«Ye a thief, then?» came someone's not-quite-hostile query.
«Some have called me that," Alexei answered carefully, wondering if he'd made the right answer. What if these scum felt some sort of professional jealousy? «What of it?» he added, fear sharpening his voice.
«Eh, no need to get hot about it!» They evidently thought he was about to go back into the bizarre fighting frenzy that had killed their leader. «No shame in bein' a thief.»
«A good one?» someone asked, and Alexei sneered.
«Do I look a failure, now? Do I?»
«If yer so fine a thief, what ye doin' runnin' for yer life?»
Alexei managed a reasonably casual shrug. «Misfortune.» He glanced at them slyly, feeling how hostility, bit by bit, was being replaced by curiosity.
Alexei straightened as a sudden, fantastic idea struck him. After all, he'd need help to get out of this forest, particularly now that these fools had left him afoot and nearly penniless. Not one of these slow-witted creatures seemed eager to replace their late leader, so… «You see," said the young man carefully, «I did make one small mistake. I needed a band of good, skilled men behind me. I didn't have one at the time. But something tells me I just might have one now.» With a coolness that wasn't quite feigned any longer, Alexei pulled a golden ring from his finger and tossed it to the robbers, a
«Yes," repeated Alexei softly, watching them, «I do think I have a band behind me now.»
He waited a moment, but there were no arguments.
Chapter XXI
Resolutions
It was a mild spring day, and she'd taken her mending outside, meaning to do her sewing by sunlight. But for some time now, Maria had been sitting, simply sitting, staring moodily off into space.
Maria hurried over that last, over the silly hurt; of course she'd been nothing to him, no more than his nurse, no more than he'd been anything to her! A nameless wanderer; she should be ashamed of herself for even considering-Enough of this! There was work to be done. And yet, why
Until now, the forest birds had been chirping, there'd been the normal little rustlings of creatures in the underbrush. But suddenly the forest fell into so abrupt a silence that Maria looked up again, heart pounding, listening intently.
And then she heard the invading sound of hoofbeats. Maria sprang to her feet, letting the mending fall, unheeded, to the ground.
'Father!
«Father," she called, then more fiercely, Come here! Hurry!»
It was a troop of soldiers come riding up. Prince Svyatoslav had finally found them.
«… and I must admit you gave me quite a fright," Danilo said, smiling, to the captain of Svyatoslav's guard. The man grinned in return.
«You gave me a bit of a fright, too,
«Is it true?» breathed Vasilissa. «The pardon‑is it really… ?»
«Quite true,
Danilo snorted. «Which is, as I'm sure my daughters will agree, today!»
But Maria hesitated. «Please, tell me this: how did you find us?»
«Well, our Prince gave us directions. But we were pointed onto the shortest way by some peasant or other.»
«A peasant?»
«A man in a crudely made deerskin caftan.»
Maria exchanged a startled glance with her father. «Finn?» she asked. «But how could he have known… ?»