"The Cawdors?"
"Run the ville since the long winter, so the oldsters say. Old baron died around twenty years back. Whispers tell of his being choked by Lady Rachel. But..." He allowed the sentence to drift off into silence. "There were three brothers. One good, one bad and one... one that just up and vanished, Master Thursby. He was... I'll come to him last. There was Morgan, who was everything good. Murdered by Harvey, who now runs the ville, who's every evil you could set your mind to. A gross and perverted bastard who shadows the earth he waddles over. Married to slut Rachel. One son, Jabez Pendragon Cawdor. Has every stinking, rotten part of both his parents in him. I can't... There aren't words for someone like him."
"The other brother?"
"Ryan Cawdor. Fifteen when he disappeared. Word was of an attempt on his life. That left him... Swift and vengeful boy, they say. Some think him rotting in the moat, like many another. But a lot of honest folks still think that one day he'll come riding in from the west on a stallion of pure white. He'll slaughter the Cawdors, take back the ville and the sunshine days will come again to all in the Shens. What d'you think of that, Master... Thursby?"
This time the hesitation was plain.
"What do you think about this missing brother, Master... Freeman?" Ryan dragged the pause out even longer.
"I think that I believe some things and not others. You know?"
"What?"
"I believe he escaped. I believe he lives. I don't believe in the dreck about a white stallion or a blaster that fires golden ammo. No!"
"I heard a tale, Master Freeman."
"Tell me." The young man picked up a handful of dried cones from a nearby pine tree and flicked them underhanded into the water, staring after them as they bobbed and leaped through the shallows and falls of the narrow river. He kept his face turned away from Ryan.
"Morgan Cawdor, they say, had a woman, and the woman bore a child after the death of her husband. Murdered, we agree, by Harvey. A son, I heard. The mother was mutie."
"She was..." the young man began, pale face flushing, dark eyes glaring. He threw the rest of the cones into the water with a barely controlled viciousness.
"She was what? I heard she was a woman with the power of seeing. If there had been a son, could he have inherited that?" He waited a moment, then answered his own question. "Perhaps."
"They say that Ryan Cawdor was desperate wounded when he fled the ville."
"Do they?"
"They say that a blade from Harvey's fist took out an eye, neat as a stone from a ripe plum so they say and opened a cut that ran from eye to mouth along the right side of the boy's cheek."
Then he turned and looked straight into Ryan's good eye, a fierce intensity in his glittering black eyes.
Neither man spoke for several heart-stopping seconds.
The moment broke into shards of crystal time as a voice wafted to them from the trail that led to the village.
"Nate? You there?"
"Yeah."
"Seen Tom?"
"No. Saw him late last night. Not this morning. Why d'you?.."
"Missing. Horse gone an' all."
Ryan felt the short hairs rising on the back of his neck the familiar warning of imminent danger. Sitting close to the young man, he was aware of Nathan's whole body tensing and stiffening. His mouth hung open, and the breath hissed through the man's teeth.
"We've..."
"I heard it," Ryan interrupted.
"The horse? The bastard's gone to the ville."
There was a cold horror in Nathan's voice and blank, shocked face.
"Couple of hours after midnight. Listened. Didn't hear anything more."
Freeman stood up, uncoiling with an easy grace. "You heard it! By all the gods, Ryan! Didn't you feel it? Didn't you see it!"
Ryan also stood, hardly noticing in the sudden, dreadful tension that Nathan had admitted he was indeed part mutie. And he had called him "Ryan." He knew him.
And, in turn, Ryan realized his own guess was correct. He knew who Nathan Freeman was!
"Morgan's son," he said softly. "You're the son of my brother. Your mother was Guenema. I'm your uncle, lad."
"Hell," Nate said. "I guess I knew that all along, Uncle Ryan." His expression changed. "But now's not the time. Gotta move, and fast."
"We been betrayed?"
"Tom. Wants to be sec chief of Shersville. Guess he'll get his way now." The words tumbled over one another in the young man's haste to explain.
"When will they come, Nate?"
The water was covering their conversation from the villager standing a few paces behind them.
"They're here."
"What? Fireblast! We have..."
Nathan Freeman laid a hand on his arm. "Too late. Now I'm concentrating I can hear 'em. Load of sec men, on all sides. They'll take you, even in a firefight. Listen, I can make it through the woods. Get to the old man and the straw-head girl. To your wag. Other blasters there?"
"Yeah. Couple."
"I know paths and ways. I'll do what I can, Ryan. Don't fight. Harvey and Rachel aren't muties. Won't expect you. Won't think it's you, mebbe. Play Floyd Thursby. Stick to your story. Could get away. Watch Rachel. More, watch Jabez. Warn others. Me and the other two'll do what we can, when we can."
Ryan's fighting brain was racing. He still hadn't heard any sound of a sec patrol closing in on them, but he'd seen enough of mutie skills in his life to know that his nephew was probably telling the truth. There'd been a blind listener up in the high plains who could hear a kerchief of satin fall on soft earth at two hundred yards.
"Yeah," Ryan said. "Don't charge in after us. If'n we can fool 'em, we could get away free. Foolish to lose lives for nothing. Wait and listen, Nate. That's the best."
Then Ryan heard them horse-mounted sec men, clattering along the main blacktop through Shersville. He knew they'd be good mounts. Front Royal had always been famed for the quality of its horses. Right back to the time before the long winter.
"Gotta go," Nathan whispered. "Just meet the man I dreamed of for twenty fucking years. And we gotta part."
"Watch your back, Nate," Ryan said, quickly shaking hands with his nephew. The grip was brief but firm.
The young man leaped at the river, balancing for a moment on a large flat stone near the center, then hopped to another, smaller stone. With a splash, he reached the opposite bank. Pausing for a second and waving a hand to Ryan, he then disappeared into the dense screen of bushes.
Ryan turned away to make his way back to Shersville, where the sec men were already in control.
For a moment Ryan's head whirled, and he felt himself transported back to his fifteenth year, battling for his life in a blood-slippery passageway in the stone heart of the ville. The uniforms of the sec men were unaltered: maroon jerkins, with breeches tucked into high boots. They wore helmets that hugged the skull, and some wore goggles. They were armed with the same M-16 assault rifles that Ryan also remembered well enough from his childhood trusty weapons that had served the barony well over the years since the endless chilling.
Krysty, Jak and J.B. stood in a group outside the barn, surrounded by at least thirty of the guards. The old man, Tom, preened himself nearby. He was grinning broadly, chest out like a little pigeon, bursting with pride at his own achievement.
The leader of the sec guards was a sergeant, tall and with shoulders nearly as broad as the doors on the barn. He saw Ryan coming toward him and grinned.
"Hurry up, One Eye. That's four plucked and two to go."
"Where's Nathan Freeman?" Tom yelped.
"Who? "Ryan said.
"You know, you bastard!" screeched the venomous little villager. "Make him tell," he whined to the sergeant.
The sec man spit in the mud, not bothering to hide his contempt. "Baron says you get to be sec chief of this dung heap until someone better comes along. So zip up that mouth of yours or I'll shut it. I decide what happens."