Michael came in with cups of wine. He flushed very red when he saw the Abbess.
The captain glanced at him. ‘All officers, Michael. Get Ser Milus from the Bridge Castle too.’
Michael sighed, served the wine, and left again.
The Abbess pursed her lips. ‘You wouldn’t abandon us,’ she said, but it was more a question than a statement.
The captain was looking through his window to the west. ‘No, my lady, I wouldn’t. But you must have known there would be a response.’
She shook her head, anger warring with frustration. ‘By Saint Thomas and Saint Maurice, Captain, you task me too heavily! I did no more than was my right, even my duty. The Wild was beaten – or so I’m told by both the sheriff and the king. Why should I not expand my holdings at the cost of some old trees? And when the killing started – Captain, understand that I had no idea that the killings were connected, not until-’
The captain leaned forward. ‘Let me tell you what I think,’ he said. ‘Hawisia unmasked a traitor, and died for it.’
The Abbess nodded. ‘It is possible. She asked to go to the outholdings when, ordinarily, I would have gone.’
‘She was your chancellor? The post Sister Miram holds now?’ he asked.
She shook her head. ‘No. She had more power then the other sisters, but she was too young to hold an office.’
‘And she was widely disliked,’ Sauce said.
The Abbess flinched, but she didn’t deny it.
The captain had his head in his hands. ‘Never mind. We’re here now and so are they. It’s my guess that the Jacks, or the daemons, or both, were going to kill
The Abbess looked at her hands. ‘I loved her,’ she said.
The Red Knight knelt by her and put his hands on hers. ‘I swear I will do my best to hold this fortress and save you. But, my lady, I still feel you know something more. There is something personal about all this, and you still have a traitor within your walls.’ When she didn’t answer him, he got up from his knee. She kissed his cheek, and he smiled. He handed her a cup of wine.
‘Not your usual contract, ser knight,’ she said.
‘Damn it, my lady, this
As the captain spoke, his officers trickled in – Bad Tom, Ser Milus, Ser Jehannes, Wilful Murder, and Bent. The others were either asleep or on patrol.
The Abbess was brought a chair.
‘Park wherever you can,’ the captain said. ‘I’ll try and make this brief. I’d say we’re almost surrounded, and our enemy hasn’t bothered to build trench lines and trebuchets. Yet. But he’s got enough force to close the woods and every road around us. He’s got Outwallers – who are those men and women who live in the Wild, for you godless foreigners.’ The captain gave Ser Jehannes a mirthless smile. ‘I’m guessing he has a hundred or more Outwallers, a thousand irks, and perhaps fifty to a hundred other creatures of the types we’ve already seen – wyverns, daemons and the like.’ He shrugged. ‘I’m guessing our enemy is a potent magus.’
Bad Tom whistled. ‘Lucky we didn’t get ourselves killed trying for their camp then.’
The captain nodded. ‘When you move fast and plan well, you deserve a little luck,’ he said. ‘But yes, I’d say that getting away with that raid seized our luck with both hands.’
‘So now what?’ Sauce asked.
‘First, Jehannes, you are now the constable. Ser Milus, you are now marshal. Tom, you are now first lance. Sauce, you are now a corporal. In one sweep, I’m short three knights. Milus, are there any likely lads in your refugees? The merchants?’
Milus scratched under his chin. ‘Archers? Hell, yes. Men-at-arms? Not a one. But I’ll tell you what there is down in my little kingdom – there’s two wagon loads of armour in barrels, and some nice swords, and a dozen heavy arbalests. All for sale at the fair, of course.’
‘Better than what we have?’ the captain asked.
‘White plate – the new hardened breastplates.’ Ser Milus licked his lips. ‘The swords are good, the spearheads better. The arbalests as heavy as anything we have.’
The Abbess smiled. ‘Those were for me, anyway.’
The captain nodded. ‘Take it all. Tell the owners we’ll give them chits for it and settle up at the end if we’re still alive. How heavy are these arbalests?’
‘Bolts a forearm in length and thick as a child’s wrist,’ Ser Milus said.
‘Put them on frames. Two for you and the rest up here for me.’ The captain looked at the Abbess. ‘I want to build an outwork.’
‘Anything you like,’ she said.