figures emerged from the boulder field, and Vaijon smothered something that sounded remarkably like a curse.
'Tomanak ! How in the name of all the gods did they get a
'They didn't, lad,' Bahzell said softly. Vaijon glanced at him oddly, and he grinned as yet another rider picked his cautious way clear of the boulder field. 'Those are coursers, Vaijon.'
'But-' Vaijon began to protest, then stopped as the sheer size of the 'horses' registered. There were dismounted men with them, and the head of the tallest man out there didn't reach the shoulder of the smallest of the half-dozen coursers. And then a seventh rider came around the boulder field, on a much smaller mount, and Bahzell laughed.
'Well, now! It seems I may've been being just a mite hasty. That fellow trailing along behind
'You do, hey?' Hurthang looked at him skeptically, then shrugged. 'So what are you thinking to do now?'
'Why, if they're minded to call on us all sociable like, we ought to be meeting them,' Bahzell replied, and strode down the rough wall with long, swinging strides.
The others followed, all but Hurthang scrambling down with considerably greater difficulty, and he walked down to the foot of the slope atop which Charhan's Despair sat. Then he stopped and waited, arms folded, for the Sothoii to reach him.
It didn't take them long. Vaijon and Brandark, neither of whom had ever seen a courser before, stared at the huge creatures. It was impossible for anything that size to be simultaneously graceful and delicate, yet somehow the coursers managed it, and neither of them could figure out how. Bahzell, however, was focused on other concerns-like the tall, red-haired man in silver-washed plate armor mounted on the chestnut stallion at the head of the Sothoii party. The rider nodded to Vaijon and Brandark gravely, as if acknowledging a reaction he'd seen many times, but his eyes were on Bahzell.
'Good morning,' he said. A neatly trimmed beard and mustache showed in his open-faced helm, and his voice was surprisingly light for such a big man, but it had the rap of someone accustomed to being obeyed. 'You must be Bahnak's son,' he went on, looking Bahzell straight in the face.
'Aye, I am that,' Bahzell agreed, and glanced past him at the single man mounted on a regular war horse. 'And a good morning to you, too, Wencit,' he said.
'The same to you,' the wizard replied calmly, wildfire eyes glowing. Then he smiled. 'I told you I had an errand of my own to run on the Wind Plain, didn't I?'
'So you did,' Bahzell said, then returned his gaze to the man on the chestnut courser. 'And who might you be, if I might be asking?' he inquired politely.
'Tellian, Baron and Warden of the West Riding,' the wind rider said simply. One of Bahzell's friends inhaled sharply, but he only nodded, as if he'd expected that answer.
'And would it happen it was you as was sending these lads-' he twitched his head at the bodies littering the slope '-down the Gullet?' he asked mildly.
'It was not,' Tellian said shortly. Then he showed just a flash of white teeth under his mustache. 'If it
'Would it, then?' Bahzell cocked his head, then snorted. 'Aye, like enough it would. Still and all, you're after being here now, aren't you just?'
'I am.'
Tellian nodded, and it was his turn to let his eyes sweep the dead men. His expression was grim, but he said nothing for several seconds, and Bahzell waited silently. The Kingdom of the Sothoii was unique in that its highest noble rank after the king himself was that of baron. Legend said that was because the original Sothoii settlers had been led to the Wind Plain by a single baron who had escaped the Fall of Kontovar. According to the tales, he had refused to promote himself to count or duke as so many other refugee leaders had done, and that had set a tradition which the Sothoii still declined to break. Bahzell had no idea if the story was accurate, but whatever the reason, the man before him was one of the four greatest nobles of the Sothoii, with a 'barony' anyone else would have called a kingdom in its own right.
'I was not aware of what Lord Glanharrow intended.' Tellian's sudden statement snatched Bahzell back to the surface of his own thoughts. 'Had I been, I would have commanded him to abandon his plans. In which case-'
He stopped again and shook his head.
'No, that's not quite true,' he said in the voice of a man scrupulously intent on getting his facts straight. 'I
He waved one hand at the bodies, and Bahzell nodded once more. But the Horse Stealer's eyes were hard, and he twitched his own head back towards the fort behind him.
'Aye, and so this… and so the thirty-seven lads of mine dead back yonder, as well,' he said grimly. Tellian's head snapped up, and his eyes flashed angrily, but then he clenched his jaw and chopped his head in a nod of his own.
'That, also,' he acknowledged, and silence fell once more.
'So would you be telling me just what it is you're minded to do now you
'I don't know,' Tellian admitted. 'I never intended for this to happen, yet it has. Whoever began it, both you and we have dead to mourn, and here I am, halfway down the Gullet with an army at my back. Under the circumstances, many at Court-and in other districts of my own Riding-would say the rational thing to do is to press on. The war has been started, and we hold the advantage at the moment. And if we secure control of the Gullet so that we can pass men freely up and down it, we'll continue to hold it.'
'Aye, I can be seeing that,' Bahzell conceded levelly. 'It's in your mind as how my father isn't one to be looking lightly at this, come what may and whoever was starting it. It might just be he'd be minded to be hitting back at the West Riding for it, but he's his hands full with Churnazh the now. So if you were to keep right on going, why, you might put paid to all his plans-even bring him down for Churnazh-and then you'd not have to worry at all, at all, about what he might or might not have been after doing. Would that be about the size of it?'
'It would,' Tellian agreed with a grim smile.
'Well, I can't say as how I'm surprised,' Bahzell said frankly, 'for it might be I'd think much the same in your boots. But it's not so simple as all that. I told your Lord Glanharrow as how we wouldn't be moving for him, and no more will we stand aside for you. And whatever
One or two of the men with Tellian stirred angrily, but the baron only shrugged.
'Whatever I may decide, Milord Champion, I, for one, have no doubt at all that you and your companions serve the War God,' he said. One of the dismounted Sothoii made a sound of disbelief, but Tellian quelled any outburst with an icy frown. 'When Wencit of Rum vouches for someone's truthfulness,
'And your point is, Baron?' Kaeritha's question was sharp, and Tellian turned to face her.
'My point, Milady, is that while you and I might be inclined to see this matter as a case in which the Order of Tomanak intervened, precisely as it ought, to prevent an unprovoked massacre of those unable to defend themselves, others might not. I feel quite certain there will be some at Court who will see it only as a clash between hradani and Sothoii and be furious if I do anything but continue the attack. And there will be others who will fear, legitimately perhaps, that Prince Bahzell's people will see it that way, as well, and demand vengeance. That, after all, is the way of border warfare, is it not? Both sides can always justify present atrocities on the basis of past wrongs done to their fathers, or their grandfathers… or their great-great-