Crown of Stars (Crown of Stars #7)
Page 169“A whisper like the ranks of the dead approaching,” he said, and she looked at him, puzzled, and only then did he realize he had spoken his thought aloud. “A taste like the eve of battle.”
“Is that what makes you restless as a prowling dog? Not just those dark clouds? Will we fight Conrad today?”
“He’s sent no herald, made no attempt to parley.”
“Sent no word of my daughter,” said Liutgard bitterly.
“It makes me wonder what his intentions are. But, in truth, there is another scent on the wind, and I’m not sure what it is.”
“Where is Theophanu?”
“Close. See, there.” He pointed to the southeast. “That color on the ridgeline. There.”
She squinted, then shrugged. “I don’t see it. Only the trees along the hills.”
“My archer Lewenhardt caught sight of it yesterday. I wouldn’t have noticed it myself, but his eyes are sharp. I believe that is her banner, set up to alert us.”
“That’s as close as she can come, with Conrad and Sabella in her path. If we could coordinate our attack, we could strike from two sides. At this juncture, neither army has an advantage. If I judge correctly, Conrad and Sabella have numbers about equal to our own.”
“The margraves should have marched with us.”
“Yes, I suppose they should have. Gerberga will wait it out in Austra and come to claim what she can from whichever is left standing.”
“Gerberga can go rot! It was Waltharia I was thinking about.”
“She sent three centuries of men, all she could spare. Think how many she lost—her own husband—when she sent a troop south with me.”
Liutgard did not appear so much aged by the long campaign but hardened, made mirthless. She had laughed more, once upon a time, and she had been wont to cast quotes into her banter—she could read—lively lines from the poets or homilies out of the mouths of the church mothers. “I, too, lost many milites in Henry’s wars, Cousin! Yet I stand beside you. Even Burchard went home.”
“To die.”
She snorted. “I’ve come to think that dying is the coward’s choice.”
“Surely you do!”
“You have never faltered.”
“Only in my heart.”
“Well, then, listen to me. When the time comes to strike, you must remain behind the walls. Until your daughter is recovered, you must remain safe—”
“In case I am killed, and she is dead after all, and the inheritance thereby left in confusion? No. I will ride, just as you will. I want revenge.”
“I need a strong captain to hold these walls!”
She gestured toward Fulk. “There he is.”
“Hai!” A sentry shouted. “See there, Your Majesty.”
“There!” cried Liutgard, pointing.
The clouds split as suddenly as if they had been sliced asunder. Sunlight lanced over the valley, sharpening every detail of Conrad’s camp. That light illuminated the southeastern ridgeline. A gash in the wall of trees opened as first one, then a pair, and then a dozen trees toppled. Banners made tiny by distance flowed like water as they rippled back and forth.
“That’s her signal!” cried Sanglant. He turned to Captain Fulk. “Set Lewenhardt here to watch and listen. We arm. Spread the word by mouth alone. Let no trumpet or bell sound the alarm until the gates are opened.”
“What of Wichman?” Liutgard asked. “Do you think he and his company are lost?”
“Always.” He grinned. “We shall not count on them. But I will expect them, nevertheless.”
As they moved to the stair to descend the tower and prepare for battle, a tingling in the middle of his back gave him pause, like the misgivings of a man new to war who imagines the ax blow that will bring his death. Stopping in mid-stride, he canted his head, lifted his chin, and tasted the air. “That is the smell of Eika.”
“Eika?” cried Fulk.
“Can Sabella have made an alliance with those creatures?” demanded Liutgard. “Better to hold within our walls than ride into such an ambush.”