* * *
With the scary mage gone, the library felt safer than the outer cave to Stanis. But his mates were out there; he wasn’t going to stay safely behind.
“Hey now,” he said when Aralorn used the table to get to her feet. She looked like she weighed half what she had the first time he’d seen her—all pared down to bone and sinew. But she walked without limping to the little padded bench and shuffled under it until she came up with a sword and scabbard she belted on. He didn’t miss that the scabbard was stained with blood—from the Uriah who’d killed Astrid.
“He told you to stay here.” Maybe she hadn’t heard the mage.
Aralorn glanced up as she sheathed the sword. “It says in my files—I know because Ren showed them to me—‘Does not take orders, will occasionally listen to suggestions.’ Did Wolf sound like he was suggesting anything to you?”
Stanis shook his head. “No.” He shuffled his feet a little. “I don’t follow no orders either, but if that one ever told me to do anything in that tone of voice, I can’t help but think I’d be sitting where he wanted me until I was covered in dust.”
She laughed. “Yes, he’s a little intimidating, isn’t he?” She checked the draw of the sword, adjusted it a little, and said, “But there’s no way I’m sitting here while everyone else gets to fight.” She looked at him. “You know your way to the rest of them? I might be able to find my way out, but I don’t know how this cave connects into the rest.”
Stanis squirmed.
She smiled. “No need to tell him that I couldn’t find my own way there,” she said.
“I’m not afraid of him,” Stanis stated belligerently, though his mam had taught him better than that.
“Of course not,” she said stoutly. “Nothing to be afraid of.”
After about the halfway point, she put her hand on his shoulder. “Sorry, Stanis, we’re going to have to slow down.”
“No trouble,” he said. “Why don’t you lean on me a bit?”
She muttered something he didn’t catch but put some of her weight on him. For a while that was all she did, but eventually her arm wrapped around his shoulders, and she honestly leaned on him.
“Good thing you’re short,” he said. “You should have stayed. What would have happened if I weren’t here to help you?”
“Then I’d have crawled,” she said grimly.
He glanced up at her face, visible in the light of one of those little glowy balls Wolf had shown him how to make.
“Right,” he said. She didn’t look like a nice Lady right now, she looked like someone who could lick her weight in Uriah and then some. Maybe she was a match for that Wolf after all.
* * *
Aralorn swung a leg over the barricade erected to keep people—except for runners like Stanis, whose magic seemed capable of keeping them from getting hopelessly lost—from wandering the tunnels.
She listened for sounds of battle, but the tunnel was suspiciously silent.
“Where were the Uriah when you came running?” she asked, as the passageway floor took a steep upward bend.
“Don’t know.” Stanis shook his head. “Somebody spotted ’em outside and sprinted to the caves like an idiot. They’re sure to have followed ’em here.” He paused. “I don’t hear nothin’.”
“If they were inside our camp when Wolf came, you’d still be hearing things,” she told him stoutly, finding that she couldn’t quite believe it. What if they’d taken him by surprise? What if he hadn’t had a chance?
“What if they took him by surprise?” asked Stanis, echoing her thoughts, his voice a bare whisper as they crept closer to where there should be a bunch of people fighting for their lives.
Her hands were sweating—from effort, she told herself. “No one takes him by surprise,” she told Stanis. “He works things the other way.”
And that was truth. She could breathe better, doubtless because the floor had flattened out again.
Stanis stopped. “Big cave’s just around the corner,” he mouthed. “The main one where everyone’s camped. We should—”
“ Not his wards?”
Oh, she recognized that voice. She stood up straight and strode around the corner, where the whole camp—as far as she could tell at a glance—was standing armed and ready. She couldn’t see the owner of the loud voice, but she could hear him just fine.
“What does he mean ‘not his wards’? Why didn’t you ask him more? Do we expect them to come running in?”
She pushed her way through—not hard once people realized where she was going.
“It means that they aren’t his wards,” said Myr neutrally.
The big nobleman who stood in front of him was used to getting his way—with money or intimidation.
“Boy,” he boomed. “You don’t let that strippy bugger get away with half-assed answers. He’s not in charge here.”
She couldn’t get there any faster without falling on her face, but . . . Myr hit him. A quick, decisive blow that dropped the ox like a stone.
Aralorn pulled her sword and held it to the downed man’s throat, making sure he felt the sharp edge. A foot on his shoulder.
The fear that had held her since she realized that it was too quiet made her testy, and she would have been quite happy to put the sword all the way through the blasted man’s neck and take care of the problem. But her father had been a canny politician when it suited him, and she could hear his voice in her ear.
So instead of killing him, she said coolly, “Do you desire this man dead, my king? I assure you it would be a pleasure. We could display his body on a stake just outside for the crows to eat.”
“And attract every scavenger in twenty leagues,” said Myr regretfully. “No. Not just yet.” She couldn’t read his voice and wouldn’t lift her eyes from her enemy to look at his face.
She grimaced at the triumph in the eyes of the nobleman at her feet. He started to say something, then stopped. Maybe it was the weight of her heel on a nerve just in front of his shoulder, maybe it was that her arm dropped just a bit, letting the sword dig a little deeper.
“Permission to deal with him as my father would?” she asked.
“I recall the stake incident,” said Myr dryly. “My grandfather told me about it. No one disobeyed the Lyon’s orders for a few years afterward. Effective but extreme, you have to admit. We are a little short of numbers here—so I find myself reluctant to give you my unqualified permission.”
The nobleman paled. “The Lyon?” he said.
Aralorn bared her teeth at him, but continued to talk to Myr. “Your Majesty, if you please. Haris?”
“Aye?”
“Haris, I think that you’ve been working too hard. You need an assistant.”
“Don’t need no nobleman to help me cook,” said Haris grumpily.
“Haris,” said Myr in silky tones, “I have no intention of allowing this man to interfere with your efforts. However . . . skinning, turning the spit, or taking out the refuse—how much could he hurt?”
“Oh aye,” said Haris, sounding remarkably happier. “That I’ll do, sire.”
“Aralorn, let him up,” Myr said.
She pulled her sword away after wiping the blood off on the idiot’s shirt.
“Oras,” Myr said. “A week of helping Haris is a gift. Do not make me regret it.”
The nobleman swallowed. Perhaps he recognized, as Aralorn did, the old king in his grandson’s face.
Myr turned his attention to Aralorn then, ignoring the man on the ground. “I need you to go out and find Wolf. Is this an assault we need to prepare ourselves for—or can I take people off alert?”
“What’s going on?” she asked, sheathing her sword.
“The Uriah tried to come into the caves after our hunting party and were stopped by wards on the cave mouth. Wolf says they aren’t his wards and sent us all back here to cool our heels and guard the narrow entrance.”
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