Hector stood straight, took a deep breath, and began to sing. He swung his sword back onto his shoulder and cut an arrow from the air, and Ranald picked up the tune, and Alan Big Nose was there, his voice strong and true on the notes, and Erik Blackheart stepped over Ewen’s corpse and roared into the chorus.
At some point the Sossag stopped loosing arrows.
Hector finished the song, raised his sword – a salute to his enemies, who had given him that gift of peace, right at the end.
A warrior, painted black head to toe, raised a sword – just a short bowshot away. And Hector could see that the Outwallers had gathered in tight while his men sang.
Good. It would be a clean end in a straight fight.
Ranald sighed. ‘Your brother will never forgive himself for missing this,’ he said, and they charged.
Otter Creek Valley, East of Albinkirk – Peter
When it was over, Peter sat on the ground and wept. He didn’t know why he was crying – only that his body needed the release.
Skahas Gaho came and put a hand on his shoulder. Brant was meat for the ravens. Ota Qwan had a wound across his chest that would probably kill him, inflicted when the last giant had stumbled forward, dragging three Sossag warriors, shaken them off, and landed one final cut with his great axe before Ota Qwan and Peter had managed to put him down.
The woods were full of death.
But even after a day of vicious fighting – and Peter couldn’t imagine worse fighting – there were still hundreds of Sossag unwounded, or capable of movement, and Ota Qwan had enough breath to send them to round up any cattle they could find and start them for home.
Peter sat by Ota Qwan and held his hand, watching the blood leak out of the man’s chest.
Just at sunset, the faeries came.
Peter had never seen one before but he’d known men who believed in them. He was sitting with the dying Ota Qwan. There were a hundred wounded Sossag groaning or worse, and scavengers had begun to move in on the corpses.
Peter was too tired to care.
The first one he saw looked like a butterfly, except that it was ten times the size and glowed faintly, as if sun lit. Behind it were four more, in a formation.
Peter had time to wonder whether they were predators, scavengers, or pests, and then the first one alighted on Ota Qwan’s chest.
Peter started, wondering if he had been dreaming.
A faerie is to a man as a hummingbird is to a bumblebee. Or so Peter thought, gazing at the jewel-like being.
Peter didn’t think.
The pink shape drifted along Ota Qwan’s chest, and then reached out, oh, so gracefully, and touched Peter – and that touch was like every slaver’s iron ever forged. Something was ripped from his chest, as if red-hot pincers had entered his heart and dragged it out past his ribs, and he vomited over his lap.
And the faeries laughed. Their laughter seemed to echo in his empty head like the shouts of revellers in a cave-
And Ota Qwan coughed, spat, and sat up.
‘No!’ he said suddenly, his usually too-calm voice alight with wonder. ‘No! You didn’t!’
But Peter was crying, because now he had something to weep for – whatever it was he’d just lost.
And the faeries laughed.
Their laughter sounded more like a curse.
Otter Creek Valley, East of Albinkirk – Ranald Lachlan
Ranald Lachlan rose from the black curse, through pain, and into the soft darkness of an April night. He sat up without a thought in his head, and the arrow that had penetrated his mail fell by his side, and he cut his hand on his own long sword lying in the bloodstained flowers by his side.
And then he knew where he was.
Fair folk. And Ranald knew that he had been dead, or close enough as made no matter, and someone named Peter had given them the usual trade. A piece of your soul for the life of a friend.
And the Outwallers were all around him in the moonlit dark. Just for a moment, he thought to steal away – but they were looking at him. A hundred of them.
Cursing, he dragged himself to his feet.
Black death was behind him, and in heartbeats would be his again, and he spat.