Liaze then looked up at Zacharie. “Goblins?”
“Oui, Princess,” said the steward, vaguely gesturing toward the open window. “Louis spitted with a crossbow bolt the only Goblin we saw as it climbed the wall toward your rooms.”
Liaze set the silver horn aside and wiped an eye with her fist and said, “Why would a lone Goblin climb the wall?”
Zacharie shrugged.
Liaze frowned and then took in a breath. “Did it have a cudgel or other weapon?”
“Oui, Princess, a cudgel.”
“It must have been sent to break the pane and let the shadow in, but Luc-” Liaze’s voice choked, and she took a shuddering breath. “Luc opened the window himself, and-”
“Princess,” called Remy as he came striding in, an unsheathed falchion in his grip. “It was a witch.”
“What?” asked Zacharie. “Did you say ‘witch’?”
“Oui, Zacharie. Anton saw her silhouette against the stars as she flew up from the woods.”
“ That’s what that was,” said Liaze, more to herself than the others. She got to her feet and said, “A witch… and she dragged the shadow and Luc after, as she flew away.”
“Four of you and four of them,” said Zacharie, sighing. “Did I not say?”
“Rhensibe, Hradian, Iniqui, and Nefasi,” agreed Remy, nodding. “Since Rhensibe is dead, perhaps it is one of the three who are left.”
“But why take Luc?” asked Liaze. “Why not me instead?”
Zacharie and Remy looked at one another, and neither had an answer, but Zoe said, “Through Lady Michelle, Rhensibe struck at Borel.”
“That’s right,” said Zacharie. “It was indirect revenge. Perhaps the same is at work here. Whichever witch it is, mayhap she simply wanted to reave true love from you.”
Liaze stooped and took up her bow, her blanket gaping wide. “Which way did she fly, Remy? I lost sight of her and the shadow and Luc in the darkness.”
“So, too, did Anton,” said Remy, looking away.
Liaze sighed and shook her head. But then she looked at Zacharie. “Did we take any casualties?”
“Oui,” said Zacharie. “Two members of the houseguard-Adrien and Paul-were crushed, as if by a giant hand.”
Liaze’s face fell. “The witch’s dark clutch, the shadow,” she said, now stepping toward the window. Remy tried to get between her and the opening, but she waved him away. Liaze looked out upon the starlit lawn, the faint light now augmented by the lanterns of searching men. “It tried to rupture the manor with its terrible grip.”
“I heard the timbers groan,” said Zoe, her eyes flying wide.
“I will have the carpenters and masons and roofers inspect every inch,” said Zacharie.
“My lady,” said Remy. “We can take part of the warband and go searching for Sieur Luc.”
“Which way would you ride?” asked Liaze.
“I… I don’t know,” said Remy.
“Precisely,” said Liaze, tears welling unseen, for she stood at the window looking out.
“A seer might know,” suggested Zoe. “We could ask Malgan. He lives in the Autumnwood.”
An image of the seer sprang to Liaze’s mind: a reed-thin, sallow-faced man with lank, straw-colored hair, his hands tucked across and within the sleeves of his buttoned red satin gown.
Remy snorted. “This Malgan: he’s the one who continually whispers to himself and looks about and flinches as if seeing invisible things. Princess, I think him perhaps untrustworthy, mad as he is.”
“I would not disagree with you, Remy,” said Liaze. “Alain calls him a charlatan, and Camille says Lord Kelmot-the Lynx Rider-calls him a mountebank.”
“But he’s all we have,” said Zoe.
“I would rather travel to the Summerwood and ask the Lady of the Mere, or on beyond to the Lady of the Bower,” said Liaze.
Zoe nodded and said, “They helped Camille.”
“Ere we make any rash decisions,” said Zacharie, “let us see what the daylight brings. There might be something we find that points us the right way.”
Liaze took a deep breath and slowly let it out. “You are right, Zacharie. Let us wait until daylight.”
Zacharie bowed, as did Remy, and they withdrew. Zoe lingered and asked, “Would you like me to stay with you, Princess?”
“Non, Zoe. I’d rather be alone.”
“Then I’ll just close this,” said Zoe. She stepped to the window and latched the shutters, then drew up the sash and locked the frame into place. She pulled the drapes to, then curtseyed and said good-night and slipped from the room.
When she was gone, Liaze threw herself onto the bed and released her pent-up grief.
14
Weeping off and on, Liaze did not sleep the remainder of that night, and just ere first light she arose and donned her leathers, wincing a bit from the darkening bruise on her breast. She strapped on a long-knife. She took up her bow and quiver of arrows and started for the door, but turned and stepped back and retrieved Luc’s silver horn. Then she went into the hallway beyond.
“My lady,” said Didier, one of the wards at the door. Patrice, the other guard, bobbed his head. “Zacharie says we are to accompany you, wherever you go.”
“Non,” said the princess. “I need to be alone to think.”
“We can stand off a good distance,” said Patrice.
Liaze sighed. “Very well, but at a good distance: I want no distractions.”
“How far, my lady?” said Didier.
“A hundred paces or more.”
“A hundred paces? But, my lady-”
Liaze lifted the silver horn. “At need I will call.”
The warders looked at one another, and reluctantly agreed, and Patrice said, “As you wish, Princess.”
Down the stairs they went, and the manor was silent, and those whose duties began this early were creeping about, despair on their faces, as if they were in mourning. And as the princess went by, some opened their mouths as if to speak, but they knew not what to say, while others simply curtseyed and lowered their gazes and hurried away on their errands.
Out from the manor Liaze went with her two guards, and she strode across the lawn toward the willow grove, the early light of dawn just barely in the skies.
As they reached the golden leaves and drooping branches, Liaze said, “Wait here.”
Didier raised his hands in protest. “But my lady, we will not be able to see-”
“I will be within a hundred paces, or thereabout, and I have the horn,” said Liaze, cutting off his objection. “I need to be alone, and the pool with its welling water is soothing unto me.”
Again the guards looked at one another, and Patrice said, “As you will, Princess.”
“But please, my lady,” said Didier, “keep the horn at hand, always within reach.”
“I will,” said Liaze, then she turned on her heel and walked in among the golden leaves, soon to be lost to sight.
With willow branches swaying behind her, Liaze came to the glade, and in the light of dawn she saw a crone at the water’s edge, weeping.
A witch?
Liaze raised the horn, preparing to blow, but then she hesitated.
Wait! It is said witches are unable to weep ought but falsely, shedding no tears whatsoever.