Thick mist swirled in slow, heavy clouds on the chill
breeze, rising from the cold, standing water and scarcely
thicker mud of the swamp. Somewhere above the mist, the
sun crawled towards midday, burnishing the upper reaches
of vapor with a golden aura that was delicately beautiful
in its own way. All thirty of the mounted men were
liberally coated in mud, however, and the golden glow did
little to improve their tempers.
"It would be the Bogs," one of the trackers growled,
grimacing at the mounted troop's commander.
"Would you really prefer the Gullet?" the grizzled
horseman responded in an equally sour voice.
"Not really, Sir Yarran," the tracker admitted. "But at
least I've been down the Gullet before. Halfway, at
least."
Sir Yarran grunted a laugh, and so did most of his men.
Their last trip down the Gullet had not been a happy one,
but the men in this troop were not so secretly delighted
by at least one of its consequences. Yet the laughter
faded quickly, for like Sir Yarran, all of them were
unhappily certain that the mission which brought them to
the swamps this morning had been sparked by an effort to
undo that consequence.
Sir Yarran rose in his stirrups as if those extra few
inches of elevation could somehow help his sight pierce
the billowing fog. They didn't, and he growled a mental
curse.
"Well, lads," he said as he finally settled back into the
saddle, "I'm afraid we've no choice but to keep going for
at least a bit farther." He looked at one of his men and
pointed back over his shoulder the way they'd
come. "Trobius, go back and find Sir Kelthys and his men.
Tell him we're pushing on into the swamp." He
grimaced. "If he cares to join us, he'll be welcome, but
there's little point his wallowing about in there, unless
he's nothing better to do than freeze his arse off in
muddy water along with the rest of us."
"Aye, Sir Yarran." Trobius saluted, reined his horse
around, and went trotting off into the mist. Sir Yarran
contemplated the swamp ahead of them sourly for a few more
moments, then grunted resignedly.
"All right, lads," he said. "Let's be going. Who knows? We
might get lucky enough to actually find something to
track."
"Aye, Sir," the tracker acknowledged, and urged his horse
forward, picking a careful path deeper into the watery
muck. "And pigs may fly, too," he muttered to himself, and
Sir Yarran glanced at him. Fortunately, his voice had been
low enough Sir Yarran could pretend he hadn't heard him.
Which suited Sir Yarran just fine. Especially because he
was in complete agreement with the other man.
He watched the tracker and his two assistants making their
cautious way deeper into the treacherous footing, then
sighed and clucked gently to his own horse.
"And of course we won't be able to prove a thing."
Sir Yarran Battlecrow grimaced, then hawked noisily and
spat into the fire in disgust. It was a habit Sir Festian
Wrathson, Lord Warden of Glanharrow, had been trying to
break him of for years. Not because Festian disagreed with
the emotions which spawned it, but because Yarran did it
with so much energy.
At the moment, however, Festian felt no urge to reprimand
Yarran. If anything, he longed to emulate his marshal, the
commander of Glanharrow's armsmen. And whatever Festian
might long for, Yarran, at least, had earned the right to
express himself however he chose.
Steam oozed from the knight's rain-soaked tunic and
trousers. His graying blond hair was rough edged and
sodden, and although it was obvious he'd wiped down his
riding boots, they were still smeared with mud stains. His
sodden poncho was draped over the back of one of the
hall's chairs, radiating its own steam wisps before the
fire, and a servant was busy drying Yarran's cuirass in
one corner.
"No, we won't be," Festian said after a moment. "And
because we won't, I can't afford to go about making
accusations. Especially not about my neighboring lords."
"Aye, that's true enough, and I know it," Yarran agreed in
a heavy, resigned tone. "Still and all, though, Milord,
you and I both know, don't we?"
"Maybe we do, and maybe we don't," Festian replied. Yarran
gave him a skeptical look, and the lord warden waved one
hand. "Oh, I know what we both suspect, Yarran, but as you
say, it's not as if we had proof, is it?"
"No, Phrobus take it," Yarran acknowledged sourly.
"Then let's take it one step at a time and consider what
we do know for certain. For example, what direction were
they headed when you lost the trail?"
"Phrobus only knows," Yarran growled. A serving woman
entered the hall and handed him a steaming mug, and the
marshal's expression lightened perceptibly as he detected
the rich, strong scent of chocolate. It was an
extraordinarily expensive luxury on the Sothoii Wind
Plain, and the tough, grizzled warrior had a bigger sweet
tooth than any three of Glanharrow's children combined.
He smiled at the serving woman, accepted the mug, and
sipped with slow, sensual pleasure. Festian allowed him to
savor it for several seconds. Then he cleared his throat
rather pointedly, and Yarran lowered the mug and wiped a
froth of chocolate from his mustache with an almost
sheepish air.
"Beg pardon, Milord," he said. "Took me a bit by surprise,
that did."
"You've been working your arse off for me for weeks now,
Yarran," Festian said mildly. In fact, as he and Yarran
both knew, the other knight had been doing precisely what
Festian would once have been doing for the deposed Lord
Mathian. Not, as both of them knew, that Mathian would
have been rewarding anyone with hot chocolate for his
efforts.
"What I'm here for, Milord," Yarran said, which was as
close as either of them was ever likely to come to putting
their shared knowledge into words.
"Any road," the marshal continued after a moment, "whoever
it was started off headed southwest, but there's no damned
way that was where he was really going. Nothing that
direction but the Gullet, and not even a wizard could get
that many cattle down the Gullet." He shook his head. "No,
Milord, they started out that way, and I'm guessing they
meant to at least make us wonder if they'd headed down it.
Wanted us to think it was the Horse Stealers if they
could, like as not. But they turned another direction once
they hit the Bogs." He shrugged. "Can't prove any of that,
of course. We did our best to follow them, but there's too
much quicksand and too little solid ground to hold hoof
prints. I damned near lost three of my men before we gave
it up. I'd have kept going if we'd been able to find any
signs at all, but it's soupy enough in there at the best
of times. In the spring-especially one as rainy as this?"
He shook his head again. "No way at all to say what
direction they went."
"And whatever way they headed, there are altogether too
many places they can come out of the muck again," Festian
agreed sourly.
"Aye, Milord. That's true enough. But what sticks in my
mind is that it would take someone who knows the Bogs like
the back of his own hand to get a herd of cattle through
them."
Festian grunted in agreement. He knew what Yarran was
really getting at. "The Bogs" were a treacherous spread of
swamp, mud banks, and mire which stretched for miles south
and eastward from the narrow passage known as "the
Gullet." Once, centuries ago, a river had found its way
down the Escarpment, the towering side of the Sothoii Wind
Plain, to the grasslands below, through that passage. Then
some long forgotten earthquake had changed its course,
turning the gorge it had bitten out of the Escarpment's
forbidding wall into one of the very few avenues by which
the Sothoii and the barbarian hradani could get at one
another. It wasn't much of an avenue-more of a tortuous,
twisting alley, really-but it had served as an invasion
route either way, in its time.
Yet Yarran was correct when he said no one could possibly
get a herd of stolen cattle down the Gullet ... and that
only someone with an intimate knowledge of the terrain
could have threaded that same herd through the trackless
mud where the frustrated river had spread and flowed and
soaked to create the Bogs.
Which meant, almost certainly, that whoever had stolen the
cattle-and the sheep, and the horses, before them-came
from Glanharrow itself. Not that that was very much of a
surprise.
"With all due respect, Milord, and I know you don't want
to, but I think it's time you called on Baron Tellian for
help," Yarran said after several silent seconds. A heavier
gust of rain drummed on the hall's roof, and the flames on
the hearth danced.
"A lord is supposed to look after his own herds, just as
he's supposed to look after the well-being of his own
people," Festian said flatly.
"Aye, so he is," Yarran agreed with the stubborn deference
of a trusted henchman. "And meaning no disrespect, but
just what has that got to do with it?" Festian glared at
him, and the marshal shrugged. "Chew my head off if you
want, Milord, but you and I both know truth when it bites
us on the arse. And so does Baron Tellian, come to that.
He knew when he chose you to replace that arse-headed
idiot Redhelm that there'd be those as would do all they
could to see to it you fell flat on your face. Well,
that's what's happening now. I'd bet my best sword that
whoever ran those cattle off in the first place is one of
our own people. No one else'd know the Bogs well enough to
get a herd that size through 'em. But whoever he is, he's
got to have someone to take them off his hands when he
gets to t'other side. Now, I suppose it's possible he
could have some bent merchant who could dispose of them
for him for a partner. But it's a lot more likely one of
your fellow lords is waiting for him. Maybe we can't prove
it, but we both know it, and Baron Tellian's your liege
lord ... not to mention the one as dropped you into the
pot in the first place. And if another lord is behind
this, then like as not he's a close enough neighbor of
yours to make the Baron his liege, too. Or else he's
someone else's vassal," Yarran carefully named no
names, "in which case you've no choice but to appeal to
the Baron. So, either road, it seems to me, it's the
Baron's place to be sending help now that someone's
declared open war on you."
"Stealing cattle and horses is hardly 'open war,' Yarran,"
Festian objected, but it sounded weak, even to him. True,
there'd been no formal declaration of defiance or
hostilities, but among the Sothoii, herd-raiding and
lightning border forays were the traditional means of
striking at an enemy. Yarran only snorted with magnificent
emphasis, which was quite enough to make his own opinion
of Festian's objection clear, and the Lord Warden of
Glanharrow shrugged.
"Whatever it may be," he said, "Baron Tellian has enough
other problems on his plate right now without my adding
this one to it."
"Again, with all due respect, Milord, this is something as
is supposed to be landing on his plate. And I'm not the
only one who thinks so." Festian cocked an eyebrow, and it
was Yarran's turn to shrug. "Sir Kelthys thinks it's time,
as well."
"You've discussed this with Kelthys?" Festian asked
sharply, a thin flicker of anger dancing in his eyes for
the first time, and Yarran nodded.
"Wasn't as if I had a lot of choice about it, Milord," he
pointed out. "Being as how Deep Water backs right up on
the Bogs the way it does. Wouldn't have done for me to be
leading more than a score of mounted men across his land
without explaining to him just what we were up to."
"The thieves cut across Deep Water?" Festian demanded, his
surprise evident.
"No, of course not." Yarran snorted again. "I just said
that anyone who knows the Bogs well enough to give me the
slip in them has to be from around here, Milord. And
anyone from around here knows exactly what would happen to
anyone fool enough to try to take a herd of stolen cattle
through Sir Kelthys' lands." He shook his head. "No, I cut
across Deep Water to try to make up time on them. Did,
too. Just not enough.
"Anyway, he turned out a half-score of his own men to
help, not that it made much difference in the end. And he
spent most of our ride together discussing the raids and
their pattern with me."
"I see." Festian frowned unhappily, but much as he might
have liked to, he couldn't simply reject Yarran's advice
out of hand. Especially not if Sir Kelthys Lancebearer,
Baron Tellian's cousin, also thought it was time Festian
called upon his liege for assistance. If only it didn't
stick so sideways in his craw!
"Milord," Yarran said with the respectful insistence of
the man who had been Festian's senior lieutenant when
Festian had commanded Glanharrow's scouts for Lord
Mathian, "I know it's not something you want to be doing.
And I know pigs probably know more about politics than I
do. But it's plain as a pimple on Sharna's arse that
whoever is doing this is striking as much at Baron Tellian
as at you. I'm not saying whoever it is wouldn't be happy
enough to do anything he could to make you look unfit to
hold Glanharrow, because we both know that, even as stupid
as Redhelm was, there'll always be some as think he ought
to be sitting in that chair still. But there's bigger fish
to fry this time, and if they make you look unfit, then
they make him look unfit for having chosen you. That's my
opinion, anyway, and Sir Kelthys shares it. Which means
Baron Tellian won't be thanking you if you wait to call on
him until it's too late."
For a taciturn fighting man with a reputation for never
using two words when one would do the trick, Yarran did
have a way of getting his points across, Festian
reflected. And he wasn't saying anything Festian hadn't
already thought. It was just-
It's just that I'm too damned stubborn to ask for help
easily. But Yarran's right. If I can't solve this problem
on my own-and it seems I can't-and I wait too long to ask
the Baron for help, it will be too late. And then both of
us will be drowning in horse shit. "Well," he said the
mildly after a moment, "if you and Sir Kelthys both agree
so strongly, then I suppose there's not much point in my
arguing, is there?" Yarran had the grace to look
embarrassed, though it was obvious it took some effort on
his part, and Festian grinned crookedly.
"Finish your chocolate, Yarran. If you're so eager for me
to go hat in hand asking for Baron Tellian's assistance,
than I think you're the best choice to take the message to
him." Another gust of rain pounded on the hall's roof, and
Yarran grimaced at the sound.