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“You’re a Spearman-and a senior armsman to a Spearman duke. Would the nearest army post send a company or two this way if you asked?”

“Yes.” There was no doubt in Tothas’ reply, and Bahzell nodded.

“Then we’d best ask someone-the healer, I’m thinking, and not our landlord-who you can trust to be taking word to the army. And until help comes, we’ll trust you to keep Rekah and the boy alive to talk when it does come. Aye, and while I’m thinking on it, you’d best send word to Duke Jashân, as well. If it’s home they’re headed, it just might be couriers on the highway can beat them there. But only to Jashân, mind! From the way the baron talked, I’ve a feeling there’s hands in this closer to home.”

“I’ll do it.” Tothas nodded grimly. “Trust me for that and get her back safe. And . . . tell her I love her.”

“Ah, don’t be daft, man!” Bahzell laughed sadly. “If she needs to be told after all these years, then she’s not half so bright as I thought her.”

“Tell her anyway,” Tothas said with a small, sad smile. “And Tomanāk bless and guide you both.”

“Aye, well, thank you,” Bahzell said, and glanced wryly at Brandark.

***

Dawn bled in the east as two hradani picked their way across a field of wheat stubble. They were uncommonly well provided with riding beasts and pack animals, especially when only one of them was mounted. If they were able to find-and rescue-Zarantha, she’d need her mule, and Bahzell’s packhorse, the pack mule, and Rekah’s mule all carried pack saddles. Brandark thought his friend had been a little unreasonable to insist on loading the pack animals so lightly, but he hadn’t argued. They had to take them along, anyway-just as they’d had to take along Tothas’ warhorse.

Any villager would recognize the horse as a stranger, and Tothas had decided his best chance for the next few days was to lie hidden in the inn. His horse’s presence would betray his own, and taking it along would not only give any who strayed across their tracks the idea that they’d taken him along but also provide Brandark with a war-trained change of mounts.

They’d taken Rekah’s mule for much the same reasons. Only the healer and the staff of The Brown Horse knew how badly the maid had actually been hurt, and the innkeeper had grown a backbone when Bahzell restored his nephew to him. He was still terrified, but he had the boy’s life to worry about now-and a chance to be free of the terror which had haunted his village. He’d agreed to hide both Rekah and Tothas, as well as the boy, while the healer’s son-a square, solid young man whose bovine features disguised a ready wit-took word to the nearest garrison.

So now Bahzell and Brandark crossed the field to a narrow track well back from the main road. The twisting band of mud, little used and completely overgrown in places, snaked through desolate winter woodland, but its surface was pocked with the marks of shod hooves and dotted with occasional droppings. The dung was spongy, but not broken down as a heavy rain would have left it. That meant it could be no more than forty-eight hours old, and Bahzell squatted on his heels and studied the hoofprints carefully while Brandark sat his horse beside him and tried not to fidget.

“What are you doing?” the Bloody Sword asked finally.

“Even such as you should know any hoof is after leaving its own mark, city boy, and I’ve a mind to be sure I’ll know ’em when I see them again.” Brandark’s ears shifted in question, and Bahzell shrugged. “It’s like enough we’ll lose them somewhere. If it happens we do, don’t you think it would be helpful to know what we’re looking for when it comes time to be casting about for them?”

Brandark stared at the churned mud and shook his head dubiously. “You can actually recognize individual prints in that mess?”

“D’you recognize notes in a song?” Bahzell asked in reply. Brandark nodded, and the Horse Stealer shrugged. “Well, I’ll not say I’ve all of them straight already, but I’ll be having them all tucked away in here-” he tapped his temple “-by the time we’ve put a mile or two behind us.”

“How far ahead are they?”

“As to that,” Bahzell frowned and rubbed his chin, ears half-lowered, “they’ve a full day’s start on us, and from all the baron said, they’ll have moved like Phrobus himself was on their trail, to start at least, and they’ve at least two mounts each from these tracks.” He shook his head slowly. “I’d not be surprised if they’re near thirty leagues in front of us, but they’ve the better part of four hundred leagues to go in a straight line, and it’s no straight line they’ll move in. Not if they’re minded to avoid the roads. And I’m doubting they’ll find fresh mounts once these tire.”

“Why?”

“Because they’d no notion Zarantha was after walking into their hands. Close to home, they’ll have folk ready to remount them without question, but once out of their own front yard they’ll have to buy fresh as they go-assuming they find someplace with more than plowhorses to sell in the middle of all this nothing-and there’s too many of them to do that without raising questions. No, once they’ve settled in to run cross-country they’ll have naught but the horses under ’em to do it with, and a strange thing it will be if we can’t make up a bit on them every day then.” He shook his head again. “It’s in my mind we’ll catch them up, Brandark, but we’ll not do it all in a jump.”

Brandark chewed his lip unhappily. “I don’t like leaving her in their hands that long.”

“No more do I.” Bahzell’s face turned grim, and his ears went tight to his skull. “They’ll be after keeping her alive as long as they’ve a hope of getting her home to Jashân, but that’s not to say they’ll treat her well.” The Horse Stealer’s jaw tightened, and then he shook himself. “Well, we’ll not accomplish much while we stand about talking, so-”

He adjusted his sword baldric, and then Brandark blinked as he vanished up the narrow slot of the trail in the ground-devouring lope of the Horse Stealer hradani.

Brandark had heard of how rapidly Horse Stealers could cover ground and hadn’t believed it. But for the first time since leaving Navahk, Bahzell was truly in a hurry, with neither injured women, merchant wagons, nor sick armsmen to slow him, and Brandark had no choice but to believe. He pressed with his heels, urging his horse to a trot, yet he had to ask for a mud-spattering canter, with the long line of horses and mules thudding along behind him, before he could catch up and drop back to a trot. No wonder the infantry of Hurgrum had seemed so baffling to Navahk’s cavalry!

Bahzell turned his head and flashed a grin over his shoulder, then turned his eyes back to the trail before him and loped on into the sunrise with the horses and mules bounding along behind him.

Chapter Twenty-five

Cold wind blew into Brandark Brandarkson’s face. It was the sixth evening of their pursuit, and Tothas’ horse moved wearily under him as the western horizon ate the sun. Shadows stretched inky black with the onset of evening, but Bahzell jogged steadily on like some tireless, questing hound, and Brandark wrapped his cloak about himself and shivered.

Their quarry had, indeed, kept to wild country. They’d also hooked further east than Brandark had anticipated before turning south, and their twisting path had kept them off ridge lines and avoided open stretches. The hradani had made up ground, as Bahzell had predicted, but less than he’d hoped. Their targets were pushing even harder than he’d feared, almost as if they knew-not suspected, but knew -someone was behind them. They were even riding on after nightfall, which took toll of their mounts but meant they regained an hour or two each evening when darkness forced Bahzell to halt.

A stronger gust flapped Brandark’s cloak, and he glowered at the clouds in the east. Rain was bad enough-two days back, a storm had all but obliterated the trail; how Bahzell had held to it was more than Brandark could even guess-but this wind smelled of snow. A blanket of that would hide any trail, even from a Horse Stealer, and-