The captain shrugged. ‘I am going to hold this fortress to the bitter end,’ he said. ‘I’m going to hold it if I have to do it by myself. When we march away from Lissen Carak – and by my power, Ser George, we
Ser George rubbed his shoulder. ‘We’re going to die her, and that’s not what we do, boy. We live. Let the other bastard do the dying.’ He looked at the captain. ‘You have a very persuasive way with an arm lock.’
Two rocks struck close together.
The Lower Town, Lissen Carak – The Red Knight
An hour later, as the light began to grow outside, the off-going watch started up the path with two heavy beams – the rooftrees from collapsed cots – carried high on their shoulders.
The enemy’s machines launched a flurry of stones but the off-going watch was already out of range. They scurried up the ridge, and men came out of the fortress’s main gate to help.
And then there was silence.
Hours passed.
The captain had been sleeping in his armour, his head down on the table in the donjon. He woke to the silence, and he was up the ladder in a twinkling, his sabatons ringing, his hip armour scraping on the hatch to the first floor of the tower.
No Head was already on the battlements. He pointed to the enemy machines – just three hundred paces further west. Close enough to touch, or so it seemed.
‘Cuddy could reach ’em with an arrow. Or Wilful Murder.’ No Head grinned. ‘I’m tempted to try, myself.’
‘Even if you caught one or two,’ the captain said, ‘there are many, many more of them.’ He was much more exposed here – his Hermetic defences weren’t buttressed by the power of the fortress. He could feel Thorn.
He looked around.
The Lower Town’s curtain wall was breached in four places.
He felt the old man stir.
The captain concentrated.
He went back to watching.
Sauce watched the beams come through the gate. Skant came over to her – hollow eyed, rubbing his arms – and handed her a note.
She looked it over and nodded. She had the day watch formed in the courtyard for inspection, and she found Wilful Murder easily. ‘Wilful,’ she said. ‘On me.’
He stepped out of the ranks.
‘Find Bent. And any artificers you can rustle up. Master Random’s man is in the dormitory – I think that the pargeter boy is in the Great Hall. These beams are to form the pivot arm of a trebuchet – mounted where the onager was.’
Wilful Murder digested this. Nodded. Chewed on his moustache.
While he was looking at the tower and Cuddy was inspecting the duty archers, Bad Tom appeared in his armour. He didn’t look like a man who’d been up all night.
‘Captain needs the quarter guard. At the double.’ He nodded.
Ser Jehannes came along the wall and down the curtain steps. ‘Hold hard, Tom.’
Tom’s eyes met Sauce’s. ‘Now,’ he said.
He turned to face Ser Jehannes.
The quarter guard was the watch reserve – half the able men, usually the very best men, but today simply half the available troops. Sauce had more than a dozen men-at-arms in the day watch – most of the rest were kept ready for the sortie – led by Ser John Ansley, a big, cheerful, ruddy-faced young man. ‘Ser John, you have the watch,’ she said. ‘I’m taking the quarter guard. On me!’ she called, and the quarter guard came; sixteen archers and eight men-at-arms. Most of the archers were guildsmen she didn’t know – with all five of the new recruits – the local boys. Ben should have been her master archer, but he was already standing with Wilful Murder.
‘Cuddy – you’re the senior,’ she said.
‘Like enough,’ he said.
Jehannes raised his voice. ‘You are insane!’ he roared at Tom.
Tom laughed.
Her senior man-at-arms was Chrys Foliak – one of her own tent-mates. He had the others ready to move.
Cuddy made a motion with his hand and Long Paw stepped out of the ranks and joined him.
They went out the postern. It was obvious to them all that Ser Jehannes disagreed with the order to send them. But then the courtyard was behind them, and they were out in the light.
Below, on the fields, hundreds – perhaps thousands – of creatures were moving toward the Lower Town. The fields themselves seemed to be moving.
‘Good Christ!’ Chrys Foliack muttered. ‘Good Christ.’
Long Paw spat thoughtfully.
He paused in the postern, leaned back, and shouted ‘Toby! Michael!’
He couldn’t see the captain’s valet or his squire. ‘JACQUES!’ he roared.
A nun – tall and pretty despite her hollow eyes – came to the postern. ‘May I help?’ she asked.