Page 14 of A Touch of Shadows
WREN
Wren cursed to herself. She thought she’d given Pol the slip.
‘They won’t come this far in. Not even on the road. They’re scared of?—’
‘Not them.’ Finn mounted fluidly, turning the horse around in a circle, and held out his hand to her. ‘There are mounted soldiers coming. Lots of them. We don’t want to be out in the open. You know this place. Come on.’
Something in his urgency infected her, and suddenly their positions were reversed. He knew what he was talking about and she did not. Wren could hear it now, distantly, the sound of horses’ hooves, a great many of them, and with it the pounding of metal, armour, weapons. An armed force, travelling south at speed. That couldn’t be good.
Soldiers never came through here. Thirbridge wasn’t worth their while.
She grabbed his hand and swung up behind him, clinging to his broad back to hold on. Beneath them, the horse moved restlessly. It could sense danger too.
Elodie would understand, wouldn’t she? The tower was the safest place Wren knew.
Wren also knew she would never hear the end of it if she turned up with this stranger in tow, with his weapons and his warhorse. He wore travelling clothes, but he was made of muscle, and she’d seen the weapons he carried, secured about the horse and on his person. The way he moved, the way he fought… he had to be a knight of some kind. Or at least trained by them.
Elodie had always had choice words to say about knights. Along with quite a long list of others.
But right now… right now there was an armoured host bearing down on them and he was all Wren had. Even if they’d been following him.
There had to be somewhere else, another option. Taking a breath to push back her first panicked instinct she looked around, and saw it.
‘Back there, into the trees,’ she said. ‘There’s an incline and a ridge. You can see the road ahead from there but stay concealed. It should be safe enough. They won’t be able to see us up there.’
At least she hoped not.
He urged the black horse forward, slowing only when they entered the edge of the forest again, just enough so the horse could find his footing safely.
It was a good hiding place, one of her favourites. One where you could see without being seen. She used to watch the roads from up there, whenever she could sneak away from the tower. She’d imagine where the various travellers were going; Sidonia, perhaps, with its dark towers, or Pelias, perched on the edge of the great sea. But it didn’t matter. Not now. They needed to hide and this was the best place. The only place available to them.
If these soldiers were coming from the north, they came from Ilanthus. And that was never good news.
She needed to warn Elodie. But going now would risk bringing the danger directly to their tower.
Indecision made her cling to Finn’s back even more tightly, as the horse headed up the slope. As they reached the summit, Finn dismounted, leaving her perched up there. She let herself down carefully, aware of the horse’s every movement, and went to his side, where he leaned over the top of the ridge, examining the road.
Smoke rose from the north road, beyond the trees, and Wren felt something catch in her throat, something hard and uncomfortable. There was only one thing in that direction. Thirbridge.
It had to be. There was nothing else for miles around except forest. The village was burning.
Had they put them all to sword?
‘Look in Dancer’s saddlebags,’ Finn said. ‘There’s a—’ His voice fell still when he glanced at her frozen expression. ‘Never mind. I’ve got it.’ He rummaged in the bags and then came back with a small case, and a flask. ‘Drink some of that. It’ll help.’
Wren watched as he opened the case and took out some kind of metal tube. Gone was the soft, bewildered man, dazed by enchantments. His eyes were sharp, every movement succinct and determined. He twisted the tube deftly and it expanded into an elegant telescope, smaller but not so different from the one Elodie kept mounted on a stand in one of the upper rooms of the tower. He lifted it to his eye and peered out over the forest. Capable, she thought, practised. She… she had to stop thinking about him. Wren brought the flask to her mouth and took a large mouthful.
It wasn’t water. It burned down her throat. She could feel its heat in her chest and she coughed, spluttering as she pulled the flask back from her mouth.
Finn raised one eyebrow, even though he never looked away from the telescope and whatever it showed him.
‘Never had spirits before? Maybe take it a bit easier. It’s strong stuff. Comes all the way from Sidonia itself.’
‘I suppose you go there all the time. Did they follow you here?’
He shrugged his shoulders, which wasn’t an answer. ‘They weren’t meant to. They also come looking for witches. You wouldn’t know anything about that, would you?’
Her stomach roiled. She could blame the alcohol, but she knew she’d be lying. ‘No.’