Nor the cares I carry now. Emeric had been a boy lord then, still not yet free of his teens, lumbered with the rule of a famed, if fading, house after his father’s death in the war. It was a life he’d lived for only a few short years, before his exile at the hands of Modrik Kastor. He clenched his jaw at the memory. It was bitter, even now. The disgrace of it, standing there before the great and good of Ilithor, hearing his ‘crimes’ be read out in the throne room as Janilah Lukar sat there, passing his judgements and decrees. Lord Modrik Kastor had stepped up and spoken himself of Emeric’s ‘unseemly behaviours’, as he termed them, with his southern staff; a grating charge, sickeningly hypocritical. Few knew back then of the horrors that unfolded between the walls of Keep Kastor, but Emeric did, and no doubt that was part of the reason Modrik wanted him gone.
All I did was fall in love with a southern girl, Emeric thought. And Modrik and Janilah conspired to see me banished for that ‘sin’. It just so happened that both of the bitter old men were grandfathers to a certain prince. And Mooton wonders why I will not beg a pardon from him. Why should Raynald wish to overrule that charge when it was his very grandsires who sent me away?
“Who’s the one in pink and blue?” came the voice of Captain Turner, drawing Emeric from his thoughts. “Little feminine, isn’t it? And that field o’ flowers…”
“That’s House Amadar,” said Brown Mouth Braxton. “They’re from the Heartlands. The flowers represent the plenty of the harvest.”
“The rider’s got to be Sir Rikkard,” Jack said. “He’s the Amadar heir, isn’t that so, my lord?”
Emeric nodded, pushing those dark memories of his past aside. “Rikkard Amadar is the last living son of Lord Brydon, yes.” He looked at the man riding next to him. His banner bearer held a flag of greyish blue and white. The coat of arms was a steel gauntlet, crunched into a fist. “What do you make of that one, Gill? Is it more to your liking?”
The sea captain squinted and gave a nod. “Aye, that’s more like it. Simple. Powerful. Very Vandarian. House Oloran, no?”
“Correct. Do you know who the rider is?”
“Sir Killian,” said Jack o’ the Marsh, who was very well versed on banners and sigils, lords and knights and the ranks of the landed gentry. “He’s heir to his father Lord Penrith’s seat. They call him Goldmane for his golden hair.”
“Goldmane?” chortled Turner. “Well, might as well start calling you Redmane then, Jack. And Borrus’d be Baldmane.”
“Or Nomane,” Jack put in.
That got some laughter from the men. Emeric managed a smile.
The two parties were converging quickly now. Another banner-bearer among the host bore the Pentar flag and sigil, though the knight was not one that Emeric knew. Old Lord Porus had had many sons and nephews, so he supposed it was one of them. A few others completed the ensemble, knights and retainers of princes and heirs, all men of high birth and noble standing. It was the sort of company Emeric had once endured, rather than enjoyed, company in which he had never felt particularly comfortable.
I was an outcast even before I was exiled, he reflected. He had sat with these men at balls and banquets in his youth, fought them in the joust and melee, but would any of them recall him? His name, yes - oh he had a famous name. But him? Well, he had cause to doubt that. It was Sir Oswald they cared for, he thought sourly. I was never more than a curiosity to them. A middling lord with a famous name who never quite fit in.
By the time the two hosts came together, Emeric had found his way right to the back, mingled in with the sailors and the sellswords, to better go unnoticed. Borrus dismounted his barded warhorse in a single leap and marched forward to embrace his friends. “Killian, you old dog!” he roared, all but pulling him down from his horse, crunching him in his embrace. “Rikkard, get that little arse of yours over here and give me a hug!” Rikkard Amadar got the same treatment, smiling all the while.
Lord Rammas did not get a hug. Instead he went to a knee. “My lord, this is yours.” He reached up, presenting what looked like a brooch; Emeric was so far back it was hard to see through all the horses and heads. “Your father wore this, as Warden of the East. Now it is yours. May you wear it well.”
Borrus took the brooch with great solemnity. “Thank you, Lord Rammas. You may rise, my friend.” He gripped forearms with the muscled lord, shaking firmly, then turned toward the other knights and lesser lords, nodding to each, addressing them if he knew their names, before advancing toward Prince Raynald. “Your Highness, I am honoured to have you here in East Vandar. You marched with quite a host, I hear?”
Raynald was a handsome youth of eighteen who looked much alike to his father, Rylian, with warm waves of auburn hair, a strong jaw and cheekbones, and those piercing green-brown eyes that were all the rage in his family. His sense of courtesy was richly attuned, as rich as the armour and cloak he wore, glorious in green. “Thirty thousand swords, Lord Kanabar,” he said, with an upward tilt of the jaw, a proud expression. “I look forward to fighting alongside you, as you once fought alongside my father.”
Borrus liked that. “Well said, young prince. And days we will see restored.” He paused in a weighty moment. “I was greatly saddened to hear of his death.”
The boy prince dipped his eyes. “As was I, when I heard of your lord father’s passing at the Bane. A great man. But I’m sure you will match him.”
“Not if that beard’s anything to go by,” Mooton whispered, with a grin. Unfortunately, Mooton Blackshaw’s whispers were like another man’s roars, and everyone heard. Borrus turned to him with a glare. He had not been free of a bit of lighthearted mockery over that beard, which was not near as thick and red as his father’s had been. “I’m just saying…” Mooton went on, shrugging. “All your hair’s on your chest, Borrus, everyone knows that.”
“Forgive my cousin, my lords,” Sir Toryn interrupted, from atop his horse. He smiled to lighten the air. “He is rather clumsy with his tongue at times, though he more than makes up for it with his ferocity with axe and blade.”
“Cousin? You are Sir Torvyn Blackshaw, then?” Raynald observed. “The knight who spent all those years in that southern pit?”
“Decades would be more accurate, Your Highness.” Sir Torvyn smiled, the model of grace, though his face still twitched and jerked on occasion, a symptom of his trauma. “Without Lord Borrus I would not be here.”
Emeric looked at Borrus, wondering if he would take the praise himself, but the big man knew better than to steal another’s thunder. “I was present,” he said, “though that honour goes to Jonik. You will know him as the Ghost of the Shadowfort, Prince Raynald.”
“Yes…I did hear of that…”
“My lords.” Sir Rikkard stepped forward. His armour was silver, with a shade of light blue worked into the metal of his breastplate. On his back he wore his Varin cloak. Emeric found it interesting that he chose to represent the order and not his house. He glanced around at the skies with a wary look in his eyes. “Perhaps we ought to continue this inside the walls. There have been some dragon attacks of late, and they may come at any time.”
“Let them,” Borrus said. He looked east, as though fronting up to what lay beyond. “I hear Vargo Ven is out there. I want his head, Rikkard. I want to carve out his brain and use it as a cup, while I toast to the memory of my father.”
Emeric had a good long look at Rikkard Amadar’s face. He looked weary and careworn. “We can talk about that inside, Borrus.” He returned to his horse and mounted up. “Come. We have had pavilions prepared for you.” He set off at that, and the rest fell in to follow, the prince and greatlord heirs and highborn knights moving to the front, Emeric lingering behind with the rest, happy to have gone unnoticed until now.
The portcullis was misting softly when they passed beneath it, curls swirling around its savage spikes. Emeric found himself riding alongside Sansullio. “This is godsteel,” the Sunshine Sword remarked.
“Northern forts and cities often use godsteel in their gates and walls,” Emeric said. “Though rarely so much as this. I understand only Bladeborn can raise and lower the gates here, and the same is true of the drawbridges.”
“Drawbridges?” Sansullio repeated. “There is more than one?”
“Three,” Emeric told him, as their horses’ hooves rattled along the steel-strengthened wood of the bridge. The moat below was wide and deep, bristling with nasty spikes and stakes, half hidden in the murky water. “There is a second entrance looking east onto the plains and a third on the southern side, where the fort meets the river. Each has a double gate and drawbridge between them, same as here.” They passed under the second gate, just as the first was lowered behind them, blocking off the world beyond, and entered into the great ward. At once they were assaulted by colour and noise and motion. Sansullio, who never lost his cool, almost lost his cool.
He gave an exhale. “There are…so many, my lord.”
Yes, Emeric thought, with a twinge of concern for the sellsword. He looked across the sea of tents and pavilions, the cookfires and stables, the barrack marquees and training yards and archery ranges, the latrines and privy shelters where the nobles emptied their bowels, all contained with the vastness of the great ward of the fort at Rustbridge. The scale of it was enough to steal his breath.
“That is what a hundred thousand men in camp looks like, Sansullio.” And sounds like, he thought, as the world erupted into shouts and barks of laughter, the ring of steel and twang of arrows, the rattling of wagons and clop of hooves and the general constant din of a thousand men in motion, bustling all about them. He gave his friend a tap on the arm as the leaders continued down a wide thoroughfare. “Come, we’d best not lose the others.” He spurred his steed on, the Sunshine Swords and sailors following.
Their pavilions had been raised near the wall in the northwestern corner, close enough to the river that it could be heard rushing past outside. It was here that they stopped, handing their horses over to be taken by the grooms. “This one is not to be tied or stabled,” Emeric informed them, gesturing to Shade. The beautiful black-coated Rasal thoroughbred was not like other horses, and was not to be confined. “He will go where he pleases, do you understand?”
“Aye, m’lord,” one of the grooms said. “I’ve worked with Rasals before. I know how particular they can be.”
No one had ridden Shade since they’d begun on their journey south. Once, Regnar had tried, but that hadn’t gone well for him. There was only one rider Shade would permit onto his back.
Emeric found that he had been granted a private tent of his own, though it was small. Sir Rikkard Amadar showed him the way personally. “I am sorry it isn’t bigger, my lord. Regretfully, space is tight, as you can tell.”