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Gryvan stared down at his black boots. His sons were flawed-he knew that-yet still they were his sons, and entitled to receive from him the same legacy he had inherited from his father: the ascendancy of the Haig Blood; order and security, imposed upon the turbulent peoples of these lands through strength, and through force of will. He could feel his cheeks colouring, a hot flush of rage at the thought that those who dwelled beneath the protective aegis of Haig power would dare to conspire against it.

“I was released by Ragnor oc Gyre’s Captains as a token of their benign intent,” Mordyn said. “The influence of the most bellicose factions within the Black Road is dwindling. They had slipped from Ragnor’s control for a time, it’s true, but that has changed. They understand that they cannot prevail against our martial strength, whatever minor victories they might have won thus far.”

Gryvan closed his eyes against the pounding ache that was building in his skull. His hands, still clasped behind his back, tightened, the fingers bars of steel locked around one another.

“They will retire from all the lands they have occupied,” Mordyn continued. “They will withdraw across the Stone Vale, and make over to you all the territory they have seized. To you personally, sire, not to Kilkry or Lannis. They pledge a permanent peace, on condition that you rule those lands directly and unmake the Bloods that formerly held them. Ragnor knows that without Kilkry and Lannis to stir up these ancient, dry troubles, there can be peace between our peoples. In pursuit of the same quarry, he pledges in his turn to wipe away the Horin Blood.”

“Peace…” rasped Gryvan.

“The better to deal with those enemies that lie more nearly at hand. The Crafts. Dornach. The time is ripe. Everything you have long dreamed of lies before you now, sire. It is all possible, now that they have revealed themselves. We have only to reach out and grasp the future, to make it real.”

“I need…” Gryvan’s tongue stumbled over his own words. There was some part of him that feared the fell anger, the grasping hunger, roiling in his breast. Yet the larger part rejoiced in the scent of crisis, the anticipation of long-held ambitions upon the brink of realisation. Kilkry, Dargannan, Lannis, all swept away. The Crafts humbled. Dornach bloodied, perhaps even subjugated. And King, perhaps? Perhaps even that?

“I need more certainty,” the stubbornly cautious fraction of him said as he turned back to face his Chancellor. “I need to know.”

“We have a day or two,” Mordyn said with a flat smile. He seemed entirely unsurprised by Gryvan’s hesitancy. “No more, I would suggest. And no time at all, perhaps, for one or two matters.”

“Such as?” Gryvan asked. He wanted this to end now. His mind seethed, his temples throbbed. Why was it so difficult to think clearly? He wanted only to retire to his chambers.

“I hear rumours of a plot-fostered by the Goldsmiths, perhaps-to seize Igryn and return him to his lands, in the hope of stirring up yet more enfeebling trouble for us. Allow me to have him removed to In’Vay. Once he is there, out of sight and mind, he can be quietly killed. None will mourn his passing. None who are true friends to the Haig Blood, at least.”

“Very well. My wife no longer finds him amusing, in any case.”

“And recall the Bloodheir from Kilvale, sire. Send word at once. Have him bring a few thousand of his men back here. The greater threat now is from Dornach, perhaps Dargannan; perhaps still closer to home, if the Crafts and those they have suborned think us weak. The people of the city grow more restive with every passing day. We may need Aewult’s swords to cure them of that ill.

“The forces of the Black Road lack both the vigour and the inclination to test him again, and I can set them on the path back to their own lands with a single message. Better yet, if we but halt all movement of ships in and out of Kolkyre, they might yet wipe away the last vestiges of the Kilkry Blood on our behalf, even as they retire. Roaric will quickly fail, if we close the sea to him.”

“I need to know,” the High Thane repeated.

“I believe we can clear away whatever doubts you harbour, sire,” Mordyn said, nodding sympathetically. “There is one here in Vaymouth who surely knows the truth of it, and might be compelled to share it. The Dornachman. Alem T’anarch.”

“The Ambassador?” Gryvan murmured, faintly incredulous.

“You must have the truth. You said as much yourself. Such truths cannot be won easily, or without daring. T’anarch… he has no supporters here, sire, no mobs to rise up in his name. And his masters have never concealed their contempt for us, their envy of our strength.”

“Would you have open war with the Kingship?”

“If this comes to nothing, whatever wounds we open may be healed. But there is war already, I think, open or otherwise. A great many will be rendered carrion by the end of it: those who shy away from the demands of the moment or yield the initiative to their opponents.”

Carrion, thought Gryvan, his weariness briefly pierced by lances of bitter anger. Yes, if there are those who think to test my resolve, that is their destiny. I shall not meekly surrender all that I hold, all that I have won. Let those who imagine otherwise learn the harsh lessons of their error. The weak, the foolhardy, the traitorous, become carrion. Such is the world.

VII

The scout came back into the copse on a lame horse. There was a bloody welt across its hamstring.

“Crossbow,” the rider said by way of explanation as he swung out of the saddle.

In the gathering darkness it was difficult to see much, but the man’s voice sounded strained to Orisian.

“And you?” he asked. “Are you hurt?”

“Nothing serious, sire. The woman with the crossbow: my knee met her helmet when I rode her down.”

“Were you followed?” Taim demanded. He was holding the horse’s reins, stroking its neck while another warrior examined its wound.

“No.” The scout shook his head emphatically. “It was just the two of them stumbled across me. Both dead. They were careless, wandering around looking for a deer or hare for the pot, I think, not someone to fight.”

“And Ive Bridge?” Orisian asked.

“Not more than three score spears to hold it, sire, as far as I could see. And only half of those look to be trained warriors.”

“No Inkallim?” asked Taim.

“None that I could see. Couldn’t go too close, but no, I don’t think so.”

“Good enough,” Taim grunted. “We’ve likely got them overmatched, then.”

“We should wait until the night’s got a firm hold,” said Orisian quietly. “Let them get bleary with sleep. K’rina and Eshenna and Yvane can stay hidden here, with a dozen men.”

He half-expected Taim to demur, to try to persuade him to remain behind with the na’kyrim, but the warrior said nothing. Orisian glanced up through the leafless branches towards the bruised sky. The cloud was thin; the moon, risen long ago, a diffuse disc.

“There should be enough light to see by. And if there isn’t, we’ll have Kyrinin with us. They won’t.”

They had not made camp in the little patch of woodland. No tents were set up, no fires were lit, despite the searing cold. They merely sheltered there, from the desultory snow and from the revelatory daylight. Men and horses were crowded into the heart of the copse, all made listless and irritable by the enervating tension. Some sat on the damp ground, dicing or muttering softly to one another, or chewing on cured meats and oatcakes. Most stood by their horses, keeping them quiet.

Sentries were scattered through the fringes of the thicket, watching the snow-dusted fields and rough slopes all around. Low hills rolled their way westwards, sinking into the huge coastal plain. There were scattered farms and villages, fading in the distance into a flat haze of grey. Snow showers had come and gone all day, by turns revealing and obscuring grim signs of unrest and ruin. For a time a dark smear of smoke marked the site of some burning barn or farmhouse; later a dozen twisting, frail columns rose elsewhere, betraying the campfires of some roving band of reavers; once a great company of riders could be seen, sweeping across the very lowest slopes.