“Centaurs coming,” Gesade said, sniffing the wind. “A day or two, I think.”
“It will be good to have the reinforcements,” Petariel said. “And good of them to travel so far from their farms in winter. We must make them welcome.” Gesade sniffed again. “The wind’s wrong, but… Something. Let’s go look.” Unicorn and rider trotted off along their assigned path through the snowy forest.
—«♦»—
VANDELT and Merchan had been partners rather longer than the usual pairing among the Unicorn Knights; a little over a century now. Vandelt had never found the Elf to whom his soul could bond, and Merchan simply said that Vandelt was incapable of managing without him. Vandelt might have been Captain of the Unicorns if he’d chosen—he’d certainly been a Unicorn Knight longer than anyone else currently serving among them—but he was far more interested in his garden, and he was quite willing to admit that he had no interest in command. Let Petariel have that honor, with Vandelt’s great goodwill.
But he had seen his fragile and delicate garden at Deskethomaynel turn to dust in the Great Drought, and he was as willing as anyone to strike out at the servants of those who had killed his beloved plants. And he was by no means stupid, merely unambitious.
So when Merchan warned that someone was approaching from the direction they had been set to watch, Vandelt blew a warning immediately, even before he rode out to investigate further.
It did not save them.
The arrow took Merchan squarely in the chest. It did not penetrate his armor, but it clung, and it
But of their attackers, he saw nothing.
“Run, Merchan!”
The unicorn turned, heading back toward their own lines. Vandelt raised his horn to blow a second, more urgent warning, but it was too late. Merchan had only gone a few yards before a net fell over them from above, tangling them in its meshes and sending Merchan crashing to the forest floor.
Before Vandelt could cut them free, the Shadowed Elves dropped from the trees, long knives flashing in the weak sunlight. Merchan and his rider died within seconds of each other.
The Shadowed Elves cut the ring of burning metal carefully from the unicorn’s body, handling it with tongs, and spiked it to the nearest tree.
Then they moved on.
—«♦»—
“KELLEN says that something’s wrong.”
Idalia passed Vestakia into the hands of the waiting Healers, who would take her back to the temporary camp a mile away as quickly as possible—distance was truly the best remedy for what ailed her; that, and a great deal of rest—and turned back to the Elven general.
“He will have given you all the information he had, of course,” Redhelwar said imperturbably.
“Well, his precise words were ‘tell Redhelwar something’s not the way it’s supposed to be,’ if that helps. He couldn’t tell me more than that. He
“I know Kellen. He will have—” Redhelwar broke off, looking past her. He’d looked grim a moment before. Now he looked appalled.
Idalia followed the direction of his gaze. A single Elven Knight was running toward them from the cavern mouth, running as if more than his life depended upon it.
He slid to his knees at the feet of Redhelwar’s bay destrier.
“A feint,” he gasped. “The females are not there. Kellen said—the females are not in the caverns.”
“But the children were,” Idalia said with sudden bleak understanding. “They left them behind, so Vestakia would have something to follow.”
Redhelwar barely moved. His voice did not waver.
“Dionan, tell Jertnayan what Tildaril has said. Request him, if it is possible, to find where the females have gone.”