Zaranda cast him a dangerous look. Janafar leapt to her feet. "You can bend your necks to councils, keeps, and crossbows if you like!" she declared. "I at least want to see this castle before I give up all I've worked for."
"Now you're thinking," Zaranda said, nodding serenely. "When in doubt, reconnoiter. When you don't think there's doubt, reconnoiter anyway—you save a lot of unpleasant surprises that way."
She stood up, dusting off the seat of her trousers, and looked to the youth from Masamont. "Now, did I hear you say . . . crossbows?"
20
"There it is," whispered Byador—unnecessarily, since the castle of Baron Lutwill was rather hard to miss.
Lying on her belly in the midst of a thicket of aro-matic scrub that did little to keep the afternoon sun from prickling her back through her linen tunic, Zaranda surveyed the scene. Masamont was a collec-tion of a hundred buildings or more, the largest and most central of which were built of stone, with peaked red tile roofs like the coastal towns. Like most of inland Tethyr, the surrounding countryside was flat. Fields green with the long summer's second crops, beginning to fill out, broke up the landscape, interspersed with lines of shade from windbreak trees planted along irri-gation ditches and neat orchards of half-ripened fruit.
However, flat did not mean entirely lacking relief, like a gaming table in the parlor of a Cormyrean lord; the thicket in which Zaranda and her small band lay hidden topped a slight rise backed by a creek. The prominence from which the castle rose, three furlongs away, was too symmetrical to be nature's work. Zaranda guessed it was an artificial mound, a motte, built at some unguessable remove in Tethyr's lengthy past to provide better outlook and tactical advantage for what-ever fortification was first raised upon it.
The manor itself was a bailey, pitched rooftops peek-ing over a twelve-foot dressed-stone wall, and a stone keep perhaps four stories tall sticking up from the cen-ter of it. "You're right," Janafar breathed to Byador. "It's a fortress."
Zaranda withheld a smile. The castle was a step or at most two above her own manor. It lacked flanking towers or crenelations and even at this range she could see that the dry ditch surrounding it was half-filled with trash. A fixed wooden bridge led to the gate, hint-ing that the baron's mechanics were not up to the task of keeping a drawbridge in repair. By her standards it was pretty weak beer. Yet she understood how invinci-ble and intimidating it appeared to her untempered vil-lage warriors.
"I've seen enough," she announced quietly, and slith-ered back down to the stream. The rest of the party—Stillhawk, Shield, Balmeric, and the three trainees—followed.
Chenowyn awaited on the far side, on the edge of a brushy and neglected woodlot. Zaranda had let her come because Chen refused to be parted from her. The shrubs on the low ridge made her sneeze uncontrol-lably, so she had consented to watch the horses. She amused herself by making ripples and tiny splashes ap-pear in the water by force of will.
Jumping across the creek, Zaranda gave her a quick frown. She disapproved of Chen's playing unsupervised with her wild talents.
"So what do you make of it?" Zaranda asked her trainees.
They looked at one another and then back at her with anxious eyes. No one spoke.
After a moment, Balmeric said, "We'll never cast it down with our ragtag army, lacking siege engines."
Zaranda pulled a long face. "I mislike 'never.' It's too big for my mind to hold."
"Zaranda will find something magical to do," Chenowyn pronounced proudly.
Zaranda grinned and ruffled her hair. "Magic isn't the solution to all problems. At least, not my magic.
But there is a solution." She put hands on hips and looked challenge at the others. "Well?"
"Attack the flank," said Shield.
Balmeric uttered a bark of laughter. "A castle's flank? Ho, that's rich. Even so great a moon-calf as you can plainly see the castle's round."
"Zaranda says there's always a flank," the orog maintained stolidly.
"So she does," Byador said. "But Master Balmeric's right—how can a castle have a flank?"
"Not all flanks are physical," Zaranda said. "Attend me. Even you, Balmeric; you've not seen so much of siegecraft as I have. The thing about sieges is, they sel-dom end with a successful storming. Ladders and en-gines and mines aren't what win them."
"What does win them?" Janafar demanded, bursting with impatience.
Zaranda only grinned.
The man rode into the sunset down the indifferently kept-up road, which ran past the castle and on into Masamont. He sported a flamboyant plumed hat, ringleted dark hair that bobbed about his shoulders, grandiose mustachios, and a coat with a riot of colored ribbons pinned down the front. He wore a rapier through his sash and a yarting slung across his back. He cantered his mount, a striking palomino mare with a long and lustrous white mane and tail, up to the two spearmen who stood guard before the castle gate, and halted on the bridge.
"Greetings, gentles," he said, sweeping off his hat and bowing long from the saddle. "I hight Fyadros, the Incomparably Wonderful Bard, and this is Zizzy, the Wonder Horse."
As if in greeting, the mare bobbed her head three times, making her forelock bounce, and thrice smote the wooden bridge with a dainty hoof. The guards gaped.
"What brings you this way, good bard?" asked one, too overawed by the splendor of this apparition to remember his obligation, as a member of a rural robber baron's en-tourage, to be rude and overbearing at all times.
"We seldom see the likes of you hereabouts," echoed his companion, similarly stricken.
"Indeed, that's evident by the quaint way your jaws hang down to your hauberks," the bard said. "What brings me is my whim, which rules with a hand of iron; I come from here, and there, and everywhere. Just now I feel the winds of adventure blowing me to Zazesspur, whence I shall take ship for the wondrous realm of Maztica."
The guards looked at each other. "Do you think," asked the one on the right, "that you could stay a night or two? We don't get much by way of entertainment out here."
"The village women hate us, the trollops," the other said. "They give us nothing we don't take at poniard-point."
"Indeed? Such strapping stalwarts as yourselves?" The bard stroked his long chin and looked thoughtful. "It could be that I might be induced to bide the night here, if nicely asked."
The guard on the right turned and bellowed for an errand boy to go and fetch the chamberlain. While they waited, Fyadros entertained the guards with improba-ble tales of a halfling who attempted intimacies with a firbolg maid.
At length the great oaken gates groaned open behind them. A slight middle-aged man in a black robe stood there. He had receding dark hair, white-touched at the temples, and a wisp of mustache. A dirty, skinny boy peeked past a gate valve behind him.
"I am Whimberton," the man said in a thin voice, "chamberlain to Castle Lutwill and the ever-glorious, to say nothing of -victorious, Baron Lutwill. Who might you be?"
"He's a bard," the guard on the right said.
"He has a Wonder Horse," added the one on the left.
"I am of course Fyadros, the Incomparably Wonder-ful Bard, and being of generous disposition only mildly miffed at not being recognized at once, seeing what a backwater this is."
"Of course I recognize you, good Fyadros," the cham-berlain said smoothly. "It was only that poor light mo-mentarily dulled my sight. What might I do for you?"
"Your guards hinted you might care to beseech me to pass the night within and brighten your dull and mean-ingless lives with my stories and songs, which are, it goes without saying, incomparably wonderful."