The next day, Arpulo's men withdrew from around the castle where Aranast Aragis' son was leading the defenders. Aranast was glad to be able to come out. He was glad to join in helping to chase the imperials out of his father's dominions. He was appalled at the way his father's vassals obeyed the Fox.

'You are not their sovereign, lord king,' he told Gerin that evening as the army encamped. 'You have no business requiring them to act as you desire.'

'Fine,' Gerin said cheerfully. 'In that case, you can go back to your keep and stay there, too.'

'That is not what I meant.' Had Aranast's back got any stiffer, he would have turned to stone. 'These men are vassals to my father, King Aragis the Archer. It is fitting and proper for your own vassals to grant you all due obedience. It is neither fitting nor proper for the vassals of another sovereign to grant you the aforesaid obedience, nor for you to claim it.'

Gerin felt like marching around behind Aranast and giving him a boot in the arse, that being a likelier avenue to admit sense than his ears. Regretfully abandoning the idea, the Fox said, 'When we were campaigning against the imperials before, I acknowledged your father as the overall commander. I wasn't his vassal when I did it. The world didn't end. It won't end now, either, if his men obey me for a while.'

'My father will not approve,' Aranast said.

'If he has any sense, he will,' Gerin replied. 'I don't know how much that proves, I will admit. Besides, your father is still besieged down there'-he pointed south-'and so they can't very well obey him for the time being. Do please remember, I'm the one who got rid of Swerilas the Slippery and won my half of the war. I did that before the imperials retreated, before they knew they were even supposed to retreat. What did your father do? Locked himself up in a keep, that's what.'

'That's unfair,' Aranast said. 'He was heavily beset, and facing the larger half of the imperial army-against which he struck some strong blows.'

'Good for him,' Gerin said. 'I have no complaint about anything he did. No, I take that back-for him to send you to tell me not to presume to forage off the countryside struck me as excessive, and does to this day. When he comes out of his castle, he's welcome to take his men back, for all of me. In the meanwhile, I intend to get some use out of them.'

Aranast sputtered and fumed. He remonstrated with some of his father's vassals. 'Gerin the Fox has a higher rank than yours, Prince Aranast,' one of them told him. 'If you expect us to obey you, shouldn't you also expect us to obey him?' That made Aragis' son sputter and fume even more, but he gave the noble no answer.

The imperials had trampled down a good many fields of wheat and barley in Aragis' dominions, and stolen a lot of livestock. Now that they were withdrawing from the northlands, they set fires in the fields behind them, both to hamper Gerin's pursuit and to leave Aragis' vassals and serfs as hungry and weak as they could.

Aranast cursed Arpulo with bitter hatred. So did Aragis' retainers who rode with the Fox. So did Gerin. Arpulo was conducting a coldbloodedly vicious retreat, doing as much harm as he could before he finally went south over the High Kirs.

But only the Fox's long experience as a ruler, a man whose every action was on display before his fellows, let his curses sound sincere. Inwardly, he was something less than downhearted at seeing how much Aragis would have to do in the lands he already ruled before he could contemplate going to war against anyone else.

Just before sunset, the riders Gerin had sent to the village where Elise was keeping a tavern caught up with his army. 'You haven't got her with you,' Gerin noted. 'Did she refuse to come?'

'No, lord king,' one of them answered. 'She wasn't there.'

Gerin scowled. 'Where did she go? Did any of the villagers know? Did she go south into the Empire, or north to Duren's holding?'

'No one knew, lord king,' the rider said. 'One day she was there, as she'd been for the past little while. Next morning, she was gone. The villagers made it plain she was not in the habit of telling them what she intended doing before she did it.'

'I believe that,' Gerin said. 'She was never in the habit of telling anyone what she intended doing before she did it.'

He paced back and forth, discontented with the world. He'd hoped to have an unambiguous answer about the woman he'd once loved, but the world hadn't been generous enough to give him one. For her sake and his own, he hoped Elise had gone down over the mountains, not up to her son's holding. Not only would the road up to Duren's be full of refugees and brigands and deserters from Aragis' army and Gerin's and the imperials', and thus dangerous for her, she might make the road dangerous for Gerin if she reached the keep and inflamed Duren against him.

Gerin wondered again if she could do that. In the end, he had to shrug and shake his head. He simply did not know.

By that time the next day, he'd stopped worrying about a woman he' d seen for an hour or so over a twenty- year span. He had more urgentperhaps not more important, but more urgent-concerns: his army came up to the keep in which Aragis the Archer had been besieged.

**

Aragis proved not to be in the castle. 'Oh, no, lord king,' said the steward, a pudgy fellow named Wellas Therthas' son. 'He went south in pursuit of Arpulo when the imperials broke off their encirclement yesterday.'

'Sounds like him,' Gerin agreed. He eyed Wellas. 'You could have stayed besieged a lot longer before they starved you out, couldn't you?'

'Oh, aye, lord king,' Wellas answered. 'But how could you have known that, to bring it out so sure and certain?' He eyed the Fox, too, with a mixture of respect and wonder.

'Call it a good guess, if you like,' Gerin said. If Wellas was still plump after a good many days shut away from the outside, the siege couldn't have caused the defenders too much in the way of hardship. Gerin didn't want to come right out and say that, though, having no reason to hurt the steward's feelings.

The Fox rode after his fellow king. Wellas thoughtfully helped supply the army with journeybread, sausage, and smoked meat from the castle storerooms, proving the keep had indeed been far from running out of supplies. Gerin was quickly glad to have the extra food: the imperials had set more fires behind their line of march, and he could have done little in the way of foraging.

For that very reason, he met Aragis coming back up the Elabon Way. The Archer looked disgusted. 'Good to see you, Fox,' he growled, though good was not a word that would have fit his humor. 'We can do this better together than I could by myself-I haven't the men for a proper pursuit, and I just went after that bastard of an Arpulo as soon as he pulled out: didn't realize he'd burn everything behind him as he went.' His lean face-not much leaner than when Gerin had seen him last-was streaked with soot and smoke.

'He does seem to be doing that,' Gerin said, nodding. 'A farewell present since he can't stay, you might say.'

'So I gather.' Aragis looked more disgusted than ever. 'I've been penned up in there, away from everything that looks like news. What in the five hells happened? Did Crebbig I, his ever so illustrious majesty, have the generosity to drop dead?'

'No such luck, I'm afraid,' Gerin answered. 'The Sithonians are revolting again, and he's called his men back over the mountains.'

'Ah, is that what it is? So we'll be rid of Swerilas as well as Arpulo, eh?' Aragis nodded, too. 'I won't miss either of them a bit, and that's the truth.' His gaze suddenly sharpened. 'What are you doing here, Fox? I mean here in particular. Why aren't you chasing Swerilas' men instead of Arpulo's? For that matter, where are Swerilas' men? Why didn't they come down and join their friends?'

'They were chasing me,' Gerin answered. 'They tried chasing me through the wood west of Biton's shrine in the valley of Ikos. Do you know that wood?' Aragis' eyes widened in his filthy face. Gerin took that for agreement. He went on, 'They rode into the wood. They didn't ride out.' He explained the oracular response he'd had from Biton's Sibyl, and how he interpreted it.

' `Bronze and wood,' ' Aragis repeated. 'I would have taken that to mean swords and chariots, or maybe

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