Spindle and Dagger - J. Anderson Coats Page 0,75

THEY DO IT FOR DAYS and days. Vale after vale. They burn and smash and hamstring.

They kick in doors.

I’m falling behind the column. The lads are shapes moving through the trees, blurry arcs of metal and glowing firebrands and endless, relentless marching. It’s not a chaos for fleeing through. It’s a chaos for living through.

This has every mark of a Norman raid. Cadwgan will hear of it soon. He’ll call up his warband. He’ll march to drive the enemy out, and he’ll find —

Vale after vale. The sky turns gray and then black.

Rhys appears. He’s got soot beneath his fingernails and his hair is just starting to curl again at the ends.

“I’m all right,” I mutter. “Go on with the others.”

He doesn’t, though. We move together as whole vales burn. He is careful not to touch me, but we are shoulder to shoulder nonetheless.

Then one morning Einion penteulu doesn’t give the order for the lads to march drawn and ready. Instead he and Owain stand together in the cold chill of dawn, deep in discussion. They turn when Rhys slants through the trees at a dogtrot, out of breath, and heads straight for Owain.

This is it. Cadwgan is somewhere close, and they’ll be setting up the ambush. None of them will be watching what I’m doing.

“Can’t be,” Owain growls. “We are playacting a Norman raid. Not a man of those bastards would dare the real thing.”

“Not unless he thought he could get away with it,” Einion penteulu replies. “You’re supposedly in Ireland. Your father was negotiating from the border with England. Your cousin Madog in disarray.”

“It’s half-built.” Rhys is panting, deep and winded. “Norman style. The keep’s partway up. Walls look solid, but wood burns.”

“Gerald of Windsor. It can be no other.” Owain grins at the heavens and pets his underwear charm. “Thank you, Saint Elen. I’m listening. Keep pointing me true.”

It’s too much to hope that Nest will be with him. Not somewhere like this. But I’ll get an audience. Gerald of Windsor will know who I am by now. Nest will have told him everything, and he’ll know what I’ve done for his children. How he owes me for leaving me stranded on that pier.

He’ll know what Nest promised, and how it was bought.

We move swift and silent now. Nothing burns. There’s no plunder. By midday I’m belly-down, on a rise alongside Owain, looking down toward a rolling green plain. An earthwork mound rises above a fist of sharpened palisades. A tangle of rope and a web of scaffolding cling to it like cobwebs, but it looks finished enough to resist anyone trying to harm it. Men are at their labor throughout the works, carting barrows of stone and driving teams of horses dragging timbers, and somewhere down there is Gerald of Windsor, directing the digging of the ditch and the fastness of the gate and the placement of the men who will hold it for him.

Gerald of Windsor, who is still offering a bounty on Owain’s head.

Raids are done quick, like the snap of a neck, and this castle looks too sturdy to be taken by a single attack. Owain will bid me wait here where it’s safe. He won’t be able to spare anyone to mind me. When the lads fail and scatter, I’ll need to be gone. I won’t get another chance like this.

“M-my lord?” Rhys’s voice trembles.

“Dusk,” Owain replies, “when they’re at their supper.”

There’s a small grind of metal. I turn and stiffen. We’re surrounded. Men in leather armor stand over us, pointing long spears at our necks. One has Rhys by the collar, a blade quivering at his throat.

“Stand,” one of them says in French. “Slowly.”

I do it. My legs somehow hold me up. Owain always says he gives no mercy to Normans and doesn’t expect it from them. Whatever happens now, Gerald of Windsor will make sure it’s anything but quick.

“Saint Elen,” I whisper, because saints are here to help us for reasons none of us can know, and mayhap it hasn’t been Owain she’s been looking to these last years. Mayhap she’s been looking to me.

Owain cuts his eyes my way. Stands straighter.

The Norman asks something. Owain responds, and the fighting man coughs a harsh laugh and stabs his weapon at the castle works. As we’re marched downhill at spearpoint, Owain makes a field gesture to the lads, one I don’t recognize, then says loudly in Welsh, “I told you, we’re pilgrims! We mean to pray at the shrine at Saint

readonlinefreenovel.com Copyright 2016 - 2024