John Flanagan - The Icebound Land

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The forest that spread out below them was dull and featureless-from this height it looked like a rough carpet.

"What are we going to do, Halt?" Horace asked, and his companion hesitated before answering. Not because he was uncertain of the answer itself; rather, because he was unsure how his young friend's temperament would greet it.

"We wait," he said simply, and immediately saw the frustration in Horace's eyes. He knew the boy was expecting something to precipitate matters with Deparnieux.

"But Deparnieux is torturing and killing people! And we're just sitting back watching him do it!" the boy said angrily. He expected more from the resourceful ex-Ranger than the simple injunction to wait.

The forced inactivity was galling to Horace. He wasn't coping well with the boredom and frustration of day-to-day life in Montsombre. He was trained for action and he wanted to act. He felt the compulsion to do something-anything. He wanted to punish Deparnieux for his cruelty.

He wanted a chance to ram the black knight's sarcastic comments back down his throat.

Most of all, he wanted to be free of Montsombre and back on the road in search of Will.

Halt waited until he judged Horace had calmed down a little. "He's also lord of this castle," he replied mildly, "and he has some fifty men at his beck and call. I think that's a few more than we could comfortably deal with."

Horace picked a crumbled piece of granite from a corner of the balustrade and tossed it far out into the void below, watching it fall, seeming to curve in toward the castle walls until it was lost from view.

"I know," he said moodily, "but I wish we could do something."

Halt glanced up from his task. Although he hid the fact, his sense of frustration was even sharper than Horace's. If he were on his own, Halt could escape from this castle with the greatest ease. But to do so, he would have to abandon Horace-and he couldn't bring himself to do that. Instead, he found himself torn by conflicting loyalties-to Will, and to the young man who had unselfishly chosen to accompany him in search of a friend. He knew that Deparnieux would show no mercy to Horace if Halt were to escape. At the same time, every fiber of his being ached to be on the road and in pursuit of his lost apprentice.

He dropped his eyes to the almost completed bow again, careful to keep any sense of his own frustration out of his voice.

"The next move is up to our host, I'm afraid," he told Horace.

"He's not sure what to make of me. He's not sure whether I might be useful to him. And while he's uncertain, he's on his guard. That makes him dangerous."

"Then surely we might as well fight him?" Horace asked, but Halt shook his head emphatically.

"I'd rather he relaxed a little," he said. "I'd rather he felt we were not as dangerous, or as useful, as he first assumed. I can sense he's trying to make his mind up about me. That business with the cook was a test."

The first drops of rain spattered onto the flagstones. Horace looked up, realizing with some surprise that the clouds, seemingly so far away only a few minutes ago, were already scudding overhead.

"A test?" he repeated.

Halt twisted his face into a grimace. "He wanted to see what I would do about it. Maybe he wanted to see what I could do about it."

"So you did nothing?" Horace challenged, and instantly regretted the hasty words. Halt, however, took no offense. He met the boy's gaze steadily, saying nothing. Eventually, Horace dropped his eyes and mumbled, "Sorry, Halt."

Halt nodded, registering the apology. "There wasn't much I could do, Horace," he explained gently. "Not while Deparnieux was keyed up and on his guard. That's not the time to take action against an enemy.

I'm afraid," he added in a warning tone, "the next few weeks are going to bring us more of these tests."

That gained Horace's attention immediately. "What do you think he has in mind?"

"I don't know the details," Halt said. "But you can bet that our friend Deparnieux will perform more unpleasant acts, just to see what I do about them." Again, the ex-Ranger grimaced. "The point is, the more I do nothing, the more he will relax, and the less careful he will be around me."

"And that's what you want?" Horace queried, beginning to understand. Halt nodded grimly in reply.

"That's what I want," he said. He glanced at the dark clouds that were whipping overhead. "Now come inside before you get soaked," he suggested.

The rain came and went over the next hour, pelting in on the wind, driven almost horizontally through those open window spaces of the Chateau where the occupants had neglected to close the wooden shutters.

An hour before dark, the rain cleared as the ever-present wind drove the clouds farther south, and the low sun broke through in the west, in a spectacular display against the dispersing storm clouds.

The two prisoners were watching the sunset from their windswept terrace when they heard a commotion below them.

A lone horseman was at the main gate, hammering on the giant brass bell that hung on a post there. He was dressed as a knight, carrying sword and lance and shield. He was young, they could see-probably only a year or two older than Horace.

The newcomer stopped hammering and filled his lungs to shout. He spoke, or rather shouted, in Gallic, and Horace had no idea what he was saying, although he certainly recognized the name "Deparnieux."

"What's he saying?" he asked Halt, and the Ranger held up a hand to hush him as he listened to the last few words from the knight.

"He's challenging Deparnieux," he said, his head cocked to one side to make out the strange knight's words more clearly. Horace made an impatient gesture.

"I gathered that!" he said with some asperity. "But why?"

Halt waved him to silence as the newcomer continued to shout. The tone was angry enough, but the words were a little difficult to make out as they ebbed and flowed on the swirling wind.

"From what I can understand," Halt said slowly, "our friend Deparnieux murdered this fellow's family-while he was away on a quest.

They're very big on quests here in Gallica."

"So what happened?" Horace wanted to know. But the Ranger could only shrug in reply.

"Apparently Deparnieux wanted the family's lands, so he got rid of the lad's parents." He listened further and said, "They were on the elderly side and relatively helpless."

Horace grunted. "That sounds like what we know about Deparnieux."

Abruptly, the stranger ceased shouting, turned his horse and trotted away from the gate to wait for a reaction. For a few minutes, there was no sign that anyone other than Halt and Horace had paid the slightest attention. Then a sally port in the massive wall crashed open and a black-armored figure on a jet-black battlehorse emerged.

Deparnieux cantered slowly to a position a hundred meters from the other knight. They faced each other while the young knight repeated his challenge. On the castle ramparts, Horace and Halt could see Deparnieux's men eagerly taking up vantage positions to watch the coming battle.

"Vultures," Halt muttered at the sight of them.

The black-clad knight made no reply to the stranger. He simply reached up with the edge of his shield and flicked the visor on his helmet closed. That was enough for his challenger. He slammed down his own visor and set spurs to his battlehorse. Deparnieux did the same and they charged toward each other, lances leveled.

Even at a distance, Halt and Horace could see that the young man was not very skilled. His seat was awkward and his positioning of shield and lance was clumsy. Deparnieux, by contrast, looked totally coordinated and frighteningly capable as they thundered together.

"This doesn't look good," Horace said in a worried tone.

They struck with a resounding crash that echoed off the walls of the castle. The young knight's lance, badly positioned and at the wrong angle, shattered into pieces. By contrast, Deparnieux's lance struck squarely into the other knight's shield, sending him reeling in the saddle as they passed. Yet strangely, Deparnieux appeared to lose his grasp on his own lance. It fell away into the grass behind him as he wheeled his horse for the return pass. For a moment, Horace felt a surge of hope.

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