"With respect, my Prince, my people have been receiving trouble from raiding Taneryn villagers for months. If you have only just arrived, how can you possibly know who is guilty and who..
"Enough, I say!" Sasha had never seen Damon so angry. "You shall not attempt to justify what I saw there! Did you send them?" For the first time, Usyn's confidence appeared to slip, just a little. "Answer the question!"
"I did not!" A sullen look crept over the lordling's face. Suddenly, he looked no more than a pouting, temperamental seventeen. "The villagers of Hadryn can organise their own defence! If you have a problem with that, deal with it yourself?"
"We dealt with it," Damon said darkly. "We dealt them thirty dead and more. More shall follow, Hadryn or Taneryn, for any who commit wanton murder in the name of ancient feuds!"
"My father was murdered by this heathen animal!" Usyn yelled, eyes wide with indignant fury. "The father-in-law of Prince Koenyg, who is also my brother! If the authority of Baen-Tar does not defend my right to justice, then what in all the hells' good is it for!"
There was a silence, then, upon the grassy plain by the wide, cold lakeside. Sasha felt rather than heard the gathering presence behind, the creak of a leather belt, a faint rustle of clothing, the compression of grass beneath heavy boots. Damon stared at the younger man, anger duelling with a rare distaste that seemed to sit like acid upon his tongue. The younger, paler man glared back, breath coming hard, his manner that of one accustomed to sudden fits of temper.
"Family Lenayin would be nothing without the north!" Usyn hissed. "The king owes his throne to our unwavering support! Your father knows this, Princeling! Well that you should learn it too! Well that you should know with whom your true loyalties lie!" This last with a harsh glare at Kessligh, acknowledging his presence for the first time. The eyes remained upon him for one hard-breathing moment, wild and white about the rims. Then to Sasha, also for the first time, with an even greater hatred than before.
"I serve the king," Kessligh said simply.
"You serve only yourself!" Usyn spat. "Yourself, your whore and your godless serrin friends! Your power in Baen-Tar grows weak, old man! The king no longer listens to you and your kind! You may have those idiots in Valhanan fooled, but you've never fooled the men of the north-we know what you are!"
"Sure you do," Kessligh said with an utterly unpleasant smile. "I'm the reason you're not speaking Cherrovan."
Usyn's hand went to his belt knife, and Kessligh's to his own in a blur of motion. And Usyn's eyes went wider still, face draining of any remaining blood, as if realising, with sudden terror, what his temper had nearly brought him to.
Kessligh's smile grew wider. Sasha had seen him hit crawling insects on a tree trunk from ten paces with that knife.
She decided it was a good time to swing on her heel and check the scene behind. Sure enough, there were upward of thirty Hadryn men standing there, and more gathering behind. Some in a state of partial dress, others fully armed and armoured. Strong men and tall, as with the soldiers of all standing companies; their pale skin untouched by any ink quill, their hair trimmed short, sometimes even shaved. Their eyes were hard and their manner unwelcoming. Behind them, she glimpsed members of Damon's Royal Guard contingent hovering by the lakeside tents with evident alarm.
"Forget the knife," Kessligh told Usyn then. With all the ease and assurance that one might expect from the greatest soldier in Lenayin. "If what you say of your father's death is true, your case seems good. Baen-Tar's justice serves here. Whatever disagreements exist, you shall find justice in Prince Damon, where it is warranted. Only remember this, young lord. Do not try us and do not test our patience. All the north should know very well what I am capable of."
And he bowed, all good form and politeness. Sasha swung back long enough to do likewise. Damon did not bow. He would nod, affirmingly, if Usyn bowed first. But Usyn simply stared, wild-eyed and hateful. And so Damon swung on his heel and walked, Kessligh and Sasha at his sides.
The Hadryn men stood back just enough to let them through, but not enough for comfort or respect. Sasha walked with her right thumb hooked into her belt beside the knife there, ready for the fast thrust of a close quar ters attack. A man bumped her arm, not moving aside quite in time. She could feel the eyes upon her, roaming over her body. But the Royal Guard were close ahead now as they emerged from the crowd.
"That little fool's a real worry," Kessligh muttered as soon as they were out of earshot. "His loss has made him unstable."
"I think he was expecting Koenyg," Damon said darkly. "Given that it's Koenyg's father-in-law who's been killed. I warned Koenyg that Usyn would take it amiss, but he insisted he was too busy with Rathynal approaching. Wyna was distraught."
"Poor girl," Sasha said sarcastically. "Meeting Usyn, I suddenly see the family resemblance. The whole Telgar family's unstable. I'm so thrilled to be related I could vomit."
"And I'm sure your graceful presence shall do wonders for Usyn's stability," Kessligh remarked.
"You didn't help," Sasha retorted, determined to get some payback for all the times he'd accused her of provocation.
"I thought it best to scare him a little," Kessligh replied, the familiar, hard edge to his tone. "He's a bundle of raw impulses right now, most of them aggressive. I appealed to the only raw impulse that might give him pause."
"What if he thinks you're bluffing?" Damon asked, casting a wary glance across as they walked.
"I don't bluff," Kessligh said grimly.
Damon glanced at Sasha. Sasha shrugged. "He doesn't bluff," she admitted. "Feints and misleads from time to time, but never bluffs."
"There's eighty of us threatening to take on several thousand of them," Damon retorted. "What is that if not a bluff?"
"Suicide?" Sasha suggested, raising an eyebrow at Kessligh.
Kessligh shook his head. "It's a start," he said.
Six
E vening, and the setting of the sun behind the mountains transformed the overcast sky to a deep, ominous red. The lake seemed ablaze as they walked along its bank, headed for the walled town of Halleryn. The mountains behind cast all the land and lake into shadow, the sun long since set behind its rugged peak. The colour was mesmerising, and reminded Sasha of tales told in the Steltsyn Star, of dark spirits with eyes the colour of fire… and she made the spirit sign to her forehead; an unthought, reflex gesture.
"Stop that," Kessligh said with irritation at her side. Of all the dinner party, he alone had eyes more for the town walls ahead than for the illomened sky. "I told you, the colour is caused when the lowering sun strikes the underside of the clouds instead of the top. And it looks so bright because we're in the mountain's shadow, and it's reflecting off the lake. It's very beautiful, but I tell you there's nothing otherworldly about it."
"This is a demon sky," Jaryd disagreed, staring upward as he walked. "Father Urys in Algery used to tell me about this when I was a lad-sometimes at evenings, when the sun god slips into his netherworld, there opens a space between Loth and our world. This is all the power of Loth spilling free, and demons with it… there's bad things afoot this night, I can feel it."
"Aye," Kessligh said sourly, "and if you lot don't cut the superstitious rubbish, I'll be one of them."
They crossed the bridge above the small stream, the torches held by the Royal Guardsmen to the front and rear gusting trails of flame. Ahead, the walls of Halleryn were alive with torchlight and whipping, wind-blown banners. Their party's own banners, held aloft by the two guardsmen not wielding torches, fluttered and snapped above their heads. In the light from the battlements, Sasha could see the dark shapes of archers watching their approach.