- "He's back!" shouted Guenna.
I laid down my axe, and picked up my shirt. I used it to wipe off some of the sweat, before putting it back on. We had gone through a lot of wood over the winter, and still had a great deal of work ahead of us to replace it.
There was no need to ask who 'he' was. I'd been worrying about Inisian for months. I tried my best not to show it - for Yevna's sake, mostly. Even now I made an effort not to hurry, to appear unflappable. I don't think Guenna was fooled.
Inisian was surrounded by a small crowd, all calling out questions. Yevna was by his side. He turned his head, and saw me. His smile was broad.
- "Good to have you back." I said, enfolding him in a hug. "We were worried."
- "I was never in any danger." he said.
- "There's a lot to tell, I imagine."
- "Yes. Mother Nadesti suggested that I just tell it once, with everyone there."
We gathered in Guen's house again: Vingoldas and Hedyn, Weyl and Seva, my wife and daughters.
- "Let Inisian speak." said the old woman. "Don't interrupt, if you can help it. You'll have a chance for questions, later." She smiled at Guenna as she said this.
"Go ahead, lad."
Inisian nodded. "Well ... I went south of the lake. I didn't even have to ask to join Bacho. Two warriors met me as I approached Southend, and -"
- "Southend?" I asked.
Guen Nadesti shot me a look.
"Sorry." I said.
- "Southend is the new name for ... Nadestis." said Inisian. "Bacho's name for it."
- "He changed the name?" said Mother Nadesti. I knew how she felt. In the Uplands, a man's name, his family's ... is everything. We don't have many possessions, or much wealth. We do have our names, and our reputations.
There's an old curse in the Uplands:
May your name be forgotten
. Bacho was doing his best to erase the Nadestis from memory.
- "Go on." said the old woman.
- "These warriors saw my weapons - and right away, they asked if I wanted to join Bacho. It was that easy. He's taking on any fighting men he can get - and he doesn't care where they come from."
- "How many does he have?" asked Vingoldas. Mother Nadesti frowned, but she didn't reproach him; it was something we all wanted to know.
- "Thirty-five." said Inisian.
My heart fell. So many? How was that even possible?
- "Where did he get so many?" asked Vingoldas.
- "From the south, or west of Bentwood, for the most part. Bacho's none too particular. If they can stand upright and carry a weapon, he takes them on. There are a few names. BearSlayer. Bloodaxe. But most of his men are cutthroats. Back-stabbers."
"I swear, I wouldn't be afraid if I had to face two of them, alone. Their strength lies only in numbers. And their reputation."
- "What reputation?" asked Mother Nadesti.
- "They're killers." said Inisian. "Murderers."
"Every summer, Kestutis takes a raiding party. They demand tribute, recruit fighting men ... and they loot, rape, and kill." Inisian looked grim. We both remembered seeing Kestutis, north of the Three Sisters.
"That's how Bacho gets the means to reward his fighters. And he needs them, to keep control of the lake from Bentwood to Southend. I'm sorry - Nadestis."
- "I imagine that also keeps his men busy." I said. "But tell me something: were the boatmen his? Were those Bacho's men?"
- "They were. And their disappearance worries him. He thinks they were drowned, or that they were taken unawares by wild men."
- "Tell us about Bacho." said Mother Nadesti. "You met him?"
- "Oh, yes." said Inisian. "He rides about, on a horse - very fine. Never without half a dozen of his men. He slapped me on the back, told me that my fortune was made ..."
"But people talk. He murdered his wife, some four years ago. Now he has two concubines."
Poor Abrelda, I thought. Meonwe's sister hadn't deserved such a fate.
- "And Kestutis?" said Yevna. From her tone, I suspected that she already knew the answer to that question. She had spotted Inisian, on his way home, before anyone else.
- "He's unmarried. But the men talk about him, too. He lives for killing. And for rape. Lots of rape."
"He raped two married women - one in Bentwood. One of the husbands objected. Kestutis killed him. That's partly why Bacho needs so many men. It's also one of the reasons he sends his son raiding every summer."
- "How much do they know about Prospal Hill?" I asked.
Everyone sat very still. The muttering and whispering ceased. This was the question uppermost in everyone's minds.
- "Not much." said Inisian.
There was a collective sigh of relief.
"But they know that
someone
lives here."
- "Tell us." said Mother Nadesti.
- "They think that it might be refugees from Nadesti. They believe that you're dead, Mother Nadesti. I'm sorry. But there are a few who think that Veran and his daughters might be here. That's one thing that causes them to lose to sleep.
Where is Hammerfist
? they ask."
- "Thank you, Inisian." said Guen. "That will do, for now. We'll gather tomorrow. I'll want to know your thoughts on what we've just heard."
Vingoldas was one step behind Sulcen and me as we left the old woman's house.
- "What do you think?" he asked me.
I shook my head. "I don't know, yet. I'm sorry. Some of this is re-opening old wounds - I thoughts my scars were thicker. Some of it is new. I need time to digest this."
- "I understand, One-Eye." he said.
Sulcen took my arm as we walked home. She had never done anything like that before.
- "I understand, too, husband." she said.
***
- "One day, they're going to find us." said Seva. Her brother, Weyl, nodded in agreement.
- "Hedyn?" said Mother Nadesti.
- "I don't know, rightly. But if'n they find us ... we're done."
I let Vingoldas speak before me. I wanted to know what he would say, of course. But the truth of the matter was that I didn't know what to say, myself.
- "We need allies." he said.
"It's a simple matter, Mother. If they bring a dozen men again, and try to climb the Hill, we can stop them. But that will tell them, for certain, that we're here. And on the day when they try to climb the slope, and
at the same time
come by boat, along the river ... or if we don't see them coming ..."
"Then Hedyn's right. We're finished. We can't defend against so many."
Guen Nadesti looked at me. There was nothing more that needed saying. I simply nodded. She swallowed, and then glanced at her daughter.
"The nearest folk are Duenerth's kin -"