to her at that moment.

'We need a fire. Food. Shelter,' said Kell, matter-offactly. His eyes were burning. 'Or we will die.'

'I like a man who doesn't mince his words,' said Saark.

'And I like a man who fucking pulls his weight! Now get out there and find us firewood, and find us a shelter, or I swear Saark, you'll be wearing another wide and gaping smile on your belly before the sun is down.'

'Fine, fine, a simple 'please' would have sufficed.' Saark turned to hunt for firewood, a dandy in rags, but the look on Kell's face halted him. He frowned, turning back. 'Yes, old man? Is there something else? Maybe I should stick a brush up my arse and sweep the floor whilst I'm at it?'

'One more thing. No more poetry. Or I'll cut out your cursed tongue, and be glad I done it.'

Saark snorted, and headed into the gloom-shadowed forest, muttering, 'All these threats of violence are so low born, lacking in nobility, so uncouth and raw. Threats truly are the language of the peasant.'

Moving into the forest, they found a natural shelter from the wind, and in a small alcove surrounded by holly trees and ancient, moss-covered rocks, built a fire. Myriam was gone for two hours, and returned with a dead fox brought down by a single arrow from her bow. As she went about skinning and gutting the creature, Saark stripped off his wet shirt and laid it on a rock by the fire to dry. He flexed his fast-repairing body, and Kell looked up from where he was sharpening Ilanna's blades with a small whetstone.

'You're repairing well, lad,' he said, eyes fixed on the chest-wound cut from above Saark's heart by Kradekka on the plateau of Helltop. 'I still find it hard to believe you carried that Soul Gem inside you for so long – and realised nothing.'

'I was bewitched. Once. And only once.' Saark sighed, and stretched out, like a cat in the sun, and ran his hands up and down his arms and flanks, checking himself. 'It'll never happen again, I promise you that! And by all the gods, I've taken a battering since I met you.' His eyes sparkled with good humour. His pain had obviously receded, and he was more his old self. 'Look at all these new scars! Incredible. One would have thought keeping company with The Legend would have brought me nothing but women, fine honey-wine, rich meats and incredible fame. But now? Now, I'm stuck in a forest after the, quite frankly, most abominable adventures of my entire life, I'm riddled with bruises and scars, been beaten more times than a whore's had hot fishermen, stabbed, burned, chastised and abused, and to top it all the only company I get is that of a grumpy old bastard who should be crossbow whipped in the face for his taste in clothes, whiskey and women.' Saark sighed.

Kell looked up. 'Shut up,' he said.

'See? Where's the witty banter? The dazzling repartee? I wish to discuss literature, philosophy and women. Instead, I get to grub in the woods for mushrooms and onions, dirty my nails like the lowest working man instead of being ridden like a donkey by a buxom farm lass!'

Kell sighed. And looked to Myriam. 'Is the meat ready? The stew's bubbling.'

Myriam crossed to him carrying a thin metal plate, and scraped a pile of fox meat into the pan. 'I'll dry the rest, roll it in salt. We can take it with us.'

'Good girl,' said Kell, nodding his approval. Saark scowled, and started to remove his trews. 'And what are you doing?' snapped Kell.

Saark, half bent, glanced up. 'I'm sick of wearing wet clothes.'

'You're not removing your stinking trews here, lad. Get out into the forest.'

'But it's cold in the forest.'

'I am not staring at your hairy arse whilst I cook,' said Kell, face like thunder. 'I, also, have been through much recently. And it's bad enough seeing your homeland torn asunder and your friends murdered by ice-smoke magick and insect-born albino soldiers, without some tart wishing to dangle his tackle over my fox stew. So get out into the forest, and try not to sit in the pine needles. They sting, you know.'

Saark stared hard at Kell. 'Kell, you're worse than any old fish wife,' he snapped, but pulled his trews up and sauntered away from their makeshift camp, swaying his hips provocatively, just to annoy the old warrior.

An hour later, with the winter sun dying in the sky and pink tendrils creeping over the horizon chased by sombre, snow-filled storm clouds, Kell sat back with hands on his belly, and closed his eyes.

Saark was mending his torn shirt with needle and thread supplied by Myriam's comprehensive pack; a woman used to living in the wilds for weeks at a time, the provisions she carried were lightweight but necessary. Salt, arrows, thread, various herbs, and several spare bowstrings. As she pointed out, her bow was her life. It was her means to a regular food supply, and with fox stew in their bellies, it was hard for anybody to disagree.

Nienna was staring into the fire, lost in thought, holding the binding on her severed finger. Myriam moved and sat beside her. 'Do you want me to look at that? It should be ready for a fresh dressing.'

Nienna sighed, and nodded. 'Yes. Thank you.'

As Myriam unwound the bandage from Nienna's hand, examined the stitched flesh above the cut finger, and applied fresh herbs to the wound, Nienna found herself looking away, face stony.

The albino soldier under Skaringa Dak had taken her finger to punish Kell for an escape attempt. Now, she felt she was less than a full woman. No longer beautiful. No longer whole. Nienna looked down, and flexed her hand, wincing as pain shot up the edge of her hand and arm.

'Still hurts, yes?' smiled Myriam.

'Like a bitch,' said Nienna.

'And you've met a few of those, right?'

Nienna laughed. 'I didn't mean you.'

'I did,' said Myriam. She sighed. 'I've done… questionable things.' She stroked her own cheek, then rubbed at her eyes. 'I'm tired of doing bad things. I have been given a gift. A second chance. I am strong now, and fit, and although in the eyes of the people of Falanor I am…'

'Outcast?' said Kell, softly.

They looked up. He was reclined, his body a shadowy bulk in the gloom of fast approaching night. Firelight glinted in his beard, in his glittering eyes. He may have looked like a big friendly bear, ensconced as he was in his tatty battered tufted old jerkin, but this was a big friendly bear that could turn nasty and insane in the blink of an eye.

'Yes. An outcast. Alien. The enemy.' Myriam smiled at Kell, and shrugged. She turned back to Nienna. 'Once this is all done, once this game is played out, I will be hunted to my death in Falanor. By every man with a bow or knife. The vachine are seen as evil. I cannot change that.'

'They drink the blood of others,' said Kell, voice still soft.

'And you eat the flesh of beasts,' said Myriam.

'Not human flesh,' said Kell.

'To the east, past Valantrium Moor, past Drennach, past the Tetragim Marshes, there are tribes who eat the flesh of men. They see it as no different to cow, or dog, or pig. It's just meat.'

'They, too, are evil.'

'Why so?'

'It goes against the teachings of the Church. Human flesh is sacred.'

Myriam shrugged. 'So you mean to tell me if you were ever put in a position where you were going to die of starvation, and human flesh was on the menu, you absolutely would not eat? Not even to save your own life? To save the lives of your children?'

'I would not,' lied Kell, throat dry, remembering the Days of Blood, where he had indeed eaten human flesh, and much more, and much worse. 'I would rather die,' he said, voice husky, eyes hidden.

'Well that's where we differ, then,' snapped Myriam, voice hard. 'But you should not judge so readily, Kell. I guided you and Nienna and Saark out from that bastard mountain; I saved your lives. This time.'

'Lucky for us,' nodded Kell, dark eyes glinting in the firelight. And now he didn't look like such a friendly bear. Now he looked far more dangerous. 'But enough talk. What are your plans now, Myriam?'

'I will attempt to kill the Vampire Warlords.'

This was met with momentary silence. The wind hissed through the trees, and it sounded like the roll of the ocean against a beach. It was hypnotic. Somewhere, snow clumped from high branches. Conifers creaked and sighed.

'Why?' said Kell, eventually, head tilted to one side. It was such a simple question, Myriam was speechless for a few moments as she composed her thoughts.

'It is the right thing to do,' she said, eventually, and looked into the fire, refusing to meet his gaze.

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