The Abbess seemed untroubled. ‘You are very perceptive,’ the Abbess said. ‘But there’s something I don’t like about this.’ She walked to the edge of the tower and looked down. Just below her, a pack of nuns stood on the broad platform of the gatehouse and watched the end of the rout below and the disappearing column of dust that marked the captain’s sortie.
One nun left the wall, her skirts held in her hands as she ran. The Abbess wondered idly why Sister Bryanne was in such a hurry until she saw the priest. He was on the wall, alone, and praying loudly for the destruction of the enemy.
That was well enough, she supposed. Father Henry was a festering boil – his hatred for the captain and his attempts to
But the siege was pushing the routine away, and she worried that it would never return. And what if the captain went out and died?
‘What do you say, my lady?’ Amicia asked, and the Abbess smiled at her.
‘Oh, my dear, we old people sometimes say aloud what we ought to keep inside.’
Amicia, too, was looking out to the east where a touch of dust still hung over the road that ran south of the river. And she wondered, like every nun, every novice, every farmer and every child in the fortress, why they were riding away, and if they would return.
North of Albinkirk – Peter
Peter was learning to move through the woods. Home for him was grass savannah, dry brush and deep-cut rocky riverbeds, dry most of the year and impassable with fast brown water the rest. But here, with the soft ground, the sharp rock, the massive trees that stretched to the heavens, the odd marshes on hilltops and the endless streams and lakes, a different kind of stealth was required, a different speed, different muscles, different tools.
The Sossag flowed over the ground, following trails that appeared out of nowhere and seemed to vanish again as fast.
At mid-day, Ota Qwan stopped him and they stood, both of them breathing hard.
‘Do you know where we are?’ the older man asked.
Peter looked around. And laughed. ‘Headed for Albinkirk.’
‘Yes and no,’ Ota Qwan said. ‘But for a sailor on the sea of trees, you are fair enough.’ He reached into a bag of bark twine made into a net that he wore at his hip all the time, and drew forth an ear of cooked corn. He took a bite and passed it to Peter. Peter took a bite and passed it to the man behind him – Pal Kut, he thought the man called himself, a cheerful fellow with a red and green face and no hair.
Peter reached into his own bag and took out a small bark container of dried berries he’d found in Grundag’s effects.
Ota Qwan ate a handful and grunted. ‘You give with both hands, Peter.’
The man behind him took half a handful and held them to his forehead, a sign Peter had never seen before.
‘He’s telling you that he respects the labour of your work and the sacrifice you make in sharing. When we share pillaged food – well, it never really belonged to any of us to begin with, did it?’ Ota Qwan laughed, and it was a cruel sound.
‘What about the dinner I cooked?’ Peter asked, ready to be indignant.
‘You were a slave then!’ Ota Qwan thumped his chest. ‘My slave.’
‘Where are we going?’ Peter asked. He didn’t like the way Ota Qwan claimed him.
Skadai appeared out of thin air to take the last handful of the dried berries, he, too, made the gesture of respect. ‘Good berries,’ he said. ‘We go to look at Albinkirk. Then we hunt on our own.’
Peter shook his head as the war captain moved on. ‘Hunt on our own?’
‘Yesterday, while you rutted like a stag – wait, do you know even who Thorn is?’ Ota Qwan asked him, as if he were a child.
Peter wanted to rub his face in it, but in truth, he’d heard the name mentioned but didn’t know who he was. And he was increasingly eager to know how his new world worked. ‘No,’ he said, pouting.
Ota Qwan ignored his tone. ‘Thorn wishes to be the lord of these woods.’ He made a face. ‘He is reputed a great sorcerer who was once a man. Now he seeks revenge on men. But yesterday he was defeated – not beaten, but bloodied. We did not follow him to battle because Skadai didn’t like the plan he heard, so now we go east to fight our own battles.’
‘Defeated? By whom?’ Peter looked around. ‘Where was this battle?’
‘Six leagues from where you rutted with Senegral, two hundred men died and twice that number of creatures of the Wild.’ He shrugged. ‘Thorn has ten times that many creatures and men at his beck and call and he summons more. But the Sossag are not slaves, servants, bound men – only allies, and only then when it suits our need.’
‘Surely this Thorn is angry at us?’ Peter asked.