Read Ranger's Apprentice 1 & 2 Bindup Online
Authors: John Flanagan
The newcomers weren't Wargals. They were Skandians.
Gilan slept like a log for six hours, totally exhausted, in the tent where Halt had taken him. Throughout that time, he didn't stir once. His mind and body were shut down, drawing new strength from total rest.
Then, after those six hours, his subconscious mind stirred and began to function, and he began to dream. He dreamt of Will and Horace and the girl Evanlyn. But the dream was wild and confused and he saw them as captives of the Wargals, tied together while the two robbers Bart and Carney stood by and laughed.
Gilan rolled onto one side, muttering in his sleep. Halt, sitting nearby repairing the fletching on his arrows, glanced up. He saw that the young Ranger was still asleep and went back to his routine task. Gilan muttered again, then fell silent.
In his dream, he saw the servant Evanlyn as the King had described her â with her hair long and uncropped, masses of it flowing down her back, thick and lustrous and red.
And then he sat up, wide awake.
âMy God!' he said to a startled Halt. âIt's not her!'
Halt swore as he spilled the thick, viscous glue that he was using to attach the goose feather vanes to the arrow shaft. Gilan's sudden movement had caught him by surprise. Now he mopped up the sticky liquid and turned with some irritation to his friend.
âCould you give a bit of warning when you're going to start shouting like that?' he said peevishly. But Gilan was already out of the camp bed and hauling on his breeches and shirt.
âI've got to see the King!' he said urgently. Halt stood warily, not altogether sure that Gilan wasn't sleepwalking. The young Ranger shoved past him, dashing out into the night, and tucking his shirt into his trousers as he went. Reluctantly, Halt followed him.
There was a slight delay as they reached the King's pavilion. The guard had changed several hours before and the new sentries didn't know Gilan by sight. Halt smoothed things over, but not before Gilan had convinced him that it was vital for him to see King Duncan, even if it meant waking him from a well-deserved sleep.
As it turned out, in spite of the late hour, the King wasn't sleeping. He and his supreme army commander were discussing possible reasons for the raids into Celtica when Gilan, barefoot, rumple-haired and with several buttons still askew on his shirt front, was allowed into the pavilion. Sir David looked up in alarm at the sight his son presented.
âGilan! What on earth are you doing here?' he demanded, but Gilan held up a hand to stop him.
âJust a moment, Father,' he said. Then, he continued, facing the King, âSir, when you described the maid Evanlyn earlier, did you say “red” hair?'
Sir David looked to Halt for an explanation. The older Ranger shrugged and Sir David turned back to his son, anger clearly showing on his face.
âWhat difference does that make?' he began. But again Gilan cut him off, still addressing the King.
âThe girl who called herself Evanlyn was blonde, sir,' he said simply. This time, it was King Duncan who held out a hand to silence his angry Battlemaster.
âBlonde?' he asked.
âBlonde, sir. She'd cut it short, as I said, but it was blonde, like your own. And she had green eyes,' Gilan told him, watching Duncan carefully, and sensing the importance of what he was telling him. The King hesitated a moment, covering his face with one hand. Then he spoke, the hope growing in his voice.
âAnd her build? Slight, was she? Small of stature?'
Gilan nodded eagerly. âAs I said, sir, for a moment, we could have taken her for a boy. She must have used her maid's identity because she thought it was safer if she remained incognito.' Now, he understood those slight hesitations in Evanlyn's speech, and why she had a broader grasp of politics and strategy than most servants would be expected to have.
Slowly, Halt and Sir David began to realise the import of what was being said. The King looked from Gilan to Halt to David, then back to Gilan again.
âMy daughter is alive,' he said quietly. There was a long silence. It was finally broken by Sir David.
âGilan, how far behind you were the two apprentices and the girl?'
Gilan hesitated. âPossibly two days' ride, Father,' he estimated, following his father to the map table and indicating the furthest point that he thought Will and the others might have reached by now. Sir David took instant charge, sending messengers running to rouse the commander of the cavalry wing and have him prepare a company of light cavalry to leave camp immediately.
âWe'll send a company of the Fifth Lancers to bring them in, sir,' he told the King. âIf they leave within the hour and ride through the night, they should make contact sometime around noon tomorrow.'
âI'll guide them,' Gilan offered immediately and his father nodded assent.
âI'd hoped you'd say that.' He seized the King's arm, smiling with genuine pleasure at the relief on the tall man's face. âI can't tell you how pleased I am for you, sir,' he said. The King looked at him, a little bemused. So recently, he had been privately mourning the loss of his beloved daughter Cassandra. Now, miraculously, she had been restored to life.
âMy daughter is alive,' he said once more. âShe's safe.'
Evanlyn crouched over the pile of wood beside the bridge railing. From time to time, she heard the dull thrum of Will's bow as he fired at the approaching enemy, but she forced herself not to look up, concentrating on the job in hand. She knew they had one last chance to get the fire going properly. If she got it wrong this time, it would mean
disaster for the Kingdom. So she carefully stacked and placed the wood, making sure there was sufficient air space between the pieces to allow a good draft. She had none of the shavings left to use for tinder this time, but only a few metres away, she had a perfect source of fire. The right-hand cable was still blazing fiercely.
Satisfied that the wood was stacked properly, she took Will's saxe and cut several one-metre lengths of tarred rope from the bridge railing â thinner lengths, not the massive cable itself. It would have been almost impossible to hack through that in time.
Taking the rope lengths, she came to her feet and darted across the bridge to the blazing fire on the other side. It was a simple matter to get the lengths of tarred rope burning, then she ran back to her fire pile and draped the burning rope around the base, trailing it through the gaps she had left in the wood. The flames licked at her fingers as she pushed the rope in between pieces of wood. She bit her lip, ignoring the pain as she made sure the fire was burning freely.
The tar-fed flames crackled at the wood, flickered, then took. She fanned them for a few seconds as they became established, until the lighter kindling strips were burning fiercely, then the heavier planks began to take fire as well. The handrail caught in several places and now tongues of flame were shooting up to the cable, beginning to lick at it, feeding on the tar, then running up to where it joined the wooden pylon structure.
Only now did she take the time to glance up at Will. Her eyes were dazzled by the fire and she could see him only as a dull blur, five metres away, behind a rock outcrop.
As she looked, he rose to a standing position and fired an arrow. She looked into the surrounding darkness but could see no sign of their attackers.
The bridge gave another convulsive jerk beneath her feet and the roadway tilted to an alarming degree as the second of the three strands of the right-hand cable burnt through and the structure sagged further to that side. They wouldn't have much time to get back across to where Horace and Tug waited. She had to warn Will.
Saxe knife in hand, she ran full pelt to where he crouched behind the rocks, his eyes searching the darkness for movement. He glanced quickly at her as she arrived.
âThe other side's burning,' she said. âLet's get out of here.'
Grimly, he shook his head, then pointed with his chin to a jumble of rocks barely thirty metres from where they crouched.
âCan't risk it,' he told her. âOne of them has got behind those rocks. If we go now, he might have time to save the bridge.'
Out of the corner of her eye, she saw a quick, darting movement to their left and pointed quickly.
âThere's one!' she said. Will nodded.
âI see him,' he replied evenly. âHe's trying to draw my fire. As soon as I shoot at him, the one closer to us will have a chance. I have to wait for him to show himself before I can shoot.'
She looked at him, horrified, as she realised the significance of what he was saying. âBut that means the others can close in on us,' she said. This time, Will said nothing. The incipient panic he had felt was now replaced by a calm sense of resolution. Deep in his heart, a part of him was
glad â glad that he hadn't failed Halt and glad that he had repaid the faith that the older Ranger had placed in him when he chose him as an apprentice.
He glanced at Evanlyn for a long moment and she realised he was willing to be captured if it kept the enemy away from the bridge just a few minutes longer.
Captured or killed, she amended.
Behind them, there was a groaning crash and she turned to see the first cable finally give way in a shower of flame and sparks. It took the burnt-through upper half of its pylon with it. That was the result they had wanted. They had discussed the idea of simply cutting the main cables, but that would have left the major structure of the bridge untouched. The pylons themselves had to be destroyed. Now the entire bridge was hanging, suspended by the left-hand cable, and flames were already eating their way through that. In a few more minutes, she knew, the bridge would be gone. The Fissure would be impassable once more.
Will tried to give her a reassuring smile. It wasn't a very successful attempt. âYou can't do much more here,' he told her. âGet across the bridge while you've still got time.'
She hesitated, desperately wanting to go but unwilling to leave him on his own. He was only a boy, she realised, but he was willing to sacrifice himself for her and the rest of the Kingdom.
âGo!' he said, turning to her and shoving at her. And now she thought she could see the glitter of tears in his eyes. Her own eyes filled and she couldn't see him clearly. She blinked to clear her vision, just in time to see a jagged rock curving down out of the firelit night.
âWill!' she shouted, but she was too late. The rock took him in the side of the head and he grunted in surprise, then his eyes rolled up and he fell at her feet, dark blood already welling from his scalp. She heard a rush of feet from several directions and she tossed the saxe knife aside and scrabbled in the dirt for Will's bow. Then she found it and was trying to nock an arrow when rough hands grabbed her, knocking the bow from her grasp and pinning her arms to her sides. The Skandian held her in a bear hug, her face pressed into the rough sheepskin of his vest, smelling of grease and smoke and sweat and all but suffocating her. She kicked out, lashing with her feet and tossing her head, trying to butt the man who was holding her, but to no avail.
Beside her, Will lay unmoving in the dust. She began to sob in frustration and anger and sadness and she heard the Skandians laughing. Then another sound came and they stopped. The arms holding her released a little and she was able to see.
It was a drawn out, creaking groan and it came from the bridge. The right-hand support was gone, and the left-hand side, already weakened by the fire, was now holding the entire structure. It was never meant for such a load, even in perfect condition. With a final sharp SNAP! the pylon shattered at its halfway point and, cables and all, the bridge collapsed slowly into the depths of the Fissure, trailing a bright shower of sparks behind it in the darkness.
Gilan watched impatiently as the company of cavalrymen remounted after a fifteen-minute break. He was itching to be away, but he knew that both horses and men needed rest if they were to continue at the killing pace he had set them. They had been travelling for half a day and he estimated that they should meet Will's party sometime in the early afternoon.
Checking that all the troopers were mounted, he turned to the captain beside him.
âAll right, Captain,' he said. âLet's get them moving.'
The captain had actually drawn breath to bellow his command when there was a call from the lead troop.
âHorseman coming!'
An expectant buzz ran through the cavalrymen. Most of them had no idea what their mission was about. They'd been roused out of bed in the early dawn and told to mount and ride. Gilan stood in his stirrups, shading his
eyes against the midday glare, and peered in the direction the trooper had indicated.
They hadn't reached the Celtic border yet, and here the terrain was open grasslands, with occasional thickets of trees. To the south-west, Gilan's keen eyes could make out a small cloud of dust, with a galloping figure at the head of it.
âWhoever he is, he's in a hurry,' the captain observed. Then the forward scout called more information.
âThree horsemen!' came the shout. But already Gilan could see that the report wasn't quite correct. There were three horses, but only one rider. He experienced a sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach.
âShould we send out an intercept party, sir?' the captain asked him. In times like these, it wasn't always wise to let a stranger ride full pelt into the middle of a group. But now that the rider was closer, Gilan could recognise him. More to the point, he could recognise one of the horses he was riding: small, shaggy, barrel-chested. It was Will's horse, Tug. But it wasn't Will riding him.
The lead troop had already fanned out to stop the rider's progress. Gilan said quietly to the captain: âTell them to let him through.'
The captain repeated the order with considerably more volume and the troopers separated, leaving a path for Horace. He saw the small group of officers around the company banner and headed for them, bringing the shaggy little Ranger horse to a halt in front of them. The other horses, which Gilan now recognised as Horace's and the pack pony that Evanlyn had ridden, were following behind Tug on a rope rein.
âThey've got Will!' the boy shouted hoarsely, recognising Gilan among the group of officers. âThey've got Will and Evanlyn!'
Gilan closed his eyes briefly, feeling a lance of pain in his heart. Then, knowing the answer before he asked, he said: âWargals?'
âSkandians!' he replied. âThey took them at the bridge. They â¦'
Gilan flinched in surprise at the word. Surprise and horror.
âBridge?' he said urgently. âWhat bridge?'
Horace was breathing heavily from his exertions. He'd alternated between the three horses, switching from one to the other, but not resting himself at any stage. He paused now to get his breath, realising he should start from the beginning.
âAcross the Fissure,' he said. âThat's why Morgarath took the Celts. They were building a huge bridge for him to bring his army across. They'd almost got it finished when we got there.'
The captain beside Gilan had turned pale. âYou mean there's a bridge across the Fissure?' he asked. The implications of such a fact were horrendous.
âNot anymore,' Horace replied, his breathing steadier and his voice a little more under control now. âWill burnt it. Will and Evanlyn. But they stayed on the other side to keep the Skandians back and â'
âSkandians!' said Gilan. âWhat the devil are Skandians doing on the plateau?' Horace made an impatient gesture at his interruption.
âThey were the advance party for a force that's coming
up the southern cliffs. The Skandians were going to join forces with the Wargals, cross the bridge and attack the army in the rear.'
The group of cavalry officers exchanged looks. Professional soldiers, all of them could imagine how disastrous that could have been for the royal forces.
âAs well the bridge is gone then,' said a lieutenant. Horace swung his tormented gaze on the officer â a young man barely a few years older than himself.
âBut they've got Will!' he cried, his eyes welling with tears as he thought of how he had stood by and watched helplessly as his friend was knocked out, then carried away.
âAnd the girl,' added Gilan, but Horace dismissed her.
âYes! Of course they got her!' he said. âAnd I'm sorry she's been caught. But Will was my friend!'
âYou're sorry she's been caught? Do you know who â¦' the captain interrupted indignantly, for he was one of the few who knew the true nature of their task. But Gilan stopped him before he could say more.
âThat's enough, Captain!' he said crisply. The officer looked at him angrily and Gilan leaned forward, speaking so that only he could hear.
âThe fewer people who know the girl's name now, the better,' he said, and understanding dawned in the officer's eyes. If Morgarath knew that his men held the King's daughter hostage, he would have a powerful tool to bargain with. He looked back to Horace. âHorace, is there any way they might be able to repair this bridge?' he asked and the muscular youth shook his head vehemently. He was devastated at the loss of his friend but his pride in Will's accomplishment was obvious as he described it.
âNo way at all,' he replied. âIt's gone, well and truly. Will made sure that nothing remained on the far side. That's why he was caught. He wanted to make sure.' He paused and added: âThey might get a small rope bridge across, of course.'
That decided Gilan. He turned to the captain.
âCaptain, you'll continue with the company and make sure no bridge of any kind is thrown across the Fissure. We don't want any of Morgarath's forces, no matter how small, coming across. Get Horace to show you the location on a map. Hold the west side of the Fissure until you're relieved, and send out patrols to locate any other possible crossing points. There won't be many of those,' he added. âHorace, you'll come with me and report to the King. Now.' He stopped abruptly as he realised that Horace was waiting for a chance to say something. He nodded for the apprentice to go ahead.
âThe Skandians,' said Horace. âThey're not just on the plateau. They're sending a force north of the Thorntree Forest as well.'
There was another buzz of comment from the officers as they realised how close their army had come to disaster. Two unexpected forces, attacking from the rear, would have left the King's men very hard-pressed indeed.
âYou're sure of this?' Gilan asked and Horace nodded several times.
âWill overheard them talking about it,' he said. âTheir forces on the beach and in the fens are a feint. The real attack was always going to come from behind.'
âThen we don't have a moment to waste,' said Gilan. âThat force in the north-west could still be a big problem if
the King doesn't know about it.' He turned to the company commander. âCaptain, you have your orders. Get your men to the Fissure as soon as you can.'
The captain saluted briefly and issued a few crisp orders to his officers. They galloped off to their troops and, after a quick conference while Horace pointed out the site of the fallen bridge on a map of the area, the entire company was on the move, heading at a brisk canter for the Fissure.
Gilan turned to Horace. âLet's go,' he said simply. Wearily, the young warrior nodded, then turned back to mount his own horse. Tug hesitated, pawing the ground as he watched the cavalry ride away â back towards where he had last seen his master. He trotted a few uncertain paces after the troop then, at a word from Gilan, he reluctantly fell in behind the tall Ranger.