She felt her muscles twitch, her lips moving involuntarily. She fought it, of course.
‘Not your most beautiful look,’ Lykos commented, frowning at the expression on her face.
Nathair — where are you? Please come home and end this nightmare. Not for the first time she marvelled at Lykos’ sheer audacity — that he would do the things he was doing in light of Nathair’s return.
‘What’s going on behind those eyes?’ Lykos said. ‘Speak freely.’
‘Nathair,’ she said. ‘How can you do these things, knowing that he will return one day?’
Lykos laughed. ‘Kingship changes people, my lady. Responsibility, pressure, it does things to a man. And Nathair will soon have far more on his mind than who his mother shares a bed with. I don’t think you’ll recognize your son when he returns.’
CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND FIVE
CYWEN
Cywen stamped her feet and blew on her hands. It was cold and damp, her breath fogging before her. A heavy mist cloaked the ground. She crouched and scratched Buddai behind an ear; the hound leaned against her, nearly pushing her over.
‘Mount up,’ Calidus said as he rode out of the mist.
She was close to the head of the column, the smell of Nathair’s draig strong in the air.
It had been half a ten-night since Alcyon had left the column, staying in the woods they had passed through. Calidus had been poor company since then, refusing to answer a single question she put to him. That didn’t stop her trying, though.
‘Alcyon is waiting for my brother, isn’t he?’ she asked the silver-haired man, not for the first time.
He turned his yellow eyes upon her, the first reaction she had achieved. ‘Today is a momentous day,’ he said quietly, though she felt scared, suddenly, a threat in his voice. ‘You are a curiosity to me now, nothing more. I do not need you. If you distract me again I will put a knife through your eye, and enjoy watching you die.’ He held her gaze. ‘Do we understand one another?’
‘I. .’ She nodded, all her anger and defiance draining away.
A shout went up from the back of the column. Calidus pulled on his horse’s reins, turning to look back. A figure loomed out of the mist, tall and wide.
Alcyon.
He approached Calidus with his head bowed. As he drew closer Cywen saw that he looked exhausted, his usual pallor deathly white now, cuts upon his arms, matted blood in his hair. He came and stood before Calidus, dropped to his knees.
‘I have failed you,’ the giant grated. ‘My life is forfeit.’
‘It’s forfeit when I have no more use for you,’ Calidus snapped. ‘Get up and follow me.’
Calidus ordered a warrior close by to watch Cywen, and then he rode a distance away with Alcyon in tow. Cywen strained to hear them, but only caught a few disjointed words as they returned to her. ‘Half a day behind, maybe more,’ was all she heard Alcyon say.
‘We’d better get this done, then,’ Calidus said and cantered to the head of the column.
‘I told you,’ Cywen said to Alcyon.
‘What?’ the giant growled.
‘That Corban would be the one doing the killing.’
Alcyon glowered at her. ‘Mount up,’ he ordered.
As she climbed onto Shield’s back the giant reached out, his long arms encompassing her. Before she realized what he was doing she had a rope knotted about her waist, the other end tied to Alcyon’s belt.
‘What’s that for?’ she said.
‘There’ll be fighting today, and I won’t be able to spend it all watching you. Can’t have you running off in the confusion.’
‘Fighting today?’
‘Aye.’
‘Can I have my knives back?’
‘No.’
‘Why not — I might need to defend myself.’
Alcyon smiled at her. ‘I can see why Veradis likes you,’ he said. ‘You’ve got spirit.’
Veradis? That stilled her tongue.
‘Put your knives out of your head; there’s not a chance in Asroth’s Otherworld that I’ll be putting a blade in your hand. I might like you, but I don’t trust you. And don’t worry; if you need defending, I’ll be the one to do it.’
She couldn’t think of an answer to that, so she just scowled at him instead.
All about her the Jehar were already mounted, waiting. Horses whickered, harness creaked, chainmail jangled, then a horn call rose up somewhere ahead, eerie and muted in the morning mist. The host set off, two thousand warriors riding to battle.
‘The fighting will be at Murias, then?’
‘No more questions,’ Alcyon said. Something in his tone warned her not to press him.
‘I’m glad,’ she said to him.
He raised an eyebrow. ‘Glad?’
‘That you’re still alive. That my brother didn’t kill you.’
‘Come, faster,’ he ordered, opening his stride, moving past rows of the Jehar, heading for the head of the column. Shield slowed as they neared Nathair astride his draig, but Cywen encouraged him forward and they fell in beside Nathair and his bodyguards.
By mid-morning the mist had mostly burned away, revealing hills and vales of sweeping moorland, much the same as they had been journeying across for days. Up ahead a lone mountain loomed, dark cliffs soaring into the clouds.
‘Murias,’ Calidus declared.
It was not until the sun was hovering over the horizon that they had ridden close enough for Cywen to make out towers and walls, though the place did not look like any of the giant strongholds she had seen before. The towers looked as if they had grown out of the mountain, as if the rock had been melted and reformed by crude hands. Something organic, rather than built.
The ground started rising, sloping up to meet the mountains. Cywen saw a wide road, cutting a line into long shadows cast by the mountain, leading to a huge arched gateway of carved stone. The gates were closed.
‘Not planning a stealthy attack, then?’ Cywen said to Alycon.
Nathair overheard her. ‘I am the Bright Star, the Seren Disglair,’ he said from his draig’s back. ‘It feels as if I’ve been waiting for this moment all my life; I’ll not lessen it by sneaking up like a thief in the night. This is my destiny.’ He looked at her and smiled.
Have it your way. Though I’m wondering how you think you’re going to get in there. Just walk up and knock on their gates?
In the distance a sound drifted on the air, a wolven howling, as if heralding the coming of night. Buddai whined, and Shield slowed, his head pulling around.
‘Walk on,’ Cywen ordered, digging her heels into Shield’s sides. Buddai was standing stock still, his head cocked to one side. Then he bolted away, back the way they had come, quickly disappearing into the gloom. Cywen called him, reining Shield in.
‘We can’t stop,’ Alcyon said, tugging on the rope about her waist.
‘But Buddai. .’
‘He doesn’t like the look of Murias,’ Alcyon said. ‘Sensible animal. He’ll be out here when we’re done, waiting for you.’
‘But. .’
‘Keep moving.’ It was Calidus who spoke now. After a last look back Cywen urged Shield onwards.
CHAPTER ONE HUNDRED AND SIX
CORALEN
‘Murias,’ Coralen said, pointing into the distance. A tall peak reared before them, the first mountain of a range that faded into the distance.
They had ridden hard since the ambush in the woods, two nights gone. At first she’d thought they would catch the giant, but he had not stopped running for two days and nights solid, each morning the gap between them widening a little.
It had been a shock, seeing the other Jehar in the woods, a lesson of what awaited them once they caught up with Nathair and his warband. Tukul had been grim faced ever since, something unspoken passing between them all.
Blood was going to be shed.
But I knew that, anyway.