The Tower of Ravens (65 page)

Read The Tower of Ravens Online

Authors: Kate Forsyth

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Fantasy - Epic

For a moment she thought she had failed, for the horses came on at the same headlong pace, their nostrils flaring red, their eyes rimmed with white. Then the bodyguard’s horse suddenly came to a juddering halt, legs splayed, head hanging. Though the big, grey-bearded man whipped it with his reins and slapped it with the flat of his sword, it refused to budge. Suddenly its legs folded and it sank down in the middle of the road. The bodyguard jumped off, the unconscious child lolling in his arms, and dragged at the bridle, trying to force it on. Meanwhile, Lord Malvern’s horse was rearing and plunging, refusing to go forwards. He slashed at it with his sword, and it reared so precipitately the lord was thrown from its back. Rhiannon whooped with joy, and so did Lewen, who had turned the corner and was galloping up the cobbled hill towards the foundered horses. Nina and Iven were close behind him.

The bodyguard glanced back at him, then dropped the reins and began to run up the road towards the gatehouse, Roden’s arms and legs flopping wildly. Lord Malvern rolled, got to his feet and began to run too. Both men had naked swords in their hands, and murder in their eyes. Rhiannon set an arrow to her bow with shaking fingers. Again her aim wavered between them. She did not want to risk shooting Roden, but if she shot down Lord Malvern, the bodyguard would be upon her, with the open gate only a few strides past her. She tried to steady her breathing, and shot the bodyguard in the thigh. He cried out in agony, but although his stride faltered and broke, he did not stop, lurching forward with the feathered haft of the arrow sticking out of his leg. Rhiannon shot him again in the same spot, and then, in desperation, in the other leg. He fell, Roden rolling out of his arms. Lord Malvern bent, caught up the little boy, and ran on. He was too close now for Rhiannon to shoot him down. She drew her slim black dagger from her boot and flung it at him. To her horror he simply raised one hand and the dagger spun away harmlessly. Then he raised his sword and swiped at her. Blackthorn reared and he shrank back instinctively, allowing Rhiannon to roll away under his sword. Then the winged horse bent her head and charged him. One of her long, sharp horns slashed him across the face. He screamed and dropped his sword, putting his hand up to cover the gash. Rhiannon reached out a hand to try to trip him, but he stumbled past her and through the gates, Roden still clasped against his chest. The massive gates clanged shut behind him.

 

Storming the Castle

 
 

Rhiannon sat up slowly, sick with disappointment.

Argent came to a blowing halt a few feet away, and Lewen jumped down and came to help her up.

“He got past,” Rhiannon said, her voice thick.

“Ye almost had him,” Lewen said. “It was so close.”

“Now what?” she asked, tears stinging her eyes.

“We go in and get him out,” Lewen said, looking up at the immense wall towering over their heads. Rhiannon heaved a sigh that came from the very pit of her chest cavity.

“First, we question the bodyguard,” Lewen said, letting go of Rhiannon’s arm as she leant against the wall. He drew his knife and walked back down the road towards the bodyguard. The man was clutching his shattered leg, his face twisted in pain. He looked at Lewen’s set, determined face, then back down the road, to where Nina and Iven were cantering up towards them, Cameron close behind. With a great effort he staggered to his feet, and then, before Lewen could stop him, dragged himself up onto the wall and launched himself into the dizzying space on the far side. They heard a thin wail, and then a sickening bone-crunching thud. Soon after, there came another, more distant thud, and then another. Then there was only silence.

Grey with horror, Lewen ran and looked over the wall. Then he turned back and sank to his haunches, his dagger dropping from his hand. Iven and Nina flung themselves off their horses and ran to look too. Nina was weeping.

“I guess he didna want to be questioned,” Rhiannon said through the roaring in her head, then she slid down the wall till she too was sitting. Nina ran to her side.

“Rhiannon, Rhiannon,” she sobbed. “Och, ye were so close! I really thought ye’d saved him.”

“I tried,” Rhiannon said. “I’m sorry.”

“Nay, nay, ye did so well, ye were so brave, so clever,” Nina wept. “Och, my laddie, my babe. We were so close!”

Rhiannon dropped her head onto her arms.

“Ye’re sorely hurt,” Nina said, dashing the tears from her face. “Let me look at your arm. Och, I have naught here, naught to ease the pain or stop the bleeding. What a hare-brained, madcap rescue this is, me barefoot and in my nightgown, and only a sword and a few daggers between the lot o‘ us. How are we meant to storm the castle like this?” Her tears began to flow again, but she unwrapped Rhiannon’s arm deftly, examined the ugly wound with compressed brows, and then bound it up again with clean cloth torn from her nightgown. Her bandage was far more effective than Rhiannon’s.

“I shall have to fly over the wall,” Rhiannon said slowly, cradling her arm against her. “It’s the only way to get in.”

“But ye’re injured,” Nina pointed out, taking her shawl off and fashioning Rhiannon a gorgeous, many-coloured sling. “And Roden could be hidden anywhere inside that castle.”

“It’s too dangerous,” Iven said reluctantly. “Unless…”

“Blackthorn is mine,” Rhiannon said. “She willna carry anyone else.”

“No‘ even me?” Lewen said.

“Ye’re too heavy for her,” Rhiannon said.

Lewen acknowledged the truth of this. It was a rare horse that could carry his weight.

Nina sat back on her heels. “It’s the only way,” she said. “But can I let ye do it? What if they shoot ye down? I’d never forgive myself.”

“Better I die here, flying on my horse’s back, trying to save Roden, than at the end of the hangman’s rope,” Rhiannon said wryly. She managed to stand up.

Cameron was hanging back, wide-eyed and pale-faced. Lulu, who had ridden the whole way clinging to Cameron’s belt, darted forward and seized Rhiannon’s blood-slick hand in her tiny, leathery paw. She jumped up and down, gibbering, waving up at the castle with her other paw.

“She wants to go with ye,” Nina said. “She wants to help ye find Roden.”

Rhiannon looked at the little arak doubtfully.

“She has a very precise sense o‘ smell,” Nina said. “And she can climb anything. Happen she can help ye find Roden? For ye may be able to fly over the walls, Rhiannon, but how are ye to find my lad once ye’re inside?”

“I do no‘ think Blackthorn will like it,” Rhiannon said. “Lulu’s awfully smelly.”

“She willna mind,” Nina said eagerly. “Oh, please, Rhiannon. Ye do no‘ ken Lulu. She’s very clever, and quick, and nimble, and she adores Roden. She’ll help ye, I ken she will.”

“All right,” Rhiannon said. She looked up at the stone bulwark again and could not help a little shiver.

“I dinna even have water for ye and Blackthorn to drink,” Nina said remorsefully. “No‘ a crumb to eat. After such a hard ride too!”

“That’s all right,” Rhiannon said absently. “I am used to being hungry.”

She whickered to Blackthorn, who whickered back, and led the mare over to the wall so she could mount. Before she could clamber up on to the wall, Lewen was beside her, lifting her in his strong arms and throwing her up onto the mare’s back. She smiled at him, and he held up his hand to her. When she took it he drew her down so he could kiss her.

“Be careful, my love,” he said. “Come back safely.”

“O‘ course I will,” she replied with an attempt at her usual jaunty manner.

He unslung his quiver of arrows and passed it up to her. It was full of arrows, fletched with shining, iridescent-green feathers. “I have a Talent with wood, ye ken. I made all these arrows with my own hand, and they will always fly true. Take them.”

“I will, but no‘ because I need enchanted arrows to shoot true,” she said with a flash of her dimple.

“I ken, its just…”

She nodded and passed him her own quiver with its handful of clumsily whittled arrows. “Yours are much bonnier, I’ll be glad to take them,” she said cheekily. “Thank ye.”

Iven stepped up to give her his hand. “Thank ye, Rhiannon,” he said gravely. “Bring Roden back to us.”

“I will,” she said gamely. “What will ye do now? Where shall I meet ye?”

“We will go now and bang on that door until someone lets us in,” Iven said. “It’s all I can think o‘ doing. In the meantime, let us hope the reeve from Linlithgorn is on his way. If he refuses us permission to search the castle, surely he canna refuse the reeve?”

“Laird Malvern rules this land as if he were a prionnsa and this were his kingdom,” Nina said unhappily. “I’m sure he will have no hesitation in refusing the reeve, and I doubt the reeve will have the courage to insist. After all, he does no‘ ken who we are and he would ken and respect the laird all too well, I think. All the laird has to do is deny everything.”

“He’ll have trouble explaining the gash across his face,” Rhiannon said grimly. “I think Blackthorn put out his eye.”

“We can but hope,” Iven said and stepped back, so Nina could come and embrace Rhiannon.

“Ye have power, lassie,” the witch said to her intently. “I have sensed it in ye, and ye used it here, to bring the laird’s horses to their knees. Trust in yourself, and draw upon it in need. It shallna let ye down.”

Rhiannon nodded sceptically, then waved her hand to Cameron. “Bye, laddie!” she said. “See ye soon.”

“Good luck!” Cameron replied. “I hope ye find Roden.” He hesitated a moment, then said in a rush, “that was amazing what ye did afore, with the horses and all, I mean.” As Rhiannon shrugged and smiled, he continued, “I’m sorry I punched ye. Ye ken, yesterday.”

Rhiannon touched the yellowing bruise on her temple. “Well, I’m sorry I kneed ye in the balls,” she replied.

Cameron grinned, though his brown cheek coloured. “So am I,” he said.

Nina passed up Lulu, who clung to Rhiannon’s waist with her skinny, hairy arms, gibbering a little and bouncing up and down with excitement. Blackthorn shied and spread her wings, dancing sideways.

“Ssssh,” Rhiannon said sternly to the little arak. “Thigearns do no‘ bounce.”

Lulu immediately stopped bouncing, though Rhiannon could feel her quivering, whether with fear or excitement it was impossible to tell. She took a deep breath. She was trembling herself, and very definitely from fear. She smiled at the circle of upturned faces, determined they would not know how very scared she was, and then wheeled Blackthorn round and set her into a canter. After a few quick strides, the mare unfurled her blue-tipped wings and leapt into the air. The circle of faces fell behind.

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