carefully and, when he found Karin lying on the dock trailing her hands in the water, told her only that the house was empty.

Even the second manor they reached had not appeared to disturb her as much as it disturbed him. Like the first manor, this one was perched on a hill, but they had seen no smoke rising from the hall, and neither dogs nor housecarls came to meet them.

Roric approached cautiously, coming up behind the burial mound that stood part way down the hill. It was late afternoon, and the mound’s long shadow lay across the buildings. They needed more food, having eaten everything the woman had given them three days earlier, yet the silent structures could have concealed an ambush. But the buildings all stood uninhabited, their doors open, their contents in confusion as though the people who lived here had fled something unexpected and unimaginable.

“They must have been driven out by some of the raiders that woman mentioned,” Karin commented, but Roric did not think so. Raiders would have smashed everything they could not carry, and probably fired the hall as they left. The open buildings to him signaled panic but not looting. The wind whispered around the eaves, pushing the doors slowly back and forth with faint creaks. Karin, unconcerned, whistled as she found some rather stale bread and cheese although deciding that the milk in the dairy had gone too sour.

In the hall she tidily folded up the disordered blankets on the beds. Roric had to pull her away or she might have suggested they spend the night there. The sun had slipped over the horizon by the time they were mounted again, riding out past the burial mound-and, just for a second, a form flickered on the top of the mound, seeming to raise a hand in salute or in warning. Roric shouted to Goldmane and urged him forward, knowing that Karin would take it as a challenge to race, and not daring to look back.

While day-dreaming that spring, a short time ago-although it seemed like years-of the fortune he would make to be worthy of Karin’s love, Roric had always assumed he would return to offer her what he had won, not have her riding beside him on the voyage to find it. Now, while trying to plan for the unknown dangers that lay ahead, he repeatedly found himself irritated by her presence-and the constant check it made on what he might dare. But if she had not been with him he would have stood and fought Gizor to the death, and he felt fairly sure whose death it would have been.

“The powers of voima are with us now,” Karin now said with sudden cheerfulness, giving him a smile. “We’ll find Valmar-if your stallion can keep up!” She kicked her mare and was off, galloping ahead of him down the grassy track, her braids whipping out behind her. Goldmane sprang in pursuit. For a second, just a second, Roric thought he saw a huge dark shaggy shape, the size of the bear he had killed in the Wanderers’ realm, rising from behind a boulder a quarter mile ahead. He reached for his sword, but when he looked again there was nothing there at all.

They reached at the end of a long day’s riding the rift where the peninsula was nearly cut in two by a narrow arm of the ocean, cutting far inland. Roric pulled Goldmane up at the crest of the hill, looking across the valley before them. The peninsula here narrowed to ten miles wide or less. Off to the east were high, barren, virtually impassable cliffs, facing on the ocean on their far side. From those cliffs on this side cascaded a river that became salt as it ran toward the ocean away to the west. His fingers found his little bone charm, and he turned it over absently. So far, he thought, fate had been with them, but their stories might end abruptly in this valley.

The track before them dropped rapidly, then followed a zigzag path through barren grasslands and scrub, dodging boulders the size of Hadros’s hall, until over a mile away it reached the salt river. Before them, according to the stories he remembered the king telling years ago, was the only easy away across the river.

The mountains they had seen for days on the horizon ahead of them rose at last on the far side of the river, their upper reaches streaked with snow. It was as though here the earth had cracked open and the ocean had rushed into the breach. The river itself was spotted with islands made of single enormous rocks, the odd tree growing from their summits.

In the distance came a high shrill whistle, a signal or else a sea bird. “A hundred men could hide among those boulders, and you’d never see them until it was too late,” Roric muttered. The only sign of humanity was a wide blackened area of burnt wood and tumbled stones, open to the sun, which might once have been a castle.

“Did that castle guard the crossing?” Karin asked, pulling her mare up beside him. The wind blew the fine hair escaping from her braids across her eyes, and she pushed it back.

“It used to. Hadros said that it was fired in the last war, and if it was rebuilt it’s been fired again.”

Roric considered the ruin in silence a minute longer. “This must be,” he said then, “the kingdom of that king you were telling me about, outlawed at the All-Gemot. If so, those deserted hills we’ve just come through would have been where his tenants once lived. The ford is the only way to go from the southern to the northern part of the peninsula without taking ship. I expect too many kings-those on the sea, those to the north, and those to the south-fear control of the crossing for anyone ever to have held the castle successfully for long.”

“No use us trying to make this into our kingdom, then,” Karin said, and he could not tell if she was mocking.

There was at any rate no sign now of anyone trying to guard the crossing. “I had better go ahead,” he said, “to find out if there really might be someone behind those rocks. You wait here. I don’t see a ship in the river, but Gizor would know better than to leave the ship in plain sight.”

He did not add that a salt river like this might well mark the end of the powers of voima that had been riding with them.

“I’m coming with you,” said Karin determinedly. “It’s you Gizor is trying to kill, not me.”

“And I may need you and your knife to back me up again,” he answered with a sudden grin. “Come on, then.”

He took the lead, allowing his stallion to pick his own way down the slope while gazing around intently. There were distant, plaintive cries from shore birds-that is, he was fairly sure they were all birds-and the murmur and rustle of the wind, but no other sounds. Even the salt river was still too distant to hear.

“I don’t think they will have brought horses,” Roric said over his shoulder. “So if try to jump us, we’ll outrun them-give that spotted mare of yours a chance to prove she really is a horse of voima.” Nothing stirred behind the boulders littering the flat area before them; when a bird rose abruptly almost under Goldmane’s feet he was almost as startled as the stallion.

“Hadros always said that there were strange creatures here in the northern lands,” Roric added once Goldmane had all four feet on the ground again, forcing his voice to stay calm. “But when I was little he would never tell me what they were, and when I was older I never asked. How about a sea-troll, as much bigger and fiercer than the troll we met at the manor as the sea is bigger than a stream?” He pulled his lips back from his teeth, enjoying the thought. “If there’s a sea-troll here, we may not have to worry about Gizor after all.”

“You know,” commented Karin, “considering that you and Hadros are enemies, you are very much alike sometimes.”

He looked back at her in surprise, but only for a second because he needed his attention for the narrow track. “But I am Gizor’s enemy, not Hadros’s,” he told himself, except that he was Hadros’s also. But would it be so bad to be like the king? He shook his head to dismiss such useless thoughts. He needed to act, not to worry. He turned his attention fully to watching for ambush.

The shadows from the huge boulders were dark and crooked, and half an army could have hidden in the scrubby brush. He squinted at the rocks, trying to decide if some of the darkness at their feet might be the ashes of camp fires-or even puddles of dried blood-rather than merely shadow, but it was impossible to tell. As they proceeded slowly downhill, Roric kept his back straight, trying not to feel a tickle between his shoulder blades. To look back, as though fearing an archer behind him, would only distract him from the much more likely dangers ahead.

They went slowly between the boulders until they reached the ruins of the castle, its tumbled, fire-scorched stones not yet overgrown with creepers. His fist squeezed tight on his sword hilt, and it felt as though the air itself vibrated with tension. They went quietly, cautiously, the only sounds the creak of saddles and the chink of horseshoes on stone.

“Look!” said Karin sharply. He swiveled his head, following her pointing hand. Off to the west, coming up the salt river from the direction of the sea, was a red sail.

No time for caution now. “Come on!” he shouted. “They must have reached the river before us and spotted us when we came over the crest of the hill. But we’ll beat them to the crossing!” He kicked Goldmane forward, and

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