by J. V. Jones
Gods, but it was good not to think. Just ride and be damned as your ears chilled to freezing and your tailbone took a hammering against the cantle. He’d been shut up for too long in the furry black walls of the hillfort. Too much damp, too many whisperings, too much fear of what was to come. A hundred and seventy Bluddsmen were garrisoned there. When had they turned into frightened girls? We are Bludd, Vaylo wanted to shout out at the morning. We are not built to sit and wait.
Arriving at the headland that topped the valley, Vaylo reined in his horse. The Field of Graves and Swords lay directly ahead of him and he felt the pressure that had been building in his chest ease. Dead clansmen lay here. Respect was due. He walked the horse forward through the dried out heather stalks, rye grass and snow. The stallion’s neck steamed. Vaylo smelled horse sweat and frozen mud. When he drew close enough to see the canker on the nearest blade, he dismounted. His feet punched perfect impressions in the snow.
Deciding to trust the stallion, the Dog Lord let the horse stand free. Mayhap it would nose something tasty from the snow. Behind him he was aware of Hammie and Mogo slowing their mounts. Behind them, the wolf dog was high-trotting through the white.
The swords were as Cluff Drybannock said: fallen or falling. Vaylo counted eleven that were wholly upright, and perhaps twice that number that pierced the snow at odd angles. Dozens more must lay beyond sight. You could still make out the barrows, though, the stone mounds that had been raised around the bodies. Vaylo did not know if Dhoone preferred to cover their dead rather than bury them, or if it was a case of men fallen in winter with the earth too hard to be dug. The mounds gave him a chill more than the swords, for he had not been expecting them. Man-shaped but three times as big, they were swollen with new snow. Fox tracks led in toward the middle of the field and Vaylo followed them, his left hand resting on his horn of powdered guidestone.
When he came to the first sword he halted. Drawing his newly-acquired sable cloak around his legs, he knelt in the snow. The sword’s point was intact but the blade had been eaten by rust and its edge was gone. It had once been a greatsword, Vaylo reckoned, probably close to six feet long including hilt. Someone strong and able must have wielded it. Leaning forward he touched the cankered edge and was surprised to feel how firmly it was fixed in place. He had thought the lightest pressure might have tilted it, and now he wondered about the men who had formed these mounds and set these swords in place. Had they poured cement into the warrior’s chest cavities and plunged the hilts between their ribs? What had they feared? What had happened here to raise these swords?
Slapping a hand on his knee, the Dog Lord rose to standing. Two ovals of snow shed from the fur of his cloak. On the periphery of his vision he saw the wolf dog ghosting along the edge of the mounds. When he heard footsteps approaching he turned.
Hammie Faa and white-haired Mogo Salt stepped forward to pay their respects to the dead. No one spoke. All were warriors here. Mogo was young to have the white hair and Vaylo wondered if he minded it. Not all Salt men had it—Cawdo’s hair had been thick and brown—but it was a trait the family was known for.
“Come,” Vaylo said to them after some minutes had passed. “Let us away to look at the Rift.”
They mounted their horses and rode north until the land ceased rising. Vaylo enjoyed the high-sprung nature of his horse, was glad he had to fight it. He thought about the Dog Horse, his mount for nearly a decade, and wondered what had become of it after it had broken free from the burning stables at Dhoone. He had loved that horse, but doubted anyone else could, and he hoped it hadn’t been slaughtered for meat. No Dhoonesman would have been able to master it, that was for sure.
Forcing the stallion into a skidding halt, Vaylo squinted into the far distance. His old, hardened lenses were not what once they were and it took a moment for the Rift to come into focus. You couldn’t see the hole itself, just the raised cliffs on the other side of it and the horizon-long shadow that told of something . . . missing.
“It’s a sight,” he said as Hammie and Mogo rode abreast of him. “But not one to warm a man’s heart.”
Hammie stood in his stirrups and whistled. He too was kitted with a new cloak and a borrowed horse. The cloak was maroon and trimmed with marten and intended for someone taller. The horse had big nostrils and a powerful neck.
“I was there six days back,” Mogo said. “An entire roundhouse could fall in and you wouldn’t be able to find it.”
Silence followed as Hammie and the Dog Lord contemplated this fact.
“Where are the Maimed Men?” Hammie asked.
“East of here. Sometimes we see their smoke.”
Hammie thought about this. “How do they get across for their raids?”
Mogo brought his white eyebrows together in a frown. “Da told me there was a bridge only no sworn clansman can see it.”
Cawdo Salt was dead, killed several months back at Ganmiddich, so Vaylo did not speak up to contradict his wisdom. The Dog Lord did not believe in such things as bridges that could only be seen by select people. He believed in trickiness and subterfuge, and imagined they played some part in the Maimed Men’s ability to cross into the clanholds. “You know what I think?” he asked. Both Mogo and Hammie earnestly shook their heads. The Dog Lord put on his most serious chief’s face. “Even if I give you a five minute start I’ll still beat you back to the fort.”
Hammie, who knew how these things worked, took off. Mogo Salt, who was all of twenty-six, and had little experience with his chief just sat there in the saddle and looked confused.
“Go,” Vaylo told him, not unkindly. “It’s a race.”
The boy got the idea soon enough. As Vaylo listened to the drum of horse hoofs he finally felt free to breathe. To the west of him he spied the wolf dog, worrying a piece of fox. Turning the stallion, he looked south at the Copper Hills. He thought he could see the broken turret of the fort’s watchtower, but couldn’t be sure.
What were Bluddsmen doing here? And why were they staying?
This was Dhoone—and a godforsaken corner of it at that. How long before Robbie Dun Dhoone rode north to reclaim it? How long before whatever monstrosities had slain Derek Blunt and his men stirred for a second feeding? Vaylo could not get the sight of the barrows out of his mind. Men dead and entombed in stone but still fighting.
They had been buried to the north, not to the south to protect against attacks from rival clans. Had the Maimed Men ever warranted such a display of fear and bravado? Vaylo thought not. The Maimed Men were outcasts, left-behinds. Freaks. You could fight off ten of them with a decent crossbow.
Vaylo breathed the icy air through his mouth, punishing his teeth. He did not like it here, and wondered how long he could stay. Kicking the stallion into motion, he raced south.
As he descended the slope into the valley, the sun broke out for a while and its scrawny warmth improved his spirits. He had to remember that here was better than nowhere. Chief of a moldy hillfort was better than no chief at all. Hunkering low against his horse’s neck, Vaylo switched paths so he wouldn’t have to pass the Field of Swords and Graves. Might even be quicker this way, always supposing he didn’t run into rocks and ponds concealed by the snow. The territory was still new to the horse so it didn’t have much of an opinion on the route. It didn’t like the scent of the wolf dog, that much was certain, and Vaylo thought it a pity that he hadn’t trained the hound to chase his horses—he’d get some real speed from them that way.
Hope of catching Hammie and Mogo dwindled as he found himself on the wrong side of a melt creek that had sprung on the valley floor. Of course, Vaylo chided himself, he should have kept an eye to the seasoned man. Mogo Salt had been here the longest; his route would be the best. Irritation made Vaylo force a jump, and the stallion stumbled on the upslope, panicked, and tried to throw him. The Dog Lord hung on grimly, knees clamped to the horse’s belly, knuckles white around the reins. It occurred to him that he could end the race—simply trot the horse back and congratu
late the winner—but it seemed a petty kind of act. Give up now and he’d deprive either Hammie or Mogo of the satisfaction of beating his chief.
Shaken and with the old pain nagging at his heart, Vaylo galloped back to the hillfort. For a wonder Hammie Faa won. Those big nostrils had meant more air, which made for a faster horse. Both men assailed him with their stories. Hammie’s saddle had slid off center, his mount had thrown a shoe. Mogo had taken the lead, hit a pothole, had a near miss with the offending shoe. Vaylo grumbled at them, told them he’d taken time midway to boil himself a cup of tea. Hammie beamed, his cheeks as red as only a Faa man’s could be.
“Inside,” Vaylo ordered. “And no telling this to the bairns.” As he spoke he looked up at the drum-shaped war terrace that extended out from the fort’s north ward. Cluff Drybannock stood there speaking to someone Vaylo recognized and knew.
The surprise of it chilled him. He had thought himself at the end of the earth here, yet there was his third son.
It was difficult to keep his mind in the moment. Stirring himself, he frowned skeptically at the hoof that was missing a shoe, told Mogo he’d more than likely ducked horseshit, not iron, and steered his small group onto the path that led to the western door.
The hillfort no longer boasted viable stables and all horses were kept belowground in the western ward. Someone had done a fair job of boxing and partitioning the space, and Vaylo saw that sheets of scrap copper had been molded into troughs. He forced himself to unsaddle and brush down the stallion. Hammie knew something was up and offered to take charge of the feed and watering. Vaylo let him. “For a man with a new horse,” he told him, “you didn’t do half bad.”
Hammie pressed his lips together, nodded, and then said, “Chief.”
Vaylo took that word up the stairs with him and into the north ward. The big double doors were open and the air outside blew in. Bluddsmen were sitting on benches and leaning against walls, keeping up the pretense of oiling swords, mending tack, scraping rust from chainmail. One man was actually taking a swipe at the mold on the walls with a cloth soaked in lye; Nan’s circle of influence was growing. They were quiet as he walked through the room and onto the war terrace.
Cluff Drybannock and Gangaric HalfBludd were the only men on the balcony. They were standing close to the stone balustrade, off center to avoid the gazes of the Bluddsmen in the ward. Neither man was speaking. The distance between them was a fraction too great to allow relaxed conversation. They turned to him as he stepped outside. Gangaric looked relieved.
“Father,” he said. “It has been a long time.”
Vaylo clasped his son’s arm, and was surprised to feel an equal pressure in return. “Son.”
Gangaric HalfBludd had made himself an axman and a HalfBluddsman in memory of his great-grandfather, Thrago, and he wore a fine crimson cloak overmounted with a heavy collar of woodrat skins in the manner of the border clan. His mighty war ax was cradled across his back. The limewood handle rose above his left shoulder for ease of draw. The fierce oyster-shell-shaped blade was protected by a bloodstained mitt. Such was the price of warriorship in HalfBludd, Vaylo recalled: you had to dress in your own drawn blood.
“Have you ridden from the Bluddhouse?”
Gangaric’s large head was bare and his scalp featured alarming bands of part-shavings. “I’ve been on the hoof for thirteen days. The snow slowed me.”
Vaylo unpinned his heavy sable warcloak. It would need to be aired to dispel the stench of panicked horse. Laying it over the balcony he asked, “What news?”
This was the question Gangaric had been waiting for, the one Cluff Drybannock had doubtless asked only to be answered coldly, I await my father’s return.
Vaylo knew all about his sons.
“Pengo has possession of Ganmiddich,” Gangaric said. “He won it from the Spire’s army, and is now under fire from Blackhail, Bannen and Scarpe.”
Sweet mother of all bastards. This news was so startling it rendered Vaylo speechless. Pengo, his worthless second son, in command of one of the great prizes of the clanholds? How had this happened? How many flukes of fate and pigs escaping from pokes had it taken to bring this piece of good fortune to bear? Ganmiddich taken from city men? Finding his voice he asked, “The Spire routed Blackhail and Ganmiddich?”
“Aye. Pengo rode in at battle’s end. Blackhail was beaten, and the city men were set to claim the Crab Gate. Then the city men split their army. Half stayed to shore the gate, and half withdrew.”
This just kept getting stranger. “Why would the city men do such a damn fool thing?”
Gangaric shrugged. The skin on his face and neck was deeply ice-tanned and wormed with broken veins. “The half that withdrew crossed the river and headed back to Spire Vanis. The half that Pengo saw off headed west.”
Vaylo nodded, thinking. West was good. West was away from Bluddsworn clans. Turning his back on his son, the Dog Lord gazed north across the gray and snow-mounded valley. From here you could not see the Field of Graves and Swords, and he was glad of it. Glad also that the hundreds of Bluddsmen and women Pengo had led from Dhoone all those weeks ago had found a home. And as yet come to no harm.
“Ganmiddich can be held by small numbers as long as the gate remains sealed.” It was Cluff Drybannock speaking, the words his first since Vaylo had arrived.
Gangaric challenged them. Pushing his hand against the air that separated him from Drybone, he cried, “Gates sealed! What sort of Bluddsmen would we be if we hid behind closed doors like frightened maids?”
“Live ones,” Vaylo said flatly, spinning about. He was surprised by how closely his third son’s words echoed his own thoughts of earlier that day. Hide. Sit and wait. The complaints were almost the same. To distract himself he asked, “What of Withy?”
Gangaric threw a defiant glance at Cluff Drybannock before speaking. “Withy suffers. Hanro took harm when Skinner Dhoone attacked, and has not recovered from his injuries. Thrago holds the house. Dun Dhoone has already mounted one attack.”
We are the clan that makes kings. That was the Withy boast, so of course Robbie Dun Dhoone would want to rewin the Withyhouse for Dhoone. You could call yourself a king without Withy, but you couldn’t become one until the Withy chief anointed your shoulders and laid some new-made crown on your head. As Vaylo recalled, the old Dhoonish crown had been forged into a Blackhail sword.
Vaylo leant against the stone balcony. His legs and spine were sore after the horse race and he needed the support. Hanro was his sixth son. Thrago his fifth. They had both been at Withy for months, though Hanro had been there the longest and had held the command. Vaylo imagined his sixth son must be ill indeed to secede that command to his older brother. Or worse, Thrago may have seized it. Vaylo glanced at Gangaric. The relationships his sons had with each other was something he did not fully understand. Some were allies. Some not. Gangaric and Thrago had been close as boys, and they had both wed HalfBludd maids.
All wives were dead now, slain by Hailsmen on the Bluddroad, but that was a dark thought for another day.
“You intend to travel south to Withy?” Vaylo asked. It nearly wasn’t a question.
“Aye. Thrago needs aid.” Gangaric’s jaw came up. Pointedly, he looked back at the shambling, crazily roofed hillfort. And then sneered. “We are Bludd. We must fight.”
Gods help me not to hit him. Vaylo ground down his seventeen remaining teeth. Directly across from him Cluff Drybannock stood tall and still, his waist-length braids moving in the breeze, his expression controlled. Watching his fostered son calmed Vaylo and he took a moment to fish inside his belt pouch and pull out a cube of chewing curd. The curd was old and the mold had gotten into it, but he worked it soft in his mouth and swallowed the bitter taste.
What did he need here? Looking at Gangaric’s hard, mutinous face, Vaylo decided that what he needed was more information. He spat the chewing curd over the edge. “How does Quarro sit at Bludd?”
Vaylo himself had sent Gangaric to aid his eldes
t brother, Quarro, after Robbie Dhoone’s torching of the Sacred Grove and his tearing down of the outhouse widely believed to have been built from the remains of the last Dhoonestone. If Vaylo remembered rightly Gangaric had not wanted to go, and had insisted on taking a crew of axmen along for comradeship and support. Were those men here today? Probably. Gangaric was not the sort to ride hundreds of leagues across unfriendly territory on his own.
Gangaric kicked a loose chip of masonry with his foot. Uncomfortable. He took a speaking breath, glanced at Drybone, and then exhaled and didn’t use it. Finally he blurted, “I would rather we speak alone.”
“Speak or I will break your ax arm.”
For a long moment no one moved. The holes in the centers of Gangaric’s sky blue eyes got bigger and blacker. All of Vaylo’s sons had grown up in fear of their father. The question was: had that fear gone? I am fifty-three, Vaylo thought. Am I capable of beating my son?
It was a question he did not have to answer. Jerking into motion, Gangaric cried, “Here then. If you force me to say it. The Bluddhouse has turned into a stinking well. Quarro grows fat and lazy—drinks ale all day and stays abed with Trench whores. Calls himself chief, though not many call him it back. He and his cronies are holed up in the house. Dun Dhoone’s garrisoning men at Wellhouse, spoiling for battle. What does Quarro do? Decides to have a pit dug for bear baiting. A fucking bear pit. With the Sull sneaking on our eastern bounds, the Trenchlanders raiding our farms, and the Thorn King knocking on our door, he digs a bear pit!” Gangaric was shaking so strongly, the limewood ax handle was vibrating above his shoulder like a twanged string. “Something needs to be done before it all goes to hell. I’m not going back there. The place stinks worse than this.”
Vaylo breathed in and out, and tried to recall why he’d continued having sons after his first was born. Angarad had had a hard time with the labor, and the mewling purple creature that had been produced after three days did not seem worth the effort and the risk. Quarro, she decided she would name it, after some grandfather’s grandfather who might have once worked in a quarry, or possessed only a quarter of something vital—like a ball. Vaylo had not liked him. Straightaway, he knew that. Little Quarro screamed like someone was trying to skin him and shit like a sick dog. What was hard to understand then was why he, Vaylo Bludd, had gone ahead and made six more. For a certainty he should have stopped at two. That way Gangaric HalfBludd, formerly Bludd, would not be standing there, daring to accuse his father of inaction.