‘I don’t know any more than you,’ Ser Michael said. ‘But my gut tells me you’re spot on.’
An hour later they emerged from deep fog to find themselves cantering across dead grass and bracken that reached to their horses’ bellies. All the Vardariotes but Count Zac and his immediate staff were gone – vanished into the fog.
They halted and changed horses, and they were off again.
At sunset, they stopped long enough to put feed bags on their horses’ heads, and eat some sausage. The Red Knight walked from man to man, down the column. He said the same thing to every man.
‘We’re taking an insane risk, and playing for everything,’ he said with a grin. ‘No sleep tonight. Just keep going. Ignore the fog. That’s what scouts are for.’ He passed back up the column, leaving Ser Michael and Father Arnaud to speculate as to what he intended. At the head of the column stood a man holding a pony. The Red Knight bowed to him.
‘This is more help than I ever expected,’ he said. ‘Again.’
‘From which you may – again – assume that things are worse than you imagined,’ said the guide.
There was a long silence – made more epochal by the totality of the fog and the quiet around them.
He’s taking us straight across the aethereal, isn’t he? asked Harmodius. Blessed Virgin, think of the power required.
He’s saving us about forty miles of brutal mountains. We’ll have to pass them on the way out. Or be trapped against them, unable to manoeuvre, and cut to pieces.
Well, aren’t you the optimist?
When they stumbled out of the snowy fog, they were in a broad, flat marsh, frozen solid, at the foot of a ridge that seemed to fill the sky as the sun rose somewhere far, far to the east behind it. A castle stood at the top of the ridge, and well off to the north sat the town of Ermione. The sea was on the other side of the ridge; the Red Knight could smell it.
The Red Knight gathered them all together. ‘Now we rescue the Emperor,’ he said.
They all nodded.
‘Where are we?’ asked Ser Michael.
‘Eastern Thrake,’ said the Captain. ‘That’s the Imperial castle of Ermione. Last night we moved very fast indeed.’
Count Zac scratched his beard and strove to appear his usual phlegmatic self. ‘Where are the rest of my lads?’ he asked.
‘I very strongly hope that they are storming and holding the high pass for us, and choosing a camp for the main army,’ said the Red Knight. ‘If not, this will turn out to be a very unfortunate trip.’
Men began to ask questions, and the Captain held up his arms for silence. ‘It’s not your business if I cut a deal with Satan,’ he said coldly. ‘It’s your business to storm the castle on those heights. I am told that the enemy has a force within a day’s march. There will be no siege but we’ll only get one shot at this.’ He smiled in the growing grey light. ‘You’ll find if you examine your recent training that you have all practised this.’
Men looked around and realised how many times in the last sixteen weeks they had stormed mock castles.
‘How do we open the gate?’ Count Zac said. ‘Sorcery?’
The Red Knight shrugged. ‘Better,’ he said. ‘Alchemy.’
Ser Michael and Gavin had, as they discovered, practised the whole thing.
Bent and Wilful Murder waited a long time in the growing light at the edge of day, arrows on their bows, watching the men in the towers. It was so cold that the very hairs in your nose seemed to freeze – so cold that sentries kept moving smartly or froze to death. But tired, cold men tend to move in patterns.
Ser Michael opened his mouth, and the Red Knight shook his head and pursed his lips.
The two master archers raised their bows in perfect unison, and all the other archers with them raised theirs, and two dozen shafts flew in the crystalline air. The spent shafts rattled against stone where they missed, but few of them missed.
The two sentries died.
Ser Gavin and Ser Michael picked up the thing like a bronze bell that had materialised at the last halt and ran it to the postern gate of the castle. At their heels came all the men-at-arms, while Count Zac and his men and all the archers remounted and waited at the edge of the woods.
Ser Michael’s hands shook and the backs of his arms and edges of his biceps tingled with what felt like weakness.
The snow crunched under his sabatons, and he made himself run faster.
The two strongest men lifted the bronze bell, mouth to the great iron-shod oak postern door, and seated it against the door.
There was a blur of power, and the bronze somehow mated to the iron on the gate. Ser Gavin let go of the thing as if it was poisonous. Michael backpedalled, almost fell as his heel caught on a piece of frozen dung in a horseshoe print, caught himself with a wrenching motion of his hips that made noise.
‘Run!’ hissed the Red Knight. ‘Here – flat to the wall!’
Twenty armoured men-at-arms held themselves flat to the wooden palisade, just around the corner from the postern gate. The Red Knight’s mouth moved.
There was a sound like all hell breaking loose, and the stench of hell, too.
In what seemed like silence, the Red Knight waved his sword and ran into the foul-smelling smoke, and they all followed him in.
Ser Michael’s responsibility was the main gate. He led six men-at-arms across the frozen yard and fell flat on his face when the ice under foot betrayed him. Harald Derkensun got him to his feet and the other men passed him. There were men sleeping in the gatehouse, but no guard. They killed the sleeping men in their beds and Derkensun, who knew his way around a gatehouse, tripped the gate mechanism and the chains rattled as the portcullis went up and the two big gates opened on counterweights-
Ser Milus followed the Captain’s steel-clad back into the nearest door in the main hall – which proved to be nothing but a covered passage dividing the Great Hall from a barracks area.
‘Ignore them!’ the Captain said softly and ran through a curtained door into the Great Hall. There were a dozen men sprawled on log benches and two men were awake. One shouted.
The Captain ran through the hall, and none of the Thrakians seemed to see him. So they turned on Milus and Gavin, and the fighting began. Milus set his feet and swung his axe and the Thrakians backed away, and Ser Giorgios ran right past the melee and followed the Captain with two more Scholae at his heels – as they’d been taught to.
Milus’s pole-axe caught an unwary Thrakian who didn’t know how long his reach was, cleanly severing almost a third of his head as well as the arm he’d raised to defend himself in the last heartbeat. He had enough head left to scream in stupefied horror as the top of his head fell in his lap.
The surprise was over.
Ser Giorgios followed the Captain up the steps of the tower, which twisted like a corkscrew. It was all he could do to breathe, and he was wearing less armour than the Albans.
They reached the top to find four men cramming the landing, using swords to break down the door of the room at the top of the tower.
The Red Knight put one down before the fight started, by slamming his long red sword into the man’s unarmoured ankle from three steps down – a long thrust and a wrist cut. It was almost the end of the fight – the man staggered, screamed without comprehending what had happened to him – and fell down the stairs. His death on their swords almost threw the Scholae back, and gave his mates time to prepare.
The Red Knight grunted in exasperation. He leaped up the last three steps, absorbing two heavy blows – one to his helmet and one to his right pauldron – and his basilard clenched in his left fist gutted the nearest man.
Ser Giorgios was so close on his heels that he used the dying man as a shield, shouldered him into the third man on the landing and then stabbed through the dying man – repeatedly – until his adversary gurgled.