This time the aim was slightly better. He had been aiming for the chest — the largest target — but the arrow was high and now the outlaw lay on his back, the black shaft jutting from his forehead and blood bubbling to the snow.
"You took your time getting involved," said the girl coolly, stepping across the body of the third outlaw and wiping her slender blade on his shirt.
Rek tore his eyes from the face of the man he had killed.
"I just saved your life," he said, checking an angry retort.
She was tall and well-built — almost mannish, Rek thought; her hair long and mousy blonde, unkempt. Her eyes were blue and deep-set beneath thick dark brows which indicated an uncertain temper. Her figure was disguised by the silver steel mailshirt and bronze shoulder pads; her legs encased in shapeless green woollen troos laced to the thigh with leather straps.
"Well, what are you staring at?" she demanded. "Never seen a woman before?"
"Well, that answers the first question," he said.
"What does that mean?"
"You're a woman."
"Oh, very dry!" She retrieved a sheepskin jerkin from beneath the tree, dusting off the snow and slipping it on. It did nothing to enhance her appearance, thought Rek.
"They attacked me," she said. "Killed my horse, the bastards! Where's your horse?"
"Your gratitude overwhelms me," said Rek, an edge of anger in his voice. "Those are Reinard's men."
"Really? Friend of yours, is he?"
"Not exactly. But if he knew what I had done he would roast my eyes on a fire and serve them to me as an appetiser."
"All right, I appreciate your point. I'm extremely grateful. Now, where's your horse?"
Rek ignored her, gritting his teeth against his anger. He walked to the dead outlaw and dragged his arrows clear, wiping them on the man's jerkin. Then he methodically searched the pockets of all three. Seven silver coins and several gold rings the richer, he then returned to the girl.
"My horse has one saddle. I ride it," he said, icily. "I've done about all I want to do for you. You're on your own now."
"Damned chivalrous of you," she said.
"Chivalry isn't my strong point," he said, turning away.
"Neither is marksmanship," she retorted.
"What?"
"You were aiming for his back from twenty paces and you hit his leg. It's because you closed one eye — ruined your perspective."
"Thanks for the archery instruction. Good luck!"
"Wait!" she said. He turned. "I need your horse."
"So do I."
"I will pay you."
"He's not for sale."
"All right. Then I will pay you to take me to where I can buy a horse."
"How much?" he asked.
"One golden Raq."
"Five," he said.
"I could buy three horses for that," she stormed.
"It's a seller's market," he retorted.
Two — and that's final."
"Three."
"All right, three. Now, where's your horse?"
"First the money, my lady." He held out a hand. Her blue eyes were frosty as she removed the coins from a leather pouch and placed them in his palm. "My name is Regnak — Rek to my friends," he said.
"That's of no interest to me," she assured him.
3
They rode in a silence as frosty as the weather, the tall girl behind Rek in the saddle. He resisted the urge to spur the horse on at speed, despite the fear gnawing at his belly. It would be unfair to say he was sorry he had rescued her — after all, it had done wonders for his self-esteem. His fear was of meeting Reinard now. This girl would never sit silent while he flattered and lied. And even if, by some stroke of good fortune, she did keep her mouth shut, she would certainly report him for giving information on caravan movements.
The horse stumbled on a hidden root and the girl pitched sideways. Rek's hand lanced out, catching her arm and hauling her back in the saddle.
"Put your arms around my waist, will you?" he said.
"How much will it cost me?"
"Just do it. It's too cold to argue."
Her arms slid round him, her head resting against his back.
Thick, dark clouds bunched above them and the temperature began to drop.
"We ought to make an early camp," he stated. "The weather's closing in."
"I agree," she said.
Snow began to fall and the wind picked up. Rek dipped his head against the force of the storm, blinking against the cold flakes that blew into his eyes.
He steered the gelding away from the trail and into the shelter of the trees, gripping the pommel of his saddle as the horse climbed a steep incline.
An open camp-site would be folly, he knew, in this freak storm. They needed a cave, or at least the lee of a rock face. For over an hour they moved on until at last they entered a clearing, circled by oak and gorse. Within it was a crofter's hut of log walls and earthen roof. Rek glanced at the stone chimney: no smoke.
He heeled the tired gelding forward. At the side of the hut was a three-sided lean-to, with a wicker roof bent by the weight of the snow upon it. He steered the horse inside.
"Dismount," he told the girl, but her hands did not move from his waist. He glanced down. The hands were blue and he rubbed at them furiously. "Wake up!" he shouted. "Wake up, damn you!" Pulling her hands free, he slid from the saddle and caught her as she fell. Her lips were blue, her hair thick with ice. Lifting her over one shoulder he removed the packs from the gelding, loosened the girth and carried the girl to the hut. The wooden door was open, snow drifting into the cold interior as he stepped inside.
The hut was one-roomed: he saw a cot in the corner beneath the only window, a hearth, some simple cupboards and a wood store — enough for two, maybe three nights — stacked against the far wall. There were three crudely made chairs and a bench table roughly cut from an elm trunk. Rek tipped the unconscious girl on to the cot, found a stick broom under the table and swept the snow from the room. He pushed the door shut, but a rotten leather hinge gave way and it tilted open again at the top. Cursing, he pulled the table to the doorway and heaved it against the frame.
Tearing open his pack, Rek pulled his tinder-box free and moved to the hearth. Whoever had owned or built the holding had left a fire ready laid, as was the custom in the wild. Rek opened his small tinder-pouch, making a mound of shredded dry leaves beneath the twigs in the grate. Over this he poured a little lantern oil from a leather flask and then struck his flint. His cold fingers were clumsy and the sparks would not take, so he stopped for a moment, forcing himself to take slow deep breaths. Then again he struck the flint and this time a small flame flickered in the tinder and caught. He leaned forward, gently blowing it, then as the twigs flared he turned to sort smaller branches from the store, placing them gently atop the tiny fire. Flames danced higher.
He carried two chairs to the hearth, placed his blankets over them before the blaze and returned to the girl. She lay on the crude cot, scarcely breathing.
"It's the bloody armour," he said. He fumbled with the straps of her jerkin, turning her over to pull it loose. Swiftly he stripped off her clothing and set to work rubbing warmth into her. He glanced at the fire, placed three more logs to feed the blaze and then spread the blankets on the floor before it. Lifting the girl from the cot, he laid her before the hearth, turning her over to rub her back.
"Don't you die on me!" he stormed, pummelling the flesh of her legs. "Don't you damn well dare!" He wiped her hair with a towel and wrapped her in the blankets. The floor was cold, frost seeped up from beneath the hut, so he pulled the cot to the hearth, then strained to lift her on to the bed. Her pulse was slow, but steady.
He gazed down at her face. It was beautiful. Not in any classic sense, he knew, for the brows were too thick and thunderous, the chin too square and the lips too full. Yet there was strength there, and courage and determination. But more than this: in sleep a gentle, childlike quality found expression.