High above, a half league to the west, the ravens paused, circling.
"Over here!" Turin shouted. "Here!"
"Idiot!" Carfax jammed his heels into his mount's sides, plowing through the sedge grass to snatch the cloak away. "They're not looking for us."
"Then what—" Turin shoved his fist against his teeth. "Ah, no!"
A faint streak, tipped with a spark of sunlit steel; one, two, three. Arrows, shot into the sky, arcing impossibly high, impossibly accurate.
A burst of feathers, small bundles of darkness plummeting; one, two, three.
"Haomane's Allies." Mantuas swallowed. "You think they found the ship, lieutenant? Are they after us?"
"They couldn't have found the damned ship." It had been near dusk on the second day at sea when Carfax had dispatched the captain of the Ilona's Gull, planting a dagger in the side of his throat. An ignoble death, but a swift one. His men had seen to the crew, and together, under cover of darkness, they'd gotten the ship headed north, making landfall the next day at the fetid, uninhabited mouth of the Verdine. "Why would they look there?"
Turin retrieved the Ellyl cloak and folded it away, not meeting his eyes. "We were seen crossing the Traders' Road, lieutenant."
"We were supposed to be seen. Heading north, overland to Pelmar." Carfax passed a hand over his face, found it oily with sweat. If he looked anything like his men, he looked a mess, the walnut dye darkening his skin to a Pelmaran hue streaking in the humid heat. That had been the last effort of their pretense, crossing the old overland trade route that ran between Seahold and Vedasia. Since then, they'd seen no other travelers and had let their guises fail. "We've made good time. They couldn't have followed that quickly."
"Well, someone did."
They watched him, waiting; waiting on him, Carfax of Staccia. His comrades, his countrymen. There was no one else in command in this desolate, humid wasteland. What, Carfax thought, would General Tanaros do if he were here?
"Right," he said smartly. "Someone did. Let's find out who."
THEY HAD REACHED THE DEFILE'S Maw.
It was aptly named, a dark, gaping mouth in the center of the jagged peaks that reared out of the plains, surrounding and protecting the Vale of Gorgantum. They looked to have been forced out of the raw earth by violent hands, those mountains; in a sense, it was true, for Lord Satoris had raised them. It was his last mighty act as a Shaper, drawing on the power of Godslayer before he placed the shard of the Souma in the flames of the marrow-fire. It had nearly taken the last reserves of his strength, but it had made Darkhaven into an unassailable fortress.
Tanaros breathed deep, filling his lungs with the air of home. All around him, he saw the Fjel do the same, hideous faces breaking into smiles. The Staccians relaxed, sitting easier in the saddle. Even Ushahin Dreamspinner gave a crooked smile.
"We are bound there?"
He studied the Lady Cerelinde, noting the apprehension in her wide-set eyes. They were not grey, exactly. Hidden colors whispered at the edges of her pleated irises; a misty violet, luminous as the inner edge of a rainbow. "It is safe, Lady. Hyrgolf's Fjel will not let us fall."
She clutched the neck of her rough-spun cloak and made no answer.
Kaldjager Fjel ran ahead up the narrow path, bodies canted forward and loping on knuckled forelimbs, pausing to raise their heads and sniff the wind with broad nostrils. They climbed the steep path effortlessly, beckoning for their comrades to follow.
"Lady," Hyrgolf rumbled, gesturing.
One by one, they followed, alternating Fjel and riders. The horses of Darkhaven picked their way with care, untroubled by the sheer drops, the steep precipice that bordered the pathway. Below them, growing more distant at each step, lay the empty bed of the Gorgantus River. Only a trickle of water coursed its bottom, acrid and tainted.
At the top of the first bend, one of the Kaldjager gave a sharp, guttural call.
A pause, and it was answered.
It came from the highest peaks, a wordless roar, deep and deafening. Thunder might make such a sound, or rocks, cascading in avalanche. It rattled bones and thrummed in the pits of bellies, and Tanaros laughed aloud to hear it.
"Tordenstem Fjel," he shouted in response to the panicked glance Cerelinde threw him over her shoulder. "Have no fear! They are friends!"
She did fear, though; he supposed he couldn't blame her. It had taken him hard, a thousand and more years gone by. A Man in his prime, with blood on his hands and a heart full of fury and despair, riding in answer to a summons he barely understood.
Bring your hatred and your hurt and serve me…
Then, he had shouted in reply; had faced the Tordenstem as it crouched atop the peak with its barrel chest and mouth like a howling tunnel, and shouted his own defiant reply, filled with the fearless rage of a Man to whom death would be a welcome end. And the Tordenstem, the Thunder Voice Fjel, had laughed, barrel chest heaving, ho! ho! ho! Maybe you are the one his Lordship seeks, scrawny pup!