a year or more once I moved to Lilleheim. You never saw me this way, that’s all,” she said softly, but with a laugh in her voice. Then she pouted a beautiful, bowed pout. Lip rouge. Just a trace, but enough. “You don’t like it?”
He didn’t answer, but downed the rest of his wine and moved to pour himself more. She rose, took the pitcher, and filled his cup.
The slightest trace of sandalwood perfume.
“I liked you as a tomboy,” he said. “I like you now.”
And then she bent to kiss him. It was what he’d thought of, brooded on, fallen asleep imagining on cold desert nights. Perfect.
He stood and picked her up. She was still so slight, so thin from her long recovery. He took her to the bedroom.
“I have to leave at dawn,” he said. “I have to be on the Escarpment by noon.”
“Were you thinking of sleeping?”
“No.”
He laid her on the bed, untied the red sash, pulled back her robe.
Somehow he had remembered her breasts as being on the small side, but they were not, they were ample. The scar stretched from above her hip, down her right groin and onto the leg. A portion of muscle had been destroyed beneath it and would never grow back, leaving a slight depression. This was not beautiful. Neither did it matter.
He was throwing off his tunic, unwrapping his filthy leg wraps, all at once, all in a frenzy, and she began to laugh.
“What?”
“Straight in from the field,” she said. “You probably have the blood of your enemies on you.”
“Some, yes,” he said.
“
He stepped back. “No,” he said. “I didn’t manage to draw any of that.”
Mahaut pulled him toward her, guided his hand to the scar tissue.
Then suddenly she twisted an arm up and under his chin.
An obsidian dagger was in her hand. Its tip was biting into his neck deeply enough to raise a welt of blood.
“Don’t show pity,” she said.
“All right,” he said. “I won’t.”
He drew back, and with the same motion caught her arm, twisted. With a cry of pain, she released the dagger. He took it up and plunged it into the wood of the bed’s headboard, where it stuck fast.
In almost the same motion, he put a hand on her breastbone and leaned hard onto her, one knee on her bed, one foot on the ground. He stared down at her naked form, said nothing.
She pulled him closer, kissed him again. Her tongue snaked out and forced its way into his mouth. Now he pulled down his breeches enough, but he was still half undressed. It was enough. And he could no longer wait.
“No pity,” he said. “And no mercy.” He touched the scar. Then he moved his fingers lower till she gasped.
Suddenly she cried out. She twisted away from his touch, raised a hand and slapped him across the face. She put her fingernails into it, enough to scratch, to draw blood. He snatched her free wrist, held it tight-under the pressure of his grip, the black onyx bracelet dug into her flesh until she gasped. He pushed the hand down, down to the other hand, wrist over wrist, and held her to the bed. She ceased to struggle but lay rigid, the muscles of her body tensed.
“Do you want me to let you go?” he said.
She shook her head. “No. Don’t let me go,” she said.
He held her tighter.
“Bring me back,” she whispered. “You brought back Loreilei. Bring
Holding her in this manner, he found-felt-his way inside her.
Then, as suddenly as the storm took her, she was calm. Her breathing eased. She opened to him like the Land itself.
* * *
Mahaut gave him the dagger to take with him.
“It was my grandmother’s,” she said. “For protection in the streets of Mims, she told me. I used to always carry it, but I’ve got a pistol now.”
He looked at her in surprise.
“We are rich. Such things can be acquired. It’s only for the protection of my virtue, such as it is,” she said. “I use a bow for pleasure.”
“And the occasional Scout captain?”
She laughed at that, but continued to proffer the dagger. “I want you to carry it with you. Always. Will it be a hindrance to you?”
“I will carry it,” he said.
He left at dawn, and slept in the saddle on the way back to Hestinga. His dont knew the way, and though it stopped a few times to graze upon the thorny grass on the side of the road it craved, he made it back in time to deploy up the Escarpment.
He was at the Upper Cliffs by nightfall.
PART FOUR:
1
Observe:
The Blaskoye flowed down from the Escarpment on new three-moons night. They chose four discrete paths down. It was impossible to guard the length of the Rim, and, though the Scouts were aware of where the breaches occurred, there was little they could do except provide intelligence. The bands bypassed Hestinga fifteen leagues to the south, riding over the broad expanse of farmland south of the road and headed for Garangipore. It was then Abel knew.
This is the feint we have been looking for, said Center. It will be an attempt to draw out the forces of Hestinga, including your father. The Blaskoye have learned since Lilleheim not to underestimate the Militia, and especially the Regulars. They will not wish to be trapped and encircled in a village again, but will have a different plan.
There are various permutations, Center said. A countermarch-or, in their case, a counterride-back on Hestinga. A raid combined with an invasion from the north. An ambush attempt, after drawing out the forces from Hestinga.