'Colonel Vallimir came up a while ago,' murmured Yolk, as though that was the very thing Tunny needed to lift his spirits.
'Wonderful,' he hissed. 'Maybe we can eat him.'
'Might be some food came up with him.'
Tunny snorted. 'All officers ever bring up is trouble, and our boy Vallimir's the worst kind.'
'Stupid?' muttered Worth.
'Clever,' said Tunny. 'And ambitious. The kind of officer climbs to a promotion over the bodies of the common man.'
'Are we the common man?' asked Yolk.
Tunny stared at him. 'You are the fucking definition.' Yolk even looked pleased about it. 'No sign of Latherliver yet?'
'Lederlingen, Corporal Tunny.'
'I know his name, Worth. I choose to mispronounce it because it amuses me.' He puffed out his cheeks. His standard for amusement really had plummeted since this campaign got underway.
'Haven't seen him,' said Yolk, gazing sadly at that forlorn slice of bacon.
'That's something, at least.' Then, when the two lads looked blankly at him. 'Leperlover went to tell the tin-soldier pushers where we are. Chances are he'll be the one bringing the orders back.'
'What orders?' asked Yolk.
'How the hell should I know what orders? But any orders is a bad thing.' Tunny frowned off towards the treeline. He couldn't see much through the thicket of trunk, branch, shadow and mist, but he could just hear the sound of the distant stream, swollen with half the drizzle that had fallen last night. The other half felt like it was in his underwear. 'Might even be an order to attack. Cross that stream and hit the Northmen in the flank.'
Worth carefully set his pan down, pressing at his stomach. 'Corporal, I think-'
'Well, I don't want you doing it here, do I?'
Worth dashed off into the shadowy brush, already fumbling with his belt. Tunny sat back against his trunk, slipped out Yolk's flask and took the smallest nip.
Yolk licked his pale lips. 'Could I-'
'No.' Tunny regarded the recruit through narrowed eyes as he took another. 'Unless you've something to pay with.' Silence. 'There you go, then.'
'A tent would be something,' whispered Yolk in a voice almost too soft to hear.
'It would, but they're with the horses, and the king has seen fit to supply his loyal soldiers with a new and spectacularly inefficient type which leaks at every seam.' Leading, as it happened, to a profitable market in the old type in which Tunny had already twice turned a handsome profit. 'How would you pitch one here anyway?' And he wriggled back against his tree so the bark scratched his itchy shoulder blades.
'What should we do?' asked Yolk.
'Nothing whatsoever, trooper. Unless specifically and precisely instructed otherwise, a good soldier always does nothing.' In a narrow triangle between black branches, the sky was starting to show the faintest sickly tinge of light. Tunny winced, and closed his eyes. 'The thing folks at home never realise about war is just how bloody boring it is.'
And like that he was asleep again.
Calder's dream was the same one as always.
Skarling's Hall in Carleon, dim with shadows, sound of the river outside the tall windows. Years ago, when his father was King of the Northmen. He was watching his younger self, sitting in Skarling's Chair and smirking. Smirking down at Forley the Weakest, all bound up, Bad-Enough standing over him with his axe out.
Calder knew it for a dream, but he felt the same freezing dread as ever. He was trying to shout, but his mouth was all stopped up. He was trying to move, but he was bound as tight as Forley. Bound by what he'd done, and what he hadn't.
'What shall we do?' asked Bad-Enough.
And Calder said, 'Kill him.'
He woke with a jolt as the axe came down, floundering with his blankets. The room was fizzing black. There was none of that warm wash of relief you get when you wake from a nightmare. It had happened. Calder swung from his bed, rubbing at his sweaty temples. He'd given up on being a good man long ago, hadn't he?
Then why did he still dream like one?
'Peace?' Calder looked up with a start, heart jumping at his ribs. There was a great shape in the chair in the corner. A blacker shape than the darkness. 'It was talk of peace got you banished in the first place.'
Calder breathed out. 'And a good morning to you, brother.' Scale was wearing his armour, but that was no surprise. Calder was starting to think he slept in it.
'I thought you were the clever one? At this rate you'll clever yourself right back into the mud, and me along with you, and so much for our father's legacy then. Peace? On a day of victory?'
'Did you see their faces, though? Plenty even at that meet are ready to stop fighting, day of victory or not. There'll be harder days coming, and when they come more and more will see it our way-'
'Your way,' snapped Scale, 'I've a battle to fight. A man doesn't get to be reckoned a hero by talking.'
Calder could hardly keep the contempt out of his voice. 'Maybe what the North needs is fewer heroes and more thinkers. More builders. Maybe our father's remembered for his battles, but his legacy is the roads he laid, the fields he cleared, the towns, and the forges, and the docks, and the-'
'He built the roads to march his armies on. He cleared the fields to feed them. The towns bred soldiers, the forges made swords, the docks brought in weapons.'
'Our father fought because he had to, not because he-'
'This is the North!' bellowed Scale, voice making the little room ring. 'Everyone has to fight!' Calder swallowed, suddenly unsure of himself and ever so slightly scared. 'Whether they want to or not. Sooner or later, everyone has to fight.'
Calder licked his lips, not ready to admit defeat. 'Our father preferred to get what he wanted with words. Men listened to-'
'Men listened because they knew he had iron in him!' Scale smashed the arm of his chair with his fist, wood cracking, struck it again and broke it off, sent it clattering across the boards. 'Do you know what I remember him telling me? "Get what you can with words, because words are free, but the words of an armed man ring that much sweeter. So when you talk, bring your sword."' He stood, and tossed something across the room. Calder squeaked, half-caught it, half-hit painfully in the chest by it. Heavy and hard, metal gleaming faintly. His sheathed sword. 'Come outside.' Scale loomed over him. 'And bring your sword.'
It was hardly any lighter outside the ramshackle farmhouse. Just the first smear of dawn in the heavy eastern sky, picking out the Heroes on their hilltop in solemn black. The wind was coming up keen, whipping drizzle in Calder's eyes, sweeping waves through the barley and making him hug himself tight. A scarecrow danced a mad jig on a pole near the house, torn gloves endlessly beckoning for a partner. Clail's Wall was a chest-high heap of moss running through the fields from beyond a rise on their right to a good way up the steep flank of the Heroes. Scale's men were huddled in its lee, most still swaddled in blankets, exactly where Calder wished he was. He couldn't remember the last time he'd seen the world this early and it was an even uglier place than usual.
Scale pointed south, through a gap in the wall and down a rough track scarred with puddles. 'Half the men are hidden in sight of the Old Bridge. When the Union try to cross, we'll stop the bastards.'
Calder didn't want to deny it, of course, but he had to ask. 'How many Union on the other side of the river now?'
'A lot.' Scale looked at him as if daring him to say something. Calder only scratched his head. 'You're staying back here, with Pale-as-Snow and the rest of the men, behind Clail's Wall.' Calder nodded. Staying behind a wall sounded like his kind of job. 'Sooner or later, though, chances are I'll need your help. When I send for it, come forward. We'll fight together.' Calder winced into the wind. That sounded less like his kind of job. 'I can trust you to do that, right?'
Calder frowned sideways. 'Of course.' Prince Calder, a byword for trustiness. 'I won't let you down.' Brave, bold, good Prince Calder.
'Whatever we've lost, we've got each other still.' Scale put his big hand on Calder's shoulder. 'It's not easy, is it? Being a great man's son. You'd have thought it would come with all kinds of advantages with borrowed admiration, and respect. But it's only as easy as it is for the seeds of a great tree, trying to grow in its choking shadow. Not many make it to the sunlight for themselves.'
'Aye.' Calder didn't mention that being a great man's younger son was twice the trial. Then you've two trees to take the axe to before you can spread your leaves in the sunshine.
Scale nodded up towards Skarling's Finger. A few fires still twinkled on the flanks of the hill where Tenways' men had their camps. 'If we can't hold up, Brodd Tenways is meant to be helping.'
Calder raised his brows. 'I'll expect Skarling himself to ride to my aid before I count on that old bastard.'
'Then it's you and me. We might not always agree, but we're family.' Scale held out his hand, and Calder took it.
'Family.' Half-family, anyway.
'Good luck, brother.'
'And to you.' Half-brother. Calder watched Scale swing up onto his horse and spur off sharply down that track towards the Old Bridge.
'Got a feeling you'll need more'n luck today, your Highness.' Foss Deep was under the dripping ruins of a porch beside the house, his weathered clothes and his weathered face fading into the weathered wall behind.
'I don't know.' Shallow sat wrapped in a grey blanket so only his grinning head showed, disembodied. 'The biggest mountain of best luck ever might do it.'
Calder turned away from them in sulky silence, frowning across the fields to the south. He'd a feeling they might have the truth of it.
Theirs wasn't the only bit of earth being turned over. Few other wounded men must've died in the night. You could see the little groups, hunched in the drizzle with sorrow, or more likely self-pity, which looks about the same and serves just as well at a funeral. You could hear the Chiefs trotting out their empty babble, all aiming at that same sorry tone. Splitfoot was one, standing over the grave of one of Dow's Named Men not twenty paces distant, giving it the moist eye. No sign of Dow himself, mind you. Moist eyes weren't really his style.
Meanwhile the ordinary business of the day got started like the burial parties were ghosts themselves, invisible. Men grumbling as they crawled from wet beds, cursing at damp clothes, rubbing down damp weapons and armour, searching out food, pissing, scratching, sucking the last drops from last night's bottles, comparing trophies stole from the Union, chuckling over one joke or another. Chuckling too loud because they all knew there'd be more dark work today and chuckles had to be grabbed where they could be.
Craw looked at the others, all with heads bowed. All except Whirrun, who was arching back, hugging the Father of Swords in his folded arms, letting the rain patter on his tongue. Craw was a little annoyed by that, and a little jealous of it. He wished he was known as a madman and didn't have to go through the empty routines. But there's a right way of doing things, and for him there was no dodging it.
'What makes a man a hero?' he asked the wet air. 'Big deeds? Big name? Tall glory and tall songs? No. Standing by your crew, I reckon.' Whirrun grunted his agreement, then stuck his tongue out again. 'Brack-i-Dayn, come down from the hills fifteen years ago, fought beside me fourteen of 'em, and always thought of his crew 'fore himself. Lost count on the number o' times that big bastard saved my life. Always had a kind word, or a funny one. Think he even made Yon laugh one time.'
'Twice,' said Yon, face harder'n ever. Got any harder he'd be knocking lumps from the Heroes with it.
'He made no complaints. Except not enough to eat.' Craw's voice went for a moment and he gave a kind of squeaky croak. Stupid bloody noise for a Chief to make, 'specially at a time like this. He cleared his throat and hammered on. 'Never enough for Brack to eat. He died ... peaceful. Reckon he'd have liked that, even if he loved a good fight. Dying in your sleep is a long stretch better'n dying with steel in your guts, whatever the songs say.'
'Fuck the songs,' said Wonderful.
'Aye. Fuck 'em. Don't know who's buried under here, really. But if it's Skarling his self he should be proud to share some earth with Brack-i-Dayn.' Craw curled his lips back. 'And if not, fuck him too. Back to the mud, Brack.' He knelt, not having to try too hard to look in pain since his kneecap felt like it was going to pop off, clawed up a fistful of damp black soil and shook it out again over the rest.
'Back to the mud,' muttered Yon.
'Back to the mud,' came Wonderful's echo.
'Looking on the sunny side,' said Whirrun, 'it's where we're all headed, one way or another. No?' He looked about as though expecting that to lift spirits, and when it didn't, shrugged and turned away.
'Old Brack's all done.' Scorry squatted by the grave, one hand on the wet ground, brow furrowed like at a puzzle he couldn't work out. 'Can't believe it. Good words, though, Chief.'
'You reckon?' Craw winced as he stood, slapping the dirt from his hands. 'I'm not sure how many more o' these I can stand.'
'Aye,' murmured Scorry.
'I guess those are the times.'
Opening Remarks 'Get up.'
Beck shoved the foot away, scowling. He didn't care for a boot in the ribs at any time, but 'specially not from Reft, and 'specially not when it felt like he only just got off to sleep. He'd lain awake in the darkness a long time, thinking on Caul Shivers stabbing that man, turning it over and over as he twisted about under his blanket. Not able to get comfortable. Not with his blanket or with the thought of that little knife poking away. 'What?'
'The Union are coming, that's what.'
Beck tore his blanket back and strode across the garret room, ducking under the low beam, sleep and anger forgotten both at once. He kicked the creaking door of the big cupboard closed, shouldered Brait and Stodder out of the way and stared through one of the narrow windows.
He'd half-expected to see men slaughtering each other outside in the lanes of Osrung, blood flying and flags waving and songs being sung right under his window. But the town was quiet at a first glance. Weren't much beyond dawn and the rain was flitting down, drawing a greasy haze over the huddled buildings.
Maybe forty strides away across a cobbled square the brown river was churning past, swollen with rain off the fells. The bridge didn't look much for all the fuss being made of it a worn stone span barely wide enough for two riders to pass each other. A mill house stood on its right, a row of low houses on its left, shutters open with a few nervy faces at the windows, most looking off to the south, just like Beck. Beyond the bridge a rutted lane led between wattle shacks and up to the fence on the south side of town. He thought he could see men moving there on the walkways, dim through the drizzle. Maybe a couple with flatbows already shooting.
While he was looking, men started hurrying from an alley and into the square below, forming up a shield wall at the north end of the bridge while a man in a fine cloak bellowed at 'em. Carls to the front, ready to lock their painted shields together. Thralls behind, spears ready to bring down.
There was a battle on the way, all right.
'You should've told me sooner,' he snapped, hurrying back to his blanket and dragging on his boots.
'Didn't know sooner,' said Reft.
'Here.' Colving offered Beck a hunk of black bread, his eyes scared circles in his chubby face.
Even the thought of eating made Beck feel sick. He snatched up his sword, then realised he'd nowhere to take it to. Weren't like he had a place at the fence, or in the shield wall, or anywhere else in particular. He looked towards the stairs, then towards the window, free hand opening and closing. 'What do we do?'
'We wait.' Flood dragged his stiff leg up the steps and into the attic. He'd got his mail on, glistening with drizzle across the shoulders. 'Reachey's given us two houses to hold, this and one just across the street. I'll be in there.'
'You will?' Beck realised he'd made himself sound scared, like a child asking his mummy if she was really going to leave him in the dark. 'You know, some o' these boys could do with a man to look to-'
'That'll have to be you and Reft. You might not believe it, but the lads in the other house are even greener'n you lot.'
'Right. 'Course.' Beck had spent the past week chafing at Flood being always around, keeping him back. Now the thought of the old boy going only made him feel more jittery.
'There'll be you five and five more in this house. Some other lads from the weapontake. For the time being just set tight. Block up the windows downstairs best you can. Who's got a bow?'
'I have,' said Beck.
'And me.' Reft held his up.
'I've got my sling,' said Colving, hopefully.
'You any good with it?' asked Reft.
The boy shook his head sadly. 'Couldn't use it at a window, anyway.'
'Why bring it up, then?' snapped Beck, fingering his own bow. His palm was all sweaty.
Flood walked to the two narrow windows and pointed towards the river. 'Maybe we'll hold 'em at the fence, but if not we're forming up a shield wall at the bridge. If we don't hold 'em there, well, anyone with a bow start shooting. Careful, though, don't go hitting any of our boys in the back, eh? Better not to shoot at all than risk killing our own, and when the blood's up it can get hard to make out the difference. The rest of you downstairs, ready to keep 'em out of the house if they make it across.' Stodder chewed at his big bottom lip. 'Don't worry. They won't make it across, and even if they do they'll be in a right mess. Reachey'll be getting ready to hit back by then, you can bet on that. So if they try to get in, just keep 'em out 'til help gets here.'
'Keep 'em out,' piped Brait, jabbing happily at nothing with his twig of a spear. He didn't look like he could've kept a cat out of a chicken coop with that.
'Any questions?' Beck didn't feel he had a clue what to do, but it hardly seemed one question would plug the gap, so he kept quiet. 'Right, then. I'll check back if I can.' Flood limped to the stairway and was gone. They were on their own. Beck strode to a window again, thinking it was better'n doing nothing, but naught had changed that he could see.
'They over the fence yet?' Brait was up on tiptoe, trying to look over Beck's shoulder. He sounded all excited, eyes bright like a boy on his birthday, waiting to see what his present might be. He sounded a little bit like Beck always thought he'd feel facing battle. But he didn't feel that way. He felt sick and hot in spite of the damp breeze on his face.