Seth Pennyman, Valet, had just come from the surgery, where they had set his broken arm and broken leg. He’d been brushed from the wall by a wyvern’s tail. Nothing had set properly, and the sisters had just reset the breaks. He was full of some drug, and muttered curses in his sleep.
Walter La Tour, gentleman man-at-arms, sat reading slowly from a beautifully illustrated psalter. Fifty-seven years old, he wore new glass spectacles on his nose. He’d received a crushing blow from the behemoth in the fight by the brook.
The captain sat down and clasped his right hand. ‘I thought I’d lost you when that thing put you down.’
Walter grinned. ‘Me too,’ he said. ‘Don’t make me laugh, my lord. Hurts too much.’
The captain looked more closely. ‘Are those things new?’ he asked, reaching for the glass spectacles.
‘Ground by the apothocary right here,’ Walter said. ‘Hurt the nose like anything, but damn me, I haven’t been able to read this well in years.
The captain put them on his own nose. They wouldn’t really stay, the heavy horn frames merely pinching. There was a fine steel rivet holding the two lenses together so that they pivoted – the captain knew the principle, but had never seen them in action.
‘I . . . that is, we-’ La Tour looked wistful. ‘I might stay here, Captain.’
The captain nodded. ‘You’d be well suited,’ he said. ‘Although I doubt me that you are too old to chase nuns.’
‘As to that,’ Walter said, and turned crimson. ‘I am considering taking orders.’
‘I owe God,’ Walter said, by way of explanation. ‘They saved me, here. I was dead. That behemoth crushed me like an insect, and these holy women brought me back. For a reason.’
The smile was wiped from the captain’s face. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I, too, owe something to God.’
He moved on down the line of cots. Low Sym lay with his face to the wall, his back carefully bandaged. Justice tended to be instant, in the company. He moaned.
‘You are an idiot,’ the captain said with professional affection.
Sym didn’t roll over. He moaned.
The captain was merciless, because next to La Tour and the others, Sym’s pain was like the sting of a fly. ‘You picked the fight because you wanted the girl. The girl didn’t want you, and beating up her brothers and her fellow farm-hands wasn’t going to ever make her like you. Eh?’
Moan.
‘Not that you care, because you are not above a spot of forced love, eh, Sym? This is not Galle. I didn’t approve of your way in Galle, my lad, but this is our country and we are all holed up in the fortress together, and if you so much as breathe garlic on a farm girl, with or without her permission, I’ll hang you with my own hands. In fact, Sym, let’s be straight about this. You are the single most useless fuck in my whole command, and I’d prefer to hang you, because the message that I mean business would cost me nothing. You get me?’ He leaned forward.
Sym moaned again. He was crying.
The captain hadn’t been aware that Low Sym was capable of crying. It opened up a whole new vista.
‘You want to be the hero and not the villain, Sym?’ he asked very quietly. Sym turned his head away.
‘Listen up, then. Evil is a choice.
Sym moaned.
He captain leaned close. ‘Not a bad time to decide to be a hero and not a villain, Sym. Your current line will end on a gallows. Better to end in a story than a noose.’ He thought of Tom. The man was a hillman – easy to forget, but his notions of word fame lingered. ‘Finish in a song.’
The small man wouldn’t look at him. The captain shook his head, tired and not very happy with his job.
He got up from the nursing stool by the archer and stretched.
Amicia was right behind him. Of course. There he was, the prince of hypocrites.
She looked down at Sym, and then back at the captain.
He shrugged at her.
She furrowed her brow, and shook her head, and waved him on his way.
He stumbled away, cast down.
He made an exasperated sound, and stepped out into the corridor that ran from the recovery beds to the serious patients’ ward. He walked a few paces and turned the corner only to find himself standing by Gawin Murien’s bed. The younger man had one leg bandaged from the crotch to the knee.
He sat by Ser Gawin’s bed. ‘No one will look for me here,’ he said in bitter self-mockery.
Gawin’s eyes opened.