The men on board began to disembark, hauling themselves over the bulwarks at the bow and dropping to the beach. The rowing crew staggered up onto dry land and stretched themselves out with groans of weariness, dropping onto the coarse stones and sand and lying as if dead. One of the last to come ashore was Slagor, the captain.
He dropped tiredly to the beach. His beard and hair were matted and rimed white with salt. His eyes were red and haunted-looking. He and Erak faced each other. Oddly, they didn't greet each other with the normal grasped forearms. Will realized that there must be little love between the two men.
"What are you doing here at this time of year?" Erak asked the other skipper.
Slagor shook his head disgustedly. "We're damned lucky to be here.
We were two days out of Hallasholm when the storm hit us. Waves as big as castles there were, and the wind was straight from the pole. The mast went in the first hour and we couldn't cut it loose. Lost two men trying to clear it. Then the butt end kept slamming into the ship's waterline, and before we got rid of it, it had driven a hole in the planks. We had one compartment flooded before we knew what was happening, and leaks in the other three."
The wolfships, in spite of the fact that they looked like open boats, were actually highly seaworthy vessels. This was in no small part due to the design that divided the hulls into four separate, watertight compartments beneath the main deck and between the two lower galleries where the rowers sat. It was the buoyancy of these compartments that kept the ships afloat even when they were swamped by the huge waves that coursed across the Stormwhite Sea.
Will glanced at Erak now. He saw the heavily built Jarl was frowning at Slagor's words.
"What were you doing at sea in the first place?" Erak asked. "This is no time to try to cross the Stormwhite."
Slagor took a wooden beaker of brandy-spirit offered by one of Erak's men. Around the small harbor, the crew of Erak's ship was bringing drinks to their exhausted countrymen and, in some cases, tending to injuries obviously sustained as their ship had tossed and heaved in the storm. Slagor made no gesture of thanks and Erak frowned slightly. Again, Will was conscious of a feeling of animosity between the two captains. Even Slagor's manner was belligerent as he described their misfortune, as if he were somehow defensive about the whole matter. Now he drank half the brandy in one long gulp and wiped the back of his hand across his mouth before answering.
"Weather had cleared back in Hallasholm," he said shortly. "I thought we had a break long enough to get across the storm zone."
Erak's eyes widened in disbelief.
"At this time of year?" he asked. "Are you mad?"
"Thought we could make it," Slagor repeated stubbornly, and Will saw Erak's eyes narrow. The burly Jarl lowered his voice so that it didn't carry to the other crewmen. Only Will and Evanlyn heard him.
"Damn you, Slagor," he said bitterly. "You were trying to get a jump on the raiding season."
Slagor faced the other captain angrily. "And if I was? It was my decision to make as captain. No one else's, Erak."
"And your decision cost two men their lives," Erak pointed out.
"Two men who were sworn to abide by your decisions, no matter how foolhardy those decisions might be. Any man with more than five minutes' experience would know that this is too early to make the crossing!"
"There was a lull!" the other man shot back, and Erak snorted in disgust.
"A lull! There are always lulls! They last a day or two. But that's not long enough to make the crossing and you know it. Damn you for your greed, Slagor!"
Slagor drew himself up. "You've no right to judge me, Erak. A captain is master of his own ship and you know it. Like you, I'm free to choose when and where I go," he said. His voice was louder than Erak's and Will sensed he was blustering.
"I'll note you chose not to join us in the war we've just been fighting," Erak replied, scorn in his voice. "You were content to sit at home for that, then try to sneak out and get the easy pickings before other captains were ready to leave."
"My choice," Slagor repeated, "and a wise one, as it's turned out." His voice became a sneer. "I notice you didn't exactly have a great deal of success in your invasion, did you, Jarl Erak?"
Erak stepped closer. His eyes blazed a warning at the other man.
"Watch your tone, you sneak thief. I left good friends behind me there."
"And more than friends, as I've heard," replied Slagor, emboldened now. "You'll get scant thanks from Ragnak for leaving his son behind as well."
Erak stepped back, his jaw dropping. "Gronel was taken in the battle?"
Slagor shook his head now, smiling at the other man's loss of poise. "Not taken. Killed, I heard, at the Thorntree battle. Some of the ships managed to make it back to Skandia before the storms set in."
Will glanced up quickly at that. Wolfwind, Erak's ship, had been the last to leave the Araluen coast. The crew were still waiting for Erak's return when the survivors of Horth's ill-fated expedition had straggled back to the ships, bringing news of the failure and then sailing away. Will had later heard Wolfwind 's crew talking about the Thorntree battle. Two Rangers, one short and grizzled, the other young and tall, had led the King's forces that decimated the Skandian army as they had marched to outflank Duncan's main force. Somehow, Will knew in his heart that they had been Halt and Gilan.
Erak shook his head sadly. "Gronel was a good man," he said.
"We'll feel his loss sorely."
"His father is feeling it. He's sworn a Vallasvow against Duncan and his family."
"That can't be right," Erak said, frowning in disbelief. "A Vallasvow is only to be taken against treachery or murder."
Slagor shrugged. "He's the Oberjarl. He can do as he likes, I'd say. Now for pity's sake, do you have any food on this godforsaken island? Our stores are ruined by seawater."
Erak, still distracted by the news he'd just heard, became aware of Will and Evanlyn's presence. He jerked his head toward the huts.
"Get a fire going," he told them. "These men need hot food."
He was angry that Slagor had to remind him of his duty in this matter. He may not have liked the other captain, but his men deserved help and attention after all they had been through. He shoved Will roughly toward the hut. The boy staggered, then began to run, Evanlyn close behind him.
Will had a nasty feeling in the pit of his stomach. He had no idea what a Vallasvow might be, but he knew one thing. Keeping Evanlyn's identity a secret had suddenly become a matter of life and death.
10
T HE ROAD NEARED THE OCEAN, AND THE WOODS ON EITHER SIDE gradually moved closer and closer, as fertile, tilled fields gave way to denser forest country. It was the sort of country where peaceful travelers might well become fearful of bandits, as the thick trees close to the roadside gave ample cover for an ambush. Halt, however, had no such fears. In fact, his mood was so dark that he might well have welcomed an attempt by bandits to rob him of his few belongings.
His heavy saxe knife and throwing knife were easy to hand under his cloak, and he carried his longbow strung, resting across the pommel of his saddle, in Ranger fashion. One corner of his cloak, specially made for the purpose, folded back from his shoulder, leaving the feathered ends of the two dozen arrows in his quiver within quick, unimpeded reach. It was said that each Ranger carried the lives of twenty-four men in his quiver, such was their uncanny, deadly accuracy with the longbow.