‘Quickly, Rothe,’ he said.
He watched Kanin coming. He could see the fury in the man’s face now, and the great bloody wound Ess’yr had put there with her bow. Orisian was strangely aware of the leaden weight of his soaking clothes. He squeezed the hilt of the knife. Rothe’s sword smacked against the rope. The shieldman cursed. Kanin hauled at his reins. His horse came to a ragged halt at the base of the jetty.
The other riders gathered around him. They looked as if they had ridden out of the rain-riven sky itself, a wild expression of the storm. Kanin held out his sword, pointing it at Orisian.
‘Hold,’ he cried. ‘Hold there.’
Warriors were dismounting. Orisian could see crossbows being readied.
‘Rothe?’ asked Orisian without looking round.
‘Done!’
A crossbow bolt snapped out, flashing darkly through the rain and past them, out over the sea. An answering arrow sprang from Varryn’s bow. It darted past Kanin, thudded into the warrior behind him.
‘Get into the boat,’ said Orisian. ‘Everyone.’
‘Oh dear, oh dear,’ Hammarn was muttering over and over again.
He and Yvane, then Anyara scrambled into the boat. A flurry of bolts hissed down the length of the jetty. Orisian flung himself at the rowboat. Rothe, there beside him, gasped as one quarrel found his shoulder. The boat rocked as the shieldman slumped into it. Orisian struggled to his feet. Yvane was fumbling with an oar; she was staring, as if in surprise, at the crossbow bolt transfixing her upper arm. Varryn, still standing with Ess’yr on the end of the jetty, loosed another arrow.
‘Come on,’ Orisian shouted at the Kyrinin. ‘Get in.’
‘Pull, pull,’ Anyara was screaming at Hammarn as the two of them hauled at oars. The boat jerked away from the jetty. Orisian reached for Ess’yr.
‘Don’t be stupid,’ he shouted. ‘You can’t stay here.’ Kanin was rushing down the jetty, his warriors coming behind him like a dark flock of crows stooping out of the rain-lashed sky. Orisian heard Kanin’s inarticulate scream of fury. Varryn and Ess’yr looked silently at one another for an instant and then leapt from the jetty. They landed together in the rowboat’s stern, so lightly and precisely that it hardly bucked.
Orisian scrambled over Rothe’s prostrate form. The warrior was moaning softly. Orisian saw the blood soaking through his shieldman’s shirt, but would not allow the sight to touch him. Not yet. There were four oars. Hammarn and Anyara were pulling at two, Yvane struggling with a third.
‘No,’ Kanin was shouting as the boat took another unsteady lunge away from the shore.
More bolts: dark flickers darting out to the boat, slicing through the rain.
‘Get down,’ shouted Orisian, and hunched over his oar. A couple of the quarrels thudded into the hull, the stern; another flew over their heads. He felt his oar shiver and saw a bolt stuck in it, next to his hand. Then nothing. The warriors on the jetty were hurrying to reload. Kanin stood at the furthest point, arms and sword upraised as if to threaten the thick, grey sky itself.
Waves, dragged up by the storm, were slapping at the rowboat’s prow. Water sluiced over the sides and around their feet. Spray misted around their heads.
Gasping, spitting salt water from his mouth, Orisian hauled at the oar with all the strength he had left. As they drew clear of Koldihrve he could see, through the teeming rain, the vague shape of Kanin standing impotent and dark over the water, staring out. The Horin-Gyre Thane watched them all the way.
They rode the tide out to the Tal Dyreen ship. The sailors, laughing and shouting excitedly, threw ladders over the side. As they tied ropes about Rothe so that he could be hauled aboard, the huge shieldman fainted away.
Epilogue
I once saw a fragment of a manuscript, found in the ruins of one of Dun Aygll’s palaces. It may be truth, it may not, but this is the meat of what it said:
Minon, who was to be the Torturer, and was to cast a dark shadow across his times, gave no sign of what he was to become in his childhood. He had woken only dimly to the Shared, had no talents in its use of any substance, and lived a quiet and gentle life in the woods of the Far Dyne hills.
His father was a man of wicked inclinations, though, and from the cottage where he dwelled with his Kyrinin wife and his na’kyrim son, this man went forth at night to practise murder and thievery. In time his deeds cast a shroud of fear upon those parts and an unnamed lord sent his warriors to rid the country of the bandit. They came one eve upon the cottage of Minon’s father. The wife they slew before the hearth, the husband in the stable where he kept his horse. Minon put a knife into the heart of one of the attackers before they bore him to the ground.
Then, such was their anger at his slaying of one of their number, the warriors resolved to put Minon to a cruel death. They bestowed upon that child terrible tortures. But in the extremity of his suffering, there arose in Minon an unsuspected power. Fleeing from the pain and horror of his senses, he found some doorway into the deeper reaches of the Shared that until that moment had been hidden from him, and up out of those deep places there flowed an awful, potent river. All the cruelties his captors had practised upon him were then revisited tenfold upon them, for Minon broke his bonds and unveiled a terrible visage.
He alone walked away from that cottage and he left nothing but blood behind him. He went alone into the world and fear and foreboding ran before him like fell hounds.
The harbour of Kolkyre was thronged with boats great and small. The whole city, and the harbour district in particular, was filled with warriors: not just those of Kilkry but also remnants of the army of Lannis-Haig and advance companies of Ayth, Taral and Haig. There were, as well, hundreds of fugitives from the fighting in the Glas valley. Never in living memory had the city been so overflowing with humanity.
Taim Narran pushed his way through the crowds on the waterfront. So great was the press of bodies that he was in danger of losing track of Roaric nan Kilkry-Haig, who was guiding him on his way. Amidst all the grim rumour swirling around Kolkyre, today Roaric was the bearer of only good tidings. The message he brought to Taim in his borrowed chambers in the Tower of Thrones had been so unlooked-for, so joyous, that Taim hardly dared allow his weary heart to believe it.
‘Where are they?’ Taim shouted above the din.
‘At the harbourmaster’s house,’ came the reply. ‘They were on a Tal Dyreen ship that came in an hour ago. They tried for Kolglas, but the captain found out what had happened at Glasbridge from some fishermen and he wouldn’t take them up the estuary after that. So he brought them here. They wished to bathe and change their garments before presenting themselves to my father.’
When they came to the house Taim could not contain himself, and brushed past the servant who guarded the door. He cast about, his heart thudding, in search of those he had never thought to see again. In the dining hall he found a stranger group than any he might have imagined. Anyara, the niece of his dead Thane, was at a table with two na’kyrim: one a small, dishevelled old man who looked to be asleep where he sat, the other a woman who turned and fixed him with a penetrating glare. Beyond them, by the fire that roared in the grate, stood two tall Kyrinin—a man and a woman—clad for the forest. They glanced up when he entered and he met their flinty eyes. The woman cast her gaze down again but the man did not, and the ferocious spirals of tattoos upon his face lent his glare a wild edge. Taim found that his voice had fled from his throat.