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"Then why would you stay?"
"My resolve to go has weakened."
"What has weakened it, Corum?"
"Something quieter in me, yet something, perhaps, that is stronger. It is my love for you, Rhalina, that has conquered my desire to have immediate revenge on Glandyth. It is love. That is all I can tell you."
And she began to weep again, but it was not from sorrow.
The Tenth Chapter
A THOUSAND SWORDS.
Winter reached its fiercest. The towers seemed to shake with the force of the gales that raged around them. The seas smashed against the rocks of Moidel's Mount and sometimes the waves seemed to rise higher than the castle itself.
Days became almost as dark as night. Huge fires were lit in the castle, but they could not keep out the chill that was everywhere. Wool and leather and fur had to be worn at all times and the inhabitants of the castle lumbered about like bears in their thick garments.
Yet Corum and Rhalina, a man and a woman of alien species, hardly noticed the winter's brawling. They sang songs to each other and wrote simple sonnets concerning the depth and pa.s.sion of their love. It was a madness that was upon them (if madness is that which denies certain fundamental realities) but it was a pleasant madness, a sweet madness.
Yet madness it was.
When the worst of the whiter had gone, but before spring elected to show herself; when there was still snow on the rocks below the castle and few birds sang in the gray skies above the bare and distant forests of the mainland; when the sea had exhausted itself and now washed sullen and dark around the cliffs; that was when the strange Mabden were seen riding out of the black trees in the late morning, their breath steaming and their horses stumbling on the icy ground, their harness and their arms rattling.
75.It was Beldan who saw them first as he went onto the battlements to stretch his legs.
Beldan, the youth who had rescued Corum from the sea, turned and went hastily back into the tower and began to run down the steps until a figure blocked his way, laughing at him.
"The privy is above, Beldan, not below!"
Beldan drew a breath and spoke slowly. "I was on the way to your apartments, Prince Corum. I have seen them from the battlements. There is a large force."
Corum's face clouded and he seemed to be thinking a dozen thoughts at once. "Do you recognize the force? Who are they? Mabden?"
"Mabden, without doubt. I think they might be warriors of the Pony Tribes."
"The folk against whom this Margravate was built?"
"Aye. But they have not bothered us for a hundred years."
Corum smiled grimly. "Perhaps we all, in time, succ.u.mb to the ignorance that killed the Vadhagh. Can we defend the castle, Beldan?"
"If it is a small force, Prince Corum. The Pony Tribes are normally disunited and their warriors rarely move in bands of more than twenty or thirty."
"And do you think it is a small force?"
Beldan shook his head. "No, Prince Corum, I fear it is a large one."
"You had best alert the warriors. What about the bat creatures?"
"They sleep in winter. Nothing wilt wake them."
"What are your normal methods of defense?"
Beldan bit his lip.
"Well?"
"We have none to speak of. It has been so long since we needed to consider such things. The Pony Tribes still fear the power of Lywm-an-Eshtheir fear is even superst.i.tious since the land retreated beyond the horizon. We relied on that fear."
76."Then do your best, Beldan, and I'll join you shortly, when I've taken a look at these warriors first. They may not come in war, for all we know."
Beldan raced away down the steps and Corum climbed the tower and opened the door and went out onto the battlements.
He saw that the tide was beginning to go out and that when it did the natural causeway between the mainland and the castle would be exposed. The sea was gray and chill, the sh.o.r.e was bleak. And the warriors were there.
They were s.h.a.ggy men on s.h.a.ggy ponies and they had helmets of iron with visors of bra.s.s beaten into the form of savage and evil faces. They had cloaks of wolfskin or wool, byrnies of iron, jackets of leather, trews of blue, red, or yellow cloth bound around the feet and up to the knees with thongs. They were armed with spears, bows, axes, clubs. And each man had a sword strapped to the saddle of his pony. They were all new swords, Corum judged, for they glinted as if freshly forged, even in the dull light of that winter's day.
There were several ranks of them already on the beach and more were trotting from the forest.
Corum drew his sheepskin coat about him with his good hand and he kicked thoughtfully at one of the battlement stones, as if to rea.s.sure himself that the castle was solid. He looked at the warriors on the beach again. He counted a thousand.
A thousand riders with a thousand new-forged swords. He frowned.
A thousand helmets of iron were turned toward Moidel's Castle. A thousand bra.s.s masks glared at Corum across the water as the tide slowly receded and the causeway began to appear below the surface.
Corum s.h.i.+vered. A gannet flew low over the silent throng and it shrieked as if in startled terror and climbed high into the clouds.
A deep drum began to sound from the forest. The metallic note was measured and slow and it echoed across the water.
77.It seemed that the thousand riders did not come in peace.
Beldan came out and joined Corum.
Beldan looked pale. "I have spoken to the Margravine and I have alerted our warriors. We have a hundred and fifty able men. The Margravine is consulting her husband's notes. He wrote a treatise on the best way to defend the castle in case of an attack of this kind. He knew that the Pony Tribes would unite one day, it seems."
"I wish I had read that treatise," said Corum. He swallowed a deep breath of the freezing air. "Are there none here with actual experience of war?"
"None, Prince."
"Then we must learn rapidly."
"Aye."
There was a noise on the steps within the tower and brightly armored men came out. Each was armed with a bow and many arrows. Each had a helmet on his head that was made from the curly-spined pink sh.e.l.l of a giant murex. Each controlled his fear.
"We will try to parley with them," murmured Corum, "when the causeway is clear. We will attempt to continue the conversation until the tide comes in again. This will give us a few more hours in which to prepare ourselves."
"They will suspect such a ruse, surely," Beldan said.
Corum nodded and rubbed at his cheek with his stump. "True. But if weif we lie to them, regarding our strength, perhaps we shall be able to disconcert them a little."
Beldan gave a wry smile, but he said nothing. His eyes began to s.h.i.+ne with an odd light. Corum thought he recognized it as battle fever.
"I'll see what the Margravine has learned from her husband's texts," Corum said. "Stay here and watch, Beldan. Let me know if they begin to move."
"That d.a.m.ned drum!" Beldan pressed his hand to his temple. "It makes my brains s.h.i.+ver."
"Try to ignore it. It is meant to weaken our resolve."
Corum entered the tower and ran down the steps until 78.he came to the floor where he and Rhalina had their apartments.
She was seated at a table with ma.n.u.scripts spread out before her. She looked up as he entered and she tried to smile. "We are paying a price for the gift of love, it seems."
He looked at her in surprise. "That's a Mabden conception, I think. I do not understand it. . ."
"And I am a fool to make so shallow a statement. But I wish they had not chosen this time to come against us. They have had a hundred years to choose from ..." "What have you learned from your husband's notes?" "Where our weakest positions are. Where our ramparts are best defended. I have already stationed men there. Cauldrons of lead are being heated." "For what purpose?"
"You really do know little of war!" she said. "Less than do I, The molten lead will be poured on the heads of the invaders when they try to storm our walls." Corum shuddered. "Must we be so crude?" "We are not Vadhagh. We are not fighting Nhadragh. I believe you can expect these Mabden to have certain crude battle practices of their own . . ."
"Of course. I had best cast an eye over the Margrave's ma.n.u.scripts. He was evidently a man who understood the realities."
"Aye," she said softly, handing him a sheet, "certain kinds of reality, at any rate."
It was the first time he had heard her offer an opinion of her husband. He stared at her, wanting to ask more, but she waved a delicate hand. "You had best read swiftly. You will understand the writing easily enough. My husband chose to write in the old High Speech we learned from the Vadhagh."
Corum looked at the writing. It was well formed but without any individual character. It seemed to him that it was a somewhat soulless imitation of Vadhagh writing, but it was, as she had said, easy enough to understand.
Therewasaknockonthemaindoortotheir 79.apartments. While Corum read, Rhalina went to answer it. A soldier stood there.
"Beldan sent me, Lady Margravine. He asked Prince Corum to join him on the battlements."
Corum put down the sheets of ma.n.u.script. "I will come immediately. Rhalina, will you see that my arms and armor are prepared?"
She nodded. He left.
The causeway was almost clear of water now. Beldan was yelling something across to the warriors on the bank, speaking of a parley.
The drum continued its slow but steady beat.
The warriors did not reply.
Beldan turned to Corum. "They might be dead men for all they'll respond. They seem singularly well ordered for barbarians. I think there is some extra element to this situation that has not revealed itself as yet."
Corum had the same feeling. "Why did you send for me, Beldan?"
"I saw something in the trees. A flash of gold. I am not sure. Vadhagh eyes are said to be sharper than Mabden eyes. Tell me, Prince, if you can make anything out. Over there." He pointed.
Corum's smile was bitter. "Two Mabden eyes are better than one Vadhagh . . ." But nonetheless he peered in the direction Beldan indicated. Sure enough there was something hidden by the trees. He altered the angle of his vision to see if he could make it out more clearly.
And then he realized what it was. It was a gold-decorated chariot wheel.
As he watched, the wheel began to turn. Horses emerged from the forest. Four s.h.a.ggy horses, slightly larger than those ridden by the Pony Tribes, drawing a huge chariot ia which stood a tall warrior.
Corum recognized the driver of the chariot. The Mabden was dressed in fur and leather and iron and had a winged helmet and a great beard and held himself proudly.
80."It is Earl Glandyth-a-Krae, my enemy," said Corum softly.
Beldan said, "Is that the one who took off your hand and put out your eye?"
Corum nodded.
"Then perhaps it is he who has united the Pony Tribes and given them those bright, new swords they carry, and drilled them to the order they now hold."
"I think it likely. I have brought this upon Mould's Castle, Beldan."
Beldan shrugged. "It would have come. You made our Margravine happy. I have never known her happy, before, Prince."
"You Mabden seem to think that happiness must be bought with misery."
"I suppose we do."
"It is not easy for a Vadhagh to understand that. We believebelievedthat happiness was a natural condition of reasoning beings."
Now from the forest emerged another twenty chariots. They arranged themselves behind Glandyth so that the Earl of Krae was between the silent, masked warriors and his own followers, the Denledhyssi.
The drum stopped its beating.
Corum listened to the tide drawing back. Now the causeway was completely exposed.
"He must have followed me, learned where I was, and spent the winter recruiting and training those warriors," Corum said.
"But how did he discover your hiding place?" Beldan said.
For answer, the ranks of the Pony Tribes opened and Glandyth drove his chariot down toward the causeway. He bent and picked something from the floor of his chariot, raised it above his head, and Bung it over the backs of his horses to fall upon the causeway.
Corum shuddered when he recognized it.
Beldan stiffened and stretched out his hand to grasp the stone of the battlement, lowering his head.
81."Is it the Brown Man, Prince Corum?"
"It is."