fulfill your part of the agreement, my lord, we should be on our way. We have a difficult ride ahead of us, a large part of it through icy water. His Majesty will be waiting.â
âOf course,â Bran murmured, scanning the sleeping hostages with admiration as he donned his helmet. He certainly could not fault their discipline.
âLook after them, Campbell,â he said, pulling on gloves and moving toward the entrance to the tent. âWencit will want them back in good health, and we would not wish to disappoint him.â
CHAPTER FOUR
âAnd I will give thee the treasures of darkness, and hidden riches of secret places.â
ISAIAH 45:3
THE walled city of Cardosa lies nearly a mile above the Eastmarch plain, on a high plateau of sheer-faced rock. It has been the seat of earls and dukes and, sometimes, of kings, and it is guarded west and east by the treacherous Cardosa Pass, the major passage through the Rheljan Mountains.
Late each autumn, toward the end of November, the snows sweep in from the great northern sea, cutting off the city and burying the pass in snow. This condition persists well into March, until long after winter has fled the rest of the area. Then the melting snow turns the Cardosa Pass into a raging cataract for the next three months.
But the thaw is not uniform, even in the pass. Because of the mountainsâ run-off pattern, the eastern approach is negotiable weeks before the west: a quirk that has been a major contributing factor in the cityâs changing ownership over the years. It was this that enabled Wencit of Torenth to capture the winter-hungry city without oppositionâhigh Cardosa, depleted by the previous summerâs dispute and exhausted by the snows, which could not wait for relief troops and supplies from royal Gwynedd. Wencit could supply these things; and so Cardosa surrendered.
Thus it was that as Bran Coris and his nervous escorts made the final, wet approach to the cityâs gates, the cityâs new ruler relaxed at leisure in the apartment he had chosen in the cityâs state house and prepared to greet his reluctant guest.
Wencit of Torenth grimaced as he struggled with the fastening of his doubletâs high collar, craning his neck as he made the final adjustment. At a discreet knock at the door, he smoothed the gold-encrusted velvet over his chest with an impatient gesture and thrust a jeweled dagger into his sash. The ice-blue eyes registered a hint of mild annoyance as he glanced in that direction.
âCome.â
Almost immediately, a tall, gangling young man in his mid-twenties stepped through the doorway and bowed. Like most members of the royal household, Garon wore the brilliant blue-violet livery of Wencitâs personal service, with the leaping black hart of Furstán emblazoned over the left breast in a white circle, along with a flat-linked chain of office. His expression was one of acute interest and anticipation as he watched his royal master begin rolling up documents from the writing table by the window and slipping them into leather storage tubes. When he spoke, his voice was low and cultured.
âSire, the Earl of Marley is here. Shall I send him in?â
Wencit gave a curt nod as he finished storing the last of the documents, and Garon withdrew without further words. As the door closed, Wencit began pacing the heavily carpeted floor with nervous energy, hands clasped behind his back.
Wencit of Torenth was a tall, thin, almost angular man in his late forties, with hair of a brilliant rust-red, untouched by gray, and pale, almost colorless eyes. Wide, bushy sideburns and a sweeping moustache of the same fiery red emphasized the high cheekbones, the triangular shape of the face. When he moved, it was with an easy grace not usually associated with a man of his size and stature.
The overall effect had led his enemies, who were many, to compare him to a foxâthat is, when they were not making other, less