'I am a stranger,' Blade began, 'and I know little of your ways. What little I know tells me that you are brave men— and a pack of fools!'
Uproar. Curses. Horsa began to struggle to his feet. 'You dare, rogue? In this Council you dare— '
Lycanto was silent, but looked amused. Cunobar waved a hand for silence. 'Peace, Horsa. We bade him speak— so let him speak as he likes. The reckoning will come.'
Horsa sat down. 'That it will,' he growled.
Blade curled his lip in contempt of them. 'If I were this Getorix, this one you call Redbeard, I would have your heads on poles this moment. You sit and bleat like old women while he improves each hour. One of you says kill me, the stranger, while another says do not kill me lest the Lady Taleen and her father be wrathful. So you do nothing. You talk. You let me talk. While the water runs and Redbeard marches!'
Blade pointed a finger at Lycanto. 'You are the biggest fool here, King! You rule and yet you do not rule. You allow insolence to go unpunished. Not only in this room, but in all the town. I have seen and heard how your men drink and gamble and wench when they should be preparing for war. And you bury your nose in a beer horn and do nothing. Sarum Vil is a shambles, your army is a rabble, and if I were Redbeard I would laugh and deal with you as though you were maids and not warriors. But that might be difficult. I admit it. You and your rabble, King, would not even make good raping. I doubt that Redbeard has an army of perverts. So he will merely hang you, or cut off your heads, and content his men with your women.
'You have heard that I am a wizard. It is true. I come from a far land, of which you know nothing, and there is no time to tell you now. But I am a wizard— if being wizard means that I use my brains for something other than to stuff my skull box.
'I can show you tricks of war that Redbeard never heard of. I can show you skills and organization that you have never heard of. I can do all these things, making victory over Redbeard certain, and I will do them. After I kill this man I choose to face in single combat. But I say this, King, that this fight is a waste of precious time and you are bound to lose a good man. But you must have it, I see that, and so I say let us begin now. No more fools chatter— get on with it. I choose the man called Horsa. And I ask Cunobar the Gray as second and companion at arms, or however you call these things.'
Silence. All were staring at him. Blade took a step toward Horsa and spat at the man's feet. 'I say I choose you to kill! Unless your blood is white— in which case I will choose another.'
Horsa came up with a roar, pounding on the table with both fists, his broad red face contorted in rage. 'Spy! Slave and whoremonger! Father of lice— son of a whore who coupled with a goat! You dare speak me so? I, Horsa, champion of all the Albs. Thunor strike me if I do not eat your liver this night.'
Blade smiled coldly, having achieved his first purpose of baiting the man into near senseless anger. 'If you fight half as well as you talk, Horsa, I am a dead man.' He laughed and spat again.
The big hall was in tumult. Only the Dru was silent, rapidly stroking away with her brush, and Blade found time to wonder, even in the midst of such chaos, who would read of this strange and unlikely encounter.
Lycanto at last got order by pounding on the table with his beer horn. All sat down again but Horsa, who remained standing and glaring at Blade, a line of white froth visible around his mouth. Blade realized that Horsa had gone berserk, and that it would be no easy matter to kill him.
Lycanto had to raise his voice almost to a scream to be heard over the din. He shouted at Blade, but there was a new, and reluctant, respect in his tone and glance.
'You have made your choice, stranger. So shall it be. Now, this night, you will fight Horsa. But I should tell you this— ' Lycanto's weak mouth smirked beneath drooping moustaches. 'Horsa spoke truth. He is champion of all Albs. He is Horsa the Skull Maker. He has made more widows than Thunor himself.'
'And consoled them,' said a voice from somewhere along the table. 'A pity this stranger has no widow to be. Poor Horsa must go to the whores afterward, like any common knave.'
A great roar of laughter went up. A score of good-natured gibes were flung at Horsa, who at last grinned sourly and sat down without another glance at Blade.
Lycanto pounded again with his beer horn for order. For the time Blade was ignored again. As he listened, with wonder and some amusement, he realized that this was not only a fight, but festival as well. They were a feckless lot, these Albs, and meant to have their fun. Deeming Blade as good as dead, Lycanto was ordering great quantities of food and beer to be readied. Blade allowed his burgeoning plan to emerge a little further into the light— the more they ate and caroused, the heavier they drank, the better for what he had in mind.
At last relative silence fell again. Horsa said, 'As the rogue challenges me I have choice of place. Not so, Lycanto?'
The King's nod was perfunctory. 'We all know that, Horsa. What choose you?'
Horsa was on his feet again. He looked at Blade with contempt. He was calmer now. 'I choose the fire ring. Let it be prepared. I would see how nimbly this bastard dances when his feet begin to burn.'
Lycanto gave an order and a man at arms hurriedly left the hall.
Cunobar the Gray now stood and held up a hand. The King nodded and the talk died away again.
Cunobar looked disdain at Blade, and his smile was something mingled of mirth and malice, leavened with the smugness of a man who has accomplished precisely what he intended. Blade, who had never counted the man as friend, and was puzzled by his seeming advocacy, began to understand. Cunobar was pleased with himself, and the why of it was plain enough. Cunobar wanted either Blade or Horsa dead. Or both. At the moment Blade could not fathom the reasons, nor did they matter. Cunobar could only win.
Cunobar nodded curtly in Blade's direction. 'The stranger asks that I serve as companion at arms, as second to see fair play. This I cannot do. You will know the reasons, so I do not explain. I was right, I am right, in that he stands and talks like no slave I have ever seen. It is fair that he be given this chance. Yet there is no guarantee that he is a gentleman— and I will serve no other. Yet he must have a companion at arms, to abide by our law. Who among you will serve him?'
Dead silence. None looked at Blade, who laughed and strode, arms akimbo, to the foot of the table. He did not force his laughter. He was genuinely amused and his deep voice tolled in the chamber like a dark toned bell.
'So be it! I see that you gentlemen are too fastidious to serve a ragged stranger. This speaks ill of your hospitality, of which you are so proud, but I will let it pass. By your leave, then, I will choose my own man. His name is Sylvo.