Ren’erei didn’t approach her until the ship was underway, joining her leaning on the port rails, watching the deep blue waves passing by.
‘She’ll be fine. The Al-Drechar will care for her,’ she said.
Erienne smiled to herself. She couldn’t help but like the young elf despite her deeply ingrained serious nature but sometimes she missed the real issue completely.
‘Oh I have no doubt she’ll be fine. It’s me I’m worrying about.’ She didn’t lift her head, letting the white-flecked water fill her eyes.
‘You’ll miss her terribly.’
‘Yes, I will. Let’s just find Denser fast.’ She looked across. Ren’erei wasn’t looking at her but she was nodding as she gazed down at the sea.
‘It will be a pleasure to meet him,’ said Ren’erei. ‘The father of Lyanna and the keeper of your heart.’
Erienne blushed and was glad for the elf’s studying of the Ocean Elm’s load line.
‘Don’t get too excited. He’s Xeteskian first and my husband second, I think.’
‘Then his priorities are askew.’
‘Not really. I am a mother first and a wife second. We both have tasks to fulfil before our lives together can really start. I think it’s best we’re honest in the interim.’
Ren’erei contemplated Erienne’s words. She could see the elf raise her eyebrows as she thought, and suck in her lips. Erienne felt very safe in her company. She was solid and dependable and her thoughts ran deep. And her naïveté was endearing. Ren wasn’t streetwise like anyone with a normal education in the ways of Balaia but she harboured great strength of feeling and inside the elf there was the confidence to kill. The Raven could have done with her a few years ago.
‘How will you find him?’
‘Communion. When we arrive in Arlen, I think I have the range to reach Xetesk. I’m sure he’ll still be there. Or possibly Dordover. Either way I can contact him. Then we wait.’
‘And The Raven?’
‘He’ll bring them. If I know Denser, he’s already contacted them.’
‘You sound very sure.’
Erienne shrugged. ‘They’re all such different people but when one is troubled, they all do the same thing.’ She smiled, a little surprised by another surge of longing. Not for Lyanna but for them. The Raven. To stand among them once again. Should that happen, she knew they’d be all right. After all, The Raven never lost. Erienne suppressed a laugh at her own ludicrous arrogance and looked back to the beautiful blue sea.
Chapter 10
Hirad’s meeting with Denser was never going to be warm but the devastation he saw at Thornewood and then Greythorne took much of the venom from the barbarian’s mood. Ilkar had watched him brood ever since they’d left the Balan Mountains, unwilling even to entertain the thought of cordial relations with the Xeteskian. He had grumbled about leaving the Kaan who were all but shovelling him from the Choul and his temper had remained frail for the entirety of the three-day ride.
But Thornewood had changed him. The three original members of The Raven’s first ride, almost fifteen years before, had seen signs of wind damage while they were over a day from the forest. Flattened grassland, bushes uprooted and drifts of broken twigs, leaves and dirt, all told of a powerful gale.
But nothing could prepare them for Thornewood itself. It was gone. Just a tangled mass of twisted and shattered trunks, scattered debris and piles of foliage covered in dirt. It was as if some giant claw had gouged across the forest, scooped it up, crushed it and then let it fall once again. Where once a stunning landscape had been, there was now just a smear on the face of Balaia.
‘I can’t even see where the farms might have stood,’ whispered Ilkar. ‘There are no borders to the wood. Nothing at all.’
The Unknown pointed north and east. ‘There’s the trail though it’s mostly hidden now. We should see if there’s anything we can do.’
But close to, it was clear that what little could be done, had been done. A few foundation poles from one of the farmsteads that had lived off the forest could be seen snapped off low to the ground and, here and there, a piece of treated hide was wedged in a shallow crack in the earth. All other signs of life had been swept away.
Hirad stared into the havoc that had been visited on Thornewood and voiced the fear they all felt.
‘Thraun?’
‘We just have to pray he escaped,’ said The Unknown quietly. ‘But even he would have been hard pressed to survive a falling tree.’
‘And as for the pack . . .’ Ilkar left his words hanging. Though he was a wolf, Thraun would always retain vestiges of humanity in his mind. It was the way of all shapechangers, even those lost to their human form, and Thraun had already experienced more sadness than most of his fragile kind could bear. The Gods only knew what he would do if he lost the pack.
‘What caused this?’ The Unknown shook his head.
‘I’m scared to even think about it,’ said Ilkar.
‘What do you mean?’ asked Hirad.
‘Let’s get to Greythorne,’ said Ilkar by way of reply. ‘Find Denser.’
They rode on, expectations of finding the town undamaged dismissed. But as they travelled the decimated lowlands surrounding the wrecked forest, it became clear that their worst fears were liable to be realised.
It was like a journey through a foreign landscape though they all knew the land well. So many landmarks and waypoints had gone. Trail posts, cairns, copses and spinneys, all had been scratched from the face of Balaia. Any remote homestead had been destroyed, timbers scattered wide and even the topsoil had been ripped away on the exposed slopes, bringing rock to the surface for the first time in centuries.
The wind, if such it was, had been utterly indiscriminate and totally ruinous.
They were under a day’s ride from Greythorne with the morning all but over when The Unknown turned in his saddle for the third time in as many miles. He dropped back slowly before shifting in his seat and pulling up.
‘Hey!’ he called, dismounting and scrutinising the girth buckle and strap. ‘Wait up.’
Hirad and Ilkar wheeled their horses and trotted towards him, slipping off as they approached.
‘Girth slipping?’ asked Hirad.
The Unknown nodded. ‘No,’ he said. ‘Don’t look up. We’re being followed. Tell you what, get out your waterskin and let’s have a break, all right?’
Hirad shrugged. ‘Sure.’
The Unknown unbuckled the strap and tugged it back to the same position before joining his friends sitting at the side of the trail. The horses grazed a few feet away.
‘How many?’ asked Hirad, handing him the waterskin.
‘Impossible to say.’ He took a swig and rinsed his dry mouth, handing the skin back. ‘I’ve seen metal glint and shapes moving against the background.’
‘Distance?’ Ilkar pushed a hand through his hair and lay out on his back.
‘Three miles, maybe a little more. Certainly horse-borne. I think they’ve been trailing us since the Balan Mountains.’
‘But you didn’t want to worry us, eh?’ Hirad’s tone was only half joking. The Unknown’s lips thinned.
‘No, Hirad, I just wasn’t sure. You know how it is,’ he said. ‘It’s of no importance anyway. They haven’t attacked us so we have to assume they’re just trailing us for information. That also means they’ll probably have a mage to communicate with whoever.’
‘Dordover,’ said Ilkar.
‘Most likely,’ agreed The Unknown. ‘And suffice to say, we can’t let them find out any more than they can already guess.’
‘So where do we take them? The forest?’ Hirad nodded at the wrecked woodland. They had been skirting it to the south having ignored the north-east trail through the farmsteads as they headed for Greythorne.
‘Yes. At the rock.’
Whatever the state of the forest, the crag at its centre would still be intact until the earth opened up to swallow it.
‘Assuming we can persuade them
to follow us in there.’
Thornewood was a mess, just a shamble of dying vegetation and twisted wood. The birds had returned and their song could be heard above the wind that was gusting stronger again, clouds bubbling across the fast greying sky.
‘I don’t think they have any choice,’ said The Unknown. ‘They can’t simply watch the hunter trails because there are none, not any more. We can pick our way in and out anywhere. And they can’t go on to Greythorne and risk us not stopping there.’
‘But they’ll assume our decision to go in means we’ve seen them, won’t they?’ queried Ilkar.
The Unknown shrugged. ‘Possibly. But it hardly matters. It’ll make them wary perhaps but it doesn’t change what they’re doing. And if we lose them, then so much the better.’
‘So, Unknown, any ideas about how to get in?’ Hirad smiled. The Unknown blew out his cheeks. The force of the hurricane had snapped off almost every tree at a height varying between eight and a dozen or so feet. Tangled foliage was knotted across the forest floor and banked up in huge drifts against close-packed stands of trunks and, further in, no doubt against the rock itself. It had left no obvious entry point and the Raven trio would have to pick or hack their way through the least dense obstructions.
‘We’ll find a way. C’mon, break over, no time like now.’
They mounted up and trotted gently to the borders of the forest, indistinct now with debris scattered so widely. Making their way inside, the destruction was brought into stark focus. In places, the forest floor had been swept clean, the mulch and dust of years, the loose topsoil and every plant, flower and shrub scoured away. No tree was undamaged and everywhere arches of fallen boughs crisscrossed just above their heads or were impenetrable, forcing a change of direction, as if they wished no living thing to see the death of Thornewood.
For three hours, The Unknown ensured they left a traceable trail as he bullied his horse through the debris. Where it thickened too much to be trampled, he dismounted and used his sword one-handed, sweeping through leaf and branch alike. Behind him, Ilkar and Hirad followed, saying nothing until they reached the crag.
‘Make sure you clean your sword. Sap’s a real killer for rust,’ said Hirad, sliding from his horse. The Unknown looked at him, his expression carefully blank.
‘Really? Thanks, Hirad. I’d have hated to have lost my sword through ignorance of sap’s rust-inducing qualities.’
Ilkar chuckled.
‘Just saying,’ muttered Hirad.
‘I have been at this a couple of years myself,’ said The Unknown. ‘And don’t get comfortable. You’ve twenty yards of path to make thataway—’ he waved his sword across the clearing around the crag ‘—while Ilkar goes and listens for them and I work out our best point of contact. All right?’
Hirad nodded. ‘What about the horses?’
‘Take them down the path to tether when you’re done. I’d help you but I can see little brown spots on my blade. What do you think they mean?’
Hirad pulled his sword from its scabbard. ‘Funny, Unknown, but leave the jokes to me next time, eh?’
‘To prove you’re even less amusing, presumably,’ said Ilkar.
‘All right, come on,’ said The Unknown. ‘They won’t be far behind.’
Hirad was convinced it wouldn’t work. Dordovan spies or assassins weren’t the type to blunder into a hastily laid ambush. But he had to concede they couldn’t lead anyone straight to Denser or Erienne at this stage; and if all it served was to throw them off the scent, then he’d take that as a positive result. And there was no desire to kill those that followed them, after all, they might have some very useful information. They were merely under orders. What they needed was some clear guidance on why following The Raven was an occupation with no future.
It was with some surprise then, that he heard Ilkar whisper that they were coming, just as the wind picked up suddenly, gusting through the remains of the forest and sifting at what it had so brutally created.
The Raven had taken up position a few yards from the crag itself, hidden from the path they’d made by a tangle of pine branches and thick, sharp gorse.
There were four of them, leading their horses, treading carefully and not uttering a sound, as if aware that all was not right in Thornewood. All were men, clad in varying shades of dark leather armour, long swords in free hands, helms framing faces older than those watching them. Hirad raised an eyebrow at the oddity. They were clearly an experienced team but the carelessness with which they’d revealed themselves to The Unknown made him wonder why Dordover had chosen them to follow The Raven. At least with no elves or willowy athletes in the party he could be fairly sure they weren’t mage-assassins. Just trackers.
They entered the crag clearing and were edging around it cautiously, two by two, when The Unknown stepped out directly in front of them, the point of his sword down, tapping on the earth before him, its sound dull but music to Hirad’s ears as he moved next to his old friend.
‘Lost or looking?’ asked The Unknown, not unpleasantly. The quartet had stopped abruptly and Hirad saw the front pair share a glance, sudden fear in one’s eyes, confusion and surprise in the other.
‘I don’t like being followed,’ said The Unknown.
‘We’re not—’ began the left of the pair, a heavyset man with greying temples and long brown hair beneath his helm. He had a few days’ growth of stubble, thick eyebrows and a stooped forehead.
‘I don’t like being lied to either,’ said The Unknown, interrupting smoothly. Hirad felt Ilkar step up behind them, a spell shape no doubt already formed.
‘Now,’ continued The Unknown. ‘We aren’t looking for any trouble. We’re just helping a friend. I understand this is all of great interest to your masters but they’ll find nothing by sending people to follow us. Just bodies. Do I make myself clear?’
The men shifted a little, one dropped his gaze from The Unknown but the other held firm, brow creasing.
‘You’ll kill us if we continue to follow you?’
‘Quick, isn’t he?’ said Hirad.
The Unknown ceased tapping his sword point.
‘We don’t want to but we can’t risk you jeopardising what we have to do either. So turn around now and go back the way you came.’
More hesitation. Behind the front pair, the second whispered urgent words.
‘Is there something you’re confused about?’ asked Hirad, his voice loud and harsh in the silence of the forest. The wind stilled momentarily before a fresh gust plucked at cloak, hair and mane, whistling through the jumbled branches.
‘I’m not used to being threatened,’ said the heavyset man.
‘It’s not a threat,’ said The Unknown. ‘Call it heartfelt advice.’
Hirad couldn’t stop the smile touching his face. The Unknown had used the same words to face down Styliann, a former Lord of the Mount and a rather more powerful adversary.
‘I don’t see this as a laughing matter,’ said one of the second pair, stepping forward between the horses. He was mid-height, younger than his companions, with a long nose and small mouth below hooded eyes.
Hirad felt the tension rise. The four men hadn’t been ready for a fight before. Perhaps they were now. He and The Unknown gazed on unmoving. From behind them, Ilkar spoke.
‘Please don’t make this difficult because it’s really very simple,’ he said. ‘You were following us, we don’t want you to, and we’ve asked you very politely to stop doing so. I suggest we all calm down and go our separate ways. What do you say?’
Hirad and The Unknown both nodded and Hirad saw three of the men relax but the heavyset one pursed his lips.
‘We have direct orders,’ he said, more in explanation than anything else.
‘Well now you have new ones,’ said Hirad.
‘Hirad, shut up,’ hissed The Unknown. ‘Look, no one’s watching you. Just report back you saw us headed in the direction of Greythorne but lost us in Thornewood.’ He shrugged. ‘But before you
go, tell me who sent you to follow us. Dordover?’
The man nodded. ‘And losing you was not an option we were given,’ he said, and as if he’d reminded his colleagues of a forgotten fact, the tension returned.
Ilkar chuckled gently. ‘Oh, come on. I know Vuldaroq and the Dordovan Quorum are keen to get their prodigy back but they’ll hardly have your heads for losing us, will they?’
The answering silence hinted that they believed otherwise.
‘Either way, fighting us will not help you,’ said The Unknown. ‘Because whoever wins, you will have “lost” us, won’t you?’
For a moment, they stood on the verge of fatal indecision. Then, the heavyset man’s face twisted in what passed for a lopsided grin. He inclined his head and put up his sword.
‘Let’s not spill blood here,’ he said. Hushing his companions, he turned them round and they mounted and left the crag clearing.
The Unknown put a finger to his lips and the three of them stood silent until the hoofbeats died away.
‘You know what they’ll do, don’t you?’ he said.
‘Of course,’ said Ilkar.
‘Then if you’d be so kind, Ilkar,’ he invited.
The elf smiled, formed the shape for a CloakedWalk, stepped forward and disappeared, his footfall utterly silent in this mockery of his ancestral home.
‘C’mon Hirad,’ said The Unknown. ‘Let’s go. They won’t be tracking us back through here.’
‘Ahead, you think?’
‘No doubt about it.’
Hirad smiled and they led all three horses on an angled path to exit the wood about half a mile from where they’d entered it, a slow enough passage to give Ilkar time to find their followers and let them believe The Raven had swallowed the lie.
Ilkar was disappointed. They really weren’t very good at all. Having exited Thornewood the way they’d entered it, the quartet had turned east and trotted along not far from its edge, leaving a trail only the senseless could fail to follow. He broke into a jog and skirted the boundaries of the wood, the wind steadily picking up in strength at his back, clouds now thick and threatening overhead in the grey, dank afternoon sky.
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