guess. 'You are lord Feston, Festil's son,' he said, 'marshall of the west wall.'
'Yes, today I am that,' Feston replied curtly, staring back from deep-set eyes. He had his father's narrow face and high cheeks, but his brow jutted forward with rough angles, giving him the appearance of a perpetual squint. Beneath shaggy brows like woolly caterpillars, a large nose hooked down over a wide gash of a mouth pulled into a grim line. 'Now see to your task,' he said as he turned and in great haste sprinted off in the direction of the keep. Nimbly jumping and sidestepping still sleeping forms, he rapidly covered the distance, his mail a-jingle with his erratic motion.
Alodar finally cleared his head and turned to wake Morwin. Together they dragged the two-wheeled cart, near which they had spent the night, to the base of the stone steps near the western gatehouse. From the large trunks lashed to the rough sideposts, they unpacked the crucibles, sacks of starch, slabs of wax, and other paraphernalia they would need for the day. Swinging the heavy loads across their backs, they slowly mounted the stairs to the high platforms jutting out from the wall above. As their heads poked through the opening in the first level, Alodar paused, deeply inhaling the aroma of a morning meal simmering above a small firepit.
'On to the top, thaumaturge. There is no work for you here,' one of the men stirring the broth growled. Alodar shrugged his shoulders and resumed his upward tread. He and Morwin climbed on past a second level, which, like the first, supported archers who would fire through the narrow rows of loopholes encircling the castle. Then, panting from their exertion, they arrived at last at the top of the wall.
Alodar glanced down the line of merlons and crenels. They ran straight and true to the southwest tower some three hundred feet away and then continued on at right angles to the east for another six hundred. All along the length, knots of men were making ready for the day, stringing bows, nocking arrows, and watching the activities in the fields beyond. The tower to the southeast was the smallest of the four that marked the corners of the fortress, but it also soared into the sky, like a double-length lance, seemingly too tall for such a slender shaft.
From the corner, the wall swept back to the north, but Alodar's view of the east gatehouse was obscured by the massive keep that sat in the center of the bailey. Although already high off the courtyard floor, he had to crane his neck upwards to see the bartizan from which he had launched the air gondola the day before. Behind the huge stronghold, the wall continued on to complete the square between the two corner towers of the north and the western gatehouse next to where Alodar stood. He looked into the bustle of activity among the ramshackle of temporary huts and timber buildings in the bailey below, and the near chaos contrasted sharply with the cold symmetry of the gray stone.
'Make ready, here comes the first,' rang in Alodar's ear as he hurriedly dropped his load and knelt up against the protection of the wall. His heart began to race as he heard the crack of the siegecraft's release. In an instant, the walls rang with the sharp contact of stone on stone.
The archer next to him leaped from his crouch and drew his longbow. 'They start early today,' he said to no one. 'They must be anxious to feel our sting.' He loosed three shafts before ducking again beside Alodar's gear to await the next onslaught. The second crack was faint and distant. Although Alodar could see rocks ricochet and splinter off the other walls, the stone he pressed against remained quiet and firm, not reverberating from any direct hit. Seconds passed, and the tenseness grew. Alodar held his breath, wondering why no volley came from the west in synchronization with the rest. What could disrupt the precision that had bombarded them so incessantly the many days before? Finally he could stand it no longer and slowly extended himself to squint over the capstone.
'The belfries,' he shouted. 'The belfries are in motion towards the wall.'
All along the west, the throwing engines were idle, but the men-at-arms hid behind their shields no longer. They ran at full tilt, carrying their long scaling ladders and pulling the tall leather-and-steel-covered belfries towards the defenses. Three slender towers rocked and swayed like giant metronomes as they joggled over the rough terrain, but they stayed upright and closed with alarming swiftness.
As the word of the assault propagated down the line, the defenders sprang to positions to fire at the now exposed targets rapidly approaching them. The archer next to Alodar released one shaft and was drawing another when he suddenly yelled and was thrown backwards, his bow hurling high into the air. Alodar quickly reached out and grabbed his legs tightly as the heavily armed man nearly tumbled over the platform down onto the bailey floor. The shaft of a blue-feathered arrow quivered in his shoulder through split rings of mail. Alodar glanced back through the crenel to see doors at the top of the belfries thrown open and archers within answering the volleys from the castle, shaft for shaft. Along the wall he heard additional screams as more missiles found their mark.
'Quickly, Morwin,' he shouted. 'Start filling the molds.'
The next archer in the line, several crenels away, saw his stricken comrade and slowly began to crawl to him, well aware of the swish of arrows that now sailed with deadly regularity through the openings in the wall. When he arrived, he pinned the wounded man firmly, and Morwin, with one mighty heave, yanked the arrow free. The soldier cried with pain as he passed into unconsciousness, and the ragged hole in his arm disgorged a flood of deep red blood and bits of flesh.
Alodar blotted a bit of the blood onto a piece of cloth and tossed it into the small crucible he had ready, simmering nearby. He added some starch and said the incantation quickly, with no elaborate subterfuge of words. In a few moments the starch began to thicken into a gel and Alodar turned his attention to the wax, not bothering to check that the bloodflow was stopping as well.
'Which one is the coolest, Morwin?' he asked as he looked over the apprentice's growing collection of limbs, torsos, and heads that he dumped from small lead molds. The apprentice pointed to his left and then resumed filling the empty molds from the bubbling vat and lining the solidified forms in a row.
Alodar selected a waxen arm and twisted a deep gouge near the shoulder joint with his thumb. Returning to the archer, he broke the connection of the spell and then cut the mail and underjersey away from the wound. He stabbed the scraps of cloth and ringlets into the soft wax of the model and began a second incantation. When he was done, he held the limb over his small fire. Then working with steady strokes he slowly filled the gouge, returning the wax to its original smooth shape.
To all external appearances the man now seemed well; the blood had stopped and the wound was neatly closed. But from the furrowed and sweating brow Alodar knew that the pain was still there. The soldier would recover much more quickly than if unattended and with no risk of infection, but it would be some time before he again drew a bow.
'Thaumaturge, over here and hurry.'
'On the second level, two men down.'
'Quickly man, stop the bleeding.'
Cries for Alodar's assistance rang out along the wall and from the platform underneath. He bundled up what gear he could carry and scurried toward the nearest call for help. He quickly patched up two men and moved on to a third, too intent upon his tasks to watch the progress of the approaching attack.
He attended three more on the second level in as many minutes and then climbed back up to Morwin for new supplies. As his head popped through the platform floor, he heard several ragged hurrahs and the sound of sword on shield. Down towards the flanking tower, be could see that two belfries had made contact with the wall. The blue-surcoated troops of Bandor poured from the openings onto the walkway and into the press of defenders converging upon them.
Two separate melees formed on the small confines of the narrow ledge. Alodar squinted at the swirls of activity but could not guess the outcome, since neither side could maneuver many men into striking position.
'By the laws, Alodar, look,' Morwin shouted. Alodar ripped his gaze from the fighting to the wall immediately behind him. A third belfry thudded against the stone, and men began to jump out over the merlon onto the platform. Alodar quickly looked beyond the men to the gatehouse and then back over his shoulder to the south. No one else was near; all the men-at-arms along the wall had rushed to defend against the first two onslaughts.
Six men bounded onto the walkway, with swords drawn, and began to move towards Alodar and the ladder to the courtyard. Alodar looked wildly around the paraphernalia for some weapon to aid him. He saw the still reclining form of the first man he had tended. With a deep breath, he stooped and withdrew the unused sword from its scabbard.
The cold steel felt surprisingly heavy and unbalanced, and he clasped his left hand over his right around the thick hilt. He advanced one step and grimaced with the effort of remembering the meager instruction he had received as a boy. The advancing men seemed to pay him no heed and rapidly closed upon the point of the blade