Nuada was furious when Groundsel told him bluntly that he would not be allowed to accompany the rescue party. The outlaw leader had gathered thirty men together and each was carrying food — bread, dried meat and fruit.
‘You need me to show you the way,’ protested Nuada. ‘You need me!’
‘I can find the Royal Road, Nuada, without any help. But look at you — you are on the verge of collapse. You could not stand the journey.’
‘I’ll get him there — and back,’ said Llaw Gyffes. The snow had begun to fall thickly once more and Llaw, like the rest of the men, was warmly clad in oiled sheepskin and high wool-lined walking boots. A hood covered his blond hair and a long scarf was wound around his neck.
Groundsel walked over to Nuada and placed a hand upon his shoulder. ‘Every step that you slow us. down could mean a death on the Royal Road. You understand that?’
‘I won’t slow you down, I promise you.’
Llaw pulled Nuada aside and offered him a drink from his canteen. Nuada accepted it — and choked.
‘Gods of chaos!’ he spluttered. ‘What is it?’
‘It is a raw spirit distilled from grain — a little goes a long way. You feel warmer?’
‘I feel as if someone just lit a fire in my belly.’
‘Good. Now, let’s go.’
Groundsel set off at a good pace, feeling his way through the snow with a staff, thrusting it deep into drifts to test the footing. The men behind moved without a sound. There was no conversation and Nuada knew that most of them could not understand the nature of their mission.
‘Why did you want to come?’ asked Llaw, as they walked some way behind the rescue party.
‘I told them I would — but also they fear Groundsel.’
‘They are right so to do. You are leading the wolf into the lamb-pen; do not be surprised if he behaves like a wolf.’
‘I will not be surprised, Llaw. Now tell me why you came with us?’
Llaw chuckled and helped Nuada to climb a sloping drift. The wind picked up, howling ice and snow into their faces, and further conversation became impossible. A journey which had taken Nuada a day and a half was made in less than four hours by the rescue party.
They came across the first bodies lying huddled by a dead fire. There were two women, an old man and a child. All were frozen stiff.
Groundsel hawked and spat. Ice had formed on his dark brows and short beard. ‘Stupid!’ he said. ‘Had they built the fire twenty paces over there, by those rocks, they would still be alive. How could they think a fire in the open would warm them?’
Leaving the bodies where they lay the men pushed on, coming to the cave at mid-afternoon. Some forty people were crowded there; four were dead. Groundsel led the men inside and they broke out the rations. The two fires were dying down and Llaw Gyffes returned to the forest for fuel. Nuada scanned the gaunt, weary faces, glimpsing the girl at the back of the cave. She was squatting beside an elderly woman and he pushed his way through to her.
‘I came back,’ he said simply.
‘She is dead,’ replied the girl. ‘She died an hour ago.’
Nuada gazed down on the serene face. The woman was in her late sixties, he guessed, and she had the look of the patrician. ‘Then nothing can harm her now,’ he said. ‘Come, there is food.’
‘I am not hungry.’ He put his arm around her slender shoulders and pulled her to him.
‘Would she want you to die also?.’ he asked. ‘Follow me.’ Taking her by the arm he led her to Groundsel, who gave her some bread and a canteen of water.
‘The cave could not take all of us; there are others still outside,’ the girl told them. Groundsel turned away and sent three groups to search the forest. Llaw Gyffes went with them. In the cave a woman fell at Groundsel’s feet, hugging his legs and crying quietly. Embarrassed, he pulled away. A man came to him, seizing his hand and pumping it; others joined him. Groundsel accepted their gratitude with ill grace and pushed his way out into the blizzard. He walked alone for a while and watched the men searching the snow; there were bodies everywhere.
He was about to return to the cave when he heard a whimper from close by and looked around, but there was no one to be seen and the sound ceased. Taking his staff he probed the bushes, but could find nothing. He stopped and listened, but the howling wind obscured any lesser sounds. He crouched closer to the ground… still nothing. To his left there was a small drift of snow. As he looked, the wind caused it to flurry and he caught sight of an edge of cloth. Moving to it, he dug away at the snow. Buried here were a man and a woman, huddled together, frozen in death, but they had curled themselves around a small child wrapped in a woollen blanket. Grdundsel could imagine their last thoughts: protect the child until the end, their bodies shielding it from the wind and the snow. The child’s head moved and its mouth opened. Groundsel swiftly lifted it clear of the snow and ran for the cave. Inside he forced his way to the fire and pulled away the frozen blanket, rubbing at the little girl’s slender limbs. Her hair was short, but tightly curled and golden, and she was thin, terribly thin.
‘Akis!’ he called. ‘Where the Hell are you?’
A stocky man came forward. ‘Did you bring the milk?’ asked Groundsel.
‘It’s mostly gone, my Lord,’ replied the man. Ever since Nuada’s saga of the beast, men had begun to echo the poet’s style of address.
‘Get some here. Now! And warm it.’
‘Yes, my Lord.’
The girl’s head sagged against Groundsel’s shoulder. ‘Don’t you die on me!’ he shouted. ‘Don’t you dare die on me!’ He shook her and rubbed her back and she began to whimper. ‘That’s it,’ said Groundsel. ‘Cry! Cry and live!’
‘Shall I take her?’ asked a woman.
‘Leave me alone,’ snapped Groundsel as Akis returned with some milk, warmed in a wooden bowl. The outlaw leader lifted the girl’s head and held the bowl to her lips; the milk dribbled to her chin, as she shut her mouth against it. ‘Pinch her nostrils,’ said Groundsel and a woman crouched down beside them and followed his bidding. The child’s mouth opened. At first she choked on the milk, but then she began to swallow. When the milk was finished her head sagged again to his shoulder. He was about to shake her when the woman touched his arm.
‘She is asleep,’ she said. ‘Just asleep. She will be fine. Wrap her in a warm blanket and leave her with me. I’ll take care of her.’
Groundsel was reluctant to part with the child, but he did so, brushing the hair back from her brow. ‘She is pretty,’ he said, ‘and tough. I like that in a child. How old is she? I am not good at judging ages in babes.’
‘I would say around two years old. She might be a little more, but she is very thin and small.’
‘You look after her,’ said Groundsel, rising.
‘Yes, my Lord.’
‘I am not a Lord! See to her.’ He saw Llaw Gyffes helping a young couple into the cave, which was now becoming seriously overcrowded.
‘It’s a nightmare out there,’ said Llaw. ‘There are bodies everywhere, must be close to a hundred.’
‘How many survivors?’ Groundsel asked.
‘I’ve seen around thirty. There’s no room for them here and if we don’t find shelter of some kind, many more will die.’
‘There are deeper caves about three miles from here,’ said Groundsel, ‘but bears inhabit some of them.’
‘At least you can kill a bear,’ muttered Llaw, ‘but we can’t beat this cold.’ Other survivors began to crowd into the cave entrance, shouting for room to be made. Those at the centre were being pushed too close to the fires and arguments broke out.
Groundsel stepped on to a boulder so that he could see over the heads of the milling refugees.
‘Silence!’ he bellowed. All movement ceased. ‘We will need to march out into the blizzard. I want the strongest among you ready to move in the next hour. The rest can stay here; I will leave men and food and we will come back for you when the blizzard dies down.’
Some of the refugees began to shout, refusing to leave the sanctuary of the cave. ‘You will do as you are damn well told!’ Groundsel roared. ‘Or else I’ll leave you all to starve! Now, there are deeper caves around an hour’s march from here. There we can build fires to keep you alive. Anyone who believes they can make the journey, move to the left of the cave. Those who wish to remain, move to the right.’
Slowly the refugees began to shuffle into place.
Groundsel stepped down and an elderly man approached him.
‘I thank you, sir, for your help. Tell me, are you the hero, Llaw Gyffes?’
‘No, I am the devil Groundsel.’ The man’s eyes widened and he backed away.
‘Those on the left, move out of the cave. Now!’ shouted Llaw Gyffes. ‘Come on, make room.’
Groundsel found the woman nursing the child he had saved and leaning down, he took the sleeping girl. ‘You are going to take her out into the cold?’ said the woman. ‘Is that wise?’
‘I’ll keep her safe,’ promised Groundsel, opening his sheepskin jerkin and closing it around the child.
Outside, the blizzard had eased and the snow was falling less thickly as Groundsel took the lead and the thin column set off. Akis, Nuada and four others remained in the cave, distributing food and building up the fires. There was more room now, and the group was mostly made up of the elderly or the young. Nuada was tired, more weary than at any other time in his young life. But he felt curiously lifted and filled with a sense of quiet joy. He sat back against the cave wall and looked at the people sleeping by the fifes. His people. His by blood, and by deed. The raven-haired girl sat beside him; her mother’s body lay at the back of the cave, a thin linen sheet over her face.
‘My name is Kartia,’ said the girl. She was still cold and he lifted the blanket from his shoulder and drew her in. He said nothing and leaned his head back against the rock wall; it felt like a feather pillow.
And he slept, without dreams.
The journey to the deep caves took more than four hours, but the snows held off and the temperature rose marginally. Even so many of the weaker refugees needed assistance, and Llaw Gyffes and two others followed some way behind the column, watching out for those who fell by the wayside. Llaw gave some of them a mouthful of the fiery spirit, hauling them to their feet. Only one man died during the trip, his heart giving out as he struggled to climb the last hill.
Once at the caves huge fires were lit and the refugees gathered gratefully around them. The child Groundsel was carrying awoke, and he fed her with the last of the milk. Llaw Gyffes watched him with the girl, his pale eyes betraying no emotion. Feeling himself observed, Groundsel passed the child to a middle-aged woman and walked back to the cave mouth where he sat down opposite the tall warrior.
‘I like children,’ Groundsel remarked, his dark eyes staring challengingly at Llaw.
‘So do I. I think the blizzard has passed — the worst should be over for now.’
Groundsel gazed at the sky. ‘No clouds. It will get colder yet.’
‘What will you do with them all?’ asked Llaw. ‘How will you feed them, take care of them? And how did Nuada talk you into it?’
Groundsel shrugged. ‘I have a full granary and they can work for their food. They can fell trees, gather wood. The younger women can whore for my men; we’ve not enough women as it is. Three men were killed recently in a fight over a woman.’
Llaw nodded. ‘And the last question? Why?’
‘I don’t answer to you, Llaw Gyffes; I answer to no one. If I choose to do a thing, I do it. I may choose to kill them all tomorrow. My choice. Why did you come?’
Llaw shrugged. ‘I needed the exercise. I felt like a dog in a cage. How’s your back?’
‘I heal fast.’
‘You’d better watch for infection. I’ve seen animal scratches turn bad, very bad.’
‘Not here,’ said Groundsel. ‘The air is good for wounds. Not one case of gangrene have I seen since I came to the forest.’ He was silent for a moment, remembering the pain and the fear when the talons sliced home. ‘That was a mighty beast, was it not?’
‘Damn near broke my axe,’ said Llaw. ‘Has it occurred to you what fools we were to sit in the open?’
‘Once or twice,’ Groundsel admitted. ‘So far my hunters have found six more of them, dead in the snow. But there is no clue as to their origins. No one has ever heard of anything like them before. I have even sent men to seek the Dagda and ask for his counsel.’
‘You know where he lives?’
‘No, but the men will go to all the settlements seeking news of him,’ said Groundsel. ‘He will hear of it — wherever he is.’
‘Tke important question,’ said Llaw, ‘has to be: Who sent the creatures? And why?’
‘Sent them?’ responded Groundsel. ‘They were not a hunting pack of hounds. I saw no leashes. And no man alive could train those creatures.’
‘Remember the boy? He said he watched it appear from the air, in a flash of lightning. Our own hunters found tracks that just appeared on a hillside. No. Someone wants to bring death into the forest — we need to know who.’
‘We do indeed,’ Groundsel agreed, ‘if you are correct. But I am not convinced. There are parts of the forest that have never been explored — high valleys, lonely canyons. The beasts could have been driven down by’lack of game — or even curiosity.’
‘Maybe,’ said Llaw, ‘but you saw the wolf creature. It was not completely covered in hair; its chest and belly were dark-skinned. Such a beast would be unlikely to live high where the air is cold. And the other creature that was found dead in the drift? The cold killed it. What forest beast have you heard of that does not prepare for winter?’
‘It’s a compelling argument, but where does it take us? Some sorcerous animal trainer releases his pack in the mountains? How would we find him? Or recognize him if we did?’
‘Find him? We cannot,’ admitted Llaw. ‘But another wizard could.’
‘I take it this is leading somewhere?’ Groundsel snapped. ‘You don’t exactly find yourself surrounded by wizards about here.’
‘There is a lad at my village who claims he was an apprentice to a man of magic named Ruad Ro-fhessa. When the snow clears, I will seek him out.’
Groundsel stood and stretched. ‘That means leaving the sanctuary of the forest. A risky venture, Strong-hand. With that red-gold beard and that pale hair you are an easy man to recognize. And how would we poor forest folk fare if our great hero was taken from us before he could raise his army?’
‘I think you would manage, my Lord Groundsel — Great Slayer of Beasts and rescuer of small babes.’
Llaw stood and gazed down at the smaller man. Groundsel smiled, but it did not reach his eyes. ‘I think I like you, Llaw. I really do.’
‘That’s good — and very reassuring.’
‘Don’t be too reassured. I’ve killed men I’ve liked before.’
‘I’ll remember that.’
For five days Ruad waited, opening the Black Gate each evening and holding it for an hour. Once a giant lizard with serrated teeth tried to force its way through and he sent it scurrying back with a burst of white fire. On the sixth day he was too weak to attempt the Power spell and walked wearily back to the village.
Gwydion said nothing as he entered the small cabin that had been cleared for them. The old man merely put his hand on his friend’s shoulder. Ruad shook it loose.
‘I’ve lost him,’ he said, slumping to a chair. Gwydion sat beside the Armourer, staring into the broad ugly face and seeing his own reflection in the bronze eye-patch. Ruad cursed. ‘I sent him to his death, just like all the others.’
‘He was a man, he made his own decisions,’ said Gwydion. ‘And Gods, Ruad, it was worth the risk. If the Knights of the Gabala could assemble once more, we could sweep the land clean of this evil — we could raise a rebel army.’
‘They are all dead, Gwydion. Let me rest.’ Ruad stumbled to a straw-filled mattress set against the wall and stretched himself out.
Gwydion moved to him. ‘I will give you sleep,’ he said, touching his finger to the wizard’s brow. Ruad’s eye closed, his breathing deepening. Gwydion reached effortlessly into the Colours, marvelling at the strength of the Green, feeling the power flowing from the millions of trees and the birds and animals drawn to them. He replenished his strength and opened his eyes. The candle was burning low and guttering, so he lit another from the stub of the first.
A light tapping disturbed his thoughts and he moved i to the door and opened it. A youth stood there, pale hair glistening in the moonlight. Behind him stood a taller man, dark-haired and dark-eyed.
‘Yes?’ asked Gwydion. ‘Is someone sick?’
‘No, sir,’ said the youth. ‘I am seeking Ruad Ro-fhessa. I was his apprentice; my name is Lamfhada.’
Gwydion reached out and touched the youth on the shoulder. There was no evil in him. ‘Enter,’ said the old man, ‘but talk softly, for Ruad is asleep — and he needs his rest.’
The newcomers entered the cabin and Gwydion stoked the fire, hanging a kettle over the coals. ‘Would you like some herb tea? It is sweet and aids gentle dreams.’
‘You do not remember me, do you?’ said the hard-faced man. He thrust out his right arm, exposing the leather-covered stump.
‘Elodan? I heard you were dead. I am glad to see the story was untrue. You must forgive me; I am growing old and forgetful. When last I saw you it was as a Knight arrayed in silver armour, a black-plumed helm on your head.’
‘Long ago, Gwydion. Another age. The world has changed since then — and not for the better.’
Gwydion poured boiling water into a copper pot and added dried leaves, stirring the mixture with a wooden spoon. He let it stand for several minutes and then transferred it to three round-bottomed mugs.
‘Why are you here?’ asked the old man.
‘I have hopes that the wizard can mend my arm,’ said Elodan. ‘Lamfhada tells me he can do anything.’
‘How did you find us?’
Lamfhada grinned. ‘I have been practising with the Colours. I cannot master the majors, but I can now fly the Yellow. And I sensed Ruad was in the forest, though I could not tell where except that it was to the east of where I was. Then we heard of a healer and a wizard, and men were speaking about the three golden hounds. I was there when Ruad was working on the last of them, so I knew it was him. Do you think he will be angry that I sought him out?’
‘I do not believe so,’ said Gwydion, ‘but he has suffered a terrible loss and you may find him… changed. Have patience, Lamfhada. And you, Elodan, do not expect overmuch. Ruad is a wizard of great power, but some things are beyond mere men.’
‘My hopes were never high, Gwydion. But we will see.’
Gwydion turned his attention back to the youth. ‘The Yellow,’ he said, ‘is a wondrous colour. I too learned my skills in such a way. It is the Colour of Dreams.’
‘And yet it has no power,’ said Lamfhada.
‘No, no, you are wrong. The Yellow leads us to all the other Colours. It is a guide. Without it there would be no wizards, no healers, no mystics, no seers. Tell me, as you ride the Yellow, what Colour do you find pushing at the edge of your mind?’
‘None, sir.’
‘In time you will find yourself drawn to another Colour, which will intrude as you fly the Yellow. For me it was Green and I became a healer; for others, like Ruad, it is Black. For some, sadly, it is the Red. But the Yellow will lead you to the Colour of your life, for good or ill.’
‘Are all men governed by Colours, then, even when they are not sorcerers?’ Lamfhada asked.
‘Of course. The Colours are life. Look at Elodan — what Colour does his soul wear?’
The warrior said nothing, but Lamfhada swung to look at him. ‘I do not know,’ said the youth. ‘How does one tell?’
‘It takes little magic, my boy,’ said Gwydion. ‘A farmer is a man who loves the land and the yield of the land. His is the Green of growth. But a warrior? What other Colour is there for a man who lives to strike his fellows with a razored blade, or a deadly mace, or a flashing lance? Elodan’s Colour is Red, and he knows it. He has always known it. Am I right, King’s champion?’
Elodan shrugged. ‘There will always be a need for warriors. I feel no shame at what I… was.’
‘Ah, but then you were not a warrior because of that need. You chose the path because you enjoyed the fight.’
‘That is true. Does it make me evil?’
‘No, but neither does it bring you close to sainthood,’ said Gwydion, reddening. He took a deep breath. ‘Forgive me, Elodan. I have no right to berate you. But much of my life has been spent healing wounds caused by swords or arrows or axes; dealing with the result of hatred, lust or greed. I know you are not evil — but I loathe the men of swords. Come, it is late. Rest here, and we will speak to Ruad in the morning.’
Errin regained consciousness after a few moments and sat up groggily. Ubadai helped him to his feet. ‘Bad chin,’ said the tribesman, grinning. Errin staggered.
‘I’m sorry,’ apologized Sheera. ‘I thought you’d move or something. I mean, the speed with which you tackled the beast… Are you all right?’
‘Only my pride suffered lasting damage,’ said Errin. ‘Can I sit down somewhere?’
‘Not here,’ replied Ubadai, gesturing at the bodies. ‘Blood will bring many creatures — wolves, lions, who knows? You can sit on my horse.’
‘No, he can’t,’ said Sheera. ‘It ran as soon as you dismounted.’
‘Better and better,’ Ubadai grunted. The tribesman scanned the area, then pointed to a nearby hill. ‘There should be caves — with our luck, many beasts there. Hip-deep in beasts. Still…’ He gathered the saddlebags and provisions from Errin’s dead mount, and waited while Sheera fetched her meagre pack from the shelter beneath the tree. Then he supported Errin as they moved slowly uphill. The fresh mountain air soon revived the nobleman. As Ubadai had predicted, there were many shallow caves. He entered one on the south of the hill, but backed out swiftly. ‘Bear,’ he said. The second cave was empty and the Nomad gathered wood and built a fire.
Sheera settled down beside the fire, grateful for the warmth, and sat watching Errin. ‘I really am sorry,’ she said.
He shrugged. ‘Don’t be. I never was very good at defending myself. My old sword tutor said my wrists were as strong as damp lettuce.’
‘You moved well enough against the beast, and that sword-thrust all but disembowelled it.’
‘Beast was dying anyway,’ Ubadai told Sheera. ‘You could have killed it with that branch.’
‘What is that supposed to mean?’ Errin asked.
Ubadai shrugged. ‘Sick, maybe. But when it killed horse it nearly fell. It did not charge — it staggered.’
‘That’s a nice thought,’ snapped Errin. ‘The conquering Knight kills a sick beast — hardly the basis for a great saga. It didn’t look ill to me.’
‘Yes, it did,’ said Sheera. ‘Its chest was almost blue. And it did fall before attacking.’
‘It had thin skin,’ said Ubadai. ‘Not good for cold.’
‘Can we stop feeling sorry for the creature?’ asked Errin. ‘It wasn’t exactly a wounded rabbit.’
‘You wait here,’ said the Nomad. ‘I’ll find horse.’
After the tribesman had gone, Sheera built up the fire. ‘It doesn’t matter that the beast was not at full strength, Errin. You still tackled it — and you pulled me clear of the talons with astonishing speed.’
He grinned at her. ‘I was rather pleased with that.’ He wanted to tell her about the belt, but thought better of it; it was pleasant to be seen in an heroic role. Looking at Sheera, he was struck by her similarity to her sister: the same wide eyes and full lips, the same piercing gaze. Sheera was taller, her hair shorter and more tightly curled, but there was no doubting the blood line.
‘What is wrong?’ she asked, as she saw his face change.
‘Nothing. Would you like something to eat?’
‘Not at the moment. I’m still a little queasy from the battle.’
‘It was brave of you to stand before the beast with just a burning branch,’ he said. ‘You looked very impressive there.’
‘I didn’t have time or space to use my bow. You showed great skill in charging your horse at it.’
‘I can’t claim too much credit for that; the poor animal was trying to stop and lost its footing.’ He looked away and silence fell between them. ‘Look…’ he said at last. ‘About Dianu…’
‘Let’s not talk about it,’ she said, her face hardening.
‘There are some things that must be said. I was a fool; I know that, and no amount of breast-beating will erase it. But I knew nothing of the danger she was in; I did not know you had Nomad blood.’
‘You killed her, Errin. Your arrow pierced her heart.’
He closed his eyes, then opened them to stare into the flames. ‘Yes,’ he agreed. ‘My arrow… but you do not know what it was like. I had a broken leg and was making my escape. I wanted to rescue her, but I could not get down from my horse. When I rode to the hilltop, she was being tied to a stake at the top of a pyre — ’
‘I don’t want to hear this!’
But Errin pushed on. ‘If I had reached her, I could not have freed her. She would either have burnt slowly to death or choked on the smoke. What would you have done, Sheera?’
‘All those people around her,’ she whispered. ‘She must have known many of them. She used to distribute gifts in Mactha — food and coin for the needy. Yet they cheered as she was led to the stake; we heard that in Pertia. And they screamed in rage when you robbed them of their sport. What makes people act like that? How could they be so cruel? So evil?’
He shook his head. ‘How can I answer? Some weeks ago a slave boy ran away after I had bought him as a gift for the Duke. I hunted him down, and when he had almost escaped I loosed an arrow into his back. Why? How can any man answer? He was mine; he disobeyed me; I watched him crawl into the forest to die alone. It’s been on my mind ever since. I cannot justify it — no more could any man present when Dianu died justify his passions.’
‘Are you sure the boy died?’
‘No, but the arrow went deep.’
For a while they sat in silence, then Sheera spoke again. ‘It is hard to believe how soon the world can change. I spent four years in Furbolg — attending school, enjoying feasts and dances and banquets. I even met the King. He was tall and not old, but his eyes were strange and cold. I did not like him, nor his new Knights. Many rumours sprang up about them. Some men said they were demons from another world; others claimed they were sorcerers who sacrificed living victims on a secret altar. Then the fear began — the arrests, the executions, the mobs chanting in the streets. I used to walk along the Perfumed Path at night — you recall it?’
‘Yes,’ he said. ‘A haunt for lovers. Roses and many other flowers lined the path all the way to the Royal Park.’
‘No one used it during my last year in Furbolg. Four women disappeared while walking it, two others were attacked and raped. It became a place of fear. And the murders and robberies! Not a day passed without word of some new outrage, but even that was not enough to concern the nobility. Then one evening at the palace everything changed. The King had ordered a special feast; we arrived late and saw that the palace hall was packed with beds and couches and everywhere people were rutting. The slave at the door told my uncle that no man was allowed to remain with his wife; all had to find other partners. We slipped away then, and that’s when my uncle sent me to Dianu and our plan to escape was formed.’
‘The King turned the palace into a brothel?’ exclaimed Errin. ‘And the nobles stood for it?’
‘Four who refused to take part were later accused of treachery. That’s when the King’s champion, Elodan, left his service and challenged the Red Knight, Gairbre. We were already on the road by then, but we heard of the fight.’
‘Yes,’ said Errin softly. ‘Cairbre told me of it. The world has thrown away its sanity.’
‘Not the whole world, Errin. Only the Gabala.’
‘Perhaps Cartain will raise an army strong enough?’
‘No, he will not,’ said Sheera fiercely. ‘Cithaeron is far away. And, anyway, there is already an army here. You have heard of Llaw Gyffes? Now is the time, Errin. Not in a year or ten years. Now!’
‘But the man is a peasant — you can’t be serious.’
‘A peasant? I would sooner be ruled by an honest peasant than a mad king. But his army would grow even faster if men like you were allied to him.’
Errin shook his head. ‘I have heard many stories of the legendary wife-killer, but I have never seen this army. What would it consist of? Killers, thieves, robbers? Would these put an end to King Ahak’s reign of terror — or add to it?’
‘When I was a child,’ said Sheera, ‘there was a fire on the estate. Our foresters set another blaze before it, burning all the ground in its path. The first fire was starved and died, and the land was safe. Within a few years you would never have known there had been two fires.’
Ubadai entered the cave. ‘No good,’ he said. ‘Horse bolted and I saw wolf tracks. We walk now.’
‘Back to Pertia?’ enquired Sheera softly.
‘No,’ said Errin. ‘We’ll find Llaw Gyffes.’
‘Better and better,’ grunted Ubadai.