Well before dawn, we had finished stacking the bodies. On our side, Priit and Shant were dead, and three other fighters with them - one a woman. Four more were wounded, none of them seriously.
It was a complete, staggering triumph. I hadn't yet figured out all of the implications. Manahir's power was broken - perhaps for good, if Borna could exploit his victory. He was busy doing exactly that.
- "Nanaidh. Dirayr. I want all of their weapons packed onto the spare horses." he ordered. "Hravar: Search every one of the prisoners - even the wounded. Lovro: Find me a leader among them. Ljudevit: Have you counted?"
- "Twenty-two dead, including Maigon. His brother Gojsla was among them. That's all three of Manahir's grandsons. Thirty or so wounded. Fifty-five prisoners, all told." I reported.
- "Is that all of them?" he asked.
Shit. I hadn't thought of that. "I'll count the horses." I said.
The result of my count was not to my liking.
"Eighty-five." I told Borna. "A few look like packhorses, but I can't be sure."
- "So some of them escaped. On foot." he said. "Doesn't matter, for now. Get our people ready to move. We're taking all of the horses."
- "We're leaving?" I asked.
- "I want to be at Manahir's steading before he has a chance to learn what happened here." said Borna. "We can end this - once and for all."
Lovro found a disconsolate young man named Modri. He had long, braided hair, and a cleft chin. Modri was Gojsla's Hand, but his Lord had been killed. He was probably blaming himself - as I would have done, in his place.
- "Modri," said Borna, "this feud between Manahir's family and mine must end. I have no wish to kill prisoners. If I ask you for your word - that you will not fight against me again - would you give it?"
Modri could not meet his eyes. "Lord ... I cannot. I am sworn to Manahir."
- "I know that." said Borna. "But if he was dead ... and his son Aham with him ... would you still fight against me?"
This time, Modri looked up.
- "They still live, Lord."
- "Modri, I intend to ride at dawn. I will take every single horse with me. My people and I are going to Manahir's steading, and we are going to kill the old man and his son."
"They arranged the deaths of my father and my brother - you know this. I've sworn vengeance, and I will have it. What I'm asking is this: will you continue to fight me once they're dead? Must we be enemies forever?"
I loved Borna like the brother I never had. He was my Lord, and my friend. But I had never seen him like this - so commanding, so ... Lordly. Modri obviously felt it, too. Still, he shook his head.
- "I am sworn to Manahir, Lord."
Borna reached out, and put his hand on Modri's shoulder. "What if I asked you for an oath not to fight against me for seven days?"
The former Hand thought it over, his brows knitted.
- "I could do that, Lord."
- "Thank you, Modri." said Borna. "Then I will offer every one of your companions the same bargain. With one condition."
"If they've already given their parole once, I won't accept it a second time."
- "That's fair, Lord." said Modri.
- "Then I will leave you tools. Will you see to burying our dead, Modri? Both sides?"
- "I can do that."
- "Afterwards, I suggest that you walk north. You will come to our steading before the day is out. They will feed you. In a week's time, I will be back to release you from your oath - if not before."
Modri agreed. When he had gone, Borna turned to Lovro and me.
"Do you think he'll keep his word?"
- "Did you see his face?" asked Lovro. "He will."
- "He's a Hand." I said.
- "Of course he will." said Imants, the guslar. I hadn't even noticed that he was with us.
- "Ljudevit." said Borna. "Find me two captains. We'll take them with us."
- "Captains? You don't want them causing trouble once we've gone?"
- "That too. But I want them with us, so that Manahir and Aham will believe me when I tell them that Maigon is dead. I want them to surrender, rather than fight." he said.
Borna asked every single one of the prisoners for an oath. It took time - especially when we found four of them who had been captured before. One was Juris. On the 'Polite' horse raid - when we first encountered red-headed Aare - we had caught Juris for the second time. Though he had already sworn an oath not to take up arms against Borna again, Juris argued that guarding horses for his Ban did not constitute 'fighting'.
We let him go, then. But not this time. We hanged all four oath breakers.
And just after dawn, we were ready to go.
It took us almost two full days to reach Manahir's steading. We were herding all of the captured horses, for one thing; and for another, we had not slept the night before. But if any of Maigon's men had escaped capture, they could not possibly have made the journey on foot without us overtaking them.
I had never seen the place before. Borna had been twice, as a child, with his father.
- "It's big." he said. "Twice the size of our steading. And wealthy. The lands around are more fertile, and the pastures are more lush. You'll see."
- "Will we be able to take it?" asked Lovro. "What if they fight?"
- "You'll see, LongArm." replied Borna.
Imants just chuckled. "Lovro LongArm." he said. "I like it. You have the mind of a poet, Lord Borna."
The guslar had already seen Manahir's steading, too, but he wouldn't tell us anything about it, either. "You'll see." he said.
I got the joke when we finally saw the place. It was huge. It's one thing to hear a steading described as 'twice the size' of your own. It's another thing to see it for yourself.
Manahir would have needed every one of his hundred men to defend the wall. Even then, I think that a determined opponent would have had little trouble getting in. There were two entrances, and both gates were open. The palisade wall was not particularly high. Even at a distance, I could see three or four spots where a grown man could effect an entry. In one place, I could probably have ridden through on horseback.
Borna chose boldness. We rode straight into Manahir's steading, through the wide-open gate. There were only fifty of us prepared to fight, but with almost 150 horses, we must have seemed like an irresistible force.
The guards at the gate melted away. People watched us from doorways, and windows, as we filled the main street. They seemed awed, or curious, rather than hostile.
We halted before reaching Manahir's great hall. Borna dismounted. Then he turned, and called a score of names - including mine, of course. Lovro, Dirayr, Hravar, and Nanaidh were called first. Borna chose a few of the younger men as well, including Aare.
With our two prisoners, we advanced towards the great hall on foot.
There were perhaps a dozen warriors gathered before the doors, which were closed behind them. But these men did not seem very resolute. Borna halted us, and then stepped another two paces ahead.
- "Who leads here?" he called.
No one answered, for a moment. Then a black-bearded warrior spoke up.
- "I suppose I do." he said.
- "Do you know who I am?"
- "Yes, Lord."
- "Maigon is defeated, and dead. So is his brother. All but five of their men were killed, or captured." said Borna. Black-beard could see two men he knew, standing next to me. Both were nodding as Borna spoke, confirming that what he said was true.