The road became an obstacle course of bodies, both human and livestock. The nauseating death smell grew stronger as well. At one point I had to stop and drag an overlapping pile of corpses aside to make room for the wagon. They were tied together at the wrists and weren’t all adults. They’d been marched here and then executed; the family dog, no doubt loyally tagging along, was on the bottom.
When I returned to the wagon, Polly said flatly, “What a mess.”
“You think?” I said, and snapped the reins before she could reply.
AT last the rising sun burned through the cloud cover and showed the full extent of the damage. Homes were reduced to their stone parts. Fields smoldered, bodies lay everywhere, and livestock stood numbly, not sure whether to flee or graze. Buzzards began to appear in the sky as wolves skittered for the shadows. The worst part was the utter silence: there seemed to be no wounded, only the dead.
“That son of a bitch,” Kay muttered. “That son of a bitch. This was never supposed to happen again. We promised the people it wouldn’t, and they trusted us. They made this a country, not just an island.” His rage, even muted by his injury, was fearsome.
“Why would he do this?” Polly asked from the back, as calmly as if discussing a pot roast.
“Because he enjoys it, the son of a bitch,” Kay said. “As a kid he liked to cut the legs off birds and watch them try to land.”
I remembered the adolescent Medraft I’d encountered. This is exactly how I’d have guessed he’d grow up. But as I came to appreciate the scale of it, it no longer made sense as a tactic. “If he’s planning a coup, then he must believe that all this will be his soon. Why destroy it?”
“I don’t know,” Kay growled. “You can be sure there’s a plan, though. Courtesy of the poison-titted bitch that suckled him.”
“That’s somebody’s mother you’re talking about,” Polly said, her words echoing Kern’s warning. “If he’s a grown man, his mother can’t make him do anything.”
Kay turned to snap a reply, having to swivel his whole body due to his neck. Instead he exclaimed, “Holy shit, that’s a coffin!”
Polly snorted. “Nothing gets past him, does it?”
Kay’s anger vanished in his confusion. “Seriously, LaCrosse, that’s a coffin. Has it been there all this time?”
“Yeah,” I said.
Kay’s face no longer shone with sweat; his fever must’ve broken. “Did you tell me about it before?”
“I mentioned it.”
“I guess I was really out of it. Who’s in it?”
“I’m doing a favor for a friend.”
“The favor involves taking a coffin to Nodlon? At a time like this?”
“Yes.” I jerked my head slightly toward Polly.
She saw it, though, and said, “He means he won’t talk about it in front of me because he doesn’t know if he can trust me. Fine, I only stayed with a total stranger in a ditch for hours and risked my life flagging down help for him. That’s all.”
Kay leaned close and asked quietly, “Is it anyone I know?”
“No.”
He sighed with relief. “Then never mind. I have a feeling I’ll be attending plenty of funerals soon enough.”
Or just one, I thought but didn’t say.
We topped a small hill. At the bottom, four horsemen blocked the road at a place where the forest gave way to open, wild meadows. There’d be no sneaking past them.
Two of them noticed us as we looked down at them. They wore mismatched metal and leather armor scavenged from past battles and had the arrogant posture of men used to pushing people around. Even without it, the bodies littering the nearby ground, the empty “confiscated” wagons parked in a neat row, and the riderless horses tied to available tree branches told the story. Nobody got through this roadblock. But we would, because I wasn’t walking away from this now. Sure, I’d earned my money and kept my word, but if I didn’t avenge the innocent blood, no one would. And that was a contract with my conscience.
The other two guards stood in the meadow near a solitary tree. They shared a longbow and took turns firing shafts into a corpse that hung by its ankles from a branch. At this ridiculously close range the arrows went almost entirely through the body. The two archers laughed as the most recent shot made the corpse swing in a shallow arc.
As she took in the tableau, Polly said, “Shit.”
“Well put,” I agreed.
“I’ll handle this,” Kay said, and forced himself to sit up straight.
I put my hand warningly on his arm. “These aren’t Knights of the Double Tarn.”
“They’re under Medraft, and I outrank him.”
“I don’t think you do today.”
We had no choice but to continue down the hill toward them. I stopped the wagon when one of the men stepped in front of us and raised his hand. He was missing the tip of his nose. “That’s far enough, shit-kicker. By the king’s order, this road is closed.”
Kay said raggedly, “I’m Robert Kay, King Marcus Drake’s seneschal and General Medraft’s commanding officer. I’m on my way to Nodlon, so move aside.”
The second man, tall and skinny with ears that stuck out like open closet doors, said, “Tough titty, old man. You ain’t getting there on this road.” He rubbed the neck of the nearest horse. “Nice team, though. Strong. Make good army horses.”
Nose-tip walked around the wagon. He gestured at the coffin and said, “Hey, who’s the worm farm?”
“My mother,” I said. “She died six months ago. I’m moving her to be buried by my father.”
He scowled. “You dug her up?”
I shrugged. “It’s what she wanted.”
“You stupid country fucks,” he said. The two men laughed. I guess my expensive clothes, spattered with dried blood and coated in trail dust, no longer gave me away.
By now the archers had noticed us, too. I said, “So what’s the toll?”
“Toll?” Closet-ears said.
“Yeah, you know. The toll to use the road.”
The two exchanged looks and snickered. “So you got money to pay a toll?” Nose-tip asked.
“Show it to us,” Closet-ears added.
I held up my money bag and shook it so it rattled.
“Whoo-ee, we got us a rich boy here,” Closet-ears said. “Jingles like the bells on a whore’s ankle.”
“You know,” I said wearily, “there’s no reason to be an asshole about this. I’m willing to pay to get past you.”
“He called us assholes, didn’t he?” Nose-tip said.
Closet-ears shoved him playfully. “I think he just meant you.”
“Really? Well, in that case, I think I’ll just take all the money as an insult fee.”
I said, “Tell you what: I’ll shoot you for it.”
Closet-ears and Nose-tip exchanged a look. Closet-ears said, “Huh?”
I pointed at the archers, who had stopped their contest and now intently watched us. “One arrow each, me and your best man. You pick the distance and target. If I make a better shot, you let us through. If I don’t…” I trailed off with a shrug.
Closet-ears called out, “Hey, Raven! This guy wants to shoot against you!”
The one called Raven, tall and about thirty years old, walked over with the bow. He looked at me carefully, evaluating both my skill and my status as a threat. I did my best to hide both, which-given my unwashed hair, disheveled clothes, and unshaven face-wasn’t hard. “What do you know about shooting?” he said at last. “Poaching the king’s deer in the winter?”
“Only one way to find out,” I said.
He thought it over for a minute, then gestured I should get down. I did. When I began slipping off my scabbard, two swords appeared at my throat. I finished much more slowly. The blades went away, but their owners watched me minutely.
I followed Raven, Closet-ears, and the fourth man over to the swinging corpse. Nose-tip stayed by the wagon, nonchalant but certainly alert.
We stopped twenty paces from the tree. Closet-ears rushed over and gave the corpse a shove. It began to swing, dislodging two crows who’d swooped in for a snack. The body was a well-dressed middle-aged man’s; his purplish face was still frozen in its dying look of surprise. Raven pulled an arrow from the quiver and nocked it. “Can you do this?” he said smugly, then fired. The arrow pierced the swaying palm of the dead man’s right hand. His compatriots laughed.