by Robin Hobb
I saw Burrich wince. Such honesty is admirable, but not always good leadership. I saw Foxglove and Kerf exchange measuring glances. ‘My queen, Kerf has more battle experience than I. I would accept his command,’ Foxglove offered quietly.
Kerf looked down, as if mildly ashamed. ‘Burrich was Chivalry’s man. He has seen far more battle than I have,’ he observed to his mare’s neck. He looked up suddenly, ‘I commend him to you, my queen.’
Burrich’s face was a struggle of conflicting emotions. For a moment, his eyes lit. Then I saw a hesitation build.
Heart of the Pack, they will hunt well for you, Nighteyes urged him.
‘Burrich, take command. They will fight with heart for you.’
My skin prickled to hear Queen Kettricken virtually echo Nighteyes’ thought. From where I sat, I could actually see a shiver run over Burrich. He straightened in his saddle. ‘We have no hope of surprising them in this flat country. And the three circles they have already gained can become defences for them. We are not a vast force. What we have most of, my queen, is time. We can pen them. They have no access to fresh water. If Bayguard stands, and we keep the Outislanders trapped where they are, between the third earthwork and the wall, we can simply wait for our ships to arrive. At that time we can judge if we wish to join an attack on them, or simply starve them out.’
‘This seems wise to me,’ the Queen approved.
‘They are fools if they have not left at least a small force with their ships. Those we will have to contend with immediately. Then we must set our own guards to the ships, with orders to destroy them if it looks as if any of the Outislanders have got past us and are trying to escape. If not, you will have ships to add to King-in-Waiting Verity’s fleet.’
‘This, too, seems sensible.’ The idea clearly pleased Kettricken.
‘It is tidy, but only if we act swiftly. They will soon be aware of us, if they are not already. Certainly they will see the situation as clearly as we have. We need to get down there, and contain those besieging the keep and destroy those guarding the ships.’
Kerf and Foxglove were both nodding. Burrich looked at them. ‘I want your archers for our circle around the keep. We want to contain them there, not get into any close fighting. Simply pin them down where they are. Wherever they breached the walk is where they will try to trickle out again. Guard most heavily there, but watch all along the outer wall. And for now, do not try to go within the outer wall at all. Let them scuttle about like crabs in a pot.’
Terse nods from both captains. Burrich continued.
‘I want swords for the ships. Expect the fighting to be nasty. They’ll be defending their only escape routes. Send a few lesser archers, and have them prepare fire arrows. If all else fails, burn the ships where they’re beached. But try to take them first.’
‘The Rurisk!’ Someone in the back ranks gave a cry. All heads turned to the water. There was the Rurisk, rounding the north tooth of Neatbay. In a moment, a second sail appeared. Behind us, the mounted warriors raised a shout. But out beyond our ships, anchored in deep water, white as a dead man’s belly and her sails as bloated, floated the white ship. The moment I saw it, an icicle of terror sliced my guts.
‘The white ship!’ I choked. Fear sent a shudder through me that was almost like pain.
‘What?’ Burrich asked, startled. It was the first word he had spoken to me that day.
‘The white ship!’ I repeated and pointed a hand.
‘What? Where? That? That’s a fog bank. Our ships are coming into the harbour over there.’
I looked. He was right. A fog bank, melting in the morning sun even as I watched. My terror receded like the ghost of mocking laughter. But the day seemed suddenly chillier, and the sun that had briefly parted the storm clouds a weak and watery thing. An evil cast lingered on the day, like a bad smell.
‘Split your forces and deploy them now,’ Burrich said quietly. ‘We don’t want our ships to meet any resistance as they come into shore. Quickly, now. Fitz. You’re to go with the force that attacks the Red Ships. Be there when the Rurisk beaches, and let those on board know what we’ve decided. As quickly as those Red Ships are cleaned out, we shall want all fighters to join us in containing the Outislanders. I wish there was a way to get word to Duke Kelvar of what we’re doing. I suppose he’ll see, soon enough. Well, let’s get going.’
There was some milling about, some conferring between Kerf and Foxglove, but in a surprisingly short time, I found myself riding behind Foxglove with a contingent of warriors. I had my sword, but what I really missed was the axe I had become so comfortable with over the summer.
Nothing was as tidy as was planned. We encountered Outislanders in the wreckage of the town, long before we reached the beach. They were moving back toward their ships, and hampered with a coffle of prisoners. We attacked the Raiders. Some stood and fought, and some abandoned their prisoners and ran before our horses. Our troops were soon scattered throughout the still-smouldering buildings and debris-scattered streets of Neatbay. Some of our force stayed to cut the ropes on the prisoners and help them as best they could. Foxglove swore at the delay, for the Raiders that had fled would warn the ship-guards. Swiftly she split our force, leaving a handful of soldiers to help the battered townsfolk. The smells of dead bodies and rain on charred timbers brought back my memories of Forge with a vividness that almost unmanned me. There were bodies everywhere, far more than we had expected to find. Somewhere I sensed a wolf prowling through the ruins, and took comfort from him.
Foxglove cursed us all with surprising skill, and then organized those she kept with her into a wedge. We swept down on the Red Ships in time to see one being launched into the retreating tide. There was little we could do about that, but we were in time to prevent a second ship from getting off. We killed those ones with surprising alacrity. There were not many, only a skeleton rowing crew. We even managed to kill them before they could slay most of their captives who lay bound on the thwarts of the ships. We suspected that the ship that escaped had been similarly laden. And hence, I surmised to myself, not initially planning to engage the Rurisk or any of the ships that now converged on the one that had eluded us.
But the Red Ships had been outward-bound with hostages. To where? To a ghost ship that only I had glimpsed? Even to think of the white ship brought a shudder over me and a pressure in my head like the beginning of pain. Perhaps they had intended to drown their hostages, or to Forge them, however that was done. I was not in a position to give it great thought then, but I saved the knowledge for Chade. Each of the three remaining beached ships had a contingent of warriors, and they fought as desperately as Burrich had predicted they would. One ship was set afire by an overzealous archer, but the others were taken intact.
We had secured all the ships by the time the Rurisk was beached. There was time now to lift my head, and to look out over Neatbay. No sign of the white ship. Perhaps it had been only a cloud bank. Behind the Rurisk came the Constance, and behind them a flotilla of fishing vessels and even a couple of merchant ships. Most of them had to anchor out in the shallow harbour, but the men aboard them were ferried swiftly ashore. The warship crews waited for their captains to hear word of what went on, but those from the fishing vessels and merchant ships swept past us and headed directly for the besieged keep.
The trained crews from the warships soon overtook them, and by the time we reached the outer walls of the keep, there was an attitude of cooperation if not any real organization. The prisoners we had freed were weak from lack of food and water, but recovered quickly and were indispensable in giving us intimate knowledge of the outer earthworks. By afternoon, our siege of the besiegers was in place. With difficulty, Burrich persuaded all involved that at least one of our warships would remain fully manned and on alert, in the water. His premonition was proven correct the next morning, when two more Red Ships sailed around the northern point of the bay. The Rurisk ran them off, but they fled too easily for us to take any satisfaction in it. Al
l knew they would simply find an undefended village to raid further up the coast. Several of the fishing vessels belatedly gave chase, though there was little chance of them catching the oared vessels of the Raiders.
By the second day of waiting, we were beginning to be bored and uncomfortable. The weather had turned foul again. The hard bread was starting to taste of mould, the dried fish was no longer completely dry. To cheer us, Duke Kelvar had added the Buck flag of the Six Duchies to his own pennon flying over Bayguard to acknowledge us. But like us, he had chosen a waiting strategy. The Outislanders were penned. They had not attempted to break out past us, nor to advance closer to the keep. All was still and waiting.
‘You don’t listen to warnings. You never have.’ Burrich spoke quietly to me.
Night had fallen. It was the first time since our arrival that we had had more than a few moments together. He sat on a log, his injured leg stretched straight in front of him. I crouched by the fire, trying to warm my hands. We were outside a temporary shelter set up for the Queen, tending a very smoky fire. Burrich had wanted her to settle in one of the few intact buildings left in Neatbay, but she had refused, insisting on staying close to her warriors. Her guard came and went freely, in her shelter and at her fire. Burrich frowned over their familiarity, but also approved her loyalty. ‘Your father, too, was like that,’ he observed suddenly as two of Kettricken’s guard emerged from her shelter and went to relieve others still on watch.
‘Didn’t take warnings?’ I asked in surprise.
Burrich shook his head. ‘No. Always his soldiers, coming and going, at all hours. I’ve always wondered when he found the privacy to create you.’
I must have looked shocked, for Burrich suddenly flushed as well. ‘Sorry. I’m tired and my leg is – uncomfortable. I wasn’t thinking what I was saying.’
I found a smile unexpectedly. ‘It’s all right,’ I said, and it was. When he had found out about Nighteyes, I was afraid he was going to banish me again. A jest, even a rough jest, was welcome. ‘You were saying about warnings?’ I asked humbly.
He sighed. ‘You said it. We are as we are. And he said it. Sometimes, they don’t give you a choice. They just bond to you.’
Somewhere off in the darkness, a dog howled. It was not really a dog. Burrich glared at me. ‘I can’t control him at all,’ I admitted.
Nor I, you. Why should there be control, one of the other?
‘Nor does he stay out of personal conversations,’ I observed.
‘Nor personal anything,’ Burrich said flatly. He spoke in the voice of a man who knew.
‘I thought you said you never used … it.’ Even out here, I would not say ‘the Wit’ aloud.
‘I don’t. No good comes of it. I will tell you plainly now what I’ve told you before. It … changes you. If you give in to it. If you live it. If you can’t shut it out, at least don’t seek after it. Don’t become –’
‘Burrich?’
We both jumped. It was Foxglove, come quietly out of the darkness to stand on the other side of the fire. How much had she heard?
‘Yes? Is there a problem?’
She hunkered down in the darkness, lifted her red hands to the fire. She sighed. ‘I don’t know. How do I ask this? Are you aware that she’s pregnant?’
Burrich and I exchanged glances. ‘Who?’ he asked levelly.
‘I’ve got two children of my own, you know. And most of her guard are women. She pukes every morning, and lives off raspberry leaf tea. She can’t even look at the saltfish without retching. She shouldn’t be here, living like this.’ Foxglove nodded toward the tent.
Oh. The vixen.
Shut up.
‘She did not ask our advice,’ Burrich said carefully.
‘The situation here is under control. There is no reason she should not be sent back to Buckkeep,’ Foxglove said calmly.
‘I can’t imagine “sending her back” anywhere,’ Burrich observed. ‘I think it would have to be a decision she reached on her own.’
‘You might suggest it to her,’ Foxglove ventured.
‘So might you,’ Burrich countered. ‘You are captain of her guard. The concern is rightly yours.’
‘I haven’t been keeping watch outside her door each night,’ Foxglove objected.
‘Perhaps you should have,’ Burrich said, then tempered it with a, ‘Now that you know.’
Foxglove looked into the fire. ‘Perhaps I should. So. The question is, who escorts her back to Buckkeep?’
‘All her personal guard, of course. A queen should travel with no less.’
Somewhere off in the darkness there was a sudden outcry. I sprang to my feet.
‘Stand fast!’ Burrich snapped at me. ‘Wait for word. Don’t rush off until you know what is happening!’
In a moment, Whistle of the Queen’s Guard reached our fire. She stood before Foxglove to report. ‘Two-pronged attack. At the breach just below the south tower, they tried to break out. And some got through at …’
An arrow swept through her and carried off forever whatever she had begun to tell us. Outislanders were suddenly upon us, more of them than my mind could grasp, and all converging on the Queen’s tent. ‘To the Queen!’ I shouted, and had the slim comfort of hearing my cry taken up further down the line. Three guards rushed out of the tent, to put their backs to its flimsy walls, while Burrich and I stood our ground in front of it. I found my sword in my hand, and from the corner of my eye saw firelight run red up the edge of Burrich’s. The Queen appeared suddenly in the door of the tent.
‘Don’t guard me!’ she rebuked us. ‘Get to where the fighting is.’
‘It’s here, my lady,’ Burrich grunted, and stepped forward suddenly, to take off the arm of a man who had ventured too close.
I remember those words clearly and I remember seeing Burrich take that stride. It is the last coherent memory I have of that night. After that, all was shouting and blood, metal and fire. Waves of emotions pounded against me as all around me, soldiers and raiders fought to the death. Early on, someone set fire to the tent. Its towering blaze lit the battle scene like a stage. I remember seeing Kettricken, robe looped up and knotted, fighting bare-legged and barefoot on the frozen ground. She held her ridiculously long Mountain sword in a two-handed grip. Her grace made a deadly dance of the battle that would have distracted me at any other time.
Outislanders continued to appear. At one point, I was sure I heard Verity shouting commands, but could not make sense of any of them. Nighteyes appeared from time to time, fighting always at the edge of the light, a low sudden weight of fur and teeth, hamstringing with a slash, adding his weight to change a Raider’s charge to a stumble. Burrich and Foxglove fought back to back at one point when things were going poorly for us. I was part of the circle that protected the Queen. At least, I thought I was, until I realized she was actually fighting beside me.
At some time I dropped my sword to snatch up a fallen Raider’s axe. I picked my blade up the next day from the frozen ground, crusted with mud and blood. But at the moment I did not even hesitate to discard Verity’s gift for a more savagely effective weapon. When at last the tide of the battle turned, I did not consider the wisdom of it, but pursued and hunted scattered enemy through the night-black, fire-stinking wreckage of Neatbay village.
Here, indeed, Nighteyes and I hunted very well together. I stood toe to toe with my final kill, axe against axe, while Nighteyes snarled and savaged his way past a smaller man’s sword. He finished his but seconds before I dropped my man.
That final slaughtering held for me a wild and savage joy. I did not know where Nighteyes left off and I began; only that we had won and we both still lived. Afterwards, we went to find water together. We drank deep from a communal well’s bucket, and I laved the blood from my hands and face. Then we sank down and put our backs to the brick well to watch the sun rise beyond the thick ground mist. Nighteyes leaned warm against me, and we did not even think.
I suppose I dozed a bit, for I was
jostled alert as he quickly left me. I looked up to see what had startled him, only to discover a frightened Neatbay girl staring at me. The early sun struck glints off her red hair. A bucket was in her hand. I stood and grinned, lifting my axe in greeting, but she sheered off like a frightened rabbit amongst the ruined buildings. I stretched, then made my way back through the trailing fog to where the Queen’s tent had been. As I walked, images of last night’s wolf hunting came back to me. The memories were too sharp, too red and black, and I pushed them down deep in my mind. Was this what Burrich had meant by his warning?
Even by the light of day, it was still difficult to understand all that had happened. The earth around the blackened remains of the Queen’s shelter was trampled into mud. Here the fighting had been heaviest. Here was where most of the enemy had fallen. Some bodies had been dragged aside and tumbled into a heap. Others still lay where they had fallen. I avoided looking at them. It is one thing to kill in fear and anger. It is another thing to consider one’s handiwork by the chill grey light of morning.
That the Outislanders had tried to break through our siege was understandable. They had, perhaps, had a chance of making it as far as their ships and reclaiming one or two of them. That the attack seemed to focus on the Queen’s tent was least comprehensible. Once clear of the earthworks, why had not they seized their chance for survival and headed for the beach?
‘Perhaps,’ observed Burrich, gritting his teeth as I probed the angry swelling on his leg, ‘they did not hope to escape at all. It is their Outislander way, to decide to die, and then to attempt to do as much damage before doing so. So they attacked here, hoping to kill our queen.’
I had discovered Burrich, limping about the battleground. He did not say he had been looking for my body. His relief at seeing me was evidence enough of that.