Gwal?â she asked softly.
He scratched at the white stubble on his chin. âIs there no food in this house? By God, a man could die of starvation visiting you.â
âThereâs a little cold stew, and a spare flagon of your honey spirit. Itâs too fiery for my taste. You want that, or shall I heat up the stew?â
He gave a wicked grin and winked. âNo, lass. Just fetch me a drop of the honeydew.â
âFirst a bargain.â
âNo,â he said, his voice firm. âI will tell you no more. Not yet. And if that means a dry night, then so be it.â
âWhen will you tell me?â
âSoon. Trust me.â
âOf all men I trust you most,â she said, moving forward to kiss his brow. She fetched him the flagon and watched as he filled a clay cup. The liquid was thin and golden, and touched the throat like a flame. Gwalch drained the cup and leaned back with a sigh.
âEnough of this and a man would live forever,â he said.
She shook her head. âYou are incorrigible. Do you know the legend of Ironhand?â
âOf course. Went through a Gateway, to return when we need him.â
âAnd will he return?â
âYes. When the time is right.â He drank a second cup.
âThatâs not true, Gwalch. I found his bones.â
âYes, I know. Under several boulders in the pool of the falls. Why did you tell no one?â
Sigarni was surprised, though instantly she knew she should not have been. âWhy do you ask, when you already know the answer?â she countered.
âIt is not polite to answer a question with a question, girl. You know that.â
âPeople need legends,â she told him. âWho am I to rob them of their power? He was a great man, and it is nice for people to think that he actually managed to kill all the assassins, instead of being done to death by the murdering scum.â
âOh, but he did kill them all! Seven of them, and him wounded unto death. Killed them, and their war hounds. Then he sat by the pool, his strength fading. He was found by one of his retainers, a trusted man, loyal and steadfast. Ironhand told him to hide his body where none could find it until the chosen time. You see, he had the Gift. It came on him as he was dying. So the word went out that Ironhand had crossed the Gateway and would one day return. And so it will be.â
Gwalch filled a third cup and half drank it. Leaning forward, he placed the cup on the hearthstone, then sank back, his breathing deepening.
âWhen will he come back, Gwalch?â whispered Sigarni.
âHe already has once,â answered the old man, his voice slurring. âOn the night of the Slaughter. It was he who killed the last demon.â The old man began to snore gently.
Fell loved the mountains, the high, lonely passes, the stands of pine and the sloping valleys, the snow-crowned peaks and the vast sweep of this harsh country. He stood now above the snow line on High Druin staring out to the north, the lands of the Pallides and farther to the distant shimmering river that separated the Pallides clan from the quiet, grim men of the Farlain. This was a land that demanded much from a man. Farming was not easy here, for the winters were harsh beyond compare, the summers often wet and miserable, drowning the roots of most crops, bar oats that seemed to thrive in the Highlands. Cattle were bred in the valleys, hard, tough, long-haired beasts with horns sweeping out, sharp as needles. Those horns needed to be sharp when the wolves came, or the black bears. And despite the long hair and the sturdiness of their powerful bodies, the vicious winters claimed a large percentage of the beastsâtrapped in snowdrifts, or killed in falls from the icy ridges and steep rises.
It was no land for the weak of spirit, or the soft of body.
The cool dusk breeze brushed the skin of his face and he rubbed his chin. Soon he would let his close-cropped beard
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