingertips"he felt the tap of the bottom far below. A touch he could scarcely feel. The horizon was as bare as a ring of steel, but the sea was not fathomless. And he hauled that line back as if he were reeling in the far shore and that old lead came back to him stuffed with mud"with silt, sweet with the taste of rivers. At the darkest. At the last cast.” The Patriarch turned to Abravanal, to Severin, to the assembled peers, and he thrust his bearded chin high. śI stand before you as cities lie in ashes. The king wages war. Sanctuaries fall. And I think of Saerdan’s final heave of the lead"plunging through the darkness, reaching down, down for the very bed of the sea when all was lost. śNow, when you have done here, there is a mighty funeral beginning. For this, I think, we shall mark the night in procession. There may yet be holy ground enough at the old sanctuary.” With that, Oredgar left the denizens of the Painted Hall in fierce and shamefaced silence. HOW LONG THEY sat in that dark hall, Durand could not say. But after an age served in grim celebration, a runner slipped through the crowd to Kieren, like a bird winging in through a sickroom window. And, in moments, Abravanal was on his feet and stalking from the hall with his robes flapping behind him. Durand got up to follow and found that he was not alone as barons, lords, and fighting men joined. And the crowd became a baffled procession groping through the narrow spaces of the castle and pouring out into the twilit marketplace where the duke hesitated. Alone, the old man gaped at a vision that spread before them in the gloom: thousands of men and women had climbed the ruined citadel. Their silent multitude now gathered round the ruins of a high sanctuary whose broken walls stood in an island of rushlight and torches. They blundered after Abravanal like nursemaids on a sleepwalker’s heels as the old man staggered through the charred city, until soon the towering blades of the sanctuary’s walls pitched near and their makeshift procession was among the mute crowd. People cast their eyes down and parted to let the procession through to the eerie place in the midst of the gathering. It seemed to Durand that Oredgar had rebuilt his sanctuary with a press of living men in place of dead stone. Above, the purple Heavens gaped with twilight. But on the tiles at their feet lay every man who’d been carted from Ferangore, blue-pale and as still as eternity. Slack skin shone with oil, and the air was thick with balsam and ginger. The Patriarch of Acconel spread his arms at the head of the candlelit multitude. śJoin as we sing the Last Twilight and walk the hours of darkness as they did in the days of the High Kingdom. For now, our land is laid bare to the Otherworld, the Banished groan at their ancient fetters, and the Lost spin above our heads. But we shall not despair. And neither shall we sleep, for the prayers of the priests and Knights of Ash suffice no longer, and we must take the burden in our own hands. Those who lie in this place faced death and disaster for our sakes and we must do likewise now. The wise women have prepared them and now we must wait the dawn to send them onward. Over this last night, we must keep vigil. We shall not sleep so that our brothers may rest untroubled until their passage through the Bright Gates of far Heaven.” śDawn,” Abravanal said. śOne night is not enough to bid him good-bye! My son!” And Durand wondered if the old man knew how Lamoric had fought for just such a sob"for anyone to think him worth it. Abravanal doubled over and Kieren, nearest, rushed to his elbow. But the old man reared up. śIt will be here!” he said, turning to the crowd. Facing them all, wild-eyed. śWe will build a gibbet here where all can see what becomes of traitors! Of traitors and killers all! They shall not see the dawn. They shall not see it!” Men took hold of the old man, though Kieren gave a quick and reluctant nod to the duke’s mad orders: they would build a scaffold in the funeral’s midst. _________ AND SO DURAND joined the heaving circle around the wrecked sanctuary while a gang of workmen hammered and sawed for the duke, and Durand cursed the madness of it all. Great songs rose among the masses, their arcane harmonies curling in the high darkness while the labor of marching took place in the rutted earth below. People caught each other’s elbows and watched for the children and the old. As he jostled in the throng, Durand found himself stealing glances through piers and broken windows of the sanctuary where the dead lay like ivory men in the candlelight. The duke sat crumpled at the head of his son, while Almora, with her ink-brush hair, nestled against Deorwen’s chest"the little thing was not sleeping, but Durand thanked Heaven that Deorwen could be there with the girl’s father half-mad. And then he saw Deorwen’s eyes searching the darkness where he marched, hidden, and he wondered what comfort there was for her in all this chaos. Her father and brother were marching among the mourners"barefoot and stained, dragging their chains like souls already deep in some Hell. śI should grab them and fly this city of madmen,” Durand muttered. He’d pulled Moryn from a mountaintop with the Rooks ranged against him and three armies fighting in the streets. śAnd here, there’s half an army that would lend me aid.” But, that night, such a clumsy stroke must mean war. Abravanal’s men were bound with ancient oaths and they too had suffered for Mornaway’s sin. Worse, after what Durand had seen at the Fuller’s Bridge, he doubted that Severin would submit to any attempt at rescuing him. In his own way, the old man was more stiff-necked than his bloody son. Durand looked into the Heavens"only to be reminded of greater disasters. Great glacial landscapes of cloud swung low over the duchies of the north like the face of a falling moon. And he circled through the dark beneath the ominous Heavens, making wide swinging pass after wide swinging pass. Near the candlelit mouth of the sanctuary, his course brought him near the scaffold where delegations of Abravanal’s trusted lords slipped through the sanctuary in ones and twos to plead. They scowled and muttered at the scaffold. But Abravanal was unmoved. He saw Coensar the Champion standing watch in the sanctuary. Turn after turn, Durand watched the man: his gray hair, the slim blade of Keening"but the glint of an inward gaze. This was not the captain, alert. This was a man trapped and thinking, his eyes fixed. It would have been so much tidier if one or the other of them had died. There had been a wealth of chances for bad luck in the last weeks"Durand felt a wry tug of irony as he stumbled through the gloom"and Coensar had certainly done his best. Now though, Durand haunted the city Coensar meant to command, an untidy reminder. A glance into the dark beyond the marching circle revealed that there were indeed creeping things half-visible among the scorched acres just as Oredgar had warned: long-limbed creatures with slack bellies, shadows with vulpine gazes. At the limits of sight, Durand thought he saw something as tall as an oak, watching. But the song climbed higher around Durand, and he pictured Coensar on the day they broke the siege, striding among the rafters as he cleared that nest of bowmen above the fight. He conjured up the heartbeats before the betrayal. It had all happened very quickly. There Coensar had been, standing above the fighting like a ship’s master on a pitching deck. Alone, he had thwarted an ambush that should have slain their army, commanding the battle he was winning. But then he must have spotted Durand"the shield-bearer he had trained to knighthood"charging off with Lamoric on his saddlebow and Coensar’s chance was lost, the whole of his future bundled up on another man’s horse. But when Coensar swung his ugly peasant’s ball of tines, Durand had been trying to save their blasted liege lord! But now . . . if Kieren was cunning, Coensar was the hero, the Champion. Men would follow him no matter how Abravanal faltered. They could rebuild the dukedom on his shoulders. Durand rubbed at his knotted cheek"and glanced up to spot the Baron of Swanskin Down. The man picked Durand’s face from the crowd in a glum instant. He passed Sallow Hythe and the others, each man ignoring Durand except, perhaps, for a flicker of his eyes. Durand shook his head, bewildered. śHas Coen told them?” The turf seethed with secret watchers. And, out against the dark, the giant figure still looked on. It leaned upon a crook. Why should the Champion of Gireth stain his own colors? There should be no reason for these men to look his way, unless something had forced Coen’s hand and they were puzzling over what to do with the man who knew Coensar’s secret. With so many of his thoughts unsettled, Durand had been keeping clear of Berchard. Now, he wondered if it wasn’t time to ask the man a question. Finding Berchard was the work of a moment, and in a few heartbeats, he had pulled the stocky knight out into the dark. śBerchard,” he said, śwhen did you know?” The startled man gulped. śHells, boy. I thought one of the Strangers had"” śWhen did you know what our captain had done?” The knight’s eye rolled. śDo you see them? It’s thick with spirits, man.” A taloned hand spread near the man’s ankle. śAh. You must see the devils. Fighting men and leeches often do"it’s death that opens the eyes.” śI’ve good reason, Berchard.” If the barons knew, they had choices to make about what to do with their heroes. Could they trust the secret to a man like Durand? śI think I’ve a right, haven’t I?” With a grunt, Berchard squinted up into Durand’s face. śI came upon an empty village once upon a time"on the River Tresses up near the Blackroot Mountains. Just a few hovels on the bank with gardens plowed back into the wood, and I’d been walking days, coming up from Sallow Hythe, if I remember, and night was coming on. And the last thing I wanted to do was sleep under a thornbush. Did I say it was raining?” Durand seized the man. There were things in the gloom prowling nearer, low and catlike. śBy Heaven, man! It’s a plain enough question.” Berchard stopped cold. There was no joking in his face, and, when Durand freed him, the man continued almost as if he were reading the words from the Book of Moons. ś"Pelting down,” he said. śAnd I looked through the whole place, thumping on the doors and pushing my way into the little wooden sanctuary they had. But there wasn’t a soul to be found. śAnd then it struck me that there was grass standing pretty high in the street. And I thought: there’d been sheep on the meadow and pigs in the forest, but there was precious little moving in the town. So I shoved my way through the door of the first old hovel"and the reek I met! śYou hear stories of whole villages where some fever carries off every living soul"” śAye.” ś"And no one’s left to bury the dead. But this was only an ox. Dead, tied, and sinking into its own filth behind barred doors. Maybe been there for a moon or two. Every hovel was the same. I found a dog who’d strangled himself on a stout lime lead. And dead stock barred or fenced in. But not a man. śI didn’t know what had befallen the poor devils, but I was ready to take my leave. So I started back toward the wellhead where I’d tied my horse"when I saw it. śIt could have been someone’s washing: just a patch of red homespun matting the tall grass. But it was a body; hardly anything left of her. Brown as roots and yellow as old crockery. No sign of why. And I picked out another patch of cloth, and another"a path leading back behind one of the hovels. Body after body lying in the bindweed, thistle, and cabbages. Not a stain, nor sign of murder. śNow, standing over the yard in back of the house was this dung heap. And the bodies made a path to the thing. First women, then little children"sprawled and horrible. Little kirtles. Bonnets. Finally, hard against the dung heap, five or six men, armed with hoes and forks. śSo there I am back of some hovel with bodies strewn like stiff mats in the grass all round. It’s still raining. An open grave fanned round this dung heap and me in the middle"when I hear it"Ssssss! Like eggs on a hot pan. I leap, and the dung heap is shifting, big clods rolling. Something alive is uncurling in that warm reek. And I knew that I was just in time. And so I got my good eye shut and ran like a child, tramping on more than one empty suit of clothes on the way I’ll tell you"cracking them bones.” śJust in time for what?” prompted Durand. śI’d seen a wet glint of scales. But I’m no fool, and I’ve lived when others have died beside me. I’d heard tales down the Gray Road of a serpent born of a dung heap. Born of a cockerel’s egg, choked with poison. And a glance that’ll kill a man, certain, if he sees it. They call him the basilisk. śIt’ll have been one of the little lads who stumbled on it. And the others will have come to see what their friend had done, or if he was teasing them. And then the mothers, and then the husbands mad and armed with what they could find. All dead. And any one of them would have been fine if they’d just left bad enough alone. If they’d just decided that they didn’t need to know what had happened. Or if they’d just turned their backs. But that’s never the way.” śFrom the day Coen struck me down. You’ve known since the very day.” Berchard shook his head. śYou see?” śYou were there in the Painted Hall.” When Durand lay torn to pieces, his face smashed like a jug. They’d known before Badan and Ferangore. Before Durand could think or stop himself, he’d knocked the old knight sprawling and was striding over him. śWho else? Who else knew?” You could see the cords in Berchard’s neck, straining under his beard. If the barons knew, they might be plotting anything, even now. śEveryone,” said Berchard. śLamoric. Your brother got it out of me. Heremund . . . Our Badan might’ve been the only"” śI’ll speak to the barons,” Durand snarled. He wouldn’t run. Two-score faces turned his way as he left his friend lying in the rubble and pushed into the procession. All the hours upon the floor in the Painted Hall, all the days in Yrlac, and they had known. His face was burning when he broke free of the crowd and stalked toward the gaggle of barons where they colluded by the scaffold"if he’d had a sword, God knew what he might have done. As it was, he set his hand on Sallow Hythe’s shoulder and spun the man round. śWe must speak,” he said. Sallow Hythe turned slightly, letting candlelight fall on Durand’s face"his brow clouded a moment. śYou could be no one but Durand Col,” he said, and Durand remembered that he still bore scars and that his head remained bare from the surgeons’ razors. śHere,” said the elegant baron. śI suppose we must deal with every issue when it comes to us. There is a chamber or two remaining in this old shell. At the foot of the tower.” The barons ushered Durand to a low door where the masonry survived. As he stepped over the threshold, the door rattled shut behind him. Durand’s father lifted a torch. And Durand stood alone with his father and the barons of Gireth just as he had been on the far shores of the mere ages before. Even Kieren was there. śHe has no business dragging us anywhere against our will,” Swanskin grunted. The gruff old man paced the room, peering about himself as though he expected the ceiling to come down. Sallow Hythe merely closed his eyes. śWe will forgive the lapse, I think. For the conversation is one that must be had.” They had the look of men choosing an uncomfortable course, and were bracing themselves to follow through. śWe have heard a story,” said Sallow Hythe, kneading his temples. śIt seems that our Champion has allowed ambition to tempt him into dishonor. And that you were the principal victim of his . . . error in judgment.” Durand’s father stood across the room, saying nothing. śWe are further led to believe,” continued Sallow Hythe, śthat Coensar intends to allow you to decide what becomes of him. It is my belief that Coensar is unable to accord his recent actions with his beliefs concerning his own character.” śIs that what bothers him?” śDid we need more trouble at this moment? You have asked. You are granted as clear an explanation as may be. Lamoric is gone and half the peers of Gireth are lost with him. The city has been laid waste, and manors for leagues around have been sacked by the raiding parties of Yrlac’s army. But have you seen how the people rally? How they gathered here? Even before we returned, they were rebuilding. śI imagine that self-absorption is to be expected of a man in your position, but you must have noticed the work gangs"they are not paid laborers.” He raised his hands toward the city beyond the vaults of the chamber ceiling. śIt is good will. The undaunted spirit of a land uncowed by the indifference of its faraway king and the brutality of its enemies. When you see the masses marching in their circles. When you hear the mallets and axes in the streets, you hear their defiance. śI do not wish to debase this spirit with too much calculation, but morale can be squandered if close account is not taken of it.” Young Honefells interrupted, his blue eyes rolling at his elder’s elaborate diction. śHost Above, Sallow Hythe.” But Swanskin preempted an argument with a rumble from the dark. śIt is simple, boy. There’s not the coin for this work. Whether we war with Mornaway or no, we’ll be sweeping the treasury floor for the last penny long before we’ve so much as renewed the walls. All the silver in Abravanal’s lands will be gone in a thousand hire-swords’ purses. Is it not so, Kieren?” Kieren nodded low. śAbravanal is scarcely able to put food in the mouths of those who have volunteered.” And so Sallow Hythe spread his long-fingered hands. śHis Grace cannot afford justice. Not for you. Our heroes cannot be rapists or thieves or oathbreakers or traitors, for we cannot afford to dishearten their admirers. Not just now, anyway. Not while they are needed.” śI have not asked,” said Durand. śHow many men would desert us if we poisoned the tales of brave Sir Coensar, the Champion of Ancient Gireth, and his holding the rampart for his young lord? Perhaps they would decide that he’d let Lamoric die"or killed him. The duke and his son might both have been made fools of by this mercenary captain. However it came to pass, we would lose some, that much is sure. It might be a third of all our laborers.” His face was grim as he paused. śIt is more than one man is worth.” Durand’s gaze traveled over eyes of flint and winter blue, his father’s included. And for the first time, Durand wondered if these men meant to kill him. śWhy does the duke not say these things with his own tongue?” he murmured, conscious of being a large man in a small space. Swanskin’s broad nostrils flared. śBecause you are little better than a common soldier! Because he thought four barons might suffice to serve as messengers! We’ve no time to bandy bloody words with children! There is a host beyond these doors with its lord trussed and ready for the chopping block!” His shout was a physical blow, and Durand felt a stab of panic. But then he looked closer at the great men, and saw them shifting in their boots like guilty children. śBut that’s not the reason; His Grace does not know.” śNo,” said Honefells. The bluff young lord gave a grudging, slanted smile. śYou’re no fool, Durand. Outrage is the best cloak for a lie, and Abravanal has not come himself, because he does not know. We know. His son has died. Both sons. That is enough for him. He is not party to this. Don’t think ill of the old man.” Swanskin frowned. śBut, one way or another, the tale must die. We must be satisfied.” Durand knew what he should say. He should let Coen’s treason stand. He thought of his nights with Deorwen. Of the things Coensar knew"or guessed"and did not say. śLong ago, Coensar told me that I need let no blow go unanswered. . . .” śYou see,” said Swanskin. śA young man’s blood is quick and this injustice will work like a sliver. How if there is some other sleight? How can there not be? How long will he hold his tongue while Coensar lives in fame? We must be finished here. How long have we got till dawn? Is there an hour?” At this, Baron Hroc swelled like a bear. śAre you pushed for time? Why then have we been standing here gabbling with the boy? If he can say neither Śyes’ nor Śno,’ why’d we let him speak at all? The time to slit his throat was when he stepped through that door!” śYou mistake Swanskin’s meaning,” Sallow Hythe began. Hroc’s eyebrows shot up. śOh! So you think I can’t hear what’s spoken plain before me, do you? The boy’s been mad and a fool, but he’s bled rivers for you bastards and he’s never given any man alive cause to doubt his word.” As his father rose to defend him, all Durand could think of was Lamoric. And the man’s wife. He’d put a man off a cliff. He’d stolen through the dark of his master’s house. He couldn’t think. But Swanskin was speaking. śThen, if we’re to trust his word, we must hear it!” Durand seized the door handle and propelled himself outside, hoping for space and air to think and reason. Instead, he blundered smack into a scene from the end of the world. A thousand bodies were stirring upon the sanctuary floor. Gleaming with sacred oils, they struggled and, finally, climbed to their knees, their winding sheets hanging from their bare limbs. Durand saw Abravanal on his feet, not knowing which way to turn. Deorwen clutched the awestricken child to her breast. And the crowd, at a standstill now, moaned like the sea"five thousand gaping faces. Over all their heads, the sky was churning, the hanging mountain twisting apart, wrenched into spines like the points of a crown. Row upon row, the dead turned with their eyes on the northern sky and their arms wide"each man summoned to prayer by the war in the Heavens. At Durand’s back, the barons stumbled from the sanctuary chamber, almost forgotten. While, at the very same instant, Marshal Conran reeled through the broken portals of the sanctuary, hardly a step from Durand. His enormous hands caught Durand’s shoulders as if he were a child. śThe king,” he breathed. His eye stared so wide that Durand wasn’t sure he even knew there were dead men praying around him. śHe is alone. He lashes at the trees. Gnarled branches. Unhorsed! But there is someone in that forest with him!” An impossible gust of wooded air boiled up around the towering knight: the smell of sopping acres under naked trees. His hands were ice and twisting tighter and tighter. Durand saw something moving in that broad, blue eye. In a moment, the big man would snap Durand’s shoulders. śConran!” Durand tried to wrench free. Beyond the sanctuary, the crowd had ceased their singing. Creation was still under the spinning vault of Heaven. śOh! Oh, Heaven help us!” And Abravanal was careering through the sanctuary, the Sword of Judgment clutched to his bony chest, as huge in his arms as a grown man’s weapon in the hands of a child. Coensar trailed the man, not sure whether to leave Deorwen and the child. śThey rebel!” Abravanal shouted. śOur fallen sons! First Twilight is upon us . . .” He cast his searching gaze over the praying figures all around him. śIt is the traitors! The traitors live!” he cried, now pelting down the nave, weaving closer. śThey will not suffer it! It is a clear sign.” Now, the old man caught Durand’s sleeve, and, for a moment, Durand was torn between madmen. śYour Grace, no!” śThe dawn is theirs and they will not suffer these devils to share it!” said Abravanal. He shouted, eyes starting from his skull, śBring the butchers out! Bring"” "But the duke and his son had already stepped from the crowd. śDuke Abravanal, we are here.” Severin’s face was still, though his skeletal frame trembled in its rags despite the support of his heir. śGood. Good!” The old man clutched at Durand’s tunic, and he seemed to recognize him. Tears shone on his face. śYou were at his side. You must do this.” He pushed the great blade upon Durand. śMy boy would not take my father’s Sword of Judgment. You must take it now.” śYour Grace"” Durand had the huge sword in his fists. śNo.” The old man shook his head. śIt is justice. It is their debt and freely they pay it.” Durand saw two fools too mad to flee even with an army at their backs. And the old man hauled on Durand’s sleeve, tugging him to the scaffold and up with the men of Mornaway. Abravanal jerked the scabbard from the ancient blade and flung the thing aside. This would be no hanging. And there Durand stood, with the twilit Heavens spinning like a platter, five thousand shocked faces staring with the Banished beyond. Gunderic’s old blade took both hands to wield; even to lift it was a struggle. He saw the dead mouthing words: mouthing some sort of prayer. And he saw Almora staring up from the midst of the madness, clutched in Deorwen’s arms. She was a brave thing, but now she was screaming so that she hardly breathed. And Deorwen"she was caught between the little girl and her brother on the scaffold, and her lover with the blade that would kill him. In the Atthias, there is no block for the highborn: not when a sword is used, for a fine blade was no woodcutter’s axe to risk in a knotted stump. śI will be first,” said Severin. śIt must be me.” śIt is not just,” said Abravanal. śI am living.” And his son was dead: the unassailable reason of madness. And an anonymous soldier pulled the old man aside, leaving Moryn of Mornaway to step out on the fresh planks. The man scanned the crowd for an instant, taking in the Heavens and the ruins and the multitudes. He must have seen men among the crowd, hands on their blades. Moryn’s dark eyes flashed and he thrust his chin high. śI do this by my will! Let no man of mine seek to thwart my purpose. Let none seek to avenge me.” Durand saw Deorwen looking up as he heaved the enormous blade back. And when he turned back to his work, he saw Moryn staring into his eyes. Finally, the Lord of Mornaway gave the smallest fraction of a nod, taking his death from mad Abravanal. Consenting. And there was Durand with the killing blade poised over his shoulder, the only sound Almora’s screaming. śNo!” said a voice into Durand’s daft silence. śIt is too much!” And it was not one of the men upon the platform. Durand shared a tight-jawed look with Moryn before Coensar took the stairs. śDo not stop,” Abravanal was saying. But Durand would not move now for worlds. The captain limped the last step. śYour Grace, it mustn’t be this way. What will be left if every traitor dies? The kingdom is falling.” He stepped across the platform with his hands open. śIt is justice,” the duke said. śHave you seen Almora?” The duke blinked across the sanctuary. Almora’s dark eyes stared from streams of tears, clutching Deorwen. śWho’s held her with her sister gone?” said Coensar. śWho does she cling to now? And you would slay the woman’s brother, Your Grace? Her father? When her husband’s yet unburied? Could you trust her with your daughter after? You will not do this, because you are a better man than Radomor. He would sneer at us all if he saw this.” As Coensar spoke, a sound pricked at Durand’s ears, a whisper rising like the rustle of leaves before a storm. All around the sanctuary, the dead were still praying, faster and faster, the tongues clicking and popping in their mouths like locusts in a field. Marshal Conran reeled among the rows of dead men. śHis Highness comes up on a clearing!” shouted Conran and fell to the ground below the scaffold. Durand leapt down, letting Gunderic’s sword clatter. Conran shook his head. śThe branches give way and he stumbles out into a place thick with rank grasses. He’s calling out to the shadows: ŚDo what you have come to do! Work your master’s will upon me.’ And they come.” Durand looked into the dizzy eye. He could smell the forest in the midst of that burned city, and the sticky whispers of the dead became the rush of leaves in the high branches of Windhover as the giant twisted against the tiles. śThey come . . . there are so many.” And in Conran’s eye, Durand could see the twilit sky full of branches, the shadows of armed men, and the gleam of naked blades. The king had fallen, crawling. And the dead of Gireth stood, tipping their faces Heavenward. And Durand saw the forest explode with horses. śLancers!” gasped Conran. śA conroi or more.” Durand saw men torn from their feet. He could hear crash and scream. Knights thundered down upon the assassins, blades bare. And a gale of small birds stormed around them. śHe . . . he is free!” Conran breathed. Durand saw the trees wheeling once more. Irridescent birds. Was Ragnal saved or fleeing once more? Then a figure"a long streak of shadow"and a gauntlet reaching. And there was a smiling face. A thin and dog-tired smile. śIt is the prince. Prince Biedin has brought his brother from the edge of death!” The scent of those distant trees flooded the city by the mere. A feverish ocean of leaves and growing things under the Sowing Moon broke over the ruins. Conran spread his hands upon the sanctuary steps, rising as, all around the sanctuary, the fallen sank to the tiles, and the looming of glaciers and mists churning overhead withdrew, stilled once more. WITH ONE BELEAGUERED twist of his head, Durand saw Deorwen, Almora, Coensar, Abravanal, mourners in their thousands, and he could not catch hold of it all"it was like catching an ocean in his hands. And so he stumbled away, pitching through the awestruck crowd and out into the twilight and the ruins. He wove between broke-toothed facades beyond which he glimpsed tangles of charred timber like a thousand-acre puzzle box; a touch might bring the black city down in a cloud. A wet voice chuckled, huge and warm at his neck. śYou are welcome now,” it spluttered. The rotten breath boiled around him, and he spun, reaching for a blade that he did not carry. But the monstrous ancient of the mere was not in the street with Durand. The voice addered between the broken walls. śYou have left old Gunderic’s blade, Bull of their festival.” It chuckled as Durand stumbled faster. śNearly, our kingdoms are returned to us. We have heard the marching step. Temple after temple, falling. Moon after moon. Nearer and tramping nearer. But now, that sandal hangs. It hangs over us, but not falling. Not falling"and that island temple stands by the house of eagles, the vilest brightest temple. That ring by which all chains are gathered, it binds us still!” No matter what the thing said about its bonds, Durand heard it free in the streets with him. Its sigh shuddered and it dragged its monstrous hooves or feet or talons through the rubble not far away. And so Durand scrambled away, hoping that some sanctuary or shrine stood intact in all the broken lanes and he could shut its door on the monster. śBut you, Blood of Bruna,” the brute said. śBruna betrayed. Bruna betrayer. Dupe and deceiver who crawls my stolen kingdom. Was I prophet enough for thee?” Durand plunged into an ally. They read his fortune, every mad thing in Creation, and they saw that betrayal there. And Coensar. Some small part of his mind wondered at the darkness of the old story of Bruna, a lover among the Firstborn of Creation’s Dawning. A friend had betrayed him"or he’d betrayed that friend. And he’d taken his people to war. The first of men, maybe. Was this his doom? But he heard the brute, scraping the high walls on his heels. And its footfalls shaking soot from the sky. Ahead, Durand heard something knock. He pictured a great door swinging, and a chain across it. śWait!” he called. śLong was I king over the men of these shores! The firstborn of man and beast they slid down to me. Cool bodies to comfort me in the dark. ŚBull’ you Sons of Atthi called me, and bull you sent me full of iron darts. But you, at least, will mock no longer. Bull of their battles! You who have borne the pains I promised!” With the thing’s breath in his nostrils, Durand burst into the open street once more"there was no swinging door. He saw only the ruined Gates of Sunset and the scorched idol of the Silent King of Heaven, lying like a charred invalid among the empty tents of refugees. How they had fought there! Durand remembered the glorious route, the flight for Gunderic’s Tower, the moment at the castle gates. He turned and saw the monster stepping from the alley like a man crawling from a barrel"its lamp eyes wide, its great bull’s skull streaming putrefaction. Its hog-rib teeth caught the twilight. But, as Durand gave ground, he heard the chain still swinging: tock . . . tock. And his mind followed the sound, wondering with a dying man’s dispassion just what he was hearing. The monster stood, the rotten king of this shore. And Durand blundered against the stone King in Silence"just a brush of fingertips. HE WAS ELSEWHERE. Tock. He knew the sound now as a staff’s clear rap on stone. But he was no longer where he had been. The touch of his fingertips upon that idol had taken him away from the city and the streets and now he stood in a forest track under a towering elm. And the Traveler loomed above him, its limbs hung with the rags of the roadside, its frame the bones of the dead in ditches. This was the giant he had seen beyond the sanctuary, looking on. The brim of the giant’s pilgrim hat cut a swelling circle from the Heavens as the Power creaked low, the knotted cords of its beard swinging below its jaw. śOnce more, you’ve come to crossroads.” Durand shook his head, scrabbling once at his stubbled scalp. It had been a long time since the well at Col where he’d met this thing before. He had been a child, it seemed to him now. But he remembered the questions he had asked down by the water"and the Power’s promises. śThere were many promises,” he rasped. And, nearly, a frayed laugh escaped him. The Traveler rumbled: śSo it has ever been.” Durand struggled to remember their last conversation; it seemed so long ago"though a man could scarcely forget his chats with gods. śA place, I wanted, when mine was gone. And, I think, success. That seemed far from me then.” Though how much farther now? śAnd, though I asked about Śfamily’ I wondered what woman would ever want a pauper-thug on the road.” He stood with his hitched shoulder and the marks of Coensar’s ambition plain on his face. There was more pain than he liked to admit. śWhat became of all that, then?” Solemnly, the Power straightened against the sky. śIt has come to pass.” Durand looked high into the Traveler’s distant eyes"one penny bright, the other black. And he clenched his tiny fists. śThis is no light matter to me.” śDid you not triumph at Red Winding and Tern Gyre? Were you not Bull of Acconel’s festival? Did you not bring victory at Acconel and Ferangore and twice swim a mere to save a city?” śYou cannot mean what you say.” śYou craved a place. A share of glory.” The Power’s string-knotted palms brushed dry whispers from his forked staff. śAnd a beauty . . .” śPower, your promises weigh less than your brother’s silence.” There was a dry rushing sound as the Traveler drew breath. śI am not perverse in this. The balance is ancient and we are, all of us, bound by it. Hosts Above; Hosts Below. A push above allows a pull below. Though I might set you upon the throne of dukedoms, the Powers of darkness would throw you down. The straight word is twisted.” śAnd so I have groveled for crooked whispers. I ask you, what have your whispers gained me? If I have had my share of fortune, thorned and meager though they have been, what is left to me? What would you have me do now?” śI stand at the crossroads,” said the Power. śMost hear but the tap of my stick. But much has turned about you.” Durand groped at his eyes, despairing. śI . . . I cannot fathom what you say. You have come to gloat and torment"” Like all the seas together, the giant roared. With his staff, he struck the vault of Heaven a blow that flashed from horizon to horizon. And Durand knew that he had dared much in the face of such power. śThe Host may do as it might, but I will answer this. What will become of me? What must I do? The questions, the answers, they echo from heart to heart through the ages. Forever unchanging.” In mountains leagues away, the ice gave way and plunged headlong down high vales. The Power shook the earth with his staff’s heel, and Durand crushed his face against the mud. śHow can a man live and not wonder?” Durand heard the ship’s-rigging creak of the great frame bending once more. śThe answers do not change, O child of my brother’s dreaming. Glory, love. All of these.” The smell of roots and stones and cold-water ditches brimmed the horizons as Durand sprawled on the earth. śEach and all shall be your own!” And, with a rush of a forest’s weight of leaves, every sound of the titan vanished from that place. śAnd will I find only the same fruitless harvest?” was Durand’s whisper. But there was no sign of the Traveler when Durand found the courage to raise his eyes. DEORWEN’S VOICE SUMMONED him once more into Creation. A familiar note reached the forest track: her call, it seemed to him, carried the echoes of stone walls where the breeze was full of tentcloth and guylines. There was even the trill of morning robins. śDurand?” she whispered. And he smiled up into a human face in a human place, hard by a capsized idol. śWhere have you been?” she asked. He blinked up at her. And, finally, saw the marks of exhaustion and fear upon her face. Her doe brown eyes glinted. śYour father,” Durand managed, śdoes he live?” And Deorwen blinked back tears, knuckling them from her cheeks. śHe does. Abravanal is like his people. Swords and stone walls did not keep sorrow from his door. There is nothing to do with such anguish. Nothing but rail or collapse and he has relented now. My father has made promises: his host, should there be war. And the free use of his roads and rivers, if there’s peace and trade. All till the death of Moryn’s heir. It is what he meant to offer from the beginning.” Almost, Durand reached for her"laughed for relief with her. But the black she wore was widow’s black. And a wife’s headcloth covering her hair. On that stone floor, Lamoric would still be waiting. Durand pried himself from the street, and when Deorwen touched his battered jaw, he stepped back. śAlmora will be missing you,” he said. DURAND MET A procession already gathering at the sanctuary ruin. Again, the crowd had found its voice, and it was a singing multitude that lifted each dead man to its shoulders and began the solemn march for the fields beyond the Gates of Sunset. And so Durand simply fell in line, taking his place under the bier of one dead man. Soot-blackened plowmen bawled hymns all around him while their pale burdens rode like idols above the throng. Somewhere, Badan rode strangers’ shoulders. Men Durand had known since childhood or marched with down the Valley of the Rushes rocked over their heads, and he fought to keep his eyes closed, breathing the oiled air and hearing the cry of the waking gulls from the harbor. Shadows led them from the sanctuary ruin past the Gates of Sunset to the rutted fields where dark holes had been opened in the earth. The fallen would lie between their city and the Duchy of Yrlac, standing watch as they had in life. Through it all, Abravanal marched at the head of his people. In one night, he must have been broken and mended a dozen times. But his duty thrust him before the masses, and he walked now with Almora at his side and the great Sword of Judgment on Coen’s shoulder as they came to the gravesides. Conran and his brother prayed. The Patriarch sung to the Eye. And though the Sowing Moon hung huge and ghostly over the mere, the Eye of Heaven split the horizon as they laid the dead into the bosom of the earth. Five thousand heads turned and five thousand voices together sang the Dawn Thanksgiving to the clear Heavens and its Silent King. They had seen the storm part. Somewhere in the forest of Windhover, the crown was safe for a time. They had heard Conran’s vision. And though they could not know why the last sanctuary still stood, they knew peace when it came to them. Durand stayed as serving men and lords filled the graves. He watched faces disappear and long shapes vanish in the rising earth. And he stayed after the last word was sung and the chill had sent all but a few to their beds. Heremund tapped him gamely on the arm. śI tried to give you some warning. I could see it coming in Coen’s eyes, but you couldn’t hear. Maybe there wasn’t anything you could have done. And then we thought it might hurt you"hearing what he’d done"and you needed to heal. Maybe you were off to the Gates. And after, well, Coensar has been a good man. The lads couldn’t turn on a friend.” Durand stared over the mounded earth, and finally the skald ducked his eyes and trudged away. Durand had meant to find words, but none came. At last, only he and the duke’s few men remained. Abravanal let his hand settle on Durand’s arm. He seemed very small, and very old. Almora had been bundled over Kieren’s shoulder and the Fox wavered between concern for his duke and his onetime shield-bearer. śHis Grace wants a word,” he said. And Durand looked. The duke took his hand from Durand’s arm. śDurand Col. I know what you tried to do for my son. I know how many times his life was owed you. You were his guardian, though he would not be guarded.” But Durand was thinking that the man might not have died at all if Durand had not lingered with his wife. śI know what you suffered for him.” Durand blinked. śNo other man living could have stolen Severin’s boy from Radomor’s citadel. I saw you standing here"brooding over these graves. You have the look of a man bidding good-bye. But I would not have you depart.” The old man saw in him the grief of a loyal servant. Durand felt like a liar. He could not have said what he felt. Shame, perhaps. Perhaps other things. But Abravanal looked into the clouds of Durand’s eyes, and hope seemed to glow through the wreck of the old man’s life like the Eye of Heaven through the empty windows of the high sanctuary. Durand wondered what the old man thought he saw. śI have a daughter still,” he said. śShe is the last of my blood. All that survives of my wife. My fathers. As you served my son, Durand, I plead with you: serve my daughter. She will have his wife to stand by her. I think that must be. But the Powers will not have another child of mine. Not while I live.” The old man cast his eyes down, confessing, śI could not endure it.” But Durand could not answer. He imagined years in Gunderic’s Tower with Deorwen always near. No escaping, but never touching. And, after a space of heartbeats, the duke nodded and walked from the graves with his daughter"leaving Durand entirely alone. Or so he thought. A shadow slipped over him. And he saw a figure against the Eye of Heaven. A blade glinted in the man’s fist. śWho are you?” Durand challenged, wincing into the glare. Durand could see the man’s shoulders rising with deep breaths, his blood pounding. And the slender blade winked, turning in the stranger’s hand. And Durand guessed whom he faced. śCoen.” For the space of two slow heartbeats, the figure was still. Then he stepped from the light. And, without a further word, stalked for the gates with a blue mantle swirling in his wake. And Durand realized that everything must stay as it was"that his decision had always been made. He was no stronger than Berchard or Heremund. He could no more turn on Coensar than any of the others. And so, he would return to the court of Abravanal and stand guard over the duke’s last child. He would watch beside Coensar and it would all go on as it was that day, but he would, at least, make good on his promises. And he would have the prophecy of the Traveler. Eyes around that city of ruins and green wood were raised at the sound of Durand’s laughter. Table of Contents IN A TIME OFTREASON Acknowledgments 1. A Necklace of Millstones 2. The Eagle Summons 3. Signs Before Sailing 4. The Bittern and the Bier 5. The Glen of Idols 6. The Night Leap 7. The Winding Road 8. To Race the Moon 9. In the Hall of Eagles 10. The Dust of Princes Lost 11. Tide, Time, and Laughter 12. The Leopard Bares His Claws 13. Discretion’s Cost 14. Death and Dreaming 15. A Mortal Game 16. Numbering the Dead 17. The Shadow of Black Wings 18. The Red Hour 19. The Night’s Messengers 20. Sunset Falling 21. A Shell of Stone 22. The Banished and the Lost 23. The Relief of Acconel 24. A Broken Victory 25. Path of Ashes 26. A Leopard by the Tail 27. The Empty Storm 28. The Tiers of Ferangore 29. Homecoming

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