When Wynter was five, her
father dressed her in a little red coat, put her on the back of his horse, and
took her on a picnic. Wynter remembered the drowsy movement of the horse
beneath her, and leaning back into the warm support of her father as they travelled
the forest paths. She remembered his strong arms encompassing her as he held
the reins, the scent of wood shavings and resin from his clothes. She
remembered the light coming through the foliage, and how it had moved across
her hands, which were so small on the big leather pommel of Lorcan’s saddle.
Lorcan’s
friend Jonathon had been with them, and his sons, Razi and Alberon. All of them
were happy, and laughing, which was something they seemed to do quite often
back then. Just two friends and their beloved children out for a jaunt on a
warm autumn day, getting the best of the good weather before winter finally
tightened its grip. Looking back on it, Wynter knew there must have been some
kind of military presence with them, but she had no recollection of soldiers or
any kind of guards. Perhaps she was so used to
the presence of soldiers around her father’s good friend that she no longer
noticed them. She never thought of Jonathon as ‘the King’ back then. She
recalled only thinking of him as Jon, that big, golden-headed man, so quick to
lose his temper but just as quick to show affection. He had been best friend to
her own father, and father to her two best friends, those brothers of her
heart: the dark, serious, protective Razi, and the grinningly impulsive, loving
Alberon.
Razi
had kept trotting on ahead, his brown face all alight at the unexpected freedom
of the day. Alberon was for the first time astride his own horse, and Wynter
remembered watching with amused envy as he urged the little creature on, attempting
to keep pace with his older half-brother. She recalled him calling anxiously
across the sun-dappled air, ‘Razi! Razi! Don’t leave me!’ and Razi’s smile as
he turned back to wait.
They
had stopped at a ford, and the men had stripped to their underthings and run
into the shallow water, whooping and splashing and laughing at the cold. Wynter
had hopped from foot to foot at the edge of the water, watching as Alberon
threw himself into his father’s arms. Jon had flung him high into the sunshine,
Albi’s small face luminous with sun-glitter and joy.
She’d
felt a warm presence by her side, and she had looked up into Razi’s smiling
face.
‘Come
on, darling.’ He had offered his hand. ‘It’s only cold for a moment.’ He led
her carefully into the stream, her hand held tight in his, then her father had
waded over and hoisted them, one under each water-chilled arm, and carried them
out into the bright sunshine to teach them how to swim.
-0-
Almost eleven years later,
Wynter Moorehawke sat on the warm, smooth-pebbled beach of a similar ford and
listened to the furtive rustling of the surrounding forest.
Half her
mind was on
the unintelligible conversation of the Merron warriors who sat on the rocks to
her right, the other half on the forest shadows and all the lurking
possibilities they might contain.
Down by the water’s edge, the now
twenty-year-old Razi crouched on his haunches and frowned out across the
shallow water. For a blissful moment it seemed as though he might actually relax and sit down, but Wynter knew that he was
unlikely to stay still for long. Sure enough,
the dark young man almost immediately ran his hands through his hair, sighed in
frustration and rose once again to his feet.
Do
not start pacing, thought Wynter, but Razi, of course, did just
that.
His
lanky silhouette stalked out of sight at the corner of her eye, then stalked
right back in again just as quickly, and Wynter had to turn her head so that
she wouldn’t be driven mad by his ceaseless prowling. Since Embla’s death, a deep and angry
river of impatience had run very close to Razi’s surface, and it manifested
itself in constant, irritating motion. Wynter felt
genuine sympathy for Razi’s loss, but just at that moment, the crunch, crunch, crunch of his
footsteps on the pebble shore was grating on her already stretched nerves. She
tightened her jaw against the urge to snap at him.
An
irritated sigh drifted across from the group of warriors. ‘Tabiyb,’ rumbled
Úlfnaor, ‘sit down before I take back of my sword to your head.’ Razi glowered
and the black-haired Merron leader frowned. ‘Sit,’ he ordered. ‘You wear
me out.’ Razi sat, and Úlfnaor nodded in approval. ‘They be back soon,’ he
said. ‘You take this time to rest.’
The big man sounded calm, but even as
he spoke his dark eyes roamed the far bank
with restless anxiety. His warriors sat tensely around him, the three women
sharpening their swords, the three men staring at the trees on the other side
of the ford. They had set out that morning expecting to make contact with Alberon and to engage him in
diplomatic talks, so men and women alike were magnificently dressed in the pale-green embroidered tunics and britches of the Merron formal costume,
their arms and hands and necks heavy with silver tribal jewellery. But the day
had grown old with no contact from the Rebel Prince, and evening was fast
approaching. Wynter was beginning to fear that they had been misled.
She met the eye of the Merron healer,
Hallvor. The sinewy woman smiled reassuringly, but Wynter could see the tension
in her face. Úlfnaor’s two giant
warhounds
were snuffling about at the water’s edge. They looked up as Hallvor rose to her
feet. She sheathed her sword as she made her way to the shore, and the dogs
wagged their tails, hoping for action. But Hallvor just laid a callused hand on
each of their wiry heads and stood watching the
trees on the other side. She murmured unhappily in Merron. Úlfnaor answered in
soothing tones.
Wynter
wished that Christopher were there, and not just because she wanted him to
translate. She frowned across the water,
willing him to return. Beside her, the gravel crunched as Razi began to move
about once again. His long shadow fell across Wynter and he hunkered down by
her side, his elbows on his knees, his eyes on the far bank.
‘I
do not think we will be lucky here either,’ he
said quietly.
Wynter
nodded. Since early morning, the Merron had been making their way along this
river, stopping at prearranged rendezvous points,
waiting for Alberon’s men to show up and guide them to the rebel camp. This was
the fourth such designated meeting place and it, like all the others, had
proved deserted. They had been waiting for well over an hour now, but still Úlfnaor was loath to move on. Apparently if this
rendezvous proved a washout, there was only
one remaining point at which they could hope to meet their guides. If that,
too, proved deserted then the Merron’s diplomatic mission would be a failure.
The Northern warriors would have to return to their homeland with their duty
unfulfilled, and Razi, Wynter and Christopher would be no closer to finding
Alberon’s camp than they had been almost three weeks previously.
‘Chris
and Sól have been away too long,’ murmured Wynter.
Razi
just sighed and rubbed his face. He’d heard enough of this from her, she knew,
but Wynter didn’t care. She was prickly with anxiety. There were less than four
hours of daylight left, and she wanted Christopher where she could see him. She
wanted him by her side, not out in the woods where the Loups-Garous might be
prowling and where the King’s men were still actively hunting the rebels.
‘Úlfnaor
should never have allowed Chris and Sól out there alone,’ she said.
‘Reconnoitre be damned! Truth be told, I think he let them go just to shut the
two of them up and give them something to do.’
Razi
huffed in agreement. Christopher was an incorrigibly reckless fellow at the
best of times, and as for Sólmundr – since the loss of his beloved Ashkr, the
Merron warrior
had seemed
possessed of a dangerous, unquenchable kind of restlessness. He and Christopher
seemed to spark each other off, and both were champing at the bit, longing for
action. They had set off into the forest with far too much enthusiasm and far
too little caution for Wynter’s liking. Even with Sólmundr’s warhound, Boro, by
their side, she feared her two friends were horribly vulnerable out there.
Wynter
was opening her mouth to say so when, down by the river’s edge, Hallvor and the
warhounds suddenly came to attention. Frowning, the healer took a step forward, her eyes on the trees. The
warhounds growled, and Hallvor gestured sharply to quiet them.
Razi
and Wynter rose to their feet. On the rocks,
the other Merron stood up, swords in hand.
‘Cad
é, a Hallvor?’ asked Úlfnaor.
Hallvor
shushed him, her attention fixed ahead. Then she pointed into the trees.
‘Coinín,’ she said. ‘Agus é ag rith.’
It
was Christopher, running soundless and very fast through the trees, his long
black hair flying behind him, his slim arms and legs pumping. He burst into the
sunlight and crossed the shallow ford in a glitter of splashing footsteps. Boro
and Sólmundr came racing after.
‘Quick!’
hissed Christopher. ‘Someone’s coming, and they ain’t no diplomatic party!’
The
Merron spun for their horses, but Sólmundr called them back. He ran straight up
the rocks and flung himself on the weapons pile, snatching up his longbow and
arrows. His companions swerved to join him and he began hissing breathless
explanations as they loaded up.
Christopher’s
grey eyes met Wynter’s as he slid to a halt at her side.
‘No
time to run,’ he said. ‘Make a stand! They’re right behind us.’
She
drew her sword. ‘How many?’
‘Have
I time to load the matchlock?’ asked Razi.
Christopher
shook his head to both questions. ‘No idea how many; don’t even think they know
we’re here. But they’re heading straight for us and they’re in a damned big
hurry. No
time for the gun, Razi. Just draw your swords, the two of you, and stay behind
the archers.’
Sólmundr
shouted, and Christopher spun just in time to catch the crossbow the warrior
had flung to him. Christopher’s quiver of black bolts came sailing after, and
Wynter caught it one-handed while Christopher pulled the lever to draw his bow.
She handed him a bolt. He loaded the bow as he spun to face the ford, and
Wynter stepped to his side, her sword in hand.
Sólmundr
shook his sandy hair from his eyes and drew his longbow, sighting on the trees.
The Merron spread out along the beach, their longbows at the ready, their
warhounds standing in disciplined silence at their sides. The wood and leather
of the longbows creaked as the warriors put just enough tension on the strings
to keep the arrows in place, not yet expending their energies on a full draw.
The buzzing quiet of the autumn evening settled around them as they waited.
Christopher
nestled the crossbow into the hollow of his shoulder. He settled his stance.
‘Here they come,’ he whispered. Wynter could hear them now, coming up fast. So
different to Christopher’s earlier silent approach; this was the noise of
someone smashing heedlessly through the heavy forest. It was the sound of
someone panicked, someone desperate. The Merron pulled their longbows to full
draw and levelled their aim.
The
man who crashed through the trees didn’t register them. He came staggering from
the shade into the sunlight and splashed halfway across the bright water
without even noticing the row of imposing warriors standing on the far bank,
tracking him with their arrows. His head was down, his arms wrapped around his
belly, and all his energy seemed taken with simply putting one foot in front of
the other.
‘Hold!’
cried Wynter. ‘You hold now!’
The
man spun in response to her voice and staggered to a halt. Once his forward
momentum deserted him, he seemed to lose his ability to stand and he
immediately dropped to his knees and collapsed face-first into the shallow
river. The water around him instantly turned red.
There was a
moment of stunned silence as the company watched the man’s blood swirl and
spread and trail away in dark ribbons from his body. Then Razi threw his sword
aside with a clatter and waded into mid-stream to roll the man onto his back.
Wynter
had assumed the poor fellow to be unconscious, but as soon as Razi lifted his
face from the water the man took a gasping breath and clutched Razi’s coat with
a bloody fist.
‘Help
me,’ he rasped. ‘Help me…’ His half-opened eyes were on the Merron, who had
switched their aim back to the trees and were dividing their attention between
the newcomer and whoever might appear in pursuit of him.
Razi
began to heave the fellow up and Wynter ran to help him. Christopher splashed
out after her. Without dropping his guard, he circled around in front of her
and Razi, his crossbow aimed at the far bank.
‘Get
yourselves behind the archers,’ he ordered roughly.
‘Cavalry…cavalry…’
moaned the wounded man as they dragged him to shore. ‘Escape…the Prince.’
Razi
met Wynter’s eye across the top of the man’s head as they laid him on the warm
stones of the beach. ‘You are a member of the King’s cavalry?’ he murmured,
turning the man over and opening his jacket to check his injuries. Wynter
winced at the sight of a pulsing wound in the poor fellow’s side. She had to
look away from the mess of exposed bone and bulging organs.
‘I
shall fetch your medical bag,’ she said.
But
Razi shook his head, his face grim, and Wynter knew there was nothing that
could be done.
Razi
leaned close. ‘You are a member of the cavalry?’ he repeated gently.
‘Yes…no…not…they’re
after me. Oh Jesu, help me…’ The man
began trying to crawl away, his bloody hands scrabbling on the smooth stones,
his face twisted in pain. Blood pumped in horrible quantities from his wound
and pooled on the rocks around him.
‘Shhh,’
said Wynter, laying her hand on his face. ‘Lie easy…lie easy, friend.’ The man
stilled and rested his head on the stones with a moan. ‘Who pursues you?’ she
asked.
‘The
cavalry…the cavalry…the King’s men…’
Wynter
glanced at Razi. The King’s men.
‘You
work for my brother,’ said Razi softly.
The
man looked up into Razi’s dark face for the first time, and his eyes widened in
fear. ‘Oh God help me,’ he whispered. ‘You’re the Arab.’ He moaned and closed
his eyes. ‘Oh, I am lost.’
‘My
father’s men pursue you?’ asked Razi. ‘You seek the safety of the rebel camp?’
‘The
Lord Razi is hoping to meet his brother at the rebel camp,’ whispered Wynter.
‘He wishes to reconcile him to the King. We can take you to safety, if you will
but show us the way to the Prince.’ But the man just turned his face into the
stones, convinced now that he was among enemies, determined to speak no more.
‘Razi,’
said Christopher, glancing back at his friend. ‘The Merron cannot allow the
King’s men to take them.’
Sólmundr
and Úlfnaor looked over their shoulders at Razi. The rest of the Merron, unable
to understand this conversation, kept aim on the trees, but their eyes flicked
anxiously between their leaders and the dark-skinned man they’d sworn to
protect.
‘Razi,’ insisted Christopher, ‘if your
father’s men arrive, we must fire on them! Else you are condemning these
people to death – and your mission is failed.’
Razi
shook his head and would not lift his eyes from the wounded man.
Wynter
laid a hand on his arm. She looked up into Christopher’s pained face.
‘The
King’s men will kill us, lass,’ said Christopher. ‘We must fight them or die;
there ain’t no way around it.’
‘Others
is coming!’ cried Sólmundr, and Wynter leapt to her feet at the sounds of
riders approaching fast through the trees. She weighed her sword in her hand
and stepped to Christopher’s side again, her heart hammering with anger and
with fear. Dear God, had it truly come to this? Must she now face loyal
soldiers of the crown and kill them or die?
The
Merron ordered their dogs to heel and once again pulled their longbows to full
draw. A flash of sun on metal showed through the shifting leaves of the forest
as dark shapes advanced upon them. Úlfnaor, his huge arms quivering with the
strain, held his
aim and
murmured softly to his warriors. He was obviously telling them, ‘Wait…wait…’
Wynter
crouched low. She brought her sword up. She had made up her mind that she would
not die here. She would not die!
Christopher
looked back at Razi, wanting his permission to fire.
Razi
bowed his head, his eyes squeezed shut. Then he snatched his sword, rose to his
feet and stood ready at Christopher’s side. Christopher took aim just as the
King’s soldiers burst through the trees.
There
were only two of them, and they entered the ford with an almost childlike
abandon. Wynter knew that she would never forget the looks on their faces when,
expecting nothing more than a wounded soldier fleeing on foot, they suddenly
found themselves confronted with a row of hard-faced archers.
There
was just a brief moment of suspension, the smallest fraction of time, then the
youngest soldier grabbed for his sword. Christopher’s crossbow bolt took him
between his eyes and carried him backwards from his horse. All other sound was
buried in the heavy twock of longbows, and the hiss and thud of Merron
arrows seeking and finding their target. The soldiers’ limp bodies tumbled to
the water with mighty splashes. Their blood washed downstream just as the rebel
soldier’s had done.
Wynter’s
sword-arm dropped to her side and she watched the King’s men die.
The
magnificent cavalry horses staggered under a second hail of missiles. They fell,
and their blood mingled with that of their riders, eddying out into the clear
water to flood the river with scarlet. The stain rapidly filled the ford,
swirling and flowing and stretching its arms outwards
until it lapped in bright, sun-dappled wavelets on the shore and
coloured the heedless stones at Wynter’s feet.
Behind her, Razi turned from this
spectacle of death and knelt once again by the rebel soldier’s side. Wynter
watched as he closed the poor fellow’s lifeless eyes. For the briefest of
moments Christopher stayed at Wynter’s side, his arm a sympathetic warmth
around her waist. Then he splashed out into the scarlet ford and began to help
the Merron harvest their fallen arrows.
A Roar of Smoke (an extract from
later in the book)

Wynter stood
in the main thoroughfare of the camp and listened to the silence. The road was
a humpbacked ribbon of moonlight stretching away to the deserted barricades.
Behind her, Alberon’s tent slept beneath the wide-eyed moon.
Why was it so
quiet? Where were all the subtle noises of a night-time camp? Wynter listened
in vain for the discreet tramp and murmur of the sentries, the snores, the
sighs, the coughs of sleeping men. There was none of that – just a low
creaking, like a heavy sack swinging idly from a pulley rope. She looked up and
down the road, but could find no source for the sound.
Alberon’s
voice drifted from the tent above, his words clear, though softly spoken.
‘You are on
my side, brother?’
Wynter turned
and looked up the hill, waiting for Razi’s reply. None came. She knew Razi was
standing up there, gazing at Alberon, his face as unreadable as a starless sky.
She took a step forward, her intention to climb the hill, but that creaking
noise distracted her again, and she glanced back over her shoulder.
For the first
time she noticed the scaffolds that had been erected all through the camp.
There were at least two for every tent, their crisscrossed timbers stark
against the moon-washed brilliance of the sky. Men hung from them in sets of
five, their lifeless bodies swaying in the gentle breeze. There were so many of
them. How could they have escaped her attention before now? The thick ropes
from which the men were suspended groaned against the wood of the scaffold
bars, the source of that heavy creaking sound. Wynter blessed the
shadows that
hid the details; she had never been able to stomach the bloated spectacle of a
hanged man’s face.
So this is why the camp is so
quiet, she thought. I had best deliver this news to
Alberon. I’m sure he’ll want to know that his men are dead.
A chill wind
blew from nowhere, casting grit into Wynter’s face. She flung up her hands to
save her eyes, gagging on the stench of gunpowder and rot. The ground vibrated
beneath her feet, the familiar warning rhythm of an approaching horse, and a
ghost-rider broke from the dark of the trees. As he shot through the barricades
and up the road towards her, Wynter recognised him as the soldier from the
ford, the man that Razi could not save. He was barely clinging to his saddle,
his transparent face creased with agony. He was shouting, his mouth opening and
closing in silent desperation as he galloped through the camp.
He advanced
at tremendous speed. Wynter had barely time to stagger back and he was upon
her. Horse and rider passed through her in a blast of icy cold. The gale from
their passage howled within her, screaming in her ears, snatching the hair back
from her forehead and temples, stealing the breath from her lungs. Her eyes
were blinded with swirling milky light. The soldier’s voice roared in her mind,
He will betray you! He will betray you! My Prince! It is a trap!
Then he was
gone, and Wynter fell to her knees in the dust, her hands clawed, her eyes
staring, her heart clogged in her throat.
Razi bellowed
‘NO’, and Wynter turned just in time
to see him fling himself between Alberon and the horse. Razi threw up his arms,
turned his face away, and the messenger hit him full force.
Rider and
horse exploded into cloud and dust, scattering the air with particles of light.
Razi was flung into his brother’s arms, his coat and his hair beaded in
phosphorescence. As Alberon staggered under Razi’s weight, Wynter saw his eyes
lift to the barricades. His face fell, and Wynter spun once more to face the
trees, seeking to find the source of his despair.
More riders
were galloping from the forest. Their faces set, their crossbows drawn, they
passed through the thick walls of the barricades, their eyes fixed on the Rebel
Prince. Wynter recognised the two in front; knew them by the Merron arrows that
still pierced their bodies and their blood-blackened horses. They led a charge
of glowing nebulous men – victims of God knew what distant battle – all
intently following the two ahead. Wynter ran towards them, screaming, ‘NO! NO!’
They advanced unheeding on a hurricane of dust and cold. As one, they raised
their crossbows and fired. Instead of the thwack
of arrows there came a belch of smoke from each bow, a roar as from a series of
cannons. Trails of smoke shot outwards, passing over Wynter’s head, ruffling
her hair. She spun, following the smoke as it arced its deadly trail to the
hill above her.
Alberon
looked up, his face illuminated by the advancing light. Razi frowned and
turned, too late to see. The missiles hit and the brothers were consumed in fire.
-0-