MIDNIGHT FALCON by David Gemmell

‘You will pay for this with your life!’ she hissed.

The crowd began to move out of the Roundhouse and cluster round the wagon. At that moment an armoured rider came galloping from the east. His horse thundered over the second bridge and he brought it to a stop before the Roundhouse. ‘Where is Captain Finnigal?’ he called.

‘He is on the hilltop, scouting the ground,’ said Bane. ‘Have you sighted the Vars?’

‘Aye, two hundred of them. They’re right behind me.’

‘Bara’s teeth, man, how far east did you ride?’

‘The captain said to go no more than a mile. So I waited on Giant’s Tooth until I caught sight of them.’

Bane swore long and loud. Had the man been sent further east he would have seen the Vars earlier, and the news would have given the civilians greater incentive to evacuate Three Streams. But there was no point in hammering such a truth home now. Bane addressed the crowd. ‘We can take fifteen of the oldest and most infirm in the wagon,’ he said. ‘The rest of you better run for your lives.’

The Vars had marched just under sixty miles in three days, but there was little sign of weariness among them. Snarri Daggerbright marched at the head of his little army, his second in command Dratha beside him.

‘One more mile,’ said Snarri, licking his misshapen lips. The rain had eased, the sun now shining brightly through a break in the clouds. Snarri had never been this deeply into Rigante territory before. The lands were lush and fertile, unlike the rocky slopes of his own home. The cattle they saw were – despite the harshness of the winter – already fattening well on the new grass. Snarri thought of his farm. More stone than soil, the crops withered and thin. Seeing this verdant land made him realize more than ever why Shard was determined to conquer it.

Snarri glanced back at his men, their mailshirts gleaming in the sunlight. On the first day of the march the Vars had been uneasy. Despite the assurances from Shard they scanned the horizon, constantly expecting to see a Rigante force. By the second day they were more relaxed. Snarri promised them women and plunder, and a rich harvest for the gods of blood.

‘I’ve never had a Rigante woman,’ said Dratha, on the second day.

‘Hellcats, every one of them,’ Snarri told him. ‘Unless you beat them unconscious it takes three men to hold one down. They’ll scratch, punch, kick and bite. You get no pleading from them, and they stare at you with murder in their eyes. Ah, but it is an experience to treasure.’

Dratha considered this information. ‘I thought old Lars had a Rigante wife once?’

‘Nah, she was Perdii. Softer. Once he got her back from the raid she settled down well. Lars said she only needed the lash a few times. After that she was fine. But I knew a man tried to take a Rigante woman for his wife – snatched her on a raid. Nothing but trouble. Ran away three times. He lashed her, beat her – broke her arm if I remember. She cut his throat one night, then she cut off his balls and nailed them to the door.’

‘I remember that,’ said Dratha. ‘I was about ten. Didn’t she jump off a cliff or something?’

‘Aye. We had her cornered but she ran to the cliff top and leapt. Three hundred feet she fell. Tide was out. Not a pretty sight when we found her.’ He laughed. ‘But prettier than she would have looked had we taken her alive. No, take my advice, Dratha, when we get to the village find a married woman with a small child. They’ll do anything to protect their young.’

At the base of the last hill Snarri called a halt, and gathered his men around him. ‘Three Streams is just over the rise,’ he told them. ‘We go in fast and hard, kill every man and old woman you see. The younger women will be taken alive and bound. No pleasures to be taken until the settlement is secure. Does everyone understand that?’ He looked around into the stern faces of his fighters. No-one spoke. ‘Good. Now, there is one older woman who must be taken alive. Her name is Meria. She is around five and a half feet tall, with long, silver hair and green eyes. Kill no old women with green eyes. Take them and bind them.’

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