"I'll look like a football!" Signe said. "All over stiches!"
"Actually, you look more beautiful than a sunset," Havel said. "See? I'm learning!"
She smiled back at him from the cot, then winced as motion pulled at the shoulder wound. She drifted back off to sleep.
Aaron Rothman sighed. "Thank God for morphine," he said. "I really, really hope someone is planting opium poppies!"
The big hospital tents were crowded; mostly CORA ranchers and their men, but more Bearkillers than he liked-it would have been politically dicey to hold them all back. There was a smell of disinfectant and blood, faces waxy and pale under the light of the Coleman lanterns. Gasoline stoves kept it fairly warm, but the air was close and stuffy as well.
"Her brother was just faint from loss of blood," Rothman said. "I gave him some plasma and a painkiller; he'll be sore with all those superficial cuts and punctures, but he had his tetanus shots, thank God."
"What about Signe?" Havel asked, his face impassive.
"I used the pin test," Rothman said, holding one up. "She's got feeling and movement in all the fingers and no numb spots on the arm, so there isn't any nerve damage to speak of. The clavicle's cracked, though, and the cut muscles will take some time to heal. Full function, or nearly, but not for a while, and she'll need physical therapy."
Havel gusted a sigh. "Could have been a lot worse," he said.
Then he went down the rows of cots; for many of them it had been a lot worse. He talked with those who could use it, gave a nod and a touch to others.
"Thanks!" a young Bearkiller they'd picked up in Grangeville said, with a smile despite the broken leg.
"Been there, done that," Havel said, grinning back.
The grin died as he ducked out of the tent's entrance, pulling on his armored gauntlets and settling his helmet; for one thing, the blanket-wrapped bodies of the dead weren't far away, waiting for friends and relatives to take them away, or for time to free up for burial details. For another, out here the smoke of the burning castle still lay thick, in the cold gray light just before dawn. The tower had fallen in a torrent of flame and sparks hours ago, and most of the rest of the palisade still smoldered.
Also present were the prisoners taken, two score of them; all the guards were Bearkillers or Mackenzies, most of them lightly wounded.
The CORA fighters and camp followers gathered glaring in the dark chill of morning, bundled up in down jackets and muffled in wool scarves. Breath steamed. Enough could be seen of their faces to know their mood, though; some were bandaged, and all had lost friends or family in the swarming, confused fight through the Protector's burning fort.
"String the bastards up!" sounded again; the Bearkillers turned their horses' heads outward, and a few of the kilted clansfolk reached over their shoulders for arrows.
Havel opened his mouth. Before he could speak, another voice sounded-John Brown, the CORA delegate.
"Go on!" he shouted, waving his hands. "These folks fought for us-do you want to start a battle with them, too? Go on-go on back to your tents. We're civilized people here, by God; we're Americans, not a lynch mob. Git!"
Then the leathery bearded rancher turned to Havel. "Sorry about that."
"No problem, but we'd better get under way," Havel said. Everyone's gotten a bit rougher-edged since the Change.
"Well, we've got the roadway through the fort cleared and the bridge is ready," Brown said. "Pretty hot and smoky, though."
Havel shrugged. "Well over half of them got out of the castle. We need to make sure of them before they get west to their other fort."
Josh Sanders came up, leading Havel's horse. Havel swung into the saddle with a clink and rustle of chainmail; the horse was a strawberry roan mare, not quite as well-trained as Gustav. He quieted it and stroked a gloved hand down its neck.
"No sign of a rear guard?"
The Hoosier grinned. "Boss, once they bugged out of the castle, that bunch straggled so bad I'm surprised they managed to get anyone together. But they're closed up into one group now, more or less, and less the wounded they've been leaving behind. Stopped about two hours ago, but not for long is my guess. They remembered to take their bicycles, at least."
"Good work, Josh," he said. "Aylward's people are in position?"
"Got into place about the time the fight was over here. That Brit's pretty damn good in the woods."
Will Hutton was ready at the head of the Bearkiller column, a hundred armored riders with Sanders's scouts in a clump before, and their supply echelon on wagons and packhorses behind. Havel trotted down the column of fours and into position at the front beside Luanne Larsson, where she rode with the outfit's flag drooping from her lance in the still, cold air.
A sudden gust snapped it out, brown and red in the soot-laden breeze; humans coughed, and horses stamped and snorted, tossing their heads in a jingle of bridles.
Ahead was the column of smoke from the castle, bending towards them like a reaching hand. On either side the mountains reared steep and rugged; to the north the dawn sun gilded the snowpeaks, leaving the blue slopes below in shadow.
"This part ought to work fairly well," he said.
Will Hutton nodded and spat thoughtfully aside. "Whole strategy feels sort of… odd, Mike."
"Lady Juniper is odd." Havel grinned. "And it's her idea. Yeah, it's not my own first impulse-I was always the kill-'em-all-let-God-sort-'em-out type by natural inclination, and God knows life is cheap these days-but I can see her point, long-term. And she put this whole deal together."
He raised his arm and chopped it westward. With the sun at their backs, the long shapes of horse and rider lay before them, and the hooves trod the shadows down as the Bear-killers advanced. The honed edges of the lanceheads above caught the dawn light with a rippling sparkle like stars on the sea.
"Here," Sam Aylward said.
West of Santiam Pass, Route 20 wound between forested hills that crowded close to the roadway. Eventually it swung north and east for a while before turning west and then south again, like a long U around an outthrust ridge of the mountains that reared-ever higher to Three Fingered Jack on the north and Mount Washington to the south.
Creeks brawled down from the steep slopes on either hand; they were west of the Cascade crest here, and the extra moisture showed-more Douglas fir and western hemlock, less lodgepole pine. The forest was dense, dark green, seeming to wait eagerly for the heavy snows to come, breathing a cold clear scent of pine and moist earth.
Speaking of moisture… hope Lady Juniper's magic actually works. A blizzard would bugger things for fair.
The Englishman cocked an eye at the sky; about noon, not quite time for the party to begin, but getting there, and he didn't like the look of the clouds. It was chilly enough to make him think that might mean snow, too-they were four thousand feet up here, with wet air sliding in from the Pacific, and it was December, albeit only just.
Just enough to make me doubt me sanity, wearing this Jock skirt, he thought wryly.
In fact, the kilt wasn't all that uncomfortable-the Jocks had worn them in all seasons in the Scottish Highlands, after all, with a climate that made western Oregon look like Barbados. The colors were good camouflage, and the boost to morale was more than worth it. Few of these people had been fighters before the Change, any more than they'd been farmers; wearing strange clothing helped them adjust to doing things strange to them.
There was a clatter and rustle as the Mackenzies moved into position; a lot of them were puffing from the night march in full gear, but nobody had fallen out. He grinned slightly to himself at the thought; after the past eight months, most of them were stronger and fitter than they'd ever been in their lives-Yanks had tended to lard before the Change, but he hadn't seen a fat one for months now.