The horse was the color of White Foal clay, its mane and tail and stockings black. Its bridle and reins were of woven stuff like swampgrass, and from it wafted a marshy odor. It pawed the ground, neck arched, and only then was Zip’s attention drawn to the rider, who was dis- mounting.
Zip never remembered scrambling to his feet, only the swing of the rider from his saddle, the cloak as dark as the predawn sky, and the feathered helm that inclined toward him as the rider said, “What have we here?”
“Uh, I’m just trying to put this back like it ought to be.” Zip waved vaguely behind him, toward the altar stones tumbled there, trying to protect the unassembled shrine with his body.
The rider’s helmet turned slowly. His visor was down. He was armored in browns; bronze or hardened leather or some combination, Zip couldn’t tell. But armored in the way of well-to-do professionals: arms free and bare but for wrist braces, cuirass and loinguard, greaves below his knees, and all of it fitted custom to his body. Slung at his hip was a cavalryman’s sword and equipment belt. Behind, on the saddle, Zip could see two shields, long and short, and a bow and quiver, but in the rider’s hand was only a spear.
Coming toward him without another word, the man used the spear as a staff, digging the ground with its butt. And then, when this faceless apparition was nearly upon him and Zip was beginning to wonder if there were really eyes behind the frightful visor, he finally spoke again: “I see your problem.”