When Lisah had left the reception room to return to her apartment, it was not to shed the tears her father had made mention of. Warriors are more often trained to think and react than to weep, and Lisah had been trained as a warrior. Her floors endured much striding back and forth as she strove to understand what had been done to her, and at long, long last she had reached a conclusion she had not sooner been able to bring herself to.
Her father’s sense of honor had been overcome by flattering attention, the sort he had never before been exposed to. His sense of the right had been warped in the light of the expressed wishes of the High Lord Milo, wishes no man would be expected to ignore.
Lisah had shaken her head at that conclusion, her smoldering anger aimed at the Undying Lord rather than at her beloved father. Never would her father have broken his word if he had not had his head turned so completely, the proof of which was clearly to be seen in his last remarks. She was to believe it mattered that she was female while Dharrehn was not? Wheh had such a difference mattered before, most especially to their father? And why had her brothers not supported her, as they none of them had ever failed to do in the past? Two had fallen in battle and three were away as the four now home would soon be again, but never had any of them refused to aid in her training, all standing firmly behind her right when some wide-bottomed city matron attempted to take it from her with catty criticism.
No, her brothers had been intimidated at mention of the High Lord, and her father had been flattered blind, and now they thought she would add to the dishonor by breaking a word which had been accepted as given. Were she to do such a thing her father would never forgive himself nor her, for he was certain to return to his senses as soon as his high-noble guests were gone. It was her duty to see that they were not dishonored, a di)ty she was most pleased to accept, and should the High Lord be displeased enough to wish vengeance, his wrath would fall only on her. She knew very little about the Undying High Lord, having never before considered him at any great length, yet knew well enough that she had no fear of him. The years she had lived had not been many, yet had there been sufficient of them to show her there was no man she feared.
Lisah had then begun to gather her things, having spent enough hours bringing herself to the realization that she must give her father a small bit of embarrassment to save him from more and worse. She would simply join the Crimson Cat Company sooner than expected, and that would be that. Her father’s “guests” would depart quickly enough when they found her gone, and when she returned home with true battle experience, all would be even better than it had been. She should really have been gone on her way years earlier, at the age her brothers had first left, but she had let her father’s oft-mentioned loneliness keep her home at his side. Now it would fall to Jahk to ease that loneliness, for he was the youngest and she had already had her turn.
She encountered no difficulty with the gate guards, who merely bid her a pleasant ride as always, and also had no difficulty in locating what had previously been dropped over the wall a good distance from the gate. She quickly dismounted, tied her awkward gear to White Feet equally as quickly, then set off obliquely for the road, wasting none of the precious little time she would have. She knew well enough it would have been wiser donning her armor before seeking the road, but without a dresser she would be some time adjusting it all, and when her usual ride-length elapsed without her return, the city guard would be quickly mounted and sent after her. She would need to be well away before that happened, and well concealed before she stopped. The full moon was nearly bright enough to read by, which would make remaining undetected that much more difficult.
Lisah and White Feet both had sufficient time to wish they had been able to bring a pack mule, when the road curved enough to present them with an unexpected sight. Through the darkness and her mare’s insistences that she was a war-trained destrier and not a great, sexless Northorse, Lisah caught sight of what seemed to be a battle, between perhaps fifteen defenders and nearly twice that number of attackers. As she rode nearer, wondering which side was in the right and therefore the side she should join, the clang of weapons grew clearer and also the curses and screams of the wounded. It was an insane melee, swirling like a dance of death ’neath the moon, and then the madness music turned them so that she had not the least of doubts who was there.
A great axe swung, seemingly without effort, taking both head and shoulder from a man, and a great, silent cat leaped upon another, removing face and life together. Her father’s guests were under attack, and still outnumbered despite their efforts.
Without further pause Lisah turned in her saddle, yanked on the slipknots securing the bundles to her kak, turned back to unsheathe her sword, and was encouraging White Feet in her forward leap almost before her gear had hit ground. Who the attackers might be was still unclear, outlaws having been discouraged from the area years agone, but it mattered no more than that scale remained bundled rather than worn.
The approach of horse and girl was as silent as possible, fully as silent as her arrival behind the attackers was noisy. White Feet then screamed challenge as she voiced the Cambehl cry, leading the attackers to believe that they, in turn, were being attacked, and so they were, but not by the large force they at first imagined. Their attention, however, was diverted long enough for half a dozen of their number to be accounted for by their erstwhile victims, and another two downed by the unexpected new arrivals. Lisah’s blade took the arm from one cleanly before the backswing opened his throat, and White Feet’s teeth sank into a roan neck much like her own but scarcely as well trained. The frightened, wounded horse screamed and reared, unseating its rider into the midst of the still-raging destriers of the intended victims, and steel-shod hooves quickly stamped the life from him.
From that point on the battle was turned about, as Lisah quickly saw would have been the case even had she not arrived. The attackers were, for the most part, riffraff from the city, none fully armored and few even in boiled leather, the sort who counted a battle won merely because they possessed superior numbers. Those they had hoped to overwhelm were fully armored, well-mounted, experienced warriors, unimpressed by mere numbers and coolly pleased by the unexpected diversion. Duke Hwill, especially, chortled with pleasure as he lay about him with a well-crimsoned blade, then laughed aloud when Lisah’s swing took the guts from one who had chosen to face her rather than him. The craven screamed with pain and disbelief as he tumbled from the saddle, leaving the battle in a way he had not expected. He had thought to save his life by running, but had chosen the wrong route.
Others also attempted to flee once the tide had clearly turned, but their efforts proved no more successful. A small number of the nobles’ escort, led by Sir Bryahn, pursued them back up the trail, and a few moments later a shrill, high scream rent the darkness. With none left to face their weapons, Lisah and the balance of the party trotted after pursuers and pursued to see what had occurred, and found that the fleeing few had led their would-be victims to the one who had set the attack. The dog had sat his horse well away from the battle rather than join it or lead it, and had attempted Sir Bryahn’s back while the Dunkahn heir was engaged with the last of the cur’s followers. Sir Bryahn’s plate had turned the weak, craven blow, and then Sir Bryahn had turned, to smash the skull of the thinly armored fool with the edge of his blade, bringing forth a scream shrill as a woman’s even before the blow landed. Afterward the man was no longer able to scream, his unmoving body and wide-staring eyes making that clear.