“There, lassie,” he murmured in her ear, stroking her singed, ash-smutted hair with one callused hand. “There. You did what you could. Come away now.”
“No, here- here! ” Hathan Shieldarm shouted.
“Leave the horses!” he heard Tellian bellowing. “Fiendark take it, leave the horses! ”
Hathan winced at the pain and rage in his wind brother’s voice, but the baron was right. They couldn’t save all the horses, whatever they did, and in trying to save any they played directly into the hands of the men trying to kill the King. He snarled, beating at one of the King’ armsmen with the flat of his saber, hard enough the man staggered and nearly fell. He came back up, his face a snarl of fury, then stopped when Hathan struck him again. The armsman shook his head, and reason flowed back into his expression.
Reason…and hate. Hate directed at that moment against the wind rider who’d stopped him from running into that roaring, crackling furnace.
Reason won. The armsman shook his head, then nodded and staggered back towards the King.
“Into the corner!” Tellian shouted. “Get the King into the angle-now, damn you! Now! ”
Sir Frahdar Swordshank’s voice joined the baron’s, whipping the remaining armsmen and courtiers into something resembling organized motion. They dragged the wounded with them, trying to keep low, under the smoke, as they backed into the southwestern corner of the walled enclosure. The wind-such as there was of it-was out of the west, pushing the worst of the smoke away from them. The rolling, roaring flame which had engulfed the main lodge was to their right front, and the wall itself was to their left. It was a pathetic excuse for a defensive position, but it was the best they had.
‹ They’re moving, Brother, › Gayrhalan told Hathan. ‹ They’re moving.›
They were, and the wind rider heaved a mental sigh of relief. Then his head came up as a huge, chestnut mare loomed out of the smoke beside him. Leeana leaned against Gayrfressa, coughing, her face streaked with tears, and Hathan’s heart twisted as he saw her. He started to reach out to her, but there was no time. The best he could do was give her a nod of encouragement before he and Gayrhalan crossed to Tellian.
The baron looked up grimly as Gayrhalan drew up beside Dathgar.
“She’s all right,” Hathan said quickly.
“So far,” Tellian grated. His face was as filthy as his armor, smeared with ash, and his eyes were hard, as close to despair as Hathan had ever seen them.
“They’ll be coming again…soon,” the baron continued, wrenching his thought and heart away from his daughter, focusing on the desperation of the moment. “This time it’ll be the gate.”
“Unless they decide that’s what we’re going to expect and they use the cover of the smoke to come over the walls again,” Hathan replied.
‹ It will be the gate,› Gayrhalan said flatly. Hathan looked down, and the courser turned his head far enough to looked up at him with one eye. ‹ We hurt them too badly on the walls last time, Brother. They won’t come in scattered that way a second time.› He flicked his ears in the equine equivalent of a shrug. ‹ The gate will let them come in together, and they’ll expect the smoke to keep us from seeing them until they’re right on top of us.›
“Gayrhalan’s right,” Tellian said harshly as Dathgar relayed the gray stallion’s argument. “Even if they don’t use the gate, they’ll come in concentrated this time, and that means they’ll have to cross the courtyard to get to the King. That’s when it will be up to us.”
Hathan looked at him for a moment, then turned and peered into the rolling walls of smoke and flame and nodded in slow understanding.
Leeana finished tying the water-saturated cloth across her nose and mouth. It helped-some-and she pressed her face into Gayrfressa’s shoulder, trying to shut out the horrible sounds still coming from the stable.
‹ You did all you could,› Gayrfressa told her quietly. ‹ You did all you could.›
‹ It wasn’t enough,› Leeana replied silently, hearing the sob in her own mind voice.
‹ Of course it wasn’t. But I’m selfish, Sister. I want you alive, not dead in that stable.›
Leeana flinched, hearing the terror in the courser’s voice and knowing it wasn’t for herself. She stroked the huge mare’s flank, her hand trembling, and started to say something more, but there was no need for it.
And there was no time, either.
Traram waved his men forward.
They obeyed his hand signal without eagerness, but there was no hesitation, either. It wasn’t just about the money anymore. They’d lost two thirds of their companions, and they wanted vengeance for those deaths.
They moved forward, faces swathed in water-soaked cloth, eyes squinted against the stinging smoke. The gate loomed before them, like an apparition seen through driving snow, and expressions tightened and stomachs knotted as they headed for it. It was time A bugle sounded suddenly behind them, and Traram whipped around just in time to see a mounted Sothoii armsman crashing out of the forest behind him with his lance couched.
“The King! The King! ” Cassan Axehammer shouted, and his armsmen charged.
The waves of smoke rising above the trees had spurred them forward, and Cassan’s heart had risen with every furlong. The hunting lodge must be engulfed in flame, and that very possibly meant Markhos and Tellian were already dead. Even if it didn’t, the confusion it engendered could only aid his own plans, and the warning Talthar had issued through that accursed squirrel drove him like a lash. If Talthar had told him the truth-if the assassins truly believed Cassan was the one who’d hired them-those assassins had to die, and die quickly. And so he’d launched his armsmen into the mercenaries’ backs at the gallop without wasting a precious moment trying to order or control their formation.
Surprise was total. Traram and his men had been entirely focused on the burning hunting lodge. The sudden, soaring notes of the bugle, the drum roll of hooves, and the thunder of warcries swept over them, and a merciless steel stormfront of lanceheads and sabers was close behind.
Some of the mercenaries turned, striking at their enemies with the fury of despair before they were ridden over by steel shod hooves, lanced, or cut down by furiously driven sabers. One or two, closest to the flanks of their formation, bolted for the woods, only to be cut off and slashed down by outriders of the main charge.
Most of them never had the opportunity to do even that much. Taken completely unawares from behind, they died almost before they ever realized they were under attack.
Tellian and Hathan stared at each other in confusion and speculation as the bugles continued to sound.
“Trisu?” Hathan said, but Tellian shook his head.
“It might be, but I don’t think so. It sounds to me like there’s too many of them for that.”
‹ You’re right, I think, Brother, › Dathgar said. ‹ There are at least several hundred of the lesser cousins out there-more than Lord Trisu could possibly have assembled.›
“Then who the Phrobus is it?” Hathan demanded as Gayrhalan relayed Dathgar’s remarks. The dark-haired wind rider grimaced. “Not that I’m not grateful, you understand, but something about having that many armsmen turn up all unannounced at the very moment people are trying to kill the King turns me all suspicious.”
“And me,” Tellian agreed grimly.
“So what do we do?”
“That, Brother, is a very good question.” Tellian drew a deep breath, his eyes worried, then exhaled noisily and looked down as Frahdar Swordshank appeared at his stirrup.