Chapter 2
The Last Little War had come to the Midlands with the distant sounds of battle. Blue knew those gurgles and cries and screams from the farm. Men dying didn't sound too different from goats going to slaughter.
Except for the praying. Blood and useless prayers soaked the mud churned fields between her village and the next. Her sisters didn't understand, too young and too sheltered.
That sweaty, red summer in the mending tents, mama taught her to yank a broken leg straight. How stitching flesh differed from stitching sackcloth. And when a sharp knife was mercy enough.
On Lamas Day, instead of breaking bread to place at the corners of their barn, Blue sewed a man's hand back together. Three fingers had been cleaved off, but she told him, "You've kept your thumb at least."
He just cried and cradled the bandaged limb to his chest. His tunic was too bloody to tell its color, but it didn't matter to her mama what side they fought for. Blue wiped at his face. A fox once had got into the chicken coop, torn the hens to pieces. Inside the coop smelled of shit and piss and rancid blood.
This poor soldier smelled worse.
White canvas walls spun. She struggled for breath like wet burlap covered her mouth and nose. Stars exploded behind her eyelids. And she ran.
Blue pushed past her mama, shrugging off her concerned hands, and ran for the trees. She ran and ran and ran until her long legs gave out from under her. Her knees buckled and sent her sprawling into the pine needles. The underbrush soaked her britches and tunic, but away from the sick and dying, she could fill her lungs once more.
Blood crusted under her nails, clung in the grooves of her knuckles, painted the lines in her palms. She pulled the kerchief from her head, braid tumbling free, and scrubbed at the gore. Hands as clean as she could make them without soap and water, Blue balled the linen and chucked it hard into the woods.
A twig snapped. Blue coiled her legs up and under her. Leaves rustled. From the direction of the battle field. The blade of mercy was wickedly sharp--
more than sharp enough to kill
, Blue knew-- but its delicate curve seemed far too thin to offer any safety.
Still, she clutched it to her bosom.
Branches shook to the east.
Stab up, whole body behind it
, Blue thought,
and run.
A white stallion limped into the clearing. Red and black splashed up his alabaster chest like spots of rust. Still saddled, dragging his reins, he chuffed at her impatiently.
Dizzy with adrenaline, Blue sheathed the dagger and approached slowly. "Alright, then, horse, let me look, okay? Hope that's not all yours.
"My name's Bluebelle. I won't hurt you." Lipid brown eyes locked on hers, the horse flicked his ears. He huffed when he caught scent of her bloody apron but didn't spook. Blue stepped into touching distance and he rubbed his velvety muzzle against her cheek. She didn't see any wounds on him.
"Don't worry, horse," Blue crooned softly, lifting gentle hands to his neck, "It's not my blood, either."
"Hardly reassuring, woman." A deep voice sounded behind her. "That is my horse. I'll thank you not to steal him."
Only sheer will and the desire not to be trampled kept her from yelping. She turned slowly from the shoulders, hands still on the horse's withers. "This horse will be lame inside a day, clomping rider-less through these woods."
The voice belonged to the tallest man she'd ever seen. Shoulders as wide as axe handles under finely riveted chainmail. Hair dark with sweat and mud and blood. A finger-wide split in his forehead curtained more blood down his face. He was armed, pike and shield. "Where the bloody hell did you come from?"
She pointed a trembling hand in the vague direction of the tent. And her mama. "Mender's."
"Well, I didn't think you were a butcher." He pointed the pike at her bloody apron. "Rhien's or Lambelin's army?"
"Are those the lords' name?"
Which wears yellow tunics and which green
, she wondered.
"Don't play dumb, woman." The spear point dipped toward the dirt and his shield drooped. Exhaustion stamped itself into the edges of his mouth.
"I'm from the village. We just don't want more of you dead idiots in our potato fields." Blue kept her words even, but a mottled blush worked up her throat and cheeks. "Or the Wizard's Woods, in your case."
He lifted a hand to his forehead and grimaced. "It's not that bad."
"I can see your skull." Blue clamped teeth down inside her cheek--
I hope he can't see me shaking
. Because she was trembling like the pine boughs in the narrow wind. She squinted at the man's wound. "Are you going to stab me and die of blood poisoning?"
"Fine, you, me, and Prince will all go together." He took two steps forward, and promptly blanched ashen white. His knees buckled and he thunked to his ass in the undergrowth, legs sprawled out like he was a pouting toddler. "On second thought, we can stay here."
The pike had clattered to rest against a pine tree. And out of his reach, most importantly.
I could run
, she reasoned,
I could run, and he'd never catch me
.
He would die though. Maybe not today, but he'd catch a fever and sweat himself to death alone in the forest.
Shit.