Owen waded into the stream in his Altashee leathers, knelt and dunked his head. The water washed away mud. His head came up, his hair dripping as he cleared it from his face. 'The Bishop told me. I am to take him back, not just a message.'

'Can you possibly convince him to go off on the winding path?'

'I have a feeling the spirits wouldn't want him.' Owen got up on his feet again. 'Long walk will do him good.'

'Give him one of our draft horses. I'll need it returned immediately. Give you an excuse to come back.'

Owen nodded. 'If we leave now, I should get him there in time for Lord Rivendell's Sunday supper with his officers. Couple of his men are old poachers. They got pheasant and deer. He will eat well, off hanware plates with a silver service.'

'Can you suggest to him that he ask Rivendell to let him deliver his sermon to the troops?'

'I'll do my best, sir.' Owen sighed. 'And since Rivendell will ask…'

Vlad shrugged. 'We have another week to Hattersburg, weather permitting. Two bridges, one ferry, twenty-nine miles uphill, three down. I hope we have a week's rest before we push on.'

Owen sloshed forward and patted Mugwump on the flank. 'Lord Rivendell believes we have surprise on our side.'

'Rivendell is an ass.' Vlad shook his head. 'I'm sure someone has let du Malphias know about the brimstone, shot, and other supplies piling up in Hattersburg. Depending on how his forces are arrayed, he could just raid the town and burn everything.'

'Or cart it back to his fortress.' Owen nodded. 'I'd do it. He won't. He wants us to come to his fortress and be destroyed.'

'A great victory here would win him much support among the other Laureates.' Vlad folded his arms over his chest. 'Raiding Hattersburg is not his only option.'

'Agreed. I fear he might build his own Fort Hope. He would block our access to Anvil Lake.'

'Another wise strategy, and a contingency for which we should be prepared. I will have von Metternin scout ahead when we are in Hattersburg. You will go with him.' The Prince pulled of his hat, soaked it in water, then put it back on. 'Have you shared your thoughts with Lord Rivendell?'

Owen opened his arms. 'I would have to be invited into his counsels to have a chance to offer an idea.'

'He doesn't realize that you actually have experience out here?'

'He does, but he is invested in proving me wrong. Colonel Langford, for obvious reasons, as well.' Owen unslung a canteen, unstoppered it, and sank it, bubbling, into the stream. 'A couple of sergeants have spoken with me. The soldiers will fight and fight hard, but they have a flock of featherbrains to lead them.'

'That is a lament often heard among soldiers.'

Owen shot him a sidelong glance. 'Did my uncle give you a packet of sealed orders to be opened in the event Lord Rivendell loses his mind?'

Vlad shook his head. 'Why do you ask?'

'He told me he did. He asked if you were sane and ambitious. And he asked if you would be able to take over the expedition and lead it militarily if Rivendell's sanity were in question.'

Vlad's eyes narrowed. 'He said nothing of this to me. He encouraged me to use our men to build Fort Hope, since Rivendell will not use us in the battle. Your uncle never suggested a combat command, and, quite frankly, I am not suited to it.'

'He said you could use the Count as an advisor.'

'And I'm sure he would be most able. What are you thinking, Owen? There's a look in your eye.'

The soldier blinked. 'I'm thinking that I've not been thinking. My uncle only ever does things for his own benefit. So his speaking to me as he did was for his benefit. He said nice things and apologized to me. I thought it was sincere, but how would I know? He's never been sincere before.'

Vlad nodded. 'He told me that Rivendell would fail, and that next year he would be back with enough troops and artillery to destroy du Malphias. Fort Hope would be a stepping-off place. He would lead them, reap the glory.'

'That's part of it.' Owen frowned. 'But it makes me wonder, given what he told you and me, what has he told Rivendell?'

'That's a very good question.' Vlad glanced down, shielding his eyes with a hand from the sun's shifting reflection in the water. 'Your uncle succeeds if Rivendell fails. This explains the paltry number of troops in Rivendell's command. A victorious du Malphias is a threat, so Norisle must increase the troops and resources sent next year.'

Owen's jaw dropped open. 'Which would give my uncle the largest and most formidable force in Mystria. He could do what du Malphias' has threatened: make his own nation.'

'Possible, though a grateful queen could easily grant him a holding of the land he has secured, allowing him the benefit he seeks and giving him more power in Norisle.'

Owen chewed his lower lip. 'There was another thing, Highness. He instructed me, when we take du Malphias' fortress, to secure possession of all du Malphias' papers. My uncle wants the secret of how to control the pasmortes.'

Vlad's head began to hurt. 'So the only way to thwart your uncle is to see to it that Rivendell is successful, and that du Malphias' secrets never fall into your uncle's hands.'

'Impossibility stacked on impossibility.'

'So it would seem.' The Prince nodded, then pointed back to the roadway. Bishop Bumble, clad in new white hose and with silver buckles gleaming on his shoes, waited impatiently. 'Go, relieve me of this tiring cleric, and I shall see if I can find a way to unstack these impossibilities.'

Chapter Fifty-Eight

July 6, 1764

Lindenvale, Mystria

O wen Strake remaining crouched, turned back toward Lieutenant Marnhull. 'For the last time, shut your mouth. Your babbling will get us killed.'

The blond officer sniffed. 'I am not a coward, Strake! And this sentry duty is ridiculous.'

Owen could have taken Rivendell's little provocations easily. Picket duty had never bothered him, but to be stationed in the woods with a chatterbox put him over the edge. Shifting his musket to his left hand, he filled his right with his tomahawk. He darted forward, not certain if he just wanted to scare the man or murder him.

Because of his sudden move an Ungarakii warrior's warclub only grazed his right shoulder instead of crushing his skull. Owen twisted from the impact, pain shooting down his arm. As he came around, he whipped his musket up and across the Ungarakii's painted face. Though deerskin sheathed it, the heavy steel barrel still cracked bone and spun the man away. A second warrior darted in from beyond the first, his warclub raised high for a heavy blow. Owen lunged, driving the musket's muzzle into his stomach. As the Ungarakii doubled over, Owen buried his tomahawk in the man's skull.

'Sound the alarm!' Owen abandoned the tomahawk, and stripped the cover from his musket. He had no time to shift hand or aim. He simply thrust the musket at another Ungarakii, pressed his left thumb to the firestone and invoked magick.

The brimstone's flash lit the small sentry post. The ball blew through the middle of the closest attacker and caught the one behind him on the hip. Flipping the musket around, Owen clubbed the wounded man to the ground. Another step and he smashed the butt into the first Ungarakii's head, crushing his skull.

He glanced toward the others. Lieutenant Marnhull sat on a bed of rusty pine needles, his hat gone, his right ear missing as well. His right shoulder, shattered by a warclub, sank lower than the left. He rocked side to side, mumbling a lullaby and staring at nothing.

The third sentry lay face down, his hair matted with blood, not moving.

Owen tossed his own rifle aside and snatched up the dead soldier's. 'Be quiet.'

The Lieutenant's voice shrank, obeying as if he were a scolded child.

There has to be more out there. Owen kept slowly turning, not wanting to present his back to any direction for

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