The children’s heads popped from the weeds like groundhog
heads. They watched the approaching soldiers. The boy whispered,
“Must be a thousand of them.” The column stretched back
and back. The dust it raised drifted up the face of a far hill. The
creak and jangle of harness grew ever louder.
The day was hot. The children were sweating. Their thoughts
lingered on a nearby brook and a dip in a pool they had found
there. But they had been set to watch the road. Rumor said the Lady
meant to break the renascent Rebel movement in Tally province.
And here her soldiers came. Closer now. Grim, hard-looking men.
Veterans. Easily old enough to have helped create the disaster
which had befallen the Rebel six years ago, claiming, among a
quarter million men, their father.
“It’s them!” the boy gasped. Fear and awe
filled his voice. Grudging admiration edged it. “That’s
the Black Company.”
The girl was no student of the enemy. “How do you
know?”
The boy indicated a bear of a man on a big roan. He had silvery
hair. His bearing said he was accustomed to command.
“That’s the one they call the Captain. The little black
one beside him would be the wizard called One-Eye. See his hat?
That’s how you tell. The ones behind them must be Elmo and
the Lieutenant.”
“Are any of the Taken with them?” The girl rose
higher, for a better look. “Where are the other famous
ones?” She was the younger. The boy, at ten, already
considered himself a soldier of the White Rose. He yanked his
sister down.
“Stupid! Want them to see you?”
“So what if they do?”
The boy sneered. She had
believed their uncle Neat when he had said that the enemy would not
harm children. The boy hated his uncle. The man had no guts. Nobody pledged to the White Rose had any guts. They just played
at fighting the Lady. The most daring thing they did was ambush the
occasional courier. At least the enemy had courage. They had seen
what they had been sent to see. He touched the girl’s wrist.
“Let’s go.” They scurried through the weeds,
toward the wooded creek bank.
A shadow lay upon their path. They looked up and went pale.
Three horsemen stared down at them. The boy gaped. Nobody could
have slipped up unheard. “Goblin!”
The small,
frog-faced man in the middle grinned. “At your service,
laddy-boy.”
The boy was terrified, but his mind remained functional. He
shouted, “Run!” If one of them could
escape . . .
Goblin made a circular gesture. Pale pink fire tangled his
fingers. He made a throwing motion. The boy fell, fighting
invisible bonds like a fly caught in a spider’s web. His
sister whimpered a dozen feet away.
“Pick them up,” Goblin told his companions.
“They should tell an interesting tale.”
The children’s heads popped from the weeds like groundhog
heads. They watched the approaching soldiers. The boy whispered,
“Must be a thousand of them.” The column stretched back
and back. The dust it raised drifted up the face of a far hill. The
creak and jangle of harness grew ever louder.
The day was hot. The children were sweating. Their thoughts
lingered on a nearby brook and a dip in a pool they had found
there. But they had been set to watch the road. Rumor said the Lady
meant to break the renascent Rebel movement in Tally province.
And here her soldiers came. Closer now. Grim, hard-looking men.
Veterans. Easily old enough to have helped create the disaster
which had befallen the Rebel six years ago, claiming, among a
quarter million men, their father.
“It’s them!” the boy gasped. Fear and awe
filled his voice. Grudging admiration edged it. “That’s
the Black Company.”
The girl was no student of the enemy. “How do you
know?”
The boy indicated a bear of a man on a big roan. He had silvery
hair. His bearing said he was accustomed to command.
“That’s the one they call the Captain. The little black
one beside him would be the wizard called One-Eye. See his hat?
That’s how you tell. The ones behind them must be Elmo and
the Lieutenant.”
“Are any of the Taken with them?” The girl rose
higher, for a better look. “Where are the other famous
ones?” She was the younger. The boy, at ten, already
considered himself a soldier of the White Rose. He yanked his
sister down.
“Stupid! Want them to see you?”
“So what if they do?”
The boy sneered. She had
believed their uncle Neat when he had said that the enemy would not
harm children. The boy hated his uncle. The man had no guts. Nobody pledged to the White Rose had any guts. They just played
at fighting the Lady. The most daring thing they did was ambush the
occasional courier. At least the enemy had courage. They had seen
what they had been sent to see. He touched the girl’s wrist.
“Let’s go.” They scurried through the weeds,
toward the wooded creek bank.
A shadow lay upon their path. They looked up and went pale.
Three horsemen stared down at them. The boy gaped. Nobody could
have slipped up unheard. “Goblin!”
The small,
frog-faced man in the middle grinned. “At your service,
laddy-boy.”
The boy was terrified, but his mind remained functional. He
shouted, “Run!” If one of them could
escape . . .
Goblin made a circular gesture. Pale pink fire tangled his
fingers. He made a throwing motion. The boy fell, fighting
invisible bonds like a fly caught in a spider’s web. His
sister whimpered a dozen feet away.
“Pick them up,” Goblin told his companions.
“They should tell an interesting tale.”