drove on through the trees.
A few chaotic, exhausting yards further on, Hal burst through the undergrowth to see Jamie sliding from the back of the sweat-streaked rouncey, which stood with flanks heaving. The boy examined it swiftly, then turned as Hal and the riders came up.
âLame,â he declared mournfully, then stroked the animalâs muzzle and grinned a bright, sweaty grin.
âGood while it lasted,â he shouted and started to lead the horse slowly from the wood. Hal drove on; a thin branch whipped blood from his cheek and a series of short horn blasts brought his head round, for he knew that was the signal for the âvueâ, that the quarry was in sight of the body of the hunt â and that he was heading in the wrong direction. Which, because he had been following the distant sight of red, made him angry.
âAch, ye shouffleing, hot-arsed, hollow-eeâed, belled harlot,â he bellowed, and men laughed.
âThe quine will not be happy at that,â Sim Craw noted, but Halâs scowl was black and withering, so he wisely fastened his lip and followed after. Two or three plunges later, Hal reined in and sent Bangtail Hob and Thom Bell after the Countess, to make sure she found her way safely back to join the hunt.
They forged on, ducking branches â something smacked hard on Halâs forehead, wrenching his head back; stars whirled and he felt himself reel in the saddle. When he recovered himself, Sim Craw was grinning wildly at him.
âAre ye done duntinâ trees?â he demanded and looked critically at Hal. âNo damage. Yer still as braw as the sun on shiny watter.â
Todâs Wattie came up, shepherding a panting Gib and the running deerhounds, who were not even out of breath â but they were on long leashes now, held by Todâs Wattie from the back of his horse, and starting to dance and whine with the smell of the blood, begging to be let loose. Dog Boy trotted up and Hal saw that, because he was not being hauled at breakneck pace by dogs, he was breathing even and clean; they grinned at one another.
Todâs Wattie threw the leashes to Gib, who wrapped them determinedly in his fists, truculent as a boar pig. Horsemen milled in a sweating group; a few peasants stumbled to the boles of trees and sank down, exhaustion rising from them like haze. Horse slaver frothed on unseen breezes.
â Bien aller,â bellowed White Tam and raised the horn to his blue, fleshy lips, the haroo, haroo of it springing the whole crowd into frantic movement again. Berner Philippe, breathing ragged, gasped out a desperate plea for space for his hounds and White Tam rasped out another blast on his horn.
âHark to the line,â he bellowed. âOyez! Ware hounds. Ware hounds.â
The stag burst from the undergrowth and, a moment later, a tangled trail of baying hounds followed, skidding in confusion as the beast changed direction and bounded away.
It stank and steamed, rippling with muscle and sheened like a copper statuette, the great horned crown of it soaring away into the trees as it sprang, scattering hounds and leaping majestically, leaving the dogs floundering in its wake. The powerful alaunts had been released too soon, White Tam saw, and had already been left behind, for they had no stamina, only massive strength.
âIl est hault, he roared, purple-faced. Tl est hault, il est hault, il est hault.â
âTallyho to you, too,â muttered Hal and then tipped a nod to Todâs Wattie, who grinned and nudged Gib.
White Tam cursed and banged the horn furiously on the cantle, for he could see the stag dashing away â then two grey streaks shot swiftly past on either side of him, silent as graveshrouds. They overtook the running stag, barging in on one side and forcing it to turn at bay. The deerhounds ⦠White Tam almost cried out with the delight of it.
Dog Boy gawped. He had never seen such speed, nor such brave