“Now let’s move on and see what lies ahead of us on the remainder of the trail, but brace yourself, lad. You might not like what we find.”
I was too enervated by then to show surprise. “Why?” was all I asked him.
“Because there’s worse to come, I fear. What would have happened when your cousin Theuderic realized his infantry were slow in catching up?”
“He would have come back to find them.”
“Right. And he’s not here, is he? My guess is that he made the attempt and rode into the same kind of trap, set elsewhere for him.”
“Which means he’s dead. Is that what you are saying?”
“He could be, aye.” Ursus nodded, sober-faced. “Probably is, to tell the truth, for otherwise he would have been here before now, to find out what happened to these people. I think you had better prepare yourself for finding him and his men dead between here and Vervenna.”
We rode on, neither of us saying another word, both of us expecting to find another scene of murderous destruction beyond every turn in the road and over the crest of every hill until, about a mile beyond the scene of the massacre, we emerged from the edge of a screen of small trees and saw a wide, smooth, grassy slope stretching up and away from us to the crest of a ridge that stretched all the way across our front. As soon as I saw it I drew rein.
Ursus, seeing my sudden reaction from the corner of his eye, turned toward me. “What?” he asked. “What’s wrong?”
“I know this place. I remember it”
Ursus sat looking at me patiently, holding his mount tightly reined so that its neck arched tautly and it stamped its forefeet, trying to sidle away from the curbing bit. He said nothing, controlling his restless mount, content to wait for what I had to say, and after a while I continued.
“We used to play here, as young boys. We would run up to the crest there and throw ourselves over the top, then roll downhill on the other side. It’s all grassy and soft over there, no trees and not even any stones. The hillside slopes down from the crest on that side for about two hundred paces, perhaps slightly more. It’s a gentle slope. At the bottom of it, though, it butts right into another hill and the terrain changes. That whole hillside on the other side is covered with trees … hardy old things, stunted and twisted and not very big. There’s a narrow stream cutting through the line where the two hills meet—it’s very fast, very powerful, fed by an enormous spring that bubbles up out of the solid rock, higher up the far hillside on the left, close to the top. The channel it has cut over the years is deep but not wide. It levels out only in one narrow spot, where the ford is. That’s the only way across the gully, and no more than two horsemen can cross it at a time, side by side. And then to the right of that, the slope falls away dangerously until it drops into a ravine that’s choked lower down with moss-covered old trees—ancient old thorn trees and stunted oaks. It’s a wonderful place for boys to play, but you wouldn’t want to ride a horse down there.” I stopped, reluctant to say any more but unwilling to kick my horse into motion again.
“So why did you stop here?” Ursus asked. “If that’s all you had to tell me, you could have done it as we rode.”
“It’s a natural place for an ambush.” I had been reluctant to voice my sudden conviction lest somehow, by naming it, I made it come true. “It’s a perfect trap. Beyond the ford the slope climbs steeply up to another high crest, but that slope’s grassy, too, and soft like this one, so in the heavy rain it’ll be a quagmire. There are trees on that hillside, too, on either side, pointing away from you, up toward the crest, and they act like a funnel, pushing people inward to the center. So you’re going uphill more and more steeply, and there’s less and less room on either side. And up ahead of you, there’s ample cover to screen an attacking force, while behind you, on the far side of the stream at the bottom, there’s that beautiful slope for anyone charging at you from the rear to smash whatever troops you have remaining there, waiting to cross two at a time. It’s a nasty, nasty place.”
I looked Ursus in the eye. “So … if your theory holds true and we’re to find that Theuderic has been ambushed, this is where we’re most likely to find him—on the other side of that crest up there.”
He nodded, mute, and then his eyes drifted away from mine and focused on something behind me, in the distance. Before I could begin to turn around to see what he was looking at, he had loosened his reins and nudged his horse forward and past me. I spun my mount around and moved to join him where he sat gazing at a dark scar in the grass less than fifty paces from where we sat.
“It looks as though you might be right,” he said quietly. What he had found was the darkened path worn into the muddy ground by a large number of horses as they emerged from a trail through the woodlands at our back and spilled out onto the soaked grass of the slope ahead. They had been riding in columns of four when they came out of the trees, but then they peeled off, right and left, to fan out and form a single line abreast as they made their way uphill toward the crest of the ridge, and we had no difficulty following them or seeing the moves of individual horsemen. There was a broad and much-trampled quagmire of muddied grass forming a lateral line less than twenty paces from the crest, where the advance had halted and stayed for a time, presumably safe beneath the skyline of the ridge while the leaders rode forward to look beyond and wait for their signal to attack.
Ursus glanced at me again, a wry expression on his face. “Well,” he said quietly, “we can’t very well ride away without looking, can we?”
“No, we can’t, but I wish we hadn’t come this way.”
He nodded in agreement and dug in his spurs, sending his horse bounding forward, and I followed him, roweling my own horse hard, driving him forward and uphill until I was riding knee to knee with Ursus. As we approached the crest of the ridge the ground beneath us showed all the scars born of the passage of three score of heavy horses digging their hooves in hard to gain purchase in the mud of the slippery, rising ground. Then we were on the crest itself and the scene below us opened up and spread out at our feet.
At first glance there appeared to be nothing unusual in view. The ground sloped gently down in front of us for more than two hundred paces, exactly as I had described to Ursus, and the deep gully that marked the bed of the fast-flowing stream at the bottom was a brown and black gash slanting downward from left to right, its line obscured from our view by treetops and the natural fall of the land. I looked beyond that, however, knowing that anything there was to see would be lying on the sloping hillside on the far side of the gully. Even so, there was nothing unusual to be seen from the distance at which we sat peering, and so, feeling slightly more hopeful, I kicked my horse again and put him to the downhill slope, hearing Ursus following close behind me.
By the time we were halfway down the slope, we had begun to see what we had feared we might. There were bodies among the long grass down there, but we were still a hundred and more paces away and so the only forms we could recognize were the swollen bellies of horses that had begun to bloat and now rose above the top of the grass. We increased our pace, knowing what we would find, and closed the distance quickly, and as we did so the bodies littering the upper slope ahead of us came into prominence.
It was almost exactly as I had described the probability to Ursus. Deep scars gouged by hooves scrabbling urgently in the rain-soaked ground showed where Theuderic’s party had made their crossing and started up toward the top of the distant hill. They had bunched together more and more as they penetrated farther into the funnel formed by the encroaching trees until—and even from the bottom by the ford, looking up the hill, it was plain to see where—at the very steepest part of the climb just short of the summit, they had been confronted by an enemy force. It must have been a heavy concentration of bowmen who had lain concealed until then among the trees. Perhaps a half score of bodies, men and horses, showed how far the advance had gone before that first attack. They had been in the front rank of the advancing party and had taken the brunt of the first volley of arrows. When we arrived there later to look at them we saw how, like their infantry counterparts in the first trap, they lay where they had fallen, without a drawn weapon among them.