And someone had been kind enough to drag the captain-general inside.
* * *
Emeric seethed with rage, once he realized he'd stumbled into a trap. I will crush them. I will crack them like lice. Every man, woman and child in that citadel will die.
Despite his fury, a calm and calculating part of him was finally accepting the truth. The Citadel would not fall—not quickly enough, anyway—simply through military means. And while it might fall to treachery, treason was in the nature of things a slippery weapon.
I'll have to go back to Hungary and ask for help, damn her eyes.
'Ah . . . Your Majesty.' Count Dragorvich, a clever man who always made sure that the king made all the crucial decisions—and took the credit for them, naturally—was without words this time. He just pointed.
The ricks of hay for the cavalry were on fire. Someone had obviously made the best of the distraction offered by the assault to attack their rear. Again.
'Get me the blond,' Emeric hissed.
* * *
'You're supposed to be an advisor to the Emperor Alexius VI of Constantinople. Why are you still here?' asked Emeric, looking at the blond man.
There was a pause. 'I am here to see to my master's interests.'
An interesting reply, thought Emeric. Which master?
However, all he said was: 'It is very much in your master's interests to see us win here, and win decisively and soon. So I have a task for you. There is one of these Venetians—or rather an Imperial—on the loose. He and his men are attacking our rear. Our supplies, our materiel, even our men.'
King Emeric leaned forward in his throne. 'I've checked on your background, Aldanto. I know who you are, my Milanese traitor and sell-sword. This is the right sort of task for you, I think. Find Erik Hakkonsen—or his woman. Find them and bring them in. Hakkonsen I will have dead, happily. If you only get the woman . . . see that she survives. If not quite as she was, but in a good enough state to be bait. In the meantime, I'm returning to Hungary to fetch more troops and enlist some very powerful support. When I come back, I want to see Hakkonsen's head.'
The blond man paused and then nodded jerkily. 'Hakkonsen. Yes.'
'Good,' said Emeric. Nastily: 'That'll keep you and that yellow dog of yours busy.'
* * *
Chernobog did understand long-standing hatreds, for such things were meat and drink to it—and it indulged in such things itself, from time to time. It also understood the elimination of threats. Hakkonsen was the one who had put that throbbing scar on his forehead. The puppet himself hated the Icelander, for that matter, insofar as the puppet was still able to feel anything.
As for Emeric, well, Emeric did not merely nurse his grudges, he nurtured and watered them with blood, something else that Chernobog understood. So the demon would cooperate. It did not do this for Emeric, or in fear of Emeric. It did this for itself.
Compared to hunting for this place's seats of power, hunting peasants around the maquis was as easy as breathing to the shaman. He sent the hawks up, spotted a peasant and his son, and hunted them down with Caesare and his Croat escort.
* * *
'You will find these hill-fighters,' said the scary-looking blond in charge of the soldiers. 'You will ask other peasants until you find them. And then you will give the leader this note. You will tell him I am a Greek with the Imperial fleet—but that I am from Corfu. I am shocked by the devastation, and wish to strike back at the Hungarians. Your family has worked for mine for many years. If he comes . . . Your son is free. Do you understand?'
The boy was perhaps four years old. The Greek peasant nodded. 'Yes.' He paused; quavered: 'Do you promise you will do nothing to hurt him?'
The blond blinked. 'Of course.'
The yellow dog made no promises.
* * *
'It seems worth looking into,' said Erik. 'It would hit Emeric where it hurts. Money and weapons we certainly need. But can we trust this Xerxes?'
'My family have worked for them for many years, sir,' said the peasant, nervously wringing his hands.
Erik's heart went out to the man. To be loyal enough to go looking for people the Hungarians would kill. Still, it could be a trap. 'I'll meet him. Go back to him and tell him there is a small mountain just north of Giannades. There's a shepherd's hut on the ridge. I'll meet him there at moonset. Alone. Anyone else and he'll die. You'd better come back as a hostage, too.'
'Where will I find you, master?' asked the man. 'I'm from down south. I don't know my way around these foreign parts.'
The Corfiotes always managed to make their island sound six hundred miles long, not about forty. 'Just come up this valley. Someone will see you and bring you to me.'
The man nodded resignedly.
* * *
'You must let me see my little one before I will go back. You must.' There was an edge of hysteria and distrust in that voice.
