16

Arvid’s black-clothed form seemed to melt into the shadows as they moved farther away from the stairway, where dim light came from above. Paks felt a tightness in her chest. She did not like dark underground places, and wondered for a moment why she had agreed to come. Ambros nudged her in the back. She waved a hand at him, and took another careful step. Another. Surely it was ridiculous to come on something like this with only six, one of them an untried junior yeoman, an eager girl who would be all too likely to do something silly trying to prove herself. Arvid signalled, a wave of his arm, and Paks moved lightly toward him. He was the scout, accustomed, he said, to noticing traps. Paks, the most experienced sword fighter, came second.

After her, Suli and Ambros together. Paks hoped the yeoman-marshal would be steadied by steadying the junior yeoman. Mal brought up the rear with Jori, a friend of his.

“Door,” said Arvid quietly in her ear. “I’ll try it. Hinges right. Swings out.” Paks flattened herself to the left of the door; she saw a gleam of teeth as Arvid smiled. He ran his hands over the door for a moment, then did something Paks could not see to the lock. A nod of satisfaction; he drew his own blade and slowly pulled the door open. Paks waited, ready to strike. Nothing happened. She craned her neck and looked. Even deeper blackness. A sour smell wafted out, a stench like old rotting leaves and bones. Arvid put his sword through the door. Nothing. With a shrug, he leaned around the frame, poking at the darkness as if it were a pillow.

“Light?” asked Ambros softly. He had come quite close.

“Not yet. It makes a target of us.”

“Yes, but we aren’t cats—”

“Quiet. Wait.” Arvid had told them their main danger would be haste. Make a noise, he had said, clatter around like a horse fair, and our quarry will be ready for us. Paks waited, trying to see into the darkness by force of will. Spots danced before her eyes. Gradually she found she could see a little better. The room ahead was clearly a room—all shades of darkness, but smaller than the banquet hall above them. She tried to see if anything lurked in it. It seemed as if something—a pile of something—obscured the floor, but without light she could not tell.

“Go now,” said Arvid, in Paks’s ear. Together they moved under the lintel, separating at once on the inside to flatten against the inner wall. The others waited outside.

In here the smell was stronger. Paks wrinkled her nose, trying to decide what it was. It smelled—meatier, she decided. Rotting straw, bones, meat, and something like the inside of a dirty boot. She shook her head, trying to clear it, but the smell seemed stronger every second. Arvid sniffed, a tiny sound she could hear clearly.

“That smell—” she heard from outside. She thought it was Mal.

“Quiet,” said Ambros. Paks stood still, trying to hear anything past the pulse in her ears.

“We’ll go forward five paces,” said Arvid quietly, “and then if nothing happens, we’ll try a light.”

Paks heard the scrape of his boot on the stone flags as he took the first step, and moved with him. One step. Two, three—and she stumbled over something, staggering on soft, springy, uneven footing. A yelp got out before she closed her throat; Ambros behind her scraped flint on steel at once. As the spark caught, that little light showed that she’d caught her foot on the edge of a pile of garbage. Dirty straw, old clothes, bones chewed not-quite-clean, a broken pot—she started to laugh with relief. Ambros’s candle seemed brighter than she’d expected. She turned to Arvid; his eyes were wide with surprise.

“Just trash,” she said, waving her sword at the heap. It was half her height, and easily three times her length. “They must have—”

Part of the pile heaved up—and up—a vast hairy shoulder topped by an equally vast hairy face. A rheumy eye glared at her from under shaggy brows. Then the mouth opened on a double row of very sharp teeth. By reflex, Paks struck at the arm that swiped down from the darkness. Her sword bit into it, slicing deep, but the arm’s strength nearly cost her the grip. A deep bellow split the air, and the entire pile shuddered. Paks nearly lost her footing as the creature trampled its bed and attacked.

She had no time to wonder what it was. Taller, broader, than any human, it had a roughly human shape. Heavy pelt over thick skin—it turned Ambros’s first stroke—long arms ending in clawed hands, and a surpassingly ugly face—Paks noticed these without trying to classify them. Its deep-voiced bellows shook the air around them.

“Get back, Ambros!” cried Arvid. “Keep the light—this thing can see in the dark.”

Ambros made a noise, but moved back. Suli had come up beside Paks, and was doing a creditable job with her sword—except that she couldn’t penetrate the thick hide. Paks had wounded the creature several times, while dodging raking blows from its claws, but it was still strong. Arvid, she saw in a quick glance, was trying to attack its flank, but it moved too fast—he couldn’t seem to get a killing blow in. Paks had just begun to wonder where Mal and his friend were, when she saw him working his way around the creature to its back. Once there, he swung his big axe in a mighty arc and sank it into the creature’s back. It screamed, a hoarse, high-pitched sound, deafening in that space.

“The axe does it,” he yelled. “It’s got—” But the creature heaved backwards; Paks heard the axe-haft smack into something, and Mal grunted. She jumped forward, unsteady on the piled trash, and sank her sword deep in its belly. Now it lurched forward, bending. She dodged. Arvid got a stroke in on its left arm. Mal pulled the axe out of its back and swung again, this time higher. It went to its knees, moaning. Paks aimed a blow at the neck, and blood spurted out, drenching her arm. Still writhing, it sank to a heap, its eyes filming.

“So much for silence and caution,” said Arvid tartly, when they had caught their breath. Mal and Suli had lit candles now as well, and they all took a close look at what they had killed. Half again as tall as Paks, and heavily built, it was like nothing she had ever seen.

“What is it?” she asked, wiping the blood off her hands and face. The blood had an odd smell, and tasted terrible. Ambros shook his head. Arvid looked at her.

“I’m not sure, Paks, but it might be a hool. I’ve never seen one myself, but I’ve heard.”

“A hool?”

“Big, tough, stupid, dirty, likes to lair underground. If you can imagine a solitary giant orc—”

“I thought hools were water giants,” said Ambros.

Arvid shrugged. “Maybe I’m wrong. Whatever it is, it’s dead. And we have just announced ourselves to the entire underground.”

“I never did think trying to sneak in was a good idea,” said Ambros. “Gird is not subtle.”

Arvid raised one brow, and smiled. “No. That’s why I’m not a Girdsman. But don’t worry—now you’ll have every chance for a suicidal frontal assault.”

Paks had been poking gingerly through the trash heap that the creature had laired on. A copper armband gleamed; she picked it up. “Look. This is human-size.”

“Hmm. Not worth much,” said Arvid.

“No, but—I wouldn’t have thought the robbers would throw it away.”

“That’s true. I—” Suddenly he stopped. They had all heard the sound: a rhythmic pounding, not loud, but distinct. Paks looked around. In flickering candlelight, she could just see a doorway across from the way they’d come in, and another door, closed and barred, centered the right-hand wall. Otherwise the room seemed empty.

“It’s that door—the closed one,” said Mal. He wrenched his axe free of the creature’s backbone and started for it. Paks got there first, sword drawn. Arvid and Mal levered the heavy bars up and threw them aside. Then they pulled the door open.

Candlelight showed a small room, hardly more than a cell. A gnome, one shoe off, stood poised by the door; his shoe was in his hand, where he’d been pounding the door. Another gnome lay on the bare stone floor, covered in cloaks.

The standing gnome nodded stiffly and put his shoe back on. Then he addressed Paks in gnomish. She shook her head, and he frowned, then spoke in clipped accented Common.

“It is that you lead this rescue? Or do you claim us prisoners?”

“I—” Paks looked sideways at Arvid. He spoke.

“Lady Paksenarrion commanded us for the capture of the robbers, and now we have come to see what else hides in this keep.”

The gnome bowed from the waist, and met Paks’s eyes as he stood upright. “It shall be that you have the reward of the Aldonfulk, lady. For this indeed shall value be given. It is that our partner of Lyonya is eaten by that monster, true?”

“We haven’t seen him,” said Paks, thinking of the arm-ring with a shudder. “Is that what you think happened?”

“It took him. It seemed hungry. We heard cries. We could see nothing; I will not say what happened when I have not knowledge, but that is logical.”

“Is your friend hurt?” The gnome on the floor had not moved.

“Only slightly—he was hit by arrow of robbers. He sleeps to gain strength.”

Paks was surprised by the gnome’s composure. Despite days of imprisonment in a dark cell, the death of one companion and the wounds of another, the gnome showed no distress. He turned to the other gnome, and spoke loudly in gnomish. Paks could not understand a word of it. She looked around to see if the others did, but they looked as blank as she felt. The gnome on the floor stirred, and opened his eyes.

“Surely you are hungry or thirsty,” said Paks, counting how many days they’d been imprisoned. “We have water and food.”

The response was less than she’d expected; the unwounded gnome nodded and came forward. “It is not so bad as you thought. The robbers brought food the first day or so. They fed the creature something too. Then they were gone. Then we had nothing. You will take us back to Brewersbridge?”

Paks handed him her water flask; the gnome uncapped it carefully and carried it to the other, who drank a few swallows. Then the first gnome drank. “We need not so much food as you,” he said, returning the flask. “If you take us now—”

“But we haven’t found the priest,” said Ambros.

“Priest?” asked the gnome, with no change of expression.

“We believe that a servant of Achrya is nearby—perhaps deep in this place—and directed the robbers.”

“Oh.” The gnomes looked at each other. “It is a matter for humans. We are not daskdusky, to search after the webspinner’s lair. If return to Brewersbridge, the return of your favor will be granted.”

“We might as well,” said Arvid. “We’ve lost all chance of surprise.”

“And we can’t leave these behind us,” said Paks. “They can’t defend themselves, with one of them wounded, and weakened as they are. We should get them to safety.”

“I agree,” said Mal. He had a large swelling bruise across his forehead. Paks realized that the axe-haft must have hit him on the face. “I don’t know as I can fight as good as most days.” Ambros looked at him in surprise, then concern. His voice seemed slurred.

“Will your friend need to be carried?” asked Paks.

The gnome bowed again, and gave Paks a small tight smile. “It is generous of the lady to think of that. If it is possible, he should not walk so far.”

In the end, they came back to Brewersbridge that same evening, with the two gnomes alive and well, and clear evidence of the human trader’s death. Ambros and Mal hacked off the creature’s right hand and an ear as proof of what they’d found. The gnomes took rooms at The Jolly Potboy—they were well known enough that Hebbinford trusted their credit. Paks, her clothes still stained with blood, found Suli dogging her every step.

“Did I—I mean, I couldn’t get through the hide, but did I do all right otherwise? I didn’t scream, or anything—”

Paks felt tired. “No. You did fine, Suli—I said that—”

“Yes, but—you are going back, aren’t you? You’ll let me come? And I can take your clothes, now, and get Sevri to wash them—”

“No!” It came out harsher than she meant it, and Suli looked worried. Not frightened, Paks noticed, but worried.

“But—”

“Sevri has her own duties—she’s not a washing maid. I’ll do it; any soldier learns to keep her own gear clean.” Paks could see that this was not pleasant news to Suli. She nodded, remembering her own feelings during training. “I told you before, Suli—being a warrior’s not what you thought. Most of it is like this—cleaning gear, and keeping weapons in trim, and practice. If you don’t do it yourself, you can’t be sure it’s done right.”

The girl nodded, and leaned against the wall, evidently planning to stay until she was tossed out.

“Your own sword, for instance,” said Paks severely. “Have you inspected it yet? Is it clean? Have you taken care of any nicks or dents? It’s the grange’s sword—you should return it in perfect condition.”

Suli reddened, and pulled it from the scabbard—sticky with drying blood and hair.

“Go clean that,” said Paks. “When you’ve got all the blood off, then polish it, and clean the scabbard. If you leave all that muck in the scabbard, then—”

“But how?” asked Suli. “It’s inside, and—”

Paks took the scabbard and looked. Unlike hers, this was a simple wood casing, pegged in several places and glued along the edges. The upper end was notched for attachment to a belt.

“You’re lucky. This is all wood. Take some wet grass or sedge—sedges are better—and tie them to a limber switch, and scrub inside with that. Then run clean water in and out of it. That should do. Set it in a cool place to dry—don’t put the sword back inside, or it’ll rust. If it smells clean tomorrow, you’re done. Otherwise you may have to take it apart.”

“Seems a lot of trouble, just to get a bloodstain off,” grumbled Suli. Paks glared at her, sure now of her ground.

“Trouble! You don’t know what trouble is, until you leave something to rot in your scabbard, and then nick yourself with dirty steel.” She remembered the surgeons talking about wound fever, and poisoned weapons. “It’s the way some tribes of orcs poison weapons, Suli. Store ’em in rotting flesh and blood.” She was glad to see the girl turn green and turn to go without further argument. “Check with Ambros at the grange later this evening—you’ll need to pick up another scabbard, and he can tell you where and when to meet us.”

“Yes, Paks,” said Suli, subdued.

Paks had just finished cleaning up, with her wet clothes hanging behind the kitchen, and her wet hair still chilly on her head, when Hebbinford came to tell her the gnomes wanted a word with her.

“Why?” she asked.

“Gird knows,” he said. “Being as it’s gnomes, it’s some trading matter, I’d say. Remember that they’re as full of pride as bees of sting—and as quick with it, too. They don’t like jokes, and they don’t like someone misjudging them on their size. Gnomes see everything as exchange—good for good, and blow for blow. They don’t do favors, but they’re perishing fair, if you can understand their idea of fair. And they never forget anything, to the ends of the world.”

“Oh.” Paks hoped they would understand ordinary courtesy as courtesy.

Both gnomes were seated before the fire in one of Hebbinford’s private rooms when Hebbinford announced her. One jumped up and bowed. Paks made a sketchy bow in return. She thought she could see a gleam of satisfaction in that flat dark eye.

“Master Hebbinford if you would bring ale.” The gnome gestured to a chair, and Paks sat; he returned to his own seat. His speech lacked the pauses and music of human language; Paks found it hard to follow, even though the words were pronounced correctly. “Is it that you were hired for our rescue?”

“No,” said Paks, “not exactly.”

“Then this rescue was in hope of reward?”

“No—what is it?”

“That is what I try to find out. For what service were you hired, if not for our rescue?”

Paks wondered how much she should say of the Brewersbridge Council’s affairs. “Sir—pardon, if I do not know the correct address—” He took her up at once.

“Lady, it is our mistake. We thought you would not care to be precise. I am Master-trader Addo Verkinson Aldonfulk, sixth son of my father’s house: the polite address in Common would be Master-trader Addo Aldonfulk, or Master Addo if in haste. This my companion is journeyman-trader Ebo Gnaddison Gnarrinfulk, the fourth son of my father’s third sister: he should be styled Journeyman Ebo. And thine own naming?”

“Master-trader Addo—” Paks got that far before losing track. The gnome nodded anyway.

“That will do.”

“—I am Paksenarrion Dorthansdotter, of Three Firs—”

“Three Firs is thy clan?”

“No, Master-trader Addo; it is the place of my father’s dwelling.” Paks found her own speech becoming both stilted and formal.

“Ah. We know that some humans have no clans.” He paused as Hebbinford himself returned with a large flagon of ale and three tankards. “Be welcome to ale as the guest of Aldonfulk, Paksenarrion Dorthansdotter; no obligation is thine for partaking of this gift.”

Paks stared, then caught her wits back. “I thank you, Master-trader Addo.” She took the tankard he offered, and sipped cautiously. “You asked of my employment, sir. The Council of Brewersbridge has, as you may know, a policy against idle swordsmen in the town.”

The gnome nodded. “An excellent policy. Human towns are too lawless as it is and human vagabonds cause trouble. We allow no masterless humans in the gnome kingdoms.”

Paks reddened, but went on. “Master-trader Addo, the Council examined me, and decided that I might stay some time, but they asked a favor.”

“Favor! What is a favor?”

She remembered Hebbinford’s warning. “Sir, my—my vows are to another; I am traveling from Aarenis to the far north.” That seemed safe enough. The gnome relaxed in his chair. “But they asked my aid in finding the hiding place of a band of robbers—the same who attacked you—and asked that I lead a force against them if I could find them.”

“And what pay did they offer for this?”

“Well—that I could stay longer than they would otherwise allow, and the use of a horse, and a share of goods recovered from the hideout, if there were any.”

“Hmmph.” The gnome chattered in gnomish with his companion. Paks could not tell how old they were, or if the journeyman were younger than the master. They had earth-brown, unwrinkled faces, and thick dark hair. Addo turned back to Paks. “It seems little payment for an uncertain task. How many days were you bound to stay and work at it?”

“No time was set. But I had money enough, and reason to dislike brigands.”

“Hmm. And after our caravan was taken did they say aught about rescue?”

“No, Master-trader Addo. It was thought you had been killed with the others. One man escaped to tell of the attack. Many bodies were found.”

“I see. Why then were you in the keep? To look for goods?”

“No. The robbers we captured said that someone else took over the goods. Ambros, the yeoman-marshal, thinks it is a priest of Achrya. Arvid Semminson says the goods are being sold at a distance.”

“And you did not expect to find us.”

“No, sir. But we were glad to find any that had survived.”

Another conversation in gnomish. Paks finished the ale in her tankard, and thought about pouring another. But she felt constrained to wait until it was offered. Finally Addo turned to her again.

“If you did not come and search the keep would anyone else have come?”

“No, Master-trader Addo. Most people around here think it is bad luck.”

“Superstition. Luck is a fallacy of humans; things either are or are not. That creature who ate our companion—was it dangerous to armed men?”

“Yes, sir. It was very large, and fought well; it took several of us to kill it.”

“It is true you command this force?”

Paks frowned. “I would not want to mislead you, sir. I was asked to command, and did command, the force which killed and captured the robbers themselves. Today’s foray was not entirely my idea—yeoman-marshal Ambros insisted that it must be made at once. But because I have experience, I was at the head of the party.”

Addo shook his head. “Even among humans, one must take command, and be responsible for all—I ask again if that was you or another. If another who would it be?”

“I—in that way, sir, you could say I commanded.” Paks thought it was not too great a boast—they had followed her orders, such as they were.

“You are not boastful as many human fighters are,” he commented; she wondered if he could read her thoughts. “It is important to know who commands. It is this person the clans owe thanks to.” He took a ring off his finger, and reached out to her. “At this time we have been robbed; we have nothing. But this is in earnest of your just claim on Aldonfulk and Gnarrinfulk; it shall be redeemed fairly, on my word as Master-trader.” Paks took the ring; it was black, like iron, and heavy. She nodded, wondering what to say.

“I thank you, Master-trader Addo Aldonfulk—and Journeyman Ebo.”

“It is but right. You had no obligation; you had not been hired for this task. I ask your trust that this will be redeemed.”

“Master-trader Addo, you have that trust. But I would free anyone from such captivity—”

“Oh?”

“It is right—”

“You have an obligation to a god? Are you sworn to such deeds, then?” He looked almost as if he might ask for the ring back.

“No, sir,” said Paks. “But I serve the gods of my father’s house, and they oppose evil.”

“Umph. That is well, to stand with tradition. And such belief does not interfere with our owing. Keep the ring, Paksenarrion Dorthansdotter. You returned our lives.”

“It was my pleasure to do so.” Paks sat a moment; the gnomes were silent. “Would you,” she ventured, “be my guest for another flagon of ale? With—with no obligation?” Both gnomes nodded.

“We would not willingly owe thee more,” said Addo, “but it is mannerly of thee to offer. We will be thy guests.”


Their brush with death had not discouraged Ambros at all. He insisted that they go again the next day. Mal grunted; he was purple from hairline to jaw where the axe-haft had caught him, and he breathed noisily.

“I wouldn’t have said it before, yeoman-marshal, but I’m still head-thick from this, and I don’t trust my speed. A thick eye’s bad enough in daylight.”

“Then you can stay,” said Ambros tartly. “I’ve other yeomen.”

Mal sighed loudly. “By Gird’s arm, Ambros, I’m willing enough, but—”

“Mal, I can’t wait. I can’t. Something bad is going on here—I have to deal with it.”

“Ambros, we did well by scouting around before attacking the robbers,” said Paks. “Why not look for the place where the goods are moving out? That might be a better way in.” She was thinking of the tunnel at Rotengre.

“No.” Ambros shook his head stubbornly. “It takes too long—let the priest think we were frightened back by that monster. It’s a door-guard, I imagine—”

“Certainly so,” said Arvid.

“Then, when he knows we’ve killed it but have gone away, he may be careless for a space. A short space, in which we must strike.”

Arvid looked at him curiously. “Are you angry, yeoman-marshal, that I bade you stay back with the light?”

“I was,” said Ambros frankly. “Then I realized that you had to have light to fight. This time we’ll let another carry the flint—and another be prepared to light candle or torch for us as it’s needed. Now—to plans.”


This time, the stench from the open door nearly turned Paks’s stomach. The dead creature already swarmed with vermin—in the light of the candles, a flurry of rats scuttered away, squeaking. Beyond, the open doorway gaped. Again, Paks and Arvid were in the lead. Ambros had found six yeomen to come with them, including Mal. Two of them carried lighted candles. Suli followed Paks closely.

Beyond the empty doorway, a passage sloped downhill, its rough stone floor heavy with dust churned by many feet. Paks could see and hear nothing. She glanced at Arvid.

“Let me lead,” he said quietly. “Stay close, but don’t pass me, and be ready to stop on my signal. It’s the very place for some trap.” He stepped forward. Paks waited until he was three paces ahead, and then followed. The passage went on for twenty paces—twenty more—then Arvid stopped. Paks caught his hand signal and froze in her tracks. Suli bumped her from behind. The others’ footsteps seemed loud. Then silence, as they all stood still. Arvid was touching the side walls lightly. He looked back at Paks, and gestured her forward—one step. She took it. He pointed at the floor. She could see nothing, until he pointed again. A slight ridge in the dust, a ripple she would never have noticed. Where the feet had passed it, she could see an edge of stone.

“It’s the trigger,” he said softly. “If someone steps on that, then—” he pointed up. “That will fall.” In the dimness overhead, Paks could make out a dark slit, and shining points. “A portcullis. It probably makes a noise, as well. There should be a safety block on one side, though, if they carry heavy goods through here. Ah-h.” Paks could not see what he did, but a small block of stone suddenly slid out of the wall a handsbreadth. “That should do it. We might want to come out this way in a hurry. Meanwhile, make sure no one steps on the trigger stone.”

Paks passed this information along, and everyone stepped carefully over the ridge. Arvid had gone on. He disarmed another such trap thirty paces farther on. “I expect,” he said quietly to Paks, “that both would close together, and open arrow-slits in the walls as well. But we shall hope not to find out.” After that, Paks kept her eyes roving on all sides, trying to spot traps—but she missed the next, after the passage turned and dipped steeply. Arvid halted at the top of the steepening ramp.

“Now this,” he said, “may be a chute trap.”

“What?”

“If you step on the trigger of a chute trap,” he said, “it tips up and dumps you in someone’s pot—or prison cell. It’s the same. We’re meant to go on—but you don’t see footprints in that dust, do you?”

“No—but it’s been disturbed—”

“Umm. More like something’s been dragged on it. They may use it for the caravan goods—saves carrying. I’d rather arrive on my feet. We need another door.”

Paks could see nothing but stone-walled passage. Arvid went over every stone with his long fingertips. The others fidgeted; Paks shushed them. Finally he tapped one section of wall and smiled. “This is the entrance. The trouble is that I don’t know what’s on the other side. They may have a guard right there—in which case, we’re in trouble. It may be trapped to sound an alarm—I can’t tell. But I judge it’s a safer way down than that—” He nodded at the chute.

“Well—we have to try something,” said Paks. “Can you tell which way it opens?”

“No. I don’t think it will rotate, like an ordinary door. It should either come forward or sink in, and then slide sideways. I can’t tell which.” He looked at her, challenging. Paks was determined to figure it out for herself.

“Well, then—you’re the one who can open it. I’ll cover you, on your left side. The rest of you move three paces back and stay flat against this wall—you won’t be hit by arrows, if there’s an archer, and you can see how it works. Shield the candles with your hands, in case of a strong draft. Anything else?” She looked at Arvid. He shook his head.

“You’ve a feel for this, lady,” he said.

She heard a click as he worked the mechanism. The stone before him sank back; faint light came through the gap. Soundlessly the stone slid to the left. Behind it was a landing; stairs went down to the left, where the light brightened, and up to the right. Across the landing was an alcove; four crossbows hung from pegs. Paks moved quickly through the opening, and looked both ways. Nothing. She signed to Arvid, who nodded and motioned the others in. He did something to the touchstone lock, and murmured that he hoped he’d jammed it open. His eyes slid to the crossbows. Paks quickly cut their strings. The two quivers of bolts she simply took and tied to her belt.

Down toward the light they crept, stair by stair. Halfway down, Paks could see that a passage led away ahead and another to the right. She motioned those behind her to the right-hand wall of the stair. Now she could see a door, closed, at the foot of the stairs to the left. Arvid stayed in the lead, one stair before her. At the foot, he stopped a long moment to scan the passage ahead and the foot of the stair itself. The forward passage ended in another closed door not twenty paces away, heavy wood bound with iron. Neither hinges nor bars showed on this side. The light they had seen came from torches in brackets on both sides of the passage: four ahead, and obviously more to the right. The flame-tips bent toward the left-hand door, and even on the stairs Paks could feel the draft that kept the air fresh.

Arvid put the tip of his sword past the corner. Nothing happened. Very slowly he eased his face to the corner. Paks waited, feeling her heart race. He drew back, and motioned her back a step. Then he spoke softly in her ear. “It goes twenty-thirty paces, then turns left. Wide enough for four fighters. Torch every four paces. Mark on floor, good for bow.”

“Run it,” suggested Paks.

“Only way,” he agreed. “Got to be quiet and fast.” Paks did not see how they could all be fast and silent, but she told the others. Ambros and another yeoman moved up beside her; she told Suli to stay in the second rank.

They started off at a quick jog, as quietly as possible. Paks saw the pale stripes on the floor, four of them, and stepped over the first. Then she heard a noise from somewhere ahead, and leaped into full speed, the others with her. Four crossbowmen appeared at the far end of the passage; the first flight of crossbow bolts whirred by. Paks heard a yelp from behind; something clicked on her helmet. Behind them four more, shooting even as the first four dropped their bows and leaped forward with short-swords in hand. Paks did not hesitate; it would be suicide to stop in that bare passage. She reached the first swordsmen before they were set in position; Arvid and Ambros were hardly behind her, and they forced the line back into the others. Now all eight defenders had dropped their bows.

Paks had never faced a short-sword formation with a longsword. She found herself fighting as if she had her Company weapon. At least they didn’t have shields—she smiled as her sword went home in one of them. He folded over, to lie curled on the floor. The man behind thrust at her, and she raked his arm. She noticed that Arvid, beside her, had downed another. The first man down tried to stab at her legs; Paks edged by, and Suli got him in the throat. Paks and Arvid were one step ahead of Ambros and the yeoman. Paks was beginning to think they might get through without too much trouble when four more men appeared.

“Blast!” said Arvid. “I’d hoped this was the first wave.”

Paks said nothing, fighting her way forward a step at a time. She was beginning to use the longsword more freely, with effect. Another man went down before her, and those behind seemed less eager to engage. But the noise in the passage was considerable. Ambros was yelling Girdish slogans, as was the yeoman; each had now defeated his man, and they were back in line. The clash of steel rang from the walls.

Then the torches went out as if they’d been dipped in water. Paks felt something rake across her torso; the mail held. She thrust hard ahead of her, and heard someone grunt, then sigh. She shook the weight off her blade and thrust again. Nothing.

“Arvid?” she asked.

“Here.” His voice beside her was calm. She wasn’t. Ambros cursed, off to Arvid’s right. Paks could hear heavy breathing in front of them somewhere. She moved forward a step, and her boot landed on something soft and moving. She kicked, hard, and stepped back.

“Light,” said Ambros testily. She could hear the scrape of flint and steel, but saw no spark.

“You want light, servant of Gird?” came a silky voice out of the dark ahead. “I thought you Girdsmen claimed the knowledge of lightspells.”

Paks tried again to move toward the voice, but Arvid grabbed her arm. She froze in place. She could sense that he was fumbling in his cloak. As her eyes adjusted to the darkness, she could tell that somewhere around the bend torches were still burning—vague shapes stood out against that dim glow. She could not tell how many. If they were reloading crossbows—if they had spears—we’re crazy to stand here, she thought, like sheep in a chute. With a wild yell, she jumped forward, a standing leap that took her to the first of the dark shapes. She heard Arvid’s curse, the others jumping after her. Her sword clashed against another, suddenly glowing blue. She heard other weapons striking, and pressed her own opponent hard by instinct, since she could scarcely see. She felt a blow on her shoulder, and another on the ribs. Her own blade flickered, a dancing blue gleam that lit only its target. Something raked her free hand, burning like fire or ice. She shook it, still fencing.

Their surprise attack brought them around the turn of the passage, over bodies now crumpled beneath the fighters. Ahead was a short hall with a door to the right. Against the golden glow from that door stood a tall, slender robed figure. They were within four paces of it, when that same smooth voice spoke, a word Paks had not heard before. Her muscles slackened, as if she had been hit in the head; she nearly dropped her sword. Arvid fell back a pace. Even Ambros stopped where he was, and dropped the tip of his blade. The defenders leaped forward.

“Gird!” cried Ambros, in that instant. Paks felt her body come alive again; she covered Arvid’s side with a desperate lunge, and took a glancing blow on her helmet. Suli pushed past Arvid, throwing a quick glance at Paks, and lunged at the man before her. Paks had time to notice that she was indeed quick, and quite good. Then the defenders retreated past the door, and turned to run. Paks faced the doorway. It was empty.

Within, the steady glow of lamplight revealed a chamber hung with rich tapestries in brilliant colors. In the center of the chamber stood a handsome young man in long black velvet robes edged with black fur. He smiled at them, and held out empty hands.

“Don’t you think you’re being discourteous?” he asked. His voice was mellow as old ale. “It is friendlier to announce oneself, don’t you think?”

“You—!” began Ambros. Paks noticed Suli edging forward and plucked at her sleeve. Suli turned, frowning, but obeyed when Paks gestured her back. “Spawn of Achrya,” Ambros went on. The man laughed easily.

“Alas, young sir yeoman-marshal of Gird, I am not Achrya’s spawn—if I were, you might have found another welcome. ’Tis true I have done her some service, but—what is that to thee?”

“I am the yeoman-marshal—”

“Yes, of Brewersbridge. This is not Brewersbridge. This is my keep, and you have broken in, attacking and killing my men—and you are not even the Marshal. It’s not your grange.”

“It is. It was left in my care. And you—corrupting men, robbing caravans, killing and looting—Gird’s teeth, it’s my business!” Ambros took a step forward, toward the doorway.

“So you really think a yeoman-marshal of Gird is a match for me? Or are you relying on your muscle-bound women for protection?” Suli lunged forward, and Paks caught her in the midriff with a stiff elbow. Suli gasped, and Paks spoke over her shoulder.

“Don’t be a fool, he’s trying to anger us. Stay back.”

The man looked directly at her. Something about his gaze warned her, and she dropped her eyes to his neck. “My,” he said sweetly, “a wise head rules that magic sword. Perhaps you are not what you seem, eh? I had heard of a strange lady swordfighter in Brewersbridge—a veteran of Phelan’s company, they said, who left because she would not see evil done. Is that you, then?” Paks fought back a surge of rage that roared in her ears and threatened to haze her vision. “Defeated that elven mage, and freed the elfane taig, that’s what I heard. Near enough a paladin, I should think—not a Girdsman yet, what a shame—if, that is, you defeat me. Do you think to defeat me, pretty one?”

This too Paks ignored, keeping her attention on his neck. She thought how she would like to sink her sword in it. But she heard what he said. Near enough a paladin? The thought beckoned, like a finger in the mist. But Arvid spoke up, having regained his position beside her.

“You, sir, seem to have some power of enchantment, or why do we stand here speaking to you? For me, I would see your blood on that handsome rug, and put an end to such delay.” He moved forward a handsbreadth and stopped, as if he’d hit a wall.

“Enchantments? Yes, indeed. And, since you’ve robbed me of robbers and guards alike, I’m in need of servants. You, I believe, will do nicely. And the women; Achrya will be pleased if I interfere in the growth of a paladin of Gird. I hope, indeed, to convert all of you. How pleasant it will be to have spies in the grange of Brewersbridge.”

“No! By Gird!” Ambros leaped forward, sword high. Paks shook herself, suddenly alert to her musings, and followed him. She was not surprised to see a sword appear in the man’s hand, a dagger in the other. Ambros met the sword with his own, narrowly missing a dagger thrust. Paks came in on the Achryan’s sword side. She turned his blade and thrust. Her blade seemed to stick in his robes; she jerked it free with an effort. Meanwhile his blade had raked her shoulder. She could feel the links of mail along that track.

No one else came to join them. As the priest of Achrya turned, Paks had time for a quick glance back. The others stood motionless, clearly unable to break free. Meanwhile the priest fought superbly, sweeping away their blades again and again. It seemed impossible to wound him. Every thrust that Paks thought went home caught in his robes, and he fought on unhindered. She did not notice that he worked them toward a corner of the room where dark blue velvet rose behind a carved black chair. He backed, backed again, turned, and grabbed for the chair arm. Paks, hearing a rustle above, jerked back and looked upward. A tangled mass of black webbing fell down, catching her off-balance. Where it touched her clothes, they turned black, charring. She slashed at the cords, her sword hissing as it sliced them. But they were tough and sticky; she could not free herself quickly.

Ambros had jumped forward, a long lunge at the priest, and the web caught only one foot. Before the priest could strike, he had cut himself free. Now they fought behind the chair, great sweeps of sword parting the air and ringing together.

“You might as well quit,” the priest said. “You can’t win now—two of you couldn’t defeat me.”

“Gird’s grace,” said Ambros between clenched teeth. “I won’t quit—I will kill you.”

“I think not, boy,” said the priest with a smile. He made a gesture toward Ambros’s face, and a length of something gray flicked at him. Ambros blinked but kept fighting. “You’re a stubborn fool, boy—are you hunting your death?” Paks struggled with the web, hardly aware of the Company curses she shouted. She could see blisters rising on Ambros’s face, like the mark of a fiery whip. The priest spared her a look. “You won’t get clear of that in a hurry, sweetling. ’Tis made of Achrya’s own webs. As is this—” He lashed once more at Ambros’s face. The yeoman-marshal screamed, one hand clawing at his face. “You see, boy, what you drive me to? Why will you not submit?”

Paks could see that the blow had caught his eye, but somehow Ambros had kept hold of his sword. He fought on, with less skill now, his movements jerky. Paks sawed frantically at the web, cursing again when it touched her bare skin; it burned like fire. The priest said something, a string of words she did not know, and the web moved, shifting around her, so that the cut strands were out of reach. Ambros called to her.

“Paks—call on Gird! With me—” he gave a sharp cry of pain as the priest’s gray whip touched him again.

Paks opened her mouth to say something else, and found herself yelling, “By the power of Gird Strongarm, and the High Lord, and all the gods of right—” Ambros, too, was yelling, holding his Girdish medallion now with one hand, as he flung himself on the priest. Light flared around them; Paks could hardly see, in the flurry of movement, what happened. Then the web lay still around her, and nothing moved in the heap of robes behind the chair. And the rest of the party, suddenly freed, ran forward full of questions and noise.

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