The following morning, the first of the Tarbin gate portcullises fell, and though three more remained, this further eroded the confidence of the duke’s men. His bowmen, using the archer chambers built into the walls of the gate, and the murder holes built into the ceiling, kept up a withering assault on the attackers. But the enemy’s rams still offered the Aneirans some protection, enough to allow them to begin their attack on the next portcullis.
By nightfall, the wood and iron were groaning. Aindreas knew that it wouldn’t be long before the second portcullis was defeated as well. The men stationed on his battlements had been forced to seek shelter within the towers, emerging only long enough to loose their arrows and quarrels before being chased back inside by the bombardment from Aneira’s hurling arms. The only saving grace was that with the arms constantly striking at the walls, the enemy soldiers could not risk raising ladders to climb to the ramparts.
Aindreas could do little but watch the siege unfold from his chamber. He would have preferred to fight; despite his girth, he remained a formidable presence on the battlefield, powerful, yet quick with a blade. But this type of war demanded patience, a virtue he had always lacked. Sitting at his desk, the smell of smoke stinging his nostrils, it was all he could do to keep from drowning himself in Sanbiri red.
Early the next morning, as the duke finished a small breakfast, Villyd Temsten, his swordmaster, came to his chamber, face grim, eyes smoldering. He had a bandage on his forearm and an untreated gash above his left eye, but these only served to make him appear even more fearsome than usual.
“What news, swordmaster?” the duke asked, rising from his chair and stepping around his writing table.
“Little has changed, my lord. The second portcullis still stands, though it won’t last the day. Our archers have had some success from the ramparts, but they’re still being chased back to the towers by Rowan’s hurling arms.”
“How are our stores?”
Villyd’s mouth twisted sourly for a moment. “Shrinking, my lord. Slowly, to be sure, but we can’t hold out indefinitely.”
“Neither can they.”
“Actually, Mertesse is near enough that they can reprovision more readily than we can.”
Aindreas frowned. “Is this why you’ve come? To tell me that our stores are running low?”
“No, my lord. There’s something else. I think you should come see for yourself.”
“What is it?”
“Please, my lord. Come with me.”
Aindreas took a long breath, then indicated the door with an open hand and followed Villyd into the corridor. The swordmaster led him from the inner keep to the nearest of the towers on the outer wall. They climbed to the battlements, then strode to the northeast corner of the castle.
“Look,” he said, pointing toward the farmland beyond the city walls.
The duke had known while still in his chamber what it was Villyd intended to show him. Still, he couldn’t keep from muttering a curse.
A long column of Aneiran soldiers was marching north toward Kentigern Wood, some in the black and gold of Mertesse, many in the red and gold of Solkara. They had set fire to two of the nearer farmhouses and were in the process of setting ablaze a field of grain.
“Bastards,” the duke said, staring down at them, feeling helpless and foolish.
They’ll wait until the siege is well under way, Jastanne had said, with the prescience one would expect from a Qirsi. In all likelihood you’ll have little choice but to use all your men in the defense of your city and castle. But just in case you have it in mind to stop them, don’t.
He could hear her voice, so calm and sure of herself. He would have liked to scream her name, and he found himself glancing due north, to the rise on which he had seen her the day the siege began. No one was there now.
“We should stop them, my lord. We should protect the people in your dukedom, and we should keep them from reaching the Moorlands.”
“We can’t,” Aindreas said, his voice thick.
“But, my lord-”
“We can’t!” The words echoed off the fortress walls, drawing the stares of his men. “It’s what they want us to do,” he went on, more quietly this time. “That’s why they’re burning the houses and crops, to draw us into the open.” He knew this was so, just as he knew that if he divided his army his castle would be at risk. Just as he knew that Villyd was right, that he should have been willing to risk Kentigern to save Eibithar.
“What are your orders, my lord?” the swordmaster asked, his voice so flat, it made Aindreas’s throat constrict just to hear it.
“We’ll go after the hurling arms again. If we can destroy them, we might be able to break the siege. Rowan has fewer men now.”
“Yes, my lord.”
Villyd turned and walked away, his shoulders hunched and his head low. Protocol demanded that he await permission from Aindreas before leaving, but the duke hadn’t the heart to call him back.
“People are dying, father.”
Aindreas turned to see Brienne standing beside him, her golden hair rising and falling in the warm wind.
“They’re dying because of you. And because of you, the kingdom is in peril of being overrun.”
“What am I supposed to do?”
“Tell them the truth.”
“I’ll be hanged, and Ennis will be left to rule a shamed house.”
“Yes. But still, you have to.”
He turned away from her, searching the rise once more for Jastanne, fearing that he might see her.
“Our best hope now lies with the Qirsi. As long as they prevail, we’ll be fine.”
“The Qirsi killed me. You know they did, and yet you continue to help them.”
Tears stung his eyes and he squeezed them shut rather than look at her, rather than allow any of his men to see him weep.
“You should be ashamed,” he heard her whisper.
You ‘re a ghost. You ‘re not real.
When at last he opened his eyes, she was gone. Several of his soldiers were eyeing him, some with open curiosity, others more discreetly, though with apprehensive looks on their faces.
In the next instant, the castle shook, and their attention was drawn once more to the Aneirans and their ram, which was hammering again at the Tarbin gate. A moment later, several of the men shouted warnings, pointing toward the sky. Mertesse’s soldiers had returned to the hurling arms as well. One of the great stones crashed harmlessly against the outer wall, and another passed over the ramparts and landed in the castle’s outer ward. But two clay oil pots found their mark, shattering on the walkways atop the wall and splattering flaming oil in all directions. Several men dropped to the stone, rolling frantically back and forth, trying to put out the fires on their uniforms and hair. Aindreas rushed to help them, batting at the blazes with his hands, tearing off his cape and throwing it over one man whose clothes were fully engulfed.
When the flames had finally been put out and healers summoned, an uninjured soldier approached the duke.
“You must leave the walls, my lord. They’re certain to attack again, and you could be killed.”
Aindreas glared at the man, ready to tell him to mind his own affairs. But he knew the soldier was right. He was no good to the army dead. Indeed, his death might well hasten the castle’s fall.
“Fine,” he said. “Where’s the swordmaster?”
“I don’t know, my lord.”
He glanced toward Kentigern Wood once more. Smoke continued to rise from farmhouses and fields, and the column of Solkaran soldiers was still in view, farther from the castle, but near enough to be overtaken by an army on foot.
They’ll tell the world what you ‘ve done. Think of Ennis and Affery. Think of Ioanna.