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The riding officer bowed. “My apologies-I am Janos Turkos, and I thought we might make a stand here, and see what we could collect.”

Even as he spoke, a Huran gave a long call like a heron, and all the warriors took cover but, again, the men who appeared out of the hillside were imperials-first, some stradiotes from a city regiment, and then some of the moutaineers.

They were hollow-eyed men, who had seen the loss of the centre.

One man begged them to let him go back. “My wife is in the camp!” he cried.

Another, an older mountaineer, insisted that the Emperor was dead.

Big Tree shook his head. “These men are broken,” he said. “We should run.”

Eventually, morning came. Ser Hartmut had slept ill, and he armed in a sullen silence that his squire dared not disturb, mounted his spare horse and rode through the fortified camp his men had constructed, aware of how many men were missing.

He found them at the top of the hill, as he expected-in the wreck of the captured imperial camp. There, thousands of victorious Outwallers and their allies paraded their captives or abused them-three thousand new slaves who had, the day before, been wives or husbands or children and were now mere objects for lust or drudgery.

He watched with disgust as two of his brigans drew their hooked swords and cut at each other over a woman already so abject and destroyed that he wondered she could be the cause of even a moment’s erotic urge, much less a murderous rage.

He reached down and, with a flick of his arming sword, killed her.

She sank forward over her knees, and her head rolled a foot or two before coming to rest, still jetting blood.

Slowly, her body relaxed into the earth in the final embrace of the dead, where every muscle surrenders to gravity.

The two soldiers paused, swords drawn, and looked at him.

“I’ve saved both your lives, you fools,” he said. “Get back to camp.”

An hour later, with a hundred lances at his back and all of Orley’s men, he began to clear the enemy camp. He and his knights systematically killed the enemy’s camp followers and terrified their own allies into quitting the ground. At some point, the routiers and the sailors joined the massacre. It didn’t take as long as he’d expected.

He ordered the whole camp burned, and turned his back on it.

Still there were new faces in his camp-haunted women, mostly young, and a dozen boys. And hundreds-even thousands-of their north Huran allies took their booty, which was by Outwaller standards immense, and their slaves-the cannier warriors had saved them-loaded their horses or their travois, or even their new captives, and abandoned the army, going north.

He went to Thorn.

“You must stop this, or we will have no Outwallers at all,” he said.

Thorn stood on the hillside, looking down at the column of Hurans and other northerners quitting the army. “You know that most of the captives they take will be adopted, and become Huran?” he said. “Unlike your people, who rape their captives to death.”

Ser Hartmut shrugged. “Sure, war has little beauty to it. I believe the poet said it was only sweet to those who’d never had a taste. I propose we attack the head of the column at last light and kill enough of them that the rest get the message.”

Thorn turned his great stony head to look at the Black Knight. “You would massacre our allies to force them back to their allegiance?” he asked. “Are you a complete fool?”

“It would work, given time and a firm hand,” Ser Hartmut insisted.

Thorn’s voice held an unaccustomed bitterness. “It wouldn’t work on the dead ones. I think you still underestimate the stubbornness of the Outwallers. But the thing that surprises me most is that men think I’m evil. That the Wild is the enemy.” His eyes bored into Ser Hartmut’s. “You have just massacred three thousand innocents to make sure your schedule is kept.”

“It is not my schedule, but yours,” Hartmut snapped. “And I merely do the hard things that need doing. I do not enjoy killing children. But sometimes such things must be done. If you are finished with your lilly-white moralizing, perhaps we can get the army into motion-the army that took more losses from defection than from battle.”

“We will gain that many again in new adherents,” Thorn said wearily, as if the process bored him. “They are already coming in.”

“We need to march, nonetheless.” Ser Hartmut was adamant.

Thorn waved a hand. “Let us wait a day. The northern wardens are close-let us at least bring them in.” He paused. “And my master will want to take the Inn.”

Indeed, the Inn still stood, its out-walls untouched, and was still heavily garrisoned. It had taken in many fleeing Morean soldiers and their women.

“An inn? I’ll have it in an hour. Not a full day,” Hartmut spat. “There are other armies in the field. So you have said.”

Thorn stirred. “My master says little.”

Ser Hartmut struggled with his temper and instead said, “Perhaps it is time to collect information ourselves?”

Thorn looked at him a long time. A man screamed-two Galles held him while a dozen boglins began to eat him. Men began to wager.

People laughed.

“This is who people really are, you know,” Hartmut said quietly.

Thorn grunted. “So my master says. The two of you must get along well.” He watched the atrocity and tried to remember who he had once been. He sighed. “I will try and get the wyverns to fly. Their losses have been terrible. All our flying creatures have been decimated.” Thorn shook his head. “I love the wyverns.”

Hartmut spat. “This is not a time for petty likes or dislikes. I’ll speak plainly, Lord Sorcerer. Your master is either mad, or has a plan that does not-mesh-with the plans my own royal master has made-or worse. I suspect betrayal. I wonder at his disinterest in our battle, our victory, the Emperor-I’m not a fool, Lord Sorcerer. He has a different objective than mere military victory.”

Thorn regarded him again for a long time. One of his great arms moved, and his spear-staff traced lines in the leaf mould.

“Beware of voicing such things,” Thorn said. “For myself, I have no doubts.” He looked around. “Put your energies into taking the Inn.”

Thorn turned on his heel and walked away, leaving the Black Knight standing in the leaf mould. He turned to walk away, and a thought struck him, and he paused, looking back.

I am never alone.

There it was, scratched in the dirt.

Hartmut ran two fingers through his black beard.

“By Satan’s crotch,” he whispered. And then, smiled.

Gilson’s Hole-Ser John Crayford

Two days’ march south of the ruin of the imperial camp, Ser John Crayford was sitting, utterly indecisive, in the clearing that had once been the village of Gilson’s Hole.

No one lived there. It was just three good cabins and the ruins of six others, and a common that had once been grass and was now mud and raspberries.

Ser Ricar and Ser Alison-Sauce-reined in by him.

“I mislike it,” he said. He was tired and saddle sore. They’d had two fights in the woods and he’d had to come back to the road-the rain had turned the southern Adnacrags into the Adnabogs, as his archers were saying to each other at every step.

Sauce flipped her great helm back on her shoulders to hang from its strap. “Sun’s a nice change,” she said. “Where the fuck’s the Emperor?”

Ser Ricar shook his head. “What do you intend, John?”

John Crayford shook his head. He unbuckled his chin strap and pulled his light bascinet over his head and gave it to his squire. His face was writ large with his indecision. He leaned forward in his heavy saddle as if he could see through twenty miles of heavy forest and discern what was ahead of him.

“I intend-” he began. He scratched his beard.

“Look,” he said-mostly to Sauce, whose endless and accurate criticisms were a source of real pain. “If the Emperor fights and loses, we could run into the sorcerer-”