Further to the left, the exposed fields about the valley's small stream held the majority of gathered horsemen, warding a flanking move. Amongst them were many men from Yule, perhaps five folds distance to the south, who had arrived just a few moments before.
They conceded Kumaryn the high ground above the valley's end; should an attack come, they would fall back into the village, where the buildings and lanes would remove much of the cavalry's advantage, and strategically placed ropes, pikes and spears would avail the local swordsmen of a surprise. As would some of the more assertive Baerlyn women who had taken up Sasha's suggestion some years ago and learned archery. They waited now by the windows of their houses, ready to put arrows into any passing attacker.
Lord Kumaryn did not line his army across the open ground atop the slope into Baerlyn-such a move would have been almost a declaration of war. Instead, the head of the column approached between wooden fences that hemmed in the leading horses, just as the defenders had intended. Lord Kumaryn wanted to talk, Sasha reckoned… at least for a while. A gauntfaced man with a large, pinched nose and a white beard held up his hand. The three hundred horse column came to a stop in clouds of sunlit dust. A young man in lordly clothes rode forward. In one hand, he carried the banner of Family Tathys-a stone tower pierced by a lightning strike.
Verenthane lords and their family emblems, Sasha thought sourly, watching him. Pompous fools. Fancy parading it around lowlands style, as if the very presence of that bloodline should cause men to fall to one knee in reverence.
"Greetings men of Baerlyn!" the young man cried, his voice high and clear. A squire, Sasha recalled such banner carriers were called amongst the lordly classes. Another stupid, imported lowlands word. Goeren-yai and the rural folk of Lenayin were not yet educated in such civilised terminology. Sasha hoped fervently that they would never need to be. "My Great Lord Kumaryn Tathys of Valhanan bids you greetings!"
"Aye, hello!" called one of the Baerlyn men cheerfully, to a roar of laughter from the rest.
The squire swallowed nervously. "As Great Lord of Valhanan, Great Lord Kumaryn has ridden today to Baerlyn to claim his right under law! It has recently come to my Lord's attention that upon the recent ride of the Tyree Falcon Guard into the province of Taneryn…"
"Where's your balls, lad?" yelled another man. Sasha thought it sounded suspiciously like Teriyan. More laughter.
"He left them in Cryliss, by the sound of it!" yelled another.
"Nay, Kumaryn borrowed them!" Raucous howls. This, Sasha thought with a sigh, was quite certainly Teriyan. "Be fair, Kumaryn! Give the lad his balls back, we know you've got no need of them!"
"Into the province of Taneryn," the squire continued, his high voice wavering. Sasha almost felt sorry for him. "There the Great Lord Kumaryn's dearest relative, the Lieutenant Reynan Pelyn, of the noble Tyree family of Pelyn, and family to Great Lord Kumaryn through his marriage to his sister's cousin…" Groans of derision from the Baerlyners. "… met his end in highly suspicious circumstances! Word from truth-loving men has placed the blame for this callous murder upon the person of Sashandra Lenayin…"
"Fuck off, you two-bit fool!" came a yell with precious little humour in it.
"Nay!" came Teriyan's loud reply. "Even for a fool, he's not worth oneand-five!"
Behind the squire, at the head of Kumaryn's column, Sasha noted many men who had ridden forward to hear. Some were officers of the Black Wolves, others were noble Verenthanes, well-dressed and well-groomed atop their large horses. Several others were Goeren-yai-Cryliss had some Goeren-yai, Sasha knew, largely about the city perimeter. A few Cryliss Goeren-yai were wealthy merchants and traders like their Verenthane comrades, though none had yet accepted a title. Most refused nobility as a concept. Swordwork and honour, not wealth and titles, made the measure of a Goeren-yai man. And Sasha knew some Verenthanes who felt the same.
"And so," the squire resumed, now utterly flustered, "Great Lord Kumaryn demands by the powers of law vested in him that the Lady Sashandra be handed over to his custody at once, for a trial by the procedures laid out within the king's law!"
The squire finished and backed up his horse. Ironical applause followed him. "Well done, lad!" someone shouted. "Fucking incomprehensible, but well done!"
Jaegar walked forward from the line. Like many in Lenayin, he disdained horses when there was a chance to fight on foot. In rugged, forested Lenayin, that was often. His leather jerkin had no sleeves and he wielded the massive blade in his hand as if it were a twig.
"Lord Kumaryn!" he shouted, in a deep, yet eloquent voice. "I'm very sorry that you've come all this way for nothing! Baerlyn swears its allegiance to the king in Baen-Tar, not to you! You have no authority to apprehend or administer a trial against any man, woman or child of Baerlyn in the name of justice! Justice belongs to the king, not to provincial lords! Goodbye!"
The gaunt-faced, white-bearded man rode forward atop a dappled, greywhite mare. His cloak was red and gold, and he wore a blue shirt and leather vest over chain. Sasha saw the sweat on his brow. He had to have at least fifty summers… didn't the heat bother him? She swatted at a fly… up here about the pig and sheep enclosures, the flies bred something fierce in summer.
"Master Jaegar, I presume?" Kumaryn called down from his horse.
"Yuan Jaegar," Baerlyn's headman corrected. He planted his swordtip on the road and folded his hands atop the hilt, feet set wide. Kumaryn's blue eyes were cold with disdain and his nose was wrinkled.
"You forget yourself, Yuan Jaegar," said Kumaryn. He did not speak loudly enough. Further along the line, men were straining to hear. "I am Great Lord of Valhanan. That title was granted to Family Tathys a hundred and three years ago by King Soros and has carried on to me from my father and grandfather before me. I rule Valhanan, Yuan Jaegar. Best that you recall."
"No, you tax Valhanan!" Teriyan retorted from behind. "In these parts, we call someone who takes money whilst giving nothing in return a thief!"
A cheer went up. Jaegar held up a hand and the men quieted. "The king's law is quite explicit," he said, very reasonably. "A provincial lord may levy a property tax, and no more, for the upkeep of provincial affairs. A provincial lord will deal with such local matters of law and order that do not concern the king…"
Some of the mounted nobles were laughing. "You think to lecture nie on the king's law?" said Kumaryn, smiling coldly.
"No, well, I thought there might be some disagreement," Jaegar said conversationally, "so I brought along a copy." He waved to Teriyan, who stepped from the line with a scroll in one hand and sword in the other. The nobles' smiles faded. Teriyan unravelled the scroll for Jaegar to read from. "Aye, here it is. The rights and responsibilities of the office of provincial lordship."
"Aye, that'd be you then, wouldn't it?" Teriyan suggested to Kumaryn with an insolent grin. Kumaryn glared, fingering the hilt of his sword.
"The law of Lenayin shall be administered by the king," Jaegar continued, reading easily from the scroll. Some of the nobles looked astonished. No doubt many had presumed that all Goeren-yai were illiterate. "On matters pertaining to the provincial lord's peace, said lord shall be considered an officer of the king, for the purpose of justice. Provincial affairs beneath the king's consideration shall include common theft, rape, affairs of marriage and all pertaining rights and properties, matters pertaining to contests of honour, disputes of land and boundaries…"