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Riyan wasn’t sure what that was all about and quickly dismissed it. He soon spied the old soldier talking with several older men near the door leading to the rear courtyard and stable. Riyan walked over and asked how things were going.

“There hasn’t been a sighting yet of any other Raiders,” the old soldier replied.

“It’s only a matter of time though,” another of the men added. “They’re not about to let one of their own remain our prisoner without some attempt to free him.”

“It’s odd though for Raiders to fare this far north in winter,” yet another man stated. “They’re usually most active during the warmer months when caravans are back on the road.”

“You can’t tell with these devils,” the old soldier said.

“That’s for sure,” agreed the first man.

“Well,” Riyan said, “if anything develops, let us know and we’ll help.”

“Glad to hear it,” the first man said. “It’s good to know we have you boys should the need arise.”

Riyan nodded then turned to head for the stairs. As he crossed the room, Riyan started thinking about how the situation here might affect them as they traveled south in the morning. Could it increase their danger? Would Raiders retaliate against northerners because of it? About the time he reached the bottom of the stairs, he heard the all but inaudible sound of sobbing. Coming to a stop, he looked around for the source. It sounded as if it was coming from beyond the door that led further into the inn.

No one else seemed aware of the sound as they were busy transforming the common room into a bunkhouse. Curious, he went over to the door and slowly opened it an inch. The crying was definitely coming from this direction and it sounded like the girl who was crying in the stable earlier.

In the back of his mind, he heard Bart tell him it was none of his concern. But after casting a quick glance around to be sure no one was watching, he slipped through the doorway. The sobbing was coming from the second doorway on the right. When he came to the doorway, he slowed and looked around the door jamb.

He discovered the girl was sitting in the dark with her nose pressed to the glass of her bedroom window. Riyan stood there staring at her for a moment before clearing his throat to announce his presence.

The girl immediately jumped to her feet and turned toward him. “What do you want?” she asked with a slight tremor.

Riyan put on the most disarming expression he could. “I heard you crying and was worried about you,” he replied. She didn’t say anything as tears began bubbling up once again.

“Is there anything I can do to help?” he asked. In the back of his mind he could feel Bart’s displeasure like a palpable presence.

She turned and glanced out the window. “There’s nothing anyone can do,” she said sadly.

Though the room was dark, Riyan was still able to see well enough from the light coming in through the window. Out in the courtyard they had placed many torches to keep it well lit in the event more Raiders returned. His eyes were drawn to a mass sitting on her bed that he was quick to realize were two bags filled to bursting.

He then gazed back to the girl. She still continued to gaze out the window, and it wasn’t hard to figure out where she was looking. It was the stable. Things started to click together in his mind: the conversation he and Bart had overheard when they first arrived, the fact that her sobbing had stopped when it had been announced that Raiders were sighted in the area, and now a disconsolate girl staring at the place where a Raider was being kept. If that wasn’t enough for him to figure it out, the bags sitting on her bed was the nail in the coffin.

“You love him,” he said. It wasn’t a question, rather a statement of fact.

The girl sighed and turned her head back toward him. “Yes,” she replied. “He was coming for me tonight.”

Riyan nodded. “He wasn’t here to raid Marl Crest.”

“No,” she said, shaking her head. “He has never been one of those Raiders!”

The conviction and certainty with which she said it took him by surprise.

“Now they’re going to send him to Yerith Keep to be questioned,” she said. Yerith Keep was the large fortification that the forces of Duke Knor used in this area as a base of operations.

“Yerith Keep?” he asked. “I thought they were taking him to Kendruck.”

Again she shook her head. “They wouldn’t take him there,” she explained. “All captured Raiders are taken to Yerith Keep.”

“But surely they’ll discover his innocence,” he asserted.

“No Raider has ever emerged alive from Yerith Keep once he passes through its gate,” she said. “At least so I hear.”

“We’re not at war,” Riyan said encouragingly. “He might be let go.”

She didn’t reply, only turned her face back to the window. “I’ll never see my love again.”

Riyan didn’t know what to say as she bowed her head forward and was once again wracked with sobs. He backed out of the room and left her to her sorrow. His heart went out to her. A sorrow akin to hers has been with him since first learning of the impending marriage between Freya and Rupert.

As he made his way back to the common room and then up the stairs, the last moments of her love’s last dash for freedom played across his mind. If it wasn’t for Kevik’s spell that had stopped him, he may have managed to get away. It was their fault that he had been captured. His death would be on their hands.

By the time he had climbed the steps and was in the hallway outside their rooms, he had made his decision. This was their fault and they needed to set it right. Making his way to Bart’s door, he gently knocked on the door. A moment later it opened.

“Is there an attack?” Bart asked.

Riyan shook his head. “No, nothing like that,” he said. “But there is something we need to do.”

Bart backed up as Riyan moved to enter the room.

Chapter Ten

After hearing what Riyan had in mind, Bart’s first inclination was to ask, “Are you crazy?”

“I know,” Riyan replied. “But if it’s as she says, then an innocent man is being sent to torture and death. We’re the ones who made it happen. He never would have been caught if Kevik hadn’t hit him with his goo spell.”

Bart paced the floor before the chair wherein Riyan sat. “She could be wrong about him,” he argued. “Love can blind you to all unpleasant truths about the object of your affection.”

Riyan let him pace a few more seconds before saying, “But the facts seem to support her story.” Bart ceased in his pacing and turned to look at Riyan. “Listen,” Riyan continued, “if he had come to raid Marl Crest, why would he come alone? Stands to reason a raid would succeed with more Raiders.”

“It’s none of our business,” Bart countered. “What difference is to us if another Raider is killed or not? These people seem to believe in his guilt.”

“A presumed guilt,” objected Riyan. “Hate and fear can blind a person every bit as much as love can.” A moment of silence fell between them before Riyan said, “I mean to help him.”

Bart was all set to continue the argument but stopped when he saw the determination in Riyan’s eyes. “How?” he asked.

“I was hoping together we could figure something out before dawn,” Riyan said.

Bart sighed. “I suppose telling you that it’s foolish and will likely result in someone getting killed isn’t about to sway you is it?” he asked.

Riyan shook his head and gave Bart a grin. “You know it won’t.”

“Let’s get the others in here and we’ll figure something out,” Bart said. He then turned toward the door on his way to wake the others. As he opened the door to pass into the hall, Riyan said, “Thanks.” Bart just nodded then left the room.

One by one the others began arriving until Bart returned with Chyfe who was the last. Once they were in the room and the door closed, Bart nodded to Riyan who filled them in on what he proposed to do.