by J. V. Jones
Stannig Beade’s mule-powered stone mill cast its big blocky shadow against the remains of the Hailstone. The new clan guide was wasting no time and Raina could see that the largest chunks of stone had already gone under the mill. What remained were pieces no bigger than a man’s head, and even these had been sorted and were lying in a separate pile close to the millstone. Stannig would be grinding at dawn. A charge of anger ran down Raina’s spine. How could Merritt Ganlow not see what this man was about? Snapping her head once, as if to shake off some unpleasant insect that had alighted upon it, Raina approached the remains.
She had thought, wrongly, that it might be difficult to tell Hailstone from roundhouse stone: the explosion had blasted and commingled both types of rock. Yet there was no mistaking guidestone. If she was ever asked what the differences were, she would not be able to provide an answer that would satisfy anyone other than a clansman. It was guidestone. It was different.
She picked the largest piece, how could she not? And struggled to lift sixty pounds of dead weight to her chest. She had not thought to bring a saddlebag or pack, and had only her shawl to conceal the stone. Now that she no longer had fine chambers to call her own she slept in one of the dry cells beneath the kitchen that Anwyn used for storing herbs. She took the stone there, walking around the exterior of the roundhouse and not through it. When she rapped on the kitchen door Anwyn answered. The clan matron did not know what Raina carried and did not ask.
Later Anwyn brought her supper, hot onion soup and a wedge of fried bread, and nodded briskly at Raina’s request for white spirits and a shoulder pack sturdy enough to carry a small child.
Something had already begun to change for Raina that night, but when she poured white spirits onto a soft rag and began to polish the largest remaining piece of Hailstone, she finally realized what it meant. This was no longer about spiting Stannig Beade and thwarting his plans. This was about Blackhail. This was about preserving its heart. Someone someday would need this and when they did Raina Blackhail could tell them where to find it.
Crouching amid the flickering shadows of Yarro Blackhail’s hidden strongroom, Raina Blackhail slipped the Hailstone from its bag. It was an edge piece from the exterior of the stone and the old chisel lines were still upon it. Raina thought of Inigar Stoop; his body had never been found. Would he be glad she was doing this?
I do not know.
Glancing around the small rectangular-shaped room, Raina wondered where to stow the stone. Over in one corner, perched atop a wooden market crate, were the items she had taken after Dagro’s death. Small things, tokens for herself; gifts of modest jewels he had given her, his personal handknife, his belt buckle, a letter Norala, Dagro’s first wife, had written to them both before her death. Raina had not been able to bear the thought that Mace Blackhail might claim them as his own, so she had removed them from her chambers and his gaze. Once he had asked her quite pointedly about Dagro’s handknife, for it was well made and handsome with a translucent ivory handle and double-edged blade. She had told him that Dagro must have taken it with him to the Badlands for she hadn’t seen it in over a month. She had been new to deception then and it had been a very bad lie. He never challenged her on it: any mention of the Badlands left him cold.
Mace had been gone five days now, riding for Ganmiddich with a thousand men. Tomorrow a second thousand would leave with Grim Shank at their head.
Realizing she needed to attend the departing warriors, Raina made a quick decision about the stone. She would leave it in the far corner, uncovered, and in full sight. To slide it back in the pack and conceal it would only draw attention to it if it were found. This way it would just be a wayward chunk of stone. She doubted very much that any Scarpeman besides Stannig Beade would be capable of recognizing it as Hailstone. But a Hailsman or Hailswoman would know it, and that was perhaps enough.
The wedge-shaped piece of Hailstone fitted perfectly in the corner and to Raina it seemed as if it were drawing shadows around itself, for when she stepped back she could no longer see it clearly. It had become part of the foundation, a slightly irregular chunk in the wall. She had thought she might speak a prayer but now that it came to it she had none to offer. The Stone Gods either knew what she did, or didn’t. They either judged it right or wrong. No poorly worded prayer would change that.
Scooping up the shoulder pack and the safelamp, Raina crossed to the entry portal. The stone tile was easier to set in motion from inside for a small depression cut into the face provided traction for the fingers. Within seconds Raina was back in the foundation space, once again knee-deep in water. Freed from the weight of the stone she felt oddly light and miscalculated the force needed to walk. The water sloshed a lot and twice she nearly tipped over. Drunk, she decided. Alcohol optional. Now she came to think of it though, a good strong dram of Anwyn’s twenty-year malt would be just the thing. Her nerves deserved it.
Reaching the narrow gap between stone pillars that led up toward the living spaces, Raina let down her skirts. It wouldn’t do for a chief’s wife to be seen baring her thighs. It wouldn’t do for her to be seen down here at all, but once she reached the upper cellars where the dry cells were located she was in the clear. “Just checking on the butter stores for Anwyn” would do it, either that or “Longhead’s still worried about flooding, and I thought I’d take a look at it for myself.”
When she reached the stairs she sat, pulled off her boots and drained the water. Her toes were white and wrinkled. The boots were drenched and would need to be carefully stretched as they dried. Once they were back on her feet she ran up the stairs and along the landing, the safelamp swinging giddily in her hand. One more flight of stairs to go and she’d be aboveground in the land of the living.
“Woman.”
She spun in the direction of the voice. Along the corridor all was shadow. The person who spoke did not carry a light.
Stannig Beade stepped into the halo created by Raina’s lamp. As always she was surprised that he was a clan guide, for he had the shoulder breadth and muscle of a hatchetman. He was wearing his ceremonial cloak, the black boarskin burned ragged at the hem. His tattooed and needle-pocked cheeks trapped the lamplight and gave you nowhere to look save his eyes.
“Stannig.” Raina was pleased with how strong her voice sounded. Resisting the urge to draw the shoulder pack behind her skirts she said, “If you will excuse me I have work to do in the stables. Good day.” She turned her back on him and nearly got away, but he stopped her with a question.
“Did you fall?” He waited until she had turned back to face him before dropping his gaze to her sopping skirts.
She shrugged. “Work.”
He let the silence spin out, breathing possessively, claiming the air between them. “I see.” His hands twitched. Raina could see the stone dust wedged beneath his fingernails. “I have been looking for you. Someone said they had seen you slip belowground at noon.” He paused, letting her know that it was now a long time after noon. “I had not thought to find you here.”
“Yet still you looked.” It was a mistake to challenge him and she wished she could take it back.
Again his hands twitched. “I believe you are unhappy with the removal of the Hailstone.”
Merritt Ganlow. Raina could hardly fathom it. She and Merritt had been friends for twenty years; their husbands had shared a tent the day they died. How could Merritt do this? How could she talk to this man about their private conversations?
Stannig Beade watched Raina compose herself, his expression fixed, his dark eyes gleaming with animal triumph.
Raina took a deep breath. Think, she told herself. Think. “I have some concerns, I will not hide that. To grind the stone to nothing and dump it in the lake seems . . . unceremonious.”
Stannig Bead brought a hand to his face and tapped his chin. “Unceremonious,” he repeated, giving the word a sharp little twist. “A chief’s wife concerned with matters of the gods . . . how . . . unusual.”
Raina felt
her face grow hot.
It appeared to be the outcome he was hoping for, as he nodded once, to himself. “Seems I have chosen the right person after all.”
She would not give him the satisfaction of asking what he meant. Stomach sinking, skirts dripping water onto the floor, she waited.
Stannig Beade was unperturbed. Moving his powerful shoulders in a relaxed shrug, he said, “The ceremony to hallow the new Hailstone requires a person of high honor to light the Menhir Fire. Commonly it is custom for the clan chief to hold the torch, but as you are aware your husband is a-war. I have given long thought to the matter of who should stand in for him, and spoken with many people in the clan. Time and time again a name came up. She is the one held in deepest respect. She is the one whose presence is most valued. She is the who will bring the highest honor to the ceremony.” The clan guide of Scarpe and now Blackhail looked Raina straight in the eye. “I know you would not want to disappoint your clansmen and clanswomen, Raina Blackhail, so I will assume on Menhir Night you will stand at my side and aid me in presenting the new Hailstone to the gods.”
He did not wait for her answer, just bowed a sharp dismissal and left her standing in the corridor alone.
She watched dust roused by his footsteps settle and knew she had been outmaneuvered by an expert. Stannig Beade would use her standing in this clan to strengthen his position and validate the new guidestone. She could hear her clansmen now:
“Well, I was against it, I admit. But there’s Raina at Beade’s side and we all know she’s not a woman to give her support lightly.”
“Aye. If the new stone’s good enough for Raina Blackhail it’ll do for me.”
Aware she was swaying slightly, Raina sent out a hand to brace herself against the wall. She could not refuse Stannig Beade, for she had heard the warning in his voice: Refuse and all will know it. You will fracture the clan and reveal your ambition . . . and what good will that do you on Mace’s return?
If Mace ever did return. If he died in battle it would suit Beade well enough. The Scarpe guide was already beginning to act like a chief.
Raina gave a little cry of fright as the flame in her safelamp went out.
SEVENTEEN
The Clan That Walks Swords
It was two hours past sunset and the Milkhouse’s primary door was closed and unlit. Bram Cormac hesitated to approach it and demand entry. The ferryman who had transported Bram and his horse across the Milk River was poling his barge away from the shore.
“Do’na dawdle, boy. The longer you leave it the harder you’ll have to knock.” Laughing as if he’d said something amusing, the ferryman floated away.
Bram looked at his feet. They were wet; the barge had taken in water once the weight of Guy Morloch’s stallion had settled upon it. Still, it was better than having to swim across. Last time Bram was here there had been no ferryman to provide crossing.
Gaberil, Guy’s horse, nosed Bram’s side, playful now that the trauma of the crossing was behind him. “Easy, Gabbie,” Bram murmured, absently running his hand over the horse’s mane as he stared at the massive glowing dome of the Milkhouse. “I just need a moment to decide what to do.”
It wasn’t the truth. He knew what he must do—there was no decision involved—but it didn’t mean that he couldn’t stand here for a bit and just wait.
He had been lucky in a way, for the journey here had been his own. Once Guy Morloch and Jordie Sarson had left for the Stonefly, running off to alert Dhoonesmen to the Dog Lord’s presence, Bram had no one to answer to but himself. Such a thing had never happened to him before and it had been scary, but also good. He’d remembered falling asleep that first night, crazily bedding down on an exposed hillside without fire or tent, thinking Gods, what am I going to do? Now he knew the answer.
Go slow.
Without anyone to shepherd him to the Milkhouse, Bram Cormac could take his time. It did not change his obligation to this clan, just delayed it by a few days. It was freedom and the Dog Lord of Clan Bludd had bought it for him, and Bram thought he’d better enjoy it while it lasted.
The best possible thing had happened that next morning. Bram had been woken by a bored horse. The night before Gabbie had fled in terror and panic as Vaylo Bludd’s dogs closed in on him. He’d thrown his rider, Guy Morloch, and trampled one of the dogs. Bram thought he’d seen the last of him—a spooked horse far from home might simply take off and never come back—but Gabbie was smart, and although he’d spent only a short time on the hillside southeast of Dhoone, he’d found his way back overnight. Wasn’t a bit sorry, either.
The two of them had shared a good breakfast of cheesebread and raw leeks, and once Bram had sorted out Gabbie’s saddle—it had ended up beneath him, hanging from his belly—they’d taken a ride south. It had been a perfect day, Bram remembered, with a fresh breeze and just the right amount of cloud. It wasn’t long before they’d run into the Fleece, a deep and narrow tributary of the Flow. They’d followed the Fleece west for a while toward Wellhouse, but when Bram spotted a settlement of tied clansman’s cottages on the shore ahead, he turned Gabbie around and began looking for a crossing.
The land south of Dhoone was dotted with limestone farm-houses. Barely, wheat, oats and rye were grown here, and squares of burned stubble poking through thawing snow became a familiar sight to Bram. He’d spent two nights camping on the north shore of the Fleece, enjoying the unfamiliar sensation of being master of his own time. Mabb Cormac had taught both his sons how to fish, and Bram had whittled a pole and unraveled the border of one of his woolen blankets for twine. He didn’t catch anything, but he learned why men loved to fish. You could do nothing and something at exactly the same time.
The weather changed and it rained a bit, then snowed. Gabbie shivered until he was given a blanket, and then began to chew on it. Bram thought about taking it away, but didn’t. He decided it was quite possible for a horse to digest wool.
Eventually they crossed the river. An ancient hog-backed bridge spanned the Fleece just west of Clan Camber. The tiny clanhold defended the crossing with a stone and timber redoubt and a system of pulleys and river chains, but for some reason they weren’t manned. Later that day Bram ran into a tied Camberman driving a pair of white oxen with a stick. The man had taken one look at Bram’s Dhoone-blue cloak and driven his cattle from the road.
After that incident, Bram had considered taking off the fine cloak given to him by his brother Robbie and switching it for his old ratty half-cape. The cloak identified him not only as a Dhoonesman, but also as one of Robbie’s elite crew of warriors. Bram didn’t want to get into any fights. Still, he had to admit he’d felt a small thrill when the Camberman left the road to make way for him—such was the reputation of Robbie Dun Dhoone.
In the end Bram had decided to continue wearing the cloak. His reasons were complicated and not all of them were noble. Soon enough he would wear the cream wool of Castlemilk.
He tried not to think of it, and mostly that worked as a strategy. Castlemilk later. Travel in the now. Once several years back, before Bludd had seized the Dhoonehouse, and while Maggis was still chief, a visitor had come to the roundhouse. Maggis spent half a day in conference with the stranger and later walked with him around the clanhold, introducing him to various clansmen and women. Bram was curious about the stranger, but had assumed he would not be introduced—he was twelve at the time and small for his age and of little consequence to anyone except his mother, Tilda. Yet the stranger had spotted Bram spreading hay for the horses in the stable. The stranger had been talking with the swordmaster Jackdaw Thundy in a manner that suggested they were old and good friends. “Is he one of Cormac’s boys?” the stranger had asked Jackdaw, nodding his head toward Bram. “Aye,” Jackdaw had replied. “That’s Mabb’s youngest, Bram. Come over here, boy, and meet the ranger Angus Lok.”
Up until then Bram had never heard of such a thing as a ranger, yet the unfamiliar word had caused a flutter in his chest. Angus Lok greeted him soberly man-to
-man, and for a wonder he didn’t ask any of the questions that Bram normally dreaded: How come you don’t look like your brother Rab? Did Bodie Hallax pull you from hammer training, or did you just drop out? Is it true your brother’s related to the Dhoone kings? Instead Angus Lok inquired about Bram’s mother, asked Bram’s opinion on his new sword—drawing it smartly on cue for Bram’s inspection—and told Bram he should not neglect his studies; sword and pen was better than sword alone.
Bram had been mightily impressed. The meeting had lasted only scant minutes, but it left him with a good feeling that had endured for months. He recalled seeking out Jackdaw Thundy some time later and asking him about the ranger. “Angus is a dying breed,” Jackdaw had said. “Circles like a hawk, waits like a spider. Knows the North like it’s a wheatfield he’s planted, and spends so much time in the saddle that it’s a wonder he’s not got wishbones for legs.” It was a curiously vague answer, but Bram hadn’t realized that at the time. Instead he was taken with the romance of a man crossing the country on a horse, alone, and watchful as a hawk.