Amicia reached out.
He fell asleep so quickly he dreamed of her.
Michael leaned down and placed his mouth tenderly on hers, and her lips opened under his.
‘I love you,’ he said.
She laughed. ‘Silly.’
He grabbed her chin. ‘I’ll marry you,’ he said.
Her eyes grew huge.
The door of the next stall flew open. ‘Kaitlin Lanthorn!’ shrieked her sister. ‘You little bitch!’
Green light exploded in the sky outside the stables, and a thunderous concussion shook the walls.
‘To arms!’ shouted twenty voices on the walls.
The captain leapt from his bed without knowing what had awakened him, and found himself standing by his armour rack with Michael, who had never gone to bed, getting him into his hauberk. He wasn’t even awake and Michael was pulling the laces as tight as he could at the back, and then he had his old shoes on over bare legs and was racing along the wall.
‘Bridge Castle,’ Bent shouted from the tower above them. Michael was trying to get into his brigantine while simultaneously watching the starlit sky and the walls.
The fog was gone – it had been swept away in a mighty gust of wind. The captain felt the wind, and knew it for what it was. He smiled into it.
‘Here we go,’ he said.
Two beacon fires were alight, and there was a lot of shouting – the distinctive sound of men in danger, or anger.
‘We need a way to communicate with the Bridge Castle.’ The captain leaned on the wall as Michael, now secure in his brigantine and feeling the pain from his ribs, knelt to buckle his knight’s metal leg harnesses on – a pair of valets were carrying the armour along behind them as the captain moved. It might have been comical, if the situation hadn’t been so terrifying.
Michael gradually got the captain into his harness as the infuriating man moved from position to position throughout the fortress. He made off-colour jokes to nursing sisters and he clasped hands with Bad Tom and he ordered Sauce to mount up in the new covered alley in the courtyard – covered, Michael assumed, to keep the wyverns off the horses. It was the same sortie he’d prepared the night before, and ordered to stand down.
An hour later, the west tower ballista loosed with a sharp
Michael got the rest of his own armour on, paused to rest, and fell asleep standing up at the corner where the west wall intersected the west tower.
He awoke to a loud roar. A sea of fire stretched almost to his feet and screams pierced the full-throated bellow of war. The captain’s hand closed on his vambrace. ‘Here they come!’ he shouted. ‘On my mark!’
Michael looked up, and saw a man leaning far out over the west tower edge, and the sky was not light, but it was grey.
‘Welcome back,’ the captain said cheerfully. ‘Have a good nap?’
‘Sorry,’ Michael mumbled.
‘Don’t be. Real soldiers sleep every minute they can, in times like this. Our attackers are making an attempt on the Bridge Castle and the Lower Town, while, I assume, sending men to look at what we built yesterday. Or perhaps to burn it.’ He sounded quite happy about the prospect.
Michael took a deep breath. A valet put a cup of warm wine into his hand and he drank it off.
The captain leaned well out over the wall. ‘Loose!’ he called.
The trebuchet in the western tower creaked, and the whole tower moved by the width of a finger.
‘Hail shot. Watch this.’
Michael had sometimes entertained his brothers and sisters by throwing handfuls of stones into water. This was like that, only multiplied many hundreds of times, with larger stones, and instead of striking water most of them hit the ground. The rest fell on chitinous hides and flesh and blood, having fallen several hundred feet.
‘Again!’ the captain called.
Down in the Bridge Castle, both of their heavy onagers loosed together, throwing baskets of stones the size of a man’s heart out into the trenches built the day before.
Screams rose out of the churned ground.