Friar Tuck was first to reach the little dell where the four had made camp-not far from the fields where the council was meeting, but hidden in a fold between two hills. "Iwan! Siarles!" he shouted, thundering down the hillside to the stand of beech trees where they had camped. "To arms! The Ffreinc are coming!"

The two men appeared, drawing their swords as they ran. Iwan took in the situation at a glance, thrust his sword into the turf, and raced back for his longbow. Tuck reached the shelter of the trees and threw himself from the saddle as Iwan appeared, clutching two bow staves in one hand and a sheaf of arrows in the other. "There are four of them!" cried Tuck. "Bran has a woman with him and cannot outpace them much longer. We had but a few yards' start on them."

"Four only?" said Iwan, tossing a bow to Siarles. "The way you were shouting, I thought all the Normans in England were on your tail-and their hounds as well."

"What woman?" wondered Siarles, bracing the bow against his leg to string it.

"Our escape required a hostage," Tuck explained. "For God's sake, hurry!"

A cry arose from the rim of the dell. They turned to see Bran pounding down the gentle slope, encumbered by a squirming, screaming female. His mount was tired and clearly labouring. Even as they watched, he was overtaken by the two Ffreinc knights sweeping up behind him with swords raised.

"For the love of God!" cried Tuck. "Hurry!"

"All in good time, brother," said Iwan, passing a handful of arrows to Siarles. "It does not do to hurry an archer. It makes him miss."

With quick downward jabs, the two stuck the arrows point first in the turf and, plucking one each, nocked it to the string.

"Left!" said Iwan.

"Right!" answered Siarles, and with almost languid motion, the two pressed the longbows forward as if trying to step through them. There was a single dull thrum and fizzing hiss as the arrows flew. The knight on the left, standing in his stirrups, his arm raised high, ready to begin the fatal downward slash with his blade, was struck in the centre of the chest. Already unbalanced, the impact slammed him backwards over the rump of his horse, dead when he hit the ground. The rider on the right had time but to glance once at the suddenly empty saddle of his companion before Siarles's arrow buried itself in his chest. The sword spun from his hand, and he clutched the arrow, fighting to turn his galloping mount-a fight he lost when Siarles's second arrow struck just below the first and knocked him from the saddle.

Bran galloped on. The two remaining knights appeared on the rim of the dell and started down. "Left!" said Iwan again and loosed. The arrow, a blurred streak in the air, seemed to lift the soldier up ever so slightly as the horse ran out from under him.

The sole remaining knight must have seen the two riderless horses breaking off to the side, for he tried to halt his headlong pursuit. With a cry of dismay, he jerked the reins back hard. The horse's churning hooves slipped in the long grass, and the animal slid. The knight, occupied with his stumbling mount, did not see the arrow that flung him from the saddle. He landed heavily on his side, rolled over, and did not move again.

"Get their horses!" shouted Bran to Siarles as he reined his lathered mount to a halt. "Tuck! Iwan! Break camp. It will not be long before Neufmarche realises his knights are not coming back-and then he will come in force." The two hurried off to gather the water and provisions and saddle the horses.

"Let me go!" shouted Merian, scratching at Bran's hands. He released his hold and let her fall. She landed in an awkward sprawl, her mantle sliding up over bare legs. Her shoes had come loose and been lost in the mad dash from the baron's camp. "You did that on purpose!" she raged, pulling down her mantle and scrambling to her feet. Bran slid down from the saddle. Livid with rage, dark eyes ablaze, Merian flew at him with her fists. "How dare you! I am not a sack of grain to be picked up and thrown over your shoulder. I demand-"

"Enough!" Bran snapped, grabbing both of her wrists in one strong hand.

"Take me back at once."

"So your friend the baron can carve my head from my shoulders?" he said. "No, I think I would rather live a little longer."

"My father will do the same unless you let me go. Whatever trouble you're in will not be helped by taking me. I am certain that it can be cleared up if we all just-"

"Merian!" Bran's hand flicked out and connected with her cheek in a resounding slap. "Do you understand what just happened here?" He pointed to the dead knights on the hillside. "Look out there, Merian. This is no misunderstanding. The baron means to kill me, and I do not intend to give him another chance."

"You hit me!" she said darkly. "Never do that again."

11 "Then do not give me cause.

Siarles returned, leading three horses. "One got away," he said.

"Go help Iwan and Tuck," Bran told him, taking the reins. "Three is enough."

"What are you going to do?" asked Merian, her voice shaking with anger.

"Get as far away from here as possible," he replied, examining the horses. There was blood on one of the saddles, and the horse that had stumbled had a ragged gash in a foreleg. Bran released the animal and, selecting one for Merian, pulled her around to the side and held out the stirrup for her. "Mount up."

"No."

"You are acting like a child."

"And you are acting like a brigand," she said. Raising both hands, she pushed him over backward, turned, and started running-gaining only a few paces before she felt his arms around her waist, lifting her from her feet.

"I am a brigand," he said. Lugging her back to the horse, he heaved her clumsily into the saddle and proceeded to tie her feet to the stirrups with the straps used to secure a lance. "Do not try me again, Merian, or I might forget I ever loved you."

"You flatter yourself," she snarled. "But you were ever a flatterer and a liar."

Iwan, Tuck, and Siarles emerged from the beech grove just then, leading two horses. "Ready!" called Iwan.

"Ride out," Bran said. Holding tight to the reins of Merians mount, he swung up into the saddle. "Come, my lady," he said, his voice cold and cutting. "Let us hope that, along with your loyalty and good sense, you have not also forgotten how to ride."

"Where are you taking me?"

"To Cel Craidd," he replied. "Our fortress may not be as fine and rich as Castle Neufmarche, but it is blessedly free of Ffreinc, and you will receive a better welcome there than I received at the baron's hands."

"They will find me, you know," she said, trying to sound brave and unconcerned. "And you will pay dearly for what you've done."

"They will find you when I choose to let them find you, and they are the ones who will count the cost."

Turning his eyes to the line of advancing twilight away to the east, Bran gazed at the gathering darkness and embraced it like a friend. He lifted his head, squared his shoulders, and drew the evening air deep into his lungs. When he glanced again to Merian, his eyes were veiled with the night, and she realised Bran was no longer the boy she had once known. "But now," he said, his words falling like a shadow between them, "it is time for this raven to fly."


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