“Good,” Etienne said. “Tonight then. My apartments at evening bells…”
“Oh, we’ll be there with bells on,” Fenelon said.
“I always knew you were a jester at heart, Fenelon,” Etienne said and smiled.
Then she slipped away, herding her students as a mother goose would herd her goslings. Fenelon’s gaze lingered after her for a moment. Alaric glanced at the floor and cursed inside.
No use in tying your trews up higher than your own waist,
as his father would say. Etienne was apparently too lofty for someone like Alaric.
“Ah, well,” Fenelon said, interrupting the moment of gloom. “What say we get out of this dreary place and get a little exercise, Alaric? Work up an appetite, eh?”
“What sort of exercise?” Alaric ventured.
“How good are you with a sword?” Fenelon asked.
“Well, I do know which end is which,” Alaric said and grinned. “My father insisted I take fencing lessons. I may not be up to a master’s skill, but I can hold my own.”
“Excellent, Fenelon said. “Let’s go out into the yard.”
“Shouldn’t we change clothes?” Alaric asked. “You’re not exactly dressed for rough play.”
“I always dress this way,” Fenelon said and started through the thinning crowd.
Alaric sighed and followed.
Why am I not surprised?
TEN
Vagner was getting tired of being a raven. For one thing, other ravens had started to notice him. He was in the middle of their territory, and they didn’t like it at all. More than once, he’d been forced to desert his perch on the merlon because three or four of them would dive down at him, smacking him from behind with their talons and ruffling his feathers in the act. Circling the tower did no good at all. They would just follow him, calling challenges and tormenting him. And when he tried to settle on a different perch, they would come after him there.
As much as he wanted to chance forms and feed on the irritating fowl, he dared not. His magic would just catch the attention of some nosy mageborn, like as not.
He was forced to perch up under the rim of the tower’s eaves. There at least, the real ravens could not get at him, and he was able to use beak and talons to fend them off without fear of a posterior assault. Eventually, they tired of the attacks, though it might have been the fact that yet another raven began circling their territory. Vagner didn’t care what reason drew them elsewhere. He was just pleased to see them go away and leave him along.
So now he was crammed under the eaves of the tower, bored and hungry. He hoped the mageborn bard would come soon before demon tendencies took over and forced Vagner out to see other prey…
If wishes were fishes
… A line from some ballad, he thought.
But then, fate proved, that sometimes, it could be kind even to demons. Vagner sensed the sweet essence of his intended approaching from the keep.
Two familiar figures stepped into the practice yard.
Ah, now all he had to do was wait for the right moment to pounce. The thought made Vagner giddy enough with joy that he risked qworking strains of
“When the Old Wife Fell Down…”
~
Alaric felt just a little uneasy being out in the open like this. He could tell they were outside the protection of the mages wards, for the sense of security he had felt indoors now faded. That lack of magical protection made him almost feel exposed…that and the fact unfocused hints of the demon lay everywhere. But looking around, Alaric saw nothing more than a flock of ravens doing battle about the towers of the outermost gatehouse. And he would have sworn one of them was qworking the melody of a vaguely familiar song…
“Alaric, over here,” Fenelon called, and Alaric started. With a groan, he began to check his practice padding and helm as he ambled across the courtyard. “You really won’t need all of that,” Fenelon had insisted just moments before, but Alaric felt like his body had been punished more than enough over the last couple of days. He was taking no chances.
Alaric stretched a bit to warm his muscles against the Keltoran damp that seeped through his woolens. They started with simple drills, and that gave him a chance to see how swift Fenelon was with a blade before the actual matches began. The light blunted weapons were moving at a fair clip when Fenelon suggested they try a bit of freestyle work. By then, Alaric was warmed up and felt confident enough to agree.
Confidence, however, was of little use after that. Fenelon was fast on the attack, and equally skilled at the defense, and he had that longer reach to his advantage. While Alaric was no poor hand with a blade, he recognized when he was heavily outclassed. Still, he strove to keep up, feeling every light touch of Fenelon’s tip as it found a target. Alaric’s own blade managed a few good shots, but he was starting to attribute those more to luck than skill as the bout wore on.
Finally, Alaric realized his lungs could manage no more, and he signaled for a halt to catch his wind. He stepped back, pulling off his helm, and glanced around the yard. Horns, they had quite an audience now, he noted much to his chagrin. Several of the Keltoran guards who were off duty had gathered to watch the bout. One tall fellow wrapped in many ells of plaid grinned and jerked his head towards them.
“Hey,
sassenach,
” he called. “May I have the next dance?”
“Me?” Alaric asked, looking puzzled. What in the name of Cernunnos was a
sassenach?
The Keltoran shook his head. “Nay, laddie, you’ve much to learn. I was speaking ta the peacock…”
Fenelon merely smiled. “Why certainly, I would be happy to have a go at you, sir.”
“Excuse me,” Alaric began, not sure if he felt affronted because he’d been refused or because of what the Keltoran called Fenelon. “Are you aware of whom you are speaking to?”
But Fenelon clamped a hard hand on Alaric’s shoulder and shook him to stop his speech. “It’s all right, Alaric. No harm’s done. It’s just a Keltoran manner of speaking. You’ll get used to it.”
“Your young lad’s in a wee bit of a blether far naught,” the Keltoran said. “I’m Sargeant Rory MacRae of the Outer Bailey. And you be?”
“Fenelon Greenfyn at your service, sir,” Fenelon said with a bow. He patted Alaric’s shoulder a little more gently this time. “Go get some water, Alaric. This won’t take long, I imagine.”
Alaric sighed and nodded. It would be a short match, considering the odds. Sargeant MacRae was a good stone heavier than Fenelon. Either one of those strapping fists was probably able to make short work of the master mageborn with a single blow. With a sigh, Alaric headed towards the water barrel set to one side where a number of the guards stood drinking. And as he approached, one of them dipped him a mug of clear liquid and offered it to him. Alaric accepted it with an embarrassed, “thank you.” Perhaps Fenelon was right. Alaric was not used to Keltoran ways. They seemed brusque and rough mannered to him, yet they did not act like he was less than their equal. Nodding, Alaric stepped away so he could watch the match.
~
The young mageborn was stepping away from the crowd of Keltorans. Vagner leaned forward on his perch with the eagerness of a predator. As soon as there was enough open space, he would fly down and snatch up the young bard, and be well away before any of them could toss as much as a magebolt. The demon bunched his muscles and prepared to launch and shift forms…
~
Does he ever get winded?
Alaric wondered. Sargeant MacRae was clearly the stronger man, and he was swift for his size and possessed an envious skill. There were a number of his attacks that left Alaric wincing, though Fenelon never flinched. Alaric had always heard Keltoran’s were fierce fighters and few men wanted to see one of them behind sword and targe, but this was the first time he’d had the opportunity to witness that legend for himself. Horns, he would have been on the ground begging for mercy long ago and suddenly realized how fortunate it was he had
not
been selected as the next victim.
Even so, Fenelon’s own actions remained just as impressive to Alaric. MacRae did not let up, and Fenelon was having to work for every touch he got as well as to keep his own hide intact. Many of his attacks rarely found their intended target, but he continued to smile and move about with little effort. Nor did the fight stay in one place. It ranged about the practice yard like a full-scale battle. One moment, Alaric had a clear view from his place near the water barrel, and the next he was suddenly being blocked by a wall of bodies much larger than his own as some of the guards shifted to follow the bout.
Alaric cursed to himself and sprinted aside, eager to find open ground. The space on the cobbled path that led from gatehouse to gatehouse seemed his best option now. He dashed around behind the crowd and stopped in the center as the fight pulled his way.
But the battle quickly lost his attention, for Alaric felt a shift in the air. Magic swirled about him, and on the wind, he tasted that familiar, bitter taint.
Horns!
Movement flashed from the corner of his eye. He spun towards the source and froze. A raven was speeding straight towards him, filling the air with bitter demon essence. Alaric swore as those spreading wings grew wider and the black creature shifted and grew into some hideous cross between man and bat, a mass of fur, scales and wings with murderous eyes and large jaws…the very vision he had seen in his dream.
“No!” he shouted and started to back away, only to catch his heel in a rut between the rough cobbles of the path. Flailing his arms for balance, Alaric fell.
That sheer twist of fate was a blessing in disguise. Tripping actually dropped him out of harm’s way. Claws raked past the point he had previously occupied and snatched only air. The demon uttered a very human curse as it sought to gain altitude before it could be thrown into the next gate where wards of magic burned in protest of its proximity. It flew upwards, then circled and spun back towards Alaric. He would not be able to get to his feet before it would have him.
“
Gath saighead buail
!” a voice shouted.
The demon shrieked as a magebolt slammed into the side of its head, throwing it off course, and Alaric was once more saved. He could hear a number of boots thundering across the ground towards him. Other men were shouting similar spells. The demon’s essence rose high into the clouds, briefly fading only to come back full force. Gouts of fire fell from the sky, and the guards were forced to swiftly disperse before they could be burned.
“Alaric, head for the inner gate,” Fenelon shouted. “Go on!
Dealanach buail
!”
The hot breath of lightning hissed through the air. Alaric scrambled to his feet and ran, more than willing to obey. He tore off the armor padding as he fled, eager to shed anything that slowed his escape. The demon’s essence was everywhere now, and Alaric could no more focus on where the beast was than he could hold clouds in his hands.
Head for the inner gate,
he told himself.
Head for shelter.
Head for the one place the demon could not follow…
Fire suddenly spurted down from the sky again, and this time, it slammed into the path before Alaric. With a startled cry, he skidded to a halt and threw himself back, raising his arms against the sting as it splattered. Horns, the demon was casting spells and cutting off Alaric’s route of escape. Its essence nauseated him. He could hear others shouting his name, telling him to run—to drop. If only they would make up their minds for as they added to his confusion, blackness descended from the sky and landed on the path before Alaric. He turned to flee again, but even the ground beneath his feet came alive with demon essence and grew unsteady. The cobbles broke apart and jagged stones thrust out of the ground, tripping Alaric. He barked hands and knees going down, and felt the hot tear as a stone raked hard into his leg, ripping cloth and flesh. With a cry, he was thrown over on his back by the bucking of the ground.
The demon reared over him. The hideous, bat-like face split with a smile that revealed an under-bite full of fangs.
It reached for him.
“Alaric!” Fenelon shouted. “Horns, don’t lay there like a lump!”
Easy for you to say,
Alaric thought because as he tried to draw his legs under him and rise, the left one burned with blinding pain. Only the proximity of such terrifying death was enough to spur him. Marda may not have known the greater spells, but she knew enough to teach him offensive and defensive ones. He reached into his own pain for power. Stretched one finger towards the fiend and shouted, “
Loisg saighead buail
!”
The fiery magebolt caught the demon by surprise, hitting it square in the face. Clearly, the beast had not expected such ferocity from injured prey. It shrieked and jerked back from Alaric, nearly stumbling over its own tail.
“Loisg mhor!”
Alaric heard Fenelon shout, and white fire flashed over Alaric so swiftly, he barely had time to raise his arms and protect his face. There was a hideous scream, and only then did Alaric lower his arms in time to see the demon rising into the sky, engulfed entirely in flames. It disappeared over the wall where screams of human horror could be heard echoing before a great hissing filled the air.
“Horns, it found water!” Fenelon growled.
Alaric tried to get up again, but his leg continued to scream in pain. He looked down and found his knee and calf saturated in blood… his own, alas. But suddenly, there were bodies around him, and while he felt the old panic down in his chest, he was also grateful. Voices rose in a shouting match, while Fenelon cut through their ranks to get to Alaric’s side.