It was Uwen’s distant voice, Uwen wanted help for something, andobliged to try, he drew a deep breath and tried to do what Uwen wanted, which required listening, and moving, and hurting.
He saw Uwen’s face, grimed and bloody, with trails of moisture C his cheeks, shadowed against a pearl gray sky. The air about them was quiet, so very, very quiet he could hear Dys and Cass as they moved.
He could hear the wind in the leaves. The world. had such a web of textures, of colors, sights, shapes, sounds, substance, it all came pouring in, and the breath hurt his chest as he tried to drink it all.
“Oh, m’lord,” Uwen said. “I was sure ye was dead. I looked an, looked.” He stripped the wreckage of the shield from his left arm; moved the fingers of his right hand and realized that he still held sword. The blade was scored and bright along one edge as if some fire had burned it away. The silver circlet was fused to the quillons and the hilt, the leather wrappings hung loose and silver writing was burned bright along its center. He tried to loose his fingers and much of th, gauntlet came away as if rotten with age. The skin there peeled away, leaving new, raw flesh.
He struggled to rise, with the other hand using the sword to lean on, and Uwen took it from him and helped him to stand.
All the field was leveled where they stood. There were only bodies of men and horses, and themselves.
“We won,” Uwen said. “Gods know how, —we won, m’lord. Umanon and Cevulirn took the hills and kept the ambush off our backs. Then the Amefin foot come in, Lanfarnesse showed up late, and the lady’s coming with the baggage. It was you we couldn’t find.” “Is Cefwyn safe?”
“Aye, m’lord.” Uwen lifted the hand that held his sword. “See, His Majesty’s banner, bright as day, there by the center.”
Tristen let go his breath, stumbled as he tried to walk toward that place shining in sunlight—the gray clouds were over them, but it was brilliant color, that banner, brilliant, hard-edged and truer than the world had ever seemed. A piece of his armor had come loose, and rattled against his leg, another against his arm.
“Don’t you try,” Uwen said, pulling at him as he tried to walk. “Easy, m’lord. Easy. Ye daren’t walk this field, m’lord. Let me get you up on your horse. I can do it.”
He nodded numbly, and let Uwen turn him toward Dys, who, exhausted, gave little difficulty about being caught. Uwen made a stirrup of his hands and gave him a lift, enough to qk~% b2xx’ix~e\~to the saddle.
When Uwen ttta~.%e~ %~)climb onto Cass with a grunt and a groan, and landed across the saddle until he could sort himself into it: Tristen waited, and Dys started to move, on his own, as Cass did, slowly.
Around them, from that vantage, the field showed littered with dead, until it reached the place where he had lain; and after that the ground was almost clear.
“It stopped?” he asked Uwen. “The Wind stopped here?”
“Aye, m’lord, the instant it veered off and took you, it stopped. Just one great shriek and it were gone, taking some of its own wi’ it. And some of ours, gods help ’em. Andas is gone. So’s Lusin. I thought you was gone for good, m’lord. I thought I was goin’. I thought that thing was coming right over us. But Cass was off like a fool, and I come back again and searched, and I guess I just mistook the ground, ’cause there ye was, this time, plain as plain, and Dys4ad standing over ye, having a bite of grass.”
He looked up at the pallid, clouded, ordinary sky.
“What were that thing, m’lord?”
He shook his head slowly. For what it was, he had no Word, nor would Uwen. He turned Dys toward the place where Cefwyn’s red banner flew, and saw that Ninévrisé’s had just joined it.
The land along the forest-edge and across the hills had become a place of horror, riven armor and flesh tangled in clots and heaps, wherever the fighting had been thick. Someone moaned and cried for water, another for help they were not able, themselves, to give. Men moved among them in the distance, bringing both, he hoped.
They came on a little knoll, a tree, and a dead horse. One man sat with another in his arms. They wore the red of the Guelenfolk.
Erion and Denyn. The Ivanim, wounded himself, held the boy, rocking to and fro, and looked up at them as they stopped.
“Come with us,” Tristen said gently. “We shall take you to the King.”
“I will go there soon,” Erion said faintly and bent his head against the boy’s, with nothing more to say.
Tristen lingered, wishing there were magic to work, a miracle he dared do; but there was none: the boy was dead—and he would not.
He rode on with Uwen. He saw the Heron banner of Lanfarnesse and the Amefin Eagle planted on the nearer hill, the White Horse and the
Wheel on the slope of the farther. They rode to the tattered red banner of the Marhanen Dragon, and the knot of weary men gathered about it.
They rode up among the Guelenfolk. He saw the faces of those about
Cefwyn turn toward him. He saw hands laid on weapons. He thought that they did not know him, and lifted his free hand to show it empty ... he saw Cefwyn’s face, that was likewise stricken with fear.
“Cefwyn,” he said, and dismounted.
Idrys was there, and caught at Cefwyn’s arm when Cefwyn moved toward him, but Cefwyn shook him off and came and took his hand as if he feared he would break.
“I lost my shield,” Tristen said, only then feeling his heart come back to him. “—And my helm. I don’t know where, my lord.”
“Gods.” Cefwyn embraced him with a grate of metal. He shuddered and held to Cefwyn’s arms when he let go. “You fool,” Cefwyn said gently.
“You great fool—he’s gone. Asdyneddin is dead, his whole damned army has fled the field, or surrendered under m’lady’s banner! Come. Come.
The rest of us are coming in. Pelumer is found ... lost himself in the woods, to his great disgust ...” “It is no fault of his.”
“Holy gods, —Wizards. No, I knew it. Ninévrisé’s had word of Sovrag; his cousin was wiped out, lost, and Sovrag couldn’t pass upriver. A blackness hung over the river, and the boats lost themselves while it lasted ... even so, they’ve taken down the Emwy bridge. The rebels that did escape us won’t cross. —Gods, are you all right, Tristen?”
He flexed his hand, wiped at his eyes. “I’m very well.”
He walked away then. Uwen led Dys and Cass behind him.
He had no idea where to go, now. He thought he would sleep a while.
True sleep had been very long absent from him.
—Emuin, he said, but he had no answer—a sense of presence, but nothing close. Possibly Emuin was asleep himself.
“Where are ye goin’, m’lord?” Uwen asked. “Sounds as if they’ll be bringin’ the wagons in, if ye please. We’ll have canvas ’twixt us and the weather. She’s clouded up, looking like rain tonight.”
He looked at the sky, at common, gray-bottomed clouds. He looked about him at the woods. Owl had gone, Shadow that he was, into the trees, where he was more comfortable. But he knew where Owl was.
Owl had gone to the river, where the small creatures had not been startled into hiding. Owl would wait for night. That was the kind of creature Owl was, as kings were kings and lords were lords and the likes of Uwen Lewen’s-son would always stay faithful.
He saw no shadow in the sky. None on the horizon. He did not know how to answer Uwen’s question, but he thought that he would sit down on the rocks near the road, and wait, and see what the world of Men was about to be.