I have feasted at that King's table, Borenson told himself, remembering past years when Orden took Hostenfest with Sylvarresta. The smells of roast pork and new wine and turnips had always been strong at the table—fresh bread with honey, oranges from Mystarria. Sylvarresta had always been generous with his wine, free with his jokes.
Had Borenson not thought the King too high above Borenson's own station, he'd have been proud to call him friend.
On the Isle of Thwynn, where Borenson was born, the code of hospitality was clear: to rob or kill someone who fed you was dastardly. Those who did so were afforded no mercy when slain. Borenson had once seen a man stoned near to death for merely affronting his host.
Borenson had ridden here hoping that he would not have to carry out his King's orders, hoping that the Dedicates' Keep would be so well guarded he'd never have a chance to gain entry, hoping that King Sylvarresta would have refused to grant an endowment to Raj Ahten.
Iome. Borenson recognized the Princess now, not from her features but from her graceful build. He remembered one late night, seven years past, when he'd been sitting in the King's Keep beside a roaring fire, drinking mulled wine, while Orden and Sylvarresta traded humorous tales of hunts long past. On that occasion, young Iome, wakened by the loud laughter beneath her room, had come to listen.
To Borenson's surprise, the Princess had come into the room and sat on his lap, where her feet could be near the fire. She had not sought out the King's lap, or that of one of the King's own guards. She'd chosen him, and just sat by the fire, gazing dreamily at his red beard. She'd been beautiful even as a child, and he'd felt protective, imagining that someday he might have a daughter so fine.
Now Borenson smiled at Gaborn, tried to hide his rage, his own self-loathing, at the duty he must perform. I am not death.
The dead enemy's warhorse had run downhill, stood now, ears back, regarding the situation calmly. Iome rode to it, whispered softly, and took its reins. The warhorse tried to nip her; Iome slapped its armored face, letting it know she was in command. She brought the horse to Borenson.
She sat rigidly as she drew near; her yellowed eyes filled with fear. She said, “Here, Sir Borenson.”
Borenson didn't take the reins immediately. She was within striking range as she leaned near. Borenson could slap her with a mailed fist, break her neck without drawing a weapon. Yet here she stood, offering him a service, his host once again. He stood, unable to strike.
“You've done my people a great service this day,” she said, “dislodging Raj Ahten from Castle Sylvarresta.”
A thin hope rose in Borenson. It seemed barely possible that she did not serve as a vector for Raj Ahten, that she'd given her endowment only, and therefore did not pose a major threat to Mystarria. This would give him some reason to spare her.
Borenson took the horse's reins, heart pounding. The stallion did not fight or shy from his foreign armor. It whipped its plaited tail, knocking flies from its rump.
“Thank you, Princess,” Borenson said with a heavy heart. I'm under orders to kill you, he wanted to say. I wish I'd never seen you. But he had to wonder at Gaborn's plan. Perhaps the Prince had a reason for bringing out the King and Iome, some reason Borenson didn't fathom.
“I heard more horns in the woods,” Iome said. “Where are your men? I would like to thank them.”
Borenson turned away, “They rode ahead an hour ago. We're alone here.” It was not time to talk. He retrieved his weapons from his dead horse, strapped them to the enemy's warhorse, mounted up.
They raced through the blackened woods down to the road, then followed it, thundering over one burned hill after another until they nearly reached some living trees, with their promise of shelter.
By a burbling brook at the edge of the woods, Gaborn called a stop. Even a force horse with runes of power branded on its neck and breast needed to catch its wind and get a drink.
Besides, in the green grass at the edge of the stream lay a soldier of House Orden. A black noman's spear protruded through the soldier's bloody neck. A gruesome reminder that although the small group would soon enter the woods, they'd still be in danger.
True, Borenson and his men had hunted nomen all morning, had scattered this band. But nomen were crafty nocturnal hunters, and usually fought in small bands. So some bands would be here in the woods, hiding under the shadows, hunting.
Gaborn dismounted as the horses drank, checked the soldier's body. He flipped open the man's visor.
“Ah, poor Torin,” Borenson grunted. He'd been a good soldier, had a fine talent with the morning star.
Torin wore the normal dress of a Mystarrian warrior, black ring mail over a sheepskin jerkin. A dark-blue surcoat over the mail bore the emblem of Mystarria, the green knight—a man's face with oak leaves in its hair and beard. Gaborn traced the outline of the green knight on Torin's surcoat.
“Beautiful colors,” Gaborn whispered. “The most beautiful a man could wear.” Gaborn began stripping Torin. “This is the second corpse I've had to rob today,” Gaborn grumbled as if displeased at the prospect.
“So, milord, you'll bring a new dignity to the profession,” Borenson said, not wanting to discuss the problem facing him. He eyed Iome, saw terror in her posture.
She knew what he had to do. Even she knew.
Yet Gaborn seemed oblivious. Was Gaborn mad? Or just immature? What made him think he could escape Raj Ahten with a woman and an idiot in his charge? Fine horses are nothing if you can't ride them—and obviously Sylvarresta could not ride.
“Where's my father?” Gaborn asked, stripping the corpse.
“Can't you guess?” Borenson said, unprepared for the question. “Right now, I'd say he's fifty miles from Longmont, hoping to reach it near dark. Raj Ahten has forty thousand forcibles there, buried among the turnips behind Bredsfor Manor. You know where the manor is?” Gaborn shook his head no.
“On the road three miles south of the castle,” Borenson said, “a gray building with a lead roof and two wings. We intercepted a message from the Duchess Laren that says Raj Ahten expects an army to reach Longmont within a day or two. Your father hopes to beat them to the treasure.”
“Raj Ahten knows this?” Gaborn asked, just as he got the ring mail untied from the body. “That's why he's abandoning Castle Sylvarresta? To reclaim the forcibles?”
Gaborn obviously thought this foolhardy. He angrily unstrapped the dead man's jerkin. Borenson wondered what occupied the Prince's mind. Did he not see that Sylvarresta must be slain? What was the boy thinking? “Your father hoped to convince the Wolf Lord that Longmont was conquered days ago,” Borenson explained, “and that he's been taking endowments day and night ever since.”
“A desperate bluff,” Gaborn said, inspecting the sheepskin jerkin, looking close to see if it harbored fleas or lice. But if Torin had suffered from fleas in life, they'd all hopped away as soon as the body cooled.
Gaborn put on the jerkin, pulled on the ring mail and the surcoat—all just a bit too large for him. A small shield lay by Torin's right hand—a target of wood, covered with a thin layer of brass, then painted dark blue. The lower edge of the shield was filed, so that if one slashed with that edge, it could slice a man's throat like a knife. Usually only a man with an endowment of metabolism kept such a small shield. Thrust quickly, it doubled as a weapon. Gaborn took the shield.
“What of Raj Ahten?” Borenson asked. “I can see that he is on the move, but will he go to Longmont?”
Gaborn said, “As Father hoped, he'll march within the hour.”
Borenson nodded. The sun shone in his blue eyes; he smiled. It was not a smile of relief. It was a hard smile, his battle smile. “Tell me,” Borenson half-whispered, “where are you taking them?” He nodded at Iome, her idiot father.
Gaborn said. “Longmont. I took the best horses in the King's stables. We can reach the castle by nightfall.”