Corwin smiled. 'Only should it serve our master. Otherwise, our paths are the same.'
Bovai snorted derisively. 'Nevertheless, ride forward.'
Corwin hesitated then bowed low in acknowledgment and turned away.
Golun rode up to join Bovai, his gaze locked on Corwin who was stalking away. 'I'd kill him now and be done with it,' he announced.
'Our master has need of him. He is to go south and prepare the way for an invasion in the next three or four years. Until I sit at Murad's right hand, or replace him, I cannot risk displeasing the Master.'
Golun seemed unconvinced. 'A traitor is always a traitor.'
'Like my brother up there?' Bovai whispered, nodding to the high pass.
The morning air was so clear that he still felt as if he could see him, in a small knot of several men, where the flicker of light from the dawning sun flashed off a bit of metal.
'Finish off the Marauders, that is what will give you glory, and reunite those who follow you now. Then worry about Tinuva.'
Bovai said nothing and merely nodded, his attention still focused on the crest of the mountain and the flicker of light.
The snow drifted down gently and when Dennis stopped walking it was the only sound, the whispering of the flakes as they came to rest on the overhanging branches and the forest floor.
He heard the snicker of a horse and turned, bow coming up instinctively, arrow already nocked. Then he lowered his weapon.
Roxanne, following his track, ducked low under a heavily-laden branch and came up to his side.
'I told you to stay back with the main column,' he said softly.
'I hunted here with my father for years. I can help.'
'Not now, not this kind of hunting,' he hissed. 'Go back.'
He set off again at the double, moving swiftly, daring to stay on the narrow trail. Throughout the morning and into the afternoon he had been haunted by the fear that Bovai would have sent a blocking force around to cut off this avenue of escape. Corwin knew the plan – he must have passed it along – and to run blindly forward with the hope that Bovai had not been able to set up a trap in time was a quick way to a certain death. If they were going to block the bridge, they'd have scouts out forward as well.
Down in the forest in the broad open valley the snow was not so deep, but now that they were ascending the next ridgeline the passage was getting difficult again. He had long ago taken off his cloak and slung it around his pack, but nevertheless he was breathing heavily, and sweat was soaking through his tunic.
Drenched as he was he knew he'd have problems with the cold once night settled.
He pressed on, inwardly cursing as the girl doggedly followed, at one point moving ahead of him, breaking the trail.
He finally came up by her side and grabbed hold of her reins.
'Damn you, go back.'
'You're ready to drop from exhaustion, Hartraft. Let someone mounted break the trail.'
'A mounted rider is a dead target in these woods,' he hissed. 'We do it on foot. Now go back.'
'The women and children back with the column need rest, a fire.'
'We don't stop.'
'What?'
'You heard me. We don't stop till we reach the bridge.'
Though his men knew the routine he had decided not to tell Wolfgar's people of his plan to keep marching: there was no sense in their anticipating the agony of a night march in a storm until they were already into it.
'That's still fifteen or more miles off – half of them will be dead by then,' she snapped. 'You can't push these people on a night march.'
Dennis reached up and grabbed her by the arm. 'Your father understood this and I would expect his daughter too. This is not some leisurely hike. They caught us by surprise and either we run them into exhaustion and they stop, or they catch us and slaughter us. We march through the night. Those that can't keep up, we give them a bow, a few arrows and hope they slow the moredhel down a bit, then finish themselves off.'
'Including the children?' she asked, her voice as cold as the evening chill.
He was tempted to give her a bitter response but then shook his head. 'No,' he whispered, 'of course not. Get some of the women to double up on the horses with them, they can hold a child if it falls asleep, but we keep moving.' He hesitated. 'I've ordered my men not to carry anyone who falls behind – if they do, I lose both the straggler and a good soldier. Everyone marches or they die.'
She nodded, eyes not on Dennis, but still surveying the forest. 'They didn't get ahead of you. I know this way. The moredhel would have to make a march of sixty miles or more to swing around the valley and come back out here to cut us off. Besides, there's half a dozen trails like this over this ridge. If there was a trap it would have been just on the far side of the pass back into the valley. You're free of them.'
'I don't survive by living on assumptions,' Dennis replied.
'Break the trail with my horse, otherwise it will be you who's left behind by tomorrow morning.'
He scanned the woods yet again. Already the shadows had deepened so that he could barely see more than half a bowshot away. Throughout the day the snow had been unbroken except for the tracks of animals.
All his instincts were against her suggestion but he knew she was right. He could not keep up this pace of running point throughout the night and still be ready for a fight. He reached down and undipped his snowshoes. 'Take my shoes, then wait for the column to come up. Tell Asayaga to keep them moving.'
'No.'
'What?'
'This old horse is big enough for both of us. Like I said, I know this ground. I'll ride behind you.'
He was tempted to reach up and simply pull her out of the saddle but the look of defiance in her eyes sparked a memory and finally he shook his head. He clipped his snowshoes to the side of the saddle, pulled out his cloak, put it back on then scrambled up, Roxanne sliding back. She hesitated, then finally put her arms around his waist.
The horse looked back at him, and he knew if it had a voice it would cry out in protest. The poor dumb beast was exhausted. He leaned over, patted it on the neck and whispered a few words of encouragement, then nudged it forward. Though he would not admit it, the feel of the warm saddle under him was a blessed relief. The horse ambled along slowly, needing just an occasional nudge to guide it along the trail.
As the darkness settled and deepened the snow increased, heavy thick flakes coming straight down, then gradually shifting to lighter and drier flakes that began to dance and eddy as a light breeze picked up.
He caught a glimpse of a darker shadow in the snow and reined in. A stag, caught by surprise, struggled to its feet, a curtain of snow falling from its back. The two gazed at each other for an instant and then it clumsily bounded off.
'A good sign,' Roxanne whispered. 'No one is about.'
He nodded and they rode on in silence for several minutes.
'You hunted here before?' he asked.
'Before the shortness of breath began to afflict my father he took me over the pass several times. I think it was more just to see some new country: there was always more than enough game in our own valley. We'd ride like this, with me behind him, and he'd tell me stories of kings, princes, cities with a hundred tall spiralling towers and of the great ships that sailed on warm seas.'
He spared a look back over his shoulder. There was a sad smile on her face as she remembered a happier time.
'I think that's the most I've heard you say since I've met you.'
'And this is the most you've spoken to me since I met you.'
Again there was a long silence. The snow came down harder again, at times obscuring the view so that he could barely see a dozen feet in front of them. They crossed a narrow stream, the horse nearly losing its footing on the ice-covered rocks on the far bank. It was barely calf-deep but it was, nevertheless, a major barrier. Men would get wet, then have to keep on marching, their boots freezing, the cold sapping their strength. Chances were at least one would lose his footing in the stream and get soaked, a virtual death-sentence for what in other times would be seen as a source of levity and a good laugh.
He waited for a moment, not sure how far back the column was.